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Page B6 •

The Daily Sentinel

-.mydailysentineLcom

Tnmday, May 13. 2008

Carmona's 5-hitter leads Indians over Blue Jays 3-0
CLEVELAND (AP) Fausto Cannona gave Cliff
Lee a lOugh act to follow.
Cannona pitched a fivehitter for Cleveland's second
consecutive shutout over the
struggling .. Toronto Blue
Jays, a 3-0 victory in
doubleheader
Monday's
opener.
Lee, . 6-0 with a major
league-leading 0.8 1 ERA,
staned the second game and
tried to complete a sweep for
lhe Indians.
. .
"Fausto was fantastic,"
Indians manager Eric Wedge
said. "He got better as the
game went on - noticeably
· bener."
·
Carmona (4-1 ) struck out
three and walked four in his
second shutout and third
complete game in 47 big
league starts. The right-hander was 9. months old the
previous time Cleveland
pitched consecutive shutouts
at home, on Sept. 8-9, 1982,
against
Boston
. and
Baltimore.
It had been 36 years since
the Indians dtd it in
Cleveland against the ·same
~ment,
blanking the
. cago White Sox on May
6-7, 1972.
"We know our . starting
pitching
is
extremely

Overbrook celebrates
National Nursing
Home Week, A3

•

second base to field a sharp ··
grounder, shoveled the ball
with his glove to second
CLEVBI..AM) (AP) Jadi•• teuad blte'UO baseman Jamey CarroU; who
•
AJdnJbal Cabnu..... milbe l4dl Ul
play in turned the double play.
•
With Scott Rolen on fu:st
IDIIjoc lergne hiMrry Moaday niAbt.
· · Cabreta made a clivi~~&amp; Clldl ooalillc dri~~~e by 1\.wJ ~J f&gt;'a and one out in the fourth.
The Taylor family acceptMatt Stairs lined a single to
Lyle Ova"bay, 'O'dled fleiCONl belle 81 dial llg 1 •
ed prosecutor's explanabon
Man:o ScutliQ. .
·right and Ben Francisco
for the move, a family
tDade a one-hop throw 10
MIAMI ·- Prosecutors spokesman said.
third baseman Casey Blake said Monday they will not
"All the co-defendants
Oakland ceooad ."'-temM Raody Vdardciac*l!6aed lbe to retire Rolen.
seek the death penalty can' t lie subject to the death
trick in lbe AL. oa ~'29;':2000,
lbe Y•~ :s a. . •
With two on and two outs against four _peo_ple charged penalty if the (alleged)
in the seventh, fu:st baseman with murdering Washington shooter is not," said
strong," said David DeUucci,
Shaun Marcum started for Ryan Garko made a diving Redsltins star Sean Taylor Richard Sharpstein, a
whose two-out single in the Toronto in the second game; backhand stop of a sharp because the accused shooter lawyer who has acled as
sixth drove in the ftrSt run. Sunday's rainout caused the grounder hit by Joe Inglett, · was a minor when the crime spokesman for the ~aylor.
"The way Fausto was pitch- ftrSt single-admission dnu- then flipped to Carmona was comMitted.
family. "lbere are no 1ssues
ing, we knew jt wouldn't bleheader at Cleveland sinre covering for the inning-endThe U,S. Supreme Court of discretion here. There'&amp;
take a lot."
Aug. 13, 1997.
ing out.
has ruled that people cannot no choice."
:
A.J. Burnett (3-4) gave up
Burnett allowed only one
Notes: Burnett dropped to be executed for crimes
Prosecutors and defense
three runs and five hits in 7 hit until Grady Sizemore · 30-34 with a 4.31 ERA wben committed when · they're attorneys are barred frolli
2-3 innings for the Blue Jays. doubled off the wall ia right- starting with more than four under 18, and it's a well discussing the case with
who have been blankM in 22 center with one mit in the days' rest. He's 42-36 with a · established legal principle reporters under a gag ord¢
consecutive innings.
sixth. Sizemore went to third 3.43 ERA wben starting on that others involved in the
same case as a minor can- But Hunte's attorney.
"It's tough, but that's the on a groundout by Jamey norma1 res.t ... s•·'I&lt;IUo bad
·
Michael Hornung said in 1
way it has been going," Carroll and scored on three o f 11oronto•s hits. .. . not face the ultimate penal- ·telephone interview that
· Carmona fanned A3ron Hill ty if they are less directly prosecutors would have bad
Toronto manager John DeUucci's single.
~
"That's a big iwo-out three times - Carmoqa's· responsible.
Gibbons said. "Carmona was
Assistant
State
Attorney
to
[jjj~e
a
conspLJ;acy
ai~
great. He can do that to you." knock in a zero-zero ball on1ys trikeouts . ... Burnett 1·s
mg Taylor 10 order 10
1-4 in five ~s against the Reid Rubin filed notice at
Cleveland won for the fifth game," Wedge said.
Friday
that
the
death
penalseek
death for the three
Travis Hafner drew a lead- Indians, . including 0-4 in
time in six games and
ty will be waived. That adults.
.
.
extended the Blue Jays' los- off walk in the seventh and Cleveland. ... Indians OF means the four suspects
"l~m
not
sboclred
or
sur~
ing streak to four. The Asdrubal Cabrera followed Shin-Soo Choo, recovering could get a maximum of prised they. are not going
Indians outscored Toronto with his ftrSt homer since from elbow surgery last life in prison if convicted of forward, w1th _the de~th.
September, is expeciCd 10 ftrSt-degree murder after a penalty, Hornung S3.ld;
21-1 in the fu:st three gatnes Sept 17.
of the series, .and the Blue
Cleveland's
defense begin a rehab assignment trial scheduled ·to begin · "That would have been
Jays have lost nine straight helped Carmona. ln the sec- this week at Triple-A Aug. 25 .
challenging legally."
ond, Cabrera ranged behind Buffalo.
games in Cleveland.
Eric Rivera Jr. who
Taylor was an Allturned 18 last monlh was American at the University
17 at the tim~ police s~y he of Miami and was ~ mem:
shot Taylor during a ber of the Humcanes
hotcbed robbery at the Pro national
championship
Miami-~
team
in
2001.
He was
Bowl
safety's
SEATTLE (AP) - The ChuckAnnsttongandmanag- moving as slow as Seattle's are among the weakest-drawSeattle Mariners are teasing er John McLaren refuse to season. Seven weeks into a
on tbe road in the home in NovembeL Taylor, selected with the fifth over24, died of massive blood all pick of the 2004 draft by
their increasingly indifferent · 0011ime11t directly on possibly hugely disappointing year, the
loss
after he was shot in the the Redskins and made the
fans with the prospect of trading for Griffey, who was team has drawn eight of the lO
''The weather basn 'I been
upper
leg. .
Pro Bowl in 2006 and 2007.
beloved Ken Griffey Jr. ttaded from Seaule before the lowest crowds in die histoty of good. We haven't played as
rebJming 10 the city where he 2(XXJ season.
its $514 millioo stadium with weU as we wanted. And this is
and the Mariners enjoyed their
He would fill not only seats a roUback roof.
the worst scbedule ever,"
Her time registered at
finest years,
at Safeco Field, but also the
Just 15,818 showed up for Armstrong said. "I'm opti5:21.01.
There was buzz i.i:t Seattle left-handed power-hitter void the game May 6 against Texas mistic, but when :you see
Other Redwomen results:
Monday from reports out . of the Mariners have had for on a 53-degree night, the 15.000 againSI a divislon rival,
Walker, 13th in the hammer
fromPageBl
New York that Duane Shaffer; years. The shorter fences in smallest crowd ever in the yes, you are disappointed."
throw (100 feet, (,me inch)
il special assistant 10 Mariners right field at Safeco were nine-year-001 stadium.
He said the calendar will
and junior Sarah Sandlin,
general manager Bill Bavas~ alleged!): l&gt;llilt for him. At · Armsttong said last week he take care of the issue.
nine
·
inches.
Freshman
I 5th in the hammer (81 feet.
was at Shea Stadium watdling least Oriffey could help get the expects an ebb and. flow 10
The Mariners entered
Walker
recorded
a
Rachel
six incbes ).
.
Griffey and the Cincinnati Mariners back toward the . crowd counts during a season. Monday night's game at Texas
Rio Grande will not have
Reds play the Mets last week- 36,322 fans per game they Especially one that begins·'in with the AL's wom record at 7th place ftnisb in the discus
throw. Her best effort mea- any female competitors at
end.
drew as recently as 2004, iinusually rold weather with 15-24.
the NAIA National Meet.
: Respecting basebaU's rules when they finished last in the home games against Texas,
They have bad eight crowds sured 84 feet, four inches.
Sophomore
distance
runThe NAIA National Meet
3gainst tampering with players AL West
Kansas City, Baltimore, below 20,000 in 21 home
)lllder COIItract with another
The Mariners are paying Oakland and ~~o dales this season, rompared ner Stacey Arnett fmished will ·take place, May 22-24
6th in the i,SOO:.meter run. in St. LoUIS, Missouri.
team, Mariners president attention 10 turnstiles that are White Sox. Those
··
y with five all last season.
1

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BY BRIAN J. REED

Southern.~.

ScrPageBl

MIDDLEPORT - If an
administrator can be trained
to operate it, the Middleport
Jail ·could be re-opened to
outside prisoners. ·
' At Monday evening's regular meeting of Middleport
Village Council, Fiscal
Officer Susan Baker said
there is an "excellent
chance" that the village's

'

~

dillner ~to
'

Sa!PageA2
• Chester Council
meets. See Page A3

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Obama in West Virginia
See Page A6 .

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1830 OLD LOGAN RO SE • RT. 33 JUST SOUTH OF LANCASTER
8880 UNIT£0 LANE • ONE MILE WfST OF ATHENS ON RT. 50/32
LANCASTER, OH 43130 • (740) 653-2827
ATHENS, OH tl5701• f140l 593-3279
STORE HOURS MONDAY-FRIDAY 9:00-6:00, SATURDAY 9:00-5:00I'
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POMEROY -Although
raw sewage and health
department regulation s concerning septic systems isn't
normally the topic de jour
for a luncheon, it's still an
important subject and one
that took center stage at yesterday 's Meigs County
Chamber of Commerce's
business-minded luncheon.
Steve Swatzel, registered
sanitarian with the Meigs
County Health Department.
!lpdated the chamber on
se,... system teg\llations in ·
the county. Currently it costs
residents $430 to obtain a
local permit from the health .
department and that's not
counr'g the expense of actually utting in the system
wbic
on average runs
between $6,500-$7,500, if
soil conditions are good.
Swatzel said it typically
takes two weeks for a permit to be issued, depending on those all important
soil conditions. Swatzel
also said the health department now handles not only
residential permits but per- ,
mils for public facilities
such as churches and some
businesses.
The local board of health
is required to ensure any
new systems not create a
public health . nuisance.
Older systems that were
"grandfathered in" before
the regulations changed
last July can still be
inspected if they are reported to be a public health nuisance. The Meigs County
Board of Health adopted its
local sanitary regulations

CUICAIIET•
WIWih I 414 llnU1Y YEIIICLE

Clll 7

,_..to,_.""'

BY BETH SERGENT

Hatchlings provide lessons,
entertainment·to kindergarten

LT 1042
LALW TAAC1Vtl
• 4Z" '-r-duty twin-blldo

PiiUe-,_iLAS

BSERGENTOMYOAILYSENDNELCOM

POMEROY
lmprovemenJs to the Court
Street mini-park, beautifi~
cation of downtown, and
the seasonal opener of the
summer festival season
were among the topics discussed at Tuesday s meetPomeroy
ing of the
Merchants Association.
John Musser, president,
reponed that itistalling
electricity in the mini-park
will cost about $1 ,200
according to electrician Ed
knnedy WOO will an the
work:. The Association
voied to pay for installing
.
.llrllln J. Rulllphcllo
the electncity once village
Gus
Kennedy
and
Haley
Burton,
kinde~garten
students
in
Julie
Spaun's
classroom at
use of the park is clarified
Eastern
Elemental}'
School,
check
on
14
hatchling
chicks
in
an
incubator.
The
chicks· and
with the new owner.
Tentative plans also call for the eggs they came in have been closely wl!-tched as part of a life stages experiment, and
erecting a stage since some have been a point of interest for the students and the whole school.
festival performances take
place in the park.
It was noted that floral
plantings in the downtown
area are being completed
and the baskets 16 he· hung
on the period lamps will be
BY .BfiAN J. REED
was Day 21, but the first set up the living experigoing up soon.
BAEEOO MYDAILYSENTIN!'LCOM
chick, Petunia, popped out ment. The 4-H program
The new burnished gold
of
her shell Monday night. purchased the compact
ornamental hulbs with an
TUPPERS
PLAJNS
Two
more followed, and incubator and Gary and
etching of the new bridge
are
three
new
friends
There
several
others were begin- Sh&lt;U'On Michael of Chester
now under construction
Spaun's
kinderin
Julie
ning to pick away at their provided the fertilized eggs
with a completion date of
at
Eastern
garten
class
shells during the school from their poultry farm. A
2009 are in and for sale at
Elementary
School:
Petunia,
day
yesterday. One yet to 4-H classroom curriculum
$8 each or three for $20.
Giggles
and
Wiggles.
There
hatch
has already been was used in the lessons.
They are available at
named: Baby Bob. . Big
The project is . part of a
Farmers Bank and Peoples are more on the.way, too as
soon
as
they
hatch.
Bird
is still nestled in his study unil on life stages,
Bank as , well as the Meigs
For 20 days, the young stu- shell, too. He is so named which has also included
Chamber of Commerce
dents
have been patiently because . his egg is th~ experiments with caterpiloffice and in several downwaiting for 14 chicks to largest in the incubator.
lars and butterflies and tad'town businesses.
hatch
from their eggs. They
Cass1e Turner, 4-H Agent poles and frogs, Spaun said.
As for the frrst festival of
the season, Bill Quickel, are being kept snug and with the Meigs County In addition to the science
Extension ieaming the project has prochairinan of the Gold Wings Wii11II at a steady I 00 degrees Cooperative
in
a
tabletop
incubator.
Service,
has
worked
with vided, Spaun hilS also incorand Ribs Festival, reported
It takes three weeks for Spaun and staff in the
Phaw - M•cl!• Is. AS chicks to batch. Tuesday kindergarten classroom to Pieaw - HMddlllp. A5

students.

Roberts said the purchase
will save the street department 56 man days during
the summer mowing season.
6erlach discussed a proposal to share a water truck
with
tbe
Village of
Pomeroy. The truck will be
equipped with a water tank,
and will be used to water
flower plantings and trees in
the two shopping district.

Chamber
hears about
updates on
sewage rules

HOEFLICH OMYOAILYSENTlNEL.COM

~

.....,..-.n

an

was open to outside prison- could .be
officer alreadY. .
ers by contract, it generated on staff who is trained in ja!l
approximately $35,000.
operations.
The jail has been used
Otber busineSs
only for Middleport inmates
Village Administrator
since the suicides of two Famin Roberts discussed
inmates houst;d there sc;val efforts to cut grass on vilyears ago, because the lage_property, and council
insurance provider would ·approved the purchase of a
not cover outside rrisoners. Sickle-bar mowing attachMayor Michae Gerlach ment for use in cutting
said a jail administrator grass at . the sewer lagoon
must be trained and on staff, and the perimeter of village
but said that administrator cemetenes.

BY CHARLENE HOEFLICH

hOiiiOr.

• ..._ . . I 'I

liability insurance provider
will cover the jail's operation not only for prisoners
of the Middleport Police
Departinent, l;lut from other
law enforcement jurisdictions, too.
Doiilg so would generate
considerable income for the
village. Baker said the village now pays $65 per day
to house a prisoner in the;
county jail or other facilities. In the last year the jail

for festival
season

·"'R-

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prepanng

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Merchants
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BREEDOMYOAILYSENTINELCOM

::C..IeamS

ltZT 10
lfiO-TUitM RIDER
• 50" r..lirw kipll blad 3-ift-1 RIOIIiiC4ocl

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Middleport may open jail to outside prisoners

SPORTS

Mariners' small crowds could grow With .Gritfey

• Qllt!U[

Troops hike to
quake-buried
Chinese Villages, A6

... IIIIW ~ tliiiiSQO-l'-169 ·1

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Slnlh Saleh EJ.08bllja ·

Southertt118111es valedictorians, salutatorians
BY Bent SEAOENT
BSEAGENTeMYIJA!LYSENTINEL.COM

RACINE
-Lindsey
Renee Buzzard' of Racine,
Sarah Saleh El-Dabaja of
Racine and Courtney Lee
Ginthe~ Ponland have
been namM Co-valedictorians of the Southern High
School Class of 2008.
Buizaj:d is the daughter of
Rick Buzzard and Marcia
and Brian Weaver, ElDabaja is the daughter of

Saleh and Vicky El-Dabaj;t,
Ginther is the daughter of
Jeff and Cindy Ginther. ·
This .year's eo-salutatorians are Ryan
Keith
Chapman . of Sytacuse and
Kayl)ln Renee Spradling of
Racine. Chapman is the son
ofCT and Tammy Cbapm1111
while Spradling is tile
daughter of Jerry and
CbarmeJe Spradling.
Buzzard plans on attending Ohio University in the
fall, studying pre-med to

~ventually become a physisistently participated ~stu­
cian's assistant. She said she dent council. She ·itlso
chose the fkld because of played softball and was
the many job opportunities active in the prom commitand the fact it's competitive tee. She was also a cheerand exciting.
leader for the first three
By receiving a 32 on the years of high school.
ACT, Buzzard received the
"My graduation speech is
Gateway ~ Excellence themed &lt;U'Ound people we
Scholarship at OU , 9ualify- should thank and a few
ing her for full m-state things that I think will help
tuition.
the class of 2008 along the1r
During ·her years at journey, no maner where it
Southern. Buzzard has been leads them," Buzzard said.
class president and has conEl-Dabaja
plans
on

attending Ohio University
in the fall where she plans to
double major in civil engineering and mathematics.
"I chose civil engintering ·
as my major because it is
the application of physics
and math, two subjecls that
I really enjoyed throughout
sahool," she said.
,..S.o far El-Dabaja hm•
reEI:ived the Gatewray
Scholarship from ou and

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�Page~

LOCAL • STATE

The Daily Sentinel

Wednesday, May 14, 2008

..

.B YTHEBEND

}:he Daily Sentinel

· Community Calendar
really like to try womng
again. I understand Social
Security's Ticket to Work
might let me go. to work
without endangering my
benefits. What can you tell
me
about it?
Question: I understand :
Answer: Ticket to Work
that to get Social Security
is
a voluntary program that
disability benefits, my disoffers
disabled Social
ability must be expected to
Security
and Supplemental
last at least a year. Does
Security
Income
(SSI) benthis mean that I must wait a
year after becoming dis- eficiaries a variety of choicabled . before I can receiwe es in obtaining the support
and services they need to
benefits?
·
Answer: No. You do not help them go to work and
have to wait a year ·after achieve their employment
becoming disabled to receive goals. If you receive Social
Disability
disability benefits. You . Security
Insurance
or
SSI benefits
should apply for disability
benefits as soon as you based on disability or blindbecome disabled since it can ness and would · like to
take some time for a decision. work; this program can help
The best way to apply is you get vocational rehabilionline at www.socialsecuri- tation, training, job referty.gov/applyfordisability•. If rals, and o,ther ongoing supyour application is approved, port and services to do so,
your frrst Social Security dis- For more information, visit
website
at
ability benefits will be paid our
www.socialsecurity.gov/wo
for the sixth full month after
the date your disability rk or call us toll-free at 1began. To be eligible, your 800-772-1213 (TIY 1-800.
disability has to be severe 325-0778).
Question:
Are
enough to prevent you from
Supplemental
Security
wortting, and be expected to
Income benefits taxable?
last at least a year or end in
Answer:
No,
death. For more information ·
Supplementll . Security
about Social Security, visit
Question: What · is the ln,come (SSO payments are
www.social se~ urity.gov or
call us toll-free at 1-800-772- difference between Social not subject to federal taxes,
1213 (1TY 1-800-325-0178). Security disability and SSI so you ·wiD not receive an
annual form SSA-1099.
disability?
Answer:
The
Social
However, if you. receive
Question: I am receiving
disability benefits. I would Security Administnition is Social Security benefits
BY EUZASElll CRUll
SOCIAl SECURITY
M"""'GER. ATHENS

Disability

they may be subject 'to
Wah lay-Partly sunny
income tax. For more information, visit our website at with a slight chance of showwww.socialsecurity.gov or ers in die · moming ...Then
call us toll-free at 1-800- cloudy with showers likely
7nl213 (lTY I-800-325- with a chance of thunderstorms in the afternoon.
0778).
Highs around 70. Southwest
winds 10 to 15 mph. Chance
of min 70 peroenl
We~h 1•y eight Mostly
cloudy. A chance of -showers
and thunderstorms in the
evening...Tben a chance of
showers after midnight.
Lows in the mid 50s. West
winds 5 to 10 mph. Oiance of
rain 50 percent
Thursday-Mostly cloudy
with a 20 pen:ent chance of
rain. Highs in the upper 60s.
Northeast winds around 5

Medical

Supplemental
Security income

Baptist wom~n celebrate Mother's Day
future generations.
MIDDLEPORT
Members and their guests
Women of the First Baptist
Church of Middleport held atteodin$ the holiday celetheir annual Mothers' Day . bration m tbe church feldinner on Friday evening, lowship hall were Glenna
Riebel, Pam and Andrea
May 2.
Betty ' 1 Reed,
Trudy Lyons introduced Buckley,
speal(er, Heather Crystal
the
Hood,
Marcy
Finlaw
Snyder,
who Wyatt, Judy Stewart, Sarah
emphasized in both words Fowler, Martha King,
and music the importance Juanita . Griffith, Tina
of recording family histo- Wolfe, Trudy .and Aubree·
ry to be passed down to Lyons? Connie I.ohnson,

Denise Stewart, Venedia Chase King sanJl a song. A ·
McCloud, LeAnne and drawing was beld for five·
Brittany Young, Sandra floral centerpieces which
Sutherland, Faye Wallace, were won by Tma Wolfe,
Wanda Shank, Cindy Crystal Hood, Mary Jane
Harten bach,
Heather Curtis, Venedia McCloud,
Snyder, Naomi King, Kathy ; and lfe;tther Snyder.
Johnson, Marie Snyder,
At the mom in? church
Brynda Faulk, Nina Faulk, · service on Mother s Day. in
Jodi · and Chase King, Jo!IJl addition to six. hanging basNease,
and
Tex.anna kets of flowers, begonias
Wehrung.
were presented to each of
Following the dinner .tbe women attending.

'"l(!'bursday . nigbt.••Rain

likely. Lows in the UpPer
40s. · Northeast wmds
around 5 mph. Cbance of
rain 70 percent.
friday••• Mostly cloudy
with a 50 percent cbance Hf
showers. Highs in the· mid

.

~- .

Friday nigbt.•• Mostly'
cloudy. Lows in the UpPer
40s.
Saturday-Partly sunny in
the moming ...Then becoming mostJy cloudy. A 50 percent chance of showers.
Highs in the lower 60s.
Saturday nigbt...Showers
likely. Lows in the upper
40s. Chance of min 60 percent.
..
Stmday••.Cloudy with •a
50 percent chance of showers. Highs in the {ower 60s.

Rotary Qub and. the Meigs
County ABtE program of
the Athens-Metgs . educational Service Center.
The dinner will be held at
6 p.m. in tbe cafeteria of
Meigs High School. An
awards program will be

.

.

.

ltBI (NYSE} - 43.77
Abo (NASDAQ) -Ill
MIUnd Inc. (NYSE)- 56.94
Big ...... (NYSE)- 28.75
Bab
(NASDAQ)- 21.11
BcwgWwra (NYSE)-:-- 5357
Cenluly Aluminum (NASDAQ)

e-

-74..'¥1
a.npian (NASDAQ)- 4.91
a..mlng ~(NASDAQ)5A3
Cly Httatdllotclrtatg (NASDAQ) 42.11
Collins (NYSE) - 64.&amp;1
DuPont (NYSE) -:- 48.01
a.nl&lt; (NYSE) - 32.19
Gawoall (NYSE)- 30.64
Ga•lll El&amp;ctllc (NYSE) 32.33
~-011~ (NYSE)-

student Ronald Hendrickson
of aggravated murder. He
was accused of stabbing 21year old 1odi Blanlrenship ·
14 times in April 2007 at the
rental home they shared.
Hendrickson's attorneys
1:\a:ve said h~ was stabbed
first
· Hendrickson, of Da}'ton,
was sentenced. immediately

for..,

.

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Clubs and
organizations

Wednesday, May 14
POMEROY
- Meigs
· County Departntent of Jobs
. Wednesday, May 14
and Family Services, infor· MIDDLEPORT
mational meeting on how to
Middleport Literary Club, become
a
licensed
noon luncheon with instal- foster/adoptive pareot, 6-7
lation of new officers at the p.m., Pomeroy Library.

• fiEMn ,............ '

Corp. (MAS8BT (NYSE) _ 34.88
.,_pin (NASDAQ)- 23.90
Peplllco (NYSE)- 67,25
PnM11ilr (NASDAQ) -12.10
Rockall (NYSE)- 55.35 ·
Rocky Boola (NASDAQ)~~~~ Dull:h Shelt-IO.OS
Holding (HASOAQ)-

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from Ohio University in
1967 with a bachelor's
degree in ·organizational
communication. The Santa
Rosa Beach, Ha.-resident is
tbe fouoderandformerCEO
.of CellXion, which services
.the wireless telecommunications industry.

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.Marriage _can be-rebuilt if he behaves
: 'RUTLAND
Student Princes.
: Scholarships of $2,000
Barnes will be attending
: Gch from the Linnie B. the . University
. of
· Thylor Scholarship Fund Cincinnati where he will be
: have been awarded to two enrolled in the criminal jus. students in the Meigs High tice prograin and will grad: School graduating class of uate with a bachelor's
· 2008.
degree of science after
: · The scholarships were which he ·will pursue a
' awarded
to
Cassady career in law enforcement.
· : Willford, son of Ray and
The scholarship fund was
· Kimberly Willford and to ·created in 1974 under the
. Jacob Barnes, son of David will of the late Linnie B.
;Barnes and Lorri Lightle. . . Taylor to assist children
•:.:. Willford
has
been who live in Rutland to~
accepted to Heidel berg a college education. Mr.
; College in Tiffin and will Taylor was a school teacher
~pursue a degree in teaching and many students have
1 and~ intervention and will benefited from the fund she
•
: play football for the established.
•
.
. - - - - - - - -- - - -- - - -

lChester Council meets

,

; CHESTER - Memorial
! Day services at the ceme: tery were discussed .and
:members were reminded to
: be there in white when tbe
~Chester
Council
323,
; Daughters of America, met
: recently at the hall. .
: Laura Mae Nice presided
·at the meeting which
:·opened with pledges to· the
:christian and American
; flags , scripture reading
; Lord's Prayer in unison and
j singing of the National
: Anthem.
~ lt was reported that Doris
Grueser is home from the
. hospital after hip surgery. A
; thank you note . was read
: from
Kathy
Willis.

tl.otnt ~lta,ant l\egt~ttr •
and Daily Sentinel

•

'•

'

MARIETTA (AP) - . A Cletiunon~. 64, both of
husband and wife from Culbnan~ Ala., died 'when
Alabama were the victims their Q35 Bonanza crashed
of a small plane crash in .Monday In a remote wooded
southeast Ohio, the ,.State .area 'of Morgan ,County, the
. Highway
Patrol
said patrol post in Marietta said.
·A dispatcher received a
Tuesi:lay.
.
·Jll!.illip B. Clemmons, 6S, phone call about 1:35. p.m.
wJio was piloting the plane, ~onday asking for h.elp
100. liis wife, Patricia locating the plane, · -a

.

Members were reminded of
a dinner at the next meeting
with reservations to · be
made.
·
Mother' s Day readings
included Mother's Day tribute by Esther Smith,
Whoelse but a Mother by
Esther Smith, Mama's
Kitchen by Julie Heming.
Mothers were presented
flowers. Attending were
Mary Holter, Sandy White,
Gary Holter, Ruth Smith,
Helen Wolf, Charlotte
· Grant, Opal Hollon, Esther.
Smith, Laura. Mae Nice,
Thelma White, Everett
Grant. M.arg~; Fetty, Julie
Heming, and a guest,
Richard White.

BY KATHY MITCHELL
AND MARCY SuGAR

Dear Annie: I had this
vague feeling something
was wrong with my marri.age so I decided to.Iook at
my husband's cell phone
call log . Imagine my surprise to discover a .text
message from a woman.
Her number showed up in
three months' worth of
phone bills.
,
I showed him what I
found and we talked most of
the night. My husband
agreed to let ''Lena" know
the relationship was over
and said he would have no
more contact with her. I
believed him.
Ten days later, after having been told we had no
money for Valentine's gifts,
I .found a receipt for a $500
diamond bracelet. When I
confronted my husband, he
said he felt sorry for Lena
·because she didn't have any
jewelry. He told me he
would not see her again and
would let tbe jeweler cal!
Lena to pick up the bracelet.
Two weeks after ·that, I
discovered him holding
hands with Lena at a local
restaurant. Apparently, he
decided to pick up tbe
bracelet and deliver it in
person . I confronted them,
and they assured me it was
just friendship.
I am so devastated, it
physically hurts. I love my
husband with all my heart
and he claims he loves only
me: I w.ant so much to have

faith in him. Do we have a
shot at building back the
trust in this 13-year mar- ·
riage?- Kentucky Girl
Dear Kentucky Girl:
You can rebuild trust, but
only if your husband ·
behaves in a manner that is
completely abovebo&amp;rd. He
must stop seeing Lena, and
that means no friendly
lunches, no gifts of any
kind, no phone calls, nothing. She d?esn't own any
Jewelry? Gtve us a break..
Tell him as a condiliion of
staying' in the marriage, he
mu.st go with you for ~un­
seling .---no excuses will be
accepted.
Dar ADDie· I have been
separated from my husband
for two years. There are six.
nieces and nephews on my
~usband's side, ages 11 to 17.
I v~ ~own these children all
therr lives and constder tbem
family. For their birthdays
and Christmas, I always send
them cards and gifts. .
~y . mother and stster
think I should not buy them
gifts anymore, as they are
no longer "my family.:· Am
I ·wrooe; to still_ consider
the~;e kids my meces and
nephews? What do other
.people do?
Regardless of what you
say, I will continue to do
this becau~;e I want to, not
because I have to . Canada
Dear, Canada: Good for
you. If you are dose to
these children and consider
them to be your nieces and
nephews, then that is the

relationship and you should
honor it. It's no one else's
business.
Dear Annie: I am writing
in response to "Frustrated
Mother," who complained
that her son has high scores
on standardized tests but is
failing his classes due to
incomplete .assignments.
One of your . suggestions
was that the mother ask his
teachers to provide extra
credit to make up for miss·
ing assignments.
I am a middle school
teacher, and I would never
offer extra work to students
.to make up for other
assignillerits they have not
completed. I accept late
work, and he could make
up old work for a reduced
grade. Many parents do nm
realize that my job is not
just to teach math and science, but also to teach
social, communication and
organizational· ·skills, to
name a few. Students need
to realize the consequences
of not l)erng responsible for
themselves.
Teachers
should not have to make up

additional assignments for ·
these students. - Middle
School Teacher, lllinois
Dear Teacher: You make
a valid point that students
must learn responsibility,
but homework can sometimes be tedious and repetitious, especially to students
who are ·bright enough to
be ahead of the material.
We know a teacher's burden is already · great. but
those caring teachers who
can reach students by being
flexible and creative make
a positive impression that
lasts a lifetime.
Annie·~ Mailbox i~ written by Kathy MitcheU and
Marcy Sugar, longtime editors {}! the Ann I..JJnders
column. Please e-mail your.
questioar to -ies.ailbo:r@comcast.r~et. or wriu
to: Annie's Mailbox, P.O.
Box 118190, Chicago, IL
60611. To find ouJ more
about Annie's Mailbox,
and read features by other
Creators Syndicate writers
and cartoonists, l'isit the
Creators SyndictiU Web

page oJ www.creators.com.

Her
life

3.30% A.P.Y.'

tltbt ~a:llipolis ma:Hp Qtribunt
Pomeroy Daily Sentinel
t)otnt ~lta:sa:n.t 1\t~tisttr
will be publisbing its'

•

IS

being
torn

apart.

2M

Care

spo~esmao said. The fu~;e­
lage and ·one wing. were
fotmd late Monday after-

Jacob Sames

:· ~------~~----------~
InJune

llailp tlr:ribune

· Alabama couplt1 di~~ in Ohio plane ~h·

Canady Willford

~~-. Taylor Scholarships .
~awarded to MRS students

11.'¥1
Noifulk Soutlwn (NYSEJ-

g::1v.;: a.nc

ANNIE'S MAILBOX
' '-

311.01

.

N!iddl~port Mayor Mike Gerlaclt:ldcked oil National Nursing Home Week with a speech abolll Middleport and the contribution Ove111rook Rehabilitation Center makes to the ciJmmunity. Residents, staff and visitors also enjoyed a flag folding
and POW/MIA ceremony presented by the Mason County VFW. National Nursing Home Week is being celebrated this
week and Overbrook invites the co.mmunity to participate in the daily events. Pictured are Overbrook resident and Veteran
Emest Bush, West ~ir:ginia State VFW Commander Robert Caruthers , Overbrook family member and Veteran Charles
Bush, Mason VFW Post Commander Ray Varian and Middleport Mayor Mike Gerlach .

fiiYIICiallldlliiOI'S . _ IIIII.:
in Galllpolil st (740}.441444t
81111 l.-ley ..... o In Paint •
PI Ill -ut13114)174-0174.. '
•• tillel SIPC.

held immediately following ·
the dinner.
Those planning to attend
are asked to register by
May 30 by calling the
Pomeroy Office of the
Athens-Meigs ESC at 740992-5592.

after the jury announced
their verdict.
IJlankenship, of Burton,
had
graduated . from ·
Hocking College's culinary
arts program and returned to
the school for a degree in .
hotel and restaurant management. ·
Hendrickson was studying to become a park ranger.

Other events

4:

JP IICMa-1 (NYSE)..:. 45.48 ·
KJoger (NYSE)- a.n
IJmlled .........(NYSE)-"-

College student gets life for killing ex-girlfriend
ATHENS (AP) A
southeast Ohio college student has been sentenced to
life in prison with possibility of parole after 30 years
for fatally stabbing his former girlfriend with a foldiqg ,penknife. ,
An Athens County jury on
Monday night convicted 22year old Hocking College

Wednesday, May 14
SYRACUSE - Syracuse
Village Council ordinance
.oomminee meeting and spe...cial council meeting, beginning 6 p.ni, village hall,
. special meeting about lawn.JI!OWer repairs, backstop at
ballfield, pool matters.

... 11"111 (NYSE)- 5&amp;.15
:
We11dy'a (NYSE)- 'Z1.11 . •
Wi1s88nc:0 (NYSE)- 22.14 . :
Warthlngton CN\'SE) -11,81
o.lly stock ........ - . .
p.m. ET clOSing CJ* • of : ·
-..actions
13, . .
protrided by EdiNnl--- . •

us

eu2

Overbrook celebrates National Nursing Home Week

·Subm-piiGto

Ohio University alumnus gives $7jM
ATHENS (AP) - Ohio university · from a living
. University says it will alumnus. It wiU go toward a
receive a $7.5 million dona- planned new building for
tion from alumnus Steven the Scripps College · of
Schoonover and his wife, Communication, which will
house the colft:ge's five
Barbara.
The Oniversity in Athens ,schools and the WOU~
in southeast Ohio says the ; Center for Public Media.
gift is the largest evei' to the
Schoonover graduated ·

.

.~'

Wednesday, May 14, zooS

clubhouse of the Riverside
Golf Club in Mason, W. Va.
Thursday, May l5
CHESTER Meigs
County Retired Teachet's at .
the Chester Courthouse
noon for luncheon and tour
of newly -renovated Chester
Academy. Caii992-J2I4 by
Tuesday for reservations.

Local Stocks

Recognitioa dinna .tO honorABLE students
POMEROY- The annual recognition dinner for
students enrolled in the
Meigs County Adult Basic
Education Program will he
held Monday, June 9.
The event is sponsored by
the Middleport-Pomeroy

.. Pub6c meetinw;

PageA3

11'111

noon.
The patrol had no ,details
on the cra5h.. Tbe Federal
Aviation · · Administration
the
National
and
Transportati_o n . ~afety
~ were mvesttgating.

l

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..• 'GALLIA • MASON
• &amp; MEIGS COUNTIES
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16,2111

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-

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1-800 468-6682

''ill he
in the papers
on l\laY. 18th

www.ovbc.com

--

There are currently not enough foster or
adoptive homes in our county. Children are
being forced to go to homes outside our area,
leaving school, tea~rs•. and friends behind ..

Call to ott. JOII' Mlp,• y•INI••·

99l&lt;ARE
.....................
-~·~,_. __ ..,!._, ••;;;;T.

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Ch!ktren 't SeMaH ~••on

,

P.O. Bta~: 191 • 175 Rloe Street • Middleport. OH 45760

· : o.dliDe for entries is 4 p.111. on Jue 4; 2008
: Pleale allow 5 to 7 days if ••line your enti'Hs.
•

and click 1he blue bullon.

WiTHOUT rnE

OHIO VALLEY BANK.

l~allots

.

· Smllal Now you can_, !he picture of that u~
moment 9BP1Ured in the ntN:"Bpaper. Pholoa become tim aI
·-framed Of' pri-.t on a mug .o r moo.. pad.

CD RATES

Open a Maric:et-Watch now and get a 3.25%
Interest Rate (3.30% A.P.Y.) for the first 180 days
(6 months), After 180 days, ,current rates apply.

J

llln'l. . . . .
·•111111111

Ill

EARN

www.992CAREMEIGS.com

..

�Page~

LOCAL • STATE

The Daily Sentinel

Wednesday, May 14, 2008

..

.B YTHEBEND

}:he Daily Sentinel

· Community Calendar
really like to try womng
again. I understand Social
Security's Ticket to Work
might let me go. to work
without endangering my
benefits. What can you tell
me
about it?
Question: I understand :
Answer: Ticket to Work
that to get Social Security
is
a voluntary program that
disability benefits, my disoffers
disabled Social
ability must be expected to
Security
and Supplemental
last at least a year. Does
Security
Income
(SSI) benthis mean that I must wait a
year after becoming dis- eficiaries a variety of choicabled . before I can receiwe es in obtaining the support
and services they need to
benefits?
·
Answer: No. You do not help them go to work and
have to wait a year ·after achieve their employment
becoming disabled to receive goals. If you receive Social
Disability
disability benefits. You . Security
Insurance
or
SSI benefits
should apply for disability
benefits as soon as you based on disability or blindbecome disabled since it can ness and would · like to
take some time for a decision. work; this program can help
The best way to apply is you get vocational rehabilionline at www.socialsecuri- tation, training, job referty.gov/applyfordisability•. If rals, and o,ther ongoing supyour application is approved, port and services to do so,
your frrst Social Security dis- For more information, visit
website
at
ability benefits will be paid our
www.socialsecurity.gov/wo
for the sixth full month after
the date your disability rk or call us toll-free at 1began. To be eligible, your 800-772-1213 (TIY 1-800.
disability has to be severe 325-0778).
Question:
Are
enough to prevent you from
Supplemental
Security
wortting, and be expected to
Income benefits taxable?
last at least a year or end in
Answer:
No,
death. For more information ·
Supplementll . Security
about Social Security, visit
Question: What · is the ln,come (SSO payments are
www.social se~ urity.gov or
call us toll-free at 1-800-772- difference between Social not subject to federal taxes,
1213 (1TY 1-800-325-0178). Security disability and SSI so you ·wiD not receive an
annual form SSA-1099.
disability?
Answer:
The
Social
However, if you. receive
Question: I am receiving
disability benefits. I would Security Administnition is Social Security benefits
BY EUZASElll CRUll
SOCIAl SECURITY
M"""'GER. ATHENS

Disability

they may be subject 'to
Wah lay-Partly sunny
income tax. For more information, visit our website at with a slight chance of showwww.socialsecurity.gov or ers in die · moming ...Then
call us toll-free at 1-800- cloudy with showers likely
7nl213 (lTY I-800-325- with a chance of thunderstorms in the afternoon.
0778).
Highs around 70. Southwest
winds 10 to 15 mph. Chance
of min 70 peroenl
We~h 1•y eight Mostly
cloudy. A chance of -showers
and thunderstorms in the
evening...Tben a chance of
showers after midnight.
Lows in the mid 50s. West
winds 5 to 10 mph. Oiance of
rain 50 percent
Thursday-Mostly cloudy
with a 20 pen:ent chance of
rain. Highs in the upper 60s.
Northeast winds around 5

Medical

Supplemental
Security income

Baptist wom~n celebrate Mother's Day
future generations.
MIDDLEPORT
Members and their guests
Women of the First Baptist
Church of Middleport held atteodin$ the holiday celetheir annual Mothers' Day . bration m tbe church feldinner on Friday evening, lowship hall were Glenna
Riebel, Pam and Andrea
May 2.
Betty ' 1 Reed,
Trudy Lyons introduced Buckley,
speal(er, Heather Crystal
the
Hood,
Marcy
Finlaw
Snyder,
who Wyatt, Judy Stewart, Sarah
emphasized in both words Fowler, Martha King,
and music the importance Juanita . Griffith, Tina
of recording family histo- Wolfe, Trudy .and Aubree·
ry to be passed down to Lyons? Connie I.ohnson,

Denise Stewart, Venedia Chase King sanJl a song. A ·
McCloud, LeAnne and drawing was beld for five·
Brittany Young, Sandra floral centerpieces which
Sutherland, Faye Wallace, were won by Tma Wolfe,
Wanda Shank, Cindy Crystal Hood, Mary Jane
Harten bach,
Heather Curtis, Venedia McCloud,
Snyder, Naomi King, Kathy ; and lfe;tther Snyder.
Johnson, Marie Snyder,
At the mom in? church
Brynda Faulk, Nina Faulk, · service on Mother s Day. in
Jodi · and Chase King, Jo!IJl addition to six. hanging basNease,
and
Tex.anna kets of flowers, begonias
Wehrung.
were presented to each of
Following the dinner .tbe women attending.

'"l(!'bursday . nigbt.••Rain

likely. Lows in the UpPer
40s. · Northeast wmds
around 5 mph. Cbance of
rain 70 percent.
friday••• Mostly cloudy
with a 50 percent cbance Hf
showers. Highs in the· mid

.

~- .

Friday nigbt.•• Mostly'
cloudy. Lows in the UpPer
40s.
Saturday-Partly sunny in
the moming ...Then becoming mostJy cloudy. A 50 percent chance of showers.
Highs in the lower 60s.
Saturday nigbt...Showers
likely. Lows in the upper
40s. Chance of min 60 percent.
..
Stmday••.Cloudy with •a
50 percent chance of showers. Highs in the {ower 60s.

Rotary Qub and. the Meigs
County ABtE program of
the Athens-Metgs . educational Service Center.
The dinner will be held at
6 p.m. in tbe cafeteria of
Meigs High School. An
awards program will be

.

.

.

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Abo (NASDAQ) -Ill
MIUnd Inc. (NYSE)- 56.94
Big ...... (NYSE)- 28.75
Bab
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BcwgWwra (NYSE)-:-- 5357
Cenluly Aluminum (NASDAQ)

e-

-74..'¥1
a.npian (NASDAQ)- 4.91
a..mlng ~(NASDAQ)5A3
Cly Httatdllotclrtatg (NASDAQ) 42.11
Collins (NYSE) - 64.&amp;1
DuPont (NYSE) -:- 48.01
a.nl&lt; (NYSE) - 32.19
Gawoall (NYSE)- 30.64
Ga•lll El&amp;ctllc (NYSE) 32.33
~-011~ (NYSE)-

student Ronald Hendrickson
of aggravated murder. He
was accused of stabbing 21year old 1odi Blanlrenship ·
14 times in April 2007 at the
rental home they shared.
Hendrickson's attorneys
1:\a:ve said h~ was stabbed
first
· Hendrickson, of Da}'ton,
was sentenced. immediately

for..,

.

:

'

..

~

Clubs and
organizations

Wednesday, May 14
POMEROY
- Meigs
· County Departntent of Jobs
. Wednesday, May 14
and Family Services, infor· MIDDLEPORT
mational meeting on how to
Middleport Literary Club, become
a
licensed
noon luncheon with instal- foster/adoptive pareot, 6-7
lation of new officers at the p.m., Pomeroy Library.

• fiEMn ,............ '

Corp. (MAS8BT (NYSE) _ 34.88
.,_pin (NASDAQ)- 23.90
Peplllco (NYSE)- 67,25
PnM11ilr (NASDAQ) -12.10
Rockall (NYSE)- 55.35 ·
Rocky Boola (NASDAQ)~~~~ Dull:h Shelt-IO.OS
Holding (HASOAQ)-

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from Ohio University in
1967 with a bachelor's
degree in ·organizational
communication. The Santa
Rosa Beach, Ha.-resident is
tbe fouoderandformerCEO
.of CellXion, which services
.the wireless telecommunications industry.

.
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ciallipolt~

.Marriage _can be-rebuilt if he behaves
: 'RUTLAND
Student Princes.
: Scholarships of $2,000
Barnes will be attending
: Gch from the Linnie B. the . University
. of
· Thylor Scholarship Fund Cincinnati where he will be
: have been awarded to two enrolled in the criminal jus. students in the Meigs High tice prograin and will grad: School graduating class of uate with a bachelor's
· 2008.
degree of science after
: · The scholarships were which he ·will pursue a
' awarded
to
Cassady career in law enforcement.
· : Willford, son of Ray and
The scholarship fund was
· Kimberly Willford and to ·created in 1974 under the
. Jacob Barnes, son of David will of the late Linnie B.
;Barnes and Lorri Lightle. . . Taylor to assist children
•:.:. Willford
has
been who live in Rutland to~
accepted to Heidel berg a college education. Mr.
; College in Tiffin and will Taylor was a school teacher
~pursue a degree in teaching and many students have
1 and~ intervention and will benefited from the fund she
•
: play football for the established.
•
.
. - - - - - - - -- - - -- - - -

lChester Council meets

,

; CHESTER - Memorial
! Day services at the ceme: tery were discussed .and
:members were reminded to
: be there in white when tbe
~Chester
Council
323,
; Daughters of America, met
: recently at the hall. .
: Laura Mae Nice presided
·at the meeting which
:·opened with pledges to· the
:christian and American
; flags , scripture reading
; Lord's Prayer in unison and
j singing of the National
: Anthem.
~ lt was reported that Doris
Grueser is home from the
. hospital after hip surgery. A
; thank you note . was read
: from
Kathy
Willis.

tl.otnt ~lta,ant l\egt~ttr •
and Daily Sentinel

•

'•

'

MARIETTA (AP) - . A Cletiunon~. 64, both of
husband and wife from Culbnan~ Ala., died 'when
Alabama were the victims their Q35 Bonanza crashed
of a small plane crash in .Monday In a remote wooded
southeast Ohio, the ,.State .area 'of Morgan ,County, the
. Highway
Patrol
said patrol post in Marietta said.
·A dispatcher received a
Tuesi:lay.
.
·Jll!.illip B. Clemmons, 6S, phone call about 1:35. p.m.
wJio was piloting the plane, ~onday asking for h.elp
100. liis wife, Patricia locating the plane, · -a

.

Members were reminded of
a dinner at the next meeting
with reservations to · be
made.
·
Mother' s Day readings
included Mother's Day tribute by Esther Smith,
Whoelse but a Mother by
Esther Smith, Mama's
Kitchen by Julie Heming.
Mothers were presented
flowers. Attending were
Mary Holter, Sandy White,
Gary Holter, Ruth Smith,
Helen Wolf, Charlotte
· Grant, Opal Hollon, Esther.
Smith, Laura. Mae Nice,
Thelma White, Everett
Grant. M.arg~; Fetty, Julie
Heming, and a guest,
Richard White.

BY KATHY MITCHELL
AND MARCY SuGAR

Dear Annie: I had this
vague feeling something
was wrong with my marri.age so I decided to.Iook at
my husband's cell phone
call log . Imagine my surprise to discover a .text
message from a woman.
Her number showed up in
three months' worth of
phone bills.
,
I showed him what I
found and we talked most of
the night. My husband
agreed to let ''Lena" know
the relationship was over
and said he would have no
more contact with her. I
believed him.
Ten days later, after having been told we had no
money for Valentine's gifts,
I .found a receipt for a $500
diamond bracelet. When I
confronted my husband, he
said he felt sorry for Lena
·because she didn't have any
jewelry. He told me he
would not see her again and
would let tbe jeweler cal!
Lena to pick up the bracelet.
Two weeks after ·that, I
discovered him holding
hands with Lena at a local
restaurant. Apparently, he
decided to pick up tbe
bracelet and deliver it in
person . I confronted them,
and they assured me it was
just friendship.
I am so devastated, it
physically hurts. I love my
husband with all my heart
and he claims he loves only
me: I w.ant so much to have

faith in him. Do we have a
shot at building back the
trust in this 13-year mar- ·
riage?- Kentucky Girl
Dear Kentucky Girl:
You can rebuild trust, but
only if your husband ·
behaves in a manner that is
completely abovebo&amp;rd. He
must stop seeing Lena, and
that means no friendly
lunches, no gifts of any
kind, no phone calls, nothing. She d?esn't own any
Jewelry? Gtve us a break..
Tell him as a condiliion of
staying' in the marriage, he
mu.st go with you for ~un­
seling .---no excuses will be
accepted.
Dar ADDie· I have been
separated from my husband
for two years. There are six.
nieces and nephews on my
~usband's side, ages 11 to 17.
I v~ ~own these children all
therr lives and constder tbem
family. For their birthdays
and Christmas, I always send
them cards and gifts. .
~y . mother and stster
think I should not buy them
gifts anymore, as they are
no longer "my family.:· Am
I ·wrooe; to still_ consider
the~;e kids my meces and
nephews? What do other
.people do?
Regardless of what you
say, I will continue to do
this becau~;e I want to, not
because I have to . Canada
Dear, Canada: Good for
you. If you are dose to
these children and consider
them to be your nieces and
nephews, then that is the

relationship and you should
honor it. It's no one else's
business.
Dear Annie: I am writing
in response to "Frustrated
Mother," who complained
that her son has high scores
on standardized tests but is
failing his classes due to
incomplete .assignments.
One of your . suggestions
was that the mother ask his
teachers to provide extra
credit to make up for miss·
ing assignments.
I am a middle school
teacher, and I would never
offer extra work to students
.to make up for other
assignillerits they have not
completed. I accept late
work, and he could make
up old work for a reduced
grade. Many parents do nm
realize that my job is not
just to teach math and science, but also to teach
social, communication and
organizational· ·skills, to
name a few. Students need
to realize the consequences
of not l)erng responsible for
themselves.
Teachers
should not have to make up

additional assignments for ·
these students. - Middle
School Teacher, lllinois
Dear Teacher: You make
a valid point that students
must learn responsibility,
but homework can sometimes be tedious and repetitious, especially to students
who are ·bright enough to
be ahead of the material.
We know a teacher's burden is already · great. but
those caring teachers who
can reach students by being
flexible and creative make
a positive impression that
lasts a lifetime.
Annie·~ Mailbox i~ written by Kathy MitcheU and
Marcy Sugar, longtime editors {}! the Ann I..JJnders
column. Please e-mail your.
questioar to -ies.ailbo:r@comcast.r~et. or wriu
to: Annie's Mailbox, P.O.
Box 118190, Chicago, IL
60611. To find ouJ more
about Annie's Mailbox,
and read features by other
Creators Syndicate writers
and cartoonists, l'isit the
Creators SyndictiU Web

page oJ www.creators.com.

Her
life

3.30% A.P.Y.'

tltbt ~a:llipolis ma:Hp Qtribunt
Pomeroy Daily Sentinel
t)otnt ~lta:sa:n.t 1\t~tisttr
will be publisbing its'

•

IS

being
torn

apart.

2M

Care

spo~esmao said. The fu~;e­
lage and ·one wing. were
fotmd late Monday after-

Jacob Sames

:· ~------~~----------~
InJune

llailp tlr:ribune

· Alabama couplt1 di~~ in Ohio plane ~h·

Canady Willford

~~-. Taylor Scholarships .
~awarded to MRS students

11.'¥1
Noifulk Soutlwn (NYSEJ-

g::1v.;: a.nc

ANNIE'S MAILBOX
' '-

311.01

.

N!iddl~port Mayor Mike Gerlaclt:ldcked oil National Nursing Home Week with a speech abolll Middleport and the contribution Ove111rook Rehabilitation Center makes to the ciJmmunity. Residents, staff and visitors also enjoyed a flag folding
and POW/MIA ceremony presented by the Mason County VFW. National Nursing Home Week is being celebrated this
week and Overbrook invites the co.mmunity to participate in the daily events. Pictured are Overbrook resident and Veteran
Emest Bush, West ~ir:ginia State VFW Commander Robert Caruthers , Overbrook family member and Veteran Charles
Bush, Mason VFW Post Commander Ray Varian and Middleport Mayor Mike Gerlach .

fiiYIICiallldlliiOI'S . _ IIIII.:
in Galllpolil st (740}.441444t
81111 l.-ley ..... o In Paint •
PI Ill -ut13114)174-0174.. '
•• tillel SIPC.

held immediately following ·
the dinner.
Those planning to attend
are asked to register by
May 30 by calling the
Pomeroy Office of the
Athens-Meigs ESC at 740992-5592.

after the jury announced
their verdict.
IJlankenship, of Burton,
had
graduated . from ·
Hocking College's culinary
arts program and returned to
the school for a degree in .
hotel and restaurant management. ·
Hendrickson was studying to become a park ranger.

Other events

4:

JP IICMa-1 (NYSE)..:. 45.48 ·
KJoger (NYSE)- a.n
IJmlled .........(NYSE)-"-

College student gets life for killing ex-girlfriend
ATHENS (AP) A
southeast Ohio college student has been sentenced to
life in prison with possibility of parole after 30 years
for fatally stabbing his former girlfriend with a foldiqg ,penknife. ,
An Athens County jury on
Monday night convicted 22year old Hocking College

Wednesday, May 14
SYRACUSE - Syracuse
Village Council ordinance
.oomminee meeting and spe...cial council meeting, beginning 6 p.ni, village hall,
. special meeting about lawn.JI!OWer repairs, backstop at
ballfield, pool matters.

... 11"111 (NYSE)- 5&amp;.15
:
We11dy'a (NYSE)- 'Z1.11 . •
Wi1s88nc:0 (NYSE)- 22.14 . :
Warthlngton CN\'SE) -11,81
o.lly stock ........ - . .
p.m. ET clOSing CJ* • of : ·
-..actions
13, . .
protrided by EdiNnl--- . •

us

eu2

Overbrook celebrates National Nursing Home Week

·Subm-piiGto

Ohio University alumnus gives $7jM
ATHENS (AP) - Ohio university · from a living
. University says it will alumnus. It wiU go toward a
receive a $7.5 million dona- planned new building for
tion from alumnus Steven the Scripps College · of
Schoonover and his wife, Communication, which will
house the colft:ge's five
Barbara.
The Oniversity in Athens ,schools and the WOU~
in southeast Ohio says the ; Center for Public Media.
gift is the largest evei' to the
Schoonover graduated ·

.

.~'

Wednesday, May 14, zooS

clubhouse of the Riverside
Golf Club in Mason, W. Va.
Thursday, May l5
CHESTER Meigs
County Retired Teachet's at .
the Chester Courthouse
noon for luncheon and tour
of newly -renovated Chester
Academy. Caii992-J2I4 by
Tuesday for reservations.

Local Stocks

Recognitioa dinna .tO honorABLE students
POMEROY- The annual recognition dinner for
students enrolled in the
Meigs County Adult Basic
Education Program will he
held Monday, June 9.
The event is sponsored by
the Middleport-Pomeroy

.. Pub6c meetinw;

PageA3

11'111

noon.
The patrol had no ,details
on the cra5h.. Tbe Federal
Aviation · · Administration
the
National
and
Transportati_o n . ~afety
~ were mvesttgating.

l

I

. . 23.2111'

•

;~f -

•
•J

..• 'GALLIA • MASON
• &amp; MEIGS COUNTIES
'•

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Is
16,2111

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-

.' . '

..

•

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•

•

CO

1-800 468-6682

''ill he
in the papers
on l\laY. 18th

www.ovbc.com

--

There are currently not enough foster or
adoptive homes in our county. Children are
being forced to go to homes outside our area,
leaving school, tea~rs•. and friends behind ..

Call to ott. JOII' Mlp,• y•INI••·

99l&lt;ARE
.....................
-~·~,_. __ ..,!._, ••;;;;T.

~

Ch!ktren 't SeMaH ~••on

,

P.O. Bta~: 191 • 175 Rloe Street • Middleport. OH 45760

· : o.dliDe for entries is 4 p.111. on Jue 4; 2008
: Pleale allow 5 to 7 days if ••line your enti'Hs.
•

and click 1he blue bullon.

WiTHOUT rnE

OHIO VALLEY BANK.

l~allots

.

· Smllal Now you can_, !he picture of that u~
moment 9BP1Ured in the ntN:"Bpaper. Pholoa become tim aI
·-framed Of' pri-.t on a mug .o r moo.. pad.

CD RATES

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J

llln'l. . . . .
·•111111111

Ill

EARN

www.992CAREMEIGS.com

..

�OPINION

The Daily Sentinel

The Daily Sentinel
111 Court Staeet• ~.Ohio

(740) 992-2156 • FAX (740) 992-2157
www.mydlllly..rtlnel.com

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.

Dan Goodrich
Publisher

Chariene Hoeftich

General Manager-News Editor

COJJgms sludl fflltlet rw 14w ruputit~g an
ul4blislrmmt of rtligion, or prolribiting tltt
ftu ancist·thertof; or abri4ging tltt.frwlom
of spuclt, or of tht press; or tht right of tltt
peoplt peaeubly to asstmhlt, arul to petitUifl
tlu GoVft'ftffiLflt for a mlrus ofgrinatraS.
...:. The First Amendment to the U.S. Constitution

TODAY IN HISTORY

.I

Page.A:4

Today is Wednesday, May 14, the !35th day of 2008.
·
.
There are 231 days left in the year.
. Today's Highlight in History: On M~y 14, 1948, according to the common-era calendar, the mdependent state of
Israel was proclaimed in Tel Aviv.
.
.
On this date: In 1607, English colomsts went ashore m
Yrrginia to begin building a permanent settlement;· n~
Jamestown after England's King James I.
·
In 1643, Louis the XIV became King of France at age 4
upon the death of his father, Louis the xm.
'
In 1796, English physician Edward Jenner succeeded m
inoculating 8-year~ld James Phipps against smallpox by
using cowpox matter.
In 1804, the Lewis and Clark expedition to explore the
Louisiana Territory left camp near St. LOuis.
In 1900, the Olympic games opened in Paris; held as part
. of the World's Fair.
·
In 1942, · Congress voted to establish tbe Women's
Auxiliary Army Corps.
·
In 1942, Aaron Copland's "Lincoln Portrait'~ was first
performed, by the Cincinnati Symphony ·Orchestra.
In 1973, the United States launched Skylab 1, its fJTSt
~~~acestation.
.
Ten years ago: Singer-actor Frank Sinatra died at a Los
Angeles hospital .at age 82. The hit sitcom "Seinfeld" aired
its final episode after nine years on NBC.
Five years ago: Smugglers abandnned more than 100 illegal immigrants in a locked trailer at a .T~xas true~ s~; 19
people died In Cbecbnya, a female su1c1de bombmg killed
18 people in an apparent attempt on the life of the Moscowbacked chief administrator, Akhm.a d Kadyrov. Death
claimed actress Dame Wendy Hiller in Beaconsfield,
~}a:W, at age 90; actor Robert Stack in Beverly Hills,
• ~ 84~ alllll Bask;dball Hali-4-F.amer ·Dave
DeBusschere in New York at age 62.
.
One year ago: DaimletChrysler said it was selling almost
all of Chrysler to private equity firm Cerberus Capital
Management for $7.4 billion, backing out of a troubled
·1998 takeover. The trial of suspected ai•Qaida operative
Jose Padilla opened in Miami. (Padilla and two co-defendants were convicted last August of terrorism conspiracy;
Padilla was senf(:nced to 17 years in prison.)
Today's Birthdays: Opera singer Patrice Munsel is 83.
Rock singer-musician Jack Bruce (Cream) is 65. Movie producer George Lucas is 64: Actress Meg Foster is 60. Rock
singer David Byrne is 56. Movie director Robert lemeckis
is 56. Actor Tmi Roth is 47. Rock singCF lan Astbury (The
. Cult) is 46. Rock musician C.C. (aka Cecilj DeVille is 46,
Rock musician Mike Inez (Alice In Cbains) is 42. Fabrice
Morvan (ex-Milli Vanilli) is 42. Rhythm-and-blues singer
~I Saadiq is 42, Actress Cate Blanchett is 39. Singer
Danny Wood (New Kids on the .Block) is 39. Movie writerdirector Sofia Coppola is 37. Singer Sbanice is 35. Actress
Atnber Tamblyn is 25, Actress Miranda Cosgrove is l5.
· Thought for Today: "Ah. les bOns vieux ·temps ou nous
etions si malheureux!" ·coh, the good old times when we
were so unbappy!) _._French saying.

Wednesday, May 14, zooS

vote for justice
Anyone who follows
political md cultural news
knows elections matter.
John McCain drove this
. point bome earlier this
month in a speech about the
judiciary.
.
S~g at Wake Forest
Umversity, the Arizona
Republican senator chided
judges for blurring the lines.
between the branches of
government; for disrupting
the balance our founders
wisely drew up in their
constitutional blueprint for ·
our republic.
"In the shorthand of constitutional discourse, these
abuses by the courts fall
under the heading of 'judicial activism,"' McCain
said. But, he continued,
"real activists seek to make
their case democratically to win hearts, minds and
majorities to their cause.
Such people throoghout our
history have often shown
great idealism and done
great good. By contrast.
activist lawyers and activist
judges follow a different
method. They want to be
.spared the inconvenience of
campaigns, elections, legislative votes and all of that,
They do!T"t seek to win
debates on the merits of
their argument; they seek to
shut dnwn debates by order
of the court."
And, as a · campaign
booster, McCain couldn't
have better -enemies in this
battle agains\ judicial
'usurpation of American
democracy. Howard Dean,
chairman of tbe Democratic
National Committee, has
railed a~ainst McCain's .
"radical nght-wing judicial
philosophy." This should be
music to the McCain campaign's ears. In fact, they

Kathryn
Lopez

Should play it as a

,..,..,...,;gn .

--...-song when meeting with
conservatives, mimy who
still need to be oonvinced
they bave a: stake in sup-

porting his candidacy.
As Dean hammers at
McCain, be will be cam•
• ·
&amp;
di.da
pmgnmg .or a can
te
with a radical left-wing
· di ·a1 phil 050pb McCarn
JU ct
Y·
pointed eut in his speech at
Wake Forest that neither
Sen. Barack Obama nor
Sen . .Hillary Clinton voted
for Chief Justice John
Roberts, whom is eminently
qualified to ~rve on the.
Supreme CoutL
Obama neither understands· the judiciary itself
nor the Senate's obligations
when it comes to the president's Supreme Court nominees. During the Roberts
confJTD13tion hearings, the
Illinois senator said that
Supreme .:court nominees
should "share one's deepest
values, one's core concerns, one's broader perspectives on how the world
works and the depth and
breadth of one's empathy."
Obama wanted both liberal
activists on the Court and
the Senate to do the president's .choosing for him; he
doesn't understand the separation of wwers.
Although he's on the
most radical end of the
spectrum, Obama fits in in
the Senate. If you've

watched bits and pieces of
the judicial confirmation
bearings over tbe years,
you've seen some remarkable abuses by senators all
in the name of politics.
Clarence lbomas bad to be
publicly humiliated to get
confirmed. When former
Alabama attorney general
William Pryor was before
the
Senate
Judiciary
Committee in 2003 for a
seat on 11th U.S. Circuit
Court of ACpeals, he was
asked how
could possible serve on the ooun afterbe and his wife decided to
1
reschedule their family's
vacation to Disney World
so it would not comcide
' with Gay Day there. Pryor's
pare.nting skills spoke to his
qualification for the court?
The charade that is Senate
jUdicial confirmation hearings really hit its stride in
1987, when the hearings
forced a new vedl iniO our
vocabularies. That was the
year U.S. Appeals Court
Judge Robert H . Bork,
Ronald Reagan's nominee
to replace retiring Justice
Lewis Powell on the
Supreme
Court, . was
"borked." Ted Kennedy,
now an enthusiastic booster
of Obama, a.k.a. the next
John F. Kennedy, shamef.ully railed that a Justice Bork
would mean an America
where "women would be
forced into back-alley aborlions, blacks would sit at
segregated lunch counters,
rogue ~lice could break
down Citizens' doors in midnight raids, schoolchildren
could not be taught about
evolution, writers and artists
would be censofed at the
· whim of government, and
the doors of the federal
courts would be shut on the

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Leners to the editor are .welcome. They slwuld be less
than 300 words. Mlletrers are ·subject to editing, must be
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...,..., 9 • Send addfela corrections lo The Dolly sentinel, 111 Coutt
street, F'OiilefO~. Ohio 45769.

...-.. lpllw ......
ay-.-or-0..'1G:n

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'18.27
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Coi'Ncllon Polley
Plblilhed every afte11'10011, Monday
Our mail CUI tce1 11 in ·all stories ildo thtough Friday, 111 Coun SlrH!,
be, aocura1e. H yo!! lcnow ol an error Pomeroy, OhiO,
5econd..claaa
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Ohio A.G.:offers to resign if investigation delayed

''

SYRACUSE- Mayor Eric Omningham and tbe Syracuse
Police Department has 3IUlOiliiCed anyone with omleasbrd
dogs nmrung loose in tbe village will be cited in Mayor's
Court and the Meigs County Dog Warde!J will be callrd

TB tests given
·
.
·
'

: POMEROY - The Meigs County T8 Staff will be givmg TB tests from · S~ p.m., Tuesday, May 20 at the
Pomeroy Library. Results will be read from 5-6 p.m.,
Thursday, May 22 at tbe libra!y.

r . ••

Remote controlled air show
at Vmton County AirpOrt
McARlHUR -The Ymton County Pilots and Boosters
Association will sponsor the 2nd Annual Radio Cootrolled
. Air Show SaiUTday and Suixlay, May 31-June I at tbe
· 'Vmton County Airpon. Radio controlled model aircraft of
· all descriptions from four diffeJCnt RC clubs in Ohio will
'be flying in this sanctiooed evenL
· Between RC flying events and contests, pilots from the
Boosters Association will offer airplane rides. Food will be
. available bolh days with an old fashioned bean dinnrr
· · scheduled for noon Sunday.
. · The runway will nol be closed and big planes a~e welcomOO
. · to fly in (221) to enjoy ~ notch model dying and great food.
The Ymton County Arrport is located about 6 miles north
· of McArthur just off SL RL 93 on Airport Road
· For more infonnation, contact Boo5t:e.- President Terry at
740-385-9392 or ~teve Keller at 740-418-2612-

· Meeting on foster paren1ing
POMEROY - Th6 Meigs County Departmel}t of Jobs
. •.and Family Services will host an informational ~g on
bow to become a licensed foster/adoptive parent from 6-7
p.m. tonight at the Pomeroy Ubrary.
·
,

liYANDIEW
We Sl HuGGINs
.fSS()QATED PRESS Wh i ER

COLUMBUS
Attorney General Marc
Dann on Tuesday offered to
meet demands that be resign
if lawmakers delay a
pla!U!C'11 investigation into
bis scandal-plagued ollire.
Legislative leadm; refused
tbe offer. and by evening tbe
at10mey general bad not
resigned, hili spotesman
saying be "decided tn continue doing bis job."
Dann, .wbo bas refused
resignarion requests from
bolh political parties, admitlUI May 2 10 an extramarital
affair with an employee that
be said · oontribcired to an
atmosphere leading to !ieKJI·
al barassmeot claims against
a top aide. Three aides wue
fon:ed out in tbe barnssment
investigation that showed
management encouraged a
casual wod environment
with frequent profllnity and
inappropriate interactions
with subordinates_
Democratic Rep. Robert
Hagan and a spokeswoman
for Republican Senate
President Bill Harris said
Dann, a Democrat, wanted a
bill allowing the state
watchdog to investigate his
office to take effect in 90
days, .instead of immediate-

ly after Gov, Ted Strickland
signed iL
LawmakHS-in bolh chambers approved the bill
Tuesday and Slriddand, a
DelllOCrat, · signed
it
Tuesday evening. EarliCF in
the day, House Democrats
also lried to start impeachment proceedings against
Dann, only to be dismissed
as movin! too fast by the
Republicans in pow«.
Dann's attorney, Michael
Harsbman, asked Hagan 10
belp negotiate Dann's
request, said Hagan, a loogtime Dann ally from his
hometown of YoungstOwn.
lbgan said Dann bad ·
hoped "ooole£ beads" would
prevail over time;
Messages were left with
Harshman seelring com-

mnove the measure Rlqllir- likely to step down.
Democrats drafted Dine ·
· the investigalioo bill to
~ effect immrdiateJy, but articles of · imp-rlmrnt
Husted refused, Hagan said
·
Dann, l3llginB from
Husted
spokeswoman
of
gross
Karen Stivers oonfinned immorality to obstructing
that Dann made the call to the investigation into his
Husted. Dann was upset office and making misfrad.. ·
OVCF the devdopmeuts, but ing Slat........,.s
no deal was made and the
The Democrats' resoluwonl "'resignation~ was not lion. researclled by dlree
meotioocd, she said
laWJJ13keni, acdu.sed Dann
At Dann's 'il:~ Hagan of making misleading statesaid be asked
·s if be ments under oatb and said
would remove the IDeaS~JM, he sboold bave known his
but Harris declined
actions created a hostile
Harris
spokeswoman· .wod environment,
Maggie Osttuwski said
Dann neglected bisduly by
Hagan approached Harris "...undennining the int.egitY
after the bill passed tbe · of bis office: bringing ~
House but before tbe Senate pute upon the office; beuayIOok it up.
ing the public bUst as Ohio's
"Senator Harris was not chief law enforcement omwilling to cut a deal," C£C...•~ a statement from the
menL '
Democrats said.
Ostrowski said Tuesday.
Dann
told
1be
At Dann's request, Lt .
"We promised the people
(Cleveland) Plain Dealer be Gov. Lee Fisher, a fellow of Ohio ro end a culiUre of
Democrat, met with the "COrruption that existed in
was not CJ"ining Tuesday.
"At this point. that's not attorney general in Dann' s 1he past, and we are fulfill·what t:m going to do," Columbus office for about ing mat promise by cleaning
Dann told the papa-.
an hour Tuesday a&amp;mooo. our own house wben events
"The. Attorney General Fisher
spokeswoman and cifcwnstances warbas said that be does not Kimber Perfect said the rant,~ tbe three lawmakers
. believe there a~e ground!; for conversation was private wbo researched the articles
impeaduneot, and be will and that Fisber would not said ill the statemenL
continue .10 do the job that oomment.
The governor and Dann
be wa&amp; eleclcd 10 do,~ bis
Senate Minority Leader were among many Ohio
spokesman J8!l011 Stanfonl Ray Miller told The Democrats swept iniO office
said in a writtm staremenL Columbus Dispatch that a in 2006· in tbe wake of a
Dann asked Republican resignation appeared forth- Republican scandal over
House Spealrer Ion Husted . coming, but be did not ·say state investments managed
in a pbOOe caJJ Tilesday to . ex.actly when Dann was, by a prominent GOP donor.

:it'~ons

•

Jail
fromPageAl
' Gerlach said a tank is avail. able but the villages are
· looking for a truck to use.
During open discussion,
· ·: Council Member Sandy
· Brown asked that the
streets and curbs in the
shopping district be swept.
She also asked that .the
police departmem enforce
speed limits.
Council Member · Jean
Craig, chairman . of the
recreation
department,
reported on repairs to the
picnic tables at Dave Diles
Pmt. The tables have been
repeatedly vandalized and

painted with graffiti. Craig
said there is still graffiti oo
the concrete floor of the picnic. shelter which will need
to be removed or covered.
Council also:
· • Approved .employment
of Aaron Krautter and
Amber O'Brien as part-time
polic;e dispatchers, at 16
hours per week.
. • Approved the mayor's
report of fees and fmes colleclcd in April, and reports
from the fmance, public
worts, refuse and income
tax departments.
• Approved renewal of tbe
village's liability insurance
with
Kinder
package
Insurance Agency, Ironton,
at. a tolal premium cost of ·

Merchants
fromPageAl
on events planned. He said
this year's lineup of ent:e.-tainers is the best ever and
that the entire festival is
expected to be "biggCF and
better" than in year's past.
Entertainers he listed
included Simba Jordan,
Insured Sound, ,, Mixx,

Sbawna Corder and the

Ohio's Best Ribs Award, are

Cooler Roys, Nikki Ward, on tbe schedule for the festiGospel Bluegrass, and
Elvis, Patsy Cline and
Johnnie Cash impecson-

val which gets undeiWay at
11 am. on Friday, June 6,
and · 9 a.m. on Saturday,
ator.&gt;.
June 7, along the riverfiont
Hydro boat racing, a bike in Pomeroy.
show, guided motorcycle
Quickel also said that
tours and tbe annual liglrt there possibly will be a
parade, art in the padc, eat- tractor-trailer from Habitat
ing contests, and a bog call- to Humanity coming in for
ing contest, along with ·tbe the festival. He also
traditional selection of the expects area . motorcycle
· vendor to be given the dealers to have displays on

tbe parking lot.
Quickel commended volunteers working on the festival committee mentioning
specifically the Christian
Motorcycle Club which bas
volunteered to assist with
· setup and tear down.
He emphasized that tbe
festival is considered a
tourism event and is spunsored by Meigs County
Tourism, .along with six corporate SJlOnsors.
•

social studies at the high and oooced bands as well as Frederick Kleski, Mikayla
Dawn . Krider,
Krystle
school leveL Chapman said Quiz Bowl
be chose to ~o into cducaSpradling's graduation Nicole Marler, Marissa Ann
lion
because
tt
is
somewbat
speech
hopes to be encour- Maynard, Hannah Eliz.abetb
~Page At
of a family tradition with aging as well as discuss Miller, Amy Lynn Norville,
tbe Ohio Board of RegeQ.ts both bis mother and sister "success" ·and "what it Cody Joel Patterson, Eric
S hol
S
tl
being teachers
means to 'differeot poople." Scott Pierce, Ricky Dale
c arship. he recen Y
"Having gro.wn up in · Soutbern High School's Plumie". M""'"n David
$33,294~
won the Holzer Science
'
--..-Award and tbe Sons of the that environment, I feel complete graduation list for Reynolds, Latosha Marilee
American Revolution essay weU suited for that the Class of 2008 is as fol- Richards, Wesley Jordan
contest. She was invited 10 career,~ be said.
lows: Bonnielou Colene Riffle, Whitney Morgan
and attended academic banHe will attend URG on a Allen, Malinda Marie Riffle, Ashley Nicole
s hos·-.. by both partial baseball scholarship Barnhart, Brett Ashton Robie, Trenton Mitchell
tet
I&lt;:U
and will ·be taking the field · Beegle, Bryce Lee Bowling, Roseberry
· , · Talan i(ussell
fromPageAl
uthem and the county:
This year El-Dabaja was for tbe Redmen; Chapman Georgetta Bricldes, Corey Roush, Noel Fay Sellers,
president
of the National bas also been awarded a Dalton Brinager,~ Steven Harley Sellers,
on Dec. I of last year, reg·
Honor Society, a member Wmgett Scholarship"
Brittany Brown,
e Anthony Wayne Shamblin,
ulations which are good
·of
student
council,
Quiz
During
his
years
at
Bradford
Brown,
Andrew Keith Smeck,
until July 2009.
Community
Soutbem,
Chapman
played
Christopher
Alan
Joshua
Anthony Smith,
Bowl,
FuiUre
• From July · 1997 to
Career Leaders of America baseball, football and bas- B urk:hameuzzard,r.E~nn.indseEylizP;:t!eeth · Kaylyn Renee Spradling,
December 2006 Ohio septic
and the Southl!lll Yearl&gt;ook ketball, He was also in the 8
Ashley Marie Weddle.
system rules approved three
Committee. The theme for National Honor Society and Chapman, Ryan Keith
Semor awards day is this
basic systems: Septic tank
her graduation speech will was class president this year. Chapman, TYler Cleveland Friday where even more
to leaching, sand filer to dis· · up on your Dunn·g his tun.e at SHS• Circle, Ericka Nichole scholarshiP. and acadenuc'
charge, aeration to dis•
be " not gtvmg
dreatDS.~
Chapman was consistently Cogar,
Heather
Lynn awards Will be announced
· · ~barge. Swatzel said Meigs
Ginthe£
will
be
attmding
involved
in
student
.
gov~Cundiff,
Stephanie
Danielle
for the Class of 2008_
County has had over 5,000
Ohio University the fall, ment, w~ on the s:;ooo1 Cundiff, Jessica Lynn Southern's graduation is at
systems permitted since
· ·
·
c1· •cat newspaper The Ecbo and Durilam, Sarah Beth Eddy, 8 p.m., Sunday inside the
1977 and over 3,000 with
maJOnng' Science.
1D
mt
· ·
· Quiz
· · Bowl
'
·
Sarah .S aleh El-DabaJ· a, · Charles· . W
Laboratory
Gintht7
. paltlc1p":ted
m
m
Hayman
aer.ttion. to discharge due to
has
a
....,.1
of
finishing
her
grades
mne-12.
Chelsea
Marie
Freeman,
Gymnasium
at
Southern
poor soil conditions. steep
de......, lnCiinical' ~.......,·~·
As for his speec
. h, Courtney Lee Ginther, H1gh School.
slopes, small lots and cost
.,--.._...,.,~, J
Chapman laos to ~
James Robert Grady, Krysti
Last
July
Gov. Ted
Science so that sbe may go
· p"
ocus 0~ Nichole Hall, December
on to study . Histology at a tbe top1c of perseverance.
Strickland suspended some
graduate level. She said He~ll talk abOut e:vents Dawn Hensley, Whayne
of the newer regulations for
enjoying her biology classes which bave happened m the · Wilson Marnhout, Matthew
sewage treatment systems
at Southern High School was worW since ~ cl.ass was David Lehew, Abi~ail
(until July 2009) except for
a big reason for choosing this .born to make bis pomt about Frances Nicole Jenkins;
discharging systems.
. pushing forward in life.
Ashley Dawn Kiser, Kreig
area of study.
Because discharging sysSo far Ginther has
Spradling plans on attendtems can sometimes infilreceived the Dr. James H. ing the Umversity of Rio
trate drinking water and
have an affect on stream ·
and Nellie Rowley Jewell- ~de ~ lhl: fall where she
~
\
1·
Q;
,\
"'
Manesseh Cutler Scholars will maJOr m Elementary
dellf3dation, the permits are
~
!
'
\
~
Award
which
will
cover
her
Education
(pre
K-3),
: difficult to come by, accordI
·- '&gt; 1'1-i
~
7
·"
,
.
college expenses for under~·1 c~ tbi~ field because
ing to Swatzel. The permits
---graduate Sllldies at OU.
I love little kids, the teachalso expire every five years
PO!tiiM!Nt .aTSCF.I\1111.
This year Ginther partici- mg benefits are unbeatable
· ,with a $200 chargll and bave
Aeebl W•J~end
paled in the Southern High and ~ v~ons ~ awe·a high cost for components
School Band, cbeerleading some, Spradling ,wd. .
·and maintenance which
"Dance Me A Story"
squad and many different
So far Spradling s reoe1ved
includes water testing.
._1703pm
clubs and·organizations.
two scho~. from .URG
. Swatzel
said
Meigs
pill lilted bJ:
Ginther's
l(raduation o~e_ of which IS for free
County
Health
The
Ariel~
speech will focus on · twuon f&lt;!" one year, ~ secCommissioner
Larry
ood,?f which w~ gJV~ for
"cbange."
.Mat"shall. currently repre- .
PllnoAicbl
:'My
·
speech
expresses
mee!Jng acadeiJllc· cntena
sents -tlle southeast district
. _ , • • 2pm
the idea that without and IS valued at S 15,000. Sbe
p!IIBnled bJ:
change nothing can be · also received one of ,the
Studenta
at Allen Stnolt
The chicks will not stay in accomplished," Ginther Wmgett Scholarships .
tbe incubator, or the class- said. "Though we can "" This year Spradling parlieu&lt; Olltaa: 421 2nd Ave.
room, for long. Once their despise or be scared of ticipated in marching, pep
Glllplllil, OH (740)U6-ARTS
feathers begin ID dry and 'changes they can end up
fromPageAl
develop, the chicks will be being the best thing that
lbe University of Rio Grande Crossroads program is currently accepting applications for a
porated the eggs and chicks placed in a makeshift ever happened to you."
limited number of openings for the Workforce Investment Act year round youth services
r, heated by a lamp.
Chapman plans on attend: mto language arts and math'
e
end
of
the
week,
ing the Umversity of Rio
program. Summer Employment Opponunities is one col'nj!pnent of this year round youth
cmatics learning. Yesterday,
y
be
back
home
at
tbe
Grande
in
the
fall
to
major
students were writing stoprogram.
in education w\th a focus on
Michael farm.
, ries ·about the chicks .
Eligible youth must be ages 14-21, residents of Meigs County, and meet WIA inc&lt;ime
guidelines.
.
Applicati.ms
are
available
at Soulhem High School. Eastern High School, and Meigs High
' '
.
School and at the University of Rio Grande Crossroads Program office at 150 Mill Street in
Middleport.,Applications should be submitted by May 30, 2008.
'
Funding for the WJ.A. In-School and WJA Out -of·School programs is provided by the
Retirement should be one oftht! most enjoyable rimes ofJIO&lt;lf' life. yet many
U.S. Department of Labor and the Meigs County Department of Job and Family Services.
people are 5nandally ~ *x it I can Cl'r!ale a plan designed to help
For additional information please contact:
you enjoy ffJIJremer1t Contact me to discuss IRAs and other available options.
Ages. 14-18: Donna Hartson 992-0010
7
1
1
Ages 19-21 : Brenda Pbalin 992.(J()(J()
· ~ $ d4 C lllfdJJ ~
Roy Taylor. Director
~JWI!S'
NOr!DC .fo.5UID NOT~ BrPfOPt.ES BA/1«
flMAWCI Al SUVICU , tMC.
University of Rio Grande Crossroads Program
,

Southem

Chamber ·

.

.

.

·YcJu '~~- -da~J~aging your brain with practical skills
Dad is typins, !IJ'ay furl.

The Daily Sentinel

:·Load Briefs
Fines for unleashed dogs set

fingers of millions of Citizens."
McCain' gets what a II'IIV·
esty of political ju~tice
those Judiciary Comnutree
hearings have become:
"Over the years, we bave all
seen the dreary rituals !hat
now pass for advice '!fld
consent in the confumauon
of nominees to our SupreJDe
Court. We've seen and
heard the sbabby treatment
accorded to ·nominees ....We
have seen disagreements
redefmed as disqualifications, and the least infraction of approved doctrine
pounced upon by. sen~ ,
their staffs and therr allit:li m
the media. Always banging
in the air over· these tense
confinnation battles is · the
suspicion that maybe, just
maybe, a nominee for the
Court will dare to be faithful to the clear intentions. of
the framers and to the actual
meaning
of
the
Constitution."
Conservatives. have plenty of reasons to WOrry about
McCain and his instilicts
not being conservative. One
speech, which even had a
few legitimate reasons for
conservative grumbling,
does not, of course, erase
history and concerns. 'But
one speech is commi~t
on the record. And the
speech bad a lot of truth and
justice in it
The speech should be a
reminder to those who are
concerned about judicial
activism that elections matter. And not just to the o~ce
a candidate is running for.
(Kathryn Lopez is the Nli·
tor of National Review
Online ( www, nationalreview.com). She elm be contacted at klopez@nationo.l·
review.com.)

The Daily Sentinel• Pqe As

www.mydailysentind.com

expensive stadiums with lion a year plus bonuses,
~sly ~t the~· sweat
public money, sports build Maybe !mowing the exact
· character.
da~ tbat Lincoln got shot
glistemng off ~' («ebead. ·
He is tryi.ng to ~ f Web
There are plenty of exam- isn't tbat imponant in the
ples of wbat pundits think big scheme of .things.
page for his blls~t His
13-year-old .son ·· .!I!JUSS
Jl
IS logical that is exactly Maybe historical dates .and
the room .playing'.~ ~\ of
Mmullen
opposite of what really · sports are the least importhose horrible video. ~s .
works. There was a story tant thing we should · be
filled with mindles~,i, 1 ;~iR;
recently about a college . con~rned wi,th , in .schpol,. ,
_
, journalism freshman class not the most.
lence, bazooka-tof ,Barbarellas in hot P~Ai
.
that di!,ln't lrnow the dates
"Servers! Yeah, that's
!ffisbaven macho men blot",, !i,~ells across the room to of the Amen~ Civil War. right," said the helpless dild,
mg up at\yone. who ~~ · y "What do you call They couldn t name an digging into the keyboard
their head around a corner. ;1 1 ~ things that hold Web American Secretary of once · again. His son could
Everyone knows tha\ ·· ~' f).T'
.
, Defense. An absolute dis- . have set up the Web page in
this ~d will grow up to be ' ·~ijings that hold Web grac~. R1ght? That'~ w~y minutes, but here was tough
a vaolent, know-nothmg si~s"" Does he mean a nothing gets done m this love, the kid waSletting dad
sociopath w~o will be a ~k? Does he mean ~untry, th~ schools have · learn by doing.
Vtdeo games may be to
drain nn soctety for years an IS~· ' Does he mean a failed teaching kids 1mporto come. Everyone knows Web hos~'/1
~ tant dates in bistory., Guess computers· what comic
that video games are grad- · "Server?\',, Billy guessed, wbat? No Japanese kids can books were to me. I
ually sucking out his once- not liftin~ hi eyes from his tell · y_ou the. ~ates of the devoured them still read a
malleable
brain
and IQ-draimng g,(lllle, which Amenc~ C~v1l War. Nor lot to this day. Thank you,
can Italian kids o~ German Batman and Robin. I would
replacing it with oatmeal. was wrecking his life.
1 wonder how 1)1311Y pro- kids . or ~orean· kids or guess today's gamers will
As any · pundit will tell
you, the kid should be out- fessional basketball players Enghsh kids. , Yet they all tum into tomorrow's tech
side playing basketball or and football players. .would seem able to make more whizzes. Maybe we should
football with his friends; have known the answer? popular cars tban we do: teach video games in schwl
he should be outdoors Yet the pundits think thai Toyota, BMW, Fiat, Volvo, instead of state capitals, We
breathing the fresh air, that being the high school foot- Mercedes. I wonder how could hardly do worse, ·
(Jim Mullen i.i the aurhor
his parents are letting hlm ball hero is a wonderful many of their workers
squander his best years in achievement. It's conunon could tell YO\! the capital of . of "It Takes a Vdlage Idior:
front of a ¥ideo screen. pundit lrnowledge. Except . Kentucky? But they could Complicating the Simple
They are raising another for the gambling, the all tell you one thing. The Life " and "&amp;by's First
wastrel.
divorces, the steroid abuse CEO of tHeir company isn't Tattoo. " You can rwch him
Dad stops typing and aQd the building of wildly paying himself a SlOO mil- atjim_mul/en@niyway.com.)

,,

'A~

:. Hatchlings.

Better- Retirement

•

_,,....._

5L41fC1 ro~ ANJ ~r L~ V.N.t.£

•

-·=.:-. ·-- ........ ..

',

�OPINION

The Daily Sentinel

The Daily Sentinel
111 Court Staeet• ~.Ohio

(740) 992-2156 • FAX (740) 992-2157
www.mydlllly..rtlnel.com

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.

Dan Goodrich
Publisher

Chariene Hoeftich

General Manager-News Editor

COJJgms sludl fflltlet rw 14w ruputit~g an
ul4blislrmmt of rtligion, or prolribiting tltt
ftu ancist·thertof; or abri4ging tltt.frwlom
of spuclt, or of tht press; or tht right of tltt
peoplt peaeubly to asstmhlt, arul to petitUifl
tlu GoVft'ftffiLflt for a mlrus ofgrinatraS.
...:. The First Amendment to the U.S. Constitution

TODAY IN HISTORY

.I

Page.A:4

Today is Wednesday, May 14, the !35th day of 2008.
·
.
There are 231 days left in the year.
. Today's Highlight in History: On M~y 14, 1948, according to the common-era calendar, the mdependent state of
Israel was proclaimed in Tel Aviv.
.
.
On this date: In 1607, English colomsts went ashore m
Yrrginia to begin building a permanent settlement;· n~
Jamestown after England's King James I.
·
In 1643, Louis the XIV became King of France at age 4
upon the death of his father, Louis the xm.
'
In 1796, English physician Edward Jenner succeeded m
inoculating 8-year~ld James Phipps against smallpox by
using cowpox matter.
In 1804, the Lewis and Clark expedition to explore the
Louisiana Territory left camp near St. LOuis.
In 1900, the Olympic games opened in Paris; held as part
. of the World's Fair.
·
In 1942, · Congress voted to establish tbe Women's
Auxiliary Army Corps.
·
In 1942, Aaron Copland's "Lincoln Portrait'~ was first
performed, by the Cincinnati Symphony ·Orchestra.
In 1973, the United States launched Skylab 1, its fJTSt
~~~acestation.
.
Ten years ago: Singer-actor Frank Sinatra died at a Los
Angeles hospital .at age 82. The hit sitcom "Seinfeld" aired
its final episode after nine years on NBC.
Five years ago: Smugglers abandnned more than 100 illegal immigrants in a locked trailer at a .T~xas true~ s~; 19
people died In Cbecbnya, a female su1c1de bombmg killed
18 people in an apparent attempt on the life of the Moscowbacked chief administrator, Akhm.a d Kadyrov. Death
claimed actress Dame Wendy Hiller in Beaconsfield,
~}a:W, at age 90; actor Robert Stack in Beverly Hills,
• ~ 84~ alllll Bask;dball Hali-4-F.amer ·Dave
DeBusschere in New York at age 62.
.
One year ago: DaimletChrysler said it was selling almost
all of Chrysler to private equity firm Cerberus Capital
Management for $7.4 billion, backing out of a troubled
·1998 takeover. The trial of suspected ai•Qaida operative
Jose Padilla opened in Miami. (Padilla and two co-defendants were convicted last August of terrorism conspiracy;
Padilla was senf(:nced to 17 years in prison.)
Today's Birthdays: Opera singer Patrice Munsel is 83.
Rock singer-musician Jack Bruce (Cream) is 65. Movie producer George Lucas is 64: Actress Meg Foster is 60. Rock
singer David Byrne is 56. Movie director Robert lemeckis
is 56. Actor Tmi Roth is 47. Rock singCF lan Astbury (The
. Cult) is 46. Rock musician C.C. (aka Cecilj DeVille is 46,
Rock musician Mike Inez (Alice In Cbains) is 42. Fabrice
Morvan (ex-Milli Vanilli) is 42. Rhythm-and-blues singer
~I Saadiq is 42, Actress Cate Blanchett is 39. Singer
Danny Wood (New Kids on the .Block) is 39. Movie writerdirector Sofia Coppola is 37. Singer Sbanice is 35. Actress
Atnber Tamblyn is 25, Actress Miranda Cosgrove is l5.
· Thought for Today: "Ah. les bOns vieux ·temps ou nous
etions si malheureux!" ·coh, the good old times when we
were so unbappy!) _._French saying.

Wednesday, May 14, zooS

vote for justice
Anyone who follows
political md cultural news
knows elections matter.
John McCain drove this
. point bome earlier this
month in a speech about the
judiciary.
.
S~g at Wake Forest
Umversity, the Arizona
Republican senator chided
judges for blurring the lines.
between the branches of
government; for disrupting
the balance our founders
wisely drew up in their
constitutional blueprint for ·
our republic.
"In the shorthand of constitutional discourse, these
abuses by the courts fall
under the heading of 'judicial activism,"' McCain
said. But, he continued,
"real activists seek to make
their case democratically to win hearts, minds and
majorities to their cause.
Such people throoghout our
history have often shown
great idealism and done
great good. By contrast.
activist lawyers and activist
judges follow a different
method. They want to be
.spared the inconvenience of
campaigns, elections, legislative votes and all of that,
They do!T"t seek to win
debates on the merits of
their argument; they seek to
shut dnwn debates by order
of the court."
And, as a · campaign
booster, McCain couldn't
have better -enemies in this
battle agains\ judicial
'usurpation of American
democracy. Howard Dean,
chairman of tbe Democratic
National Committee, has
railed a~ainst McCain's .
"radical nght-wing judicial
philosophy." This should be
music to the McCain campaign's ears. In fact, they

Kathryn
Lopez

Should play it as a

,..,..,...,;gn .

--...-song when meeting with
conservatives, mimy who
still need to be oonvinced
they bave a: stake in sup-

porting his candidacy.
As Dean hammers at
McCain, be will be cam•
• ·
&amp;
di.da
pmgnmg .or a can
te
with a radical left-wing
· di ·a1 phil 050pb McCarn
JU ct
Y·
pointed eut in his speech at
Wake Forest that neither
Sen. Barack Obama nor
Sen . .Hillary Clinton voted
for Chief Justice John
Roberts, whom is eminently
qualified to ~rve on the.
Supreme CoutL
Obama neither understands· the judiciary itself
nor the Senate's obligations
when it comes to the president's Supreme Court nominees. During the Roberts
confJTD13tion hearings, the
Illinois senator said that
Supreme .:court nominees
should "share one's deepest
values, one's core concerns, one's broader perspectives on how the world
works and the depth and
breadth of one's empathy."
Obama wanted both liberal
activists on the Court and
the Senate to do the president's .choosing for him; he
doesn't understand the separation of wwers.
Although he's on the
most radical end of the
spectrum, Obama fits in in
the Senate. If you've

watched bits and pieces of
the judicial confirmation
bearings over tbe years,
you've seen some remarkable abuses by senators all
in the name of politics.
Clarence lbomas bad to be
publicly humiliated to get
confirmed. When former
Alabama attorney general
William Pryor was before
the
Senate
Judiciary
Committee in 2003 for a
seat on 11th U.S. Circuit
Court of ACpeals, he was
asked how
could possible serve on the ooun afterbe and his wife decided to
1
reschedule their family's
vacation to Disney World
so it would not comcide
' with Gay Day there. Pryor's
pare.nting skills spoke to his
qualification for the court?
The charade that is Senate
jUdicial confirmation hearings really hit its stride in
1987, when the hearings
forced a new vedl iniO our
vocabularies. That was the
year U.S. Appeals Court
Judge Robert H . Bork,
Ronald Reagan's nominee
to replace retiring Justice
Lewis Powell on the
Supreme
Court, . was
"borked." Ted Kennedy,
now an enthusiastic booster
of Obama, a.k.a. the next
John F. Kennedy, shamef.ully railed that a Justice Bork
would mean an America
where "women would be
forced into back-alley aborlions, blacks would sit at
segregated lunch counters,
rogue ~lice could break
down Citizens' doors in midnight raids, schoolchildren
could not be taught about
evolution, writers and artists
would be censofed at the
· whim of government, and
the doors of the federal
courts would be shut on the

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Coi'Ncllon Polley
Plblilhed every afte11'10011, Monday
Our mail CUI tce1 11 in ·all stories ildo thtough Friday, 111 Coun SlrH!,
be, aocura1e. H yo!! lcnow ol an error Pomeroy, OhiO,
5econd..claaa
kl a BtDfY. czin the nana7Uo.n at (740) poolago pold at """""'"~'·'
.......... n. AllodatiJd Pfele. and
1112-.2156.
·ttw Ohlo riaw1~ Auocilltion.

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Ohio A.G.:offers to resign if investigation delayed

''

SYRACUSE- Mayor Eric Omningham and tbe Syracuse
Police Department has 3IUlOiliiCed anyone with omleasbrd
dogs nmrung loose in tbe village will be cited in Mayor's
Court and the Meigs County Dog Warde!J will be callrd

TB tests given
·
.
·
'

: POMEROY - The Meigs County T8 Staff will be givmg TB tests from · S~ p.m., Tuesday, May 20 at the
Pomeroy Library. Results will be read from 5-6 p.m.,
Thursday, May 22 at tbe libra!y.

r . ••

Remote controlled air show
at Vmton County AirpOrt
McARlHUR -The Ymton County Pilots and Boosters
Association will sponsor the 2nd Annual Radio Cootrolled
. Air Show SaiUTday and Suixlay, May 31-June I at tbe
· 'Vmton County Airpon. Radio controlled model aircraft of
· all descriptions from four diffeJCnt RC clubs in Ohio will
'be flying in this sanctiooed evenL
· Between RC flying events and contests, pilots from the
Boosters Association will offer airplane rides. Food will be
. available bolh days with an old fashioned bean dinnrr
· · scheduled for noon Sunday.
. · The runway will nol be closed and big planes a~e welcomOO
. · to fly in (221) to enjoy ~ notch model dying and great food.
The Ymton County Arrport is located about 6 miles north
· of McArthur just off SL RL 93 on Airport Road
· For more infonnation, contact Boo5t:e.- President Terry at
740-385-9392 or ~teve Keller at 740-418-2612-

· Meeting on foster paren1ing
POMEROY - Th6 Meigs County Departmel}t of Jobs
. •.and Family Services will host an informational ~g on
bow to become a licensed foster/adoptive parent from 6-7
p.m. tonight at the Pomeroy Ubrary.
·
,

liYANDIEW
We Sl HuGGINs
.fSS()QATED PRESS Wh i ER

COLUMBUS
Attorney General Marc
Dann on Tuesday offered to
meet demands that be resign
if lawmakers delay a
pla!U!C'11 investigation into
bis scandal-plagued ollire.
Legislative leadm; refused
tbe offer. and by evening tbe
at10mey general bad not
resigned, hili spotesman
saying be "decided tn continue doing bis job."
Dann, .wbo bas refused
resignarion requests from
bolh political parties, admitlUI May 2 10 an extramarital
affair with an employee that
be said · oontribcired to an
atmosphere leading to !ieKJI·
al barassmeot claims against
a top aide. Three aides wue
fon:ed out in tbe barnssment
investigation that showed
management encouraged a
casual wod environment
with frequent profllnity and
inappropriate interactions
with subordinates_
Democratic Rep. Robert
Hagan and a spokeswoman
for Republican Senate
President Bill Harris said
Dann, a Democrat, wanted a
bill allowing the state
watchdog to investigate his
office to take effect in 90
days, .instead of immediate-

ly after Gov, Ted Strickland
signed iL
LawmakHS-in bolh chambers approved the bill
Tuesday and Slriddand, a
DelllOCrat, · signed
it
Tuesday evening. EarliCF in
the day, House Democrats
also lried to start impeachment proceedings against
Dann, only to be dismissed
as movin! too fast by the
Republicans in pow«.
Dann's attorney, Michael
Harsbman, asked Hagan 10
belp negotiate Dann's
request, said Hagan, a loogtime Dann ally from his
hometown of YoungstOwn.
lbgan said Dann bad ·
hoped "ooole£ beads" would
prevail over time;
Messages were left with
Harshman seelring com-

mnove the measure Rlqllir- likely to step down.
Democrats drafted Dine ·
· the investigalioo bill to
~ effect immrdiateJy, but articles of · imp-rlmrnt
Husted refused, Hagan said
·
Dann, l3llginB from
Husted
spokeswoman
of
gross
Karen Stivers oonfinned immorality to obstructing
that Dann made the call to the investigation into his
Husted. Dann was upset office and making misfrad.. ·
OVCF the devdopmeuts, but ing Slat........,.s
no deal was made and the
The Democrats' resoluwonl "'resignation~ was not lion. researclled by dlree
meotioocd, she said
laWJJ13keni, acdu.sed Dann
At Dann's 'il:~ Hagan of making misleading statesaid be asked
·s if be ments under oatb and said
would remove the IDeaS~JM, he sboold bave known his
but Harris declined
actions created a hostile
Harris
spokeswoman· .wod environment,
Maggie Osttuwski said
Dann neglected bisduly by
Hagan approached Harris "...undennining the int.egitY
after the bill passed tbe · of bis office: bringing ~
House but before tbe Senate pute upon the office; beuayIOok it up.
ing the public bUst as Ohio's
"Senator Harris was not chief law enforcement omwilling to cut a deal," C£C...•~ a statement from the
menL '
Democrats said.
Ostrowski said Tuesday.
Dann
told
1be
At Dann's request, Lt .
"We promised the people
(Cleveland) Plain Dealer be Gov. Lee Fisher, a fellow of Ohio ro end a culiUre of
Democrat, met with the "COrruption that existed in
was not CJ"ining Tuesday.
"At this point. that's not attorney general in Dann' s 1he past, and we are fulfill·what t:m going to do," Columbus office for about ing mat promise by cleaning
Dann told the papa-.
an hour Tuesday a&amp;mooo. our own house wben events
"The. Attorney General Fisher
spokeswoman and cifcwnstances warbas said that be does not Kimber Perfect said the rant,~ tbe three lawmakers
. believe there a~e ground!; for conversation was private wbo researched the articles
impeaduneot, and be will and that Fisber would not said ill the statemenL
continue .10 do the job that oomment.
The governor and Dann
be wa&amp; eleclcd 10 do,~ bis
Senate Minority Leader were among many Ohio
spokesman J8!l011 Stanfonl Ray Miller told The Democrats swept iniO office
said in a writtm staremenL Columbus Dispatch that a in 2006· in tbe wake of a
Dann asked Republican resignation appeared forth- Republican scandal over
House Spealrer Ion Husted . coming, but be did not ·say state investments managed
in a pbOOe caJJ Tilesday to . ex.actly when Dann was, by a prominent GOP donor.

:it'~ons

•

Jail
fromPageAl
' Gerlach said a tank is avail. able but the villages are
· looking for a truck to use.
During open discussion,
· ·: Council Member Sandy
· Brown asked that the
streets and curbs in the
shopping district be swept.
She also asked that .the
police departmem enforce
speed limits.
Council Member · Jean
Craig, chairman . of the
recreation
department,
reported on repairs to the
picnic tables at Dave Diles
Pmt. The tables have been
repeatedly vandalized and

painted with graffiti. Craig
said there is still graffiti oo
the concrete floor of the picnic. shelter which will need
to be removed or covered.
Council also:
· • Approved .employment
of Aaron Krautter and
Amber O'Brien as part-time
polic;e dispatchers, at 16
hours per week.
. • Approved the mayor's
report of fees and fmes colleclcd in April, and reports
from the fmance, public
worts, refuse and income
tax departments.
• Approved renewal of tbe
village's liability insurance
with
Kinder
package
Insurance Agency, Ironton,
at. a tolal premium cost of ·

Merchants
fromPageAl
on events planned. He said
this year's lineup of ent:e.-tainers is the best ever and
that the entire festival is
expected to be "biggCF and
better" than in year's past.
Entertainers he listed
included Simba Jordan,
Insured Sound, ,, Mixx,

Sbawna Corder and the

Ohio's Best Ribs Award, are

Cooler Roys, Nikki Ward, on tbe schedule for the festiGospel Bluegrass, and
Elvis, Patsy Cline and
Johnnie Cash impecson-

val which gets undeiWay at
11 am. on Friday, June 6,
and · 9 a.m. on Saturday,
ator.&gt;.
June 7, along the riverfiont
Hydro boat racing, a bike in Pomeroy.
show, guided motorcycle
Quickel also said that
tours and tbe annual liglrt there possibly will be a
parade, art in the padc, eat- tractor-trailer from Habitat
ing contests, and a bog call- to Humanity coming in for
ing contest, along with ·tbe the festival. He also
traditional selection of the expects area . motorcycle
· vendor to be given the dealers to have displays on

tbe parking lot.
Quickel commended volunteers working on the festival committee mentioning
specifically the Christian
Motorcycle Club which bas
volunteered to assist with
· setup and tear down.
He emphasized that tbe
festival is considered a
tourism event and is spunsored by Meigs County
Tourism, .along with six corporate SJlOnsors.
•

social studies at the high and oooced bands as well as Frederick Kleski, Mikayla
Dawn . Krider,
Krystle
school leveL Chapman said Quiz Bowl
be chose to ~o into cducaSpradling's graduation Nicole Marler, Marissa Ann
lion
because
tt
is
somewbat
speech
hopes to be encour- Maynard, Hannah Eliz.abetb
~Page At
of a family tradition with aging as well as discuss Miller, Amy Lynn Norville,
tbe Ohio Board of RegeQ.ts both bis mother and sister "success" ·and "what it Cody Joel Patterson, Eric
S hol
S
tl
being teachers
means to 'differeot poople." Scott Pierce, Ricky Dale
c arship. he recen Y
"Having gro.wn up in · Soutbern High School's Plumie". M""'"n David
$33,294~
won the Holzer Science
'
--..-Award and tbe Sons of the that environment, I feel complete graduation list for Reynolds, Latosha Marilee
American Revolution essay weU suited for that the Class of 2008 is as fol- Richards, Wesley Jordan
contest. She was invited 10 career,~ be said.
lows: Bonnielou Colene Riffle, Whitney Morgan
and attended academic banHe will attend URG on a Allen, Malinda Marie Riffle, Ashley Nicole
s hos·-.. by both partial baseball scholarship Barnhart, Brett Ashton Robie, Trenton Mitchell
tet
I&lt;:U
and will ·be taking the field · Beegle, Bryce Lee Bowling, Roseberry
· , · Talan i(ussell
fromPageAl
uthem and the county:
This year El-Dabaja was for tbe Redmen; Chapman Georgetta Bricldes, Corey Roush, Noel Fay Sellers,
president
of the National bas also been awarded a Dalton Brinager,~ Steven Harley Sellers,
on Dec. I of last year, reg·
Honor Society, a member Wmgett Scholarship"
Brittany Brown,
e Anthony Wayne Shamblin,
ulations which are good
·of
student
council,
Quiz
During
his
years
at
Bradford
Brown,
Andrew Keith Smeck,
until July 2009.
Community
Soutbem,
Chapman
played
Christopher
Alan
Joshua
Anthony Smith,
Bowl,
FuiUre
• From July · 1997 to
Career Leaders of America baseball, football and bas- B urk:hameuzzard,r.E~nn.indseEylizP;:t!eeth · Kaylyn Renee Spradling,
December 2006 Ohio septic
and the Southl!lll Yearl&gt;ook ketball, He was also in the 8
Ashley Marie Weddle.
system rules approved three
Committee. The theme for National Honor Society and Chapman, Ryan Keith
Semor awards day is this
basic systems: Septic tank
her graduation speech will was class president this year. Chapman, TYler Cleveland Friday where even more
to leaching, sand filer to dis· · up on your Dunn·g his tun.e at SHS• Circle, Ericka Nichole scholarshiP. and acadenuc'
charge, aeration to dis•
be " not gtvmg
dreatDS.~
Chapman was consistently Cogar,
Heather
Lynn awards Will be announced
· · ~barge. Swatzel said Meigs
Ginthe£
will
be
attmding
involved
in
student
.
gov~Cundiff,
Stephanie
Danielle
for the Class of 2008_
County has had over 5,000
Ohio University the fall, ment, w~ on the s:;ooo1 Cundiff, Jessica Lynn Southern's graduation is at
systems permitted since
· ·
·
c1· •cat newspaper The Ecbo and Durilam, Sarah Beth Eddy, 8 p.m., Sunday inside the
1977 and over 3,000 with
maJOnng' Science.
1D
mt
· ·
· Quiz
· · Bowl
'
·
Sarah .S aleh El-DabaJ· a, · Charles· . W
Laboratory
Gintht7
. paltlc1p":ted
m
m
Hayman
aer.ttion. to discharge due to
has
a
....,.1
of
finishing
her
grades
mne-12.
Chelsea
Marie
Freeman,
Gymnasium
at
Southern
poor soil conditions. steep
de......, lnCiinical' ~.......,·~·
As for his speec
. h, Courtney Lee Ginther, H1gh School.
slopes, small lots and cost
.,--.._...,.,~, J
Chapman laos to ~
James Robert Grady, Krysti
Last
July
Gov. Ted
Science so that sbe may go
· p"
ocus 0~ Nichole Hall, December
on to study . Histology at a tbe top1c of perseverance.
Strickland suspended some
graduate level. She said He~ll talk abOut e:vents Dawn Hensley, Whayne
of the newer regulations for
enjoying her biology classes which bave happened m the · Wilson Marnhout, Matthew
sewage treatment systems
at Southern High School was worW since ~ cl.ass was David Lehew, Abi~ail
(until July 2009) except for
a big reason for choosing this .born to make bis pomt about Frances Nicole Jenkins;
discharging systems.
. pushing forward in life.
Ashley Dawn Kiser, Kreig
area of study.
Because discharging sysSo far Ginther has
Spradling plans on attendtems can sometimes infilreceived the Dr. James H. ing the Umversity of Rio
trate drinking water and
have an affect on stream ·
and Nellie Rowley Jewell- ~de ~ lhl: fall where she
~
\
1·
Q;
,\
"'
Manesseh Cutler Scholars will maJOr m Elementary
dellf3dation, the permits are
~
!
'
\
~
Award
which
will
cover
her
Education
(pre
K-3),
: difficult to come by, accordI
·- '&gt; 1'1-i
~
7
·"
,
.
college expenses for under~·1 c~ tbi~ field because
ing to Swatzel. The permits
---graduate Sllldies at OU.
I love little kids, the teachalso expire every five years
PO!tiiM!Nt .aTSCF.I\1111.
This year Ginther partici- mg benefits are unbeatable
· ,with a $200 chargll and bave
Aeebl W•J~end
paled in the Southern High and ~ v~ons ~ awe·a high cost for components
School Band, cbeerleading some, Spradling ,wd. .
·and maintenance which
"Dance Me A Story"
squad and many different
So far Spradling s reoe1ved
includes water testing.
._1703pm
clubs and·organizations.
two scho~. from .URG
. Swatzel
said
Meigs
pill lilted bJ:
Ginther's
l(raduation o~e_ of which IS for free
County
Health
The
Ariel~
speech will focus on · twuon f&lt;!" one year, ~ secCommissioner
Larry
ood,?f which w~ gJV~ for
"cbange."
.Mat"shall. currently repre- .
PllnoAicbl
:'My
·
speech
expresses
mee!Jng acadeiJllc· cntena
sents -tlle southeast district
. _ , • • 2pm
the idea that without and IS valued at S 15,000. Sbe
p!IIBnled bJ:
change nothing can be · also received one of ,the
Studenta
at Allen Stnolt
The chicks will not stay in accomplished," Ginther Wmgett Scholarships .
tbe incubator, or the class- said. "Though we can "" This year Spradling parlieu&lt; Olltaa: 421 2nd Ave.
room, for long. Once their despise or be scared of ticipated in marching, pep
Glllplllil, OH (740)U6-ARTS
feathers begin ID dry and 'changes they can end up
fromPageAl
develop, the chicks will be being the best thing that
lbe University of Rio Grande Crossroads program is currently accepting applications for a
porated the eggs and chicks placed in a makeshift ever happened to you."
limited number of openings for the Workforce Investment Act year round youth services
r, heated by a lamp.
Chapman plans on attend: mto language arts and math'
e
end
of
the
week,
ing the Umversity of Rio
program. Summer Employment Opponunities is one col'nj!pnent of this year round youth
cmatics learning. Yesterday,
y
be
back
home
at
tbe
Grande
in
the
fall
to
major
students were writing stoprogram.
in education w\th a focus on
Michael farm.
, ries ·about the chicks .
Eligible youth must be ages 14-21, residents of Meigs County, and meet WIA inc&lt;ime
guidelines.
.
Applicati.ms
are
available
at Soulhem High School. Eastern High School, and Meigs High
' '
.
School and at the University of Rio Grande Crossroads Program office at 150 Mill Street in
Middleport.,Applications should be submitted by May 30, 2008.
'
Funding for the WJ.A. In-School and WJA Out -of·School programs is provided by the
Retirement should be one oftht! most enjoyable rimes ofJIO&lt;lf' life. yet many
U.S. Department of Labor and the Meigs County Department of Job and Family Services.
people are 5nandally ~ *x it I can Cl'r!ale a plan designed to help
For additional information please contact:
you enjoy ffJIJremer1t Contact me to discuss IRAs and other available options.
Ages. 14-18: Donna Hartson 992-0010
7
1
1
Ages 19-21 : Brenda Pbalin 992.(J()(J()
· ~ $ d4 C lllfdJJ ~
Roy Taylor. Director
~JWI!S'
NOr!DC .fo.5UID NOT~ BrPfOPt.ES BA/1«
flMAWCI Al SUVICU , tMC.
University of Rio Grande Crossroads Program
,

Southem

Chamber ·

.

.

.

·YcJu '~~- -da~J~aging your brain with practical skills
Dad is typins, !IJ'ay furl.

The Daily Sentinel

:·Load Briefs
Fines for unleashed dogs set

fingers of millions of Citizens."
McCain' gets what a II'IIV·
esty of political ju~tice
those Judiciary Comnutree
hearings have become:
"Over the years, we bave all
seen the dreary rituals !hat
now pass for advice '!fld
consent in the confumauon
of nominees to our SupreJDe
Court. We've seen and
heard the sbabby treatment
accorded to ·nominees ....We
have seen disagreements
redefmed as disqualifications, and the least infraction of approved doctrine
pounced upon by. sen~ ,
their staffs and therr allit:li m
the media. Always banging
in the air over· these tense
confinnation battles is · the
suspicion that maybe, just
maybe, a nominee for the
Court will dare to be faithful to the clear intentions. of
the framers and to the actual
meaning
of
the
Constitution."
Conservatives. have plenty of reasons to WOrry about
McCain and his instilicts
not being conservative. One
speech, which even had a
few legitimate reasons for
conservative grumbling,
does not, of course, erase
history and concerns. 'But
one speech is commi~t
on the record. And the
speech bad a lot of truth and
justice in it
The speech should be a
reminder to those who are
concerned about judicial
activism that elections matter. And not just to the o~ce
a candidate is running for.
(Kathryn Lopez is the Nli·
tor of National Review
Online ( www, nationalreview.com). She elm be contacted at klopez@nationo.l·
review.com.)

The Daily Sentinel• Pqe As

www.mydailysentind.com

expensive stadiums with lion a year plus bonuses,
~sly ~t the~· sweat
public money, sports build Maybe !mowing the exact
· character.
da~ tbat Lincoln got shot
glistemng off ~' («ebead. ·
He is tryi.ng to ~ f Web
There are plenty of exam- isn't tbat imponant in the
ples of wbat pundits think big scheme of .things.
page for his blls~t His
13-year-old .son ·· .!I!JUSS
Jl
IS logical that is exactly Maybe historical dates .and
the room .playing'.~ ~\ of
Mmullen
opposite of what really · sports are the least importhose horrible video. ~s .
works. There was a story tant thing we should · be
filled with mindles~,i, 1 ;~iR;
recently about a college . con~rned wi,th , in .schpol,. ,
_
, journalism freshman class not the most.
lence, bazooka-tof ,Barbarellas in hot P~Ai
.
that di!,ln't lrnow the dates
"Servers! Yeah, that's
!ffisbaven macho men blot",, !i,~ells across the room to of the Amen~ Civil War. right," said the helpless dild,
mg up at\yone. who ~~ · y "What do you call They couldn t name an digging into the keyboard
their head around a corner. ;1 1 ~ things that hold Web American Secretary of once · again. His son could
Everyone knows tha\ ·· ~' f).T'
.
, Defense. An absolute dis- . have set up the Web page in
this ~d will grow up to be ' ·~ijings that hold Web grac~. R1ght? That'~ w~y minutes, but here was tough
a vaolent, know-nothmg si~s"" Does he mean a nothing gets done m this love, the kid waSletting dad
sociopath w~o will be a ~k? Does he mean ~untry, th~ schools have · learn by doing.
Vtdeo games may be to
drain nn soctety for years an IS~· ' Does he mean a failed teaching kids 1mporto come. Everyone knows Web hos~'/1
~ tant dates in bistory., Guess computers· what comic
that video games are grad- · "Server?\',, Billy guessed, wbat? No Japanese kids can books were to me. I
ually sucking out his once- not liftin~ hi eyes from his tell · y_ou the. ~ates of the devoured them still read a
malleable
brain
and IQ-draimng g,(lllle, which Amenc~ C~v1l War. Nor lot to this day. Thank you,
can Italian kids o~ German Batman and Robin. I would
replacing it with oatmeal. was wrecking his life.
1 wonder how 1)1311Y pro- kids . or ~orean· kids or guess today's gamers will
As any · pundit will tell
you, the kid should be out- fessional basketball players Enghsh kids. , Yet they all tum into tomorrow's tech
side playing basketball or and football players. .would seem able to make more whizzes. Maybe we should
football with his friends; have known the answer? popular cars tban we do: teach video games in schwl
he should be outdoors Yet the pundits think thai Toyota, BMW, Fiat, Volvo, instead of state capitals, We
breathing the fresh air, that being the high school foot- Mercedes. I wonder how could hardly do worse, ·
(Jim Mullen i.i the aurhor
his parents are letting hlm ball hero is a wonderful many of their workers
squander his best years in achievement. It's conunon could tell YO\! the capital of . of "It Takes a Vdlage Idior:
front of a ¥ideo screen. pundit lrnowledge. Except . Kentucky? But they could Complicating the Simple
They are raising another for the gambling, the all tell you one thing. The Life " and "&amp;by's First
wastrel.
divorces, the steroid abuse CEO of tHeir company isn't Tattoo. " You can rwch him
Dad stops typing and aQd the building of wildly paying himself a SlOO mil- atjim_mul/en@niyway.com.)

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Better- Retirement

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The Daily Sentinel

. NATION •

•

WoRLD

PageA6
Wednesday, May 14, 2008

Imide

Bl

The Daily Sentinel

~beat fint.p.ie florida, . . . 82
I

I ~ 3-21Md on Spurs, r.ge B2

I..

Pi I • tU!Iioafe Oriamo, r . M

Wednesday, May 14, 2008

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school vanNtw ·~rtlnu event• Involving
1MM1 frOm 'M!IP and Gallia countln .

Marauders' season ends at Waverly in sectional semifinal
Br ERic RM?JOUIII
ERANDOLPH@MYI!NLVSENTINEI..COM

(ill. .Jackaon at

p.m:

(tlltWielgnt (31 wa..,rty, 5 p.m.
(81-&lt;at (B) South Gallla,'5 p.m.
•~.. ' ,

.

Tnldc. and F'-ld .
Championships at fdhens, 5

S&amp;tML

Democratic p~esidential hopefUl Sen. Hillary

~m;

.,.........
Rodham

CHARI...ESlON, W.Va.

- Hillary Rodbam Clin.t0n

.....

ill'd: ... Field

'Tl(C ~iRO at NYHS, 4 p.m.

--

711 ,

11

( 1 ) - ~at (21 Weilrton, 5 p.m;
11\'D.-.clfCield

C/1/C meet at Soulh 1'oint, 4:30 p.m.
APP~a!o

In this phGto released by China'·s ~inhlua News Age0cy, collapsed buildings are seen in the quake-stricken 'Beichuan
county, SOI.IIhwest Chima's Sicht!Jan !Province TllleSday. SOldiers Who hiked.over 11andslicle-blocked roads to reach 1l1ti epi·
()Sillier of China's devastatirlg ealllt;tqiJiake 'Searched tlilmlilgll oollapsed buik!lililgs Wednesday for Slii'Vivors, with the death
toll of more than 12;000 certain to rise as llhe buried are fliwrlll!.l.

coasted ro a large but largely symbolic victory in
w{)f'kiog-class West Vtrginia
Buses carried survivors
On Tuesday, Wen crisson lbesday, handing Barack
BY AUDRA AliiG
Li .a nd a mend, 7lhang
Obama one of ttbe worst
ASSOCIATED PREss wRITER
. Mingfu, 44. had built a ..away from Beichuan, which crossed the disaster area to
a few oversee relief efforts, the
wood and· plastic shelter was Battened !lefeats of lhe campaign yet
Xinhua
news
scarcely slowing his maroh
MlANYANG, China with a -straw llloor where buildings standing amid · official
toward me Democratic
SGidiers hikiing over land- ~ · 30 family members piJes of rubble in a narrow agency cited the Defense
· presiden1lial nomination.
sliiJe.'IJ!ocked roads reached spent ilbe night Their valley, according to CCTV Ministry as saying that
"The White House is
ilihe epicenter @f China's .destroyed lhmnes were i.n video.
some 20,000 soldiers and
woo in lhe swing states.
devastating
elll1llhquake ,the background.
More than 10,000 JICC?Ple police arrived in the disaster
And I am winning the
Ttuesday, pulling bodies and
"I feel lucky. It's the peo- from there and surrounding area, wilh 30,000 more on
swing states," Clinton rold
a few survivors from ool- pJe in the mountains &amp;at we areas packed Mianyang's the way . by plane, train•.
cheering supporters at a
lapsed buildings. The death · are w~ about, ilhey are Iiumou Gymnasium, with truck and on foot.
victory raHy.
mil of m&lt;M'e dian l2,000 our relatives," ·Zhana said.
e~ water bottles, boxes
"We will save the peopJe," ·
She coupled .praise for
was certain· to rise ;&amp; the
Auth0Ji1lics bad ibiocked of mstaot noodles and ciga- Wen said through a 'bullhorn
Obama with a pled~e to
buried wcre found.
the road to Beichuan to .reg- rette cattons littering the to survivors in Shifang,
persevere in a camplll.gn in
Rescuers woria:d tllllough ul.ar ,ttaffic to allow rescue ground.
where two chemical plants
which she bas become the
.a steady min SCllllching vehicles access.
"I saw rocks· .and e!Uth collapsed and buried more
aecided underdog. "This
WI'Ccked towns across hilly
Price gou~g ·was evi- rolling down ilhe bill, and than .600 people, according
race isn't over yet," she
stretches
of
Sichuan dent in the nearby city of they desmyed whatever to CCI'V. "As long ·as the
said. "Neither of ils has
:province ,lh!lt :w.cre stricken Mianyang, where ·some they bit ·below," said a people are there, factories
the total delegates it takes
by Moodaf~ ?'agnin,~e-7 :9 st~s were open. A package ,farmer who ooly gave his can be buih into even better
io win."
qna!ce. China-s deadliest m ,o f mstant illliiOdles nmmally sumame, Chen, from ·the vii- ones, and so can the towns
: Obama looked ahead to
ilbreedccades. Tens Of thou- selling for 35 &lt;Oents now lage of Lcigu near Beiohuan. and counties."
the OmgGn primary later in
sands .I&gt;PeDl a second ni~ . costs '$1.15.
"There' s nothing I can do
The Finance Ministry said
the IDIJilth and to the gencroutdoors, some ·sleepmg
Botih
Beiohuan
and about this, It's all in the it had allocated $123 mil,
~ el~Gn
campaign
under plutic W:etiiog, .otJi:. Mianyan,g are in a ttiang1e !hands of the ~vemmeot."
lion in quake aid.
ll.gainsl Republican John
OiintOn ~
aat- eft hfied to :a ~um in the at:ea close to the .e pi=rter
In the prov.inoial ' '1al of
At the worl~ famous ·
McCain but die Welil · · 'lll'ilh wpel!-.
of Mianyaag, Gil die of die QI'W jlut IIOdh of Cllaeqgdu,F'M4l.A~ Wolong National Nature
Vqieia-lef 7 nmk~
'''If·~ 250 ·
ofdlediuta.-ea;
lbeSicbn;m pt'IWincial.api- radio station operated around · Reserve, all 86 pandas were
bis wealrness ~ blue . them ~temain
· night fell, a first wave ital.ofOheqgdu
·
.tbe'dock, readi"&amp;, ·text mes- reported safe late Tuesday
oollar voterli who will be unoommiued.
200 to1dier5 cmeted die
Stteet ~ hmpt;
w.em ·•
li(lOI b}i"~\irv..~· of in the first word since compivotal in the fail.
The dc~gate taUy aside, tmw ,Gf Wenchuan, near the switched on in Miaoyang oo . 'lllrirhn .areas ito Jet relalives munications with the pre,
"This is our chance to .the former fir-st tady '81rug- · ,epicenter, .trudging .across "J:uesday night, lbut all ttbc know dley are ali;ve.
serve were cut off. A group
build a new majority uf gled . to ov.e~come an m~ 110ads and mud- buildings ·were dark and
.· State
television of 31 British tourists ,panda·
Democrat~ and indepen- emerging Democratic .con- -slides, 'State IICJevision said.
deserted after the gwem- Wednesday
broadcast watching in the preserve
donts and Republicans who sensus that Obama effecSoldiers ooo1lioued their mem ordered people out ·o f touchfug scenes .of Premier also returned safely to
koow tbat four more years tively wrapped llJl ~nom- eil'oJits 011 Wednesday mom- lhem for fear of aftar&amp;hooks. Wen Jiabao at the ~y.ang . Chengdu, the Foreign .
.of George Bush just won't ination last week With a ing, .and Xi.nhwi ·said anoth- Seoucity ,g uards wme posted stadium comforting cbil, Ministry said, although
do," Obama said in victory in the Nolitb er '8 00mnedpoliceamved. at .apartmentblocksto~ dren· whose parents were there was no word on 12
Missouri, which looms as a Carolina .~ .and a narThe Fescue ·wm'k.crs people .out.
lcilied in the earthquake.
missing Americans on 11
state
m row loss m Indiana
~~ Chat the t~ll would
The industrial - city of .
battlegroiiDd
"The government will World Wildlife Fund tour.
November.
He picEd up four likely Jump ·as therr efforts 700,000 people -. home to take care of you." Wen told
Still, prospects for sur'This is our moment to superoeiegates duri.og the ooo1lioued, and Xinhua the beadqtJalllf:I'S of Ohina's a girl · about 9. "Since you vivors in the quake wne
tum the page on the divi- .day, inohJding Roy Romer, repol1ted WednesdaY. . that nuclear weapons design
survived, you must live dwindled. Only 58 people
sions and distraCtions that former Democratic P.a11ty 7,700 poople were killed ~ industl)' - was rumrd iot&lt;! a your life well." The child were pulled from demol·
Wenchuan. but tt ~aso t thmngiog ~camp, wtth cried and covered her face. ished buildings across the
pass for · politics in chairman.
Washington;" added the
"This race, I believe, is d.ear if ithat fi,gure was residllots sll:e,ping outdoors.
The go:vemment' s high, quake area so far, China
mao seeking to become the over." Romer told l!epOiilers irulluded in the larger toll of
..I'm oold.-. am't dare to gear response aimed ·to reas- Seismological
Hureau
first biack presidential nom- on a .conference .call. He 11,000. .
·sleep, and I'm waed :a
sure Chinese while showing spokesman Zhang Hongwei
ineeof a major paJity.
said only Clinton can
Helicopters were prepar- buil~isgoingrofalldown the wmild it was capable of told Xinhua. ·
With votes from 69 per- decide when to withdraw, ing to fty in relief.supPlied on me, said Tang ling; a 20- · handling . the disaster .and
Weeping parenh held a
cent of West Virginia's but he added.: "There is a if the weather pernutted. year-oldw.aitress w~in
was ready for the Aug. 8-24 vigil in a steady outside a
precincts oounted, Clinton time we need to .end it and The mad into Wenchuan a borrowed pink dow.n 'acket
Olympics
in
Beijing. collapsed school in the town
~as winning 66 peroem Of direct ·o urselves to the gen- w.as still blocked by rocks and camped outside ilhe
the v(lte, to 27 percent for eral election. I think 1hat .and mud slides, holding •up Juyuan restaurant with three Although the govemme11t of Juyuan. where more than
Obama.
time is now."
rescue worll.
ro-w.OJ'kers. "What's hap- s.aid it welcomed outside 900 hi~h school students
Clinton' s .
triumph
Only five more primaries
Many survivors were pcncd is so . cruel. In one aid, officials said that the were initially trapped. Only
assistance would be coo- one" survivor has been
approached the 70 ~~ remain on the .calendar, dependent oo the govem- minute to have so many pco- fined to money and supplies, found: a girL pulled free by
of tf:Ie vote she gained in beginning nex:t week in meot for food and water, pJe die is too tragic."
rescue team.
Arkansas, her best state to Kentucky and Oregru1, dJeo and :wme anxious fur word
At least 12,lH 2 deaths not ,to foreign personnel.
date. It came couttesy of an Puerto Rico on lime 1 and about missing relati11es.
ooc11111:ed
Sichuan alone
overwhelmingly white elec- Montama and .South Dakota
ln An Xian, on the road to wlille another 323 died in
torate comprised of the two "days ~atcr.
Beichuan, a 'ban:l-bit area oo five .ot;be,r provinoes .6nd the
There's another' import.aot the edge of the quake's epi- metropolis of (Jbongqing,
kinds of voters who have
favored her throughout the date on the .calendar, though center, a group of swwivOI'S state 'lDC"'ia reponed. 1lhat
for all
primaries. Nearly a quarter - the May 31 meeting of a huddled by the road i.n a toll seemod likely ro jump
were 60 or older, and a sim- convention ·committee lhat make&amp;bitit tent ,to prated sbar.ply . :u mscue !learns
ilar number bad no educa- · will hearClinton'uppeal to ilhem from the ram:
reaclicli1 bard-bit rowns.
tioo . beyond high school. seat .the dele~~ fro~ · Government buses !have
1be devastation :and
More than half were m fam- disputed prliiiliDCS to :calried some •survivOI'S out nmprtct.&lt;up ' rrescue across
ilies with .incomes or Aorida and Michipn.
of Beichuan, but Li tar~, ·· beavily populated
Clinton has long argued Zizboog, .a 31!-year.old cepon.of farms and, factory
$50,000 or less, and the former first lady was wining a· to have the dele_gates seat- farmer, said he had oot towns stt:ained local gowma . dectsion that heard from his relatives ments. Food dwindlc4 011
whGpping 69 percent of ed -.
their votes.
.
. . . would' cut ' into . Obama's· thelle yet.
.
the .shel"es .oftbe fe)lo' stores ,
Onlllltertlll
· Oioton won at least 16 of delegate advant~t~e ' 'Who knows what ~ that
remained
•n~
the 28 delegates at stake in · cvco though ·t he prun.aries r_:ned to dlem," U wd. Gasoline~ was· liearoe, .wilh
&amp;• .......
· West Vuginia and Obama were held so early in :the 'All we Deed , iii a little long lines outside· some ttta' ·
won at least seven. with five year that lbey violated something to .eat. rm just •tions and pwnps matted
more to be allocated.
Democrati&lt;; party rules.
happy to be alive."
.
'tcmpty."

:Zt

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Flat or low Sloped Roofs

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2

E.itnem. 5 p.m.

de=,

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Mp15
'I
of Trimllle-South Gallla game a1

8oy81

(21 Southam, 5 p.m.
·
Wlhnltr of 'it'alerfotct-Miller game at (1)

CHnton .trounces
Obama in West Vuginia
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITERS •

1Dwl 1

tor-

Clinton, D-N.V., addtesses S~&lt;!ppOitefS dUring her West
Virginia Primary 1111ght rally Tuesday at the Ohar!estOII Civic
Center in Charileston, W.Va.

That left Obama wilh
1,881.5 aelegates, to I,713
for Cl.inton, out of Ul26
needed to clinch die oomination at ·tbe pa11ty Cl'lm'en1lion in Denver d:Jis sllllllllef.
The Democra1lic win on
lluesday io a Mississippi
special dectiGn increased
by one the number of delegates needed to win tihe
oomina1lion.
Clinton's aidesoontendod
tihat bcr stmogth With blueoollar voters already
demoostt:ated in primaries
in Ohio, Pennsy:Jvania and
. Indiana - lllllke!; ber the
mote electable candidate in
the fall.
In her mouub, Clinton
said. "I deep!~ admire
Senator Obama, but she
added, "our case is
sllQnger." She said she had
won roughly 17 million
votes in ,the primaries and
caucuses to date.
Obama also ruurowly
won Nebraska'!i ooo~g
primary. He bad won the
state'·s •cauouses eadier in
the y.ear and with lhlm, a
majority of its

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take down

Tomcats 9-3
BY Eatc.RMooLPtt
ERANDOLPHCPMVDAILVSENTINEL.COM

GLOUSTER Kyle
Gordon had three hits, and
Brannon and Titus
Pierce each
had
two
RBls, leading
the
Eas .tero
Eagles past
the Trimble
Tomcats 93 in a ToValley
&amp;.._..J Conference
Hocking
Division
base-ball ·
g a m e
Tuesday.
With the
w i n ,
Eastern
(.11·11)
improves to
6-3 in the

....

..,.,

lSth Annwll Me~
F~ Golf tourney
· MASON, W.Va. - The
15th Annual Meigs Football
Golf Tournament will be
held Saturday, May 31, at
1he Riverside Golf Course
it' 8:30 a.m.
For more information,
contact Meigs football
coach Mike Chancey at
740-992. 2158 or 740,992,

0064.

2808 Meigs Flag
FoodJall Registration
ROCKSPRINGS
_
Registration is now open for
tlte .2008 flag football sea~n. o,pen to boys and girls
in grades l-6 beginning
with the 2008-09 school
year. Registration fee is $40
, per player, and $25 for each
additional sibling.
The games will 'be played
starting io September on the
M:eigs High School practice
field. Final date for registration is July I st, and payment
~11st also be received by
JuTy 1St. A workout/combine will be held on July
16th at 9 a:m. at Meigs High
School. All checks must be
made out to Meigs Fla:g
· foptbal:l- League, P.O. Box
?Si.,Pomeroy, Ohio 45769.
!
register online or for
inOre information go to
~w.meigsffl .com or call

Jo

7~541 , ] 222.

·.-

•

..

(!~

"*23&gt;12. ext. 33

.

'..idolphOmydailysentJOel.com

740-992-7953. 740-591-4641

way

TUPPERS PLAINS Eastern High School will be
holding its I Oth Annual
Eagle Basketball Camp on
May 27 through 30 from 9
a.m. to noon for boys and
gids enterin£ grades 4, S,
and '6.
Camp staff will include '
players and coaches from
the 2007-08 EHS boys and
girls basketball teams. The
camp will focus on fonda,
mentals, most of which are
(!Sed by players of all levels,
that are essential for producing wiooing basketball.
· Cost per player will be
$35 pre-registration or $45
llhe · first day of camp.
Inc.luded. in the cost will be
a camp T-sbirt.
' .Checks should be 10llde
payable to Eastern Athletic
Boosters. Checks and registration forms should be sent
to Howie Caldwell at 40878
Old . · Seven
Road,
Reedsville, OH 45772 or at
Eastern High School, 38900 ·
SR 7, Reedsville, OH
45772.

2

,. ..., Olio .

Bryan Delong will be in
his fourth season of varsity
baseball, and Evans, Clay
Bolio, and Corey Hutton
will be in their third, making
a strong '09 senior class
with Unbaokes and Jason
Morris. Sophomores Caleb
Davis and Ryan Jeffers are
two more starters that should
also be back for a third varsity season.
Waverly advances to the
Division n sectional final
against Marietta,
who
defeated top-seeded Jackson
to make tlie championship
game.

Eagles easily

Uasket~all Camp

~- opottsDmydailysenlinel.com
sp, b"

4Ms • • • /'

been considered too much
for these Marauders to come
back from. But Tuesday just
wasn't their day, and
Waverly pitching struck out
I0 batters.
The Tigers scored in the
first and the third off a single
and a double. Then in the
sixth inning three coosecuti ve hits doubled their total.
Both teams finished . with
oneenur.
The loss of Dunfee and
Story will undoubtedly be
significant, but the 2009
Marauders look to return
almost the entire starting
lineup from a team 1hat went
9·1 this season in the TVC
·Ohio.

lOth Annual Eagle

Etli: "-ldolph, Spom Wr11er

SHEAIILWSIONS

another feat
that
no
other Meigs
team
has
ac c o m plished.
All three
titles have
come under
fourth, year
head coach
S1llly
Je re m y
Gr. i m m,
who bas quickly established
the Marauders as a perennial
TVC contender.
Despite the difficult night
at the flate, Mei~s was never
out o Tuesday s semifinal,
and not even a 6-0 deficit
after six innings could have

Trocl&lt; and Field

•

..... ~ 1 ·7-3008

I

r;"1';::r;~;;';'l

SEOA1. Championships at AlhenS, 11 a.m

•. · · ~ ·7 4~2342 ext 33
••

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ClOIIrillc _. pena triz'tzzr
St6f' ill jilr C..IM~MM
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(6) Eastern at (31 Symmes Valley, 1 p.m.

QlNTACI'US

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Hll 2009 ld'UIJEW . . . . tSS'
Wr 7 u'r, M1r 21, JIIMIUIIIII
1i £i i n , Hn' Je &amp; t a s I
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Sa!ttrdey7'11

Qklr ·Soltbon • -.1onr1 ftnrtr
(51 Pike Eastern al(4) Southern , 1 p.m. ·

WAVERLY ln an
uncharacteristic
performance that hardly represented the season they had, the
Meigs Marauders baseball
team · got just two hits
against the Waverly Tip
and went on to lose W m a
Division n sectional semifinal Tuesday evening.
Senior Austin Dunfee
pitched for M~&amp;~~ striking
out four and w · g ·ooe in
his final ·game ,as a
Marauder. Aaron Story, also
a senior, concluded his
Meigs baseball career, as
well.

Juniors
J.T. Evans
and
Joey
Unbankes
accounted
for Meigs'
two hits.
It was a
tough way
for
the
Marauders
Dz ka
to go out
after another sucoessful regular season.
For 1he first time in school
history, the Marauders (14S) won their second consecutive Tri-Valley Conference
Ohio Division championship.' It was also lhe
team's third in four seasons,

a;,.n Wallera, Spom Writer
~)~. .... 33

-.a~lytlibune.com

LMy Crum, Sport8 Writer
('7&lt;10) ~. ext.'33
~Dmydrltyoogishh .oom

I

.

EricR8old:lp"'p"rt"

of

Meigs' Cornelius English, right, and Southern's Ronnie Wilson , center, compete in the 100m dash during qualifying the
Tri-Valley Conference Championships on Tuesday at Nelsonville-York High School in Nelsonville. The finals of the TVC
Championships will be !reid Thursday.
·

T

V C

Hocking.
Pierce
earned the victory for the
Eagles. The sophomore
struck out two, walked
none, and gave up no hits in
two innings of work.
Gordon, a senior, came on
in relief in the third and
pitched through the fifth,
striking out three and walkiog three. Junior Zach
HendriK pitched the rest of
the game and struck out
one.
As a team, the Eagles
combined for 14 hits and
walked nine times, and
ev~ starter reached base at
least oooe.
Gordon batted leadoff and

Meigs ends regular season
with win over Lady 'Does
BY ERic~

scored.
Freshman
Chandra
RACINE Freshman
Stanley had
a double
Sbellie Bailey con1lioued her
and
an
strong play of late with a
double, three hits, and three
RBI , and
runs scored, helping the
s e n i o r
Meigs Lady Marauders
Ha nnah
softball team defeat the
Pratt bad a
single an
Southern Lady Tornadoes 86 in a Tri· Valley Conference
Roltla
RBI on a
non-division game Monday. ·
sacrifice .
Meigs improves to II- Hl Sophomore Mick.i Barnes
on the season and remains rounded out the Meigs hit- ,
6-4 in the TVC Ohio tiog with a single.
Division, while Southern,
Senior Sarah · Eddy had a
the TVC Hocking champs double and three RBi s for
with a divisional rec.ord of Southern, while Turley,
8,2, moves to 12-S overall. senior Lindsey Buzzard.
Senior Ashley Robie led and sophomore Lindsey
the Lady TOilllldOes offen· Teaford each
singled.
sively with a double and Buzzard had two walks.
three hits.
·
junior Chelsea Pape had
Junior Hailey Ebersbach one, and senior Stephanie
pitched for Meigs and Cundiff was hit by a pitch.
earned the win. She struck
The Lady Marauders
out six and walked six . begin tournament play
Sophomore Kasey Turley Wednesday with a sectional
was on the mound for semifinal game at Waverly.
Soutl)ern, striking out three Start time will be 5 p.m.
and walking seven.
The Lady Tornadoes will
Sophomore
Meri open their tournament seaVanMeter had a double and son on Saturday when they
three RBls .for the Lady host Pike Eastern in the sec,
Marauders, who finished tiooal final at 1 p.m.
with nine hits for the game.
I' 11 Tlaed .,._
lilolgol.loo-nl
Sophomore
Shanalle
Ill
002 010 1
892
Meigs junior Hailey Ebersbach {34) throws to senior Amy Barr for a force out at first during Smith had a double, a sin- s
300 . 102 0
- 682
gle, two walks, and a run Wf' - E -: LP - Turley. ·
Monday's Tri-Valley Conference non;division game against Southern in Racine.
E~ANOOl..Pf'WMYDAILVSENTINEL.COM

�,

The Daily Sentinel

. NATION •

•

WoRLD

PageA6
Wednesday, May 14, 2008

Imide

Bl

The Daily Sentinel

~beat fint.p.ie florida, . . . 82
I

I ~ 3-21Md on Spurs, r.ge B2

I..

Pi I • tU!Iioafe Oriamo, r . M

Wednesday, May 14, 2008

' ..

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...., ScHEDULE
-""' .................
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.
'

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school vanNtw ·~rtlnu event• Involving
1MM1 frOm 'M!IP and Gallia countln .

Marauders' season ends at Waverly in sectional semifinal
Br ERic RM?JOUIII
ERANDOLPH@MYI!NLVSENTINEI..COM

(ill. .Jackaon at

p.m:

(tlltWielgnt (31 wa..,rty, 5 p.m.
(81-&lt;at (B) South Gallla,'5 p.m.
•~.. ' ,

.

Tnldc. and F'-ld .
Championships at fdhens, 5

S&amp;tML

Democratic p~esidential hopefUl Sen. Hillary

~m;

.,.........
Rodham

CHARI...ESlON, W.Va.

- Hillary Rodbam Clin.t0n

.....

ill'd: ... Field

'Tl(C ~iRO at NYHS, 4 p.m.

--

711 ,

11

( 1 ) - ~at (21 Weilrton, 5 p.m;
11\'D.-.clfCield

C/1/C meet at Soulh 1'oint, 4:30 p.m.
APP~a!o

In this phGto released by China'·s ~inhlua News Age0cy, collapsed buildings are seen in the quake-stricken 'Beichuan
county, SOI.IIhwest Chima's Sicht!Jan !Province TllleSday. SOldiers Who hiked.over 11andslicle-blocked roads to reach 1l1ti epi·
()Sillier of China's devastatirlg ealllt;tqiJiake 'Searched tlilmlilgll oollapsed buik!lililgs Wednesday for Slii'Vivors, with the death
toll of more than 12;000 certain to rise as llhe buried are fliwrlll!.l.

coasted ro a large but largely symbolic victory in
w{)f'kiog-class West Vtrginia
Buses carried survivors
On Tuesday, Wen crisson lbesday, handing Barack
BY AUDRA AliiG
Li .a nd a mend, 7lhang
Obama one of ttbe worst
ASSOCIATED PREss wRITER
. Mingfu, 44. had built a ..away from Beichuan, which crossed the disaster area to
a few oversee relief efforts, the
wood and· plastic shelter was Battened !lefeats of lhe campaign yet
Xinhua
news
scarcely slowing his maroh
MlANYANG, China with a -straw llloor where buildings standing amid · official
toward me Democratic
SGidiers hikiing over land- ~ · 30 family members piJes of rubble in a narrow agency cited the Defense
· presiden1lial nomination.
sliiJe.'IJ!ocked roads reached spent ilbe night Their valley, according to CCTV Ministry as saying that
"The White House is
ilihe epicenter @f China's .destroyed lhmnes were i.n video.
some 20,000 soldiers and
woo in lhe swing states.
devastating
elll1llhquake ,the background.
More than 10,000 JICC?Ple police arrived in the disaster
And I am winning the
Ttuesday, pulling bodies and
"I feel lucky. It's the peo- from there and surrounding area, wilh 30,000 more on
swing states," Clinton rold
a few survivors from ool- pJe in the mountains &amp;at we areas packed Mianyang's the way . by plane, train•.
cheering supporters at a
lapsed buildings. The death · are w~ about, ilhey are Iiumou Gymnasium, with truck and on foot.
victory raHy.
mil of m&lt;M'e dian l2,000 our relatives," ·Zhana said.
e~ water bottles, boxes
"We will save the peopJe," ·
She coupled .praise for
was certain· to rise ;&amp; the
Auth0Ji1lics bad ibiocked of mstaot noodles and ciga- Wen said through a 'bullhorn
Obama with a pled~e to
buried wcre found.
the road to Beichuan to .reg- rette cattons littering the to survivors in Shifang,
persevere in a camplll.gn in
Rescuers woria:d tllllough ul.ar ,ttaffic to allow rescue ground.
where two chemical plants
which she bas become the
.a steady min SCllllching vehicles access.
"I saw rocks· .and e!Uth collapsed and buried more
aecided underdog. "This
WI'Ccked towns across hilly
Price gou~g ·was evi- rolling down ilhe bill, and than .600 people, according
race isn't over yet," she
stretches
of
Sichuan dent in the nearby city of they desmyed whatever to CCI'V. "As long ·as the
said. "Neither of ils has
:province ,lh!lt :w.cre stricken Mianyang, where ·some they bit ·below," said a people are there, factories
the total delegates it takes
by Moodaf~ ?'agnin,~e-7 :9 st~s were open. A package ,farmer who ooly gave his can be buih into even better
io win."
qna!ce. China-s deadliest m ,o f mstant illliiOdles nmmally sumame, Chen, from ·the vii- ones, and so can the towns
: Obama looked ahead to
ilbreedccades. Tens Of thou- selling for 35 &lt;Oents now lage of Lcigu near Beiohuan. and counties."
the OmgGn primary later in
sands .I&gt;PeDl a second ni~ . costs '$1.15.
"There' s nothing I can do
The Finance Ministry said
the IDIJilth and to the gencroutdoors, some ·sleepmg
Botih
Beiohuan
and about this, It's all in the it had allocated $123 mil,
~ el~Gn
campaign
under plutic W:etiiog, .otJi:. Mianyan,g are in a ttiang1e !hands of the ~vemmeot."
lion in quake aid.
ll.gainsl Republican John
OiintOn ~
aat- eft hfied to :a ~um in the at:ea close to the .e pi=rter
In the prov.inoial ' '1al of
At the worl~ famous ·
McCain but die Welil · · 'lll'ilh wpel!-.
of Mianyaag, Gil die of die QI'W jlut IIOdh of Cllaeqgdu,F'M4l.A~ Wolong National Nature
Vqieia-lef 7 nmk~
'''If·~ 250 ·
ofdlediuta.-ea;
lbeSicbn;m pt'IWincial.api- radio station operated around · Reserve, all 86 pandas were
bis wealrness ~ blue . them ~temain
· night fell, a first wave ital.ofOheqgdu
·
.tbe'dock, readi"&amp;, ·text mes- reported safe late Tuesday
oollar voterli who will be unoommiued.
200 to1dier5 cmeted die
Stteet ~ hmpt;
w.em ·•
li(lOI b}i"~\irv..~· of in the first word since compivotal in the fail.
The dc~gate taUy aside, tmw ,Gf Wenchuan, near the switched on in Miaoyang oo . 'lllrirhn .areas ito Jet relalives munications with the pre,
"This is our chance to .the former fir-st tady '81rug- · ,epicenter, .trudging .across "J:uesday night, lbut all ttbc know dley are ali;ve.
serve were cut off. A group
build a new majority uf gled . to ov.e~come an m~ 110ads and mud- buildings ·were dark and
.· State
television of 31 British tourists ,panda·
Democrat~ and indepen- emerging Democratic .con- -slides, 'State IICJevision said.
deserted after the gwem- Wednesday
broadcast watching in the preserve
donts and Republicans who sensus that Obama effecSoldiers ooo1lioued their mem ordered people out ·o f touchfug scenes .of Premier also returned safely to
koow tbat four more years tively wrapped llJl ~nom- eil'oJits 011 Wednesday mom- lhem for fear of aftar&amp;hooks. Wen Jiabao at the ~y.ang . Chengdu, the Foreign .
.of George Bush just won't ination last week With a ing, .and Xi.nhwi ·said anoth- Seoucity ,g uards wme posted stadium comforting cbil, Ministry said, although
do," Obama said in victory in the Nolitb er '8 00mnedpoliceamved. at .apartmentblocksto~ dren· whose parents were there was no word on 12
Missouri, which looms as a Carolina .~ .and a narThe Fescue ·wm'k.crs people .out.
lcilied in the earthquake.
missing Americans on 11
state
m row loss m Indiana
~~ Chat the t~ll would
The industrial - city of .
battlegroiiDd
"The government will World Wildlife Fund tour.
November.
He picEd up four likely Jump ·as therr efforts 700,000 people -. home to take care of you." Wen told
Still, prospects for sur'This is our moment to superoeiegates duri.og the ooo1lioued, and Xinhua the beadqtJalllf:I'S of Ohina's a girl · about 9. "Since you vivors in the quake wne
tum the page on the divi- .day, inohJding Roy Romer, repol1ted WednesdaY. . that nuclear weapons design
survived, you must live dwindled. Only 58 people
sions and distraCtions that former Democratic P.a11ty 7,700 poople were killed ~ industl)' - was rumrd iot&lt;! a your life well." The child were pulled from demol·
Wenchuan. but tt ~aso t thmngiog ~camp, wtth cried and covered her face. ished buildings across the
pass for · politics in chairman.
Washington;" added the
"This race, I believe, is d.ear if ithat fi,gure was residllots sll:e,ping outdoors.
The go:vemment' s high, quake area so far, China
mao seeking to become the over." Romer told l!epOiilers irulluded in the larger toll of
..I'm oold.-. am't dare to gear response aimed ·to reas- Seismological
Hureau
first biack presidential nom- on a .conference .call. He 11,000. .
·sleep, and I'm waed :a
sure Chinese while showing spokesman Zhang Hongwei
ineeof a major paJity.
said only Clinton can
Helicopters were prepar- buil~isgoingrofalldown the wmild it was capable of told Xinhua. ·
With votes from 69 per- decide when to withdraw, ing to fty in relief.supPlied on me, said Tang ling; a 20- · handling . the disaster .and
Weeping parenh held a
cent of West Virginia's but he added.: "There is a if the weather pernutted. year-oldw.aitress w~in
was ready for the Aug. 8-24 vigil in a steady outside a
precincts oounted, Clinton time we need to .end it and The mad into Wenchuan a borrowed pink dow.n 'acket
Olympics
in
Beijing. collapsed school in the town
~as winning 66 peroem Of direct ·o urselves to the gen- w.as still blocked by rocks and camped outside ilhe
the v(lte, to 27 percent for eral election. I think 1hat .and mud slides, holding •up Juyuan restaurant with three Although the govemme11t of Juyuan. where more than
Obama.
time is now."
rescue worll.
ro-w.OJ'kers. "What's hap- s.aid it welcomed outside 900 hi~h school students
Clinton' s .
triumph
Only five more primaries
Many survivors were pcncd is so . cruel. In one aid, officials said that the were initially trapped. Only
assistance would be coo- one" survivor has been
approached the 70 ~~ remain on the .calendar, dependent oo the govem- minute to have so many pco- fined to money and supplies, found: a girL pulled free by
of tf:Ie vote she gained in beginning nex:t week in meot for food and water, pJe die is too tragic."
rescue team.
Arkansas, her best state to Kentucky and Oregru1, dJeo and :wme anxious fur word
At least 12,lH 2 deaths not ,to foreign personnel.
date. It came couttesy of an Puerto Rico on lime 1 and about missing relati11es.
ooc11111:ed
Sichuan alone
overwhelmingly white elec- Montama and .South Dakota
ln An Xian, on the road to wlille another 323 died in
torate comprised of the two "days ~atcr.
Beichuan, a 'ban:l-bit area oo five .ot;be,r provinoes .6nd the
There's another' import.aot the edge of the quake's epi- metropolis of (Jbongqing,
kinds of voters who have
favored her throughout the date on the .calendar, though center, a group of swwivOI'S state 'lDC"'ia reponed. 1lhat
for all
primaries. Nearly a quarter - the May 31 meeting of a huddled by the road i.n a toll seemod likely ro jump
were 60 or older, and a sim- convention ·committee lhat make&amp;bitit tent ,to prated sbar.ply . :u mscue !learns
ilar number bad no educa- · will hearClinton'uppeal to ilhem from the ram:
reaclicli1 bard-bit rowns.
tioo . beyond high school. seat .the dele~~ fro~ · Government buses !have
1be devastation :and
More than half were m fam- disputed prliiiliDCS to :calried some •survivOI'S out nmprtct.&lt;up ' rrescue across
ilies with .incomes or Aorida and Michipn.
of Beichuan, but Li tar~, ·· beavily populated
Clinton has long argued Zizboog, .a 31!-year.old cepon.of farms and, factory
$50,000 or less, and the former first lady was wining a· to have the dele_gates seat- farmer, said he had oot towns stt:ained local gowma . dectsion that heard from his relatives ments. Food dwindlc4 011
whGpping 69 percent of ed -.
their votes.
.
. . . would' cut ' into . Obama's· thelle yet.
.
the .shel"es .oftbe fe)lo' stores ,
Onlllltertlll
· Oioton won at least 16 of delegate advant~t~e ' 'Who knows what ~ that
remained
•n~
the 28 delegates at stake in · cvco though ·t he prun.aries r_:ned to dlem," U wd. Gasoline~ was· liearoe, .wilh
&amp;• .......
· West Vuginia and Obama were held so early in :the 'All we Deed , iii a little long lines outside· some ttta' ·
won at least seven. with five year that lbey violated something to .eat. rm just •tions and pwnps matted
more to be allocated.
Democrati&lt;; party rules.
happy to be alive."
.
'tcmpty."

:Zt

m

Flat or low Sloped Roofs

I

2

E.itnem. 5 p.m.

de=,

,I

Mp15
'I
of Trimllle-South Gallla game a1

8oy81

(21 Southam, 5 p.m.
·
Wlhnltr of 'it'alerfotct-Miller game at (1)

CHnton .trounces
Obama in West Vuginia
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITERS •

1Dwl 1

tor-

Clinton, D-N.V., addtesses S~&lt;!ppOitefS dUring her West
Virginia Primary 1111ght rally Tuesday at the Ohar!estOII Civic
Center in Charileston, W.Va.

That left Obama wilh
1,881.5 aelegates, to I,713
for Cl.inton, out of Ul26
needed to clinch die oomination at ·tbe pa11ty Cl'lm'en1lion in Denver d:Jis sllllllllef.
The Democra1lic win on
lluesday io a Mississippi
special dectiGn increased
by one the number of delegates needed to win tihe
oomina1lion.
Clinton's aidesoontendod
tihat bcr stmogth With blueoollar voters already
demoostt:ated in primaries
in Ohio, Pennsy:Jvania and
. Indiana - lllllke!; ber the
mote electable candidate in
the fall.
In her mouub, Clinton
said. "I deep!~ admire
Senator Obama, but she
added, "our case is
sllQnger." She said she had
won roughly 17 million
votes in ,the primaries and
caucuses to date.
Obama also ruurowly
won Nebraska'!i ooo~g
primary. He bad won the
state'·s •cauouses eadier in
the y.ear and with lhlm, a
majority of its

'

RoofJQg. Inc.
Residential •COOvnerdal

• M:&gt;BILE HoMEs •METAL ROOFS

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WP - Robertson: lP - Ountee.

take down

Tomcats 9-3
BY Eatc.RMooLPtt
ERANDOLPHCPMVDAILVSENTINEL.COM

GLOUSTER Kyle
Gordon had three hits, and
Brannon and Titus
Pierce each
had
two
RBls, leading
the
Eas .tero
Eagles past
the Trimble
Tomcats 93 in a ToValley
&amp;.._..J Conference
Hocking
Division
base-ball ·
g a m e
Tuesday.
With the
w i n ,
Eastern
(.11·11)
improves to
6-3 in the

....

..,.,

lSth Annwll Me~
F~ Golf tourney
· MASON, W.Va. - The
15th Annual Meigs Football
Golf Tournament will be
held Saturday, May 31, at
1he Riverside Golf Course
it' 8:30 a.m.
For more information,
contact Meigs football
coach Mike Chancey at
740-992. 2158 or 740,992,

0064.

2808 Meigs Flag
FoodJall Registration
ROCKSPRINGS
_
Registration is now open for
tlte .2008 flag football sea~n. o,pen to boys and girls
in grades l-6 beginning
with the 2008-09 school
year. Registration fee is $40
, per player, and $25 for each
additional sibling.
The games will 'be played
starting io September on the
M:eigs High School practice
field. Final date for registration is July I st, and payment
~11st also be received by
JuTy 1St. A workout/combine will be held on July
16th at 9 a:m. at Meigs High
School. All checks must be
made out to Meigs Fla:g
· foptbal:l- League, P.O. Box
?Si.,Pomeroy, Ohio 45769.
!
register online or for
inOre information go to
~w.meigsffl .com or call

Jo

7~541 , ] 222.

·.-

•

..

(!~

"*23&gt;12. ext. 33

.

'..idolphOmydailysentJOel.com

740-992-7953. 740-591-4641

way

TUPPERS PLAINS Eastern High School will be
holding its I Oth Annual
Eagle Basketball Camp on
May 27 through 30 from 9
a.m. to noon for boys and
gids enterin£ grades 4, S,
and '6.
Camp staff will include '
players and coaches from
the 2007-08 EHS boys and
girls basketball teams. The
camp will focus on fonda,
mentals, most of which are
(!Sed by players of all levels,
that are essential for producing wiooing basketball.
· Cost per player will be
$35 pre-registration or $45
llhe · first day of camp.
Inc.luded. in the cost will be
a camp T-sbirt.
' .Checks should be 10llde
payable to Eastern Athletic
Boosters. Checks and registration forms should be sent
to Howie Caldwell at 40878
Old . · Seven
Road,
Reedsville, OH 45772 or at
Eastern High School, 38900 ·
SR 7, Reedsville, OH
45772.

2

,. ..., Olio .

Bryan Delong will be in
his fourth season of varsity
baseball, and Evans, Clay
Bolio, and Corey Hutton
will be in their third, making
a strong '09 senior class
with Unbaokes and Jason
Morris. Sophomores Caleb
Davis and Ryan Jeffers are
two more starters that should
also be back for a third varsity season.
Waverly advances to the
Division n sectional final
against Marietta,
who
defeated top-seeded Jackson
to make tlie championship
game.

Eagles easily

Uasket~all Camp

~- opottsDmydailysenlinel.com
sp, b"

4Ms • • • /'

been considered too much
for these Marauders to come
back from. But Tuesday just
wasn't their day, and
Waverly pitching struck out
I0 batters.
The Tigers scored in the
first and the third off a single
and a double. Then in the
sixth inning three coosecuti ve hits doubled their total.
Both teams finished . with
oneenur.
The loss of Dunfee and
Story will undoubtedly be
significant, but the 2009
Marauders look to return
almost the entire starting
lineup from a team 1hat went
9·1 this season in the TVC
·Ohio.

lOth Annual Eagle

Etli: "-ldolph, Spom Wr11er

SHEAIILWSIONS

another feat
that
no
other Meigs
team
has
ac c o m plished.
All three
titles have
come under
fourth, year
head coach
S1llly
Je re m y
Gr. i m m,
who bas quickly established
the Marauders as a perennial
TVC contender.
Despite the difficult night
at the flate, Mei~s was never
out o Tuesday s semifinal,
and not even a 6-0 deficit
after six innings could have

Trocl&lt; and Field

•

..... ~ 1 ·7-3008

I

r;"1';::r;~;;';'l

SEOA1. Championships at AlhenS, 11 a.m

•. · · ~ ·7 4~2342 ext 33
••

ney leanredllle .... ara,
ClOIIrillc _. pena triz'tzzr
St6f' ill jilr C..IM~MM
Alf'ri•trtlltl .meo.e,

(6) Eastern at (31 Symmes Valley, 1 p.m.

QlNTACI'US

•an.' «

Hll 2009 ld'UIJEW . . . . tSS'
Wr 7 u'r, M1r 21, JIIMIUIIIII
1i £i i n , Hn' Je &amp; t a s I
=T'
hJ.,l' a I ••~

Sa!ttrdey7'11

Qklr ·Soltbon • -.1onr1 ftnrtr
(51 Pike Eastern al(4) Southern , 1 p.m. ·

WAVERLY ln an
uncharacteristic
performance that hardly represented the season they had, the
Meigs Marauders baseball
team · got just two hits
against the Waverly Tip
and went on to lose W m a
Division n sectional semifinal Tuesday evening.
Senior Austin Dunfee
pitched for M~&amp;~~ striking
out four and w · g ·ooe in
his final ·game ,as a
Marauder. Aaron Story, also
a senior, concluded his
Meigs baseball career, as
well.

Juniors
J.T. Evans
and
Joey
Unbankes
accounted
for Meigs'
two hits.
It was a
tough way
for
the
Marauders
Dz ka
to go out
after another sucoessful regular season.
For 1he first time in school
history, the Marauders (14S) won their second consecutive Tri-Valley Conference
Ohio Division championship.' It was also lhe
team's third in four seasons,

a;,.n Wallera, Spom Writer
~)~. .... 33

-.a~lytlibune.com

LMy Crum, Sport8 Writer
('7&lt;10) ~. ext.'33
~Dmydrltyoogishh .oom

I

.

EricR8old:lp"'p"rt"

of

Meigs' Cornelius English, right, and Southern's Ronnie Wilson , center, compete in the 100m dash during qualifying the
Tri-Valley Conference Championships on Tuesday at Nelsonville-York High School in Nelsonville. The finals of the TVC
Championships will be !reid Thursday.
·

T

V C

Hocking.
Pierce
earned the victory for the
Eagles. The sophomore
struck out two, walked
none, and gave up no hits in
two innings of work.
Gordon, a senior, came on
in relief in the third and
pitched through the fifth,
striking out three and walkiog three. Junior Zach
HendriK pitched the rest of
the game and struck out
one.
As a team, the Eagles
combined for 14 hits and
walked nine times, and
ev~ starter reached base at
least oooe.
Gordon batted leadoff and

Meigs ends regular season
with win over Lady 'Does
BY ERic~

scored.
Freshman
Chandra
RACINE Freshman
Stanley had
a double
Sbellie Bailey con1lioued her
and
an
strong play of late with a
double, three hits, and three
RBI , and
runs scored, helping the
s e n i o r
Meigs Lady Marauders
Ha nnah
softball team defeat the
Pratt bad a
single an
Southern Lady Tornadoes 86 in a Tri· Valley Conference
Roltla
RBI on a
non-division game Monday. ·
sacrifice .
Meigs improves to II- Hl Sophomore Mick.i Barnes
on the season and remains rounded out the Meigs hit- ,
6-4 in the TVC Ohio tiog with a single.
Division, while Southern,
Senior Sarah · Eddy had a
the TVC Hocking champs double and three RBi s for
with a divisional rec.ord of Southern, while Turley,
8,2, moves to 12-S overall. senior Lindsey Buzzard.
Senior Ashley Robie led and sophomore Lindsey
the Lady TOilllldOes offen· Teaford each
singled.
sively with a double and Buzzard had two walks.
three hits.
·
junior Chelsea Pape had
Junior Hailey Ebersbach one, and senior Stephanie
pitched for Meigs and Cundiff was hit by a pitch.
earned the win. She struck
The Lady Marauders
out six and walked six . begin tournament play
Sophomore Kasey Turley Wednesday with a sectional
was on the mound for semifinal game at Waverly.
Soutl)ern, striking out three Start time will be 5 p.m.
and walking seven.
The Lady Tornadoes will
Sophomore
Meri open their tournament seaVanMeter had a double and son on Saturday when they
three RBls .for the Lady host Pike Eastern in the sec,
Marauders, who finished tiooal final at 1 p.m.
with nine hits for the game.
I' 11 Tlaed .,._
lilolgol.loo-nl
Sophomore
Shanalle
Ill
002 010 1
892
Meigs junior Hailey Ebersbach {34) throws to senior Amy Barr for a force out at first during Smith had a double, a sin- s
300 . 102 0
- 682
gle, two walks, and a run Wf' - E -: LP - Turley. ·
Monday's Tri-Valley Conference non;division game against Southern in Racine.
E~ANOOl..Pf'WMYDAILVSENTINEL.COM

�Page Bz • The Daily Sentinel

Wednesday, May 14t 2008

www.mydailyseotinel.com

.• Wednesday, May 14, 2008

www.mydallysea•tlnel.com

-

.

tltrtbune ·- Sentinel - ~egtster

Votto leads Reds past first-place FJorida MarlinS

''

'

·i

CINCINNATI (AP) Jeff Ke~inger's broken left
kneecap took all the luster
away from the Cincinnati
Reds· second straight win
ovec a first-place team.
Edi11.son Volq1.1ez pitched
six effective innings, Joey
Votto
homered
and
Cincinnati earned a ooslly
5-3 victory over the Florida
Marlins on Tuesday night.
'That's a real big l()ss, but
YOI! have two choices,"
Reds manager Dusty Bakec
said. "You can feel sorry for
yourself, or you can figure
out a way to get it done. It
could've been worse. He'll
have an MRI (Wednesday}
to determine the severity."
Pinch-hitter Cody Ross
homered in the eighth to cut
Cincinnati' s lead to 5-3, and
Jeremy Hermida milked a
leadoff walk in the ninth
against Francisco Cordero.
Hermida advanced to second on a wild pitch but
·Cordero retired Hanley
Ramirez and Jorge Cantu on
groundouts and struck out
Dan Uggla for his seventh
save.
Keppinger. the team's
leading hitter, fouled a pitch ·
off his leg in the second and
X-rays revealed the injury.
The shonstop drew a basesloaded walk to make it 2-0
and played defense in the
third and foutth innings
before departing.
"That' s huge blow," said
Jerry Hairston Jr., who

moved from right field to been more patient."
shortstop after Keppinger
" It was a changeup,~
left the game. "It's a shame. Volquez said. "That might
He's worked so hard to have been the be!lt pitch I
make a name for himself. threw the whole game."
Now we've just got to step
Hairston, Vouo and Corey
up."
Pattersqo had ty&lt;o hits
Keppinger entered with a apiece. Patterson hit for
.320 bllltiog average and Keppinger in the fourth
wits tied for thUd in the inning and stayed in the
National League with a .406 game in center field with
average with runners in Ryan Freel Imoving from
seoring position. He took center to 'right to replace
over as .the starting short- Hairston.
stop when Alex Gonzalez
Vouo's eight)~ homer of
opened the season on the the season, an oppositedisabled list with a broken field solo shot to left in the
left knee.
seventh. gave the Reds a 5Reds slugger Ken Griffey 2 lead.
Jr. got the day off and
F~eel reached on an
remained stuck on 597 infield single wilb the bases
career home runs. Griffey loaded in the second, Adam
has not homered in his last Dunn had an RBI gmundout
63 at-bats since connecting in the third and catcher
against Houston ' s Chris David Ross drove in
Sampson on April 23.
Hairston with a bunt single
Florida has . lost two in the filth.
straight after winning seven
"You' ve got to tip your
in a row.
hat,". Florida manager Fredi
Volquez (6- 1) allowed Gonzalez said. "That was a
one earned run and a Sea- hell of a -bunt. Ue just exeson-high seven hits with cuted it."
two walks. His National
"You want small ball, but
League-leading ERA rose yout, want long ball, too,"
from 1.06 to 1.12 and he Baker said "Wben you get
struck out five to inc~~ · bo1h on the same nigbt, you
his league-best total to 57. ·can score some runs."
"He's got good stuff,
Mark · Hendrickson, who
man," . said Uggla, who hadn't walked more than
struck out with the bases tbree batters in any of his
loaded to end the fifth pre.vipus
eight
starts,
inning. ~·t was silting on a walked three in the second
slider, and that's what be inning to help lhe Reds
threw me, but it was almost score twice.
Hendrickson
(5-2}
impossible to"hit. lcouki''Ve

CLASSIFIED

·

E-mail

caW;:::V... (7!~1ro'!!~!!42
.

~~

allowed four runs and eight
hits in five innings. He
issued a seasoo-high five
walks and strUck out one.
"The last t;.v{) games, I' ve
had trouble finding my
rhythm," Hendrickson said.
"The hits you can't control,
but the walks made it hard
on myself. A lot of my problems were self-induced."

Hendrickson, who had
woo his last five decisions,
absoibed llis first loss since
opening day against the
New York M.ets.
Notes:
Reds . RHP
Bronson Alroyo is · scl\eduled to make his fourth
career start on three days'
rest Wednesday against
Florida. Arroyo is 1-0 wilil

.
a 3.05 ERA (20 2-3 innings;

HOW N WRU£ M. AD

seven earned. runs) and one
shutout in his previous three
starts on three days ' rest. ...
Hendrickson had two bits,
giving him six this season,
two ,more than his total frOm
his previous five 'seasons: ...
Cody Ross' home. run \!(as .
the third ·pinch-hit homer-of
his career. ·

·:.

.re

•

of them ~t bo!De.~
pme in tbe first round, closAsked if~ was a dan- mg out the Wu:anls 105-88
ger that Jli.s players were in Washingtou in &lt;lame 6.
using .,lbeir . b(&gt;me-court
"It just shows bow strong
advantige_ as . a crutch. you are as a team to be able
Celtics ,!OQliCh ~, Rivers 111 go into a bostile enVironsaid, '1be · danger is that ment and stick togeth« and
you're playing
die rOad come out with a win,"
right now against really ·Cavaliers guard '"Daniel
good teams.
·.
. Gibson said, adding that
"We earned dianiglll·. to :coming to Boston a · second
have, home-COiliJ. ;tdY~ lime will help.
!BCe, he S31~"' ~. t ~
'.'OJJce you've ex.peiieoced
1t has anything t4'111o w_itb e ' environment, going back
wby we ha~en't ~,'a~ ·to it is kind of like, 'Welve
.game. We havqa l played ·been here before.' And we
well on the ~ and ~ ·. felt like we were ri.gb.t dlere
have to do bette!- . .
• ,:·to win a ,game. So we lrnow
Thanks to the1r {i6-J6 reg- what we're capable of doing
ular:season . record, . · the on their floor .and •we're
Cel•Ms could theorelicaUy ·
. "'"the. . . 11.._ .."B .. ...,.. ' going into it with -a !ot of
w~n
rr · '":' ·~ ,... ~e OOnfidence.~
w1tho~teverw11111W.garoad ·, The Cavaliers are ban'"""

"""""'.......,......1•

-

3rd Amual KCHS Alumni

.that,

No.'team'.s evec done
t:hougb, and tbe Celtics doD 't
really want w'be the first.
~rm not even thinking
abolitaGautc7. Thal'sdcfinitely d:le i.du: Get :a win
(Wednesday) rugb.t and tty
to close it out in Game 6Pierce said. "We ·definitely
have w play weH '(in Game
5). because we hitven't been

J&gt;!,ayiilg well 00 Jhe road..

'"YoukindoOfwanttotreat
it 1iJre a Game 7, because
you can't count .on winning
Game6."
The Cavaliers are in a similarspotintheseries· 2..()
at horne and 0..2 on the road
- but they can' t f.all hack
· the dec'din
on ha ymg
1
g game
at home. On the:~ hand,
Cleveland won · an away

Fe.male

SLOO for lonJe

GAI.IJIIOUj
V

-&lt;."\~ It&lt; r "'A~·/N
7

;'"•
· .--&lt;.
C.. 1&gt;'7" I·
oJ'I&lt;t::O
_..,.,.

SR141 .fishlngpoles,gla...
ware, tools.

,
,..-~

''

...fit;~ 1

"\~ ~/t(d.*"

&lt;$QG¥l, \ i.t

ff filt&gt;.n

.-r~ 1-11\11.\bR.~ ~1".

---

~,_healthy but haS; ape;:

,

Community Fl.ndratser

neea.. 7 40-645-618 7

~

~rd

oki, 4(F) a (M). health'j &amp; riwr in Minertivlle, if rain wit!
~. 441..()365
reschedule.

r.

·
'

home~amesand ,getacbam- :

I

l..O!rrFou!to•~

..__ _ _ _ __.!

COMMUNITY YAfiD SALE
(4--5
hou6Eis)May~6-17

'

Willow Creek Rd. behind

•

1

!J•tf
.

=

boys, women. men&amp;.
•
white dog with collar In Christmas
decorations.

''~'est
,,~

lifts Hornets to 3-2 sen·es lead

BY IIlLi lliYna
ASSOCIAl'ED PRESS

N~W

ORLEANS .
Davtd West and the New

p~nsb.ip l!hat way. f don't
think that bas .e ver been Orleans Htlinets sure 1~
done," Cavaliers. co.ach ~oytobeathome.
Mike Brown said. •·y~·ve
_West had careet: playoff
got to get some road wms to htgbs of 3.8 pomts, .14
be a champion, at least that's rebounds and five blocked
the history of the game.
shots, hfungNew Orleans to
"I tell our guys, if you a 101 • 79 VICtory · over - the
expect to win in the play- San Antomo Spurs on
offs, you've got to know Tuesday mght and a 3-2
h ow to defiend and you •ve senes
N lead0 1
1 :Ired
got to ~w bow to win on im;~sive · i;a!,~c;' the
tbe road.
first {wo games ~t bome but

"'
stumbled i.n S~ Aotooio.

Spurs are 5..() in the postsea- . for the quarter, and West
son.
scored his 30th point of the
MODis Pet~n had . 12 game on a jumper over
points for New Orleans on Parker, giving the Homet!i a
four 3-pointers, piCking ~p 72-58 lead heading into the
the
slack
for
PeJa fourth quarter.
Stojakovic, who was guardDuncanwasheldscoreless
edd~sdy ~g~.
.
until early the second quarSt~JakOvJc .s?ll man~ged a ter, but the Spurs hit their
cructal transition 3 m the frrst' four 3s and six· of their
fourth quarter, however, giv- first eight. Ginobili's second
mg ~Hornets an 81-68 3putSanAntonioup37·~0.
.lead With 7:~ to go.
West, who had 22 in 'the
San Antomo pu~ed ~o 85- opening half, got New
77 •on lme Udoka s third 3· Or!eans as c1ose as 38 -36 on
~· b~ _Paul respond_ed a jumper late in the sec6i!d
.w tth a drivl~up With quarter, then tied it at 43
4;331eft aod
agam on when he put back a blocked
:.J:~-from ~_::! to.· tum fast-break lay· up.
The .spurs took a 4744
lead mto halft1me after
Parker got up from a h~
foul and sank two free
throws m the final seconds.
Notes: Robert Horry's
appearance for San Antonio
gave him 238 in the ·pi!'Y·
offs, surpassing Kareem
Abdui-Jabbar for the most in
NBA history. .. . Saints qltarterl&gt;ack Drew Brees signed a
football brought to him by a
Hornets mascot ·and thn:w it _
to fan in the uprer deck of
the arena.

·•Df'f·

a

Eagles

'

then · Brannon tripled · to
bump the margin to 8..():
The Tomcats fina,!ly got
their frrst hit' in the fourth
and made good on it. Tl)ey
scored three runs on two
doubles, a single, arid two
;,II,

•

vv"""s.

.

Eastern added one more
in the sixth on walks by
Griffin, Hendrix, and Pierce
and a single by Benedum.
Eastern begins touma·
ment play on Thursday. The
Eagles are the top seed and
will face Waterford, th~
eighth seed, in Tuppert
Plains at 5 p .m.
·

-··-·

E

332 001

T
WP -

000 300 0
Pierce; LP - -

0

·

Bidwell. 367-7574

Lost- female
German
Wirehair,
brown/gray,
Alfred!Baarwallow!Shade ,
tr' dl
rd (7 )6
40 96 •
1~; y, rewa

360
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something for """Y'flOl!ll!!ll

' CAREE~SI

Friday May 16th, 112 mile on
Willow
Creek
behind

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446-2842

IO buy .link Cers,
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~:::::::.

.
.
driver's IICE!f1Se, have good
customer relatton skils .m
be able to muttl-ta&amp;k....,.
,.......
Appli~nts wll be subjact 10
baoknround check betora

erf4)1oyees and their
famities

li.IO_____

wages and benefit&amp; includ-ing health Insurance and

mllelge reim:bufMment.
fart·time Dental Assis1ant,
tNqJB1ience helpful, but not

required. detiwf Reaume in

RHITJCCSICPC Certifted

ua1 who illneplred 10 COOk.
Applicant must be lbte 10
Now lttal jOilr JOb ...rCt. organize and manage an
-list Is ~e give indu~l kitchen, prepare
lnfoCision a call i
and tnventory food ~•.u
well as manage tncomtng
1..-...c-PAYU
and . outgoing
foods.
Ext. 2347
1~1 wUibe.reaponsible
}obl.ilat: c· 'cn.IDDm.
lor food pt11para1k:tl, ·~
18liOn and qualily to ~FEDERAL
ny standards. H you are
POSTAL JOBS
inleroalod in applying,
. pi8Ue send your roaume 10
$17.89-$2827/IY., now hir· P.O. Box 469, Gallipolis,
"''I· For appliCOtion and !roe Ohio &gt;15631 Cl.A 8&lt;J&lt; 101
gowmement job info, call
·~·-ot•~
~·-~ · ~ ~ 1· ......, I - I II hir
913-599-11226, 2C/IYII. --· ~ · ••-v' nc.
,
ing I Jonitoria1 Craw~

1

Cell Mltlyn 304-882·2645 oompelffive wages &amp; bene- resume lo :
Molgo
- - - - - - - fils end flal&lt;ible scheduleo. 1-ie&amp;- lnc. P.O. 8&lt;J&lt; 307.
A\IONI All Areaol To Buy or Aide training · -· NW. Syracuae, Ohio .5779.
·~· ·~
.
.;Mftl .
'-~' "' "'' ~~-. 304- about our Sign
on bont.5.
. .
67 ~1 -429.
Giw us a call or oome in to Mov1ng. _2 ~ workers
- - - - - -.- - seeuo. Weat11jus1westol noedod _immochloly. 8amBusy .-umm aael&lt;ing II;I 1he 31st St. bridge by 2J&gt;m. Mitimum ol 130. per
"""' """""YfMM·Muat Proc10fVilla animal d 1nic. dal'· Brenda ...s-2•51
have 81 least 3 yaars food Come )oin our teaml 740prep upenenoe . Bidwell 886-7623EOE
"""' 01y and tiY8f1lng shift
m•..•g•

I

w~

coding systems, M~-OAG
grouping software and PC

1

s~w~re . ~ dem~nstrate ~

pacll;age. Preemployment Drug Testing.
Send reSume · to: Buc:keye
Community. SeMces, PO.
Box 6~. Ja~~n . OH
45640 or e·matl to. bey~-

POST OFFICE NOW
HIRING
Avg. Pay $20/hr or
$57Kiyr, indudes
servO~.com. ~l tne
Fadetal8e!l8flts, OT.
for appltqlnts: 5/1610;8Plaoed by adSouroa, not Equal
.
Opportunity,,
olfofed wl USPS wfto him.
'·- 1-8&amp;6-.4o3-2582
PI LPN
·~~- Ate
~·--

-

Accepled Foo A
PI/Possible FT LPN 2
Ewnings, 2 Mie!nighta.
~Hive Starting Poy,
-ld •~-~·
ro
·~•""'· Paid ,

Discounts,

Insurances

~=May~~

~.

RavensWOOd

Cere

I ~~ ~" ~:w~1,:~~~

Fenced ~rd wl in
pool. $140,1100. Shown by

ground·

appt. 44,-8202
Attenlionl .

Educalion. 740·

I

~

·

~,::OwolmJNny;;;:~·

I

•NOTICE•

=

~

All ru1..-.e MWII'Iiaing
In thit ii8WII II tt ie
•ubiad to the FedM.t
Fair ttou.ing Act ol1. .

....leh-1!~0&gt;

OHIO VALLEY PUBLISH -

lNG CO. recommends
that you do business with
people you know. and

;::===~

lldwrtiee ''llny
P••hn•WJG,Iimltdon or
di1crlmiMtion lllllltd on
race, color, Nt._on, tel
t.miBaf 8ta1UI Of flatioiW
~n,

or anr intention to

IMIIe anr such

p••hn•"'*·
limitation or
diacrimination."

,_,.._

This new t 1

will nut

MlvertiMmanta for .....

.-..which lain
.............. law. O..

..........

**NOTICI:*•
s

r-------.

~

lntonned thlt all
ct..tlingllldweltiwd 1n
th6e
1

c

Borrow mart. ontaet
the Ohio Division ot
• - I I ...,
Financial
Institution 's
a.......,onenequll
Off'
c
~~tee o1
onsumer . ~~~~~·-~···~~-~
Atfa1rs BEFO
. RE you refi nance your home or House tor sale in Racine
obtain a loan . BEWARE area. Approx. 4 acres, all
of requests for any large professionally landscaped.
advance payments of Ranch s¥e . house with •
tees or insurance. Call the bedrooms, Irving room , dinOfftce of Consumer ing room , kitchen, large tamAffairs toll free a! 1 ~- ity room, centralair, gasheat
278.0003 to learn if the and 1 fi.........
.a."'-'lt '
ol
·
•.,.ace ~·tOn a
mor.tgage
broker or large Fktrida room com
•
lender
is
properly pleteiy cedar opens onto ,
licensed. (This is a pubtic patio &amp; pool area. Healed in
servtce announcem ent ground pool endo&amp;ed by prilrom the Ohio Valley vacy ten cing and landPublishin g Company)
sea~. Finished 2 car
attached 10 house
:~:ished &amp; heated 3 car
~AL
garage
unattached.
~
Etccel~nt condition ready to
-move in. $255,000.00, call:
Hictclen View ~k.ery is open {7401949-2217 , ,
.
$'tl)' Fri. &amp; Sat. trom 711m.
_
!;pm 011 82 Ded&lt;ertl Road, HUll Homes! 3 bed. only
Bidwell OH 45614 ·
. $17.0001 for listings BOO'
620-4946 ex R019
T\lftNED DOWN ON ·
&amp;OCW. SECURITY /SSI? Now Home for sale, Finlt
Ttme Home buyers. 3br. 2
No Fee Unless We Win!
Mlh, 1 1/2 cat gar., 2 acres
1-888·582·3345
lot Neighborhood Rd. o
down. 3D ~ r fixed. La.·
RtUe $86,000.00 • Call
Steve or John 446-10 18

i

I

Ripley,

3br,

2ba, Ranchel

Center, 1113 Washington
St
Ra
IWOOd
wv
(00•1273-:~ , FAX
'Refb1., 1011 Requirld E.O.E.

2 Car
Gonlge $139,900 Of 304·
.Otd Crew Rd .,behind ratr550·21 1• or 304·532-3599
groulld,3 br.,2bath loghome
full
basemenl.end
ol

Putnom Courtly En•lll'"'1

Ad.quiel,3
""'-&lt;ty.740
992-5067! 1!1!

-

. -

·

~

for•life ~"9 Port·
T'tmo ~~ · EMT
•-"-·
'
Pa••1teek
n Dilpild••·
Part-time DiltpriEh JIQIIilkJn
J&gt;OI'I 110.00 i&gt;Of hour.
............. 6 con be pkNd
up ot 111o Otfioo of
tmttgo&lt;K:I

oorvioM

3389

Now hiring•nptoyellto avt W'll1fieldRdwtnfttldWV

14&gt; and ~ lawn lind

~~:~~e;p.~.~=~=:

i

Gallipolis, OH 4S63t by May benefits

-

after 6pm Will help with
ctosingCost304-593-8871
_..:...:..:..;_ _.:.....__

rn meeltft9daqrdsua.lty and quantity stan
ts
·at
NOT to sand money
eSiBiltt ·
through the mail until you
Please visit our website at have investigated the
www.st-marys.org and apply otter
on-line under Careers &amp; --;:'":9·~;::==~
Educat1on or contact Patty ~
Ph1llips at 304-526-1542 for
~·
more informatton
ro lnAN

n-·- ·-

Being

New Haven. $l39,SOO call

Willing to babysit ln my
""'""'
home at 4484 SA 218 . • Payment coUld be the
·
GaiWpolis.
lamamothsameasrent
'
Mo-·~
Locators
er of 1, I have an ASsociates
••.,....~~
Degree in
Early (740)367-oDOO

ol ICD-9-CM and CPT-4

person to 2922 Jackson EOE
A
PI p
a&amp;k tor - - - - - - ...
· Warned· From Desk Cieri&lt;
Comie
must be compllter lrterat~
fo
and
tnendly.
rUD
avan
f an Sa .
E
. Customer
Assistant House
r to
nnce
11penence premanaoe tarred but
not mandatory
w01t eventngs nights and
.
'
Apply tn person at the
•aalaads at a shelter br G 11 . 1. Holid 1 F
a tpO •s
ey nn ron!
women
and
chlldr~n. Desk Absolutely NCl phone
Applicant mutt have high

28.

4br, 2 /te. Pool. Country

." . . . , . , - - - - - - •aco-ed
.Less than perfecl credit

r10

ActiWt membership
in
AHIMA
preferred.
Knowledge and experience

PIUIICiency

Greenbrier

""""""" ,..._ .. ,, """""' --'·~.----121e ·
3br, 2ba, approx 1 acre,
1170 MR'F!!ANIDUS Great
Neighborhood.
•
ANIDUS • Sunse1 Lane (Pl. Pleasanl)
304-812-5021
304-593·
Schwinn Airdino E.....aser
_6882
_ _ _ _ _ __
11nd Schools

.........,

Diem positions available. Accepting
appWcations 1or RN and
LPN'•· Apply al 1480
Jacl&lt;lon Pil&lt;e, Gallipolis,
phone 441-1393 tor SkiMed
Office or apply at 1458
Jad®n Pike, phone 441-·
9263 for Paf§PI)rt/Private
Care Office. Competi1ive

are ,...,._.. .., ""- .._ com- .....,.
_,
s"""'""'
'""""
pany ts in need of WI inllivid- Personnel, P.O. Box 4M, ence. $7.75/hr. Excellent

aerv.
a.nd
Subatltuta
Craw
100-KEIIfi*EIEQ' GroWing Home Hea1ttt ~lB. ';:":iettOtrl&lt;in!On~saembla crafts, wood Ag8nCyf A &amp; L Home care itoria cust a wo pre11ems.To S480M -iels -..goidoi, CNA&amp;LPN'o fanad. Meigs-pro, provided. Free Information tor Lawrence and Game vide&amp; services for adults with
J)lig. Zfl'. 801-42~9
Counlietl. Muot howl trans· developmemal .dlaallil-.
portatton, motivation and Mers""~ ~
~~~~
An E• Ia It ..i..y to earn caring anitude. We otter
IVIJIIDD' ...... ' "Ill'' ~1U1.11
. money. The Naw """"·
weol&lt;end d-entlal pay. diploma Of GED. Sand

;::"1~7~...

EED-MFOV

St. Marys
Medicalcare
Center,
393
bed lertiary
teach·a
lng facility wtth medical
~-'-~1 -"'1' ·
has 1
_,IItl,ii!VUiamialton.
mme-as.--ur,..,.._,.
diatennAninm:.torthefollow.DI'.I.I n~u•'
""" -r:-:-·.. •w

nne and Per

@

Local company oHenng "NO
DOWN PAVMENr programs foJ you to buy you r
request. For more Info 740- home instead of renting .
446-4300
·
• lOO% financ ing

ol' Every Sunday end

- BU\"IEU.-mADE6' VENDOR TABLES $25
Front Sl1ttt Promo1ions
LLC
,
740-181-4&amp;12

For~ ..... ,..._..................................-

"*~

£,..(AQ'ttf

,...,,.

3.65 acres

Estates on Sam:llill Rd. askwww.gallrpoi15Cireercollege.eclt.l
iog $160,00Q 304-674-5999
Accrediad Member Accrediting or 304-675-1566
1-800-214-Q452

Security Officers needed in •
New Haven, wv,. $7.00 To Do
$7.66 per hout, shill wor'hours vary. Must have a high 25 years of exp. caring for
school diploma or GED, elderly ladies in my home,
clean criminal· history, pass prill8te&amp;semi.-priva1e rooms
drug screen and back- available . Nutritious meal
ground check. Call 1-800- planning, excellent refer275-8359 M·F 8:30 to :00. ences phone oombers upon

., •
.
calls.
htnng, If you wo'*i like to sd'I(X)I ~ or ~Iva.
Moltdlw- oft
apply, please send your Jent. Dutle6 include: ~ Wa~ed: Fuii-Ti~ . ~~ion
_,. Take Inbound Customer resume to: P.O. ac. 469, procedt.Jres, answenng ~ avat~ to aS&amp;tsl tndivtduService calls on behalf of GailipOIIs, CWo 45631 CLA calls, &amp;tlel\er housekeeping als with mental retardat«m
Time W.,.... Cllb6e ED 101 .
duties ~ Interaction . with at a group. home in Sidwell:
3:3G-, 1p
the reSidents. AppliCant 8a-4p
Su;
.t Up lo S8.5G M1 hour Love to COOk1 Always ~ be abie to W()l't( lnde- MITuiW/Th. Mus1 have high
&lt; Night shift and Day shift -~rimenllng wilh new pendently and ho'" good oCt.oo! diplorna/GED, valid
__,......
positions IMlillbte
ideas? \lbu be who we people skltls. lntereS1ed OriYer'li license and three
_,. New on-stte Oodof tor
....,.,....., -;_,-r,. '--I
.. .--.~ican1s may •~ly to: .,_lli _......... driving e -ri-

Daly~~ $4.00

lor

Sale ................................- ....- ..... 330
.... - ·
For Sale ..............._...................................- .. 5115
For Sale or
_ 5110
"-a v
~

Compelili

healttl
insurance,
.
.
.
matching rettrement con1n·
button and paid holidays
·
·
fak 741&gt;-446-9104 or Email
'oh
· haolo
J ncanmc
careq.com

-•~Mr'r'ra
ftU
~ 11 """'"
"'~Inn

......torRent ...........................................__

F....,.

w·
ing,

I! A I r

GUN SHOW .. -......:;;

'. ClftllofThMI&lt;I ....................................- ... 010
. ClllldiEklllriV c-..,...................._,_........ 1110
f' II' .,..,lywiatk»n........,_,, ..................l40
Eqo lo .....,lor Rent ..................................... 410
. Excavetlntl ......-............:...............__..,_....130
: • Ponn Equlpment ..........................................&amp;10

•

I

flEA~
mO:m shop :nt=~ Looal ~ looking tor
1.,~------,J. ~~ny
spcn, sorecl tratn·
part~tlme must
dellwry
._.. . .,....
•
Appltcant
haveperson.
a ·vaid

Complng Eq...,_ _.._..,_ ......- ............... 7110

.

AUCI10N .\Nl

Call Today! 74().446..4367 ,

""' po&amp;ittons:
Coders
Childhood
Home Heellh Care South Ohio valley Home ·Health, ~I Coder Pay
256-1336
$25
$30
h
1
East Ohio iS currently hiring Inc. hiring STNA., CNA,
Of
our Y rates
Home Heahh Aides tor Home Health Aides and available
Mei....a Co.. you muat be cer- Po--·l ColO ·~ FuH Work from home options

Alligator Jacks, scrubs,
If"
clothing,
boy's
8-16, Learn how to become part tified or cunently have one
women's 1G-16 namebfands of one of the TOP TEN Best year elq)8rience, caJI 1-866¥
Lost·yellow'gold aoss w/16
Places to World
368-HOOtolfree
VI
diamonds on Molhe(s Day, May 15-16,First house pas1
1 .. -YU
gift from son, Rewanl $50, Church
in Chestar.GoH - - - - - - - Housecleaning patsort part
{740157e- 1032
shoes,WOOd crafts,dishes,
Courtside Bar and Grill now time, Rodney area. Also
clothes,boys2-6-adutl ·to 2X, seeking qualified applic8nts need, laborer, part time, out·
COOkware,lots or misc.
tor bartender and food roo- side house and yard work.
- - - - - - - . ner. Apply in person or call 245-50271eave me8681J9.
CLASSIFIED INDEX
--. lhl4'1 For sato ........................... -...- ............125 ' RICO achotarshlp yard sa!e- 441-9371 to schedule and
030
Star Mill Park, May 13 &amp; 14 interview. 308 2nq Ave, Little Caesars is curreltly in
,· ~ ...........................................- .......... 530
ffom9to4, andMay15from Gallipolis.
search
of
Assistant
J.pL'tiiWitls for "-nt,,,,,,, ,, ,,.,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,~440
9 to2.May 15-hatfprice.
Manager&amp; tor our Gal~pois
day and dollar 8 bag Equipment
Repatr location We oner pakt train- - - -.............................010
Auto Parte a Ace 11ao."'ies ---··--·-···-··----...... 760
Auction by coo Smtth will Technician 1of Farm anGior tng, paid VIGltioo, ftedJie
................................................... _...... 770
tollow
Lawn EC!uipment repatr &amp; ~ 0 OLHiipetltirii
A-lor Sele.-.............. - ....................- ....71 0
at 3pm.ThanM tor your sup- matntenance Must he\18 wages. Please fax resume
&amp; - l o r Sale .............................150
port!tlllll!!l!l
expenence. Must be able to to 740-886-7425
·
. • Building 51~~ 1111 ............... _,_,............- ... 550
use computer on a ltmltecl

-

9 142

'"'•~

u .-n Hl'll.l·u....&amp;:aur

.

San Antonio Spl:lfS Brooe Bowen, left, r.im Duncan, oellter, and Tony Parker sit on the bench
late in the game ~ainst teh J'4ew Orlearns H'omet;s in Game 5 of an NBA Western
Conference semifinal basketball1)1a)'Off series Tuesday In New Orleans.

Gallipoli1 C... ,.~ 3br, 2 1f2 bi, &amp; FR. 2 car
-...
(careers CIDse To Home) garage &amp; in ground pool on

:~~~
1

~;•:•:w:.c:o:m:ic:•:·c:om=~;=====::;!;:=,_~===~
w• EA. Inc.

- •• • found Sst . in Camp Conley Allin'ator Jacks.Tools,fumi:::::::...~1 area terrier PLIPI1t ca~ and ture
,.,, "lt\• .-J::. ~~
nt.'
L...........h.a
!........
I,IVIIILIIJ oN"t"Vr~~:r
a ~ques. "'""'""'rger.name
1110
' I 14th ru J r., '-------~
IIDIWANI'FD 11110
Found ·. SmaH brown and bran d glr&amp;

APphata

INS11UJCI10N

1

Sale, May 16-17, manvfam·
Last Chance. Beautlul blat* ilies have donated to this .
Lab mtx puppies, 2 11'2 mo sala, Trailer Park along the

etal

Safools

e-ience &amp; dean MVR. 100's ol· 33,45 ,78 records
Pnor expenence with semt· motorcycle &amp; parts, tools,
d
d 11-off · h 1
umps an ro
s IS e p- books, (jd · collections of
tul. Contact _Kent at 8.0 0· every thing .. 105 Mill
46.2·9365 or ftll out appltca- St .Middleport .2:00-7 :00
81
740 591
www.q1ruoong.can
.
.

\~

f\~lP•='S~~

Yor·k,·e,

..

111iil

A:g'CAP' Dump Drivers
R&amp;J Tructing is seeking
qualified .COL-A driYers to
operate semi·dump!i for
regional routeS. We feature
excellent home 1ime, health
and
dental
insurance,
401(1&lt;), vacation, bonu•pay,
lindselelyawards. Oual•ied
applicants must be over 23
yrs., have a minimum of 1
yeer of commerical driving

YAIIII Sub

Saturday 5117 at Speegway
on Jackson Pike.•All Sales
6S yr. old male AUstralian benefit Children&amp; Mlrac~
hepherdneedsroomtorun Netwolt.
to good home . 304-576-

21
Fra04e·..

e-.

Graphics SOC for small

Su.,._~

r.::-:-::-::-:--=----:---:--'-----------,
'-·• -IIDP-•W.•~-_.1..
kitrK:artylegcomcast.net

.

___

night ~in the seoond .game ,22 jloints in the ·second balf points and set ·up Chandler
followingFaustoCaonooa's aud .added ,t 4 assil;ts for foqm:alley-OOpdunkduring
five-hitter in the.
1 New
Odel!DS, which bas a 20-4 Hornets run to open
Before. a i-ainnut ~JiJidar. ne11.er.adv.ani:edpasttbesec- the dlird quarter. ,Petecson's
~ 1itartel' ~ Li:ff~f ond I1'0IIIl4i ~f ~ playolfs.
3 ~ tile surge, givipg
pttdwJ seven 1nm• m' :a
Manu Ginobili led Su New'Oikanu 64-51 lead.
12-0 trill Saturday. : · •
)..l).tonio with 20 points aod · While Swjakovic man"All we ask is to give u~ :a 1 Tony Parker had 18. the. ~ Only rune points, he
ohanre to win, but they're Home~.s held Tun Duncan to ~ wbo had the hot
go~ abo11e dte ·Can ~f "10 pomts, thoqgh lluncU baDe[ His pass tD the comer
. duty,' ~edge said. .
• : was a force on the glass wilb 1Cl. up Peterson's fourth 3,
_. So 1s second baseman 23 ·rebounds.
.•
which put the Hornets ahead
Asdrubal Cabterd, who
· 9ame 6,.1s Thursday mght 68-54. Paul then added two
turned the 14th .unW.s$ted . in San ADloni~?, where the fnx: •tluvws, giving ·him 12
triple · play in history
Moliday,- and again ·brought. ·
.and two walks in four
the crowd to its feet with· a
appearances, and sophospectacular play. The 22m~ Andrew Benedwn,
year:.Oid ran into center field
Mlo had a double and two
tn.nPag!eBl.
111 snare a looping ·ball off.
hils. Junior Ben Buckley
the bat of Bobby ·Crosby to
start the eighth. ·
· reaehed base in four of his also had a double and two
Notes: Hafner got his five plate appearances. He hits, and freshman Tyler
had a single and a
460th RBI as Cleveland's walkOO once and scored two.. · Hendrill.
walk.
·
DH, surpassing Andre runs. ·
.
' · Gordon' d ble and hi
Thornton' s team moon:!. ...
Pierce's two runs batted
. . ' ou
.ts
Cleveland
RHP
Jake in came in· the second on a by 9riffin. Zach Hendrill.,
Westbrook, out si.pce April triple to centec f~eid. aotl ~y helped score
22 wilil a .strained ribcage Brannon got both of his duee IUDS m the_first.
Gordon, Griffin, and
muscle, .threw a simulated with a triple to right one
.
. Hendrill. each had hits again
game off the Progressive innin~ latec. .
Field mound in the afterJUIUbr Decek- Griffin led in die second before
uoon . ."1 felt fme, threw all the Eagles with three rims Pierce's triple, and the
my pitches, abOut 60 of scored, fmishing with two Eagles added three more
J3plin.
them,"
said Westbrook, who hits and a wlilk.
IUDS for a 6..() lead.
widlout • walk..
Byrd's performance came is scheduled to make a rehab
De npt-bmder e1.tended
Other Eastern hitters
That was the score in the
· the frJdiaDs' 'Sooreless streak after Cliff Lee pitched nine start at Class A Lake County inc!uded Hendrix, who third when Buckley ·donwent 2-for-2 with two runs bled, Gordon walked, and
to 34 iaaing~&gt; by their start- seoreless innings Monday on Saturday.
ing staff. The last run
allowed by a Cievelmd
Sla1ter came Friday night in
the fifth iuniog a.gaiost
T(Jil)Dta by C.C. Sabathia the only run yielded by an
Indians starter in the last 39
innings.
Wedge wisHes Oeveland' s
hi,tters would feed Qff one
another's success as well. as
the pllchers and fielders are
.
doinf '
"Its a friendly competition." Wedge said of the
starting
staff' s
streak.
"(They) try .to keep oneupping one another."
Hafuer si:ngled home a
fii'St-inning run off Justin
Duchscl;lerer (3-2) and got a
tw&lt;HIIIt single off i.etty Alan
Embree in the eighth before
G.arko connected off former
teamnlllleAndrew Brown.
Rafael Perez retired the
only Oaldand batter he faced
and Masahide Kobayashi
wodl:ed the fmal I 2-3
innings for 'his first save.
1be 33-year-old right-hander, signed as a free agent in
November, had 227 saves
the last eight seasons in

r

I

GIVFAWAY

Thu...t.y for

(.~

oddedtoyourdossifledods
Borders$3.00/perod

luo

-;;;;;;;;;&amp;;~c;:-;;;.n
S-iiNfB
c.u, we'n Mc:Cany, Barnes, Donnet

r

~

All ~= 1Z Noon Z
lluSI ..... o.y. Prior To
Publlwtlon
SUnday~= t.:DO

• All act. muat be pepllld"

YA!!DSAU:

got HONEYI!mll

Byrd and two re6eveninitch
Tribe to 4-0
win
~~t~!iSC:i~~lfn'Y·
tile
~!C"bad~f~ ints
·
ra ·
·
.
. Chris P.aul had 16 iff his in the tirst half, ·soorefnine

CLEVELAND (AP) 1be Cleveland Indians IR
trying to mix in some timely
hitting with their stellar
starting pitching and strong
defense.
Paul Byrd and two reliellers combined for the
Indians' fourth shutout in
seven games and Ryan
Garko delivered a three,run
bomer in a 4-0 victory .over
tile Oakland Athletics · on
Tuesday night. .
, 1be Indians got.seven hits,
justonefewerthan they had
in a doubleheader split
Monday ·night with Tom1110
al't« which ,manager Eric
Wedge blasted his hitters for
poor preparation at the plate.
• "It · was better, they had
, tougher at-bats and it was
ood tD see (Tr.avil;) Hairier
us out," W61,i e said.
ievelanii's :f:signated
hitteJ camt in hit:tjng .179
(7-for-39) in his previous 13
games. He went2-for4 with
.ao RBI to lift his ov~
ava:agc tD .223.
Byrd (2-3) .allowed five
hils OYC2' 7 1-3 innings; strik.U., out a ~-high seven

Paper -

_ . _ _ 74G-142-l471 Hugo seiO, Fri &amp; Sat, 5/167 ~HI50. You might 5117 Bem until dari&lt;. 105U

e..,.,

onto their ~mories ··l!lf a
Gam~ I lo~s 10 Bo~ton that
wasn t dectded ~tii . James.
mtssed a layup With _8.5 •seconds. left. The Celti~s won
Game 2 more handily, but
!hey have yet to oome close
m Cleveland.
. "You can win all your

Saan~Up

Reunion 1'958-1989. May
24, 8pm-1am U006e Lodge Clay Townhouse oo Lo\'ers
Info 446-3488 or 675-4831
Lane-218. May 16-17.

·
.

Now you can have borders and QrOPhics

Display Ads

r=---......, KIT &amp; CARLYLE
.

oo

gBI1I!:

Oearl~itec

7.,.,.

·r ..·-·---~.

"llltlehlna ...
,......
_..
1ho righllo odll,

(304) 675-1333

• Sblt Yow Alii With A Kew-d • lftdude Con : • til
a
lptJ 1 • Include A Prtae • AwoW iUJL cuiatioue
• Include P'ttolle Mumba' And' ' ' -When llleeded
'
. . . SlloUid ....

SUcc
'ul Ada
Sllould lndude TheM.Item.
To Help Get R...,..e...

. ONo llallor

For

www.mydailytribune.com
www.mydailysentinel.com
www.mydailyregister.com

l\egtster

(7!~1ro992~~~5756

O.llf' In-Column: 1:00 p.m.
Monchly-Frtct.y for lnHII'tlon
~ Next Dayr• Paper
. Sundal\' In-column: 1:00 p.m.

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

Cincinnati Reds' Joey Votto (19) is congratulated by Adam Dunn (44) after Votto hit a solo
home run against the Ro.rida Mar1ins in the eighth inning of a baseball game luesda~ in
Cincinnati. Cincinnati won 5-3:
•

Webs~es:

Sentinel

Word Ads

Celtics ~ck home, h~P~ '·it's the answer
AssoctAmif'I!ESS
,.
WALTHAM, Mass. The usual beds. The .usual
lockers. The usual baskets.
The usual questions.
The Celtics are baclc in
Boston for Game 5' of their
Eastern Conference semifinal against the ~~and
Cavaliers. Wlib &lt;the besi-of·
seven series tied .at 2-2, ·die
Celtics are ' back
they' re unbeaten SO''W ·m
the playoffs after a re,gylat
season in which d:ley fiOiiled
an NBA-best 35-6 · borne
record.
But it's their 0-5 playoffs
road record that has them
· worrying.
"There is some frustra1ioo," center PJ. Brown said
Tuesday after the team's
walkthrough and film session. " But up to this point, it
hasn ' t .go~ten under our
slcin."
Despite going 31 -10 away
from Boston in the regular
season - also an NBA best
- the Celtics have yet 111
win on the road in the playoffs. The slump allowed the
Jowly Atlanta Hawks to
fo~ce them to a seventh
~in the first round, and
It oould be their doom
against the more fonuidable
Cavaliers and star LeBron
James.
"The key is winning the
series. Whether it's at home
· try to
or on the road , you JUSt
win it," Pierce said. ••tt' s a
three-game series, with two

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�Page Bz • The Daily Sentinel

Wednesday, May 14t 2008

www.mydailyseotinel.com

.• Wednesday, May 14, 2008

www.mydallysea•tlnel.com

-

.

tltrtbune ·- Sentinel - ~egtster

Votto leads Reds past first-place FJorida MarlinS

''

'

·i

CINCINNATI (AP) Jeff Ke~inger's broken left
kneecap took all the luster
away from the Cincinnati
Reds· second straight win
ovec a first-place team.
Edi11.son Volq1.1ez pitched
six effective innings, Joey
Votto
homered
and
Cincinnati earned a ooslly
5-3 victory over the Florida
Marlins on Tuesday night.
'That's a real big l()ss, but
YOI! have two choices,"
Reds manager Dusty Bakec
said. "You can feel sorry for
yourself, or you can figure
out a way to get it done. It
could've been worse. He'll
have an MRI (Wednesday}
to determine the severity."
Pinch-hitter Cody Ross
homered in the eighth to cut
Cincinnati' s lead to 5-3, and
Jeremy Hermida milked a
leadoff walk in the ninth
against Francisco Cordero.
Hermida advanced to second on a wild pitch but
·Cordero retired Hanley
Ramirez and Jorge Cantu on
groundouts and struck out
Dan Uggla for his seventh
save.
Keppinger. the team's
leading hitter, fouled a pitch ·
off his leg in the second and
X-rays revealed the injury.
The shonstop drew a basesloaded walk to make it 2-0
and played defense in the
third and foutth innings
before departing.
"That' s huge blow," said
Jerry Hairston Jr., who

moved from right field to been more patient."
shortstop after Keppinger
" It was a changeup,~
left the game. "It's a shame. Volquez said. "That might
He's worked so hard to have been the be!lt pitch I
make a name for himself. threw the whole game."
Now we've just got to step
Hairston, Vouo and Corey
up."
Pattersqo had ty&lt;o hits
Keppinger entered with a apiece. Patterson hit for
.320 bllltiog average and Keppinger in the fourth
wits tied for thUd in the inning and stayed in the
National League with a .406 game in center field with
average with runners in Ryan Freel Imoving from
seoring position. He took center to 'right to replace
over as .the starting short- Hairston.
stop when Alex Gonzalez
Vouo's eight)~ homer of
opened the season on the the season, an oppositedisabled list with a broken field solo shot to left in the
left knee.
seventh. gave the Reds a 5Reds slugger Ken Griffey 2 lead.
Jr. got the day off and
F~eel reached on an
remained stuck on 597 infield single wilb the bases
career home runs. Griffey loaded in the second, Adam
has not homered in his last Dunn had an RBI gmundout
63 at-bats since connecting in the third and catcher
against Houston ' s Chris David Ross drove in
Sampson on April 23.
Hairston with a bunt single
Florida has . lost two in the filth.
straight after winning seven
"You' ve got to tip your
in a row.
hat,". Florida manager Fredi
Volquez (6- 1) allowed Gonzalez said. "That was a
one earned run and a Sea- hell of a -bunt. Ue just exeson-high seven hits with cuted it."
two walks. His National
"You want small ball, but
League-leading ERA rose yout, want long ball, too,"
from 1.06 to 1.12 and he Baker said "Wben you get
struck out five to inc~~ · bo1h on the same nigbt, you
his league-best total to 57. ·can score some runs."
"He's got good stuff,
Mark · Hendrickson, who
man," . said Uggla, who hadn't walked more than
struck out with the bases tbree batters in any of his
loaded to end the fifth pre.vipus
eight
starts,
inning. ~·t was silting on a walked three in the second
slider, and that's what be inning to help lhe Reds
threw me, but it was almost score twice.
Hendrickson
(5-2}
impossible to"hit. lcouki''Ve

CLASSIFIED

·

E-mail

caW;:::V... (7!~1ro'!!~!!42
.

~~

allowed four runs and eight
hits in five innings. He
issued a seasoo-high five
walks and strUck out one.
"The last t;.v{) games, I' ve
had trouble finding my
rhythm," Hendrickson said.
"The hits you can't control,
but the walks made it hard
on myself. A lot of my problems were self-induced."

Hendrickson, who had
woo his last five decisions,
absoibed llis first loss since
opening day against the
New York M.ets.
Notes:
Reds . RHP
Bronson Alroyo is · scl\eduled to make his fourth
career start on three days'
rest Wednesday against
Florida. Arroyo is 1-0 wilil

.
a 3.05 ERA (20 2-3 innings;

HOW N WRU£ M. AD

seven earned. runs) and one
shutout in his previous three
starts on three days ' rest. ...
Hendrickson had two bits,
giving him six this season,
two ,more than his total frOm
his previous five 'seasons: ...
Cody Ross' home. run \!(as .
the third ·pinch-hit homer-of
his career. ·

·:.

.re

•

of them ~t bo!De.~
pme in tbe first round, closAsked if~ was a dan- mg out the Wu:anls 105-88
ger that Jli.s players were in Washingtou in &lt;lame 6.
using .,lbeir . b(&gt;me-court
"It just shows bow strong
advantige_ as . a crutch. you are as a team to be able
Celtics ,!OQliCh ~, Rivers 111 go into a bostile enVironsaid, '1be · danger is that ment and stick togeth« and
you're playing
die rOad come out with a win,"
right now against really ·Cavaliers guard '"Daniel
good teams.
·.
. Gibson said, adding that
"We earned dianiglll·. to :coming to Boston a · second
have, home-COiliJ. ;tdY~ lime will help.
!BCe, he S31~"' ~. t ~
'.'OJJce you've ex.peiieoced
1t has anything t4'111o w_itb e ' environment, going back
wby we ha~en't ~,'a~ ·to it is kind of like, 'Welve
.game. We havqa l played ·been here before.' And we
well on the ~ and ~ ·. felt like we were ri.gb.t dlere
have to do bette!- . .
• ,:·to win a ,game. So we lrnow
Thanks to the1r {i6-J6 reg- what we're capable of doing
ular:season . record, . · the on their floor .and •we're
Cel•Ms could theorelicaUy ·
. "'"the. . . 11.._ .."B .. ...,.. ' going into it with -a !ot of
w~n
rr · '":' ·~ ,... ~e OOnfidence.~
w1tho~teverw11111W.garoad ·, The Cavaliers are ban'"""

"""""'.......,......1•

-

3rd Amual KCHS Alumni

.that,

No.'team'.s evec done
t:hougb, and tbe Celtics doD 't
really want w'be the first.
~rm not even thinking
abolitaGautc7. Thal'sdcfinitely d:le i.du: Get :a win
(Wednesday) rugb.t and tty
to close it out in Game 6Pierce said. "We ·definitely
have w play weH '(in Game
5). because we hitven't been

J&gt;!,ayiilg well 00 Jhe road..

'"YoukindoOfwanttotreat
it 1iJre a Game 7, because
you can't count .on winning
Game6."
The Cavaliers are in a similarspotintheseries· 2..()
at horne and 0..2 on the road
- but they can' t f.all hack
· the dec'din
on ha ymg
1
g game
at home. On the:~ hand,
Cleveland won · an away

Fe.male

SLOO for lonJe

GAI.IJIIOUj
V

-&lt;."\~ It&lt; r "'A~·/N
7

;'"•
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C.. 1&gt;'7" I·
oJ'I&lt;t::O
_..,.,.

SR141 .fishlngpoles,gla...
ware, tools.

,
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&lt;$QG¥l, \ i.t

ff filt&gt;.n

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---

~,_healthy but haS; ape;:

,

Community Fl.ndratser

neea.. 7 40-645-618 7

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~rd

oki, 4(F) a (M). health'j &amp; riwr in Minertivlle, if rain wit!
~. 441..()365
reschedule.

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home~amesand ,getacbam- :

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l..O!rrFou!to•~

..__ _ _ _ __.!

COMMUNITY YAfiD SALE
(4--5
hou6Eis)May~6-17

'

Willow Creek Rd. behind

•

1

!J•tf
.

=

boys, women. men&amp;.
•
white dog with collar In Christmas
decorations.

''~'est
,,~

lifts Hornets to 3-2 sen·es lead

BY IIlLi lliYna
ASSOCIAl'ED PRESS

N~W

ORLEANS .
Davtd West and the New

p~nsb.ip l!hat way. f don't
think that bas .e ver been Orleans Htlinets sure 1~
done," Cavaliers. co.ach ~oytobeathome.
Mike Brown said. •·y~·ve
_West had careet: playoff
got to get some road wms to htgbs of 3.8 pomts, .14
be a champion, at least that's rebounds and five blocked
the history of the game.
shots, hfungNew Orleans to
"I tell our guys, if you a 101 • 79 VICtory · over - the
expect to win in the play- San Antomo Spurs on
offs, you've got to know Tuesday mght and a 3-2
h ow to defiend and you •ve senes
N lead0 1
1 :Ired
got to ~w bow to win on im;~sive · i;a!,~c;' the
tbe road.
first {wo games ~t bome but

"'
stumbled i.n S~ Aotooio.

Spurs are 5..() in the postsea- . for the quarter, and West
son.
scored his 30th point of the
MODis Pet~n had . 12 game on a jumper over
points for New Orleans on Parker, giving the Homet!i a
four 3-pointers, piCking ~p 72-58 lead heading into the
the
slack
for
PeJa fourth quarter.
Stojakovic, who was guardDuncanwasheldscoreless
edd~sdy ~g~.
.
until early the second quarSt~JakOvJc .s?ll man~ged a ter, but the Spurs hit their
cructal transition 3 m the frrst' four 3s and six· of their
fourth quarter, however, giv- first eight. Ginobili's second
mg ~Hornets an 81-68 3putSanAntonioup37·~0.
.lead With 7:~ to go.
West, who had 22 in 'the
San Antomo pu~ed ~o 85- opening half, got New
77 •on lme Udoka s third 3· Or!eans as c1ose as 38 -36 on
~· b~ _Paul respond_ed a jumper late in the sec6i!d
.w tth a drivl~up With quarter, then tied it at 43
4;331eft aod
agam on when he put back a blocked
:.J:~-from ~_::! to.· tum fast-break lay· up.
The .spurs took a 4744
lead mto halft1me after
Parker got up from a h~
foul and sank two free
throws m the final seconds.
Notes: Robert Horry's
appearance for San Antonio
gave him 238 in the ·pi!'Y·
offs, surpassing Kareem
Abdui-Jabbar for the most in
NBA history. .. . Saints qltarterl&gt;ack Drew Brees signed a
football brought to him by a
Hornets mascot ·and thn:w it _
to fan in the uprer deck of
the arena.

·•Df'f·

a

Eagles

'

then · Brannon tripled · to
bump the margin to 8..():
The Tomcats fina,!ly got
their frrst hit' in the fourth
and made good on it. Tl)ey
scored three runs on two
doubles, a single, arid two
;,II,

•

vv"""s.

.

Eastern added one more
in the sixth on walks by
Griffin, Hendrix, and Pierce
and a single by Benedum.
Eastern begins touma·
ment play on Thursday. The
Eagles are the top seed and
will face Waterford, th~
eighth seed, in Tuppert
Plains at 5 p .m.
·

-··-·

E

332 001

T
WP -

000 300 0
Pierce; LP - -

0

·

Bidwell. 367-7574

Lost- female
German
Wirehair,
brown/gray,
Alfred!Baarwallow!Shade ,
tr' dl
rd (7 )6
40 96 •
1~; y, rewa

360
.

something for """Y'flOl!ll!!ll

' CAREE~SI

Friday May 16th, 112 mile on
Willow
Creek
behind

jobil.infoctsloft.com

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. --....m..............................-............

. . Jlllllnltt end Bulklinga_.......... - ................. 3'0
111111
Oppollunlty ................................-210
'
n ......._........... .-......_.._ ....... 1411

. c:._.•--.c. . . . . . .-.. . . . .

7811

r

\ooURIIUR

Sat u.y 17 9-5
Sun May 18 9-3

T.-.. . . . . ............ . . . .. . . .

~

C:: .............. .........--..·--510

·················-····--······· .....450
. ....Hng...................................... _...1511
·- • Qliuuaaw ....................................-·-··---·---·.8110
"-rAcll................................-..................050
' ' ~ GrHo ........................................ _,_, ....MO
Aaallllliliid

I •

o-.. . . . . . .-...-..

. . . . . . . . ., _,,, ,,.,, ,,•••• oooooooo" " '' ' ''' "' ' ' ' "' """'110

&lt;

ln-.. . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
hnp o. .

.110

.
lor Sale ......._......................... -·---310
Moo Mid Goodi ....... ;............................... 51D
llau-.lor Aent ..............................:... _ ...,410
_ 0211
...............................................- .. 1311
.__, &amp; Gerden Equlpinent ..........;.., .......... lJe 111 ac....................................................~.~
Loll- Found ......- .........................- ........0111

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WAJIIID)

ro Bur

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Absolute Top Oollar - siiWirfgold
coins,
any

10K/14K/18K gold jewelry,
demal li(&gt;ld, pre 1935 us
currency, prooflmlnl aats,
diamonds. MTS Coin Shop.

15, 2nd Avenue, Galipolis.
446-2842

IO buy .link Cers,
' c.ll 740-388--oaM, tf no
lfWMif, 6eave ·a meaeage.
~
Can Cal Colla
..,. c Ellalli0Ul ..............................................178.

-.......
, W'

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

R1

7
•

llerchllndlee.......................541 .

-Home ....................- ................... -

~p;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;

·--torSale. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . ..- · n
- -..... Rent ...- ......................- -

' ......., "' . . ..................... _ ,_...............2211
ldataJcwctH &amp; • Wlwals ...........................740
Me
~~ooooonooonooonon""'''" '"""57G
I

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Pwa wa•la .........................~...........................oos
l'lloltorSale .............................................._sea

.......,.,........., . .......- ...- .....................120

..-.tv
rs '

'anal S. vi ..................................230

loct1Ripei&lt;................................ 180
- . . - -.....................................310
. ' - -.......... ........................... 150
" ,&amp; Fertl_. _,._.......................SSG
•
¢' • Waukd ........................................ 120

"*&gt;elor--........................................... 410

-lor-.
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-For ___. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
llpootlng _

_....... ........ .................. - ...... 520
_ . . .... Sale.- .................... ... - .................. 720

•. !JpttDI I

715

I) ................................................... 170

730
ltuy ............................................. OIIO
- lod tD Buy- F""" $uWIIII ..... -.-........ 620
WL 1To Da...................: ........................... 110

lod tci l'lenl- .......................-................ 470

_ Yarcl .... Os"lp DMa.....................................072
Yorcllll Poo••ov-le ......................... 074
....... - . -.............................. .. 0111

U-nw.•~
....._,_

I

~:::::::.

.
.
driver's IICE!f1Se, have good
customer relatton skils .m
be able to muttl-ta&amp;k....,.
,.......
Appli~nts wll be subjact 10
baoknround check betora

erf4)1oyees and their
famities

li.IO_____

wages and benefit&amp; includ-ing health Insurance and

mllelge reim:bufMment.
fart·time Dental Assis1ant,
tNqJB1ience helpful, but not

required. detiwf Reaume in

RHITJCCSICPC Certifted

ua1 who illneplred 10 COOk.
Applicant must be lbte 10
Now lttal jOilr JOb ...rCt. organize and manage an
-list Is ~e give indu~l kitchen, prepare
lnfoCision a call i
and tnventory food ~•.u
well as manage tncomtng
1..-...c-PAYU
and . outgoing
foods.
Ext. 2347
1~1 wUibe.reaponsible
}obl.ilat: c· 'cn.IDDm.
lor food pt11para1k:tl, ·~
18liOn and qualily to ~FEDERAL
ny standards. H you are
POSTAL JOBS
inleroalod in applying,
. pi8Ue send your roaume 10
$17.89-$2827/IY., now hir· P.O. Box 469, Gallipolis,
"''I· For appliCOtion and !roe Ohio &gt;15631 Cl.A 8&lt;J&lt; 101
gowmement job info, call
·~·-ot•~
~·-~ · ~ ~ 1· ......, I - I II hir
913-599-11226, 2C/IYII. --· ~ · ••-v' nc.
,
ing I Jonitoria1 Craw~

1

Cell Mltlyn 304-882·2645 oompelffive wages &amp; bene- resume lo :
Molgo
- - - - - - - fils end flal&lt;ible scheduleo. 1-ie&amp;- lnc. P.O. 8&lt;J&lt; 307.
A\IONI All Areaol To Buy or Aide training · -· NW. Syracuae, Ohio .5779.
·~· ·~
.
.;Mftl .
'-~' "' "'' ~~-. 304- about our Sign
on bont.5.
. .
67 ~1 -429.
Giw us a call or oome in to Mov1ng. _2 ~ workers
- - - - - -.- - seeuo. Weat11jus1westol noedod _immochloly. 8amBusy .-umm aael&lt;ing II;I 1he 31st St. bridge by 2J&gt;m. Mitimum ol 130. per
"""' """""YfMM·Muat Proc10fVilla animal d 1nic. dal'· Brenda ...s-2•51
have 81 least 3 yaars food Come )oin our teaml 740prep upenenoe . Bidwell 886-7623EOE
"""' 01y and tiY8f1lng shift
m•..•g•

I

w~

coding systems, M~-OAG
grouping software and PC

1

s~w~re . ~ dem~nstrate ~

pacll;age. Preemployment Drug Testing.
Send reSume · to: Buc:keye
Community. SeMces, PO.
Box 6~. Ja~~n . OH
45640 or e·matl to. bey~-

POST OFFICE NOW
HIRING
Avg. Pay $20/hr or
$57Kiyr, indudes
servO~.com. ~l tne
Fadetal8e!l8flts, OT.
for appltqlnts: 5/1610;8Plaoed by adSouroa, not Equal
.
Opportunity,,
olfofed wl USPS wfto him.
'·- 1-8&amp;6-.4o3-2582
PI LPN
·~~- Ate
~·--

-

Accepled Foo A
PI/Possible FT LPN 2
Ewnings, 2 Mie!nighta.
~Hive Starting Poy,
-ld •~-~·
ro
·~•""'· Paid ,

Discounts,

Insurances

~=May~~

~.

RavensWOOd

Cere

I ~~ ~" ~:w~1,:~~~

Fenced ~rd wl in
pool. $140,1100. Shown by

ground·

appt. 44,-8202
Attenlionl .

Educalion. 740·

I

~

·

~,::OwolmJNny;;;:~·

I

•NOTICE•

=

~

All ru1..-.e MWII'Iiaing
In thit ii8WII II tt ie
•ubiad to the FedM.t
Fair ttou.ing Act ol1. .

....leh-1!~0&gt;

OHIO VALLEY PUBLISH -

lNG CO. recommends
that you do business with
people you know. and

;::===~

lldwrtiee ''llny
P••hn•WJG,Iimltdon or
di1crlmiMtion lllllltd on
race, color, Nt._on, tel
t.miBaf 8ta1UI Of flatioiW
~n,

or anr intention to

IMIIe anr such

p••hn•"'*·
limitation or
diacrimination."

,_,.._

This new t 1

will nut

MlvertiMmanta for .....

.-..which lain
.............. law. O..

..........

**NOTICI:*•
s

r-------.

~

lntonned thlt all
ct..tlingllldweltiwd 1n
th6e
1

c

Borrow mart. ontaet
the Ohio Division ot
• - I I ...,
Financial
Institution 's
a.......,onenequll
Off'
c
~~tee o1
onsumer . ~~~~~·-~···~~-~
Atfa1rs BEFO
. RE you refi nance your home or House tor sale in Racine
obtain a loan . BEWARE area. Approx. 4 acres, all
of requests for any large professionally landscaped.
advance payments of Ranch s¥e . house with •
tees or insurance. Call the bedrooms, Irving room , dinOfftce of Consumer ing room , kitchen, large tamAffairs toll free a! 1 ~- ity room, centralair, gasheat
278.0003 to learn if the and 1 fi.........
.a."'-'lt '
ol
·
•.,.ace ~·tOn a
mor.tgage
broker or large Fktrida room com
•
lender
is
properly pleteiy cedar opens onto ,
licensed. (This is a pubtic patio &amp; pool area. Healed in
servtce announcem ent ground pool endo&amp;ed by prilrom the Ohio Valley vacy ten cing and landPublishin g Company)
sea~. Finished 2 car
attached 10 house
:~:ished &amp; heated 3 car
~AL
garage
unattached.
~
Etccel~nt condition ready to
-move in. $255,000.00, call:
Hictclen View ~k.ery is open {7401949-2217 , ,
.
$'tl)' Fri. &amp; Sat. trom 711m.
_
!;pm 011 82 Ded&lt;ertl Road, HUll Homes! 3 bed. only
Bidwell OH 45614 ·
. $17.0001 for listings BOO'
620-4946 ex R019
T\lftNED DOWN ON ·
&amp;OCW. SECURITY /SSI? Now Home for sale, Finlt
Ttme Home buyers. 3br. 2
No Fee Unless We Win!
Mlh, 1 1/2 cat gar., 2 acres
1-888·582·3345
lot Neighborhood Rd. o
down. 3D ~ r fixed. La.·
RtUe $86,000.00 • Call
Steve or John 446-10 18

i

I

Ripley,

3br,

2ba, Ranchel

Center, 1113 Washington
St
Ra
IWOOd
wv
(00•1273-:~ , FAX
'Refb1., 1011 Requirld E.O.E.

2 Car
Gonlge $139,900 Of 304·
.Otd Crew Rd .,behind ratr550·21 1• or 304·532-3599
groulld,3 br.,2bath loghome
full
basemenl.end
ol

Putnom Courtly En•lll'"'1

Ad.quiel,3
""'-&lt;ty.740
992-5067! 1!1!

-

. -

·

~

for•life ~"9 Port·
T'tmo ~~ · EMT
•-"-·
'
Pa••1teek
n Dilpild••·
Part-time DiltpriEh JIQIIilkJn
J&gt;OI'I 110.00 i&gt;Of hour.
............. 6 con be pkNd
up ot 111o Otfioo of
tmttgo&lt;K:I

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3389

Now hiring•nptoyellto avt W'll1fieldRdwtnfttldWV

14&gt; and ~ lawn lind

~~:~~e;p.~.~=~=:

i

Gallipolis, OH 4S63t by May benefits

-

after 6pm Will help with
ctosingCost304-593-8871
_..:...:..:..;_ _.:.....__

rn meeltft9daqrdsua.lty and quantity stan
ts
·at
NOT to sand money
eSiBiltt ·
through the mail until you
Please visit our website at have investigated the
www.st-marys.org and apply otter
on-line under Careers &amp; --;:'":9·~;::==~
Educat1on or contact Patty ~
Ph1llips at 304-526-1542 for
~·
more informatton
ro lnAN

n-·- ·-

Being

New Haven. $l39,SOO call

Willing to babysit ln my
""'""'
home at 4484 SA 218 . • Payment coUld be the
·
GaiWpolis.
lamamothsameasrent
'
Mo-·~
Locators
er of 1, I have an ASsociates
••.,....~~
Degree in
Early (740)367-oDOO

ol ICD-9-CM and CPT-4

person to 2922 Jackson EOE
A
PI p
a&amp;k tor - - - - - - ...
· Warned· From Desk Cieri&lt;
Comie
must be compllter lrterat~
fo
and
tnendly.
rUD
avan
f an Sa .
E
. Customer
Assistant House
r to
nnce
11penence premanaoe tarred but
not mandatory
w01t eventngs nights and
.
'
Apply tn person at the
•aalaads at a shelter br G 11 . 1. Holid 1 F
a tpO •s
ey nn ron!
women
and
chlldr~n. Desk Absolutely NCl phone
Applicant mutt have high

28.

4br, 2 /te. Pool. Country

." . . . , . , - - - - - - •aco-ed
.Less than perfecl credit

r10

ActiWt membership
in
AHIMA
preferred.
Knowledge and experience

PIUIICiency

Greenbrier

""""""" ,..._ .. ,, """""' --'·~.----121e ·
3br, 2ba, approx 1 acre,
1170 MR'F!!ANIDUS Great
Neighborhood.
•
ANIDUS • Sunse1 Lane (Pl. Pleasanl)
304-812-5021
304-593·
Schwinn Airdino E.....aser
_6882
_ _ _ _ _ __
11nd Schools

.........,

Diem positions available. Accepting
appWcations 1or RN and
LPN'•· Apply al 1480
Jacl&lt;lon Pil&lt;e, Gallipolis,
phone 441-1393 tor SkiMed
Office or apply at 1458
Jad®n Pike, phone 441-·
9263 for Paf§PI)rt/Private
Care Office. Competi1ive

are ,...,._.. .., ""- .._ com- .....,.
_,
s"""'""'
'""""
pany ts in need of WI inllivid- Personnel, P.O. Box 4M, ence. $7.75/hr. Excellent

aerv.
a.nd
Subatltuta
Craw
100-KEIIfi*EIEQ' GroWing Home Hea1ttt ~lB. ';:":iettOtrl&lt;in!On~saembla crafts, wood Ag8nCyf A &amp; L Home care itoria cust a wo pre11ems.To S480M -iels -..goidoi, CNA&amp;LPN'o fanad. Meigs-pro, provided. Free Information tor Lawrence and Game vide&amp; services for adults with
J)lig. Zfl'. 801-42~9
Counlietl. Muot howl trans· developmemal .dlaallil-.
portatton, motivation and Mers""~ ~
~~~~
An E• Ia It ..i..y to earn caring anitude. We otter
IVIJIIDD' ...... ' "Ill'' ~1U1.11
. money. The Naw """"·
weol&lt;end d-entlal pay. diploma Of GED. Sand

;::"1~7~...

EED-MFOV

St. Marys
Medicalcare
Center,
393
bed lertiary
teach·a
lng facility wtth medical
~-'-~1 -"'1' ·
has 1
_,IItl,ii!VUiamialton.
mme-as.--ur,..,.._,.
diatennAninm:.torthefollow.DI'.I.I n~u•'
""" -r:-:-·.. •w

nne and Per

@

Local company oHenng "NO
DOWN PAVMENr programs foJ you to buy you r
request. For more Info 740- home instead of renting .
446-4300
·
• lOO% financ ing

ol' Every Sunday end

- BU\"IEU.-mADE6' VENDOR TABLES $25
Front Sl1ttt Promo1ions
LLC
,
740-181-4&amp;12

For~ ..... ,..._..................................-

"*~

£,..(AQ'ttf

,...,,.

3.65 acres

Estates on Sam:llill Rd. askwww.gallrpoi15Cireercollege.eclt.l
iog $160,00Q 304-674-5999
Accrediad Member Accrediting or 304-675-1566
1-800-214-Q452

Security Officers needed in •
New Haven, wv,. $7.00 To Do
$7.66 per hout, shill wor'hours vary. Must have a high 25 years of exp. caring for
school diploma or GED, elderly ladies in my home,
clean criminal· history, pass prill8te&amp;semi.-priva1e rooms
drug screen and back- available . Nutritious meal
ground check. Call 1-800- planning, excellent refer275-8359 M·F 8:30 to :00. ences phone oombers upon

., •
.
calls.
htnng, If you wo'*i like to sd'I(X)I ~ or ~Iva.
Moltdlw- oft
apply, please send your Jent. Dutle6 include: ~ Wa~ed: Fuii-Ti~ . ~~ion
_,. Take Inbound Customer resume to: P.O. ac. 469, procedt.Jres, answenng ~ avat~ to aS&amp;tsl tndivtduService calls on behalf of GailipOIIs, CWo 45631 CLA calls, &amp;tlel\er housekeeping als with mental retardat«m
Time W.,.... Cllb6e ED 101 .
duties ~ Interaction . with at a group. home in Sidwell:
3:3G-, 1p
the reSidents. AppliCant 8a-4p
Su;
.t Up lo S8.5G M1 hour Love to COOk1 Always ~ be abie to W()l't( lnde- MITuiW/Th. Mus1 have high
&lt; Night shift and Day shift -~rimenllng wilh new pendently and ho'" good oCt.oo! diplorna/GED, valid
__,......
positions IMlillbte
ideas? \lbu be who we people skltls. lntereS1ed OriYer'li license and three
_,. New on-stte Oodof tor
....,.,....., -;_,-r,. '--I
.. .--.~ican1s may •~ly to: .,_lli _......... driving e -ri-

Daly~~ $4.00

lor

Sale ................................- ....- ..... 330
.... - ·
For Sale ..............._...................................- .. 5115
For Sale or
_ 5110
"-a v
~

Compelili

healttl
insurance,
.
.
.
matching rettrement con1n·
button and paid holidays
·
·
fak 741&gt;-446-9104 or Email
'oh
· haolo
J ncanmc
careq.com

-•~Mr'r'ra
ftU
~ 11 """'"
"'~Inn

......torRent ...........................................__

F....,.

w·
ing,

I! A I r

GUN SHOW .. -......:;;

'. ClftllofThMI&lt;I ....................................- ... 010
. ClllldiEklllriV c-..,...................._,_........ 1110
f' II' .,..,lywiatk»n........,_,, ..................l40
Eqo lo .....,lor Rent ..................................... 410
. Excavetlntl ......-............:...............__..,_....130
: • Ponn Equlpment ..........................................&amp;10

•

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flEA~
mO:m shop :nt=~ Looal ~ looking tor
1.,~------,J. ~~ny
spcn, sorecl tratn·
part~tlme must
dellwry
._.. . .,....
•
Appltcant
haveperson.
a ·vaid

Complng Eq...,_ _.._..,_ ......- ............... 7110

.

AUCI10N .\Nl

Call Today! 74().446..4367 ,

""' po&amp;ittons:
Coders
Childhood
Home Heellh Care South Ohio valley Home ·Health, ~I Coder Pay
256-1336
$25
$30
h
1
East Ohio iS currently hiring Inc. hiring STNA., CNA,
Of
our Y rates
Home Heahh Aides tor Home Health Aides and available
Mei....a Co.. you muat be cer- Po--·l ColO ·~ FuH Work from home options

Alligator Jacks, scrubs,
If"
clothing,
boy's
8-16, Learn how to become part tified or cunently have one
women's 1G-16 namebfands of one of the TOP TEN Best year elq)8rience, caJI 1-866¥
Lost·yellow'gold aoss w/16
Places to World
368-HOOtolfree
VI
diamonds on Molhe(s Day, May 15-16,First house pas1
1 .. -YU
gift from son, Rewanl $50, Church
in Chestar.GoH - - - - - - - Housecleaning patsort part
{740157e- 1032
shoes,WOOd crafts,dishes,
Courtside Bar and Grill now time, Rodney area. Also
clothes,boys2-6-adutl ·to 2X, seeking qualified applic8nts need, laborer, part time, out·
COOkware,lots or misc.
tor bartender and food roo- side house and yard work.
- - - - - - - . ner. Apply in person or call 245-50271eave me8681J9.
CLASSIFIED INDEX
--. lhl4'1 For sato ........................... -...- ............125 ' RICO achotarshlp yard sa!e- 441-9371 to schedule and
030
Star Mill Park, May 13 &amp; 14 interview. 308 2nq Ave, Little Caesars is curreltly in
,· ~ ...........................................- .......... 530
ffom9to4, andMay15from Gallipolis.
search
of
Assistant
J.pL'tiiWitls for "-nt,,,,,,, ,, ,,.,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,~440
9 to2.May 15-hatfprice.
Manager&amp; tor our Gal~pois
day and dollar 8 bag Equipment
Repatr location We oner pakt train- - - -.............................010
Auto Parte a Ace 11ao."'ies ---··--·-···-··----...... 760
Auction by coo Smtth will Technician 1of Farm anGior tng, paid VIGltioo, ftedJie
................................................... _...... 770
tollow
Lawn EC!uipment repatr &amp; ~ 0 OLHiipetltirii
A-lor Sele.-.............. - ....................- ....71 0
at 3pm.ThanM tor your sup- matntenance Must he\18 wages. Please fax resume
&amp; - l o r Sale .............................150
port!tlllll!!l!l
expenence. Must be able to to 740-886-7425
·
. • Building 51~~ 1111 ............... _,_,............- ... 550
use computer on a ltmltecl

-

9 142

'"'•~

u .-n Hl'll.l·u....&amp;:aur

.

San Antonio Spl:lfS Brooe Bowen, left, r.im Duncan, oellter, and Tony Parker sit on the bench
late in the game ~ainst teh J'4ew Orlearns H'omet;s in Game 5 of an NBA Western
Conference semifinal basketball1)1a)'Off series Tuesday In New Orleans.

Gallipoli1 C... ,.~ 3br, 2 1f2 bi, &amp; FR. 2 car
-...
(careers CIDse To Home) garage &amp; in ground pool on

:~~~
1

~;•:•:w:.c:o:m:ic:•:·c:om=~;=====::;!;:=,_~===~
w• EA. Inc.

- •• • found Sst . in Camp Conley Allin'ator Jacks.Tools,fumi:::::::...~1 area terrier PLIPI1t ca~ and ture
,.,, "lt\• .-J::. ~~
nt.'
L...........h.a
!........
I,IVIIILIIJ oN"t"Vr~~:r
a ~ques. "'""'""'rger.name
1110
' I 14th ru J r., '-------~
IIDIWANI'FD 11110
Found ·. SmaH brown and bran d glr&amp;

APphata

INS11UJCI10N

1

Sale, May 16-17, manvfam·
Last Chance. Beautlul blat* ilies have donated to this .
Lab mtx puppies, 2 11'2 mo sala, Trailer Park along the

etal

Safools

e-ience &amp; dean MVR. 100's ol· 33,45 ,78 records
Pnor expenence with semt· motorcycle &amp; parts, tools,
d
d 11-off · h 1
umps an ro
s IS e p- books, (jd · collections of
tul. Contact _Kent at 8.0 0· every thing .. 105 Mill
46.2·9365 or ftll out appltca- St .Middleport .2:00-7 :00
81
740 591
www.q1ruoong.can
.
.

\~

f\~lP•='S~~

Yor·k,·e,

..

111iil

A:g'CAP' Dump Drivers
R&amp;J Tructing is seeking
qualified .COL-A driYers to
operate semi·dump!i for
regional routeS. We feature
excellent home 1ime, health
and
dental
insurance,
401(1&lt;), vacation, bonu•pay,
lindselelyawards. Oual•ied
applicants must be over 23
yrs., have a minimum of 1
yeer of commerical driving

YAIIII Sub

Saturday 5117 at Speegway
on Jackson Pike.•All Sales
6S yr. old male AUstralian benefit Children&amp; Mlrac~
hepherdneedsroomtorun Netwolt.
to good home . 304-576-

21
Fra04e·..

e-.

Graphics SOC for small

Su.,._~

r.::-:-::-::-:--=----:---:--'-----------,
'-·• -IIDP-•W.•~-_.1..
kitrK:artylegcomcast.net

.

___

night ~in the seoond .game ,22 jloints in the ·second balf points and set ·up Chandler
followingFaustoCaonooa's aud .added ,t 4 assil;ts for foqm:alley-OOpdunkduring
five-hitter in the.
1 New
Odel!DS, which bas a 20-4 Hornets run to open
Before. a i-ainnut ~JiJidar. ne11.er.adv.ani:edpasttbesec- the dlird quarter. ,Petecson's
~ 1itartel' ~ Li:ff~f ond I1'0IIIl4i ~f ~ playolfs.
3 ~ tile surge, givipg
pttdwJ seven 1nm• m' :a
Manu Ginobili led Su New'Oikanu 64-51 lead.
12-0 trill Saturday. : · •
)..l).tonio with 20 points aod · While Swjakovic man"All we ask is to give u~ :a 1 Tony Parker had 18. the. ~ Only rune points, he
ohanre to win, but they're Home~.s held Tun Duncan to ~ wbo had the hot
go~ abo11e dte ·Can ~f "10 pomts, thoqgh lluncU baDe[ His pass tD the comer
. duty,' ~edge said. .
• : was a force on the glass wilb 1Cl. up Peterson's fourth 3,
_. So 1s second baseman 23 ·rebounds.
.•
which put the Hornets ahead
Asdrubal Cabterd, who
· 9ame 6,.1s Thursday mght 68-54. Paul then added two
turned the 14th .unW.s$ted . in San ADloni~?, where the fnx: •tluvws, giving ·him 12
triple · play in history
Moliday,- and again ·brought. ·
.and two walks in four
the crowd to its feet with· a
appearances, and sophospectacular play. The 22m~ Andrew Benedwn,
year:.Oid ran into center field
Mlo had a double and two
tn.nPag!eBl.
111 snare a looping ·ball off.
hils. Junior Ben Buckley
the bat of Bobby ·Crosby to
start the eighth. ·
· reaehed base in four of his also had a double and two
Notes: Hafner got his five plate appearances. He hits, and freshman Tyler
had a single and a
460th RBI as Cleveland's walkOO once and scored two.. · Hendrill.
walk.
·
DH, surpassing Andre runs. ·
.
' · Gordon' d ble and hi
Thornton' s team moon:!. ...
Pierce's two runs batted
. . ' ou
.ts
Cleveland
RHP
Jake in came in· the second on a by 9riffin. Zach Hendrill.,
Westbrook, out si.pce April triple to centec f~eid. aotl ~y helped score
22 wilil a .strained ribcage Brannon got both of his duee IUDS m the_first.
Gordon, Griffin, and
muscle, .threw a simulated with a triple to right one
.
. Hendrill. each had hits again
game off the Progressive innin~ latec. .
Field mound in the afterJUIUbr Decek- Griffin led in die second before
uoon . ."1 felt fme, threw all the Eagles with three rims Pierce's triple, and the
my pitches, abOut 60 of scored, fmishing with two Eagles added three more
J3plin.
them,"
said Westbrook, who hits and a wlilk.
IUDS for a 6..() lead.
widlout • walk..
Byrd's performance came is scheduled to make a rehab
De npt-bmder e1.tended
Other Eastern hitters
That was the score in the
· the frJdiaDs' 'Sooreless streak after Cliff Lee pitched nine start at Class A Lake County inc!uded Hendrix, who third when Buckley ·donwent 2-for-2 with two runs bled, Gordon walked, and
to 34 iaaing~&gt; by their start- seoreless innings Monday on Saturday.
ing staff. The last run
allowed by a Cievelmd
Sla1ter came Friday night in
the fifth iuniog a.gaiost
T(Jil)Dta by C.C. Sabathia the only run yielded by an
Indians starter in the last 39
innings.
Wedge wisHes Oeveland' s
hi,tters would feed Qff one
another's success as well. as
the pllchers and fielders are
.
doinf '
"Its a friendly competition." Wedge said of the
starting
staff' s
streak.
"(They) try .to keep oneupping one another."
Hafuer si:ngled home a
fii'St-inning run off Justin
Duchscl;lerer (3-2) and got a
tw&lt;HIIIt single off i.etty Alan
Embree in the eighth before
G.arko connected off former
teamnlllleAndrew Brown.
Rafael Perez retired the
only Oaldand batter he faced
and Masahide Kobayashi
wodl:ed the fmal I 2-3
innings for 'his first save.
1be 33-year-old right-hander, signed as a free agent in
November, had 227 saves
the last eight seasons in

r

I

GIVFAWAY

Thu...t.y for

(.~

oddedtoyourdossifledods
Borders$3.00/perod

luo

-;;;;;;;;;&amp;;~c;:-;;;.n
S-iiNfB
c.u, we'n Mc:Cany, Barnes, Donnet

r

~

All ~= 1Z Noon Z
lluSI ..... o.y. Prior To
Publlwtlon
SUnday~= t.:DO

• All act. muat be pepllld"

YA!!DSAU:

got HONEYI!mll

Byrd and two re6eveninitch
Tribe to 4-0
win
~~t~!iSC:i~~lfn'Y·
tile
~!C"bad~f~ ints
·
ra ·
·
.
. Chris P.aul had 16 iff his in the tirst half, ·soorefnine

CLEVELAND (AP) 1be Cleveland Indians IR
trying to mix in some timely
hitting with their stellar
starting pitching and strong
defense.
Paul Byrd and two reliellers combined for the
Indians' fourth shutout in
seven games and Ryan
Garko delivered a three,run
bomer in a 4-0 victory .over
tile Oakland Athletics · on
Tuesday night. .
, 1be Indians got.seven hits,
justonefewerthan they had
in a doubleheader split
Monday ·night with Tom1110
al't« which ,manager Eric
Wedge blasted his hitters for
poor preparation at the plate.
• "It · was better, they had
, tougher at-bats and it was
ood tD see (Tr.avil;) Hairier
us out," W61,i e said.
ievelanii's :f:signated
hitteJ camt in hit:tjng .179
(7-for-39) in his previous 13
games. He went2-for4 with
.ao RBI to lift his ov~
ava:agc tD .223.
Byrd (2-3) .allowed five
hils OYC2' 7 1-3 innings; strik.U., out a ~-high seven

Paper -

_ . _ _ 74G-142-l471 Hugo seiO, Fri &amp; Sat, 5/167 ~HI50. You might 5117 Bem until dari&lt;. 105U

e..,.,

onto their ~mories ··l!lf a
Gam~ I lo~s 10 Bo~ton that
wasn t dectded ~tii . James.
mtssed a layup With _8.5 •seconds. left. The Celti~s won
Game 2 more handily, but
!hey have yet to oome close
m Cleveland.
. "You can win all your

Saan~Up

Reunion 1'958-1989. May
24, 8pm-1am U006e Lodge Clay Townhouse oo Lo\'ers
Info 446-3488 or 675-4831
Lane-218. May 16-17.

·
.

Now you can have borders and QrOPhics

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• Sblt Yow Alii With A Kew-d • lftdude Con : • til
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l\egtster

(7!~1ro992~~~5756

O.llf' In-Column: 1:00 p.m.
Monchly-Frtct.y for lnHII'tlon
~ Next Dayr• Paper
. Sundal\' In-column: 1:00 p.m.

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

Cincinnati Reds' Joey Votto (19) is congratulated by Adam Dunn (44) after Votto hit a solo
home run against the Ro.rida Mar1ins in the eighth inning of a baseball game luesda~ in
Cincinnati. Cincinnati won 5-3:
•

Webs~es:

Sentinel

Word Ads

Celtics ~ck home, h~P~ '·it's the answer
AssoctAmif'I!ESS
,.
WALTHAM, Mass. The usual beds. The .usual
lockers. The usual baskets.
The usual questions.
The Celtics are baclc in
Boston for Game 5' of their
Eastern Conference semifinal against the ~~and
Cavaliers. Wlib &lt;the besi-of·
seven series tied .at 2-2, ·die
Celtics are ' back
they' re unbeaten SO''W ·m
the playoffs after a re,gylat
season in which d:ley fiOiiled
an NBA-best 35-6 · borne
record.
But it's their 0-5 playoffs
road record that has them
· worrying.
"There is some frustra1ioo," center PJ. Brown said
Tuesday after the team's
walkthrough and film session. " But up to this point, it
hasn ' t .go~ten under our
slcin."
Despite going 31 -10 away
from Boston in the regular
season - also an NBA best
- the Celtics have yet 111
win on the road in the playoffs. The slump allowed the
Jowly Atlanta Hawks to
fo~ce them to a seventh
~in the first round, and
It oould be their doom
against the more fonuidable
Cavaliers and star LeBron
James.
"The key is winning the
series. Whether it's at home
· try to
or on the road , you JUSt
win it," Pierce said. ••tt' s a
three-game series, with two

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The DMiy Smlinl'l• Page 85

JIEA Crossword PQzzle

BRIDGE

ACAC SS
18
&amp;

MOTOCROSS
RACE
Sat. 5117/08
6:00pm
Mason Co. Fairgrounds
At 62N Pt. Pleasant, wv
(Practioe 4:30pm)

304-675-5463

.....
...._.
SJIEDS-

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For mont infonnalion you may mllad
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: BARNEY

.

lllfiSJf' nn•rAMF&amp;zl••
........... '

Ul 11'

'

WHAT'S YORE

It#.-

Stanley Tree-

Trimming
&amp;Removal
•Prompt aod Quality .

YA TAKE WHAT

FAV'Ril€

..
..

LIFE GIVES VA,
ADD SOME
SPICE, N-4' SHA~
WIF

~CtPE,

GRANIN'?

~R'SY~

......

Work

---in

41 . . .

• .....
.......

-----7

a

2••

-..-.
.,.,._,.._.
a

*Reasonable Rales

•m......s

*Experienced

Ref"""""'• Available!
Call GaJy SUnley @
740-591~

THE BORN LOSER .

lwl&amp;......,.

\c

wv-

YCL1 ~ ~G

I

I

..
.
'.
~··

......_ ·

2ZIIelfto

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'(()U~fl\'(

'

~ N;DWI\\'tE
~T~~EI&gt; Sl\lf..l' '"!

()It (.()L()fS

1

~~-

--

. -.,..,_........ _,....._
fARITY CIPHER

bJLuisC.+A

E.:h ... In !lie Cllli1ellllillS tor 111101*

llld two cU!s. This is"""!' 11tle~ buJ wt1ll f ... IIIIOlti 1115 four
ID tie jad(l Thll can be harded only I
Elllllllih -l qlh. Sout!Oiins wilhftis
·dilrnlnl-&lt;(tteltanarfnlmhlide filii), Cllles !lis halrt ,. .., (or
queen), and lliiYS • halrt lD dufnmYB•
king.- 1 1 e - is~. dedlr·
er fir-. hiB halrt 10. ·d raa tie last

Today'S ~uo: l Bq&lt;ll/6 D
"«HM C:T G TMYCJBT

WHOEG«

lCTHGfH ." • WlGEJ "lJlH: G
E H W 8 J Y'G Y 8

C 0 T G 0 CE 8

WGYYCGDH. "

• GWVlJTH

con-

A B YG V

«H

V8

VCHYAH

PREVIOUS SOlUTION- "Apolitical
isjUStll!lallilCO-l'OIJ
"""" away with any 1lale Dl11ittl in lwmall11111ure.' · Munay K~

.· =

nw
a a ...
,5.0..0
..
., _
_

w

=

S(C~~~i~z-s·
fOUM - - - - .... .., Q&amp;J ..

Cuditions will~ in the).,... '. tlHd
aewt~Wil

big ~ 'that . . ·no!:
oth!Q..
thing il
-~
Uf'ltl ,1he
taunch dnt. '
'IJWRUS (April 204o1oy 20) - H )IOU too&lt;

to...., ..

•..,...

~

:,n;:,'7:!~

. . I time-out 10 ~

'~ """"-"-11ft&gt;

·':" ~liJ

.....

_to

~~y ,.,..

a lew plealura-

IT'S ;JIST A MATTER
OF KfEfiM6 OUR MINDS
ON TilE 6AME ..

WE CAN'T LET
OUR MINDS
WANDER .•

RAIItll

r-.,-..----.,.,·
- Gfll I B R ,.
1-r
,-,l,.r--r--rl-.-l~.

A CUiic 10 ber dllt, "'f's lilt .
....v .... -1..-

""

:0: ::' lhHo , . _ - """'•nv·
CANCER (June 2hluly 22)- Th5 5 on

--=·· .·

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.~
...,.,........,·..;::=::,·.::
...,-So,,......

7

7

r~-~~~~~-"....,
GA T 0 D E

•••• m•

dNing with anything in'41011a1 11. revi8it It
agMI tDrnol reM.
IIIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22)- Be mindful
llboia IQteping your fiNmcilll CONiderationa in proper balance, becau.a this is •
period when strong attachments to
material objects can 1alce preoecteuce
cwar practical ~ and reuons.·
'
LIBRA (Sept . 23-0ct. 23) - Take care
1tW you don't let your pereonal feelings
·O'Nfride ewrything alae in your tifl!l. Yr:;ur
need10 lead i8 gntat , but tt-.n eo is ~ur
ct.air1t to belong, so keep things in balance in Ol'der 10 futfill both.
SCO!'iPIO (Oct. 24-N&lt;w. 22) - T.y to
wort in an envlfonmenl tree trorn outlide
imarleA!tr'iCe&amp; it you can, but nat to 1ha
point of hiding from life. V'll••uer you try
to hide 'from oth&amp;rs, ~ h6de from ~r­
Mftaswel.
SAGIT'Tl&lt;RIUS (N&lt;w. 23-0oc. 21)- ThG
i5 an &amp;Kcelktnl time 1D "'II' out future
hapet because your llr&amp;igtited;..- can
help you visualize • Q11fM plan thlit will
pl'tMQe the~ ygu .....
CAPRICORN (Doc. 22-Jon. 191 - 'fbur
.t)llity tO sanae the pulee ol the moment
can be an invaluable aNt. tt wltl bring
the neoeesary loroee together 10 help
actWtYe _IIOmftthing thet rMens • lot to

'

1

I

.

•

;. cow and 80'(

H&amp;H

WlseConcl818

Guttering

AtltypleaiCOia•

Seamless Gutters
Roofing, Siding, Gull&lt;!!$
lnsulwd&amp;Botlded

740-416-1698:
Free Eslimates:

J&amp;l
ConStruction'

......

• Vlnrt Sldng
•Rc;plac

a It

•foltBulldlnge

•Raom&amp;e••....

IS IT 1£11. Ell

TO DFfEI! ~va

7'40-t~Mta:

-Wilt

roonas..

~-~J

"Yn'·-

CORNER STOtiE
CONSTRUCTIUN
Roofing, Siding,:

Soffit, Decks, .
Doors, WiiJdow(
E7scttic. Plutrbipg,
Drywall,

GARAELD

_,..,._

Remodeling, Room
Additions '

\JNSCIIAMII.E lnTERS

ARLO&amp;JANIS

20-f=eb:

20--

----.SMOOU1

~cf
· ~~
•

Advertise
in this space for
$64 r month

••
I

-- - -- -

·-- .-

- ---'-------------·

triendl wfth rntef"ee nnw..
ARIES (Maodl. 21-Apnl 10) - l.oood
.,_will boa much maN lhJPUI' tant to ygu
than Laual, u l h o y - _......,.
of tlmotiallll.l HCUrtty and IIUPPOf1. Don'l
heeitllte to . , . . . your8lelf In ...a-ring

.

r I' r ·Is r FI

I I I Iin I I · I I I
.

f1lice- Hullky -Quill- Hypbca • SAFElY
Times haw d!lnr' I Bed the cklt il die lwdwae
dqabi&amp;lllbr clulbes pills. He gave me SAFETY pill.

lldw......,.. '

~

dtwelop lram lllp No. 3 boiiiW.

scvM ms ANsWEIS s #13 #oe

AQUARIUS (Ja n .
19) AlhOugh you may be a bit ........._ you
· can use flis unreSt 10 your
~ that what you're ieetinQ 18 a
deeife to get away hom all that ia familiar.
Ooeo.
·
PISCES (Fob.
20) - Ewn ft
you are one ol1he quiet PilcNn.. what
you need most ngtrt now .,.IIOine ~
tul ~ in your life to bring out what il

GRWOWELLS
IT V161\4£ BEST cf ......-~ 1 ~~
11ME"- ~ IT --~
IT ~\..L
V61\l

~- in.,.-."

e ~~k~r~~~E;mm I'
FQ!! AfoiSWR

-

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Oon1 hesltala to do ""· bocllu,. rt'll

•z Fsr s•••••

• •

l
rEE-E..~'?.,.;E_::;. 11'111' ·~=:-fl.~~-~
ble activities. To your CN!dl, you are not

so LET's

.. , .......... "1,.... 1"t:l:

21 ...... 201 _

...,. "' ... - . ""' mi!iht ..

words.

tiY Vr I

·-to

any peraonal confMcl, "
be ~
ernational Bide lwt . . . . . ..., .,our
abid&amp;it....... nature. c::e-nc- .,. your
pactical HH will win out over your

111o
ICianllad ll!lll'ds 1&gt;o.

... -four .....

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at
aw-antto
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12 T...... 41 Sparlr

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. 740-4153-9657

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ID I diarnonl!. How- Soulh callinue?
Alouming daclnr can lhw 1r""15- he
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CARPENTER
SERVICE

"'=::~'\

Shop

:10--

,

l!lOie - .. . . _ - i s am;.

Wati'IIID11le spade q

·---·--

David Lewis
740-992-6971

7Pw

• .....,. ....

aiming 15-17

aort.)

Service
Ca ; ' ' n.c......,.,_..._.

Yean Experience

51 ........

• ; ••

IU:IM 1hln - - . . 1loy

.lotJpMl'STIII

• Homes • !!qJtic
Sy_, • Roofing
• Backhoe • sne
Ptq&gt;aration • Dour
• Garages • Utilities
•Pole Dams
Pomm&gt;y. Obio

••

afald._

lD IJIIIIO? Thll is l8iWII!Ibie, 1111-in
11ft lhllllllancod- ....... pro-

Forn:rly Barbur'li A\lkl Part!;

:~·q·~ . ~

, , , Ill

~1o 10.moliing-llllldiiO!IIa•

PARSON!!

740-3JI.6tM
St. Rt.1:M
Rlldlvllle, Ott
Galy Cunis- Owner

:\

:

1i . , . . , _
1171 ...
4S ......
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44 Dill
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YOL·N( S

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99Z-5776

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poinls."" .......... - - will\
nine poinls (or~ 1111! o Ji&gt;e.CIId sui). """'· No!1h , _.. two
dubs, Sllymlm, loaU!g fcf • 4-4 t..t
It Mj """" Soulh blr llea!ls,
North 10 game. (llid you
M 1111 lllilh I 4-4 jl, 1'011 11111111 .d j

II

11le uh clad rondidale wil assist with
estimating, schtduling, and _. duties as
n id. Must how! e• ahnt c:uslomer
~ skils. Must be delail oriented.
bpelienoe in body shop w:oA: ptalerred
but not fllqllired. Ful time posi1ion with
generous benefits. Immediate opening.
l'leale Mlbmit .._ lo:
ae.frDI ... ..., . . . . . ,

"ha

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""""' ... I'IHIUI\II.

.!

---1111

BODY SHOP
ASSISTAIII

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alilllicl.

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24
_ _.......

lhis ........... kllilil1!&amp; .......

..,'

Residential aod New

I0 in. BoSion Ferns
Now$5.00
While dlejilast, over
2000 10 choOse from.
Flowaing &amp;. Foliage;
Bastds. Bedding &amp;
'+qctable F1aU:
4 in. foliage pol .
SbnJ!&gt;s &amp;. Azalras
Open M-S '1-5
Closed SUIIday

•.tll:ts .

hD
hD

....-s

- · "() b " be open ll1d .,
....
..., !lilded....-

Havey Road !o!._ WV

~
Spocials

a ._..,.

INT
19

I Cia!.,

Englilh JIOIII W.i'l. AID!n, IM!d
d !lis .. "' i1lle Slllos, .

Iff Rood w J4t ahovt!
.llasoo GolfCourse

N-.-fol

19 :..:•

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When balanced,
invite cautiously

.'
•' .

11-Honest
1- lnlegrity

Syracuse. Obio

• t'

• Q It.

Zi IIIII:3li _..,..

.: ~FRANKl EARNEST

SSRolln
SICHc

....
2 Ciaolios
11 ......... 3 T..... af
.. . .
jpalo.

..--..

Slnnoo

HUBBARDS
GREENIIOOSE

wJt.a v

• "54

.

Td!crs. Mumoy.
Oafisman. MID.

CooSIJUCtion
Can be installed ova
your existing roof
!nsulaled roofs to
save on your Healing
and Air Condirioning
oost

11C

• A&amp;

~Mowtts.

Briw &amp;

lllillr

• A 71

" A Q IG

PSI CONSTRUCTION
NCKPRCE.
•
-.-.a 'FlO . • c, 2 Met~~ a·

ss~- ­

1&amp; . . . . ..

----

••

---~~~~
Pomeooy. Ohio

Scnicin&amp; Lawn

71

• 751.11
H:l I 5

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15-

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MASON MOWER
:JM..77J-5161
:114111.]194

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SOUPlONUTZ
llES~ Hl'l'teld
'oii(&amp;Ts ~T r ·

�www.mydllilpe illnel.com

-· · : '1."J tslllay,llly 14,2008
-; ~,,

www.nrjd a,u lliillllcom

FYOOP

The DMiy Smlinl'l• Page 85

JIEA Crossword PQzzle

BRIDGE

ACAC SS
18
&amp;

MOTOCROSS
RACE
Sat. 5117/08
6:00pm
Mason Co. Fairgrounds
At 62N Pt. Pleasant, wv
(Practioe 4:30pm)

304-675-5463

.....
...._.
SJIEDS-

~

..._, .

-

-

--......

.

'

~ '

..

~-

•New Hames . •

·~
Ieee

AIIJulldlnp 11rt
art- built to
lit )'Q!II" --as

••

Ra•IOdeilc ••

,_.~

SF 1o0otb.llolllw

S-Scrvi&lt;e

IOYeors

.......
....

a.w

.~,.,..,

830 East Slale She!, Alhens, OH .(570 I
For mont infonnalion you may mllad
Marie Dilatd at t7-401 589-3636 Of
· mdillanlOdoowood.oom

••

-

Pus

Pus

islluqj Ill iwilo

..

,

a.......
-I

: BARNEY

.

lllfiSJf' nn•rAMF&amp;zl••
........... '

Ul 11'

'

WHAT'S YORE

It#.-

Stanley Tree-

Trimming
&amp;Removal
•Prompt aod Quality .

YA TAKE WHAT

FAV'Ril€

..
..

LIFE GIVES VA,
ADD SOME
SPICE, N-4' SHA~
WIF

~CtPE,

GRANIN'?

~R'SY~

......

Work

---in

41 . . .

• .....
.......

-----7

a

2••

-..-.
.,.,._,.._.
a

*Reasonable Rales

•m......s

*Experienced

Ref"""""'• Available!
Call GaJy SUnley @
740-591~

THE BORN LOSER .

lwl&amp;......,.

\c

wv-

YCL1 ~ ~G

I

I

..
.
'.
~··

......_ ·

2ZIIelfto

01\' Gl..Wt5!

~t~...,

..,

n w\m WM\lO

'(()U~fl\'(

'

~ N;DWI\\'tE
~T~~EI&gt; Sl\lf..l' '"!

()It (.()L()fS

1

~~-

--

. -.,..,_........ _,....._
fARITY CIPHER

bJLuisC.+A

E.:h ... In !lie Cllli1ellllillS tor 111101*

llld two cU!s. This is"""!' 11tle~ buJ wt1ll f ... IIIIOlti 1115 four
ID tie jad(l Thll can be harded only I
Elllllllih -l qlh. Sout!Oiins wilhftis
·dilrnlnl-&lt;(tteltanarfnlmhlide filii), Cllles !lis halrt ,. .., (or
queen), and lliiYS • halrt lD dufnmYB•
king.- 1 1 e - is~. dedlr·
er fir-. hiB halrt 10. ·d raa tie last

Today'S ~uo: l Bq&lt;ll/6 D
"«HM C:T G TMYCJBT

WHOEG«

lCTHGfH ." • WlGEJ "lJlH: G
E H W 8 J Y'G Y 8

C 0 T G 0 CE 8

WGYYCGDH. "

• GWVlJTH

con-

A B YG V

«H

V8

VCHYAH

PREVIOUS SOlUTION- "Apolitical
isjUStll!lallilCO-l'OIJ
"""" away with any 1lale Dl11ittl in lwmall11111ure.' · Munay K~

.· =

nw
a a ...
,5.0..0
..
., _
_

w

=

S(C~~~i~z-s·
fOUM - - - - .... .., Q&amp;J ..

Cuditions will~ in the).,... '. tlHd
aewt~Wil

big ~ 'that . . ·no!:
oth!Q..
thing il
-~
Uf'ltl ,1he
taunch dnt. '
'IJWRUS (April 204o1oy 20) - H )IOU too&lt;

to...., ..

•..,...

~

:,n;:,'7:!~

. . I time-out 10 ~

'~ """"-"-11ft&gt;

·':" ~liJ

.....

_to

~~y ,.,..

a lew plealura-

IT'S ;JIST A MATTER
OF KfEfiM6 OUR MINDS
ON TilE 6AME ..

WE CAN'T LET
OUR MINDS
WANDER .•

RAIItll

r-.,-..----.,.,·
- Gfll I B R ,.
1-r
,-,l,.r--r--rl-.-l~.

A CUiic 10 ber dllt, "'f's lilt .
....v .... -1..-

""

:0: ::' lhHo , . _ - """'•nv·
CANCER (June 2hluly 22)- Th5 5 on

--=·· .·

~::"~":::;:~
.~
...,.,........,·..;::=::,·.::
...,-So,,......

7

7

r~-~~~~~-"....,
GA T 0 D E

•••• m•

dNing with anything in'41011a1 11. revi8it It
agMI tDrnol reM.
IIIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22)- Be mindful
llboia IQteping your fiNmcilll CONiderationa in proper balance, becau.a this is •
period when strong attachments to
material objects can 1alce preoecteuce
cwar practical ~ and reuons.·
'
LIBRA (Sept . 23-0ct. 23) - Take care
1tW you don't let your pereonal feelings
·O'Nfride ewrything alae in your tifl!l. Yr:;ur
need10 lead i8 gntat , but tt-.n eo is ~ur
ct.air1t to belong, so keep things in balance in Ol'der 10 futfill both.
SCO!'iPIO (Oct. 24-N&lt;w. 22) - T.y to
wort in an envlfonmenl tree trorn outlide
imarleA!tr'iCe&amp; it you can, but nat to 1ha
point of hiding from life. V'll••uer you try
to hide 'from oth&amp;rs, ~ h6de from ~r­
Mftaswel.
SAGIT'Tl&lt;RIUS (N&lt;w. 23-0oc. 21)- ThG
i5 an &amp;Kcelktnl time 1D "'II' out future
hapet because your llr&amp;igtited;..- can
help you visualize • Q11fM plan thlit will
pl'tMQe the~ ygu .....
CAPRICORN (Doc. 22-Jon. 191 - 'fbur
.t)llity tO sanae the pulee ol the moment
can be an invaluable aNt. tt wltl bring
the neoeesary loroee together 10 help
actWtYe _IIOmftthing thet rMens • lot to

'

1

I

.

•

;. cow and 80'(

H&amp;H

WlseConcl818

Guttering

AtltypleaiCOia•

Seamless Gutters
Roofing, Siding, Gull&lt;!!$
lnsulwd&amp;Botlded

740-416-1698:
Free Eslimates:

J&amp;l
ConStruction'

......

• Vlnrt Sldng
•Rc;plac

a It

•foltBulldlnge

•Raom&amp;e••....

IS IT 1£11. Ell

TO DFfEI! ~va

7'40-t~Mta:

-Wilt

roonas..

~-~J

"Yn'·-

CORNER STOtiE
CONSTRUCTIUN
Roofing, Siding,:

Soffit, Decks, .
Doors, WiiJdow(
E7scttic. Plutrbipg,
Drywall,

GARAELD

_,..,._

Remodeling, Room
Additions '

\JNSCIIAMII.E lnTERS

ARLO&amp;JANIS

20-f=eb:

20--

----.SMOOU1

~cf
· ~~
•

Advertise
in this space for
$64 r month

••
I

-- - -- -

·-- .-

- ---'-------------·

triendl wfth rntef"ee nnw..
ARIES (Maodl. 21-Apnl 10) - l.oood
.,_will boa much maN lhJPUI' tant to ygu
than Laual, u l h o y - _......,.
of tlmotiallll.l HCUrtty and IIUPPOf1. Don'l
heeitllte to . , . . . your8lelf In ...a-ring

.

r I' r ·Is r FI

I I I Iin I I · I I I
.

f1lice- Hullky -Quill- Hypbca • SAFElY
Times haw d!lnr' I Bed the cklt il die lwdwae
dqabi&amp;lllbr clulbes pills. He gave me SAFETY pill.

lldw......,.. '

~

dtwelop lram lllp No. 3 boiiiW.

scvM ms ANsWEIS s #13 #oe

AQUARIUS (Ja n .
19) AlhOugh you may be a bit ........._ you
· can use flis unreSt 10 your
~ that what you're ieetinQ 18 a
deeife to get away hom all that ia familiar.
Ooeo.
·
PISCES (Fob.
20) - Ewn ft
you are one ol1he quiet PilcNn.. what
you need most ngtrt now .,.IIOine ~
tul ~ in your life to bring out what il

GRWOWELLS
IT V161\4£ BEST cf ......-~ 1 ~~
11ME"- ~ IT --~
IT ~\..L
V61\l

~- in.,.-."

e ~~k~r~~~E;mm I'
FQ!! AfoiSWR

-

II atime wbco IIIey !dille

)IOU

=•

••

._,J .., aJI1"''i I*'

'

Oon1 hesltala to do ""· bocllu,. rt'll

•z Fsr s•••••

• •

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but not fllqllired. Ful time posi1ion with
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....... , .....

Saau .

I

Wi'

-

..

Hamilton-led Pistom eliminate

Delimit l'li!AitiiS"
llidad .

Magic in Game 5 with 91-86 win

~ 118ft.,

illlld Ral

s ;· W'..._

a

trnn

1 lME
mi.uioa
Decroit miSilCd
N
llis lldt
__
•s_SI_•_~aliD_
· -~--- ooy oae of 1-4 """"'P'S plUt. lfamilliloa fll*fsilla

IIY II

uc..,._ ........~......

.,.,.

.,

Odmdo )bgic fur a 91-86 McDyess-led 13.0 IUD dul
win TUesday nigbt in Game put litem ne.d 18-70.
· 5 of tbe second-round The ~ 'Slill wouldn't
~~
• tbe
series.
go any UDiil ...,~ m
"PPa~ in six ;n,u:gbt is final 9"'0Dds. ·
.
awesome. but now we
~It's~ to~ thi!ii over
eKpeC~ to do this.,~ Hamilton with,~ Dclroit mart; Rip
said. ,:'We're supposed to be Sanndc::n; .said. "Now we
~.
. .
get a dunoe to R:St. .espe.The PiStoDs will_llavc: a ci.dly Chauncey, and we
bK:ak be~ facial! tbe get a dunoe to prqJaR:-~
Boston Cdtics or Cleveland
Cavalia's in die oonfetaiOe

_..

tellallh

·::,~.:,~-

while Ho-..1 fHJf-13 Tboams' CMitU pla)'Qlf
AUBURN HD IS, YidL to sial!: Odlodo's 1lUI to 1- S0CJri1a1 RlOOid or 1,261
- ~ Ddroit Pistons or-16 in tbe tint half.
poiMs - ' be did it ia 110
m.le .JWl..,..lgb mots and
The M.P: cauied a 68- pmes - oae fcwcr- *stops to advaooe to ibe 6S ad into dte fiiW period 1'bomaii m h i to wt dte
&amp;st~ Coaf~ finals but Slnlggicd at dte Sialt or matt.. 1b's a f,K3lboMa
fur~ sixth ~ year.
die founb.. .Afttt Lewis bec;a11se l:siab is Detroit
Jtidg;d Hamilton saJred __....
.,__ ~
. tbe ba&lt;kcdull ~ Hamib said.
19 of hi 31
·
· ·die ......,~u~ililOti&gt;Sm
'
;
.
s
pnmts . m
npming .sooOacls, OdaDdo :"fo pass oae of his ·~
firs~ half, made Vi~- - • - , _ _ _ . l IS &lt;ney ..........,SC [ illaWD'l
seahng IRle lbrows 1a1e m Wftll x''""'~"" ,.,. -•Y .____ .. __ ..._. .__ ~
tbe game .and Taysbaun mimueo; as die Pistons WCIIl ~ . UQ~ • . . _ .. . . . _ . ·:Prinoe bad a key block, . _ on Stucky's sal Hamiltoll 15
P"'!""
L.l,;nn "'----. L-Id off die :and
RW!n
durin• a a~y
bmal&lt;lng ~

rroms
Laimbecc'

ee II

ill tl:le llil!;it half
fllf Game 5 fllf
illil~

Eastem
Col ~teiiiDe
semtfnlllll ~'!!­

........__,,,
~

...,,

--. ~ t

~ lfbli .;:-· :~
.or.tllmlliiD ~ . .
®Tl 1T~ il1it
Allilm1Ti l!tllls.,
Midh. llliimi!Um.
lelilltlle P.istmls:
lliitt:l 3!110il:its ill ift.lelr 9UI6 ·
win · elimil!llilled ftllle
1from \the

row:

.
fn•d...•e
of 113 playoff
r-..-1.....

appearancci. -· - ~Y·

-ic

draftled by Dclroit Wi'illl a
pi'* aoquiml from om.1n
for Datto Milicic., was
naDJI'\II to die AD-Rookie

.......

P~a&amp;illlifs.

...., ••• 11e1m. · _ ~
said McDyess IDid as
b e - aniqq at die oaasa
dw his !fNM'n••l•·r, .tao
helped Wlie him, bad dic4.

WIN.UP TO $1,000 !!!·

fiuls

•DcmJit made just 36 pcrc:zat of its shots aDd allowed
die Magic to make Deady
half of lbcir """"''p'S, but
made up fur tbe disparity at
die line. aDd by taking care
of die ball
Tbe Pislloos ~f11 at tbe line
bad just
thn!e twnoVCfli - sdling
111 NBA playoff m:IOld fur
tbe fewest giveaways in a
game- while Olbndo16-ilf-28 and bad a playoff~ 21 nunoven, wllidi
t1lmOd into 34 points fur
DetmiL
. "The £act tbat die game is
dose at tbe end when you .
look a1 die IRle tbrow shooting and turnover disparity is

PLAY COVERAll BINGO

F• 11 Oil Changes cmd Tires for Life

WHY-NOT LET UNCLE
SAM &amp; DON WOOD
HELPPAYPOR
YOUR NEXT CAR?

t

a

renwb.ble.~

~

.

.

..... GiedL•• $1500

.....
AddS---..'IPlW $1500.

Orlando

Coach Stan Van Gumly said.
To the Magjc's credit,
they dido 't go away easily
against a playoff-tested
team that improved tti 15-3
when it hal; a cbaooe to
advance since 2003.
. Detroit led by I0 late, but
was ahead 85-&amp;4 with just
IIIIda" a mim!le left after
Redo "l'uJmgtu made bacltto-back shots.
.
Tbe Pistons · won when
Hamilton made two key
~ throws. Prince blodked
Turkoglu's dunk attempt,
and Hamilton made two
more at die line in die last
20 seconds of die game.

•.

. . . DON WOOD FOR !IFE.COM ·
·---C&amp;ti
-·R
UtitiW -

Playing witbout AU-Star
point

"

zn

"'I

gtUIIll · Chauncey ·

•never

&amp;&amp;

cirt•
1 ... , .

SieleC

Billups for the second
straight game because of a
Strained bainstring, rookie
itodney Stuck.ey tilled the
void with 15 points, six
assists and no turnover-S.

"I'm

TOYOTAS• HYUNDAIS• PORDS
LINCOLNS •MERCURYS
CHEVROUftS•GMCTRUCKS
.•BUJCXS• CADILLAlS ·
lEE liE SA. . . . .

'A

4.15'1.91

(740) 446-7619

A TiffiNS

%75 West u..... SbC:ct

scared,"

f'7A.illo'l

594-3571

OR UP TO

AS LOW AS

Stuckey said.
Antonio McDyess had 17
points and 10 rebounds,
Rasheed Wallace had t4
points and Priooe added I 0.

'1\ubglu had 18 points
and nine rebounds, and
Dwight Howard, Rashard ·
Lewis and Jameer Nelson
bad 14 points apiece for the
Magic. Nelson bad guaranteed his team would extend
the series with a win.
~we played them tough,~
Nelson said. "If there's anyone in their locker room
who didn't think: this was
tough, they don't lrnow
what tough is."
Howard also had 17
·Jd!ounds and three block:s,
but his night was IIIliJl"ed by
~ 6-of-15 at the line.
Orlando was in the sccood round of the playoffs
focdle first time since 1996.
The Magic scored the last
seven points of the ftrSt
quarta" to make it 20-:all in
what bad to \lC a frustr~

TODAY'S

NUIIBER IS:

'

-......-

'"hzf r
,,..........
a,---

Tbey allowed Detroit to
score all but two of its .
points off turnovers and
offensive rebounds.
Lewis had · as many
missed shots (four) . as
tumovers in - a scoreless
first, but eaeh of the otha"
statters scored at least four
points to iii8k:e up for the
!lwful start from the le4Dl's

i

,.

Hamilton made all

,,

awa r

iJJottom Line: Do'! Wood Automotive
j
i
Saves You Ttme ~oney! .
i .
.i
.
. I
i IXMIIIOODN..JTCNOTlVE i fX1\IWOODN.JTCM)TlVE
I
i
i• ~-· I i
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I

••u

•

7

•

~

1'114
AI a
.... ,. 3 •

leading scorer.

- The Pistons enjoyed quite
In advanta&amp;e at the line.

IN REBATES, INCENTIVES
AND DISCOUNTS
ON SELECTED MODELS!

FINANCINC WITH
DPIOVED

·score for tbelil. ·

. When
Lewis finally
IIOOrCd midway lbrough the
~ · quarter, his hook
appcd a 10-2 run that put
OrliDdo aDead 33-27.
Detroit then went on a 163run, and took: a 4741 lead
iniO halftime.

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R«Just F...Uy Oxy~a

s n•'

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.

'

~LINCOLN

t----

.JJ

I0 of

his me throws before inter-

..

••

'

�•z

B6 • The llilily

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

Saau .

I

Wi'

-

..

Hamilton-led Pistom eliminate

Delimit l'li!AitiiS"
llidad .

Magic in Game 5 with 91-86 win

~ 118ft.,

illlld Ral

s ;· W'..._

a

trnn

1 lME
mi.uioa
Decroit miSilCd
N
llis lldt
__
•s_SI_•_~aliD_
· -~--- ooy oae of 1-4 """"'P'S plUt. lfamilliloa fll*fsilla

IIY II

uc..,._ ........~......

.,.,.

.,

Odmdo )bgic fur a 91-86 McDyess-led 13.0 IUD dul
win TUesday nigbt in Game put litem ne.d 18-70.
· 5 of tbe second-round The ~ 'Slill wouldn't
~~
• tbe
series.
go any UDiil ...,~ m
"PPa~ in six ;n,u:gbt is final 9"'0Dds. ·
.
awesome. but now we
~It's~ to~ thi!ii over
eKpeC~ to do this.,~ Hamilton with,~ Dclroit mart; Rip
said. ,:'We're supposed to be Sanndc::n; .said. "Now we
~.
. .
get a dunoe to R:St. .espe.The PiStoDs will_llavc: a ci.dly Chauncey, and we
bK:ak be~ facial! tbe get a dunoe to prqJaR:-~
Boston Cdtics or Cleveland
Cavalia's in die oonfetaiOe

_..

tellallh

·::,~.:,~-

while Ho-..1 fHJf-13 Tboams' CMitU pla)'Qlf
AUBURN HD IS, YidL to sial!: Odlodo's 1lUI to 1- S0CJri1a1 RlOOid or 1,261
- ~ Ddroit Pistons or-16 in tbe tint half.
poiMs - ' be did it ia 110
m.le .JWl..,..lgb mots and
The M.P: cauied a 68- pmes - oae fcwcr- *stops to advaooe to ibe 6S ad into dte fiiW period 1'bomaii m h i to wt dte
&amp;st~ Coaf~ finals but Slnlggicd at dte Sialt or matt.. 1b's a f,K3lboMa
fur~ sixth ~ year.
die founb.. .Afttt Lewis bec;a11se l:siab is Detroit
Jtidg;d Hamilton saJred __....
.,__ ~
. tbe ba&lt;kcdull ~ Hamib said.
19 of hi 31
·
· ·die ......,~u~ililOti&gt;Sm
'
;
.
s
pnmts . m
npming .sooOacls, OdaDdo :"fo pass oae of his ·~
firs~ half, made Vi~- - • - , _ _ _ . l IS &lt;ney ..........,SC [ illaWD'l
seahng IRle lbrows 1a1e m Wftll x''""'~"" ,.,. -•Y .____ .. __ ..._. .__ ~
tbe game .and Taysbaun mimueo; as die Pistons WCIIl ~ . UQ~ • . . _ .. . . . _ . ·:Prinoe bad a key block, . _ on Stucky's sal Hamiltoll 15
P"'!""
L.l,;nn "'----. L-Id off die :and
RW!n
durin• a a~y
bmal&lt;lng ~

rroms
Laimbecc'

ee II

ill tl:le llil!;it half
fllf Game 5 fllf
illil~

Eastem
Col ~teiiiDe
semtfnlllll ~'!!­

........__,,,
~

...,,

--. ~ t

~ lfbli .;:-· :~
.or.tllmlliiD ~ . .
®Tl 1T~ il1it
Allilm1Ti l!tllls.,
Midh. llliimi!Um.
lelilltlle P.istmls:
lliitt:l 3!110il:its ill ift.lelr 9UI6 ·
win · elimil!llilled ftllle
1from \the

row:

.
fn•d...•e
of 113 playoff
r-..-1.....

appearancci. -· - ~Y·

-ic

draftled by Dclroit Wi'illl a
pi'* aoquiml from om.1n
for Datto Milicic., was
naDJI'\II to die AD-Rookie

.......

P~a&amp;illlifs.

...., ••• 11e1m. · _ ~
said McDyess IDid as
b e - aniqq at die oaasa
dw his !fNM'n••l•·r, .tao
helped Wlie him, bad dic4.

WIN.UP TO $1,000 !!!·

fiuls

•DcmJit made just 36 pcrc:zat of its shots aDd allowed
die Magic to make Deady
half of lbcir """"''p'S, but
made up fur tbe disparity at
die line. aDd by taking care
of die ball
Tbe Pislloos ~f11 at tbe line
bad just
thn!e twnoVCfli - sdling
111 NBA playoff m:IOld fur
tbe fewest giveaways in a
game- while Olbndo16-ilf-28 and bad a playoff~ 21 nunoven, wllidi
t1lmOd into 34 points fur
DetmiL
. "The £act tbat die game is
dose at tbe end when you .
look a1 die IRle tbrow shooting and turnover disparity is

PLAY COVERAll BINGO

F• 11 Oil Changes cmd Tires for Life

WHY-NOT LET UNCLE
SAM &amp; DON WOOD
HELPPAYPOR
YOUR NEXT CAR?

t

a

renwb.ble.~

~

.

.

..... GiedL•• $1500

.....
AddS---..'IPlW $1500.

Orlando

Coach Stan Van Gumly said.
To the Magjc's credit,
they dido 't go away easily
against a playoff-tested
team that improved tti 15-3
when it hal; a cbaooe to
advance since 2003.
. Detroit led by I0 late, but
was ahead 85-&amp;4 with just
IIIIda" a mim!le left after
Redo "l'uJmgtu made bacltto-back shots.
.
Tbe Pistons · won when
Hamilton made two key
~ throws. Prince blodked
Turkoglu's dunk attempt,
and Hamilton made two
more at die line in die last
20 seconds of die game.

•.

. . . DON WOOD FOR !IFE.COM ·
·---C&amp;ti
-·R
UtitiW -

Playing witbout AU-Star
point

"

zn

"'I

gtUIIll · Chauncey ·

•never

&amp;&amp;

cirt•
1 ... , .

SieleC

Billups for the second
straight game because of a
Strained bainstring, rookie
itodney Stuck.ey tilled the
void with 15 points, six
assists and no turnover-S.

"I'm

TOYOTAS• HYUNDAIS• PORDS
LINCOLNS •MERCURYS
CHEVROUftS•GMCTRUCKS
.•BUJCXS• CADILLAlS ·
lEE liE SA. . . . .

'A

4.15'1.91

(740) 446-7619

A TiffiNS

%75 West u..... SbC:ct

scared,"

f'7A.illo'l

594-3571

OR UP TO

AS LOW AS

Stuckey said.
Antonio McDyess had 17
points and 10 rebounds,
Rasheed Wallace had t4
points and Priooe added I 0.

'1\ubglu had 18 points
and nine rebounds, and
Dwight Howard, Rashard ·
Lewis and Jameer Nelson
bad 14 points apiece for the
Magic. Nelson bad guaranteed his team would extend
the series with a win.
~we played them tough,~
Nelson said. "If there's anyone in their locker room
who didn't think: this was
tough, they don't lrnow
what tough is."
Howard also had 17
·Jd!ounds and three block:s,
but his night was IIIliJl"ed by
~ 6-of-15 at the line.
Orlando was in the sccood round of the playoffs
focdle first time since 1996.
The Magic scored the last
seven points of the ftrSt
quarta" to make it 20-:all in
what bad to \lC a frustr~

TODAY'S

NUIIBER IS:

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score all but two of its .
points off turnovers and
offensive rebounds.
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missed shots (four) . as
tumovers in - a scoreless
first, but eaeh of the otha"
statters scored at least four
points to iii8k:e up for the
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Thornton hospitalized while in custody

SPORTS
• Celtics hold home .
court, take series lead.
SeePage HI

BY BRIAN

J. AEEo

llliEEoeMYOAJLYSENTJNEL.COM

POMEROY
-Meigs
County
Commissioner
!~ Thornton was i.n
· s custody Thursday
lllOl"Djng on a bench warrant
charging failure to appear in
Meigs County Court, but
was IDnsported to the hospital before be could appear
before thejudge.
.

nie court issued a bench
warrant against Thornton
after he allc:gedly failed to
·.ippear in cowt on May 1.
He is charged with two
eounts &lt;Of failure to file
financial disclosure statements with the Ohio Ethics
Commission.
'I'bomton was set to
appear •before Jud$e Steven
L. Storj on April 3, but
. requested and received a .

continuimce due to illness. date, but the request was
Thornton was transported
He failed to a~ on April denied becauSe he did not from the sheriff's departIQ, and his mitial appear· provide additional medical m,ent to Holzer by emer·
ance was continued to May documentation.
gency squad for an undis1 after a physician providSheriff Robert Beegle closed medical complaint,
ed notice Thornton . had said Thornton was taken Beegle said, and . is no
been hospitalized from into custody yesterday, but longer in sheriff's custody.
April 11 to 16 at Holzer was not jailed. Beegle said
However, Beegle said, the
Thornton was to have warrant to arrest Thornton
Medical Center.
· A court spokesperson said appeared on the charge of remains in effect .until he
Thornton, through a family failure to appear, but com- appears before the judge. .
member, requested a coolin- plained of illness before he
uance of the .May I court could go to court.
'lrxe- 'lllainlwi. AS

M . . Board
' eags
reviews defidt

Democratic
voters nearly

amiders '

equal to

several options

after primary

in funding
· •.

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Republicans

BY CHAD! FIE tloEFuctt

BY BRIAN

HOEFLICHOMYDALYSENTINEL(XlM

POMEROY - Due to a
Shortage of funds for Bperll·
lion of schools in the Meigs
Local School District for the
2008.()1) year, the Board of
Eldncation took a first step
'Tuesday night to reduce the
number of employees.
After .
hearing
Superintendent
Wtlliam
Buckley and Treasurer
Mart Rhonemus detail
some of tbe Dilllrict's finalicial, 1X'Qblcml. Tbe Board

1

900 EAST STATE 51 REET • ATHENS

(888) 286-8291

OorruARIES

ON THE WEB AT www.doiiiiOOd.ClOIII

Page AS

"'NIIITA

• Delores Jean Lewis, 58
• Salah 0. Moore, 83

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forward on
hwnl•e,g
red•~ in force~-·
to tbe lack of funding for the
coming school yea~;

• .JOW~gillen

spot!~ award at area

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810 EAST STATE

ON THE WEB AT www.dollwood.Wih
;. Ariel Dancers to
:Present 'Dance Me a
Story.' See Pv AI
IIICZ

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BSERGENTOMYOAILYSENTINEL.COM

near

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ROCK SPRINGS -The
37 Meigll Middle School
st· I Its who were involved
iJI a school bus accidenton

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London Pool I
to open with
free swimming

IJSEAGENTOMYDALYSENTlNELCOM

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(888) 286-8325
ON THE WEB AT www.donwood.eont

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Students
return after
bus accident

~ LIN&lt;;OLN
850 EAST STATE

...

of reading

• ATHENS

2511

·The joys

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POMEROY- In a county where Republicans once
outoumbered ~mocrats by
two to one, the GOP can
now claim only 238 more
registered voters than its
opposition.
The Democrats have
made a significant gain in
registration as they head
into a presidential election
year. Well over twice as
many Democratic ballots
were cast in the March. pri·
1'iliu:y as · the·· nuntber of
Democrats on the books on
Election J?ay - but almost
twice as many Republicans
cast ballots as were registered, as well.
Prior to the March 4 election, tbe county's voter registration records showed
I ,540 registered Dem?Crats
and 2,582 RepubJicans.
Democrats cast 3,7~ ballots in the primary. and
Republicans cast 4,002.
Voter statistics prior to
the primary also showed
II ,292 voters registered as
"non-partisan." Those voters, according to Becky
Johnston, deputy director

Rhonemus reported ·he
anticipates a current shortfall of '$500,000 in operating funds. He said part of
Students at Meigs Primary
that is attributed to a proSchool Who panicipale in the
jected 5130,000 increase in
Accelerated Reading P.rogram
funding from tax revenues
have Allld over 15,000 books
which turned out to be only ·
this year, a goal which 88!T18d
$15,000 due to the reduced
them
an especially sweet prize.
collection .o f first balf taxes.
Sel9ct students were allowed to
The treasurer OOIM that
give Accele:atecll.Reading
instead of the 95 percent of
Teacher
Coonie Holley (pictaxes historically collected,
ru~)apeinthef~as
this year only 82 l/2 percent
reward
for reaching their goal.
of the total billing came in.
Holley sat through multiple
Settlements are based · on
rounds
of whipped cream and
amounts collected which
syrup
heaped
upon her by her
resulted in the district
cheering students (also pic·
receiving $130,000 less than
expected but already includ- · rured), all in the name of finding,
and finishing, a ·good book.
ed in the district' s budget.
. . . . . , ttl ......
"Financial
conditions
have reached a point where
we · don't have many

meet. See . . . AJ

(888) 286-9451

lJCNIMKJD AUTOMOTIVE

J. REED

BREEDOMYDAILVSENTINEL.COM

'-

Sports

Weather
@ .U...C*e v-,.

B Section
A7

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,

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Satut:day
Albany have
all since returned to school.
according to Principal Mary

~lxk. students

·Meig~es' valedictorians;·satutatorian
8Y CMm B!f ttoER.tat

were taken HOEFUCHeMY!lM.YSENT1NELCOM
from
the
scene
to
O'Blenesa
Memorial
POMEROY - Talisba
Hospital in Athens where . Beha and Amy Barr have
they received treatment for been named co-valedictoinjuries described as minor. rians and Kirk l..egar as
.. MMS Principal Mary salutatorian of the Meigs
·flawk said ·one student" was High School graduating
laler taken to Children's class of 2008.
.
~in Columbus but it · Beba, .daughter of Mr. and
was di~ve_red the injury Mrs. Steve Reba, ill a memwas preenstmg.
ber of tbe Nlllional Honor
The 37 students, mem- Society and will be attendbers of the school's chorus, ills Bc:tJumy College in the
and two parents were on a fall where sbe plans to
Meigs
Local
School major in intrmllional relaDmrici School Bus when tions. During high sehool
the accident loa.........l on sbe played volleyball, was
Route 50
on the qui.r; team and a
Soowdea The .gt"OU{l was member of HI-Y. Her other
on their way to a snlging &amp;divides have included parpedounana: in Wilmington · ·oman in Relay for llfe
Special Olympics in
PI
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· Amy.sarr

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the areas of track .and field, ars ·and was awarded Allsoftball, and basketball.
TVC academic awards for
She has attended several volleyball, basketball and
camps and conferences softball.
.
. .
including the HI- Y Model
Her extracumcular acl!VI·
UN Conference HOBY ties have included volley·
Cl~ Up, and
Y leader: ball, being named thi~ y~
ship
camp,
OHSAA all TVC and All Dtstnct
Leadership conference at Volleyball_ Team as honorOU Regional Scholars and able menuon, varsny letters .
ESSEX Scholars ProP-am in basketball and softball.
at OSU
Her volunteer expenence
Barr, daughter of Mr. and has
_includ~ J
Special
Mrs. MiChael Barr, will be ~lymptcs volunteer, and
attending Ohio University mstructor at a 5th and 6th
in the fall with a major in wade. basketball camp. She
pre-pharmacy. She is a ts a ~mberofthe Hemlock
member of the National Chris~ Church':\.
Honor Society, recipi-ent of
l..egar IS the son of Chuck
the
Danforth
Award and ~y l..egar of Pomeroy
.
' and wtll pursumg a degree
recet ved the Bausch. and in physical therapy at Ohio
Lomb Honorary Science Umversity. He is a member
·
Award, served as ambassador to tbe regional scbolPI 1
S '. s. AI

HI:

..

•

.A

SYRACUSE
-The
London Pool will open its
season with a day of free
swimming on May 24.
The day of free swimming
was approved at the most
recent Syracuse Village
Council meeting. The pool
will be open from 1-6 p.m.,
everyday, until Aug. I 0 .
Council also reviewed the
pool committee 's recommended handbook of rules
and regulations. One of the
noticeable changes in the
rules . is -young patrons
Won't be allowed to leave
and then re-er¥er the pool
unless a&lt;lcom(Yanied by a
parent. Counci I hopes this
will cut down on some of
the younger. people leaving
the pool to enter the park
area to smoke.
Also lifeguards are permitted to a sk younger
swimmers who might not be .
strong swimmers to swini in
the shallow end · before
being allowed to use the
diving boards. Cell phones
are only to be used on break
time by the lifeguards . The
village will also be charging
more for larger crowds at
private pool parties fo pay
for the extra lifeguards
required. The village also
reserves the right to close

Plun . . ..._AI

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