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Jan band coming

Ohio attorney
.general resigns, A7

to Middleport, A8

•
•

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio
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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
· •.

'·

,.'

.

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

!? JIG

.JNSJJW -~~

25~
··~

..

---~to -~e .

-S-· ,.

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

• .JOW~gillen

spot!~ award at area

.i

810 EAST STATE

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

WEATHER

c

"

Mercury i) .
• ATHENS

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•

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Editorials

.

IXXVIIIIOODAI.JTOWJTM

121••
18881 284 8230

IMIOU11I•IDGAJiil

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9bituaries

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Movies

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BY BETH SERGENT

.

BSERGENTOMYOAILYSENTINEL.COM

near

:...~ ~~~~(AGI!S
¥ e's Malloo~~· A3

•

AI

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

~ -I)DI'IIgeA7

.

· ·

2S.C

London Pool I
to open with
free swimming

IJSEAGENTOMYDALYSENTlNELCOM

· I.Ntn...l\_'~ ··

lU'

I . . DEl tit,

PIE FE . . . 'l'IDIKs. AI

BY Bmt SEI'OE"T

~ ...

. ... .. 1

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

. '.

Students
return after
bus accident

~ LIN&lt;;OLN
850 EAST STATE

...

of reading

• ATHENS

2511

·The joys

···~

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

r "' 1 ' a'!lo.
,

,

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
._AI

=-Lake

•-Act•

r

.

'

Kirk !Apr .

· Amy.sarr

:Itt;;

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

�•

•

Page~

• WORLD
Red Cross: Up to 128,000 may have died in Myanm~

The Daily Sentinel

NATION

Thursday, May 15, zoo8
'

· little ground to demands
YANGON, Myanmar (AP)
· that it let in more experts. It
- The Red Cross estimated
announced it would allow in
Wednesday that the cyclone
160 relief workers from
death toll in Myanmar could
nei~hboring countries be as high as 128,000- a
lnd1a, China, · Banglade~h
much larger figure than the
and Thailand. It was nc;Jt
government tally. The .N.
clear whether they would l:!e
warned a second w~ve of
deaths will follow unless the .
permitted to go to tbe delta.
In New York, U.N. humanmilitary regime lets in more
aid quickly.
itarian chief John . Holmes
welcomed the junta's move.
The grim forecast carne as
But he said it was 1101 enougl:l
heavy rains drenched the
and demanded that Myanmar
devastated Irrawaddy ~ ver
delta, disrupting aid operaopen its borders to foreign
tions already stru!lllling to
relief specialists and let outreach up to 2.5 rnilhon peosiders work in the Irrawaddy
ple in urgent need of food,
della.
water and shelter.
"The relief getting through
"Another couple of days
under the kind of restrictions
ex.posed to those conditions
we're operating under is by
can olily lead to worsening
no means adequate to tile
health conditions and comtask, and it's hard to see ho)V
pound the stress people are
just conP.nuing with the .sljlliving in," said Shantha
ws quo can ever be sufficient
Bloemen, a spokeswoman ·
in the j::ll~Tent .critic8l ~
for UNICEF. .
~od that we're woriilng
·A tropical depression iii
m," Holmes said.
·.
the Bay of Beng3.1 added
While it has kept out .all
new worries, but late in. the
but a few foreign aid wOritday forecasters said it was
ers, the regime has accepted
weakening aod unlikely to
tons of provisions sent. by
grow into a cyclone.
international donors, ioclu4Myanmar's government
AP pholo . ing the {}oiled Nations i1Jw.t
issued a revis¢ casualty toll Myanmar children reach their hands out to receive a fn:le banana from a local donor on the outskirts of Yangon, Myanmar, the United S~s . . ."
·.
Wednesday night, saying on Wednesday.
. ·Five U.S. C-130 niilira!Y
38,491 were known dead
lrimsport planes delivt)R!d
and 27,838 were missing.
humanitarian crises.
told VISIImg Thai Prime ·ing in a wide-range of relief . biggest city, and used police drinking water, blankets,
The' . ·
International . 11 insisted Myanmar .can Minister Samak Sundaravej supplies including material - io keep· foreigners from mosquito nets and plastic
Federatmn of Red Cross anQ handle the disaster on its on Wednesday that the gov- for temporary shelters, rice, goiitg to the delta.
sheets · Wednesday. Lt. a.&amp;Red Crescent Societies, how- own a stance that ernrrient was in control of dri nkiitg water, kitchen
The U.N. has also Douglas Powell said 197,080
ever, said its estimate put the appeared to stem not from the situation and didn't need utensils .. llll4'..medicines expressed concern this week pounds of provisions had
number of dead between the isolationist regime's foreign experts.
. including 2,000 anti-snake that some of the food and been sent in on eight U. S.
68,833 and 127 ,990._ The ability but from its deep
"They have their own bite kits: The U.N. World aid donated by international flights since Monday.
Geneva-based body &amp;aid the suspicion of most foreign- team to cope with the situa- Health Organization say.s an groups isn't making it to the
Adm. Timothy J. Keating,
range came from a compila- e..S, who have frequently tion," Samak said after increase in snake bites is most needy, but is being head of the U.S. Pacific
llon based on other estunates criticized its human rights returning to Bangkok. He feared in coming days.·
diverted by officials or the Command, said he did not
from 22 different organi za- 8buses and crackdowns on said the junta gave him a
The junta did grant military. And some aid get . the junla' s. fomial
lions,
including
. the democracy activists. ·
"guarao~" that _there was approval Wednesday for ·a worlrers and survivors said approyal for American aiil
Myanmar Red Cross SOCiety,
Meanwhile,
U.N. DO starvation or di~ out- Thai medical team to visit that in many case's spoiled or flights when he met with tile
and on media reports. ·
~-(Jeotr.ll Ban . Ki- breaks ~ng surv1vors.
· tbe delta, said Dr. Thawat poor-quality food was being Myanmar navy codUI1alliJer
Even though the figures moon said he !leCUfed suppOrt
' But~bcs say the' g~ve~- . Sutharacha of Thailand's given to ,survivors.
Monday in Yangon. But 'he
seemed. precise, spokesman from MyaiUDI( to .increase . me~t IS woefully lacking Ill Public Health Ministry. If
Zalmay Khalilzad, the said Myanmar officials wete
Matthew Cochrane said tD: flow of relief aid.
hehcopters, true~ and boats the team goes as scheduled American ambassador to allowing the planes to fly in.
they were not based on
"In view .of the magnitude ~ well as planllll!~ expe_r- Friday, i.t will be the ftrst · the U.N, has said the U.S. is
"In approving our flight
body counts, but were only of this crisis, much more llse needed to distnbute rud foreign aid group to ,work in concerned about the issue plans, they are giving us perrough estimates designed to needs to'he done," Ban told to survt':'ors, who have the ravaged delta.
and wants to make sure that mission - it is kind of
provide Red Cross donors reporters after a nearly two- Jammed_ toto monastenes
Myanmar has limited the that aid goes to the people implicit
permission,"
and partner organizations hour meeting in New York and ~hef ~nters or are few international aid work- that are intended to be the Keating said in an interview
with an idea of the numbers with Myanmar, its neigh- campmg outside.
ers in the country to recipients.
with National Public Radio's
being discussed within the bors and key donors. The
U.N. agencies and other Yangon , the countrY's
The government gave a "Morning Edition" program.
"Myanmese . ambassador volunla!y groups have been
aid community.
U.N. officials have said has assured that the able to reach only 270,000
there .could be more than Myaomese government will of the affected people, said
do all to assist."
I 00,000 dead.
Elisabeth Byrs of r the U.N.
The Red Cross estimated
Ban also said that during Office for Humanitarian
the number of people need- the meeting aimed at boost- Affairs in Geneva.
ing help after cyclone surged . ing aid to the stricken nation
She said the World Food
over the low-lying delta on he was also able to win Progrann would need 55,000
May 3 at between 1.64 mil- backing from the groups for tons of rice to feed 750,000
a high-level conference to people for three months, but
lion and 2.51 million.
But the junta still refused raise funds for disaster aid the lljlCncy had been able to
to accept help from foreign this month.
ship m only 361 tons so fai-.
Myanmar's prime minisaid ex.perts, who have vast
On Thursday, aid agenexperience in handling tee, ·Lt. Gen. Thein Sein, cies were preparing or mov-

u

Polar bears.to be protected species
BY H. JOSEF HEBERT

of ice - a key habitat for
the bear ~ woUld oontinue
and rna~ even quicken.
WASHING10N - The
He ctted cooolusions by
Interior Department declared dep~nt seielllists that
the ~ liear a threatened sea ice loss will likely result
spec1es Wednesday because in two-thirds of the polar
of .the loss of Arctic sea. ice bears disappearing by midbut also cautioned the deci- century. The bear ~la­
sion should not be viewed as lion across the Arctic from
a path to address global · Alaska to Greenland dou~
warming.
bled from about I 2,000 to
Interior Secretary Dirk 25,000 since 1960, but be
Kempthome cited dramatic , noted that scientists now
declines in sea ice -over the prediet a significant ,POpuilllast three decades and pro- tion decline. Studies last
jeclions of continued losses, year by the U.S. Geological
meaning, he said, that the Survey silggested 15,000
polar bear is a species likely bears would be lost in comto be in danger of extinction ing decades with tkose in
in the near future.
the · western Hudson Bay
But Kempthm;ne said it area of Alaska and Canada
would be "wholly inappro- under the greatest stress. ·
Kemptbome said thlt it ill
priate" to use the protection
of the bear to reduce green- melting &amp;ell ice and not subhouse. gases, or to broadly sistence hunting and CIICIIY
address climate change.
development that poses lhe
The Endangered Species threat to polar bears. While
Act "is not the right tool to some subsistence hunting
se~ .U,S. climate policy," by
Alaska . natj..ves . is
said Kempthorne, refleeting . ·allowed, the United States
a view recently expressed bans hunting bears for sport.
by Presideni Bush.
. · Canada allows limited
The department outlined a sports hunting of bears. The
set of administrative actions Hudson Bay'flear population
and limits to how it planned offCanadahasdecinedby 22
to protect the bear with its percent in the last 20 years,
new status so that it would according to one sbldy.
not have wide-ranging
But when asked bow the
adverse impact on erooom- bear will be afforded~
ic activities from building protection, Dale Hall, direcpower plants to oil and gas tor of tlie U.S. Fish aod
exploration.
Wildlife Service, bad diffi"This listing. will not stop culty coming up with examglobal climate change or pies.
Better management of
prevent any sea ice from
· mel~." said Kempl.bome. bear habititt on shore and
He s;ud he bad consulted making sure bears aren't
with the White House on the threatened by people iocluddecision, but "at.uo time was ing hunters, more studies on
tbere ever a suggestion _that. bear population trends and
this was not my decision."
their feeding habits were
Kempthome, at a news among the areas mentioned.
conference, was armed with "I don't want to prejudge
slides and charts sbowing recommendations for (hear)
the dramatic decline in sea management," said Hall
ice over the last 30 years .and whose agency administers
projections that the melting the Endangered Species Act.
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

•

Environmentalists were
already lllliPl'ing out .plans
to file lawsuits challenging
the restrictive measures outlined by Kemptborne.
"They're llying to make
this a threatened listing in
oatne only with no change
in today 's impacts and that's
DOt going to fly," said Jamie
Clark
of
Rappaport
Defenders of Wildlife and a
former U.S. Fish and
Wildlife Service director.
Members of Congress
also were skeptieal. · .
The Bush ad.miniWation
"is f\)rcing the
bear to
sink or swim, said Rep.
Edward Markey, D-'J.ass.,
chairman of a House oom.mittee on global wanoill,g.
Sat John ~· D-Ma$5~
calk:d it .'~a lifeline fol' oWlast tanainiog polar bciars:'
but said the bear's .survival
won't be assured without
limits on oil development in
the same Arctic waters
where the bears are found. . ,
, I;&gt;espite the new listing, the
announcement underscores
the Jiced to approve climate
legislation that would limit
the release of greenhouse
gases and avert the future
e~ects on cl~ change,
said Sen. Batbam Boxer, DCalif., chairwoman of . the
Environment Committee.
Scientists have blamed
global warming for the disappearance of sea ice Which is
vital for the bear's survival.
Summer iee surrounding
the North Pole declined an
average' of 10 percent per
decade since 1979, with a
loss of about 28,000 square
miles per year, according to
the National Snow and Ice
Data Center. Last year was
the sharpest drop, as the
amount of sea ice in
September fell to 1.65 million square miles, or 23 percent below the previous low
in 2005.

eotar

'

BvmEBEND

'the Daily Sentinel

•lsslllls

._...... reach
hiIIIII
•alhpoH~ 1Dallp ~rtbunt:

t}otnt tlltasant 11.\egi~ttr
and Daily.Sentinel

C1re
..... -lisllld.

'ANNIE'S MAILBOX.

.

Three isn't necessarily a crowd

..

BY KATHY MITCHELL

don't want to lose her, but
I'm not sure. how much
longer I can tolerate the
Dear Annie: I have been time around Kevin. l don't
.d ating " Siena" for five want to share her with him.
IJlontbs and I care deeply - · Three's a Crowd
about her; but she has an ex·.
Dear Three's a Crowd:
husband, "~evin," and they Siena has not quite
are close. He has a key to divorced herself from
·Iter house and comes and Kevin, but as long as there
when he wants. Siena are no romantic sparks
,c~nnot have a conversation
between them, you proba.without mentioning him. bly don't need to· worry.
Qoth of them talk quite She seems to be treating
openly
about
special him like a brother of whom
moments in their marriage. she is fond. Put your antenlt's difficult to listen to.
na up and discern whether
· Siena is in the process of Kevin has ulterior motives
"filling up a house she for being around Siena.
re~ntly bought. Kevin has Does he want her .back?
been involved since the Does he flirt with her? Does
~ginning, assisting in the he gaze longingly in her
remodeling efforts. When · direction?lf so, you need to
lie talks about the house, he convince Siena that she is
'uses "we," as in "we did hu~g Kevin by making
'this" or "we need to fix him believe she is still
.that.". It comes across as interested. If not, consider
·''their" house. I have been "adopting:' Kevin . It not
trying to help her as much only could allay your fears,
~ possible, hoping she but also generate a friend. will depend more on me ship. And try to fix him up
and less on him. I am with some eli~ible females .
:extremely uncomfortable · Dear Anme: Can you
with him around. It's like please advise your readers
they're still married with- of a source to determine
· '&lt;lut the romance. .
whether a charity is worthy?
· I know Siena loves me, We are inundated with
but she doesn't understand requests for donations for
my frustration. For the last . causes that are obviously
,few weeks, I have had prob- good, but how can we dif:lems with insomnia, mostly ferentiate among those we
.because of this issue. I can trust to accomplish the
AND MARCY SuGAR

tiles

most with our money? the process of saving for
Thanks. - Want To Help · them . when my daughter
the Right People
became critically ill, and
Dear Want to Help: now I have to start .over.
Thank you for asking. To Meanwhile, I try to sit up
find out if a charity has a front in church, at the thegood recoro and is worth ater and at movies. I also
your investmen~. contact: look directly at. people' s
The American Institute of faces when l speak to them
Philanthropy
.(charity- so I can lip-read.
watch.org),
P.O.
Box.
I don't understand this
578460, Chicago, IL 60657- gap. Glasses, wheelchairs,
8460; ·Charity Navigator prosthetics, even corrective
(charitynavigator.org), 1200 surgery are at least partially
MacArthur Blvd., Second covered. Why -not cover
.Aoor, Mahwah, ' NJ 07430; so'VI:~g critical to comGuideS tar (guidestar.o!l), : mumcallon and safety? 480 I Courthouse St., Swte Frustrated
220, Winiamsburg, VA
Dear Frustrated: We
23188; and The Better agree. As the baby boomers
Business
Bureau . Wise enter their later years, the
Giving Alliance (give.org). need for affordable hearing
Call your local BBB office or aids will become overwrite The Council of Betta' whelming, especially if they
Business Bureaus, 4200 want .to hear the Rolling
.
Wilson Blvd., Suite 800, Stones at 70.
. Arlington, VA 22203-1838.
Allllie's Mililbo:r is writDear Annie: Dr. Kochkin te11 by KDthy Mitchell tuUl
is correct in )lis description Marcy Sugar, lo11,jtime ediof signs of hearing loss and ton of the Amr Lamhrs
the advances in hearing cohulln. Please e-mail your
aids. Unfortunately, one questio11s to · lllllliesmoilcrucial thing was left out. bo:r@coiiiCliSt.Mt, or wriU
Hearing aids are not cov- to: All11ie's Mililbo:r, P.O.
ered by health insurance. . Bo:r 118190, Chicago, IL
· ·My insurance was happy 66611. To jilld out more
to pay for anENT (ear, DOse about A1111ie's Mailbo:r,
and throat specialist) and an tuUl rnul'featuns by other
audiologist .to diagnose my C1WIIors Syrulicale writers
hearing loss, but not one arul C41'toollists, visit the
cent toward the hearing aids Creahlrs Syrulicate • Web
at $1,500 apiece. I was in page at www.creators.co111.

Thursday, May 15, 2008

Community Calendar·
Clubs and
organizations
Thursday, May 15
CHESTER Meigs
County Retired Teachers at
the Chester Courthouse
noon for luncheon a nd tour
of .
newry~renovated
Chester Academy. Call
992-3214 by Tu esday for
reservations.

Monday; May 19
POMEROY
- Meigs
County Library Board, regular meeting, 3 p .m.,
Pomeroy Library.

Public meetings
Monday, May 19
RACINE
-Southern
Local School Board, regular
meeting, 7 p.m., high school
media room .

Platinum ·sponsor

:roPS Chapter given spotlight award at area meet
, :.COOLYlU£- Pat Hall
.was named weekly best
:w.eight-loss winner and
:Dianne Burns runner-up at
t~e May 13 meeting of
JDPS (Take Off Pounds
~Sensibly) Chapter #OH
2013 Coolville with 17
members present.
. KOPS (Keep Off Pounds
Sensibly)
members
LaChresia Bogardus, Mary
C:I~Iand, May Frost, Louise
Hershey
and
Patricia
4tichmond were in leeway.

Bond, Dianne Burns, Mary
Cleland, Connie Rankin and
Pat Snedden, exercise
charts; LaChresia Bogardus,
Bond, Doris Buchanan,
Burns, Jane Oldaker and
Patricia Richmond, food
charts. April monthly winners
were:
Roberta
Henderson, perfect attendance; Bond, Buchanan ,
Bums, Cleland, Frost, Judy
Morgan and Snedden, exercise charts; Bogardus, Bond
and Richmond, food charts .

to the Area Recognition
Days in Lancaster. The
chapter had the largest
group in attendance from the
southeastern Ohio area.
Chapter certificates were
awarded to Louise Hershey,
chapter queen; Dottie Bond,
I st place Division 9; Marie
LaChance,
I st
place
Division 4; Dianne Burns,
2nd place Division 3; Pat
Hall, I st place Division 3.
Seven members particiJ)ated in the Meigs County

~!4:=~..::::.: -~::::;= ·~::-:.~',,..: ,1::;'
parfect attendanoe; Dottie . for each member who went

ter

for

the

Cancer Society.
LaChance presented a
program on assertive behav·
iour.
·
The group meets every
Tuesday at Torch Baptist
Church. Weigh-in is from
5:15 to 6:15 p.m. with a
meeting at 6:30. For infor·
mation, call Pat Snedden at
662-2633 or atteod a free
meeting.

) .:_'.

American

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month subscription on your
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$400 El9ct1ic Scooter Gi!IB-Away for the Kids! Register to VI/IN!
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need to do ...
Fill out the coupon below
and drop off or mail it with a
copy of your phote ID.

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·so, you qualify for a

The University.of Rio Grande Crossroads program is currently accepting applications for a
limited number of openings for the Workforce Investment Act year round youtb services
program. Summer Employment Opportunities is one component of this year round youth
program.
Eligible youth muSt be ages 14-2-1, residents of Meigs County, and meet WlA income
guideliites.
Applications are available at Southern High School, Eastern High School, and Meigs High
School and at the University of Rio Gr.mde Crossroads Program offioe at 150 Mill Street in
Mi\ldleport. Applications should be submitted by May 30,2008.
Funding for the W.LA. In-School and W.l.A. Out -of-School progmnis is provided by the
U.S. Depart:ment of Labor and the Meigs County Department of Job and Family Services.
For additional information please contact:
'
Ages 14-18: Donna Hartson 992-0010
Ages 19-21: Brenda Phalin 992-~
Roy Taylor, Director
•
University of Rio Grande Crossroads Program

••z

_·u··. ·· . ,

!

'

318 . . . Cltl)o Owlll•. . . . . . . . . . •12
• 11 Of • • 1 1
OliGo. DUAl e1euu~OH • Ow 1rt . _ . , . , I
A•c• o.r Pis•••= 74e 112 •111 • • • sl hr PI a •= 114
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; CLEVELAND (AP)- A
Four states - lllinois, Great Lakes basin.
~late senator iuttoduced a Indiana, New York and · Wisconsin lawmakers rat}onstiwtional amendment Minnesota and two ified
the
compact
;wednesday that he says Canadian provinces have Wednesday and it now goes
'would protect the private approved the compact. It to Gov. Jim Doyle, who is
:groundwater rights . of . must be approved by all expected to sign it. The
Ohioans from a multi-state eight Great Lakes states and Michigan
. Legislature
~mpact designed to pre- then approved by Congress approved
the co!Dpact
Wednesday, but· a final
}'ent water from being sent to become federal law.
Jfrom the Great Lakes region
Grendell, a Chesterland agreement will have to wait .
~o thirsty regions:
.
Republican, says the oom- because Democrats and
.; Sen. Tim Gtendell wants pact's language includes not Republicans must resolve
;the amendment put on the just the !]real Lakes but' pri- differences over large-scale
ballot in November so vot" vate property owners' water . withdrawals from
e rs can protect their gf9und- groundwater and wells in 35 Michigan lakes and water~ater and lakes.
·
counties that are part of the ways.

; II( ;

Subm-111*0

Holzer Hospice will host its third annual Hits for Hospice coed softball tournament on May 17 and 18, at 0.0. Mcintyre
Park in Gallipolis. Games will begin on Saturday at 9 a.m.
and on Sunday at 1 p.m. Bennigan's Grill and Tavern of .
Point Pleasant and Twin Rivers Marina of Gallipolis are
platinum sponsors. Here are Rick Rose, owner of
Bennigan's and Twin Rivers Marina and Sharon Shull, RN,
BSN, director of Holzer Hospice. Holzer Hospice cares lor
f&gt;atients with any life-limiting Illness, regaroless of ability to
pay in Gatlia, Jackson , Meigs and surrounding ,counties.

--;:;::=;;::=:;~~~~~=~~~=:;~~~~~~~~~;::;-•
·
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.
·

. :senator introduces amendment to protect water rights

.23,2008

\

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1

M.al or drop off this coupon along
:
with a copy of your photo ID to
1
:
1 Ohio Valley Publishing P.O. Box 469, G•lllpolls, OH 45631 · :
I

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• WORLD
Red Cross: Up to 128,000 may have died in Myanm~

The Daily Sentinel

NATION

Thursday, May 15, zoo8
'

· little ground to demands
YANGON, Myanmar (AP)
· that it let in more experts. It
- The Red Cross estimated
announced it would allow in
Wednesday that the cyclone
160 relief workers from
death toll in Myanmar could
nei~hboring countries be as high as 128,000- a
lnd1a, China, · Banglade~h
much larger figure than the
and Thailand. It was nc;Jt
government tally. The .N.
clear whether they would l:!e
warned a second w~ve of
deaths will follow unless the .
permitted to go to tbe delta.
In New York, U.N. humanmilitary regime lets in more
aid quickly.
itarian chief John . Holmes
welcomed the junta's move.
The grim forecast carne as
But he said it was 1101 enougl:l
heavy rains drenched the
and demanded that Myanmar
devastated Irrawaddy ~ ver
delta, disrupting aid operaopen its borders to foreign
tions already stru!lllling to
relief specialists and let outreach up to 2.5 rnilhon peosiders work in the Irrawaddy
ple in urgent need of food,
della.
water and shelter.
"The relief getting through
"Another couple of days
under the kind of restrictions
ex.posed to those conditions
we're operating under is by
can olily lead to worsening
no means adequate to tile
health conditions and comtask, and it's hard to see ho)V
pound the stress people are
just conP.nuing with the .sljlliving in," said Shantha
ws quo can ever be sufficient
Bloemen, a spokeswoman ·
in the j::ll~Tent .critic8l ~
for UNICEF. .
~od that we're woriilng
·A tropical depression iii
m," Holmes said.
·.
the Bay of Beng3.1 added
While it has kept out .all
new worries, but late in. the
but a few foreign aid wOritday forecasters said it was
ers, the regime has accepted
weakening aod unlikely to
tons of provisions sent. by
grow into a cyclone.
international donors, ioclu4Myanmar's government
AP pholo . ing the {}oiled Nations i1Jw.t
issued a revis¢ casualty toll Myanmar children reach their hands out to receive a fn:le banana from a local donor on the outskirts of Yangon, Myanmar, the United S~s . . ."
·.
Wednesday night, saying on Wednesday.
. ·Five U.S. C-130 niilira!Y
38,491 were known dead
lrimsport planes delivt)R!d
and 27,838 were missing.
humanitarian crises.
told VISIImg Thai Prime ·ing in a wide-range of relief . biggest city, and used police drinking water, blankets,
The' . ·
International . 11 insisted Myanmar .can Minister Samak Sundaravej supplies including material - io keep· foreigners from mosquito nets and plastic
Federatmn of Red Cross anQ handle the disaster on its on Wednesday that the gov- for temporary shelters, rice, goiitg to the delta.
sheets · Wednesday. Lt. a.&amp;Red Crescent Societies, how- own a stance that ernrrient was in control of dri nkiitg water, kitchen
The U.N. has also Douglas Powell said 197,080
ever, said its estimate put the appeared to stem not from the situation and didn't need utensils .. llll4'..medicines expressed concern this week pounds of provisions had
number of dead between the isolationist regime's foreign experts.
. including 2,000 anti-snake that some of the food and been sent in on eight U. S.
68,833 and 127 ,990._ The ability but from its deep
"They have their own bite kits: The U.N. World aid donated by international flights since Monday.
Geneva-based body &amp;aid the suspicion of most foreign- team to cope with the situa- Health Organization say.s an groups isn't making it to the
Adm. Timothy J. Keating,
range came from a compila- e..S, who have frequently tion," Samak said after increase in snake bites is most needy, but is being head of the U.S. Pacific
llon based on other estunates criticized its human rights returning to Bangkok. He feared in coming days.·
diverted by officials or the Command, said he did not
from 22 different organi za- 8buses and crackdowns on said the junta gave him a
The junta did grant military. And some aid get . the junla' s. fomial
lions,
including
. the democracy activists. ·
"guarao~" that _there was approval Wednesday for ·a worlrers and survivors said approyal for American aiil
Myanmar Red Cross SOCiety,
Meanwhile,
U.N. DO starvation or di~ out- Thai medical team to visit that in many case's spoiled or flights when he met with tile
and on media reports. ·
~-(Jeotr.ll Ban . Ki- breaks ~ng surv1vors.
· tbe delta, said Dr. Thawat poor-quality food was being Myanmar navy codUI1alliJer
Even though the figures moon said he !leCUfed suppOrt
' But~bcs say the' g~ve~- . Sutharacha of Thailand's given to ,survivors.
Monday in Yangon. But 'he
seemed. precise, spokesman from MyaiUDI( to .increase . me~t IS woefully lacking Ill Public Health Ministry. If
Zalmay Khalilzad, the said Myanmar officials wete
Matthew Cochrane said tD: flow of relief aid.
hehcopters, true~ and boats the team goes as scheduled American ambassador to allowing the planes to fly in.
they were not based on
"In view .of the magnitude ~ well as planllll!~ expe_r- Friday, i.t will be the ftrst · the U.N, has said the U.S. is
"In approving our flight
body counts, but were only of this crisis, much more llse needed to distnbute rud foreign aid group to ,work in concerned about the issue plans, they are giving us perrough estimates designed to needs to'he done," Ban told to survt':'ors, who have the ravaged delta.
and wants to make sure that mission - it is kind of
provide Red Cross donors reporters after a nearly two- Jammed_ toto monastenes
Myanmar has limited the that aid goes to the people implicit
permission,"
and partner organizations hour meeting in New York and ~hef ~nters or are few international aid work- that are intended to be the Keating said in an interview
with an idea of the numbers with Myanmar, its neigh- campmg outside.
ers in the country to recipients.
with National Public Radio's
being discussed within the bors and key donors. The
U.N. agencies and other Yangon , the countrY's
The government gave a "Morning Edition" program.
"Myanmese . ambassador volunla!y groups have been
aid community.
U.N. officials have said has assured that the able to reach only 270,000
there .could be more than Myaomese government will of the affected people, said
do all to assist."
I 00,000 dead.
Elisabeth Byrs of r the U.N.
The Red Cross estimated
Ban also said that during Office for Humanitarian
the number of people need- the meeting aimed at boost- Affairs in Geneva.
ing help after cyclone surged . ing aid to the stricken nation
She said the World Food
over the low-lying delta on he was also able to win Progrann would need 55,000
May 3 at between 1.64 mil- backing from the groups for tons of rice to feed 750,000
a high-level conference to people for three months, but
lion and 2.51 million.
But the junta still refused raise funds for disaster aid the lljlCncy had been able to
to accept help from foreign this month.
ship m only 361 tons so fai-.
Myanmar's prime minisaid ex.perts, who have vast
On Thursday, aid agenexperience in handling tee, ·Lt. Gen. Thein Sein, cies were preparing or mov-

u

Polar bears.to be protected species
BY H. JOSEF HEBERT

of ice - a key habitat for
the bear ~ woUld oontinue
and rna~ even quicken.
WASHING10N - The
He ctted cooolusions by
Interior Department declared dep~nt seielllists that
the ~ liear a threatened sea ice loss will likely result
spec1es Wednesday because in two-thirds of the polar
of .the loss of Arctic sea. ice bears disappearing by midbut also cautioned the deci- century. The bear ~la­
sion should not be viewed as lion across the Arctic from
a path to address global · Alaska to Greenland dou~
warming.
bled from about I 2,000 to
Interior Secretary Dirk 25,000 since 1960, but be
Kempthome cited dramatic , noted that scientists now
declines in sea ice -over the prediet a significant ,POpuilllast three decades and pro- tion decline. Studies last
jeclions of continued losses, year by the U.S. Geological
meaning, he said, that the Survey silggested 15,000
polar bear is a species likely bears would be lost in comto be in danger of extinction ing decades with tkose in
in the near future.
the · western Hudson Bay
But Kempthm;ne said it area of Alaska and Canada
would be "wholly inappro- under the greatest stress. ·
Kemptbome said thlt it ill
priate" to use the protection
of the bear to reduce green- melting &amp;ell ice and not subhouse. gases, or to broadly sistence hunting and CIICIIY
address climate change.
development that poses lhe
The Endangered Species threat to polar bears. While
Act "is not the right tool to some subsistence hunting
se~ .U,S. climate policy," by
Alaska . natj..ves . is
said Kempthorne, refleeting . ·allowed, the United States
a view recently expressed bans hunting bears for sport.
by Presideni Bush.
. · Canada allows limited
The department outlined a sports hunting of bears. The
set of administrative actions Hudson Bay'flear population
and limits to how it planned offCanadahasdecinedby 22
to protect the bear with its percent in the last 20 years,
new status so that it would according to one sbldy.
not have wide-ranging
But when asked bow the
adverse impact on erooom- bear will be afforded~
ic activities from building protection, Dale Hall, direcpower plants to oil and gas tor of tlie U.S. Fish aod
exploration.
Wildlife Service, bad diffi"This listing. will not stop culty coming up with examglobal climate change or pies.
Better management of
prevent any sea ice from
· mel~." said Kempl.bome. bear habititt on shore and
He s;ud he bad consulted making sure bears aren't
with the White House on the threatened by people iocluddecision, but "at.uo time was ing hunters, more studies on
tbere ever a suggestion _that. bear population trends and
this was not my decision."
their feeding habits were
Kempthome, at a news among the areas mentioned.
conference, was armed with "I don't want to prejudge
slides and charts sbowing recommendations for (hear)
the dramatic decline in sea management," said Hall
ice over the last 30 years .and whose agency administers
projections that the melting the Endangered Species Act.
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

•

Environmentalists were
already lllliPl'ing out .plans
to file lawsuits challenging
the restrictive measures outlined by Kemptborne.
"They're llying to make
this a threatened listing in
oatne only with no change
in today 's impacts and that's
DOt going to fly," said Jamie
Clark
of
Rappaport
Defenders of Wildlife and a
former U.S. Fish and
Wildlife Service director.
Members of Congress
also were skeptieal. · .
The Bush ad.miniWation
"is f\)rcing the
bear to
sink or swim, said Rep.
Edward Markey, D-'J.ass.,
chairman of a House oom.mittee on global wanoill,g.
Sat John ~· D-Ma$5~
calk:d it .'~a lifeline fol' oWlast tanainiog polar bciars:'
but said the bear's .survival
won't be assured without
limits on oil development in
the same Arctic waters
where the bears are found. . ,
, I;&gt;espite the new listing, the
announcement underscores
the Jiced to approve climate
legislation that would limit
the release of greenhouse
gases and avert the future
e~ects on cl~ change,
said Sen. Batbam Boxer, DCalif., chairwoman of . the
Environment Committee.
Scientists have blamed
global warming for the disappearance of sea ice Which is
vital for the bear's survival.
Summer iee surrounding
the North Pole declined an
average' of 10 percent per
decade since 1979, with a
loss of about 28,000 square
miles per year, according to
the National Snow and Ice
Data Center. Last year was
the sharpest drop, as the
amount of sea ice in
September fell to 1.65 million square miles, or 23 percent below the previous low
in 2005.

eotar

'

BvmEBEND

'the Daily Sentinel

•lsslllls

._...... reach
hiIIIII
•alhpoH~ 1Dallp ~rtbunt:

t}otnt tlltasant 11.\egi~ttr
and Daily.Sentinel

C1re
..... -lisllld.

'ANNIE'S MAILBOX.

.

Three isn't necessarily a crowd

..

BY KATHY MITCHELL

don't want to lose her, but
I'm not sure. how much
longer I can tolerate the
Dear Annie: I have been time around Kevin. l don't
.d ating " Siena" for five want to share her with him.
IJlontbs and I care deeply - · Three's a Crowd
about her; but she has an ex·.
Dear Three's a Crowd:
husband, "~evin," and they Siena has not quite
are close. He has a key to divorced herself from
·Iter house and comes and Kevin, but as long as there
when he wants. Siena are no romantic sparks
,c~nnot have a conversation
between them, you proba.without mentioning him. bly don't need to· worry.
Qoth of them talk quite She seems to be treating
openly
about
special him like a brother of whom
moments in their marriage. she is fond. Put your antenlt's difficult to listen to.
na up and discern whether
· Siena is in the process of Kevin has ulterior motives
"filling up a house she for being around Siena.
re~ntly bought. Kevin has Does he want her .back?
been involved since the Does he flirt with her? Does
~ginning, assisting in the he gaze longingly in her
remodeling efforts. When · direction?lf so, you need to
lie talks about the house, he convince Siena that she is
'uses "we," as in "we did hu~g Kevin by making
'this" or "we need to fix him believe she is still
.that.". It comes across as interested. If not, consider
·''their" house. I have been "adopting:' Kevin . It not
trying to help her as much only could allay your fears,
~ possible, hoping she but also generate a friend. will depend more on me ship. And try to fix him up
and less on him. I am with some eli~ible females .
:extremely uncomfortable · Dear Anme: Can you
with him around. It's like please advise your readers
they're still married with- of a source to determine
· '&lt;lut the romance. .
whether a charity is worthy?
· I know Siena loves me, We are inundated with
but she doesn't understand requests for donations for
my frustration. For the last . causes that are obviously
,few weeks, I have had prob- good, but how can we dif:lems with insomnia, mostly ferentiate among those we
.because of this issue. I can trust to accomplish the
AND MARCY SuGAR

tiles

most with our money? the process of saving for
Thanks. - Want To Help · them . when my daughter
the Right People
became critically ill, and
Dear Want to Help: now I have to start .over.
Thank you for asking. To Meanwhile, I try to sit up
find out if a charity has a front in church, at the thegood recoro and is worth ater and at movies. I also
your investmen~. contact: look directly at. people' s
The American Institute of faces when l speak to them
Philanthropy
.(charity- so I can lip-read.
watch.org),
P.O.
Box.
I don't understand this
578460, Chicago, IL 60657- gap. Glasses, wheelchairs,
8460; ·Charity Navigator prosthetics, even corrective
(charitynavigator.org), 1200 surgery are at least partially
MacArthur Blvd., Second covered. Why -not cover
.Aoor, Mahwah, ' NJ 07430; so'VI:~g critical to comGuideS tar (guidestar.o!l), : mumcallon and safety? 480 I Courthouse St., Swte Frustrated
220, Winiamsburg, VA
Dear Frustrated: We
23188; and The Better agree. As the baby boomers
Business
Bureau . Wise enter their later years, the
Giving Alliance (give.org). need for affordable hearing
Call your local BBB office or aids will become overwrite The Council of Betta' whelming, especially if they
Business Bureaus, 4200 want .to hear the Rolling
.
Wilson Blvd., Suite 800, Stones at 70.
. Arlington, VA 22203-1838.
Allllie's Mililbo:r is writDear Annie: Dr. Kochkin te11 by KDthy Mitchell tuUl
is correct in )lis description Marcy Sugar, lo11,jtime ediof signs of hearing loss and ton of the Amr Lamhrs
the advances in hearing cohulln. Please e-mail your
aids. Unfortunately, one questio11s to · lllllliesmoilcrucial thing was left out. bo:r@coiiiCliSt.Mt, or wriU
Hearing aids are not cov- to: All11ie's Mililbo:r, P.O.
ered by health insurance. . Bo:r 118190, Chicago, IL
· ·My insurance was happy 66611. To jilld out more
to pay for anENT (ear, DOse about A1111ie's Mailbo:r,
and throat specialist) and an tuUl rnul'featuns by other
audiologist .to diagnose my C1WIIors Syrulicale writers
hearing loss, but not one arul C41'toollists, visit the
cent toward the hearing aids Creahlrs Syrulicate • Web
at $1,500 apiece. I was in page at www.creators.co111.

Thursday, May 15, 2008

Community Calendar·
Clubs and
organizations
Thursday, May 15
CHESTER Meigs
County Retired Teachers at
the Chester Courthouse
noon for luncheon a nd tour
of .
newry~renovated
Chester Academy. Call
992-3214 by Tu esday for
reservations.

Monday; May 19
POMEROY
- Meigs
County Library Board, regular meeting, 3 p .m.,
Pomeroy Library.

Public meetings
Monday, May 19
RACINE
-Southern
Local School Board, regular
meeting, 7 p.m., high school
media room .

Platinum ·sponsor

:roPS Chapter given spotlight award at area meet
, :.COOLYlU£- Pat Hall
.was named weekly best
:w.eight-loss winner and
:Dianne Burns runner-up at
t~e May 13 meeting of
JDPS (Take Off Pounds
~Sensibly) Chapter #OH
2013 Coolville with 17
members present.
. KOPS (Keep Off Pounds
Sensibly)
members
LaChresia Bogardus, Mary
C:I~Iand, May Frost, Louise
Hershey
and
Patricia
4tichmond were in leeway.

Bond, Dianne Burns, Mary
Cleland, Connie Rankin and
Pat Snedden, exercise
charts; LaChresia Bogardus,
Bond, Doris Buchanan,
Burns, Jane Oldaker and
Patricia Richmond, food
charts. April monthly winners
were:
Roberta
Henderson, perfect attendance; Bond, Buchanan ,
Bums, Cleland, Frost, Judy
Morgan and Snedden, exercise charts; Bogardus, Bond
and Richmond, food charts .

to the Area Recognition
Days in Lancaster. The
chapter had the largest
group in attendance from the
southeastern Ohio area.
Chapter certificates were
awarded to Louise Hershey,
chapter queen; Dottie Bond,
I st place Division 9; Marie
LaChance,
I st
place
Division 4; Dianne Burns,
2nd place Division 3; Pat
Hall, I st place Division 3.
Seven members particiJ)ated in the Meigs County

~!4:=~..::::.: -~::::;= ·~::-:.~',,..: ,1::;'
parfect attendanoe; Dottie . for each member who went

ter

for

the

Cancer Society.
LaChance presented a
program on assertive behav·
iour.
·
The group meets every
Tuesday at Torch Baptist
Church. Weigh-in is from
5:15 to 6:15 p.m. with a
meeting at 6:30. For infor·
mation, call Pat Snedden at
662-2633 or atteod a free
meeting.

) .:_'.

American

.....

when you pay for a 6 or 12
month subscription on your
home delivered subscription!

........
Ill
II
•., 2011

c8$allipolb~

Jaail!' 'Utribune
.¥'oint t}leasant .B.egister
The Daily Sentinel
6unbap. Gtimes _.,entiltel

••a•• ••,r '''"•r •••"'' '

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AMRA Modiicds, Pt.le .$todcs, Street Stocks, FOI.I' Cpnda s, Mini-Wadgea

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City/State/Zip - - -- ----s:-:- •
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Subscriber's Name _ _ _ _ _ __ __

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$400 El9ct1ic Scooter Gi!IB-Away for the Kids! Register to VI/IN!
................................. •be' .7 ....

SIJI .. ,

Here's all you
need to do ...
Fill out the coupon below
and drop off or mail it with a
copy of your phote ID.

'I
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IRS a...te Modala SS.OGO to Wlllll

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Senior Discount*

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·so, you qualify for a

The University.of Rio Grande Crossroads program is currently accepting applications for a
limited number of openings for the Workforce Investment Act year round youtb services
program. Summer Employment Opportunities is one component of this year round youth
program.
Eligible youth muSt be ages 14-2-1, residents of Meigs County, and meet WlA income
guideliites.
Applications are available at Southern High School, Eastern High School, and Meigs High
School and at the University of Rio Gr.mde Crossroads Program offioe at 150 Mill Street in
Mi\ldleport. Applications should be submitted by May 30,2008.
Funding for the W.LA. In-School and W.l.A. Out -of-School progmnis is provided by the
U.S. Depart:ment of Labor and the Meigs County Department of Job and Family Services.
For additional information please contact:
'
Ages 14-18: Donna Hartson 992-0010
Ages 19-21: Brenda Phalin 992-~
Roy Taylor, Director
•
University of Rio Grande Crossroads Program

••z

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318 . . . Cltl)o Owlll•. . . . . . . . . . •12
• 11 Of • • 1 1
OliGo. DUAl e1euu~OH • Ow 1rt . _ . , . , I
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; CLEVELAND (AP)- A
Four states - lllinois, Great Lakes basin.
~late senator iuttoduced a Indiana, New York and · Wisconsin lawmakers rat}onstiwtional amendment Minnesota and two ified
the
compact
;wednesday that he says Canadian provinces have Wednesday and it now goes
'would protect the private approved the compact. It to Gov. Jim Doyle, who is
:groundwater rights . of . must be approved by all expected to sign it. The
Ohioans from a multi-state eight Great Lakes states and Michigan
. Legislature
~mpact designed to pre- then approved by Congress approved
the co!Dpact
Wednesday, but· a final
}'ent water from being sent to become federal law.
Jfrom the Great Lakes region
Grendell, a Chesterland agreement will have to wait .
~o thirsty regions:
.
Republican, says the oom- because Democrats and
.; Sen. Tim Gtendell wants pact's language includes not Republicans must resolve
;the amendment put on the just the !]real Lakes but' pri- differences over large-scale
ballot in November so vot" vate property owners' water . withdrawals from
e rs can protect their gf9und- groundwater and wells in 35 Michigan lakes and water~ater and lakes.
·
counties that are part of the ways.

; II( ;

Subm-111*0

Holzer Hospice will host its third annual Hits for Hospice coed softball tournament on May 17 and 18, at 0.0. Mcintyre
Park in Gallipolis. Games will begin on Saturday at 9 a.m.
and on Sunday at 1 p.m. Bennigan's Grill and Tavern of .
Point Pleasant and Twin Rivers Marina of Gallipolis are
platinum sponsors. Here are Rick Rose, owner of
Bennigan's and Twin Rivers Marina and Sharon Shull, RN,
BSN, director of Holzer Hospice. Holzer Hospice cares lor
f&gt;atients with any life-limiting Illness, regaroless of ability to
pay in Gatlia, Jackson , Meigs and surrounding ,counties.

--;:;::=;;::=:;~~~~~=~~~=:;~~~~~~~~~;::;-•
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. :senator introduces amendment to protect water rights

.23,2008

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M.al or drop off this coupon along
:
with a copy of your photo ID to
1
:
1 Ohio Valley Publishing P.O. Box 469, G•lllpolls, OH 45631 · :
I

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OPINION.

The Daily Sentinel

Thursday, May 15. 2008.

ALL BUSINESS: A tale of 2 resorts
'

The D8ily Sentinel
111 Court Street• ~oy. Ohio

(740) 992-2156 • FAX (740) 992-2157
--mydallysentlnel.com

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.

..

Dan Goodrich
Publisher
Charlene Hoeflich
General Manager-Nevis Editor ·

•

Congrus slwll ma~ 110 law mp«ting an
utJJblishmmt of religion, or prohibiting tlu
free exercise thneof; or abrUlging tlu .frwlom of
spuch, or of tlu press; or tlu right of tlu peo- .
pk peaceably w assemhle, arul to petition the
Govnrtmmt for a mlrus ofgrievaru:u~
- The Flm Amendment to the u.s. Constitution

TODAY IN HISTORY
Today is Thursday, May 15, the !36th day of2008. There
·
Today's Highlight in History: On May 15, .)918, U.S. airmail began service between Washington, Philadelphia and
New York.
On this date: In 1911 , the Supreme Court ordered the dissolution of Standard Oil Co., ruling it was a monop&lt;ily in
violation of the Sherman Antitrust Act. ·
In 1'930, registered nurse Ellen Church, the ftrst airline
stewardess, went on duty aboard an Oakland, Calif.-toChicago flight operated by Boeing Air Transport, a forerunner of United Airlines.
In 1942, wartime gasoline rationing went into effect in 17
eastern states, limiting sales to three gallons a week for
nonessential vehicles.
In 1948, hours after deciaring its independence, the new
state of Israel was attacked by Transjordan, Egypt, Syria,
Iraq and l..ebaiJoo. ·
,
In 1958. Vice President Richard Nixon received a hero's
welcome on his return from a . violence-marred tour of
Latin America.
In 1972, George C. Wallace was shot by Arthur Bremer
and left paralyzed while campaigning in Laurel; Md.~ for
the Democratic presidential nomination.
In 1975, U.S. forces invaded the Cambodian island of
Koh Tarig and recaptured the American merchant ship
Mayaguez. (AU 40 crew members had already been.
released safely by Cambodia; some 40 U.S. servicemen
were killed in the operation.)
In 1988, the Soviet Union began the process of withdrawing its troops from Afghanistan, inore than eight years
after Soviet forces had entered the country.
One year ago: The Rev. Jerry Falwell, who built the
Christian right into a political force. died in Lynchburg,
Va., at age 73. Yolanda King, the daughter of the .Rev.
Martin Luther King Jr. and Coretta Scott King, died in
Santa Monica, Calif., at age 51. President Bush chose Lt.
Gen. Douglas Lute to oversee the fighting in Iraq and
Afghanistan as a war czar. Prime Minister Bertie Ahern
became the ftrst lrish'leader to address the joint houses of ·
the British Parliament. Kenny Chesney oollected his third
consecutive entertainer of the · year trophy from the
Academy of Country Music ..
Today's Birthdays: Actor Joseph Wiseman is 90.
Playwright Sir . Peter Shaffer ("Amadeus") is 82.
Counterculture icon Wavy Gravy is 72. Former Secretary
of State Madeleine Albright is 71. Actress-singer Lainie
Kazan is 68. Actor-director Paul Rudd ("Knots Landing"')
is 68. Singer"songwriter Brian Eno is 60. Actor Nicholas
Hamniond ("The Sound of Music") is 58. Actor Chazz
Palminteri is 56. Baseball Hall-of-Farner George Brett is
55. Actor Lee Horsley is 53. TV personality Giselle
Fernandez is' 47. Singer-rapper Prince Be (PM Dawn) is 38.
Actor David Charvet is 36. Rock musician Ahmet Zappa is
34. Olympic gold-medal gymnast Am;,~. Chow is 30. Actress
. Jamie-Lynn Sigleris 27.
·
Thought for Today: "People love to talk but bate to listen."- Alice Duer Miller, American author (1874-1942).

are 230 days left in the year.

LETTERS TO THE
EDITOR
utters to the editor are welcome. They should be less
than 300 words. All letters are subject to editing, nwst be
signed, and include address and telephone number. No
wisigned letters will be published. Letters should be in
good taste, addressing issues, not personalities. Letters of
thanks to organiztJ~ions and individ.IUlls will not be accepted for publication.

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the Ohio NIWIPIJIMl ~lsociatlon,
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Revenues in the parks
and resorts division shot up
II percent to $2.7 billion
NEW YORK - This is . during the q_uarter, a gain
not a good economy to take that was parttally driven by
a gamble in.
·
an increase in foreign travLas Vegas has, and it's elers visiting its U.S. parks
hurting casino profits. to take advantage of the
Disney has . not, and the • weak dollar.
·
·
:'Magic Kin~dom" is reapBut CEO Robert lger also
said the company's broader
mg the wmrungs. ·
In theory; it '.s not sup- offering of lower-priced .
posed to be this way.
accommodations ·and Vacl!· ·
The gaming business lion packages is helping it
often brags that it's reces- weather this econoinic storm
sion-proof because gam- ·· better than it did before.
In 1991 , more than 55
biers will always like to
gamble, but amusement ·percent of hotel rooms at
historic3\Jy Disney World were consid-"
destinations
have see ·their business get · ered premium priced. Now,
hard hit when consumers' about 7 5 percent of rooms
wallets are pinched.
there are·considered moderThe upscaling of Las ate or value priced. lgei" said
Vegas with its five-star during a conference caU on
hotels, restaurants and May 6 with · analysts.
shops, and the down-pricing · Moderately priced rooms
of Disney to more value- range between $I 49 and
oriented park packages and $240 a night, while value
hotels over the last decade mtes are between $82 and
.
has turned that concept on $151 a night.
its head.
"We believe creativity,
Plunging housing prices focused capital , inveshnent
and soaring costs for gas and strdlegic pricing have
and food have made belfCd to make us more
Americans more mindful of resilient to economic downtheir spending. Their.flrian- turns than in the past, and
cia! wariness has the poten- our recent results are evitialto hurt vacation destina- dence of that," Iger said.
lions everywhere.
While Disney's business
Yet, Walt Disney Co. 's model has been trying to
theme parks and resorts capture more visitors down
have ·enjoyed surprising the income ladder, Las
success . They
helped Vegas has done the reverse.
increase the company's fis- . The famed Strip's cheap
cal second-quarter earn- hotels and all-you-am-eat
ings by 22 percent from a buffets are mostly gone,
year ago, to $1.13 billion, replaced by ftrst-class
or 58 cents a share. resorts, fancy .restaurants
Analysts had been expect- with celebrity chefs, luxury
ing ~I ~ents a share.
retailers and high-end spas.
~BUSINESS WRITER

'53.55
' 101.10
'214.21

'•

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REMIND ME .. ,

LA.W YOU CAN USE

Not eligible for expungement?.

Delores Jem Lewis

Gambling.
once
the
This pullback is showing
lifeblood of this d_e sert up in the quarterly results of
mecca, now accounts for 41 those with big properties on
percent of Las Vegas' rev- the strip. MGM Mirage Inc. '
enues, while· 58 percent said business at its high-end~
comes from sales of food, Bellagio and MGM Grand
beverages, rooms and shop- was weaker than expected
ping. according to a report during the first quarter. Big
from the investment ftrm mall
company
Simon
Deutsche Bank. That is the Property Group Inc. also
exact opposite of what it noted weakness in the Las
was during the 1990-1991 Vegas "market, where its'
"
properties include, the luxu-:.
recession.
"We were recession-proof ry Forum Shops at CaesarS ·
when gaming was the No. I and two outlet centers.
'
source of revenue," said Sig
"We're seeing some softRogich, who beads a mar- ness in Nevada, Las Vegas; _
keting firm bearing his for the fJISt time in quite:
name that advises casinos. some time," said CEO
"Now the paradigm has David Simon during a con-.'
shifted, and we get burt ference call with analysts:·
when people decide to eat on April 29 ..
·:
out.or shop less."
Ke1th Schwer, director of
Gambling revenues were the Center for ·Business and '
down by 4 percent for the Economic Research at the·
greater Las Vegas area dur- University of Nevada at Las'
ing the first two months of Vegas, said discounting will'
the year. Should that pace likely intensify in Las Ve$as '
continue through year-end, as it looks to win back vtsiit would be only the second tors in the coming months. ·
time since 1970 that gam- There are 135,000 rooms i1t
bling revenues have faUen. Las. Vegus, an increase ' of ·
The last time was after the I .5 percent from a year ago.
SepL II terrorist attacks Some 40,000 additional'
when they fell about 0 .5 rooms are slated to be built' ·
percent and then were over the next few years. ·
slightly lower in 2002,
"If they offer the pentaccordin~ to the Las Vegas house suites at Motel 6
Convenhon and Visitors prices, then I?C:OPle will
come," he sa1d. "People
Authority.
Through the end of may .be more willing to v1sit
February, the number of if they can see some value
conventions held in Las for their money."
Vegas had dropped 10.4 ·• Suddell'ly cheap is in:·.
percent, · and average daily something Las Vegas has
room mtes were off 3.8 per- spent a . decade running.
cent to $129.89 in 2008, from. Maybe it's time theaccording to the most recent Strip took some lessons .
data available from the from "The Happiest Place:
LVCVA.
on Earth."
.

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~HLER.
. .

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WH01S JOHN MCcArN
A6AlN?

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MIDDLEPORT -

~!ores Jean Lewis,

The Daily Sentinel• Page As

www.mydailysentinel.com

Obituariet

.. .

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BY RAcHEL IIEct&lt;

;Thursday, May 15, zoo8

Executive clemency may b.e ontion
Y

=-~~v;mor grants the

A.: If the governor grants
Q.: I just learned that I twelve. To answer question home to speak with you. you afuU pardon, you will
cannot IISk the oourt to eleven, you should attach a You also may be scheduled be sent a copy of the "warseal
my
convictions separate letter to your appli- for a hearing before the rant of pardon." A copy will
because I have more than cation. The letter should Parole Board. You should also be filed with the court
one, Do I have any other explain the circumstances . attend this bearing.
where you were convicted.
optioDs?
of your convictions and
Q.: Will anyone else be The governor also may
A.: Yes. ·You may seek a what you have done since contacted as part of the grant you a conditional parpardon from the governor of your convictions to change investigation?
don ~uiring you to do certhe State of Ohio:
your life. For question
A.: Yes. The Parole Board tain thmgs before the parQ.: What is a pardon? ·
twelve, you should send as will contact the prosecuting don is granted. For examA.:
A
pardon
is
one
type
many letters of support as attorney and judge who pie, you may be asked to
Hudson.
of executive clemency that you can coUect.
were involved in your case. pay any fines or costs that
She is survived by
the
Governor
of
the
State
of
Q.:
What
happens
lifter
The
prosecuting attorney you still owe on the case.
her husband, William
Delores Jean Lewis with
Ohio
has
the
power
to
grant,
I
return
my
completed
and
judge
will be asked if
Q.: Does the pardon
Le_wis of MiddleP?rt;
granddllughtK Kylllna Lawls
A
pardon
forgives
·
y
our
application
to
the
Ohio
they
believe
you
should
be
automaiicaUy
seal my conc~dren, Becky Khen
'
given a pardon. In addition, vidions?
offomeroy, Richard (Lana) Hudson of Gallipolis, Dencil crime, and if granted, puiS Pamle lioanl?
A.: The Parole Board, the victim of your crime
A.: No. You should take
&lt;&lt;;:indy) Hudson of Syracuse, Vrrgil (Johanna) Hudson of you in the same poSition as
if
the
crime
had
never
which
investigates
aU
may
be
contacted.
your
"warrant of pardoo":O to
Pomeroy, Nancy Cloney of Canada, and Jonathan Lewis of
occurred
This
means
that
clemency
cases
for
the
govQ.:
Willi
be
notifaed
of
the
clerk'
s office of the
Middlepon: step-kids, Mary (Bill) Saxon, of Gallipolis,
Cheryl !Ke!th) ~ook of Gallipolis, and William Lewis Sr. you may answer "'no" when emor, wiU conduct an the Parole Board's recom- court in which you were
convicted and ask for your
of . GaU1~!1s; SISters, ~race Maybom of GaUipolis, and asked if you have been con- investigation in your case. mendation?
Once it concludes its invesA.: No. After the Parole criminal record to be sealed.
Nancy Uvmgston of M1ssouri; brother, William Thomson, victed of a crime.
Q.: How do I apply for a ti$ation, the Parole Board · Board finishes its investigaLaw JiJu Ctur Use is a
of Alabanta; 12 grandchildren; four great grandchildren·
panlon?
will
make
a
recommendati&lt;in.
it
will
send
a
written
weekly
co~~SJUMr
legal
~ several nieces and nephews.
.
'
A.: You may obtain an tion to the governor either recommendation to the ~ov- illfonnalion coluJM provi4fu addition to her parents, she was preceded in death by
application and instructions for or ag;iinst the pardon.
ernor. You will not be g1ven l!tl by llre Ohio StoU Bar
a aranddaughter, Ky1ana Lewis.
from
the
Department
of
Q.:
Will
I
be
contacted
a copy of the recommenda- AswciatioiL TIW anick WIJS
Funeral services will be held at 2 p.m. on Saturday, May
Correction
Web
site:
by
the
Parole
Board
durtion , but you will be notified prqJQJWI. by a11onrey ]OIUIII
17, 2008, at F1sher-Anderson-McDaniel. Funeral Home in
by the governor if your par- Sold of Community Ugal
Middleport with Rev. Mark Williams officiatin~. Burial http:f/www.drc.state.oh.us/ ing the investigatiOn?
will follow in the Hemlock Grove Cemetery. Visitmg hours · webiExa:Clernency.ht , or A.: Maybe. The Parole don has been granted or Aid Services, ltu:. ill AbvtL
by writing to the Ohio Board makes its decision denied.
Articles appearing ill tiUs
will ~ from 6-8 p.m. Friday at the funeral home.
Parole
Board,
Cl~mency
based
upon
your
submitted
Q.:
How
long
will
the
column
are inUmled to proIJ?.Iieu.of fl~wers, do~ations may be made to the family. A
Section, I 050 Freeway application, or you may be process take once I have l'ide brood, geneml in/onnareg1stty IS avatlahle onlme at www,andersoDIDcdaniel.com.
Drive North, Columbus, contacted by someone who applied for a pardon?
lion about tlu law. lhfon
Ohio 43229. When com- is i~Jvestigating your appliA.: It will take at least six applying this inf017111ltion to
pleting your application, cation. You may be contact- to eight months. and possi- a SfHt:ific legal pro~lerrr,
l'ait. 12, 1925-May II, 2008
pay especially close atten- ed by telephone or an inves- bly longer.
· fwMkrs aruuged to seek llre
tion to questions eleven and tigator ma;Y come to your
Q.: What happens if · allviuofaliceiiSedatlot'MJI.
GRANVILLE - A memorial service for Sar.th 0.
Moore, 83, of Granville will be held Saturday at I p.m. at
reduction in staff is required buses to get to locations of the district, then those three
cetite~ary l!nited Methodist Church, 102 E. Broadway,
to help compensate for the games and contests, as well · mills which the state now
Granville w1th the Rev. Stephen J. Cramer officiating.
projected $500,000 deficit.
as field trips.
provides would no longer
Byrial will be at a later date at Fredonia Cemetery.
fromPageAl
Buckley.
said
the
adminisThe
superintendent
also
be
provided. "What this
Mrs. Moore died Sunday, May II, 2008 at Sunrise of
talked
means,
said Buckley," is
tration
is
"looking
at
elimito
the
board
about
Gahanna She was horn Jan. 12, 1925 in Oak Hill, Ohio to
the late Walter and Dom Evelyn (Crabtree) Oliver. ·
options," said Buckley. He nating 15 positions" includ- ways to increase the district we would have to pass a six
Sarah, a 1943 graduate of Bexley High School, was listed three problems which ing both certified and non- income suggesting that a . mill levy to gain three addiemployed as an accounting clerk for various employers have contributed to the certified employees. He permanent improvements tional mills for school
throughout her life. She was a member of Centenary United fundi!Jg deficit in the dis- indicated some positions levy might be placed before opemtions.
The
superintendent
Methodist Church in Granville. In addition to her love of trict rising insurance currently · O{ICD or vacated the voters to take .t he presor
resigsure
off
the
general
fund.
through
retirement
stressed
the
importance of
· playing bridge, she ;JDd her husband, John, volunteered for costs, declining enrollment,
Dawes, Hospice of Central Ohio, Meals on Wheels, and the and a projected decline in nation will not be ftlled, The two new board mem- getting district finances in
along with some pro- bers, however, expressed a order and balanced to avoid
Newark Crisis Center.
·
'
tax revenue.
Surviving are her sons and daughter-in-law, Douglas B.
Buckley said be had meet grams/positions which the preference for an operating state intervention through
and Sandra Moore of Waverly, OH and Bradford W. "Jack". . with a representative of the district funds through the levy which would put the Fina:ncial .Planning
Moore of Seattle; WA; daughter and son-in-law, Marilyn area finance office of the Athens-Meigs Educational money into an undesignated Supervision Commission,"
general fund which could be an Ohio Department of
Jane and Ronald Kasson of Granville; six grandchildren Ohio
Department
of Service Center.
used for any purpose.
Education affiliate which. in
and seven great -gnmdchildren.
Other
.cost
saving
meaEducation to do what is
With
In addition to her parents, she was preceded in death by called "Staffing" where the sures being considered
that
Buckley ·effect limit s a school
her husband, John W. Moore, DVM, whom she manied number of teachers and the include reducing the num- explained equity funding board's financial control in
May 20, 1944; four brothers, Isaac, William, George, and student census of the district ber of summ'er employees, which means that the state the district.
Walter Oliver. and one.sister, Blodwyn Evelyn Oliver.
Formal letters of notificadisadvantaged·
is compared with schools and charging back to activi- provides
Arrangements are in the care of McPeek Funerdi Home having similar composition. ty groups the cost of fuel for school districts additional tion on the RIF proposal
in Granville. Visit www.mcpeekfuneralhome.com to sign He said those figures along buses used for non-academ- funding to bring those dis- were presented to Steve
an online guesthook or send condolences. ·
with the five year financial ic purposes. Currently the tricts . up to the required Morris, representative of
Memorial contributions may be made to Mt.Carmel forecast to be released at the groups pay only the bus dri- state level. Meigs Local Meigs OAPSE (non-ceniHc:ispice, 6001 East Broad Street; Columbus, Ohio 43213.
May 27 meeting of the ver, but none of the other now qualifies for three fied employees), and Becky
Meigs
Local
Buckley mills of additional state Triplett,
Me1gs Board will be the expenses.
deterniining factor in decid- acknowledged that this will aid. Should a levy for three Teachers Association (certiestate holdings, and other ing just pow much of a hurt those groups who use or more mills be pas!Oe&lt;J in fied employees.)
fi!11hcial interests to help
protect against conflicts of
fromPageAl
who have
February visit to Pomeroy order to vote against Barack families interest.The
complaints
become
Democrats
this
were filed by ·the Ohio
by U.S. Senator Hillary Obama.
"I hope I am wrong about year. Thill tells a story."
Clinton helped secure her a
The two original fourth- · Ethics Commission.
Hunter said he expects
that
point. but I believe
76-percent
win
here
and
a
fromPageAl
Thornton suffers from a
degree misdemeanor counts
the
trend to continue into
there
are
some
voters
who
big Democratic turnover,
a!J.ege that Thornton failed chronic medical condition
the
fall, and expects
to. file financial disclosure and does not regularly of the Board of Elections, and Henry Hunter, elected did not want (Obama) to
Democrats to do well from
statements. for 2005 and attend board meetings·. are mostly voters who are Democratic Party chairman carry this county," Hunter
·said.
"
In
general,
people
are
the top of the ballot to the
2006, as elected officials are · County Auditor Mary Dyer- still registered to vote but in April, agreed.
bottom.
just
sick
and
tired
of
this
"The gap has been closing
required to do annually. The Hill said a family member have not participated in a
''These Republicans .have a
in
for several years. but it Republican adniinistration.""
report discloses sources of picked up Thornton's pay- primary election for two
reason
for changing over, and
In Hunter' s own precinct,
has never been this close
income, investments, real check on Wednesday.
years or more;
Chester,
182 it should carry into the generHunter
said West
Johnston said an increase before,"
al election," Hunter said.
Democratic
ballots
were
in registered Democrats Wednesday. "If we can gain · cast, but only 61 Democrats
well as a smaU dent. He
lik.ely carne from that pool another 250 voters. the
guessed replacement of the of non-partisan voters, as . Democrats will be the were registered prior to the
spring may tVD around well as active primary voters majority party in Meigs primary.
"I have personaUy looked
- fmin Page AI
$700. He added Martin is who changed their· political County."
over
the
registration
back on. the road driving a affiliation from Republican · Hunter has identified t\\(O
records, and there are lifeatld were then going on to replacement bus.
possible reasons for the
to Democrat in March.
long Republicans - whole
McElroy, Hawk and
Kings Island in Cincinnati .
Only 45 voters actually jump in Democratic regisAccording to the Athens Meigs I..ocal Superintendent cast "'non-partisan," issues- tration, and said he believes
,_':\1'1 C'A,p
Post of the Ohio State William_ Buckley were. on only baUots in the primary.
both have cOntributed to the
~
' }' \ ·, ·1Hl&amp;hway Patrol, .a passing th~ .~1dent sc~ne. Hawk
County . Commissioner switch. He said voters are
~
0
westbound car went out of · sa1d II was decided at the Mick Davenport. ~ho was dissatisfied with the Bush
~
.,\; &gt;
control, traveled to the left scene to -cancel the trip acting Democratic Party administration, but said he
~
·····" • "~&gt;.
i;J
. or / I . ·--·
side of the highway, carne ~ca~se of f~ars that Chairman at the time of the .suspects some Republicans
back onto pavement and mJ..unes may marufest later., primacy election, said a voted Democratic ballots in
l'fJ.FOIIMI~~ ,\In~ (1Jrf11tl
into the path of the bus. The
We Wf?re very fortunate,_
Recllal Weekend
car landed under the rear Hawk sa1d about the acclHoffman,
Cunningham.
tires of the bus which was dent not,being worse ..
"Dance Me A Story"
President
of
Council Bob
dri'Ven by bus driver Ida
Hawk
added
the
May17@ 3pm
Ord and a Syracuse Board
music/chorus teacher . has
Martin, Middlepon.
pre•nlecl by;
of Public Affairs member.
The driver of the car been to. contact With Kmgs
from Page AI
The Ariel Dancers
Hoffman said he anticipated
Marcella Smith, Albany: Island to see if the kids can
Plano Recital
was not injured and rece1ve some . sort of _relm- the pool for the day due to doing engineering work in
the fall and win"ter. with .
aCJ;:ording to Meigs Local b~ment for fees patd for weather or low attendance.
May 18 0 2jJm
actual
construction
happen
school officials Smith was , a tnp they were unable to
presented by:
J
Council also agreed to .
allegedly foupd at fault for take .t hough no agreement purchase a ladder for the ing early next year or in the
Studenl8 of Allen Stnltt
the accident and an had yet been reached.
"pool at a cost of $783 and sprio~ of 2009 ..
!lo• Oflic:e; 428 2nd Ave.
Council 'gave Fire Chief
adju ster from her insur- · The Athens Highway T-shirts for the. pool staff
.Giftipolts, Ott (740) 446-ARTS
ance company is expecled Patrol Post . was contacted with the price to be deter- Bill Roush peonission to
at the Meigs Local Bu s about the mc1dent and a mined later by finding (he sale or dispose of Engine 31
Garage today to inspect request for a press release cheapest vendor.
as he saw fit. Rou sh was
the damaged bus .
about the accident, includCouncil agreed to pay going to look into a possible""
Paul McElroy, trans- ing information on any cita- $600 from the street and buyer for the engine w~ich
portation
director
for tion if applicable, was made $1,700 from the state high - needs a new pump. Also,
Meigs Local, said the bus though not received by way fund to remove two parts for the steering cannot
Tile So d em Local SrMol Dllakt
b~ a broken rear spring as press time .
dead trees, one in the road- be found to repair the truck.
Council approved replacs ide park, the' other on
,.esclloDI realsulll• for cbe
ing the tire~ on the police
Marina
Drive
near
the
ten!008 !009 Jd¥Jol , . . . . . . . . .
four years. His volunteer
nis courts. Mayor Eric cruiser which has 23,000
activities included assisting
MIJ !7, 2008. Sasdtem
Cunningham
stressed miles on it. Chief ·Shannon
with Special Olympics and American Electric Power Smith · reported last month
111&amp;1 I*J• 0 !I ea
h
helping with' local blood is paying for tree removal be issued five letters to resifrom Page AI
drives. He has studied mar- at other various spots in dents for rail grass, all of
l .., A. £&amp;C 1" •
which were resolved withthe villa~e .
.
of the National Honor tial arts for several years.
The
·
valedictorian
s
and
.
out
a citation. Smith added
Council formed a comSociety, played on . the
M,eigs golf team. received salutatorians will be speak- mittee to interview for engi - be issued 14 citations,
the All-TVC award and this ers at the Meigs High . neers on the water i"mprove- served two warrants, had
year was selected TVC- School graduation, 8 4 .m. ment project. On the com- three ·arre sts and eight
u llct llay - - · •
MVP. He earned the TVC May 23, in the Lan? R. mittee will be Grants assi sts with other agencies
Administrator
Fred last month .
All-Academic Award for Morrison gymnasium.
58, of Middleport,
passed away
on
tuesday, May 13,
2008, at St. Mary's
Hospital
in
Huntington, W.Va,
She was born on
July 25, 1949, in
Mason, W.Va., daughtq of the late Hugh A.
ThOmson and Rosella

Sarah 0. MoGle

Deficit .

.

Thornton

•
It's long been my opinion
that if Hillary Clinton oould
be appointed president,
nobody could do the job
better. In · a parliamentary
system; she'd stand an
excellent chance of becoming prime minister, since
polittcal parties tend to
select leaders more on the
basis of com~tence than
the dubious skills of a game
show host.
Like AI Gore, Clinton's
seen by friends as warni,
funny and empathetic. She
does better in small groups
and town haU-type events
than in large arenas. Also
like Gore, she's motivated
more by duty than most
politicians. Unfriendly eyes
see her determination as
"entitlement." Misogyny
run s deeper in American
culture than many ·admit;
brainy women are seen as
unnatural. The camera doesn't love her the way it loves
Sen. Barack Obama.
Too, Clinton's candidacy
has labored under tbe mani. fest disadv"a ntage of the
Beltway media's unreasoning hatred of her husband,
the virulence of which COD•
ti nues to
amaze. In
Arkansas, some think it's
rooted in resentment that
some
smooth-talking,
white-trash hayseed from
the American outback could
· become
president.
In
Washington, it' s whispered
that Hillary's unresponsiveness to certain socially
prominent hostesses made
them loathe her. Who
' knows? There's no denying
her candidacy has encountered what a friend caUs a
"~ect storm" of progresSive i8ealists merging with
Clinton -bating
celebrity
courtiers in the "mainstream" media.
And ' yet H illary keeps

Voters

tactic, losing strategy

. :.

.

'

Bob He~rt. who's been worse . Real bigots don't •:
fanning the mcial flames care, while Clinton support. ·
since
Obillna's
New ers increasingly resent the ~
Hampshire loss.
accusation. (My skio:s:
· This because under the thicker than most.) Most•'
politicaUy correct rules of also think it's a foolhardy;
Gene
engagement preferred by way t&lt;1 avoid discussing the .
Lyons
the Obama camp•. only the realities of the Electoral
lllinois senator gets to make College, which is what
ex cathedra observations Hillary was trying to do.
about such ticklish matters Regardless of why workingchugging along like The as race and class, which class white voters don't
Otiama,
no
Little Engine That Could, must be treated as infallible. support
defying increasingly shri 11 Pundits like Herbert and the Democmt can win without .
demands that she quit. Washington Post's Eugene them.
Can anybody name two
Weeks before the Indiana Robinson have been chatprimary, . Obarna described teriog about the so-caUed states Obama can win that- ,
it as the potential "tiebreak- "Bradley effect" ever since Jphn Kerry lost in 20047~
er." Then he went out and New Hampshire, · but the Supporters normaUy duck·the question with effusive _.
IQst it. Nevertheless, aU but Clinton camp must not.
openly gloating, NBC ' s
Why not? Because con- references to massive voter
Tun Russert took it upon trary to conventional wis- turnout, which the blogger ·'
himself to announce, "We dom, it wasn't the Clintons " Anglachel" parodies: For
now
know
who the who "racialized" the contest all the_''crowing about what ·'
Democratic
nominee ' s at aU. It was the Obama a superdoublewidefantastic •·
going -to be, and no one's campaign, seemingly for party organization The .
going to dispute it."
the sake of galvanizing Precioos has built, how it's
Reaction among some African-American voters in cool and digitiU and virtual
Obama sunoorters was less must-win South Carolina. . and full of lots and lots of ·
polite. "it1s high time," ' (See Princeton historian bloggers and money.. ,. AU· ·
wrote John Aravosis on Sean . Wilentz's article of which makes me ·go so
Amerieablog .&lt;CODl,
"the "Race Man: How Barack where were those voters in :
' ?. .. . .
super delegates told the Obama ·Played the Race Indi ~?D
. .-ennsyI varna
Cl.intons to take their rorry, Card and Blamed Hillary His efforts didn't make ai ·
scandal-ridden a- s and Clinton," in The New difference for him iri Ohio, ·
Texas, Massachusetts or .
"get the hell out. We are Republic.)
.
going to have another
The problem. however, is California. ... The fact is
month of these vindictive that tactic, along with the that the contest this year as ·
racist losers destroying crackpot effusions of the such, not just Obama, is: '
Obama' s credibility with Rev. Jeremiah Wright and bringing out a huge nllDlber
the very voters he is going Obama' s deep! y unpersua- of voters, and half of them · .
to need in the faU to ·beat sive alibi that ·he knew are voting for Hillary."
McCain."
nothing about them, transMeanwhile, I'm hearing '"
Hillary dido 't help herself .· formed his candidacy. increasing numbers of
with an infelicitous demo- Many citizet~s who would Clinton supporters, passiongraphic allusion, citing an vote for an . Afri.cao- ate Democrats all, say they
AP article "that found how American without a second cannot vote for Obama. And
Sen. Obama's support ... thought are put' off by a that' s a very wonying sign.
among working, hardwork- candidate who makes mce
(Arkansas
Democrating · Americans,
white the central issue · of his Gazette columnist Gene
Americans, is weakening campaign. Winning tactic, Lyons is a national IIIQga-. ·
again." Thi s prompted even · losing strategy. 1
zine award winner and co- ·
so normally sensible an
Screaming "racist" at author of "nU! Hunting of
observer as my good friend people - I' ve received a the President" (St. Martin 's ..
Joe Conaso\J to compare her grand total O[ IWO e -nlailS .Press, 2(}()()). You can e- ··
to George Wallace. So did from Obama supporters that mail Lyons at gene- ;
New Yodr. fimes columnist didn't - only makes things lyonsl@sbcglobal.net.)
'

•

: Accident

'A~

Pool

PIESCHOOL IEGISTIAnON

Seniors

r••• ..,,

To klldzle•

740-992-t 740

..

••

•

�'

PageA4.

OPINION.

The Daily Sentinel

Thursday, May 15. 2008.

ALL BUSINESS: A tale of 2 resorts
'

The D8ily Sentinel
111 Court Street• ~oy. Ohio

(740) 992-2156 • FAX (740) 992-2157
--mydallysentlnel.com

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.

..

Dan Goodrich
Publisher
Charlene Hoeflich
General Manager-Nevis Editor ·

•

Congrus slwll ma~ 110 law mp«ting an
utJJblishmmt of religion, or prohibiting tlu
free exercise thneof; or abrUlging tlu .frwlom of
spuch, or of tlu press; or tlu right of tlu peo- .
pk peaceably w assemhle, arul to petition the
Govnrtmmt for a mlrus ofgrievaru:u~
- The Flm Amendment to the u.s. Constitution

TODAY IN HISTORY
Today is Thursday, May 15, the !36th day of2008. There
·
Today's Highlight in History: On May 15, .)918, U.S. airmail began service between Washington, Philadelphia and
New York.
On this date: In 1911 , the Supreme Court ordered the dissolution of Standard Oil Co., ruling it was a monop&lt;ily in
violation of the Sherman Antitrust Act. ·
In 1'930, registered nurse Ellen Church, the ftrst airline
stewardess, went on duty aboard an Oakland, Calif.-toChicago flight operated by Boeing Air Transport, a forerunner of United Airlines.
In 1942, wartime gasoline rationing went into effect in 17
eastern states, limiting sales to three gallons a week for
nonessential vehicles.
In 1948, hours after deciaring its independence, the new
state of Israel was attacked by Transjordan, Egypt, Syria,
Iraq and l..ebaiJoo. ·
,
In 1958. Vice President Richard Nixon received a hero's
welcome on his return from a . violence-marred tour of
Latin America.
In 1972, George C. Wallace was shot by Arthur Bremer
and left paralyzed while campaigning in Laurel; Md.~ for
the Democratic presidential nomination.
In 1975, U.S. forces invaded the Cambodian island of
Koh Tarig and recaptured the American merchant ship
Mayaguez. (AU 40 crew members had already been.
released safely by Cambodia; some 40 U.S. servicemen
were killed in the operation.)
In 1988, the Soviet Union began the process of withdrawing its troops from Afghanistan, inore than eight years
after Soviet forces had entered the country.
One year ago: The Rev. Jerry Falwell, who built the
Christian right into a political force. died in Lynchburg,
Va., at age 73. Yolanda King, the daughter of the .Rev.
Martin Luther King Jr. and Coretta Scott King, died in
Santa Monica, Calif., at age 51. President Bush chose Lt.
Gen. Douglas Lute to oversee the fighting in Iraq and
Afghanistan as a war czar. Prime Minister Bertie Ahern
became the ftrst lrish'leader to address the joint houses of ·
the British Parliament. Kenny Chesney oollected his third
consecutive entertainer of the · year trophy from the
Academy of Country Music ..
Today's Birthdays: Actor Joseph Wiseman is 90.
Playwright Sir . Peter Shaffer ("Amadeus") is 82.
Counterculture icon Wavy Gravy is 72. Former Secretary
of State Madeleine Albright is 71. Actress-singer Lainie
Kazan is 68. Actor-director Paul Rudd ("Knots Landing"')
is 68. Singer"songwriter Brian Eno is 60. Actor Nicholas
Hamniond ("The Sound of Music") is 58. Actor Chazz
Palminteri is 56. Baseball Hall-of-Farner George Brett is
55. Actor Lee Horsley is 53. TV personality Giselle
Fernandez is' 47. Singer-rapper Prince Be (PM Dawn) is 38.
Actor David Charvet is 36. Rock musician Ahmet Zappa is
34. Olympic gold-medal gymnast Am;,~. Chow is 30. Actress
. Jamie-Lynn Sigleris 27.
·
Thought for Today: "People love to talk but bate to listen."- Alice Duer Miller, American author (1874-1942).

are 230 days left in the year.

LETTERS TO THE
EDITOR
utters to the editor are welcome. They should be less
than 300 words. All letters are subject to editing, nwst be
signed, and include address and telephone number. No
wisigned letters will be published. Letters should be in
good taste, addressing issues, not personalities. Letters of
thanks to organiztJ~ions and individ.IUlls will not be accepted for publication.

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..

Revenues in the parks
and resorts division shot up
II percent to $2.7 billion
NEW YORK - This is . during the q_uarter, a gain
not a good economy to take that was parttally driven by
a gamble in.
·
an increase in foreign travLas Vegas has, and it's elers visiting its U.S. parks
hurting casino profits. to take advantage of the
Disney has . not, and the • weak dollar.
·
·
:'Magic Kin~dom" is reapBut CEO Robert lger also
said the company's broader
mg the wmrungs. ·
In theory; it '.s not sup- offering of lower-priced .
posed to be this way.
accommodations ·and Vacl!· ·
The gaming business lion packages is helping it
often brags that it's reces- weather this econoinic storm
sion-proof because gam- ·· better than it did before.
In 1991 , more than 55
biers will always like to
gamble, but amusement ·percent of hotel rooms at
historic3\Jy Disney World were consid-"
destinations
have see ·their business get · ered premium priced. Now,
hard hit when consumers' about 7 5 percent of rooms
wallets are pinched.
there are·considered moderThe upscaling of Las ate or value priced. lgei" said
Vegas with its five-star during a conference caU on
hotels, restaurants and May 6 with · analysts.
shops, and the down-pricing · Moderately priced rooms
of Disney to more value- range between $I 49 and
oriented park packages and $240 a night, while value
hotels over the last decade mtes are between $82 and
.
has turned that concept on $151 a night.
its head.
"We believe creativity,
Plunging housing prices focused capital , inveshnent
and soaring costs for gas and strdlegic pricing have
and food have made belfCd to make us more
Americans more mindful of resilient to economic downtheir spending. Their.flrian- turns than in the past, and
cia! wariness has the poten- our recent results are evitialto hurt vacation destina- dence of that," Iger said.
lions everywhere.
While Disney's business
Yet, Walt Disney Co. 's model has been trying to
theme parks and resorts capture more visitors down
have ·enjoyed surprising the income ladder, Las
success . They
helped Vegas has done the reverse.
increase the company's fis- . The famed Strip's cheap
cal second-quarter earn- hotels and all-you-am-eat
ings by 22 percent from a buffets are mostly gone,
year ago, to $1.13 billion, replaced by ftrst-class
or 58 cents a share. resorts, fancy .restaurants
Analysts had been expect- with celebrity chefs, luxury
ing ~I ~ents a share.
retailers and high-end spas.
~BUSINESS WRITER

'53.55
' 101.10
'214.21

'•

. ------------------~------~---..

REMIND ME .. ,

LA.W YOU CAN USE

Not eligible for expungement?.

Delores Jem Lewis

Gambling.
once
the
This pullback is showing
lifeblood of this d_e sert up in the quarterly results of
mecca, now accounts for 41 those with big properties on
percent of Las Vegas' rev- the strip. MGM Mirage Inc. '
enues, while· 58 percent said business at its high-end~
comes from sales of food, Bellagio and MGM Grand
beverages, rooms and shop- was weaker than expected
ping. according to a report during the first quarter. Big
from the investment ftrm mall
company
Simon
Deutsche Bank. That is the Property Group Inc. also
exact opposite of what it noted weakness in the Las
was during the 1990-1991 Vegas "market, where its'
"
properties include, the luxu-:.
recession.
"We were recession-proof ry Forum Shops at CaesarS ·
when gaming was the No. I and two outlet centers.
'
source of revenue," said Sig
"We're seeing some softRogich, who beads a mar- ness in Nevada, Las Vegas; _
keting firm bearing his for the fJISt time in quite:
name that advises casinos. some time," said CEO
"Now the paradigm has David Simon during a con-.'
shifted, and we get burt ference call with analysts:·
when people decide to eat on April 29 ..
·:
out.or shop less."
Ke1th Schwer, director of
Gambling revenues were the Center for ·Business and '
down by 4 percent for the Economic Research at the·
greater Las Vegas area dur- University of Nevada at Las'
ing the first two months of Vegas, said discounting will'
the year. Should that pace likely intensify in Las Ve$as '
continue through year-end, as it looks to win back vtsiit would be only the second tors in the coming months. ·
time since 1970 that gam- There are 135,000 rooms i1t
bling revenues have faUen. Las. Vegus, an increase ' of ·
The last time was after the I .5 percent from a year ago.
SepL II terrorist attacks Some 40,000 additional'
when they fell about 0 .5 rooms are slated to be built' ·
percent and then were over the next few years. ·
slightly lower in 2002,
"If they offer the pentaccordin~ to the Las Vegas house suites at Motel 6
Convenhon and Visitors prices, then I?C:OPle will
come," he sa1d. "People
Authority.
Through the end of may .be more willing to v1sit
February, the number of if they can see some value
conventions held in Las for their money."
Vegas had dropped 10.4 ·• Suddell'ly cheap is in:·.
percent, · and average daily something Las Vegas has
room mtes were off 3.8 per- spent a . decade running.
cent to $129.89 in 2008, from. Maybe it's time theaccording to the most recent Strip took some lessons .
data available from the from "The Happiest Place:
LVCVA.
on Earth."
.

..'

~HLER.
. .

'

-•

WH01S JOHN MCcArN
A6AlN?

.
'

'

MIDDLEPORT -

~!ores Jean Lewis,

The Daily Sentinel• Page As

www.mydailysentinel.com

Obituariet

.. .

ll.

BY RAcHEL IIEct&lt;

;Thursday, May 15, zoo8

Executive clemency may b.e ontion
Y

=-~~v;mor grants the

A.: If the governor grants
Q.: I just learned that I twelve. To answer question home to speak with you. you afuU pardon, you will
cannot IISk the oourt to eleven, you should attach a You also may be scheduled be sent a copy of the "warseal
my
convictions separate letter to your appli- for a hearing before the rant of pardon." A copy will
because I have more than cation. The letter should Parole Board. You should also be filed with the court
one, Do I have any other explain the circumstances . attend this bearing.
where you were convicted.
optioDs?
of your convictions and
Q.: Will anyone else be The governor also may
A.: Yes. ·You may seek a what you have done since contacted as part of the grant you a conditional parpardon from the governor of your convictions to change investigation?
don ~uiring you to do certhe State of Ohio:
your life. For question
A.: Yes. The Parole Board tain thmgs before the parQ.: What is a pardon? ·
twelve, you should send as will contact the prosecuting don is granted. For examA.:
A
pardon
is
one
type
many letters of support as attorney and judge who pie, you may be asked to
Hudson.
of executive clemency that you can coUect.
were involved in your case. pay any fines or costs that
She is survived by
the
Governor
of
the
State
of
Q.:
What
happens
lifter
The
prosecuting attorney you still owe on the case.
her husband, William
Delores Jean Lewis with
Ohio
has
the
power
to
grant,
I
return
my
completed
and
judge
will be asked if
Q.: Does the pardon
Le_wis of MiddleP?rt;
granddllughtK Kylllna Lawls
A
pardon
forgives
·
y
our
application
to
the
Ohio
they
believe
you
should
be
automaiicaUy
seal my conc~dren, Becky Khen
'
given a pardon. In addition, vidions?
offomeroy, Richard (Lana) Hudson of Gallipolis, Dencil crime, and if granted, puiS Pamle lioanl?
A.: The Parole Board, the victim of your crime
A.: No. You should take
&lt;&lt;;:indy) Hudson of Syracuse, Vrrgil (Johanna) Hudson of you in the same poSition as
if
the
crime
had
never
which
investigates
aU
may
be
contacted.
your
"warrant of pardoo":O to
Pomeroy, Nancy Cloney of Canada, and Jonathan Lewis of
occurred
This
means
that
clemency
cases
for
the
govQ.:
Willi
be
notifaed
of
the
clerk'
s office of the
Middlepon: step-kids, Mary (Bill) Saxon, of Gallipolis,
Cheryl !Ke!th) ~ook of Gallipolis, and William Lewis Sr. you may answer "'no" when emor, wiU conduct an the Parole Board's recom- court in which you were
convicted and ask for your
of . GaU1~!1s; SISters, ~race Maybom of GaUipolis, and asked if you have been con- investigation in your case. mendation?
Once it concludes its invesA.: No. After the Parole criminal record to be sealed.
Nancy Uvmgston of M1ssouri; brother, William Thomson, victed of a crime.
Q.: How do I apply for a ti$ation, the Parole Board · Board finishes its investigaLaw JiJu Ctur Use is a
of Alabanta; 12 grandchildren; four great grandchildren·
panlon?
will
make
a
recommendati&lt;in.
it
will
send
a
written
weekly
co~~SJUMr
legal
~ several nieces and nephews.
.
'
A.: You may obtain an tion to the governor either recommendation to the ~ov- illfonnalion coluJM provi4fu addition to her parents, she was preceded in death by
application and instructions for or ag;iinst the pardon.
ernor. You will not be g1ven l!tl by llre Ohio StoU Bar
a aranddaughter, Ky1ana Lewis.
from
the
Department
of
Q.:
Will
I
be
contacted
a copy of the recommenda- AswciatioiL TIW anick WIJS
Funeral services will be held at 2 p.m. on Saturday, May
Correction
Web
site:
by
the
Parole
Board
durtion , but you will be notified prqJQJWI. by a11onrey ]OIUIII
17, 2008, at F1sher-Anderson-McDaniel. Funeral Home in
by the governor if your par- Sold of Community Ugal
Middleport with Rev. Mark Williams officiatin~. Burial http:f/www.drc.state.oh.us/ ing the investigatiOn?
will follow in the Hemlock Grove Cemetery. Visitmg hours · webiExa:Clernency.ht , or A.: Maybe. The Parole don has been granted or Aid Services, ltu:. ill AbvtL
by writing to the Ohio Board makes its decision denied.
Articles appearing ill tiUs
will ~ from 6-8 p.m. Friday at the funeral home.
Parole
Board,
Cl~mency
based
upon
your
submitted
Q.:
How
long
will
the
column
are inUmled to proIJ?.Iieu.of fl~wers, do~ations may be made to the family. A
Section, I 050 Freeway application, or you may be process take once I have l'ide brood, geneml in/onnareg1stty IS avatlahle onlme at www,andersoDIDcdaniel.com.
Drive North, Columbus, contacted by someone who applied for a pardon?
lion about tlu law. lhfon
Ohio 43229. When com- is i~Jvestigating your appliA.: It will take at least six applying this inf017111ltion to
pleting your application, cation. You may be contact- to eight months. and possi- a SfHt:ific legal pro~lerrr,
l'ait. 12, 1925-May II, 2008
pay especially close atten- ed by telephone or an inves- bly longer.
· fwMkrs aruuged to seek llre
tion to questions eleven and tigator ma;Y come to your
Q.: What happens if · allviuofaliceiiSedatlot'MJI.
GRANVILLE - A memorial service for Sar.th 0.
Moore, 83, of Granville will be held Saturday at I p.m. at
reduction in staff is required buses to get to locations of the district, then those three
cetite~ary l!nited Methodist Church, 102 E. Broadway,
to help compensate for the games and contests, as well · mills which the state now
Granville w1th the Rev. Stephen J. Cramer officiating.
projected $500,000 deficit.
as field trips.
provides would no longer
Byrial will be at a later date at Fredonia Cemetery.
fromPageAl
Buckley.
said
the
adminisThe
superintendent
also
be
provided. "What this
Mrs. Moore died Sunday, May II, 2008 at Sunrise of
talked
means,
said Buckley," is
tration
is
"looking
at
elimito
the
board
about
Gahanna She was horn Jan. 12, 1925 in Oak Hill, Ohio to
the late Walter and Dom Evelyn (Crabtree) Oliver. ·
options," said Buckley. He nating 15 positions" includ- ways to increase the district we would have to pass a six
Sarah, a 1943 graduate of Bexley High School, was listed three problems which ing both certified and non- income suggesting that a . mill levy to gain three addiemployed as an accounting clerk for various employers have contributed to the certified employees. He permanent improvements tional mills for school
throughout her life. She was a member of Centenary United fundi!Jg deficit in the dis- indicated some positions levy might be placed before opemtions.
The
superintendent
Methodist Church in Granville. In addition to her love of trict rising insurance currently · O{ICD or vacated the voters to take .t he presor
resigsure
off
the
general
fund.
through
retirement
stressed
the
importance of
· playing bridge, she ;JDd her husband, John, volunteered for costs, declining enrollment,
Dawes, Hospice of Central Ohio, Meals on Wheels, and the and a projected decline in nation will not be ftlled, The two new board mem- getting district finances in
along with some pro- bers, however, expressed a order and balanced to avoid
Newark Crisis Center.
·
'
tax revenue.
Surviving are her sons and daughter-in-law, Douglas B.
Buckley said be had meet grams/positions which the preference for an operating state intervention through
and Sandra Moore of Waverly, OH and Bradford W. "Jack". . with a representative of the district funds through the levy which would put the Fina:ncial .Planning
Moore of Seattle; WA; daughter and son-in-law, Marilyn area finance office of the Athens-Meigs Educational money into an undesignated Supervision Commission,"
general fund which could be an Ohio Department of
Jane and Ronald Kasson of Granville; six grandchildren Ohio
Department
of Service Center.
used for any purpose.
Education affiliate which. in
and seven great -gnmdchildren.
Other
.cost
saving
meaEducation to do what is
With
In addition to her parents, she was preceded in death by called "Staffing" where the sures being considered
that
Buckley ·effect limit s a school
her husband, John W. Moore, DVM, whom she manied number of teachers and the include reducing the num- explained equity funding board's financial control in
May 20, 1944; four brothers, Isaac, William, George, and student census of the district ber of summ'er employees, which means that the state the district.
Walter Oliver. and one.sister, Blodwyn Evelyn Oliver.
Formal letters of notificadisadvantaged·
is compared with schools and charging back to activi- provides
Arrangements are in the care of McPeek Funerdi Home having similar composition. ty groups the cost of fuel for school districts additional tion on the RIF proposal
in Granville. Visit www.mcpeekfuneralhome.com to sign He said those figures along buses used for non-academ- funding to bring those dis- were presented to Steve
an online guesthook or send condolences. ·
with the five year financial ic purposes. Currently the tricts . up to the required Morris, representative of
Memorial contributions may be made to Mt.Carmel forecast to be released at the groups pay only the bus dri- state level. Meigs Local Meigs OAPSE (non-ceniHc:ispice, 6001 East Broad Street; Columbus, Ohio 43213.
May 27 meeting of the ver, but none of the other now qualifies for three fied employees), and Becky
Meigs
Local
Buckley mills of additional state Triplett,
Me1gs Board will be the expenses.
deterniining factor in decid- acknowledged that this will aid. Should a levy for three Teachers Association (certiestate holdings, and other ing just pow much of a hurt those groups who use or more mills be pas!Oe&lt;J in fied employees.)
fi!11hcial interests to help
protect against conflicts of
fromPageAl
who have
February visit to Pomeroy order to vote against Barack families interest.The
complaints
become
Democrats
this
were filed by ·the Ohio
by U.S. Senator Hillary Obama.
"I hope I am wrong about year. Thill tells a story."
Clinton helped secure her a
The two original fourth- · Ethics Commission.
Hunter said he expects
that
point. but I believe
76-percent
win
here
and
a
fromPageAl
Thornton suffers from a
degree misdemeanor counts
the
trend to continue into
there
are
some
voters
who
big Democratic turnover,
a!J.ege that Thornton failed chronic medical condition
the
fall, and expects
to. file financial disclosure and does not regularly of the Board of Elections, and Henry Hunter, elected did not want (Obama) to
Democrats to do well from
statements. for 2005 and attend board meetings·. are mostly voters who are Democratic Party chairman carry this county," Hunter
·said.
"
In
general,
people
are
the top of the ballot to the
2006, as elected officials are · County Auditor Mary Dyer- still registered to vote but in April, agreed.
bottom.
just
sick
and
tired
of
this
"The gap has been closing
required to do annually. The Hill said a family member have not participated in a
''These Republicans .have a
in
for several years. but it Republican adniinistration.""
report discloses sources of picked up Thornton's pay- primary election for two
reason
for changing over, and
In Hunter' s own precinct,
has never been this close
income, investments, real check on Wednesday.
years or more;
Chester,
182 it should carry into the generHunter
said West
Johnston said an increase before,"
al election," Hunter said.
Democratic
ballots
were
in registered Democrats Wednesday. "If we can gain · cast, but only 61 Democrats
well as a smaU dent. He
lik.ely carne from that pool another 250 voters. the
guessed replacement of the of non-partisan voters, as . Democrats will be the were registered prior to the
spring may tVD around well as active primary voters majority party in Meigs primary.
"I have personaUy looked
- fmin Page AI
$700. He added Martin is who changed their· political County."
over
the
registration
back on. the road driving a affiliation from Republican · Hunter has identified t\\(O
records, and there are lifeatld were then going on to replacement bus.
possible reasons for the
to Democrat in March.
long Republicans - whole
McElroy, Hawk and
Kings Island in Cincinnati .
Only 45 voters actually jump in Democratic regisAccording to the Athens Meigs I..ocal Superintendent cast "'non-partisan," issues- tration, and said he believes
,_':\1'1 C'A,p
Post of the Ohio State William_ Buckley were. on only baUots in the primary.
both have cOntributed to the
~
' }' \ ·, ·1Hl&amp;hway Patrol, .a passing th~ .~1dent sc~ne. Hawk
County . Commissioner switch. He said voters are
~
0
westbound car went out of · sa1d II was decided at the Mick Davenport. ~ho was dissatisfied with the Bush
~
.,\; &gt;
control, traveled to the left scene to -cancel the trip acting Democratic Party administration, but said he
~
·····" • "~&gt;.
i;J
. or / I . ·--·
side of the highway, carne ~ca~se of f~ars that Chairman at the time of the .suspects some Republicans
back onto pavement and mJ..unes may marufest later., primacy election, said a voted Democratic ballots in
l'fJ.FOIIMI~~ ,\In~ (1Jrf11tl
into the path of the bus. The
We Wf?re very fortunate,_
Recllal Weekend
car landed under the rear Hawk sa1d about the acclHoffman,
Cunningham.
tires of the bus which was dent not,being worse ..
"Dance Me A Story"
President
of
Council Bob
dri'Ven by bus driver Ida
Hawk
added
the
May17@ 3pm
Ord and a Syracuse Board
music/chorus teacher . has
Martin, Middlepon.
pre•nlecl by;
of Public Affairs member.
The driver of the car been to. contact With Kmgs
from Page AI
The Ariel Dancers
Hoffman said he anticipated
Marcella Smith, Albany: Island to see if the kids can
Plano Recital
was not injured and rece1ve some . sort of _relm- the pool for the day due to doing engineering work in
the fall and win"ter. with .
aCJ;:ording to Meigs Local b~ment for fees patd for weather or low attendance.
May 18 0 2jJm
actual
construction
happen
school officials Smith was , a tnp they were unable to
presented by:
J
Council also agreed to .
allegedly foupd at fault for take .t hough no agreement purchase a ladder for the ing early next year or in the
Studenl8 of Allen Stnltt
the accident and an had yet been reached.
"pool at a cost of $783 and sprio~ of 2009 ..
!lo• Oflic:e; 428 2nd Ave.
Council 'gave Fire Chief
adju ster from her insur- · The Athens Highway T-shirts for the. pool staff
.Giftipolts, Ott (740) 446-ARTS
ance company is expecled Patrol Post . was contacted with the price to be deter- Bill Roush peonission to
at the Meigs Local Bu s about the mc1dent and a mined later by finding (he sale or dispose of Engine 31
Garage today to inspect request for a press release cheapest vendor.
as he saw fit. Rou sh was
the damaged bus .
about the accident, includCouncil agreed to pay going to look into a possible""
Paul McElroy, trans- ing information on any cita- $600 from the street and buyer for the engine w~ich
portation
director
for tion if applicable, was made $1,700 from the state high - needs a new pump. Also,
Meigs Local, said the bus though not received by way fund to remove two parts for the steering cannot
Tile So d em Local SrMol Dllakt
b~ a broken rear spring as press time .
dead trees, one in the road- be found to repair the truck.
Council approved replacs ide park, the' other on
,.esclloDI realsulll• for cbe
ing the tire~ on the police
Marina
Drive
near
the
ten!008 !009 Jd¥Jol , . . . . . . . . .
four years. His volunteer
nis courts. Mayor Eric cruiser which has 23,000
activities included assisting
MIJ !7, 2008. Sasdtem
Cunningham
stressed miles on it. Chief ·Shannon
with Special Olympics and American Electric Power Smith · reported last month
111&amp;1 I*J• 0 !I ea
h
helping with' local blood is paying for tree removal be issued five letters to resifrom Page AI
drives. He has studied mar- at other various spots in dents for rail grass, all of
l .., A. £&amp;C 1" •
which were resolved withthe villa~e .
.
of the National Honor tial arts for several years.
The
·
valedictorian
s
and
.
out
a citation. Smith added
Council formed a comSociety, played on . the
M,eigs golf team. received salutatorians will be speak- mittee to interview for engi - be issued 14 citations,
the All-TVC award and this ers at the Meigs High . neers on the water i"mprove- served two warrants, had
year was selected TVC- School graduation, 8 4 .m. ment project. On the com- three ·arre sts and eight
u llct llay - - · •
MVP. He earned the TVC May 23, in the Lan? R. mittee will be Grants assi sts with other agencies
Administrator
Fred last month .
All-Academic Award for Morrison gymnasium.
58, of Middleport,
passed away
on
tuesday, May 13,
2008, at St. Mary's
Hospital
in
Huntington, W.Va,
She was born on
July 25, 1949, in
Mason, W.Va., daughtq of the late Hugh A.
ThOmson and Rosella

Sarah 0. MoGle

Deficit .

.

Thornton

•
It's long been my opinion
that if Hillary Clinton oould
be appointed president,
nobody could do the job
better. In · a parliamentary
system; she'd stand an
excellent chance of becoming prime minister, since
polittcal parties tend to
select leaders more on the
basis of com~tence than
the dubious skills of a game
show host.
Like AI Gore, Clinton's
seen by friends as warni,
funny and empathetic. She
does better in small groups
and town haU-type events
than in large arenas. Also
like Gore, she's motivated
more by duty than most
politicians. Unfriendly eyes
see her determination as
"entitlement." Misogyny
run s deeper in American
culture than many ·admit;
brainy women are seen as
unnatural. The camera doesn't love her the way it loves
Sen. Barack Obama.
Too, Clinton's candidacy
has labored under tbe mani. fest disadv"a ntage of the
Beltway media's unreasoning hatred of her husband,
the virulence of which COD•
ti nues to
amaze. In
Arkansas, some think it's
rooted in resentment that
some
smooth-talking,
white-trash hayseed from
the American outback could
· become
president.
In
Washington, it' s whispered
that Hillary's unresponsiveness to certain socially
prominent hostesses made
them loathe her. Who
' knows? There's no denying
her candidacy has encountered what a friend caUs a
"~ect storm" of progresSive i8ealists merging with
Clinton -bating
celebrity
courtiers in the "mainstream" media.
And ' yet H illary keeps

Voters

tactic, losing strategy

. :.

.

'

Bob He~rt. who's been worse . Real bigots don't •:
fanning the mcial flames care, while Clinton support. ·
since
Obillna's
New ers increasingly resent the ~
Hampshire loss.
accusation. (My skio:s:
· This because under the thicker than most.) Most•'
politicaUy correct rules of also think it's a foolhardy;
Gene
engagement preferred by way t&lt;1 avoid discussing the .
Lyons
the Obama camp•. only the realities of the Electoral
lllinois senator gets to make College, which is what
ex cathedra observations Hillary was trying to do.
about such ticklish matters Regardless of why workingchugging along like The as race and class, which class white voters don't
Otiama,
no
Little Engine That Could, must be treated as infallible. support
defying increasingly shri 11 Pundits like Herbert and the Democmt can win without .
demands that she quit. Washington Post's Eugene them.
Can anybody name two
Weeks before the Indiana Robinson have been chatprimary, . Obarna described teriog about the so-caUed states Obama can win that- ,
it as the potential "tiebreak- "Bradley effect" ever since Jphn Kerry lost in 20047~
er." Then he went out and New Hampshire, · but the Supporters normaUy duck·the question with effusive _.
IQst it. Nevertheless, aU but Clinton camp must not.
openly gloating, NBC ' s
Why not? Because con- references to massive voter
Tun Russert took it upon trary to conventional wis- turnout, which the blogger ·'
himself to announce, "We dom, it wasn't the Clintons " Anglachel" parodies: For
now
know
who the who "racialized" the contest all the_''crowing about what ·'
Democratic
nominee ' s at aU. It was the Obama a superdoublewidefantastic •·
going -to be, and no one's campaign, seemingly for party organization The .
going to dispute it."
the sake of galvanizing Precioos has built, how it's
Reaction among some African-American voters in cool and digitiU and virtual
Obama sunoorters was less must-win South Carolina. . and full of lots and lots of ·
polite. "it1s high time," ' (See Princeton historian bloggers and money.. ,. AU· ·
wrote John Aravosis on Sean . Wilentz's article of which makes me ·go so
Amerieablog .&lt;CODl,
"the "Race Man: How Barack where were those voters in :
' ?. .. . .
super delegates told the Obama ·Played the Race Indi ~?D
. .-ennsyI varna
Cl.intons to take their rorry, Card and Blamed Hillary His efforts didn't make ai ·
scandal-ridden a- s and Clinton," in The New difference for him iri Ohio, ·
Texas, Massachusetts or .
"get the hell out. We are Republic.)
.
going to have another
The problem. however, is California. ... The fact is
month of these vindictive that tactic, along with the that the contest this year as ·
racist losers destroying crackpot effusions of the such, not just Obama, is: '
Obama' s credibility with Rev. Jeremiah Wright and bringing out a huge nllDlber
the very voters he is going Obama' s deep! y unpersua- of voters, and half of them · .
to need in the faU to ·beat sive alibi that ·he knew are voting for Hillary."
McCain."
nothing about them, transMeanwhile, I'm hearing '"
Hillary dido 't help herself .· formed his candidacy. increasing numbers of
with an infelicitous demo- Many citizet~s who would Clinton supporters, passiongraphic allusion, citing an vote for an . Afri.cao- ate Democrats all, say they
AP article "that found how American without a second cannot vote for Obama. And
Sen. Obama's support ... thought are put' off by a that' s a very wonying sign.
among working, hardwork- candidate who makes mce
(Arkansas
Democrating · Americans,
white the central issue · of his Gazette columnist Gene
Americans, is weakening campaign. Winning tactic, Lyons is a national IIIQga-. ·
again." Thi s prompted even · losing strategy. 1
zine award winner and co- ·
so normally sensible an
Screaming "racist" at author of "nU! Hunting of
observer as my good friend people - I' ve received a the President" (St. Martin 's ..
Joe Conaso\J to compare her grand total O[ IWO e -nlailS .Press, 2(}()()). You can e- ··
to George Wallace. So did from Obama supporters that mail Lyons at gene- ;
New Yodr. fimes columnist didn't - only makes things lyonsl@sbcglobal.net.)
'

•

: Accident

'A~

Pool

PIESCHOOL IEGISTIAnON

Seniors

r••• ..,,

To klldzle•

740-992-t 740

..

••

•

�Page A6- The Daily Sentinel

J

Thursday, May 15. 2008

www.mydailysentinel.com

The Daily Sentinel

·PageA7

OHIO

'Ihursclay, May IS. 2oo8

Ohio attomey gener:d
ytelds to pressure, remgns

= •

--

7 7
ISS" 145"

: BY JuuE.CARR SMmt
:

1

ASSOCIATED l'RESS WAllER

•

'--'----

.7'• ~

E
O&gt;LUMBUS - Facing
61"145"
.J
po~sible
impeachment,
Ohio Attorney General
Marc
Da on
resig11ed
WedDesday amid the scan7 •
. llal of a sexual harassment
65° 150'
investigation in his offi ce
and his exii'alllarital affair.
CINI wl
The announcement . by
•
65'152"
•..
Pann. a Democrat elected
•
on an anti-corruption plat..
form io 2006. ended. a tO·~ ert st• , ..._
,
day odyssey in . whi ch he
• J '
bad refused repeated. forceful calls to step down by
Democrati.c Gov.
Ted
~ ~ ~- ~ Fl&lt;m;e&amp; ~'. ""
Slricldand and others within
Por11!'
~ ~ ~ ~')·.~:-:o:Y'
party;
faced
growing
his
.
7
.
.
.
Ckuly
Showers ~
Ratn
• •*
SR:tw
~., • ~
mvesllgat:lve scrutiny, and
seen articles of impeachWelllher Uncil!lrgrouncl • ~
inent filed against him.
: Fellow Democ rat s led .
tbe charge to remove
Dann, catching him in a
web of hi s own word s.
• • . M ()stlY cl &lt;JilY
d
i'rida.,
_._..t...MMtly
. 1long
"' .._
pann had admiued at the Gov. Ted Strickland, left, answetS questions after Ohio AUomey Genetal Man; Dann wid!
a .:50 perrent ohanre of cloudy with a 20 percent
conclusion of the high-pro- a!Jnounced his resignation Wednesday in the Cabinet room of ~·s nllice in sbowei'S. Lows in .die mid obance of showers. Lows in
file harassment investiga· Columbus. Dann resigned Wednesday u(lller threat of impew bmenrt Z••canse dl a sexual 50s. Soulhwest winds 5 to dae upper 40s. Northwest
iion May 2 not only to !lav- harassment investigation in his office and his extramarital affair.
10 mph._Beooming oorth- winds 5 to 10 mph.
ing an affair but to hiring
west after miduight.
Sahltday...Partly sunny
ill.cqualified friends. foster- long and be lost, it looks
Deputies of OJades, !he Strickland' s chief leg.al
n
iitlay--Cioudy with a w i,ltJ a 40 percent chance •lllf
. iug bad office behavior, · almost like, everything. It's state inspector gener.al, OOilDsel Kent Madws..
50 peroeolt dw= of shmw- llbowers. Highs in the upper
and . being overwhelmed tragic for everyone. ~
removed a cartload of oomAttorney ~ Biiott, who C15. ~ in tbe upper «&lt;s; OOs.
and unprepared for the job
Dann said be: was leaving pulen; aDd files from Dann' s rq£seotod tWo 26-year-dd Nudlmrst winds Sto 10 ·· Sabmlay nipt Mostly
10 which he was elected.
the news conference to join office eadier Wcvlpecday.
jlllliO£ staffers lflbose sexual
n I j - gI 7 Sbm&gt;.as cloud", Wlitb a 50 .--,_,_,.
oomplaitm; in 1bc evening_.'lbm show- chance of showers. Lows in
• Several of those senti· bis wife and children at
Slrickland said Dann dicl b.lrasmiCnt
ineuts showed up in bome. One of his daughters, the honoGible thing by'step- against a Dann aide UDIJlV· ers filrdy after ...-.igbt. the lower 50s.
impeachment ~des filed Mia, stood by him during ping down.
eled tbiltgs at the office. Lows in tbe knla' 50s.
Stmclay tllrough - : .
Tuesday.
~nus decision will allow
his announcement, and his
called Dann' s a~n · NudbcaSl VliDds _....! 5 tbly...Mostly ciGudy ..Wth a
· Appearing
beside. family has supported him die important wod of lbe long ovadue. He anticiplles qlh.C'hw!ce of
per· . 30 percent chapce .of showStrickland
Wednesday, personally and politically.
attorney gencnl' s office to bis clieltls will bave a mudt . aD. .
ers. Highs in die upper 60s_
' . .
Dann said he realized it wa.~ ·
"lt is now my highest pri- continue witbo11t the dis- better d!anre at
Friday-Mustily cloudy Lows iii the ~ 40s.
necessary to leave to pre- ority to focus on my fami- traction caused by recent a
with mowers lilrely. Highs
MCIIIIbly nipt .........
. serve the ability of the ly," Dann said.
· events," Strickland said.
&lt;tges
dl3l: Dauu is tpne. in the upper 60s. Notth Wed• by-Mostly cloody.
office to carry out his priorStrickland, who led the
~lk:fore I was lnnkillll :at
Strickland called ii: a sad
winds S to 10 mph_ Chance Lows in the lower 50s. Higbs
ities. The 46-year-old from call for Dann to resign or day and said nann acoom- WlDlssiOOS -Mth the p!nOII of r.ain 10 peroent.
in the lower 70s.
·
~ungstown had fashioned
be impeached. didn ' t name plished many things in bis responsible (m dli.s threehimself an Ohio version of a replacement but said he . celati'Vely short time in ring circus.~ EUiott said. I - I
the crime-fighting Eliot would. immediately begin office.
.
· "Now, I can talk to someone LAJlAII
~It is appropriate for us all
Spitzer, and spent his first re viewing possible succeswho is independent and
)lear taking on some of sors. Voters would need to to aclmowledge the person- objective.~
America' s most powerful confirm · Strickland is pick at pain and anguish that
Two employees tired as a ltEP (I SEJ 43.35
llloofoll Soulhem (NYSEt bpsiness interests. ,
. . had
at the polls on the same these events have · ca11sed result of die probe
Mm{NAPMQI lUll
83.71
. ~It is now clear to me that day dJey'll vote for presi- the attorney generaL his Dann' s roommates at a ....,,..ldlnc.(NfSEJ.&amp;Inc Colp.
family members, bis staff Columbus-area town house 57.10
ibe only way to protect ... dent, Nov. 4.
{N*SNQ) 25
"Maturity," Strickland and otbers," Stricldand said. apartment, where gatber· agt.alll(llfSE)-21JD
pri.QI'i~s for the office of
iiBT (NfSEI- 35.31
attorney general and for the said without hesitation,
Under Jaw, first assistant ings were marked by bc:avy Ball Emw {NASIMQ)P •ln(NASDA'll-aG
Plerpelcu I(N'(SE!- 67.10
people of Ohio.is to remove when asked what qualities att:omei general
Tom c!rinking, pizza and young 21JIZ
8 IJjiK&amp;JW (IIYSEJ-54.07 . Fllemlet (NASDAQ)- 12
myself from the situation,.. he would look for in a new Winters will · assume the women.
RoCkwell (I'(~- 56.11
ZTJM Ilk •(liAS- ,
he said. "This wiU preserve attorney general
responsibilities of attorney
The employees, ~- C
OAQ)-lUl!
Rodly
Be aIS (NASDAQ)"We need someone who general until ' Strickland services clrief Anthony a
the great work being done
a+
n (N"SQAQIby the office."
can provide confidence to names a replacement. In a Outietret and llOIDIIIIIIIica
Aorll Dulch Shell - 71.35
: Dann quickly exited the the many, many e;mployees Jetter to the staff, Wmters tions direotu£ U:o
4.12
-(N•so•QI
S... Holding (NASDAQ)~
aews conference without of the attorney general' s called it a sad and emotion- 01, did not imzncdiate y -5.5t
M.74
.
al · day and commended the return c.alls sccting com- Qy •• ldl • {NASQAQ)iaking questions, leaving tn office.~ 1x: said.
Walllart (NYSE)- SUS
Strickland · and House st:afJfor its "nationwide rep- ment. A mesuge was also 4Z.IS
ipeculation
what
had
Wendy's (NYSE)- 27.21
We?BI ICO :(NYSEI- 22JD5
changed his mind after days Speaker Jon Husted and utation as aggressive and left with Dum's wife, CaEw(NtSEJ-&amp;5.72
Woothlnglou (NYSE)- 1L85
AlyssaW
·
,Pv•tN•SE)-41.511
professional
advocates
for
Of bunkering down against Senate
President BiU
Dllltr
stock ...,.u -lhe ..
Those
of
bod!
political
US&amp;.*
(NtSE~34.30
Qearly everyone.
Harris, bOth Republicans, the people of Ohio."
p.m.
ETcloslng
q•• I Iii
Among those meutioned panies uid 0 . . did the Ga "CiftSE)-30AS
• "He is left standing alone all said an investigation of
trMUct1oas
tor
lilly 14,
Gaw.. El Tile (NYSE) ~ that's al_l a mat~;:r of his Dann's operation by state as possible successors are right .mug by m:iping.
20118,
!J~Widecl br &amp;lward
judgment 10 wamng so watchdog , Tom Charles, U. Gov. Lee Fisbu, higher . Montgon::,;..,:a;.. ~
. , _ fiNmci.. adv.itlars
O&amp;Jidata41 (NYSE) long," said Republican authorized Thesday, will education chanceUor &amp;ic mspectm g
s
... , 311.34
IIIMC URis In GallipOlis Ill
Betty Montgomery, who continue.· Dann on Tuesday Fin~=ut, state Ttusurer ~fa!:, Weduemb!iday ·was , .FIIorz •(MYSEI-45.111
(7411) 441-9441 and • •..,
twice served as Ohio's attor- had asked that the investi- Ric .d
Cordray.
a s
, an e
an:ass. IKRiger(NtSE)-27.411
71arrero in Point Pin
111•
ney general " He didn 't gain gation be delayed, but his Ouyllbo¥ia County prosecu- ment- to the olliioe' s bllo· Lllnllid ·••ld8(NiSEI(304) Q4-0174, " nber
SIPC,
tor Btll Mason and drec!s of camer employees.
1L97
anything by waiting this request was rebuffed.

•

'

".llowr o/ U.II.U.o .tic Plti/4 ~ ..
SINM;/J / - P/JhJ.J,.Icia I"

fAIMI•fJ"!'p ,.. ' - A'' ,,...
Pl.illf l'w( QdJJ fY
..........., .llet..J .&amp;nl I'"~·,
f

"COUNTRY IDlE COOK'IN AT ns BEST!"

q~

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fkrrr·u Hot or Cold. made to~.

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.
fraflllllld diPPed ice at 11 lftMI lid
11!!lrst!alra

I

"""" Dippod
Eot..., Seating
orTakMul Drive 1lmL

NO FRilLS, JUST GREAT 1001)!

,._..

"l'hi/h Slordt 011 WI!Nb " in from ai NEW l.ocalion
Ri. 2 in l'l ........... 'WV 304-674-5479

. (304) 576-llll
. . . . . ('lioeodlly· s..illyl

a-d" ,~
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This Weeks Winner!!!

Phyllis Drehel
CONGRATS!

,..

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Gen. Hartinger Parkway
Middleport.. OH .
741-992-5248

a,IWDIB,

CWIICI,-·
-~~­

••

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been"' -

McArthur, OH
740-596-9349

1540 Eastern Avenue
•Gallipolis, OH
1740)446-6888

Load Weather

legalllil'ftlemm~'!':

356 F.ut Main
Pomeroy, OR
740-992-6292

. 740 446-3837

e-.-,

a.,

..
8241 Jac:bon Pike
. Gallipolis, OH

_~.

b b

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Sandwich Get One Free!

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.

�Page A6- The Daily Sentinel

J

Thursday, May 15. 2008

www.mydailysentinel.com

The Daily Sentinel

·PageA7

OHIO

'Ihursclay, May IS. 2oo8

Ohio attomey gener:d
ytelds to pressure, remgns

= •

--

7 7
ISS" 145"

: BY JuuE.CARR SMmt
:

1

ASSOCIATED l'RESS WAllER

•

'--'----

.7'• ~

E
O&gt;LUMBUS - Facing
61"145"
.J
po~sible
impeachment,
Ohio Attorney General
Marc
Da on
resig11ed
WedDesday amid the scan7 •
. llal of a sexual harassment
65° 150'
investigation in his offi ce
and his exii'alllarital affair.
CINI wl
The announcement . by
•
65'152"
•..
Pann. a Democrat elected
•
on an anti-corruption plat..
form io 2006. ended. a tO·~ ert st• , ..._
,
day odyssey in . whi ch he
• J '
bad refused repeated. forceful calls to step down by
Democrati.c Gov.
Ted
~ ~ ~- ~ Fl&lt;m;e&amp; ~'. ""
Slricldand and others within
Por11!'
~ ~ ~ ~')·.~:-:o:Y'
party;
faced
growing
his
.
7
.
.
.
Ckuly
Showers ~
Ratn
• •*
SR:tw
~., • ~
mvesllgat:lve scrutiny, and
seen articles of impeachWelllher Uncil!lrgrouncl • ~
inent filed against him.
: Fellow Democ rat s led .
tbe charge to remove
Dann, catching him in a
web of hi s own word s.
• • . M ()stlY cl &lt;JilY
d
i'rida.,
_._..t...MMtly
. 1long
"' .._
pann had admiued at the Gov. Ted Strickland, left, answetS questions after Ohio AUomey Genetal Man; Dann wid!
a .:50 perrent ohanre of cloudy with a 20 percent
conclusion of the high-pro- a!Jnounced his resignation Wednesday in the Cabinet room of ~·s nllice in sbowei'S. Lows in .die mid obance of showers. Lows in
file harassment investiga· Columbus. Dann resigned Wednesday u(lller threat of impew bmenrt Z••canse dl a sexual 50s. Soulhwest winds 5 to dae upper 40s. Northwest
iion May 2 not only to !lav- harassment investigation in his office and his extramarital affair.
10 mph._Beooming oorth- winds 5 to 10 mph.
ing an affair but to hiring
west after miduight.
Sahltday...Partly sunny
ill.cqualified friends. foster- long and be lost, it looks
Deputies of OJades, !he Strickland' s chief leg.al
n
iitlay--Cioudy with a w i,ltJ a 40 percent chance •lllf
. iug bad office behavior, · almost like, everything. It's state inspector gener.al, OOilDsel Kent Madws..
50 peroeolt dw= of shmw- llbowers. Highs in the upper
and . being overwhelmed tragic for everyone. ~
removed a cartload of oomAttorney ~ Biiott, who C15. ~ in tbe upper «&lt;s; OOs.
and unprepared for the job
Dann said be: was leaving pulen; aDd files from Dann' s rq£seotod tWo 26-year-dd Nudlmrst winds Sto 10 ·· Sabmlay nipt Mostly
10 which he was elected.
the news conference to join office eadier Wcvlpecday.
jlllliO£ staffers lflbose sexual
n I j - gI 7 Sbm&gt;.as cloud", Wlitb a 50 .--,_,_,.
oomplaitm; in 1bc evening_.'lbm show- chance of showers. Lows in
• Several of those senti· bis wife and children at
Slrickland said Dann dicl b.lrasmiCnt
ineuts showed up in bome. One of his daughters, the honoGible thing by'step- against a Dann aide UDIJlV· ers filrdy after ...-.igbt. the lower 50s.
impeachment ~des filed Mia, stood by him during ping down.
eled tbiltgs at the office. Lows in tbe knla' 50s.
Stmclay tllrough - : .
Tuesday.
~nus decision will allow
his announcement, and his
called Dann' s a~n · NudbcaSl VliDds _....! 5 tbly...Mostly ciGudy ..Wth a
· Appearing
beside. family has supported him die important wod of lbe long ovadue. He anticiplles qlh.C'hw!ce of
per· . 30 percent chapce .of showStrickland
Wednesday, personally and politically.
attorney gencnl' s office to bis clieltls will bave a mudt . aD. .
ers. Highs in die upper 60s_
' . .
Dann said he realized it wa.~ ·
"lt is now my highest pri- continue witbo11t the dis- better d!anre at
Friday-Mustily cloudy Lows iii the ~ 40s.
necessary to leave to pre- ority to focus on my fami- traction caused by recent a
with mowers lilrely. Highs
MCIIIIbly nipt .........
. serve the ability of the ly," Dann said.
· events," Strickland said.
&lt;tges
dl3l: Dauu is tpne. in the upper 60s. Notth Wed• by-Mostly cloody.
office to carry out his priorStrickland, who led the
~lk:fore I was lnnkillll :at
Strickland called ii: a sad
winds S to 10 mph_ Chance Lows in the lower 50s. Higbs
ities. The 46-year-old from call for Dann to resign or day and said nann acoom- WlDlssiOOS -Mth the p!nOII of r.ain 10 peroent.
in the lower 70s.
·
~ungstown had fashioned
be impeached. didn ' t name plished many things in bis responsible (m dli.s threehimself an Ohio version of a replacement but said he . celati'Vely short time in ring circus.~ EUiott said. I - I
the crime-fighting Eliot would. immediately begin office.
.
· "Now, I can talk to someone LAJlAII
~It is appropriate for us all
Spitzer, and spent his first re viewing possible succeswho is independent and
)lear taking on some of sors. Voters would need to to aclmowledge the person- objective.~
America' s most powerful confirm · Strickland is pick at pain and anguish that
Two employees tired as a ltEP (I SEJ 43.35
llloofoll Soulhem (NYSEt bpsiness interests. ,
. . had
at the polls on the same these events have · ca11sed result of die probe
Mm{NAPMQI lUll
83.71
. ~It is now clear to me that day dJey'll vote for presi- the attorney generaL his Dann' s roommates at a ....,,..ldlnc.(NfSEJ.&amp;Inc Colp.
family members, bis staff Columbus-area town house 57.10
ibe only way to protect ... dent, Nov. 4.
{N*SNQ) 25
"Maturity," Strickland and otbers," Stricldand said. apartment, where gatber· agt.alll(llfSE)-21JD
pri.QI'i~s for the office of
iiBT (NfSEI- 35.31
attorney general and for the said without hesitation,
Under Jaw, first assistant ings were marked by bc:avy Ball Emw {NASIMQ)P •ln(NASDA'll-aG
Plerpelcu I(N'(SE!- 67.10
people of Ohio.is to remove when asked what qualities att:omei general
Tom c!rinking, pizza and young 21JIZ
8 IJjiK&amp;JW (IIYSEJ-54.07 . Fllemlet (NASDAQ)- 12
myself from the situation,.. he would look for in a new Winters will · assume the women.
RoCkwell (I'(~- 56.11
ZTJM Ilk •(liAS- ,
he said. "This wiU preserve attorney general
responsibilities of attorney
The employees, ~- C
OAQ)-lUl!
Rodly
Be aIS (NASDAQ)"We need someone who general until ' Strickland services clrief Anthony a
the great work being done
a+
n (N"SQAQIby the office."
can provide confidence to names a replacement. In a Outietret and llOIDIIIIIIIica
Aorll Dulch Shell - 71.35
: Dann quickly exited the the many, many e;mployees Jetter to the staff, Wmters tions direotu£ U:o
4.12
-(N•so•QI
S... Holding (NASDAQ)~
aews conference without of the attorney general' s called it a sad and emotion- 01, did not imzncdiate y -5.5t
M.74
.
al · day and commended the return c.alls sccting com- Qy •• ldl • {NASQAQ)iaking questions, leaving tn office.~ 1x: said.
Walllart (NYSE)- SUS
Strickland · and House st:afJfor its "nationwide rep- ment. A mesuge was also 4Z.IS
ipeculation
what
had
Wendy's (NYSE)- 27.21
We?BI ICO :(NYSEI- 22JD5
changed his mind after days Speaker Jon Husted and utation as aggressive and left with Dum's wife, CaEw(NtSEJ-&amp;5.72
Woothlnglou (NYSE)- 1L85
AlyssaW
·
,Pv•tN•SE)-41.511
professional
advocates
for
Of bunkering down against Senate
President BiU
Dllltr
stock ...,.u -lhe ..
Those
of
bod!
political
US&amp;.*
(NtSE~34.30
Qearly everyone.
Harris, bOth Republicans, the people of Ohio."
p.m.
ETcloslng
q•• I Iii
Among those meutioned panies uid 0 . . did the Ga "CiftSE)-30AS
• "He is left standing alone all said an investigation of
trMUct1oas
tor
lilly 14,
Gaw.. El Tile (NYSE) ~ that's al_l a mat~;:r of his Dann's operation by state as possible successors are right .mug by m:iping.
20118,
!J~Widecl br &amp;lward
judgment 10 wamng so watchdog , Tom Charles, U. Gov. Lee Fisbu, higher . Montgon::,;..,:a;.. ~
. , _ fiNmci.. adv.itlars
O&amp;Jidata41 (NYSE) long," said Republican authorized Thesday, will education chanceUor &amp;ic mspectm g
s
... , 311.34
IIIMC URis In GallipOlis Ill
Betty Montgomery, who continue.· Dann on Tuesday Fin~=ut, state Ttusurer ~fa!:, Weduemb!iday ·was , .FIIorz •(MYSEI-45.111
(7411) 441-9441 and • •..,
twice served as Ohio's attor- had asked that the investi- Ric .d
Cordray.
a s
, an e
an:ass. IKRiger(NtSE)-27.411
71arrero in Point Pin
111•
ney general " He didn 't gain gation be delayed, but his Ouyllbo¥ia County prosecu- ment- to the olliioe' s bllo· Lllnllid ·••ld8(NiSEI(304) Q4-0174, " nber
SIPC,
tor Btll Mason and drec!s of camer employees.
1L97
anything by waiting this request was rebuffed.

•

'

".llowr o/ U.II.U.o .tic Plti/4 ~ ..
SINM;/J / - P/JhJ.J,.Icia I"

fAIMI•fJ"!'p ,.. ' - A'' ,,...
Pl.illf l'w( QdJJ fY
..........., .llet..J .&amp;nl I'"~·,
f

"COUNTRY IDlE COOK'IN AT ns BEST!"

q~

f

l

I

~ ~?

'

(...64. ....).

... ~,.

fOR THE
OUR NEW LOCATIO/I! .

_.IIIIICfi..-&amp;J

fkrrr·u Hot or Cold. made to~.

•

Gfat a. • • 'tnlluiMC$.
.
fraflllllld diPPed ice at 11 lftMI lid
11!!lrst!alra

I

"""" Dippod
Eot..., Seating
orTakMul Drive 1lmL

NO FRilLS, JUST GREAT 1001)!

,._..

"l'hi/h Slordt 011 WI!Nb " in from ai NEW l.ocalion
Ri. 2 in l'l ........... 'WV 304-674-5479

. (304) 576-llll
. . . . . ('lioeodlly· s..illyl

a-d" ,~
Nodfetllt RoolleftC. BynllAcb ....... aa.:

This Weeks Winner!!!

Phyllis Drehel
CONGRATS!

,..

IM,mAI

Enter To Win A
FREE LUNCH!

mw

Stocks

Gen. Hartinger Parkway
Middleport.. OH .
741-992-5248

a,IWDIB,

CWIICI,-·
-~~­

••

203 West Main St

been"' -

McArthur, OH
740-596-9349

1540 Eastern Avenue
•Gallipolis, OH
1740)446-6888

Load Weather

legalllil'ftlemm~'!':

356 F.ut Main
Pomeroy, OR
740-992-6292

. 740 446-3837

e-.-,

a.,

..
8241 Jac:bon Pike
. Gallipolis, OH

_~.

b b

New Exponded Menu
Grillalllrli Sandwidlrs,

Cllllhead lor pk:k""ll our .out llde plc:t.q~•idow
G ''t rill l&lt;'cn)'. WV
Opel! , _. 11 -

r.. ,

- · ....,. (1-..JII-). f.-._,~

Grat HOinc SMIISiealtaat • DiDner
11*11 Sir&amp; llilllt lied.
fried OH

*Call

Dine In or Drive Thru

-: --------.
Buy ont Ham &amp;Swiss on Rye :
Sandwich Get One Free!

•
•

E:rp. 5121/011

lUNCH BUFFET

·

---1
=:·awn••---

Ohio.,....,

....

s.•

:;;.!,

cc:rJuwA~5iiili~ini7iow:s
DINNE._ BUFFETIJ DINNER .BUFfEI
OIII1'Wo MIItiJ
Gimot be oombinrd w. any 01her offm.

'

.

J

.

....

'!!I

1$2..00 Ol'fiTwo Millai~
Ginll!l be rombinod w. any Olhor ctt'Cfi.

~·

'!.

,.

-------------,r--~----~-------,
There "IS" Such A&gt;
Thing As · 1·I I1 There
"IS"
Such
A
Thing
As
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AFree Lunch!

AFree Lunch!-

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Enter Here For A

Enter Here Eor A

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· . $JO Gift Certificate

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$30 Gift Certificate
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228 W Main, Pomeroy
.992-5432

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To ·one Of These Great Resklurants I I To One OfTizese Great Restaurants .1· '·

· Drawing Each Week!-

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Drawing Each Week!

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Gdipnljs Daily Tribue

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Mail to; Free Luadt

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Mail to: Free Lunch
GaUjpolis Daily Tribune

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The Daily Sentinel

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P B A8 •lhe Daily Sentinel

WWW.Wfoj¥4

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Siege of Fort
Randolph set
this weekend
at Krodel Park
POINT fiLEASANT,
W.Va.- The bistOOcal
events 1hat sbaped the
aiea will .oome to Jife
this weebmd with the
eighth annual Siege ·l'!f
Fort Randolph.
The ~vent, -slated for
May 16-1'&amp;, will take
plare Jlt Krodel · Pd's
Fm1 Randolph.
AC00rdi~ 10 Crai_g
Hesson, prmdent of ll.1e ·
Fort
Randolph
(Jomminee, plans aFe
IIIIllerway for this year's
event, set to le bigger
.and better than in previou~ years.
'
~(The siegel is goin_g
to !Je really big Ibis year.
For the frrst time a1 the
Siege of Fmt .Randdlpb
event, there 1&gt;/.ill be a .
IIIlll'ket fair with. a1 least ·
six or seven quality sut- ,
]ffi, or as we would say
today,. retailers,~ He~son

said.
He added thai !be sotlen; will have a variety of
l Sth rennny 5tyle items
nmging from cloihing and

~==io wooden
and
ttems.

-Jazz r.aoa .e»••iiiilo Mialleport

t.IDJDIHIQIU -De
R!iw• •lw..tl Am Cpwcjj'l
of MiMkport will [pm11C11l .bu iin die ~
wi1h Matt Jamci ad die

J,au;

Vmf~Cfiily

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Enw:nfu1e, 1 to I'Dp.m. roo
'Saturday.

38th Moonshine
Festival lights up

·

lillie ..uJl mean ewllliJig Of jaa, ·

1be UIIM
11C11l

iiq,

~ band ll1ld
muic . iin . 'die
Gollllcil headqe""""S •
town.
29G Nol1h ~ ..... Alle..
li
NEW S11LUTSVIU..E MiMepott lkfmil
- Over Memorial Day will be proVidl'ld by local
woo~renc~. &gt;the mnq hills m ~-!!'B!IlJ and delii.
. New SttaitsruJe (m 'SOU!bTi'*ct&amp;
wile
cm ft:rry CoOII•"'f oo Obio -SU ia~«SU
93} llloill come alive with die atdledoor..MY-ti38th annual MoondiiDe 45 ~lie P'"J
l1cltivat
~
Hardware
m·
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...
,_,
ep.wwur.-,
.1...:;w
.M""'1' pod 0-~
d!!I!OI'

May 22-26

area

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......... tmwn ..

lhe MoomirincCapihl(!Jf die
Wadd..mcni!loodr!~

was

made ad iili;wd llfl
·avet 1he USA. Pmp1r; .m·
did Dill drink d!emoe1-.
made a ·ving pndncioJ ;and
oellillg JJ!QO!I!fJine

~by

I'll

Stcxr:
iia .
vy. The eftlllt ii

=:t.--1 lby Kil!g

'Qie fesliival is an out-

Briefs

•u

groaothtbeV~'s"""""'~
to be beld

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Participating
sutlers
:include ·Quattermaster
G:IICJ'll!; B.uSim!ill Bottle;
COlonial Supplies: Ohio
VJ!lley Peddler; Stitches
:in 'JYine: The Wildwood
Shop: David Pierce,
Native hems: and Gregg
Milliken, blacksmitb.
In addition, people will
be able to tour the Indian
v.illage, Which will fell- .
tum native life demon.;
strations in an authentic
~nvironment complete
with wigw.ams and a·
rounsel holllie. 1'bofie in
attendance also will have
1he opportunity to see the
new ~blacksmith shop,
wbich is currently being
completed.
.
The siege is designed ·
to allow re-enactors to
portray the string of
events that transpired in.
the late 1770s and
helped shape the region.
As the story .goes, ·
Chief Cornstalk retiJmed .
to Point Pleasant to -seek
mediation over land ·
deals that had created
friction -between Native .
Americans and the new
settlers after be was
by
repelled from .the
the forces of Cal.
Andrew Lewis in the
Banle of Point !Pleasant
Oct. 10, 1774.
Cmnstalk and his son,
Elinipisco. were slain,
and despite assurances
from authorities that the ·
guilty parties would. be
punished, ·the suspects
were acquitted in a trial.
Comstlllk' s followers
plotted revenge on a
grand scale, and in 1778
planned to · attack Fort
Randolph and other
white settlements along
the Kanawha River.
Even though she lost
ber brother and nephew
to tbe whites,Comslalk's

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. ThefestivalwillqJeD;at5
HUN11NGIDN. W.Va.
p.m. on May 22 with .a
.:._Manylhard-wmtlqgllllflll
F..Wy WJII'ltt ride ·special
GAUJIIOLIS - '1'hc ;uQ ~ of the loclil
011 die .al[ oew Mbaoele .....,.181 4-11 Fun ~ w.ill riva: ii.adlastry soon will eel~
Am,uSteJDelltB midway . lfar ·~Dike plale from .f .until 8 ebrate ltbe 20011 Nationlil .
SlO ._. ,_ .... Jbe Moiler "'411.- ~ May 11 ... · · n...
~~~qJeD-dle • &gt;the GalP'
Uk filbiee
~•6pAD. .foiiow.ecl Ft,e:;~~;...:... ·
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i0a.m.~ 6 p.;m.~J~l 8

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·Instruction will be in
wliltz and slilsa. Classes will
be May -6. 13, 20 and 27.
and June 3 and 10. Waltz
sessions are at 7 p.m. .and
PARKERSBURG, W.Va.
sister Nonhelenia .assist·salw _sessions at 8 p.m. The
Julia-Ann
Square
ed&gt;fue local fOI'Ces in sav..cost ts 56@ per person for Historic District will host a
ing tbe ~ments from
cadi session of six weeks, Victorian Home and &lt;Garden
destruction.
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or $?-20 per person for both · Tour &amp; Tell, on Saturday and
These and-otl:lcr .details
iie810011S. '
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. .SundayJune7and8from,J · . w.ill 'be podliyed tmJugb-.
out the evrot, which lioks
to
tour :will teaoff
!Friday morning as redress .code is lif.ht, casual ture ,...__ home• (fi·~· floor
enacttn anive and set up
Ull.""
"
u ·clothes." Soft eather or only) and three gardens in
camp. According to
suede sole shoes are rec- the Historic District. There
Hesson. this year's event
!lmmend.ed. For mor~ will also be a plant sale. The
will feature a large numinformauon, contact Joe L1 homes and gardens an:.all in . ber of re-enactors from
at. (740) 418-7000 or wallcing distance. The tea is
West Vll'ginia, VIrginia,
mtng_45631 @yahoo.com.
beil\g held on the lawn of
Kentucky,
Ohio,
the "Castle" at 1209 Ann
Pennsylvania and Indians.
~street.
Scbool toU!'Ii will take
UJ:ft-e r Dckets are $15 including
!lace during the • day
rual
the tea. Tickets and maps
i19a.m.
are .available at each
Jay's
events
GAU.liPOUS- ilbe siu- address. Look for signs on
include life skills demon!tents of Allen Sttait, piano the front lawns of each strations, seminars and
inlilrllcitor at .the Frencb Att home. Tickets may be puractivities.. The drama,
Colony, will perform a vari- chased in advance by callwhich portrays the death
ety of musrcal selections ing 3()4..428-8536 or 304of Chief Cornstalk, also ·
during the annual Spring 422-2687 .
will take (Jlare and is slat- ,
Piano llecital at 2 p.m. on
All proceeds will benefit
ed to begm at 2 p.m. The ,
Sunday, May 18, on stage a1 the
Julia-Ann
Square
weekend's events will
the Ariel Theatre. There will Historic District improvecopclude Sunday with a
be a reception foUowing the ment projects. Tours will be
hike at 10 a.m.
recital.
open rain or shine.

Vldorian hoiiie
and prden tour

t&amp;:1:~="'!:;~~~-;!
-.,tee f:: &amp;Orfh, · .llHarrisRi\JCJ'frontPm. 'by~==~~~~~;: iJ&amp;~ear's
7 p.m.
with
a &lt;tu..:H:::: ....-.
Ed!ibiU . Of .equipment
&amp;
.

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•4011 ride~, a~
launt, ief!tf 1 1m, &amp;oc piilllMcDonald5 &lt;Jf New , . pie daowiJ!I.
1n : i n g r o o . • • •
k will '
s . 1lle
· 'lb:2008MiKMot +ine ,A...,.r.... c - 'So ""J'1s
P g · , Will tJike p11ce a 8 . IWay fot'L1fe.
p.m., mDowed by die- ifoul1h
··
••a!Jiald
MR
p , •a&lt;9pm. ·
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wilhall•i1 ae.Aeoeioai .• ii
p.m.,9o'idl ajltdc•••• e !by
GAUJI'IOUS - A jaa
~ Redman ltD fullow 0"1 at Mil be p
"71.~
IIIJI lbe ~ Will con- 1lle GaDia Acwmy · ·
elude with MeaPn Mlll]lhy Sdtool and Jllllior lfich

).lcl)ooald as grand 11W'!lbal, WhiCh is iipOIIiOIIId by

J•u a

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.

Mil be &amp;llailaD1e as ·w~ll as
....&amp;

tours "'1

.a womqg tow-

=·::~~ip~::::!:

baild .activities and ileam

die lbiltory of the ri;v.en;,JIS
weD •

a.ov.&lt; 10 be .a loCk

aDCld.im.operator. ·
1llc U.S. Coalt Gu.ml
w.ill promote .JaomelaruJ
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llld Ylllbe BlUegrass on -:.:;,~it: B.imds on
lbe Dillin tlfaF adn SCW
, May 20 o11t 6;45
GAUJII'OUS
Rro Wt"Xtling at die :fire- p.;m. • the Ariel lh:atte, Ballroom ,dana: lesliODii are
bouae .• 8 p.m.
426 Second Ave.
being tauPt on Tuesdays
• : For iltjomtDJian, call
Special guest is Ed this mnJodo and into June al
(740) 394--2838 or tlie Bingham from Marshall lhe Ariel Theatre banquet
UJ!ic;er at (71()) 394-3133.
University.
room, 426 Second Ave.

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have seven make AD-AMC; Re&amp; named South POY
TL{Iut!Dl!JIICD!t
This ..,as llhe 'SeOO!ld illime
lihat Harless lhad securM [~
team llxmors 1(2006).
Laws cli'!Bed LI!Wt lher !liiruil
liellson Wiilh pedug&gt;s ber
finest 'SeHOO. posting a 16-5
qular w:J!!1011 IIIlBiik with .a
1..'93 ERA. .She romplete.d
all 21 slllllts :and bwiled 136
rinnings, y.ielili._g BOO hits
;and :83 mns &lt;
(57 eanneil)
wi.t!h :88 stnikeouts .and 52
w.alks.
lllis WJIS a lbo.unce 'bac'k

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(V)I1hlor~ot

L, 5p.m .

0\IC lTlOIJI at 'South l'llint, '130!&gt;-m.

RBI Jllld m1 oou'b1es, while
clubbing 1l'hree ih0me runs
.and ·SCOJJing 33 runs. Mahon
ll'ejlistered .a .M9 -slugging
JPCl'OCtllage, which, lby far,
led the Ked:w0111e11 ileam. ·
Mahon eamed ih;t team
booor!i bst ~n .as a designated binm:.
!JuniM second baseman
Shannon Abbott and -sophomMe ifhir.d baseman/Sl1011tslap Kaylyn Heai!ing were
se1eoted lhon0Tiible mention.
Abbott .also had .a lte!!Jliliic

year it'ar Laws .as well, LC111111- mbound tlris seasoo, secur-

iillg the •second ht 'learn An- il\g the second base ji!Jb. She
AMC lbooor lin her QD'eer batted .329 (26-for-79) with
(11006~.

; "iUPPElRS PLAINS ~High School Will be
'holding its lOth .Annual
Eagle Basketball CariJp on
'f!.hy 27 lhrnugb 30 from 9
ain. to noon for boys and
~s entering grlldes 4, 5.
liil86.
. Ounp staff '!'ill include
players ~ IX'l!ll'lbel; fmm
ibe 2007-08 EllS boys :and
gms baskdball teams. The
.camp will focus on fundalll!'!DtBls, inost of which are
U!d by players or Jllltevei.s.
lhit are f'Siil!llti81 for pm-d!wing winning bask;etbaiL
. . 'Cost per player wiD be
$~5. pm-registration « $45
4je frrst day of camp.
hiduded mthe cost :will be
• OlffiP T- shin.
Olecks . should be made
paJable to Eastern Athlelic
BP,osters. Checks liJld registration forms should be sent
·to Howie Caldwell al-'0878
Old
Seven
'Road,
R.cedsville, OH 45772 LOf at
Eastern High School. 38900
SR 7, Reedsville, OB
45772.

Yahoo, 111 'I!OpbQIDore first
lbasem·an, iliini&amp;hed ·second
on the team lin iba11ii'1g a"'m~e Jil .43:8 (56-fur-121!)
mq the ~,gular seasoo.
She lle4 die iteam w.ith 3:8

Home court
.... '

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seven RB.f·s and 11 runs
scored. IDefensivdy, A!bbott
.mmmitted ,l'lriJy four •ert:Oili
in I U! ,clu•nrr~ (.'966 ;fiieldiillg pet.).
Hcadi~ bounced · lbac'k
.lllld fmth ibetween ShiMlt and

third, lbut it did not effect
her offense as ;;he batted

.346 (37-for-1&lt;07) with three
!home runs and 221RB-f s and
nine doubles.
She was 2nd team A'IlAMC South last year as a
freshman.
Dunn split time in left
field and made enough of an
Unplessian ta land a spot on
'the .t,U-Freshman team.
Sh'!'batted .333 (15-for45) with eight Rlilfs, four
doubles, an~ one triple. ·
Rio ended the season with
a 27-17 record overall and
w.as the No. 2 seed in the
NMA
Region ; iiXIX
Tournament. Rio bad 14-'6
AMC recard and by virtue
af beating Ohio !Dominican
head-to-head, claimed .the
South Division championship.

througl• for~ again Rio baseball

players make
AII-AMC list

~l'IIESs

IIY.._W.W.S
SPECIAL TO THE SENTINEL

CIDARvruJE - Four
members of the University
of Rio Grande 'Redmen
b.a s e b a II
team have
b e .e .n
se!Ccted to
tbe
AllAmerican
Mideast
Conference
t e a m .
Sophomore catcher Tyler
eumpton made 2nd team
while three others were
honorable mention.
Plumpton, a transfer from
'Salem lntemationlil. shined
in his.frrst season in the Rio
'
IRed
&amp; White. He led the
ISdtAnpuiMrip
team in 'batting average at
.372
('61-for-164).
Football Golf~
Plumpten tied for the team
never *liP'' ale '"
lead in •home runs with three
Paul P.i.erce iCiilml 29
MASON, W.Va. - The
and
topped the club in
13th Annual Meigs Football pointli .aDd bel,ped Shut
RBI's with 31. He also tied
Golf Tournament will be Jamesdownfcl'muchof,lhe .
far
the team lead with eight
bali.
1be
CavJiliers
second
held Saturday, May 31, at
doubles
and two triples.
forward
bid
23
·
·
with
the Riven;ide Golf Colll'lie
Plumpton
added some
3:so teft 111e
~f!:30 a.m.
needed
punch
in the middle
3be format is a $60 per made just one bas£1 in lhe
of the Redmen lineup as he
jirson, bring your own next 20 mioutcs .as Boston
was ·the team leader in slugerased
a
14-point
deficit
and
1ri4m four-mao scramble.
ging
percentage (.500) and
~s must ha\le a com- todk the lead fur good.
was
second
among the re.guJames, who Shot under 26
l!!aed handicap .of 40 or
lars
in
on-base
percentage
~ve wrth only one team percent in the fii'St four
(A29).
~ber under 10. Prizes games. was 12-of-25 from
He played .well on
Will be awarded for the top lhe field but made just fGIJI'
.defense,
also, committing
three teams.
of his last 14 sbots and
only
two
errors
in 286 total
For more information, missed all five of his 3chances, while splitting
contact Meigs football pointel's.
time
behind the plate and at
coach Mike Chancey at
~weget35or20
first
base.
7~992-2158 or 7~992(from James), it doesn't
Senior pitcher Chris
0064.
matter at Uris point;~
Brown. freshman pitcher
Cavaliel'li .Coach Mite
•
Angel Santiago, and sophoBrown said. 'To lO!le the
.
that'
..
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more
shortstop Ryan Yakura
.game ...
s w.... s more
all
nabbed
honorable men.
«i . · . · than an~
besets 1his 01' Boston Celtics forward Kevin ·Garnett (-5) waves to fans while walking to the bench in the . lion spots .
.IOCKSPRINGS
Brown, the ,lone senior on
t'bal, rm. .not ruDy oon- . third quarter ·Df Game 5 of an NBA Eastern Conference semifinal basketball series ·against
~slrition is oow open for
the Clelo'l'land Cavaliers in Boston on Wednesqay. The Celtics won 9&amp;89 to take a 3-2
1lfe ~2008 flag football sea~r-·-c•
series .l ead.
son, open to boys and girls
in.. grades 1-6 beginning
I
with the 2008"09 school
year. Registration fee is $40
per player, and S25 for each
additional sibling.
Ste'SOO biBb with dleir third
The games will be played
·
ASSOCIAlB&gt;
flfiESS
straight win, all apinst a
· inSeptemberonlhe
Marlins 1am that ·CIDIIC to
School practice
QIS: Firial dale tor both CINCINNATI - Paul town on iti best TW1 of the
Wtmtioo
payment is Jllliih., f'U'It day iD the 'l eUOD.
lbe.Marlim mived with a
~ lst. A · workout/com- m¥!r leagues ~ with a
B~winnill&amp; hit and a ICWlll-plllll 'Wilinill&amp; II1Uk
be at
beld
on . . bloody llOIII!,
' aDd die best record iD the
- a twill
9 a.m.
Meigs
He
won't
fOtJet
either
major JelaUes. By dropping
~L All checb must
~ _out to Meigs Aag . oneThe C'"'"'-.:..;
firstthey
1lireeequaled
gunes Of the
............ ......., b'-·
..,... dJe
weries,
their
Rwithill Lelgue, P.O. Box
~ fomeroy, Ohio 45769. a six-run le.t in die ninth lnn""lt los•n" streak of the
....,
:~10 register online or for Wednesday nigbt, but latlish ~Oiore information go to singled home lhe tiebreak- They almost pulled it Ollt.
1be Reds went into the
fAW.IJlC'igsffi.com or call ing run in only his &amp;i!oond
-541-1222.
big-~ at-bat for a 7-6, ninth with a 6-0 lead and a
• ••
10-innjng viCtory over lhe distinction: The only team in
• "·
florida Marlins.
tbe majors without a blown
His . opposite-field hit to save. Seven batters later, the
Q)NTACTUS
•. . •.
4t.
right on an 0-2 clumgeup lead and the distinction were
•••
:. , •740-446-2342 ext. 33
fromltenyell'inlo brought a IIJDe.
.
'
wave
of
tl'.lm'Mte'
oat0
lhe
"It
was
iCriptcd
until
the
fllrit- 1-7-30118
~eld for a jO)'OIII .pnm!""l- llindl iming." leds !llli!IIF
t'l"l-lfl0&lt;1SOrftl'dOiti104"' 101......
mg, one that ldt .biln with a Dusty Baku said. wLike
1
fl
"""
~:ct.y nose. He didri't Yogi (Bara) said, 'It ain't
• •
trii: Raldolpll, Spof1s W*lr
.cwer until it's over,' and be
(?'0)~ . .... 33
.
"Hopefully, it will only ain't lying."
.............,.,diii7Wiitli&amp;.axn
get bettec, but that's bird to
Luis (ionzaJez broke the
~
imagine,"
said
tbe
25-yearshutout
with an RBI double
.,.. W...ra, SpotU W*lr
old
shortstop,
who
hid
off
Mike
Linooln, who left
('7*») ••e 2342, .rt.aa
-.a"'''doljl!l&gt;uno.oom
drops of fresh blood on the with tbe bases loaded and no
pants leg of his white uni- outs.
Closer Francisoo
~~
. . . , Cnlnl, &amp;p a.1a ......
fonn.
·
Cincinnati
Reds'
Bronson
Arroyo
pitches
against
the
Aorida
Marlir\s
in
the
first
inning
of a
('1.00) U6 ?!Ml!, . .. 33
The
Reds
tnatcbed
their
k:rume~;e,'
.corn
baseball game Wednesday in Cincinnati.

.m

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else~

sa

Reds recover for 7-6 win over Marlins in 10 innings

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The Daily Sentinel

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WWW.Wfoj¥4

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Siege of Fort
Randolph set
this weekend
at Krodel Park
POINT fiLEASANT,
W.Va.- The bistOOcal
events 1hat sbaped the
aiea will .oome to Jife
this weebmd with the
eighth annual Siege ·l'!f
Fort Randolph.
The ~vent, -slated for
May 16-1'&amp;, will take
plare Jlt Krodel · Pd's
Fm1 Randolph.
AC00rdi~ 10 Crai_g
Hesson, prmdent of ll.1e ·
Fort
Randolph
(Jomminee, plans aFe
IIIIllerway for this year's
event, set to le bigger
.and better than in previou~ years.
'
~(The siegel is goin_g
to !Je really big Ibis year.
For the frrst time a1 the
Siege of Fmt .Randdlpb
event, there 1&gt;/.ill be a .
IIIlll'ket fair with. a1 least ·
six or seven quality sut- ,
]ffi, or as we would say
today,. retailers,~ He~son

said.
He added thai !be sotlen; will have a variety of
l Sth rennny 5tyle items
nmging from cloihing and

~==io wooden
and
ttems.

-Jazz r.aoa .e»••iiiilo Mialleport

t.IDJDIHIQIU -De
R!iw• •lw..tl Am Cpwcjj'l
of MiMkport will [pm11C11l .bu iin die ~
wi1h Matt Jamci ad die

J,au;

Vmf~Cfiily

OhiG

., .

Enw:nfu1e, 1 to I'Dp.m. roo
'Saturday.

38th Moonshine
Festival lights up

·

lillie ..uJl mean ewllliJig Of jaa, ·

1be UIIM
11C11l

iiq,

~ band ll1ld
muic . iin . 'die
Gollllcil headqe""""S •
town.
29G Nol1h ~ ..... Alle..
li
NEW S11LUTSVIU..E MiMepott lkfmil
- Over Memorial Day will be proVidl'ld by local
woo~renc~. &gt;the mnq hills m ~-!!'B!IlJ and delii.
. New SttaitsruJe (m 'SOU!bTi'*ct&amp;
wile
cm ft:rry CoOII•"'f oo Obio -SU ia~«SU
93} llloill come alive with die atdledoor..MY-ti38th annual MoondiiDe 45 ~lie P'"J
l1cltivat
~
Hardware
m·
'
f t .L•t• •
...
,_,
ep.wwur.-,
.1...:;w
.M""'1' pod 0-~
d!!I!OI'

May 22-26

area

illll:--

«•

......... tmwn ..

lhe MoomirincCapihl(!Jf die
Wadd..mcni!loodr!~

was

made ad iili;wd llfl
·avet 1he USA. Pmp1r; .m·
did Dill drink d!emoe1-.
made a ·ving pndncioJ ;and
oellillg JJ!QO!I!fJine

~by

I'll

Stcxr:
iia .
vy. The eftlllt ii

=:t.--1 lby Kil!g

'Qie fesliival is an out-

Briefs

•u

groaothtbeV~'s"""""'~
to be beld

-' ~·
~ ..,_

'lr;t!OO,

Participating
sutlers
:include ·Quattermaster
G:IICJ'll!; B.uSim!ill Bottle;
COlonial Supplies: Ohio
VJ!lley Peddler; Stitches
:in 'JYine: The Wildwood
Shop: David Pierce,
Native hems: and Gregg
Milliken, blacksmitb.
In addition, people will
be able to tour the Indian
v.illage, Which will fell- .
tum native life demon.;
strations in an authentic
~nvironment complete
with wigw.ams and a·
rounsel holllie. 1'bofie in
attendance also will have
1he opportunity to see the
new ~blacksmith shop,
wbich is currently being
completed.
.
The siege is designed ·
to allow re-enactors to
portray the string of
events that transpired in.
the late 1770s and
helped shape the region.
As the story .goes, ·
Chief Cornstalk retiJmed .
to Point Pleasant to -seek
mediation over land ·
deals that had created
friction -between Native .
Americans and the new
settlers after be was
by
repelled from .the
the forces of Cal.
Andrew Lewis in the
Banle of Point !Pleasant
Oct. 10, 1774.
Cmnstalk and his son,
Elinipisco. were slain,
and despite assurances
from authorities that the ·
guilty parties would. be
punished, ·the suspects
were acquitted in a trial.
Comstlllk' s followers
plotted revenge on a
grand scale, and in 1778
planned to · attack Fort
Randolph and other
white settlements along
the Kanawha River.
Even though she lost
ber brother and nephew
to tbe whites,Comslalk's

J)a
· .

Ni&amp;ld

j5

. ThefestivalwillqJeD;at5
HUN11NGIDN. W.Va.
p.m. on May 22 with .a
.:._Manylhard-wmtlqgllllflll
F..Wy WJII'ltt ride ·special
GAUJIIOLIS - '1'hc ;uQ ~ of the loclil
011 die .al[ oew Mbaoele .....,.181 4-11 Fun ~ w.ill riva: ii.adlastry soon will eel~
Am,uSteJDelltB midway . lfar ·~Dike plale from .f .until 8 ebrate ltbe 20011 Nationlil .
SlO ._. ,_ .... Jbe Moiler "'411.- ~ May 11 ... · · n...
~~~qJeD-dle • &gt;the GalP'
Uk filbiee
~•6pAD. .foiiow.ecl Ft,e:;~~;...:... ·
•
i0a.m.~ 6 p.;m.~J~l 8

·;::;r.J:m

COuDtY

·Instruction will be in
wliltz and slilsa. Classes will
be May -6. 13, 20 and 27.
and June 3 and 10. Waltz
sessions are at 7 p.m. .and
PARKERSBURG, W.Va.
sister Nonhelenia .assist·salw _sessions at 8 p.m. The
Julia-Ann
Square
ed&gt;fue local fOI'Ces in sav..cost ts 56@ per person for Historic District will host a
ing tbe ~ments from
cadi session of six weeks, Victorian Home and &lt;Garden
destruction.
'
or $?-20 per person for both · Tour &amp; Tell, on Saturday and
These and-otl:lcr .details
iie810011S. '
.
"
. .SundayJune7and8from,J · . w.ill 'be podliyed tmJugb-.
out the evrot, which lioks
to
tour :will teaoff
!Friday morning as redress .code is lif.ht, casual ture ,...__ home• (fi·~· floor
enacttn anive and set up
Ull.""
"
u ·clothes." Soft eather or only) and three gardens in
camp. According to
suede sole shoes are rec- the Historic District. There
Hesson. this year's event
!lmmend.ed. For mor~ will also be a plant sale. The
will feature a large numinformauon, contact Joe L1 homes and gardens an:.all in . ber of re-enactors from
at. (740) 418-7000 or wallcing distance. The tea is
West Vll'ginia, VIrginia,
mtng_45631 @yahoo.com.
beil\g held on the lawn of
Kentucky,
Ohio,
the "Castle" at 1209 Ann
Pennsylvania and Indians.
~street.
Scbool toU!'Ii will take
UJ:ft-e r Dckets are $15 including
!lace during the • day
rual
the tea. Tickets and maps
i19a.m.
are .available at each
Jay's
events
GAU.liPOUS- ilbe siu- address. Look for signs on
include life skills demon!tents of Allen Sttait, piano the front lawns of each strations, seminars and
inlilrllcitor at .the Frencb Att home. Tickets may be puractivities.. The drama,
Colony, will perform a vari- chased in advance by callwhich portrays the death
ety of musrcal selections ing 3()4..428-8536 or 304of Chief Cornstalk, also ·
during the annual Spring 422-2687 .
will take (Jlare and is slat- ,
Piano llecital at 2 p.m. on
All proceeds will benefit
ed to begm at 2 p.m. The ,
Sunday, May 18, on stage a1 the
Julia-Ann
Square
weekend's events will
the Ariel Theatre. There will Historic District improvecopclude Sunday with a
be a reception foUowing the ment projects. Tours will be
hike at 10 a.m.
recital.
open rain or shine.

Vldorian hoiiie
and prden tour

t&amp;:1:~="'!:;~~~-;!
-.,tee f:: &amp;Orfh, · .llHarrisRi\JCJ'frontPm. 'by~==~~~~~;: iJ&amp;~ear's
7 p.m.
with
a &lt;tu..:H:::: ....-.
Ed!ibiU . Of .equipment
&amp;
.

_ _. _ .

.........

• - ,

--

-

!"""'""

•4011 ride~, a~
launt, ief!tf 1 1m, &amp;oc piilllMcDonald5 &lt;Jf New , . pie daowiJ!I.
1n : i n g r o o . • • •
k will '
s . 1lle
· 'lb:2008MiKMot +ine ,A...,.r.... c - 'So ""J'1s
P g · , Will tJike p11ce a 8 . IWay fot'L1fe.
p.m., mDowed by die- ifoul1h
··
••a!Jiald
MR
p , •a&lt;9pm. ·
- . .&amp;..:...I
. f'ri4a:y. ~ 1l Willtxpl
. . .,... .
wilhall•i1 ae.Aeoeioai .• ii
p.m.,9o'idl ajltdc•••• e !by
GAUJI'IOUS - A jaa
~ Redman ltD fullow 0"1 at Mil be p
"71.~
IIIJI lbe ~ Will con- 1lle GaDia Acwmy · ·
elude with MeaPn Mlll]lhy Sdtool and Jllllior lfich

).lcl)ooald as grand 11W'!lbal, WhiCh is iipOIIiOIIId by

J•u a

we*

at

.

Mil be &amp;llailaD1e as ·w~ll as
....&amp;

tours "'1

.a womqg tow-

=·::~~ip~::::!:

baild .activities and ileam

die lbiltory of the ri;v.en;,JIS
weD •

a.ov.&lt; 10 be .a loCk

aDCld.im.operator. ·
1llc U.S. Coalt Gu.ml
w.ill promote .JaomelaruJ
· *MJ~.

II
-

IJIIS

llld Ylllbe BlUegrass on -:.:;,~it: B.imds on
lbe Dillin tlfaF adn SCW
, May 20 o11t 6;45
GAUJII'OUS
Rro Wt"Xtling at die :fire- p.;m. • the Ariel lh:atte, Ballroom ,dana: lesliODii are
bouae .• 8 p.m.
426 Second Ave.
being tauPt on Tuesdays
• : For iltjomtDJian, call
Special guest is Ed this mnJodo and into June al
(740) 394--2838 or tlie Bingham from Marshall lhe Ariel Theatre banquet
UJ!ic;er at (71()) 394-3133.
University.
room, 426 Second Ave.

•

•

.

niaoo .

•
.

I II

~

I

have seven make AD-AMC; Re&amp; named South POY
TL{Iut!Dl!JIICD!t
This ..,as llhe 'SeOO!ld illime
lihat Harless lhad securM [~
team llxmors 1(2006).
Laws cli'!Bed LI!Wt lher !liiruil
liellson Wiilh pedug&gt;s ber
finest 'SeHOO. posting a 16-5
qular w:J!!1011 IIIlBiik with .a
1..'93 ERA. .She romplete.d
all 21 slllllts :and bwiled 136
rinnings, y.ielili._g BOO hits
;and :83 mns &lt;
(57 eanneil)
wi.t!h :88 stnikeouts .and 52
w.alks.
lllis WJIS a lbo.unce 'bac'k

--- ·

(V)I1hlor~ot

L, 5p.m .

0\IC lTlOIJI at 'South l'llint, '130!&gt;-m.

RBI Jllld m1 oou'b1es, while
clubbing 1l'hree ih0me runs
.and ·SCOJJing 33 runs. Mahon
ll'ejlistered .a .M9 -slugging
JPCl'OCtllage, which, lby far,
led the Ked:w0111e11 ileam. ·
Mahon eamed ih;t team
booor!i bst ~n .as a designated binm:.
!JuniM second baseman
Shannon Abbott and -sophomMe ifhir.d baseman/Sl1011tslap Kaylyn Heai!ing were
se1eoted lhon0Tiible mention.
Abbott .also had .a lte!!Jliliic

year it'ar Laws .as well, LC111111- mbound tlris seasoo, secur-

iillg the •second ht 'learn An- il\g the second base ji!Jb. She
AMC lbooor lin her QD'eer batted .329 (26-for-79) with
(11006~.

; "iUPPElRS PLAINS ~High School Will be
'holding its lOth .Annual
Eagle Basketball CariJp on
'f!.hy 27 lhrnugb 30 from 9
ain. to noon for boys and
~s entering grlldes 4, 5.
liil86.
. Ounp staff '!'ill include
players ~ IX'l!ll'lbel; fmm
ibe 2007-08 EllS boys :and
gms baskdball teams. The
.camp will focus on fundalll!'!DtBls, inost of which are
U!d by players or Jllltevei.s.
lhit are f'Siil!llti81 for pm-d!wing winning bask;etbaiL
. . 'Cost per player wiD be
$~5. pm-registration « $45
4je frrst day of camp.
hiduded mthe cost :will be
• OlffiP T- shin.
Olecks . should be made
paJable to Eastern Athlelic
BP,osters. Checks liJld registration forms should be sent
·to Howie Caldwell al-'0878
Old
Seven
'Road,
R.cedsville, OH 45772 LOf at
Eastern High School. 38900
SR 7, Reedsville, OB
45772.

Yahoo, 111 'I!OpbQIDore first
lbasem·an, iliini&amp;hed ·second
on the team lin iba11ii'1g a"'m~e Jil .43:8 (56-fur-121!)
mq the ~,gular seasoo.
She lle4 die iteam w.ith 3:8

Home court
.... '

iiday, May lS, Jll88

..

\I II

~

seven RB.f·s and 11 runs
scored. IDefensivdy, A!bbott
.mmmitted ,l'lriJy four •ert:Oili
in I U! ,clu•nrr~ (.'966 ;fiieldiillg pet.).
Hcadi~ bounced · lbac'k
.lllld fmth ibetween ShiMlt and

third, lbut it did not effect
her offense as ;;he batted

.346 (37-for-1&lt;07) with three
!home runs and 221RB-f s and
nine doubles.
She was 2nd team A'IlAMC South last year as a
freshman.
Dunn split time in left
field and made enough of an
Unplessian ta land a spot on
'the .t,U-Freshman team.
Sh'!'batted .333 (15-for45) with eight Rlilfs, four
doubles, an~ one triple. ·
Rio ended the season with
a 27-17 record overall and
w.as the No. 2 seed in the
NMA
Region ; iiXIX
Tournament. Rio bad 14-'6
AMC recard and by virtue
af beating Ohio !Dominican
head-to-head, claimed .the
South Division championship.

througl• for~ again Rio baseball

players make
AII-AMC list

~l'IIESs

IIY.._W.W.S
SPECIAL TO THE SENTINEL

CIDARvruJE - Four
members of the University
of Rio Grande 'Redmen
b.a s e b a II
team have
b e .e .n
se!Ccted to
tbe
AllAmerican
Mideast
Conference
t e a m .
Sophomore catcher Tyler
eumpton made 2nd team
while three others were
honorable mention.
Plumpton, a transfer from
'Salem lntemationlil. shined
in his.frrst season in the Rio
'
IRed
&amp; White. He led the
ISdtAnpuiMrip
team in 'batting average at
.372
('61-for-164).
Football Golf~
Plumpten tied for the team
never *liP'' ale '"
lead in •home runs with three
Paul P.i.erce iCiilml 29
MASON, W.Va. - The
and
topped the club in
13th Annual Meigs Football pointli .aDd bel,ped Shut
RBI's with 31. He also tied
Golf Tournament will be Jamesdownfcl'muchof,lhe .
far
the team lead with eight
bali.
1be
CavJiliers
second
held Saturday, May 31, at
doubles
and two triples.
forward
bid
23
·
·
with
the Riven;ide Golf Colll'lie
Plumpton
added some
3:so teft 111e
~f!:30 a.m.
needed
punch
in the middle
3be format is a $60 per made just one bas£1 in lhe
of the Redmen lineup as he
jirson, bring your own next 20 mioutcs .as Boston
was ·the team leader in slugerased
a
14-point
deficit
and
1ri4m four-mao scramble.
ging
percentage (.500) and
~s must ha\le a com- todk the lead fur good.
was
second
among the re.guJames, who Shot under 26
l!!aed handicap .of 40 or
lars
in
on-base
percentage
~ve wrth only one team percent in the fii'St four
(A29).
~ber under 10. Prizes games. was 12-of-25 from
He played .well on
Will be awarded for the top lhe field but made just fGIJI'
.defense,
also, committing
three teams.
of his last 14 sbots and
only
two
errors
in 286 total
For more information, missed all five of his 3chances, while splitting
contact Meigs football pointel's.
time
behind the plate and at
coach Mike Chancey at
~weget35or20
first
base.
7~992-2158 or 7~992(from James), it doesn't
Senior pitcher Chris
0064.
matter at Uris point;~
Brown. freshman pitcher
Cavaliel'li .Coach Mite
•
Angel Santiago, and sophoBrown said. 'To lO!le the
.
that'
..
_.
more
shortstop Ryan Yakura
.game ...
s w.... s more
all
nabbed
honorable men.
«i . · . · than an~
besets 1his 01' Boston Celtics forward Kevin ·Garnett (-5) waves to fans while walking to the bench in the . lion spots .
.IOCKSPRINGS
Brown, the ,lone senior on
t'bal, rm. .not ruDy oon- . third quarter ·Df Game 5 of an NBA Eastern Conference semifinal basketball series ·against
~slrition is oow open for
the Clelo'l'land Cavaliers in Boston on Wednesqay. The Celtics won 9&amp;89 to take a 3-2
1lfe ~2008 flag football sea~r-·-c•
series .l ead.
son, open to boys and girls
in.. grades 1-6 beginning
I
with the 2008"09 school
year. Registration fee is $40
per player, and S25 for each
additional sibling.
Ste'SOO biBb with dleir third
The games will be played
·
ASSOCIAlB&gt;
flfiESS
straight win, all apinst a
· inSeptemberonlhe
Marlins 1am that ·CIDIIC to
School practice
QIS: Firial dale tor both CINCINNATI - Paul town on iti best TW1 of the
Wtmtioo
payment is Jllliih., f'U'It day iD the 'l eUOD.
lbe.Marlim mived with a
~ lst. A · workout/com- m¥!r leagues ~ with a
B~winnill&amp; hit and a ICWlll-plllll 'Wilinill&amp; II1Uk
be at
beld
on . . bloody llOIII!,
' aDd die best record iD the
- a twill
9 a.m.
Meigs
He
won't
fOtJet
either
major JelaUes. By dropping
~L All checb must
~ _out to Meigs Aag . oneThe C'"'"'-.:..;
firstthey
1lireeequaled
gunes Of the
............ ......., b'-·
..,... dJe
weries,
their
Rwithill Lelgue, P.O. Box
~ fomeroy, Ohio 45769. a six-run le.t in die ninth lnn""lt los•n" streak of the
....,
:~10 register online or for Wednesday nigbt, but latlish ~Oiore information go to singled home lhe tiebreak- They almost pulled it Ollt.
1be Reds went into the
fAW.IJlC'igsffi.com or call ing run in only his &amp;i!oond
-541-1222.
big-~ at-bat for a 7-6, ninth with a 6-0 lead and a
• ••
10-innjng viCtory over lhe distinction: The only team in
• "·
florida Marlins.
tbe majors without a blown
His . opposite-field hit to save. Seven batters later, the
Q)NTACTUS
•. . •.
4t.
right on an 0-2 clumgeup lead and the distinction were
•••
:. , •740-446-2342 ext. 33
fromltenyell'inlo brought a IIJDe.
.
'
wave
of
tl'.lm'Mte'
oat0
lhe
"It
was
iCriptcd
until
the
fllrit- 1-7-30118
~eld for a jO)'OIII .pnm!""l- llindl iming." leds !llli!IIF
t'l"l-lfl0&lt;1SOrftl'dOiti104"' 101......
mg, one that ldt .biln with a Dusty Baku said. wLike
1
fl
"""
~:ct.y nose. He didri't Yogi (Bara) said, 'It ain't
• •
trii: Raldolpll, Spof1s W*lr
.cwer until it's over,' and be
(?'0)~ . .... 33
.
"Hopefully, it will only ain't lying."
.............,.,diii7Wiitli&amp;.axn
get bettec, but that's bird to
Luis (ionzaJez broke the
~
imagine,"
said
tbe
25-yearshutout
with an RBI double
.,.. W...ra, SpotU W*lr
old
shortstop,
who
hid
off
Mike
Linooln, who left
('7*») ••e 2342, .rt.aa
-.a"'''doljl!l&gt;uno.oom
drops of fresh blood on the with tbe bases loaded and no
pants leg of his white uni- outs.
Closer Francisoo
~~
. . . , Cnlnl, &amp;p a.1a ......
fonn.
·
Cincinnati
Reds'
Bronson
Arroyo
pitches
against
the
Aorida
Marlir\s
in
the
first
inning
of a
('1.00) U6 ?!Ml!, . .. 33
The
Reds
tnatcbed
their
k:rume~;e,'
.corn
baseball game Wednesday in Cincinnati.

.m

~nm

...

else~

sa

Reds recover for 7-6 win over Marlins in 10 innings

....

~gh
a

&amp;t.

·b.i c l e

u.:...

.. ...

..-

..·.

.

"

1

'

\

�hl;e B2 • The oiily St:ntiuel

'

ASSOCIATED PRESS

BEREA - The days of
obscurity are over for the
Cleveland Browns. They' re
no longer being ignored or
underestimated.
After winning a ·smprising
10 games last season. the
!Browns .have been deemed
worthy of e¥eryone's attcntion. The NFL thinks so as
· :the league's schedule makcrs gave them five primetime iJ"\1 games this season
- five more than a year
ago.
Those orange helmets are
fashionable.
The · Browns are in the
Spotlight.
'
'iPeople want to see us, so
we' re excited," wide receiver Braylon Edwards. "We
just .have to deliver now."
With expectations higher
than at any potnt since their
1999 expansion return, the
Browns held their second
day of organized team activities (OTAs) on Wednesday.
The practice session, pushed
inside the club' s indoor
facility beCause of min, was
open to the media, which got
its first chance to jiee
Cleveland's cache of prized
free agents - wide receiver
Donte Stallworth and defensi ve
linemen
Corey
Williams .and Shaun Rogers
- work out.
Unlike mini-camp, the
three weeks of QTAs are not
mandatory. However, players usually repon so they
can take part in conditioning
drills and team meetings or
rehab injuries. One player
notable by his absence . is
tight end Kellen Winslow,
who underwent offseason
knee surgery but has also
made it clear that he wants
the Browns to redo .his contract.
Winslow, who · missed
most of his frrst two seasons
in the league with injuries,
has three more years left on
a contract that the Browns
restructured after he missed

an entire year following .a lhought to be finished when
mOtorcycle accident
.
the Browns signed bim as a
It's unclear if Winslow's free agent rushed for more
absence is health related or than 1,300 yards.
foreshadowing a contract
1be Browns b;irely missed
dispute. Coach Romeo the playoffs, but their near
Crerutel didn't provide any miss elevated their · status
insight intO the reason for inside the league's New
Wmslow .n ot b&amp;ng around. YOlk office and TV netwolt
"When he gets here, we'll boardrooms. They were
find out for..&lt;sure exactly rewarded with five TV
. what that is;" said &lt;JrenneL games, three on Monday
"He' s not here and I haven't night one on Thursday night
spOken with him, so wbcin and one on Sunday night. ·
he gets bere rll be able ·to
The schedule will bring
answer that question."
some quirks the Browns
A year ago, Edwards . haven' t faced. They'll have
missed the first day of long weeks. short weeks and
Ol'As, Taising concerns ·that on game days players will
he and the Browns were at have to Jcill endless hours of
odds over something. The down time at their hotels.
always talkative wideout It's the price for success, but
had little to say about his the Browns wouldn '1 want it
teammate's truancy.
any other way.
"iEverbody goes through
'1t's something new to this
personal trials and tribula- team," ~inest said. "11
lions, .and obviously he has hasn't hajlpened in a while,
something going on that the but it's deserving. We talk
team is aware about." about it. ' We don't -have
Edwards said. "That's his these type of (TV) games.'
business. I don't know Now we've got them. We
what's going on. So that's up asked for it, so now it's here.
to him and coach." ·
Now we have to go ·Out and
Linebacker
Willie perfOIID so we can get more
McGinest, who recently of that It's not something
decided be will retire after that was just handed tO us, as
the upcoming season- his guys know around here, 1t
15th, was aSked if as a team took. us a lot of hard work."
Jeader he would speak wiljl
Teams have buckled under
Winslow.
the pressure of the bright
"I don't know what the sit- lights before,. but McGmest
uation .is with !Kellen, but if feelli the B~ns ,are teady
they needed me to speak to ·for their&lt;Oewfound fame.
him, I'm like a big bmtherto
"' tell guys., :Vtfe've g'!t
him,"· lbc said "'W.e'R .all IIOIJIC !IICW aogwsttmns. A !kit
si!J1P080d Ito be b10tbcu and · of ltbe f~ iBat .bas
family .~ hem, liO 11J1:ea lbtc iiutill,Png to be
ev.et)'body ·Sbou'ld he .a1lle Ito :Jae. We llOiik e811y~ on
talk Ito reach IOiber."
~ It c1oesn"t milly ..matOleYdand's mnag dlam- auntihve,go:outand;pmve
isbyiWJIS oneditbelbjgest iit,"'lbe said. ."Vou"w :seen
reasOIIs for die dUIJ1s .rum- ~ .aJI.q;tar ilellmS before
aroUnd lin :2007_ lf.dw.arils ~ :J.?Iey ~ Jq~ ' fu: .a
and Wms1ow~ ltlr(O .Qf die yearttolbyLID'WIII•duml)n,·
Browils'top~;and !OIISiiUJ. if like &lt;OUr .mllliD'i~
most~ pnonali: *14 l'm canfi.~ 'W.C'u;e
ties; 'tqlt·i i¥ir !foous &lt;On,itbe going~ ,play w~ but .I'm
liie'1d. AIIBQ, cglllll'tel'liadk ftlll :¥Out~ .t o COble &lt;OUt .and
DQmk Anderson~.as p1llilict Su]lllT Bowls ;and liiJ
a ft:o Bow:Jer, !IOOkie lleft ' llltiaber .stuff.
·
·
tdleJoe1i'OOmas stlibiliBiil . '. ~e'.m cngto·WOJ'k bard
the ili~JiMJiive !line Jllld lDID- and see~ · lhappens.fl
ning lbd J~ Lewis,

C~velandr-------------~------------~------------~~

Browns quarterback Qerek
Anderson (3)
takes a snap
as fellow quarterback Brady
Quinn (10)
watches during practice
Wednesday in
Berea. After
winning a surprising 10
games last
season, the .
Browns have
been deemed

fromPageBl
cemed, because he's going
to contribute in other
ways."
Cleveland cut an 88-77
lead to 91-87 on two free
throws by Delonte West
with 46 seconds to play.
But. after running down the
shot clock, Garnett got the
rebound of his own miss
and Paul Pierce hit five free
throws .in tbe last 16 seconds to ice 'it
"This momentum, and
what we did !here tonight,"
Garnett said, ~·we've got 110
fi_gnn: a way tocemy this ,on
the road."
- :
· :rhe &lt;celfulS ~ ~­
home

:bui

they 'have
yet 10 ·win on the road, a

streak that allowed tile
eighth-seeded
Atlanta
Hawks to go the diJtaDQe in
the first round and let
Cleveland baU in tbil
~~~tics Jfter BollloD WOI1 .die

win.
· "They have a good cushJ

..._,.

~I WOii Roland Garms four
rimes,lbree limes m a row. l
don' t have to live that
moment again. I lrnow how

~:;:She announced her deciI
· 11'2 weeks befurc; the start of
~ french Open. W~ she
:JW; woo the past du'ee titles
1Uid four overalL
' ¥ut simply, she realized

.me

~~

'

Cincinnati Reds' Paul Janish celebrates his hit off Florida Marlins pitcher Renyel Pinto to
drive in the winning run in the bottom of the tenth inning during a baseball game.: o~
Wednesday in Cincinnati. Cincinnati won 7-6. Pinto walked two with two outs before Jamsh,
who arrived from the minors eartier in the day, singled to right fteld to end it.

Reds
. from Page 81
·Cordero, who had been 11
perfect 7-for-7 in save
chances, came on and gave
up a two-nm single ilO !libtt

'fri:anor.

.

'·

One out li~ CO.y
Ross .hit a'thrco-J'Illl]\IWif"'
to left field, nislag lh1i filt
~ herounde.dlil'stbase.lt
was . the first .........r
allowed this scaSOD by
Cordero· ~dtbe seoond,in
two -gan;es iby -~s. "
"Yttu cali't.Cw« ~ve· illp
in this ballpadf' .J loss
said. ".Y'Ou"¥e .got il0'.,1a.y
Ito !the· last .I(Jut rin CVCJY
.inning: We did ~ .~.e
got to Cordero . ~
good.. I felt pr~ ~
fortable in the ninth." _ •
Pinto ( l-.2~ walked :two
with two Outs in the 10th
Ito bring .:U)I ·!Janisb, a!ho
drove up from J'riple;A
Louisville .;e'arlie£ ill 1he
.da¥, He got into..tliC'game
as _a ode,fensiv~ tepla·~,. at
Jn · 1he ei_ghth .and\ 1IIUlik
two slick 'Plays, dt:I..Wiui
cheers from the c~d Of
12,756.
' ·'
When he flied out to
deep left field in ibis tln;t
at-bat in the eighth, the
fans gave him .a stapdiag

..

the team, pitched extJa)lely
well for the Redmen, ~­
mari.ly out of the hillpen.
He went 1-1 wit:b :a :5..40
ERA
in IS appearances-with
ion, being the best team in
West had 21 · points for
two
starts
and one~ .
.the NBA," Cavaliers center Cleveland, which missed I 0
game,
a
win
in me 1inaJ
Zydrunas llgaustas said. free throws · in the second
"They really don"t .have to half. llgauskas was held 10 game of the season 1/a'SIIS
C inc in n·a ti-C I e.r.Dto.n t:
win on the road. HopefuJJy, playoff-fow six.
we can take ~ of our
Janies scored II in the Brown pitched 3.8 .: 1/3
business at home and come frrst quarter as the Cavaliers .
back here and have another opened an 18-9 lead, but the
shot"
.
Celtics quickly cut it to
Cleveland todk a 43-29 three points. He scored 12
lead in the second quarter more in the second.
thanks to eight strlright
Then he fmally missed
•'
points from James. But one.
Rondo hit back-tocback 3Rondo set up Garnett ·for
pointers as the Celtics a short jumper, then the
scored 14 of the last l7 Celtics point guard made
. points in the first half. then consecutive 3-pointcrs to
tOok the .lead with the first · make rt 43-37- Pierce .hit a
four points of the lhirll guar- pair of ·free 'throws to cut
ter.
,
Cleveland's l.ead to four
Garnetrs steal on the tint ,points witb 1:33 left. ,
possessio,!'_ of 1be sec~
N . Ia: West (eyes) and
balf sent 'ru~yAIIcllon ~ •ast !Ben Willace (diuiness) .left
break: for 8 1oqg Z.,poinlet ..,_
· "'
th .l"'alti' '
.then Rondols ..b1 Ud fut- ,.... cout! ,.or e ·'1' _cs -- · "'~.
break Ia
made lit 47-46 dntroductJons to avo!d the
yu1': ·
smoke tbat.accompame~ the
for Boston s first lead of the . ~j•me fireworks. West
game.
.
.
· be wenno an eye spe~ Celtics made~ of . cialist after Thursday's
.tberr first 11 ~ m tile ~. "It's hard 10
lleCOIId half, !KXXtDI II.I:WIIl Ia thi
. 'th
straight points to tum .a .01111- PJa.Y • P,D.I: wt ~.eye
point ailvantqe into 1
ilnleu 1011 m a pirate. be
~ lead with itne "'' ,
ald. ... 'il1le CeltiCs lCQl'ed
lftt in idle third RoodoiJIIIr.. 12 pointe ill the fourth quar·
all 'tiiiU*l oui of~~~~- - ~(lame 4 and 22 In otbe
.1n ~.dart; hl• ~ 1im 'I6
of
5,

ovation. His second time
up, he took two fas~balls
for sttikes, then went the
otber way -with a changeup . .
And, he got ·another ovation.
"He didn't beat us;:
Marlins manager · Fredi
Gonzalez
said .
" We
walked two guys to set
that up. But that was our
· best guy out there. You tip
your hat to the kid."
Jared
Burton
(2-1)
pitched a perfect lOth for
the win .
The bullpen's meltdown
ruined another solid performance by Reds starter
Bronson . Arroyo, who
threw
seven
shutout
· innings on short rest.
The Reds pulled ahead
6•0 bebind Jerry Hairston
Jr., who is Cincinnati's
main shortstop with Jeff
K.eppinger sidelin~d by a
broken kneecap. Hairston
bad a single, double and
RBI tJJiple. ·
Adam Dunn also homered, and Ken Griffey Jr.
had a .run-scoring double.
Center fi.eJder Corey
Patterson threw out runners at home and third
base, helping Arroyo get
in position for a win the
old-fashioned way- with.
only three days between
starts. Arroyo gave up five
innings allowing 45 hits and
23 runs with 28 strikeouts .
and only six walks.
Santiago was a victim of
lack of run support early in .
the seas&lt;in, but closed the
season with a pair .of victories to end the season at 3-6
with a 4.82 ERA. Santiago
had II appearances, 10 ·
starts, and compiled 61 2/3
innings.on the season allowing only 55 bits and 41 runs
(33 earned) fanning 42 bat.
ters and walking 26.
_Yakura, like Plumpton,

nits in seven shutout
innings , throwing HI
pitches. He left after striiving out the side in the seve
enth.
Arroyo volunteered to .
work on short rest ·so the
club could get its rotation
back in order following a
weekend doubleheader. In
three previous starts ·on
short rest, Arroyo was I ~o
with a 3 .05 ERA, incl ud"
ing a three -bit shutout
against San Francisco i~
2006.
"I felt great on
days' rest," Arroyo slri~ .
" You pitch one day, and
then you're out there
again. I felt strong.~
Notes: Ross batted leadoff for the fourth time this
season .
Gorizalel
extended his hitting stre~
to seven games. . .•.
Janish's mother happened
to be visiting Louisville
wben he was. called . up.
She made the two-ho11r
drive to Cincinnati with
him, got to. see the ball~
park before the game, then
watched her son
win it. ' ·'- '
,
The
orgamst playe(l
"Happy Birthday" to Tony
Perez, who turned · 66.
Perez phiyed for the Big
Red Machine - his No.
24 is retired - and was. ill
town as a Marlins special
assistatn.
·

three

was a transfer from Salem
International, playing bis
first season for Rio. He was
second on the team with il
.301 batting average ( 40for-133) out of the leadoff
spot. Yakura scored a teamhigh 43 runs while driving
in 16 and lacing seven douc
b1es. He led the team with,a
.503 on-base percentage
and was 23-of-27 in stolen
bases.
Rio Grande posted an 1830 record ovemll and went
4-21 in the AMC.

\

e. ·

was burned out. and
became die first woman to ·
~it the spon wbile atop the
~A rankings.
- . ~'I always based every.thing on thi.s motivation !his flame - tbat was in ·
me. And once I lost that, I
lost many, many things,n
Henin said.
·' . Surprising as her depar~
titre was to the rest of tbe
.w61'ld, it seemed somehow
inevitable to her.
. , After reaching die final at
eacb Grand Slam tourna1flent in 2006, she won 10
tournaments
in
2007,
i~cludi.ng two major!;, But
this season. she started to
find it an ever bigger chore
to. pack her luggage to trave} to townaments. Her legs
felt heavy wben she sbould
have been dancing in the
,backcourt, ready tiJ tum
another one of those
.8p!1flding baclchands into a
Winner.
· ' When she was burt, she
n.o longer · minded if an
injucy lingered. Ever since
being discovered as a child
prodigy, tennis. was everything to ltenin. Now,
:though, tennis was making
it clear that her time was up.
"Everything
became
harder," Henin said "I felt,
deep inside, something was
getting out of my grasp."
· She lost 6-4, 6-0 to Maria
.'Stiarapova in the Australian
Open, tben 6-2, 6-0 to
'Serena Wtlliams at the Sony
Ericsson Open in April the worst loss for a topranked player in nine years.
' At last week's German
Open, Henin lost 5-7, 6-3,
:6-J to Dinara Safma. Then
she pulled out of this
week's Italian Open, citing
ratigue.
. "At the end of the match'·
in Berlin, (retirement) all of
a sudden was there as some~;qg evident,'' Henin said.
. Her announcement · came
a· day after one of the greatest female golfers in histocy
said sbe's quining: Annika
Sorenstam , owner of 10
Jnlljor titles and one of six
women to complete a career
-Grand Slam in her sport, is
walking away at the end of
the season.
Hen in, however, won't
have any sort of farewell
!OUr. She is retiring immediately.
·i ::'1 had reached my limits,
M;d I feel strong and
!JIIteved that I could take
Jiai~ decision ," she said.
!bere ilfe plenty of things
~ I can do. There are no
~ts. 1 did everything I
~ to do in tennis."
~ :1n addition to her four
~ Open titles, Henin
~Q)l .the Australian Open in
~·and the U.S . Open in
j!Qe3 and 2007 , She bas
tietln ranked No. I since
:Nev. 13, 2006, except for a
:ie.\&lt;en-week period last year
~kn Sbarapova held the
lip: spot, and .won neart y
. !lt20 million in career pnzc:
!l)Qiley. .
.
.
~be was a great champion." said Williams, who lost
to · Henin in a contentious
2003 French Open quarterftiutl, "and she gave me a
world of trouble,"
:~ Ute only Grand Slam title
~ · elude
Henin
is
~mbledon, where she was
~~r-up in 2001 and
~· .!'Winning
Wimoledon
)fooJd not make me bappier
tbfii am." she slrid.
-: :Winning again at Roland
~s would make no dif~nce , either, no matter
)clw much that event means ·
J6;'bq. Henin dedicated. her
Urst victory there to her
~her, who died of cancer
)!ben Justine was 12. When
..! ...

.

Beyom:e.

seconds left in the quaner, (Superbad),
Doonie
and he scored eight in the Wahlberg, JoJo Levesque
last five minutes after · and various New England
Patriots.
Boston already led by 12.
.I

w

:fttJling myself and liOClqJI
il
:!Henin retired from tennis
Wednesday, an abrupt end.i.N toll career in which she
seven Grand Slam sintitleS and spent DKJre
Gan 100 weeks ranked No.

. sioh .at a news OOilfi:rcnce

mmutoa. nam.e

~itbout .a

.

~:

fil'lt two,ptiiM.
"'We're loUia.10 pt gee• .I
clan'l bOw~" nod
Doc IJwn llid. "1t ·Miild
.. pal df lii'tGaW,6."
doWII wileD be &lt;
bla •kM C1!J ·Ileal 34 ,pointllll; a
..,..., Wbidl bad - Welt iD ,Jil'tXeCt a five-pallll .21-....nute lpiD. ... DanMll
NIIA-~~e~t 66-16 ......,. :a Jead widl' 4 minutes 10 play (]lblo.a wrmt 10 the Ioclrrr
•
100111 in tile .{oudh ljUIII'tcr
-llljllllar leW'!, - . . Ia the 'thild.
,_., made eight of hia ~ a bruiJeil left lbOUider.
~ =.·.~'fthe p~:z fint ll tbots and IOCmed .10 He U odwlgJrd for Cl MJll
. ,. . . has ever won :a tide 11111p ot1t of his senes-10111 in ~ ~ Thursday.
widaoi.t winning an aw~ llloOtina slump. But be ... Celebri11e1 m the crowd:
llllde just one basket in the ROb_Lowe, Jay-Z,
#'!*·
.
~ could be the fm;t third, a baby hook with 4S Lows C.K., Jonah Hip

-.to
advance lhrough the
aecood round
road

_...,

t

-won
ifes

·'

Celtics

Henin won there last year, it best,~ Venus Williams said.
~~SOCIATED 'PRESS
c.apped a reunion witb her
~Justine Hen in will be
•
~
father md siblings, from mnembeml as one of the
.; UMELE'ITE. Belgtum whom she'd bee.n estraQgod all-time great ...s..~"'"-f in
- 'fbe detenninatioo dW for 'Several years.
women's tennis:~" a
helped Justine Henin beat 1bat was awesome. It woman w1lo .macle up fOI'
&amp;ggts:, stronger opponents WJIS a great feeling, .and I he.- lad of size with a will
~ and again was fadiag. un going to keep dlllt feel- to win .and fi~ spirit
~ ~~=-~ ~Y!';!: ing fi!Rver now,~ she said. tbat was seoood tO none,fl

. 8Y 11M: C·

ft

fromPageBl

AP photo

8t

'

Rio

everyone's
attention.

e(J

:~

.·•

worthy of

The Daily Sentinel . . . . 113

~o. 1 Justine Benin retires from tennis immediately

Wmslow mi~ng as Brnm open practices
IIY T1111 Wti IEII

'•

-~IT-el.&lt;mm

11tunclay. May .15. ~

•

•

•. I

fillment and doggedly pur·
suing lmnis tides.
Now it JIPPCaTS that
chanocid. .._..__ She took
.note • • ~Ctgsten ~ 8elgi.ut .mo was
r.ankal No. 1 and won a
GmJd Slam lilile - retiree~
at 23 bsl year. Clijsten bas
siDoc m3rried and boo0me a
_ _..__
in a sin;lple White
T-mirt and jeans, bel' brown
hair in 3 ponytail. Hooin
&lt;...,..,.~ in Freocb for nine

WTA Tour CEO Liny Soon
said. ~It is rare thai u athIde leaves at the va:y top of
her- game .in tbi.s day .and
it was.n
age, but Justine 1w; always
Throughout her &lt;:aree.T, .played by bel' own rules, in
Henin has had to beat tbe the very best seoBe of those -..::v- L-«-- ~-•.:oiW
oof n
IDIDiiteS uciUIC ..........g quesher 5-foot-5 314, w He!in was away fmm lbe tioos Wednesday. She oeve.r
126-pound fnune, she had IDur for months at a time in · lOst~ composure and held
to figure out bow to deal 2004 and 2005 becauBe of the 1111tropltone fumly.
wil!b foes wbo could hit the an enezgy-sapping blood
1be new~ oonfere.nce was
ball baider. With a superb virus .and as~ injuries, ~t the _Justme Nl acade~y
one-handed
back!band, including tO be.- bJee and ID I VIUage about 20 m1les
amazing speed and grit, she back. In early :W07, sbe outside _o f Brussels. It bas a
roBe to the top of the sport divorced from Pieu:e-Yves smatite11Dg of bel' beloved
"She always challenged Hardenne and dropped bis day courts, wbere she
herself to play her best ten- last name.
wants to ttain .and coach
nis no matter what the cirThroughout last season, youngsters. . .
cumstances. She was just a Henin said she had finally
Family and children may
real fighter, so 1 ihink that found a balance in her life oome., but for nuw, and for
was really what made her between personal self-ful- OIKIC., dJere is oo rush.

"'D::;scd

....Jalb

'

,..,.._
8elgi111m's J111stine Henirt addresses the media at·j111stine !Ill.
tennis d111b irt Umelette. Belgium ,' on We!ilnesday aftEr
announcing her immediate ·re tirement from professionai
tennis.

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�hl;e B2 • The oiily St:ntiuel

'

ASSOCIATED PRESS

BEREA - The days of
obscurity are over for the
Cleveland Browns. They' re
no longer being ignored or
underestimated.
After winning a ·smprising
10 games last season. the
!Browns .have been deemed
worthy of e¥eryone's attcntion. The NFL thinks so as
· :the league's schedule makcrs gave them five primetime iJ"\1 games this season
- five more than a year
ago.
Those orange helmets are
fashionable.
The · Browns are in the
Spotlight.
'
'iPeople want to see us, so
we' re excited," wide receiver Braylon Edwards. "We
just .have to deliver now."
With expectations higher
than at any potnt since their
1999 expansion return, the
Browns held their second
day of organized team activities (OTAs) on Wednesday.
The practice session, pushed
inside the club' s indoor
facility beCause of min, was
open to the media, which got
its first chance to jiee
Cleveland's cache of prized
free agents - wide receiver
Donte Stallworth and defensi ve
linemen
Corey
Williams .and Shaun Rogers
- work out.
Unlike mini-camp, the
three weeks of QTAs are not
mandatory. However, players usually repon so they
can take part in conditioning
drills and team meetings or
rehab injuries. One player
notable by his absence . is
tight end Kellen Winslow,
who underwent offseason
knee surgery but has also
made it clear that he wants
the Browns to redo .his contract.
Winslow, who · missed
most of his frrst two seasons
in the league with injuries,
has three more years left on
a contract that the Browns
restructured after he missed

an entire year following .a lhought to be finished when
mOtorcycle accident
.
the Browns signed bim as a
It's unclear if Winslow's free agent rushed for more
absence is health related or than 1,300 yards.
foreshadowing a contract
1be Browns b;irely missed
dispute. Coach Romeo the playoffs, but their near
Crerutel didn't provide any miss elevated their · status
insight intO the reason for inside the league's New
Wmslow .n ot b&amp;ng around. YOlk office and TV netwolt
"When he gets here, we'll boardrooms. They were
find out for..&lt;sure exactly rewarded with five TV
. what that is;" said &lt;JrenneL games, three on Monday
"He' s not here and I haven't night one on Thursday night
spOken with him, so wbcin and one on Sunday night. ·
he gets bere rll be able ·to
The schedule will bring
answer that question."
some quirks the Browns
A year ago, Edwards . haven' t faced. They'll have
missed the first day of long weeks. short weeks and
Ol'As, Taising concerns ·that on game days players will
he and the Browns were at have to Jcill endless hours of
odds over something. The down time at their hotels.
always talkative wideout It's the price for success, but
had little to say about his the Browns wouldn '1 want it
teammate's truancy.
any other way.
"iEverbody goes through
'1t's something new to this
personal trials and tribula- team," ~inest said. "11
lions, .and obviously he has hasn't hajlpened in a while,
something going on that the but it's deserving. We talk
team is aware about." about it. ' We don't -have
Edwards said. "That's his these type of (TV) games.'
business. I don't know Now we've got them. We
what's going on. So that's up asked for it, so now it's here.
to him and coach." ·
Now we have to go ·Out and
Linebacker
Willie perfOIID so we can get more
McGinest, who recently of that It's not something
decided be will retire after that was just handed tO us, as
the upcoming season- his guys know around here, 1t
15th, was aSked if as a team took. us a lot of hard work."
Jeader he would speak wiljl
Teams have buckled under
Winslow.
the pressure of the bright
"I don't know what the sit- lights before,. but McGmest
uation .is with !Kellen, but if feelli the B~ns ,are teady
they needed me to speak to ·for their&lt;Oewfound fame.
him, I'm like a big bmtherto
"' tell guys., :Vtfe've g'!t
him,"· lbc said "'W.e'R .all IIOIJIC !IICW aogwsttmns. A !kit
si!J1P080d Ito be b10tbcu and · of ltbe f~ iBat .bas
family .~ hem, liO 11J1:ea lbtc iiutill,Png to be
ev.et)'body ·Sbou'ld he .a1lle Ito :Jae. We llOiik e811y~ on
talk Ito reach IOiber."
~ It c1oesn"t milly ..matOleYdand's mnag dlam- auntihve,go:outand;pmve
isbyiWJIS oneditbelbjgest iit,"'lbe said. ."Vou"w :seen
reasOIIs for die dUIJ1s .rum- ~ .aJI.q;tar ilellmS before
aroUnd lin :2007_ lf.dw.arils ~ :J.?Iey ~ Jq~ ' fu: .a
and Wms1ow~ ltlr(O .Qf die yearttolbyLID'WIII•duml)n,·
Browils'top~;and !OIISiiUJ. if like &lt;OUr .mllliD'i~
most~ pnonali: *14 l'm canfi.~ 'W.C'u;e
ties; 'tqlt·i i¥ir !foous &lt;On,itbe going~ ,play w~ but .I'm
liie'1d. AIIBQ, cglllll'tel'liadk ftlll :¥Out~ .t o COble &lt;OUt .and
DQmk Anderson~.as p1llilict Su]lllT Bowls ;and liiJ
a ft:o Bow:Jer, !IOOkie lleft ' llltiaber .stuff.
·
·
tdleJoe1i'OOmas stlibiliBiil . '. ~e'.m cngto·WOJ'k bard
the ili~JiMJiive !line Jllld lDID- and see~ · lhappens.fl
ning lbd J~ Lewis,

C~velandr-------------~------------~------------~~

Browns quarterback Qerek
Anderson (3)
takes a snap
as fellow quarterback Brady
Quinn (10)
watches during practice
Wednesday in
Berea. After
winning a surprising 10
games last
season, the .
Browns have
been deemed

fromPageBl
cemed, because he's going
to contribute in other
ways."
Cleveland cut an 88-77
lead to 91-87 on two free
throws by Delonte West
with 46 seconds to play.
But. after running down the
shot clock, Garnett got the
rebound of his own miss
and Paul Pierce hit five free
throws .in tbe last 16 seconds to ice 'it
"This momentum, and
what we did !here tonight,"
Garnett said, ~·we've got 110
fi_gnn: a way tocemy this ,on
the road."
- :
· :rhe &lt;celfulS ~ ~­
home

:bui

they 'have
yet 10 ·win on the road, a

streak that allowed tile
eighth-seeded
Atlanta
Hawks to go the diJtaDQe in
the first round and let
Cleveland baU in tbil
~~~tics Jfter BollloD WOI1 .die

win.
· "They have a good cushJ

..._,.

~I WOii Roland Garms four
rimes,lbree limes m a row. l
don' t have to live that
moment again. I lrnow how

~:;:She announced her deciI
· 11'2 weeks befurc; the start of
~ french Open. W~ she
:JW; woo the past du'ee titles
1Uid four overalL
' ¥ut simply, she realized

.me

~~

'

Cincinnati Reds' Paul Janish celebrates his hit off Florida Marlins pitcher Renyel Pinto to
drive in the winning run in the bottom of the tenth inning during a baseball game.: o~
Wednesday in Cincinnati. Cincinnati won 7-6. Pinto walked two with two outs before Jamsh,
who arrived from the minors eartier in the day, singled to right fteld to end it.

Reds
. from Page 81
·Cordero, who had been 11
perfect 7-for-7 in save
chances, came on and gave
up a two-nm single ilO !libtt

'fri:anor.

.

'·

One out li~ CO.y
Ross .hit a'thrco-J'Illl]\IWif"'
to left field, nislag lh1i filt
~ herounde.dlil'stbase.lt
was . the first .........r
allowed this scaSOD by
Cordero· ~dtbe seoond,in
two -gan;es iby -~s. "
"Yttu cali't.Cw« ~ve· illp
in this ballpadf' .J loss
said. ".Y'Ou"¥e .got il0'.,1a.y
Ito !the· last .I(Jut rin CVCJY
.inning: We did ~ .~.e
got to Cordero . ~
good.. I felt pr~ ~
fortable in the ninth." _ •
Pinto ( l-.2~ walked :two
with two Outs in the 10th
Ito bring .:U)I ·!Janisb, a!ho
drove up from J'riple;A
Louisville .;e'arlie£ ill 1he
.da¥, He got into..tliC'game
as _a ode,fensiv~ tepla·~,. at
Jn · 1he ei_ghth .and\ 1IIUlik
two slick 'Plays, dt:I..Wiui
cheers from the c~d Of
12,756.
' ·'
When he flied out to
deep left field in ibis tln;t
at-bat in the eighth, the
fans gave him .a stapdiag

..

the team, pitched extJa)lely
well for the Redmen, ~­
mari.ly out of the hillpen.
He went 1-1 wit:b :a :5..40
ERA
in IS appearances-with
ion, being the best team in
West had 21 · points for
two
starts
and one~ .
.the NBA," Cavaliers center Cleveland, which missed I 0
game,
a
win
in me 1inaJ
Zydrunas llgaustas said. free throws · in the second
"They really don"t .have to half. llgauskas was held 10 game of the season 1/a'SIIS
C inc in n·a ti-C I e.r.Dto.n t:
win on the road. HopefuJJy, playoff-fow six.
we can take ~ of our
Janies scored II in the Brown pitched 3.8 .: 1/3
business at home and come frrst quarter as the Cavaliers .
back here and have another opened an 18-9 lead, but the
shot"
.
Celtics quickly cut it to
Cleveland todk a 43-29 three points. He scored 12
lead in the second quarter more in the second.
thanks to eight strlright
Then he fmally missed
•'
points from James. But one.
Rondo hit back-tocback 3Rondo set up Garnett ·for
pointers as the Celtics a short jumper, then the
scored 14 of the last l7 Celtics point guard made
. points in the first half. then consecutive 3-pointcrs to
tOok the .lead with the first · make rt 43-37- Pierce .hit a
four points of the lhirll guar- pair of ·free 'throws to cut
ter.
,
Cleveland's l.ead to four
Garnetrs steal on the tint ,points witb 1:33 left. ,
possessio,!'_ of 1be sec~
N . Ia: West (eyes) and
balf sent 'ru~yAIIcllon ~ •ast !Ben Willace (diuiness) .left
break: for 8 1oqg Z.,poinlet ..,_
· "'
th .l"'alti' '
.then Rondols ..b1 Ud fut- ,.... cout! ,.or e ·'1' _cs -- · "'~.
break Ia
made lit 47-46 dntroductJons to avo!d the
yu1': ·
smoke tbat.accompame~ the
for Boston s first lead of the . ~j•me fireworks. West
game.
.
.
· be wenno an eye spe~ Celtics made~ of . cialist after Thursday's
.tberr first 11 ~ m tile ~. "It's hard 10
lleCOIId half, !KXXtDI II.I:WIIl Ia thi
. 'th
straight points to tum .a .01111- PJa.Y • P,D.I: wt ~.eye
point ailvantqe into 1
ilnleu 1011 m a pirate. be
~ lead with itne "'' ,
ald. ... 'il1le CeltiCs lCQl'ed
lftt in idle third RoodoiJIIIr.. 12 pointe ill the fourth quar·
all 'tiiiU*l oui of~~~~- - ~(lame 4 and 22 In otbe
.1n ~.dart; hl• ~ 1im 'I6
of
5,

ovation. His second time
up, he took two fas~balls
for sttikes, then went the
otber way -with a changeup . .
And, he got ·another ovation.
"He didn't beat us;:
Marlins manager · Fredi
Gonzalez
said .
" We
walked two guys to set
that up. But that was our
· best guy out there. You tip
your hat to the kid."
Jared
Burton
(2-1)
pitched a perfect lOth for
the win .
The bullpen's meltdown
ruined another solid performance by Reds starter
Bronson . Arroyo, who
threw
seven
shutout
· innings on short rest.
The Reds pulled ahead
6•0 bebind Jerry Hairston
Jr., who is Cincinnati's
main shortstop with Jeff
K.eppinger sidelin~d by a
broken kneecap. Hairston
bad a single, double and
RBI tJJiple. ·
Adam Dunn also homered, and Ken Griffey Jr.
had a .run-scoring double.
Center fi.eJder Corey
Patterson threw out runners at home and third
base, helping Arroyo get
in position for a win the
old-fashioned way- with.
only three days between
starts. Arroyo gave up five
innings allowing 45 hits and
23 runs with 28 strikeouts .
and only six walks.
Santiago was a victim of
lack of run support early in .
the seas&lt;in, but closed the
season with a pair .of victories to end the season at 3-6
with a 4.82 ERA. Santiago
had II appearances, 10 ·
starts, and compiled 61 2/3
innings.on the season allowing only 55 bits and 41 runs
(33 earned) fanning 42 bat.
ters and walking 26.
_Yakura, like Plumpton,

nits in seven shutout
innings , throwing HI
pitches. He left after striiving out the side in the seve
enth.
Arroyo volunteered to .
work on short rest ·so the
club could get its rotation
back in order following a
weekend doubleheader. In
three previous starts ·on
short rest, Arroyo was I ~o
with a 3 .05 ERA, incl ud"
ing a three -bit shutout
against San Francisco i~
2006.
"I felt great on
days' rest," Arroyo slri~ .
" You pitch one day, and
then you're out there
again. I felt strong.~
Notes: Ross batted leadoff for the fourth time this
season .
Gorizalel
extended his hitting stre~
to seven games. . .•.
Janish's mother happened
to be visiting Louisville
wben he was. called . up.
She made the two-ho11r
drive to Cincinnati with
him, got to. see the ball~
park before the game, then
watched her son
win it. ' ·'- '
,
The
orgamst playe(l
"Happy Birthday" to Tony
Perez, who turned · 66.
Perez phiyed for the Big
Red Machine - his No.
24 is retired - and was. ill
town as a Marlins special
assistatn.
·

three

was a transfer from Salem
International, playing bis
first season for Rio. He was
second on the team with il
.301 batting average ( 40for-133) out of the leadoff
spot. Yakura scored a teamhigh 43 runs while driving
in 16 and lacing seven douc
b1es. He led the team with,a
.503 on-base percentage
and was 23-of-27 in stolen
bases.
Rio Grande posted an 1830 record ovemll and went
4-21 in the AMC.

\

e. ·

was burned out. and
became die first woman to ·
~it the spon wbile atop the
~A rankings.
- . ~'I always based every.thing on thi.s motivation !his flame - tbat was in ·
me. And once I lost that, I
lost many, many things,n
Henin said.
·' . Surprising as her depar~
titre was to the rest of tbe
.w61'ld, it seemed somehow
inevitable to her.
. , After reaching die final at
eacb Grand Slam tourna1flent in 2006, she won 10
tournaments
in
2007,
i~cludi.ng two major!;, But
this season. she started to
find it an ever bigger chore
to. pack her luggage to trave} to townaments. Her legs
felt heavy wben she sbould
have been dancing in the
,backcourt, ready tiJ tum
another one of those
.8p!1flding baclchands into a
Winner.
· ' When she was burt, she
n.o longer · minded if an
injucy lingered. Ever since
being discovered as a child
prodigy, tennis. was everything to ltenin. Now,
:though, tennis was making
it clear that her time was up.
"Everything
became
harder," Henin said "I felt,
deep inside, something was
getting out of my grasp."
· She lost 6-4, 6-0 to Maria
.'Stiarapova in the Australian
Open, tben 6-2, 6-0 to
'Serena Wtlliams at the Sony
Ericsson Open in April the worst loss for a topranked player in nine years.
' At last week's German
Open, Henin lost 5-7, 6-3,
:6-J to Dinara Safma. Then
she pulled out of this
week's Italian Open, citing
ratigue.
. "At the end of the match'·
in Berlin, (retirement) all of
a sudden was there as some~;qg evident,'' Henin said.
. Her announcement · came
a· day after one of the greatest female golfers in histocy
said sbe's quining: Annika
Sorenstam , owner of 10
Jnlljor titles and one of six
women to complete a career
-Grand Slam in her sport, is
walking away at the end of
the season.
Hen in, however, won't
have any sort of farewell
!OUr. She is retiring immediately.
·i ::'1 had reached my limits,
M;d I feel strong and
!JIIteved that I could take
Jiai~ decision ," she said.
!bere ilfe plenty of things
~ I can do. There are no
~ts. 1 did everything I
~ to do in tennis."
~ :1n addition to her four
~ Open titles, Henin
~Q)l .the Australian Open in
~·and the U.S . Open in
j!Qe3 and 2007 , She bas
tietln ranked No. I since
:Nev. 13, 2006, except for a
:ie.\&lt;en-week period last year
~kn Sbarapova held the
lip: spot, and .won neart y
. !lt20 million in career pnzc:
!l)Qiley. .
.
.
~be was a great champion." said Williams, who lost
to · Henin in a contentious
2003 French Open quarterftiutl, "and she gave me a
world of trouble,"
:~ Ute only Grand Slam title
~ · elude
Henin
is
~mbledon, where she was
~~r-up in 2001 and
~· .!'Winning
Wimoledon
)fooJd not make me bappier
tbfii am." she slrid.
-: :Winning again at Roland
~s would make no dif~nce , either, no matter
)clw much that event means ·
J6;'bq. Henin dedicated. her
Urst victory there to her
~her, who died of cancer
)!ben Justine was 12. When
..! ...

.

Beyom:e.

seconds left in the quaner, (Superbad),
Doonie
and he scored eight in the Wahlberg, JoJo Levesque
last five minutes after · and various New England
Patriots.
Boston already led by 12.
.I

w

:fttJling myself and liOClqJI
il
:!Henin retired from tennis
Wednesday, an abrupt end.i.N toll career in which she
seven Grand Slam sintitleS and spent DKJre
Gan 100 weeks ranked No.

. sioh .at a news OOilfi:rcnce

mmutoa. nam.e

~itbout .a

.

~:

fil'lt two,ptiiM.
"'We're loUia.10 pt gee• .I
clan'l bOw~" nod
Doc IJwn llid. "1t ·Miild
.. pal df lii'tGaW,6."
doWII wileD be &lt;
bla •kM C1!J ·Ileal 34 ,pointllll; a
..,..., Wbidl bad - Welt iD ,Jil'tXeCt a five-pallll .21-....nute lpiD. ... DanMll
NIIA-~~e~t 66-16 ......,. :a Jead widl' 4 minutes 10 play (]lblo.a wrmt 10 the Ioclrrr
•
100111 in tile .{oudh ljUIII'tcr
-llljllllar leW'!, - . . Ia the 'thild.
,_., made eight of hia ~ a bruiJeil left lbOUider.
~ =.·.~'fthe p~:z fint ll tbots and IOCmed .10 He U odwlgJrd for Cl MJll
. ,. . . has ever won :a tide 11111p ot1t of his senes-10111 in ~ ~ Thursday.
widaoi.t winning an aw~ llloOtina slump. But be ... Celebri11e1 m the crowd:
llllde just one basket in the ROb_Lowe, Jay-Z,
#'!*·
.
~ could be the fm;t third, a baby hook with 4S Lows C.K., Jonah Hip

-.to
advance lhrough the
aecood round
road

_...,

t

-won
ifes

·'

Celtics

Henin won there last year, it best,~ Venus Williams said.
~~SOCIATED 'PRESS
c.apped a reunion witb her
~Justine Hen in will be
•
~
father md siblings, from mnembeml as one of the
.; UMELE'ITE. Belgtum whom she'd bee.n estraQgod all-time great ...s..~"'"-f in
- 'fbe detenninatioo dW for 'Several years.
women's tennis:~" a
helped Justine Henin beat 1bat was awesome. It woman w1lo .macle up fOI'
&amp;ggts:, stronger opponents WJIS a great feeling, .and I he.- lad of size with a will
~ and again was fadiag. un going to keep dlllt feel- to win .and fi~ spirit
~ ~~=-~ ~Y!';!: ing fi!Rver now,~ she said. tbat was seoood tO none,fl

. 8Y 11M: C·

ft

fromPageBl

AP photo

8t

'

Rio

everyone's
attention.

e(J

:~

.·•

worthy of

The Daily Sentinel . . . . 113

~o. 1 Justine Benin retires from tennis immediately

Wmslow mi~ng as Brnm open practices
IIY T1111 Wti IEII

'•

-~IT-el.&lt;mm

11tunclay. May .15. ~

•

•

•. I

fillment and doggedly pur·
suing lmnis tides.
Now it JIPPCaTS that
chanocid. .._..__ She took
.note • • ~Ctgsten ~ 8elgi.ut .mo was
r.ankal No. 1 and won a
GmJd Slam lilile - retiree~
at 23 bsl year. Clijsten bas
siDoc m3rried and boo0me a
_ _..__
in a sin;lple White
T-mirt and jeans, bel' brown
hair in 3 ponytail. Hooin
&lt;...,..,.~ in Freocb for nine

WTA Tour CEO Liny Soon
said. ~It is rare thai u athIde leaves at the va:y top of
her- game .in tbi.s day .and
it was.n
age, but Justine 1w; always
Throughout her &lt;:aree.T, .played by bel' own rules, in
Henin has had to beat tbe the very best seoBe of those -..::v- L-«-- ~-•.:oiW
oof n
IDIDiiteS uciUIC ..........g quesher 5-foot-5 314, w He!in was away fmm lbe tioos Wednesday. She oeve.r
126-pound fnune, she had IDur for months at a time in · lOst~ composure and held
to figure out bow to deal 2004 and 2005 becauBe of the 1111tropltone fumly.
wil!b foes wbo could hit the an enezgy-sapping blood
1be new~ oonfere.nce was
ball baider. With a superb virus .and as~ injuries, ~t the _Justme Nl acade~y
one-handed
back!band, including tO be.- bJee and ID I VIUage about 20 m1les
amazing speed and grit, she back. In early :W07, sbe outside _o f Brussels. It bas a
roBe to the top of the sport divorced from Pieu:e-Yves smatite11Dg of bel' beloved
"She always challenged Hardenne and dropped bis day courts, wbere she
herself to play her best ten- last name.
wants to ttain .and coach
nis no matter what the cirThroughout last season, youngsters. . .
cumstances. She was just a Henin said she had finally
Family and children may
real fighter, so 1 ihink that found a balance in her life oome., but for nuw, and for
was really what made her between personal self-ful- OIKIC., dJere is oo rush.

"'D::;scd

....Jalb

'

,..,.._
8elgi111m's J111stine Henirt addresses the media at·j111stine !Ill.
tennis d111b irt Umelette. Belgium ,' on We!ilnesday aftEr
announcing her immediate ·re tirement from professionai
tennis.

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B4 • The llaily Serdiitd .

15.,2001

The Daily Sentinel • Page B5

•

Pats owner Kraft pleased with Boston Herald's apology 1.
liT lis

"=nn

=

.O.SSOC~TED

PRESS

aw,ay .a firsi-JIOODd ,draft pid: unidenli1iied sooroes.
Bosmn HeAld for aoing baseball.
what is unpi'OCedented in
Patriots spolcesman 'Stacey this year after .an investiga1'or 3 112 mcmths rtbat
terms of reoogoiring tllelr James said the ·t eam bad no tion found llbe P~ 'Vio- stoJy bas lbung .out dlore Ill«
•Cfrol" in &lt;1 llllljclr way,~ Kraft immediate · oomment on lated league rules by ~ .a o1GUd .anti we ,doniod iii
Sllid. "fm really delighted Speot.e:r's rema11ks.
New Y&lt;mt Jets ooacbe~ oo right U]!l front,~ lKn'ft said
witlb !lbat. but I wish it never
W.alsb told Goodell be did the sideline cluriiig llhe sea- "'When ;the ~ c8Ued
h¥JW!Cd~
not tape llhe walkit!hroug,h son &lt;Gpe!ICI:
Stacey James wiith llhe stmy,
Knft ·said 'he 4idn't ll!bink be said iit's OODl'JeteiY iflilse
The apoklgy .came a day and had 100 lrnowJec'!ge that
after &lt;1 meeting between any rOiiber Patri0ts employees ilbe in~esli@lii0n Chat \began .and unsubstantiated~
NFL ,oommissioner Rooger did S!l, Goodell sirid: The ltheo would ~ve :a tasting
[n llhe l\1)01ogy, pu'blisbed
Goodell .and Walsb pmd•llW1 oommissiooer ..also indicatod stain ron the dub.
in
the
newspaper'.s
no m&lt;~.jor 11evela!ioos .abmn lhe oonsidered the investiga- · "I 'Was un~y w.ith what Wednesday ediliion and ,p ostllhe iiC.Uil 's taping proce- tiBn over ·after mcetmg willb transpifed i.n the ifall, die .e d &lt;0n its Web site, llibe
Walsh on ~uesday.
actiens oof some of our Herald said llhe st0ry was
dures.

R&gt;XBOROUGH., Mass.
New Engl.and Patriots
owner Robert Kraft &lt;lllmlplin!C!!!Ied the Bostcm llmlld
011 wednesday for~[­
in,g f« a story lhat said Iris
team vi~ .a St. Louis
Ra!m w.all:llhrough bef&lt;m:
ilbc 1Q02 Super Bowt
He's ~ diSll)lp!Jinted.~
dloo;gb. that the ~
~a story duU was rom~~ llhint I spcal&lt;: for .all
pkfdy falSe: and unsubstan- Palriot fans,~ K!raft said.
tiated ~ KRft said in an "We'.re relieved duU Ibis is
•
Udennew
with
Tbe o~er .and you see !lhat ·!!his is
Associated .Press.
.n0nsense and we WeFe
He also said be OOesn 1 unfmJy accused and we're
·
!know why fernner New 1110v.ing ·On.~
England video a~sistant Matt
Kntft lij)Me by tcleph1me
Walsh dido't refute ·the story be'f0Fe 'Sen. Aden Specter
1IO!JD .after it came out on · said in Washington i!hat be
Feb. 1., die day !before the wants an independent invesP.attiols 0Sl
Super Bowl liigatiBn '(1)f the Patriots' illlp'l0 tbe New York Giants, 17- mg of opposing coaches'
14, ruini11g lheir guest fur an si.grulls ·s.imillar ~o ilhe
'unbeaten season.
·MltcheU Repmi! oo perfor'1 ~st oomplimem the mance-enbancing ·drugs in
-

otribune - Sentinel ClASSIFIED

me

"The orily thing I oon't
&lt;Understand is w-hat be said
{Tuesday) he .c ould have
s.aid !!hat .a loog «me "YlO and
defused it within 24.00ursof
the story coming •l'lut,~ Kraft
s.aid. "ff you read the iblogs
or read pe19ple or talk m people, everyene assumed he
was the source •aT was ane
step removed jjrom t'he
source .... You'll have to
decide why he waited.~
Goodell fined ooac"h .Bill
iBeliohidk $501M}(i)(i) and the
team $2.50,00!!1 and too'k

empleyees, .and we were based &lt;(l)n sources · "it
penalized severely fm that,~
believed to be ae&amp;llle.~
he said. "We said back in
. "'We new :lmew ilhat this
S~mber lhat we had disclesed all ,Gf our actiens as report w.as false, and that no
an organiution to the tape af ltbe 'Wallcrboough ever
1~. You c.an see this m
s eX!isted,n the paper wrote.
"We should mn bave pubtrue.'
lished
,fue allegatJien in .fue
"The eJtii(\)DeOUS story really 1ed to a second round rof abs.enoe ·a f tfiirmer vertificainquisitiens after 'SeptembeJ:, tion. The B0ston Hor.alfii
and it really was a distrac- regrets the damage .done lo
tion. The s.ad pmt (is) tihJn it · the t~;am by publication .of
took .aw.ay ifirom an i '8-'6 t'he allegatJion. and sincerely
Super BoWl season.~
a)l0lagizes te its Teaders and
The Herald's story cited to t'he New England Palriots'

In One Week With Us
REACH OVER 285,000 PROSPECTS
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E-ttlll
classlfied@mvctailytribune.com

..

Qtribune
...,_ _ _ _ _ _..___ _or:,;'..;,Fuoiiiii.To(1-40)1.ri31101

tJ!tfu,M,~~

WorciAds

m
m

ifull-&lt;blown MitcheU Report- the allegatien, and sincerely
lty,pe 'investigation. He said .ap0]@gizes ta its !Teaders and
public reaction weuld aeter- ~o tlle New England
mine t'he NJ\L' s next step.
Patriots' owners, players,
~j would h~ d18l the empleyees .anB fans ifer our
C(\)IIUlrissioner ·would do 1this e1iTriC
&lt;On bis ow.n,n Specter said.
SpOO!.er lfeJ'f'ated Iris dis,
Palri!lts
sjJoksman apJlFoval of Goocten:s deci'Stacey James said the team s1on te destroy 1the notes and
ihad no comment on tapes oonfiscated during the
Specter's .r emarks.
initial in;vestigallion ilast fall,
Earlier Wednesday, the as well as ·the "'piecemealn
Boston Herald a,pologized way the league has revealed
for a story that said the details about ilhe Upings. He
Palriots - videotaped .a St. also cited the fact a P.atriots
Louis · Rams wallctlmou,gh .attoJllley sat i.n Qll W.a'lsh' s
bef'Ore •t he 21i102 Super meeting wiib .·Goode11 as
BawL
proof ltbe iio11estigatioo 'h as
lin the ~egy, publisbed not been i.ntpartial.
i.n
me
newspaper's
"That seguenee iis inoom\Wednesday edi:tJiQn .and lfll"Chensible," Specter 'Sll.id.
posted on tits Web site, the "lf s .an insult to the intelliHerald said the story w.as gence ef'lhe people who fo1basefii on sources "it low it."
belie\&lt;eil tolbe credible."
• Specter's
interest
in
~we now :lmew that this Spygate centers in pal1 on
report was false, and that no the two NFL teams in his
tape of the walkthrough e~er state. The Philadelphia
existed," t'he paper wmte.
~les lost .10 the Patriots in
"We should not have pub- the 'Super Bowl lin 2005, the
lished the .allegation tin ,( he same season i n which the
absence of f'rrmer vecifica- S.teelers were defeated by ·
tion. The Boston Her.ald New'England in 1he AFC
regrets the damage done 1o chllll1Pionship game.
lbe ream by publication of
Pittsburgh defeated New

,:'""

/)UJ.tllire.s

p;sp~pyAcls

NDftaaW~\"f'or.q

Monday thn1 Friday
8:00 a.m. to 5:00

•

deesn' ,t want the public to fm last ifall," When the comASSOciATED PRESS
IBse ceniiidenoe [n the missiener dook-ed the 1team a
2008 fll"st-round W:aft pick
league's integrity.
WASHINGroN - Hol!il . "'They arc ,enormous role and fined coach 8 ill
on, NFL Spy;gate i.sn't &lt;Over. models ilior everyoody,~ Belichiclc $500,1(100 .and 1$:
Not if die "'Woendn Specter $aid. "'f Y"'U &lt;CaD . team '$2$(1;000.
Piltsbwp Stec1c:rs fan in 'oheatt iin tbe NFL, y~Ju •Can
But S;peoter be1c.l tris .own
Qmgn:ss bas :my.tbing t0 4o oheatt
oollege, yeu can three-!hour meeting with
wit'h it.
oheatt
high scbool, yori Walsh in Washin,gton on
Sen. Men Spocter on .c.an cbeat &lt;(l)n yeur grade- Tuesday. He said Wals"h
Wednesday called f&lt;(l)r an s.cbool malib rest. There's no detailed bow illhe f'aliJ!iats
indcpendeR1 imv.e!ll;igation of limit as to what you can de. used vi~ signals to
llhe New Fn,g:Iand Patriots' I think llhey owe the.public a their adv.~e: .an 'l'lffentlqling of &lt;llppOSing ooaches' let mere c ander .and a 3Gt sive player weu1d memariu
si;gna_ls., J-sib1y simibr to .rrum: credibility.~
the signals, \\&lt;atch for them
lihe llligb-pmliile Mitchell
Goodell
essentialily on lt!he sideline .and .pass
Report em penfumrumce declared an end ta Sji!ygate them .on to assistl!Dt ooadh
enhancing ~s in baseball. after a 3 l.t!2~baur meeting in Charlie Weis, who would
"Wbat iis neoessacy is an New ¥eJik ron lluesday llben inform &lt;i!UliTlei'bildk
objecllive i.nvestig.allion., n OlOlllliJig with fmmcr New ThmBBdy.
Specter said :at at .Cws oon- &amp;t_g!and Wlee :assistant
~And illhey had !10me obe\lifcnence in l'he ~toL ~Ant1 Matt Walsh. Walsh -sui1J')lied '!'lu&amp;ly good results," :Specter
this one has 001 been dibjec- libe ik:a_gue wit'h videotapes sa.id.
ti01e.~
of boaohes' signals m&lt;lde lhy
Specter said be would preThe
Pennsylvania the Pat!iiets, lbut offered na fer ·l!he NFL .an-ange the
Republican was unforgiving new sigui1iicant rev.elations ind1:1pendent invest4lation
of his criticism of NFL com- about the dhealling scandal and was willing lP wait sevmissioner Reger Goodell, d18l has threatened til taint eral months - while he
saying d18l Goodell ihas rthe ream's three Super iBBwl continues
to
undergo
m&lt;lde "ridiculous~ .aSllef- tiilles.
chemGiher.apy treallments
llions dJat w0uidn't 1lly '1in
Goodel'l ·s aid .aftetwaFd f0T Hodgkin's disease kindergai!Ien.n The 'Senator 'lbat ;the infmmat:ion fmm before calling for Congress
said Goodell wis caught in rthe interview with W.alsh to take what he calleil "cor~ "illf.Parent ~onflict . of ~was (l(Jnsisteut ·with what rective actiari.~ Such action
llllteresf because ll!he NFL . we disciplined the Patriets _oa.u ld.include bearing~; or·.a

1\r-gi!iter

OrFuTo(74DIB-2157

0.11• ~~H~Wt: 1.::. . P-1'n-

Sen. Specter wants independent investigation into Spyga~ i•
w WillE

Sentinel

(740) 44.2342 . (740) 992-2156 (304) 675-1333

..

liT I

Web5ites:
www.mydailytribune.com
www.mydailysentinel.com
www.mYdailyregister.com

IIOW N
WltiJE M. M
Su . ftiiAds

England e8I!her lihat seaS(i)n;
and rthe impliclllli&lt;m is t1hat;
taped signals firom 't hat:
game helped rthe Patriots ill'
the rematch. Steelcrs c~
num !Dan ltlilOiley bas -called,
'lhe !llllltter a "lOOn-issue." ;
· '1 ihave a diffeFCDt per&lt;{
spective," Specter said . .,..~
elected by 12 million ~:
:ple., and a Jot _of tbem ~
Steeler fans ..•• fuanldy
incensed about what ~
pened wit'h lhe 'Steelers, .an£
rm inoens.ed .about the note~
being destroyed. I reallY,

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Mowyoucan bavebanlersand·QI'IIPhics
~

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adcledloyourdossifiedads
Bot.ders$3.001perad
GRqlhics SOCforsmcdl

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Specter was again asked: ·
whether his interest in dJC;

1hi"Call

matter · 'has ~o do· w.i~
Phj] ad·eJ ph ia-b.a se4
Comcast, ·o ne· of his largest!:
campaign
contributor&amp;.;
Comcast has been invel01el\t
in a dispu~ wit!h 1he leag~
over the placemem Bf ·the&lt;
NFL Network on its cabJer
system,
"
"They .have ibeen a clllll{
paign COT)tributor,n 'S~
said, "along with 51il,~
other people ... l've been Ill;
this line of work for a long'
time, and no one has ever:
questioned my integrity." · :,

· l.as1 Chance. Be.niful blatl&lt;
Lob mile IJIIP!IIes, 2 112 mo
old. O(F) 9 (M). ~ &amp;
·plliylul. ..1'()365

"i

REACH 3 COUNTIES

found Sol . in Comp Cooley
area lefrier ~ call and
identify J04.&lt;i7H639

CLASSIFIED INDEX

.
----""'*". . . . . .. . . . . . . . ......................

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.. _ _ _, ___ ...............- ...............725

-

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• I2 =·-·--·--··-·-··i!O-J00000i!o000
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.............................. 7110

no - -·- .............................................. no
....... ·- 5ollt ............._ ..." ....... l50 .
• Mt' 4 Se 11'I - ··-··-··---··-·-·----550
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~~····-···· ..·---··:.........210

• ·a'

1lu1l:
Caacc

Ttalntng ....................~..- ........... 140
aAIIIalai'ttan.a ......- -........... 710
Cw:png Fql 'it; :u:d:..... - ......._ , _......... 710

c.- ar

T~Jar~D ...............-

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

Comm.mlly Fundrai&amp;ar Yard
S&amp;Je, May 16-17, many tamlites Mve dona1ed to this

.... o1o

c I"J a. c.eer eou.g.

n r rn; It c.. ........·--·--·-......... 110

a ·

1 'FlshYa ....................... " ___ ..140

... ' mot for ....... ,....................._. _ _
7 - u ........- .................- ..................830
2 1$ - · -·-·-................ ____.,0

-

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..........-4111
.._lfor___,. . ........
.--._.·-----3311

....._.........................-

POST OFF1CE NOW
HIRING
Avg. Pay $20Alr or
S57Kiyr. includes

..................

, .......,.................~ .............................-515

For- ar r.-.............,......................_.. 510

·
......... - ........................ 510 .
...................................................... _ ......450
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Ilk.

...., -

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!) -·----~-·-·-· .. ·-------·---··--·..,.

....................................................050

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ttllp Wueted .................:...............................110
1101ne·h+ o.uazw:ts ...................................810
. - 1 a r Sele .......................................- .. 310
-. 510
Rent... .............- ..............- .......10
... ..
ttiCAiliiii .......................................~...- ... 020 '
Iii ................................................-.....-110

Learn how 10 become pan
of one of the TOP TEN Best
Places to Wot1c.!

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tl• 1 ctt ..............................

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I Me kdwndila ....................-~540

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...... - f o r s.lo...............--...........3211
~to ~ ....................,........................220
.... bz Lf lw &amp;·4 Wheslals ..........."'·"";;; ....T.O

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. . - , . &amp; II 1• ...................................... 120
1': t :1 IIIII Selwl .................""'""'"'""".230
- . T V &amp; C11 ,..................................... 110
---~ ! ...................................... .. 'I It• cttc~n........."..................._ ....1-IO
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The Dail
. ySadinel
740-992-2155

M

'3

. . . . .

d.. "'""'"""""'-""""..... 1.20

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

...... ""' Rent .......................................... -.410
11(1&lt; ~~o,.
sao
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Sele ..................................,......... ns

,.,_tor
..... 7

,. ·---···---·--'"'"""''""''"'' ........ 170

v... f'ar - ........- ..................................710
I d 10 Buy ....................- ............,_...... 010
w. ra d 10 lkly- Ferm
llsu ..................RO

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. . ,, f10 """·-··-·--·'""'''"'""""'"~..... 70
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• ~1~-~IIIC~-~Y~U~- _;_

ochOiarst&gt;p yam saleSlor Mil Patt&lt;• ...., 13 &amp;..1•
1rom 91o 4 onci~ 151n:Jm
9 to 2.May, 15-haltprioe

Oou1110de Bar and

Grill now

·seol&lt;inll QUOIIfiod applicim1s

tqr bart.-r and ~ nm-

~'- Apply in person or call
Clay and dollar 8 bag. 441~9371 . to schedule and
Auction by Dan Smith will interview. 308 2nd Ave,
follow
Gdpoa.
a1 3pm.Thanks for your I1UP' _Equipmen1
Repa;r
portl!lll!l!!lll
Tectmit:ian for Fann imcuor
Lawn Equipment repair &amp;
~~oUCIION AMl
malntonanoa. Must have
~ F'LE:A MAIIIWr 1
. axparionce. MUSI be - 10
uae - • e r on a lmiled

•
r

GUN SHOW. MI.£
MARIE I lA, eli.
Couuzlu&amp;t Inn •
s.t M.,.' 17 9-S
Sun Ml!r 18 11:3
Daly Admi&amp;liion $4.00
-IIUY'SEI.L- 6' VENOOR TABLES S25
.Fronl s;ghl Promotions.

u.c

7~-G412

-:~~'"'

Mge&amp;,

modem thop, continuous

company aponliOred training, heatth insur«nce,
lllllll:hlng JW1i....- COIJ1ri.
bution and pa&lt;l holkjays.
Fu 74!H&lt;46-9104 oc Email
jotmcarmict\aeiOcareq.com

FElERAL
POSt:AL JOBS

American A.ssoc. of Labor 124hirs. emp.

913·~99-8226.

'"""·

(Careers ClOse To Home) 4BR, 3 bath, 2268 sq.tl . a1
Call Today! 740-44&amp;4367, 578 Jay Or. Spacious master
suit wf den and lrg walk·if1
1·800·214-0452
www.gallipokscarHfCOiiegll .edu
clo&amp;e1. 'fR, LA w/ brick FP.
Accrediklcl J.hmbt!r Accrediting Fenced yan::l WI in ~
Council b' lr ~ ; d&amp;lil ~ pool. $1.&amp;0,000. Shown by

"'

AtlenUon!
Local company ottering "NO
DOWN PAYMENr pro·
grams for you 10 buy your

Vinyl Siding _ Shiog6e Roof.
$230 per montt1 . 7:.&amp;0~3859948.
-------1968 12x60 mobile home .

I

homefnsteadofrenting.
• 100% financing

.,._"*'·

()h;o 45631 Cl.A Bal 101

W

M(7~ttga)~.OCJOO

1.

Service Experience pre-

Gal-

day. --~1

col~.

.

in ttw.

il

- ·to

_.,,.,.-.,
tta..1ng Act al11611

hir

- - ft
aciNiilw --.ny
pehnnw, limbtlon 9'1'
d*rimlnatton t..c1 on
r.ce, cotar. Nligk)n, . .
f8mltill -~'or Ml:ioMl
origin. w .ny ~to
IMkoe .ny aucn
pi&amp;leu$i&amp;C , iiMtllllion Of

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lmhalicn."

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ad . . . . . . . . . tar ....
ml

-

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.........

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-~ .....
ll+81h• · un

eNOTICE•

terred OUt nat rnancserory.
Mewing: 2 handy WO!"Qrs ~ly in person at the NOT to eend mone
~ Inn F1ort ..."011\ll' the .,.;1 until
. - immodlototy. 8am·
2pm Minimum of $30. ""' Desk. ,l,baolulely NO phone ~~sttgated r

r

Locators. 2

Alltwl . . . . iidwtliaing

~==~~~=:;
OHIO VALLEY PUBLISH
lNG CO. recommeo
you do bustness
people you know. a

1BFI. ' $2400.00 74~5-

2138
--------,-

' Less than pertea credh
.~..
2 b.ed. 2 bath. 299 a montll.
........~"".
740-446 3570
• Payment co uld be me ---~----=
same as rent .
2002 16xBO OaKwood 3 Bed

bid-·"'

ny

14x70. 3br. 1 ba. 1 owner,
must see. too many updates
to Jist, Green Terrace, $8000
obo. 446-6o91 or 645-8615
-.,.-...,...,---~"
16XBO 3. Bedroom 2 Batti

ld6 ~ ~ --------

11111

r~s~l

appt441-8202

anaScnooi&amp; 1274B.

Schwim Ainline Exercisef
P1aced by adSource. no1
ol'lered w/ USPS INho tiires.
100'5 ot 33.45,76 records
1~3-2562
motorcycle &amp; parts, tools,
- - - - - - , - - - - boOks, old collections of
Putnam County Emergency
.
every thing ..l 05 Mill
~- •-'
Se rvlcersa.......,..
..ng.....,..rca- St ,M1ddleport 2 00 ~ 7 00
local C~ny looking .for
t•ons for the following Pan- Wed Fr Sat Ph 74()..591 _
part-time delivery person .
T;me
positmns·
EMT, 645:).:~'78-6262
Applicant must have a valid
Paramedic and Dispatchers,
driver's lioense. have gOoa ParHime Dispatch position
T'fANIID
oostomer relation Skills and
pays $10.00 per hqur.
To Do
,be able to mutt+-tast. .well.
can be•.piQked
Awlk:ams oril be su!)jed 1o Appica1ions
up at the office of 25 )'ears· of ~ caring tor
ba9kground ct•u&gt;&lt; befllf' Emergency 5efVioe6 3389 elderty racMes fn my home,
ririrog. H I'OU wwld lil&lt;e 1o
Winfield Ad Wintietd WV
privat&amp;&amp;&amp;emi-private rooms
apply, ptease seni:t your
·
avail~ . Nu1ritious meal
rei!Mlle to: P.O. 8m: 469,
~Dump llftwreN
planning, ex:oellen1 refer·
Gal~ Ohio •5631 CLA A&amp;J Truclr;ing is seek1ng ences phone numbers upon
8al 101 .
Qualffied Cpl-A clri¥ofo 1o reQuest Fof more ;nfo. 74l&gt;
_:...__ _ _ __
operate semi-dump6 lor «6-4300
Low to cook?
A.lways regkillaJ routes. We foatlne - - - - - - , . . . - experimef'ittng with new &amp;xcellem hOfl1e time . health Willing 10 babysit 1.; my
insurance, home , at 4484 SR 218 .
id9a&amp;? 'Wiu may be' who we end dental
.I am 8 mothare looking for. A local com- ~l(k), ..ecauon. borus ~· Galipolr!i.
peny Is In need Of In~ and satety awams.. Ouallfied ,,,. oil ..I have an Associa1es
go
uol-;. inop;Md 1o COOl&lt;. applicants must be over 23 ~ '"
Earty
Appicant must be able to yr&amp;., have a minimum ol 1 Chfldhood El:lucation. 7«)organize and · i"nanall(t an year of commerical driving 255.1336
industrial kitchen, prepare e.ptrieooe &amp; dean MVR.
Priof w;periel ;ce with semiand ftMnloly
woll 10 if1ccJrOOg ~ and io helpful. Contacl _
., 800- ~r;:i":;;;;;;.;:~:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;,
and
outgoing
·
lnciW:Iual wll be ttiijJOiwibte 462·9365 "' 1111 0111 opplk;aOMM:iUNITV
for loC\d Plflll8-. ·
,_, and QCJOIIly 10 IXIIri'8- liOn
EOEat www.rjtrOOdng .com

If yoo ""'
~.· ~ ~ ~.
'interested
in applying.
IIIIIIRN nUIU . . - , """"'"'
S17.89-128.27hir., now hir· pMMie sene! 'f'OUI" resume to rmBI be COf11)Uter literate
ing. For applioolion and- P.O. Box 469. Gali4&gt;&lt;';s, and friencly. Customer

~~""""'""""" lob klfo. call

Ripley, 3br, 2ba, Rancher
- - - - - - - - on 2 'acres, 24x32 2 Car
4br, 2 AC . Pool. Country Garage $1 39,900 or 304·
New Haven, $139,500 call 550.2114 or 304·532-3599
after 6pm Wtll hel:p with
closfng Cost 304·593-8871

. . ,..

..

Bath _

2000

16x70

Fleetwood 2 Bed 2 Bath.

1999 16xBD Fortune 3 Bed 2

Bath. 1997 14&gt;70 Oat&lt;wood
3 Bed 2 Bath. Daytime 3880000 Evening 388-8017 or
245-9213

2008 3 bedroom 2 bath sec·
tioOat home $279 per month
· 74!).385-7671 .
lAND AIID HOME. , _ 3

bed 2 bath . includes tand,
ready to move into Onfy 399
a month (wac) 866-5648679 MUST SALE

MockMnl see Ohio's largest
d•st:Xav. Midwest 74Q..828·
2750
mym;dwosl.com

NEW- 4br~2ba 1.700 SQ
ft from $399 mo Mtawest
7 .t0-828~2750

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$21 • .36 per month, tnctudls
m.nv upgqdes, delivef\1 l

HI-up. r74ti }385-24~

_..... 011 .,.. ..-1

' : : - : : : : : : : : : ·:~ One Acre WI• Br mobUe
home.aH electnc.Broad Run
HUO 1 3 bod. """! W lla .. 2 m' from P'*O'
$1 7 ,0001 tor ksllngs 800· Pian! on a p8....cl f'OIICI ,I"'tCCe

~

- - - - - - - - · 620&lt;0!106 .. R019

-.304773-~18

�ra

~..,

B4 • The llaily Serdiitd .

15.,2001

The Daily Sentinel • Page B5

•

Pats owner Kraft pleased with Boston Herald's apology 1.
liT lis

"=nn

=

.O.SSOC~TED

PRESS

aw,ay .a firsi-JIOODd ,draft pid: unidenli1iied sooroes.
Bosmn HeAld for aoing baseball.
what is unpi'OCedented in
Patriots spolcesman 'Stacey this year after .an investiga1'or 3 112 mcmths rtbat
terms of reoogoiring tllelr James said the ·t eam bad no tion found llbe P~ 'Vio- stoJy bas lbung .out dlore Ill«
•Cfrol" in &lt;1 llllljclr way,~ Kraft immediate · oomment on lated league rules by ~ .a o1GUd .anti we ,doniod iii
Sllid. "fm really delighted Speot.e:r's rema11ks.
New Y&lt;mt Jets ooacbe~ oo right U]!l front,~ lKn'ft said
witlb !lbat. but I wish it never
W.alsb told Goodell be did the sideline cluriiig llhe sea- "'When ;the ~ c8Ued
h¥JW!Cd~
not tape llhe walkit!hroug,h son &lt;Gpe!ICI:
Stacey James wiith llhe stmy,
Knft ·said 'he 4idn't ll!bink be said iit's OODl'JeteiY iflilse
The apoklgy .came a day and had 100 lrnowJec'!ge that
after &lt;1 meeting between any rOiiber Patri0ts employees ilbe in~esli@lii0n Chat \began .and unsubstantiated~
NFL ,oommissioner Rooger did S!l, Goodell sirid: The ltheo would ~ve :a tasting
[n llhe l\1)01ogy, pu'blisbed
Goodell .and Walsb pmd•llW1 oommissiooer ..also indicatod stain ron the dub.
in
the
newspaper'.s
no m&lt;~.jor 11evela!ioos .abmn lhe oonsidered the investiga- · "I 'Was un~y w.ith what Wednesday ediliion and ,p ostllhe iiC.Uil 's taping proce- tiBn over ·after mcetmg willb transpifed i.n the ifall, die .e d &lt;0n its Web site, llibe
Walsh on ~uesday.
actiens oof some of our Herald said llhe st0ry was
dures.

R&gt;XBOROUGH., Mass.
New Engl.and Patriots
owner Robert Kraft &lt;lllmlplin!C!!!Ied the Bostcm llmlld
011 wednesday for~[­
in,g f« a story lhat said Iris
team vi~ .a St. Louis
Ra!m w.all:llhrough bef&lt;m:
ilbc 1Q02 Super Bowt
He's ~ diSll)lp!Jinted.~
dloo;gb. that the ~
~a story duU was rom~~ llhint I spcal&lt;: for .all
pkfdy falSe: and unsubstan- Palriot fans,~ K!raft said.
tiated ~ KRft said in an "We'.re relieved duU Ibis is
•
Udennew
with
Tbe o~er .and you see !lhat ·!!his is
Associated .Press.
.n0nsense and we WeFe
He also said be OOesn 1 unfmJy accused and we're
·
!know why fernner New 1110v.ing ·On.~
England video a~sistant Matt
Kntft lij)Me by tcleph1me
Walsh dido't refute ·the story be'f0Fe 'Sen. Aden Specter
1IO!JD .after it came out on · said in Washington i!hat be
Feb. 1., die day !before the wants an independent invesP.attiols 0Sl
Super Bowl liigatiBn '(1)f the Patriots' illlp'l0 tbe New York Giants, 17- mg of opposing coaches'
14, ruini11g lheir guest fur an si.grulls ·s.imillar ~o ilhe
'unbeaten season.
·MltcheU Repmi! oo perfor'1 ~st oomplimem the mance-enbancing ·drugs in
-

otribune - Sentinel ClASSIFIED

me

"The orily thing I oon't
&lt;Understand is w-hat be said
{Tuesday) he .c ould have
s.aid !!hat .a loog «me "YlO and
defused it within 24.00ursof
the story coming •l'lut,~ Kraft
s.aid. "ff you read the iblogs
or read pe19ple or talk m people, everyene assumed he
was the source •aT was ane
step removed jjrom t'he
source .... You'll have to
decide why he waited.~
Goodell fined ooac"h .Bill
iBeliohidk $501M}(i)(i) and the
team $2.50,00!!1 and too'k

empleyees, .and we were based &lt;(l)n sources · "it
penalized severely fm that,~
believed to be ae&amp;llle.~
he said. "We said back in
. "'We new :lmew ilhat this
S~mber lhat we had disclesed all ,Gf our actiens as report w.as false, and that no
an organiution to the tape af ltbe 'Wallcrboough ever
1~. You c.an see this m
s eX!isted,n the paper wrote.
"We should mn bave pubtrue.'
lished
,fue allegatJien in .fue
"The eJtii(\)DeOUS story really 1ed to a second round rof abs.enoe ·a f tfiirmer vertificainquisitiens after 'SeptembeJ:, tion. The B0ston Hor.alfii
and it really was a distrac- regrets the damage .done lo
tion. The s.ad pmt (is) tihJn it · the t~;am by publication .of
took .aw.ay ifirom an i '8-'6 t'he allegatJion. and sincerely
Super BoWl season.~
a)l0lagizes te its Teaders and
The Herald's story cited to t'he New England Palriots'

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Qtribune
...,_ _ _ _ _ _..___ _or:,;'..;,Fuoiiiii.To(1-40)1.ri31101

tJ!tfu,M,~~

WorciAds

m
m

ifull-&lt;blown MitcheU Report- the allegatien, and sincerely
lty,pe 'investigation. He said .ap0]@gizes ta its !Teaders and
public reaction weuld aeter- ~o tlle New England
mine t'he NJ\L' s next step.
Patriots' owners, players,
~j would h~ d18l the empleyees .anB fans ifer our
C(\)IIUlrissioner ·would do 1this e1iTriC
&lt;On bis ow.n,n Specter said.
SpOO!.er lfeJ'f'ated Iris dis,
Palri!lts
sjJoksman apJlFoval of Goocten:s deci'Stacey James said the team s1on te destroy 1the notes and
ihad no comment on tapes oonfiscated during the
Specter's .r emarks.
initial in;vestigallion ilast fall,
Earlier Wednesday, the as well as ·the "'piecemealn
Boston Herald a,pologized way the league has revealed
for a story that said the details about ilhe Upings. He
Palriots - videotaped .a St. also cited the fact a P.atriots
Louis · Rams wallctlmou,gh .attoJllley sat i.n Qll W.a'lsh' s
bef'Ore •t he 21i102 Super meeting wiib .·Goode11 as
BawL
proof ltbe iio11estigatioo 'h as
lin the ~egy, publisbed not been i.ntpartial.
i.n
me
newspaper's
"That seguenee iis inoom\Wednesday edi:tJiQn .and lfll"Chensible," Specter 'Sll.id.
posted on tits Web site, the "lf s .an insult to the intelliHerald said the story w.as gence ef'lhe people who fo1basefii on sources "it low it."
belie\&lt;eil tolbe credible."
• Specter's
interest
in
~we now :lmew that this Spygate centers in pal1 on
report was false, and that no the two NFL teams in his
tape of the walkthrough e~er state. The Philadelphia
existed," t'he paper wmte.
~les lost .10 the Patriots in
"We should not have pub- the 'Super Bowl lin 2005, the
lished the .allegation tin ,( he same season i n which the
absence of f'rrmer vecifica- S.teelers were defeated by ·
tion. The Boston Her.ald New'England in 1he AFC
regrets the damage done 1o chllll1Pionship game.
lbe ream by publication of
Pittsburgh defeated New

,:'""

/)UJ.tllire.s

p;sp~pyAcls

NDftaaW~\"f'or.q

Monday thn1 Friday
8:00 a.m. to 5:00

•

deesn' ,t want the public to fm last ifall," When the comASSOciATED PRESS
IBse ceniiidenoe [n the missiener dook-ed the 1team a
2008 fll"st-round W:aft pick
league's integrity.
WASHINGroN - Hol!il . "'They arc ,enormous role and fined coach 8 ill
on, NFL Spy;gate i.sn't &lt;Over. models ilior everyoody,~ Belichiclc $500,1(100 .and 1$:
Not if die "'Woendn Specter $aid. "'f Y"'U &lt;CaD . team '$2$(1;000.
Piltsbwp Stec1c:rs fan in 'oheatt iin tbe NFL, y~Ju •Can
But S;peoter be1c.l tris .own
Qmgn:ss bas :my.tbing t0 4o oheatt
oollege, yeu can three-!hour meeting with
wit'h it.
oheatt
high scbool, yori Walsh in Washin,gton on
Sen. Men Spocter on .c.an cbeat &lt;(l)n yeur grade- Tuesday. He said Wals"h
Wednesday called f&lt;(l)r an s.cbool malib rest. There's no detailed bow illhe f'aliJ!iats
indcpendeR1 imv.e!ll;igation of limit as to what you can de. used vi~ signals to
llhe New Fn,g:Iand Patriots' I think llhey owe the.public a their adv.~e: .an 'l'lffentlqling of &lt;llppOSing ooaches' let mere c ander .and a 3Gt sive player weu1d memariu
si;gna_ls., J-sib1y simibr to .rrum: credibility.~
the signals, \\&lt;atch for them
lihe llligb-pmliile Mitchell
Goodell
essentialily on lt!he sideline .and .pass
Report em penfumrumce declared an end ta Sji!ygate them .on to assistl!Dt ooadh
enhancing ~s in baseball. after a 3 l.t!2~baur meeting in Charlie Weis, who would
"Wbat iis neoessacy is an New ¥eJik ron lluesday llben inform &lt;i!UliTlei'bildk
objecllive i.nvestig.allion., n OlOlllliJig with fmmcr New ThmBBdy.
Specter said :at at .Cws oon- &amp;t_g!and Wlee :assistant
~And illhey had !10me obe\lifcnence in l'he ~toL ~Ant1 Matt Walsh. Walsh -sui1J')lied '!'lu&amp;ly good results," :Specter
this one has 001 been dibjec- libe ik:a_gue wit'h videotapes sa.id.
ti01e.~
of boaohes' signals m&lt;lde lhy
Specter said be would preThe
Pennsylvania the Pat!iiets, lbut offered na fer ·l!he NFL .an-ange the
Republican was unforgiving new sigui1iicant rev.elations ind1:1pendent invest4lation
of his criticism of NFL com- about the dhealling scandal and was willing lP wait sevmissioner Reger Goodell, d18l has threatened til taint eral months - while he
saying d18l Goodell ihas rthe ream's three Super iBBwl continues
to
undergo
m&lt;lde "ridiculous~ .aSllef- tiilles.
chemGiher.apy treallments
llions dJat w0uidn't 1lly '1in
Goodel'l ·s aid .aftetwaFd f0T Hodgkin's disease kindergai!Ien.n The 'Senator 'lbat ;the infmmat:ion fmm before calling for Congress
said Goodell wis caught in rthe interview with W.alsh to take what he calleil "cor~ "illf.Parent ~onflict . of ~was (l(Jnsisteut ·with what rective actiari.~ Such action
llllteresf because ll!he NFL . we disciplined the Patriets _oa.u ld.include bearing~; or·.a

1\r-gi!iter

OrFuTo(74DIB-2157

0.11• ~~H~Wt: 1.::. . P-1'n-

Sen. Specter wants independent investigation into Spyga~ i•
w WillE

Sentinel

(740) 44.2342 . (740) 992-2156 (304) 675-1333

..

liT I

Web5ites:
www.mydailytribune.com
www.mydailysentinel.com
www.mYdailyregister.com

IIOW N
WltiJE M. M
Su . ftiiAds

England e8I!her lihat seaS(i)n;
and rthe impliclllli&lt;m is t1hat;
taped signals firom 't hat:
game helped rthe Patriots ill'
the rematch. Steelcrs c~
num !Dan ltlilOiley bas -called,
'lhe !llllltter a "lOOn-issue." ;
· '1 ihave a diffeFCDt per&lt;{
spective," Specter said . .,..~
elected by 12 million ~:
:ple., and a Jot _of tbem ~
Steeler fans ..•• fuanldy
incensed about what ~
pened wit'h lhe 'Steelers, .an£
rm inoens.ed .about the note~
being destroyed. I reallY,

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Specter was again asked: ·
whether his interest in dJC;

1hi"Call

matter · 'has ~o do· w.i~
Phj] ad·eJ ph ia-b.a se4
Comcast, ·o ne· of his largest!:
campaign
contributor&amp;.;
Comcast has been invel01el\t
in a dispu~ wit!h 1he leag~
over the placemem Bf ·the&lt;
NFL Network on its cabJer
system,
"
"They .have ibeen a clllll{
paign COT)tributor,n 'S~
said, "along with 51il,~
other people ... l've been Ill;
this line of work for a long'
time, and no one has ever:
questioned my integrity." · :,

· l.as1 Chance. Be.niful blatl&lt;
Lob mile IJIIP!IIes, 2 112 mo
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• Mt' 4 Se 11'I - ··-··-··---··-·-·----550
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~~····-···· ..·---··:.........210

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Ttalntng ....................~..- ........... 140
aAIIIalai'ttan.a ......- -........... 710
Cw:png Fql 'it; :u:d:..... - ......._ , _......... 710

c.- ar

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n r rn; It c.. ........·--·--·-......... 110

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... ' mot for ....... ,....................._. _ _
7 - u ........- .................- ..................830
2 1$ - · -·-·-................ ____.,0

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1101ne·h+ o.uazw:ts ...................................810
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The Dail
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ochOiarst&gt;p yam saleSlor Mil Patt&lt;• ...., 13 &amp;..1•
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9 to 2.May, 15-haltprioe

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tqr bart.-r and ~ nm-

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every thing ..l 05 Mill
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Se rvlcersa.......,..
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local C~ny looking .for
t•ons for the following Pan- Wed Fr Sat Ph 74()..591 _
part-time delivery person .
T;me
positmns·
EMT, 645:).:~'78-6262
Applicant must have a valid
Paramedic and Dispatchers,
driver's lioense. have gOoa ParHime Dispatch position
T'fANIID
oostomer relation Skills and
pays $10.00 per hqur.
To Do
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Awlk:ams oril be su!)jed 1o Appica1ions
up at the office of 25 )'ears· of ~ caring tor
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·
avail~ . Nu1ritious meal
rei!Mlle to: P.O. 8m: 469,
~Dump llftwreN
planning, ex:oellen1 refer·
Gal~ Ohio •5631 CLA A&amp;J Truclr;ing is seek1ng ences phone numbers upon
8al 101 .
Qualffied Cpl-A clri¥ofo 1o reQuest Fof more ;nfo. 74l&gt;
_:...__ _ _ __
operate semi-dump6 lor «6-4300
Low to cook?
A.lways regkillaJ routes. We foatlne - - - - - - , . . . - experimef'ittng with new &amp;xcellem hOfl1e time . health Willing 10 babysit 1.; my
insurance, home , at 4484 SR 218 .
id9a&amp;? 'Wiu may be' who we end dental
.I am 8 mothare looking for. A local com- ~l(k), ..ecauon. borus ~· Galipolr!i.
peny Is In need Of In~ and satety awams.. Ouallfied ,,,. oil ..I have an Associa1es
go
uol-;. inop;Md 1o COOl&lt;. applicants must be over 23 ~ '"
Earty
Appicant must be able to yr&amp;., have a minimum ol 1 Chfldhood El:lucation. 7«)organize and · i"nanall(t an year of commerical driving 255.1336
industrial kitchen, prepare e.ptrieooe &amp; dean MVR.
Priof w;periel ;ce with semiand ftMnloly
woll 10 if1ccJrOOg ~ and io helpful. Contacl _
., 800- ~r;:i":;;;;;;.;:~:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;,
and
outgoing
·
lnciW:Iual wll be ttiijJOiwibte 462·9365 "' 1111 0111 opplk;aOMM:iUNITV
for loC\d Plflll8-. ·
,_, and QCJOIIly 10 IXIIri'8- liOn
EOEat www.rjtrOOdng .com

If yoo ""'
~.· ~ ~ ~.
'interested
in applying.
IIIIIIRN nUIU . . - , """"'"'
S17.89-128.27hir., now hir· pMMie sene! 'f'OUI" resume to rmBI be COf11)Uter literate
ing. For applioolion and- P.O. Box 469. Gali4&gt;&lt;';s, and friencly. Customer

~~""""'""""" lob klfo. call

Ripley, 3br, 2ba, Rancher
- - - - - - - - on 2 'acres, 24x32 2 Car
4br, 2 AC . Pool. Country Garage $1 39,900 or 304·
New Haven, $139,500 call 550.2114 or 304·532-3599
after 6pm Wtll hel:p with
closfng Cost 304·593-8871

. . ,..

..

Bath _

2000

16x70

Fleetwood 2 Bed 2 Bath.

1999 16xBD Fortune 3 Bed 2

Bath. 1997 14&gt;70 Oat&lt;wood
3 Bed 2 Bath. Daytime 3880000 Evening 388-8017 or
245-9213

2008 3 bedroom 2 bath sec·
tioOat home $279 per month
· 74!).385-7671 .
lAND AIID HOME. , _ 3

bed 2 bath . includes tand,
ready to move into Onfy 399
a month (wac) 866-5648679 MUST SALE

MockMnl see Ohio's largest
d•st:Xav. Midwest 74Q..828·
2750
mym;dwosl.com

NEW- 4br~2ba 1.700 SQ
ft from $399 mo Mtawest
7 .t0-828~2750

myrntdweS1hOme.com

NowJIIe&lt;looomMmesln:Jm

$21 • .36 per month, tnctudls
m.nv upgqdes, delivef\1 l

HI-up. r74ti }385-24~

_..... 011 .,.. ..-1

' : : - : : : : : : : : : ·:~ One Acre WI• Br mobUe
home.aH electnc.Broad Run
HUO 1 3 bod. """! W lla .. 2 m' from P'*O'
$1 7 ,0001 tor ksllngs 800· Pian! on a p8....cl f'OIICI ,I"'tCCe

~

- - - - - - - - · 620&lt;0!106 .. R019

-.304773-~18

�~.- 15,2008

"CROSS

$5,000! Midwest 740-828- www.spring-tfalley-proper- 2 BedrOoms, C/A, 1 112 · prised! Cheat out our used

i

1..ors &amp;
ACIIFAGE

I

L.,-~;::;;::;;:;;,_,.11

Balh. Adul1 ·" "" &amp; Bally invento'}'

"""· Patio. S1art $425Mo.
pd
BF!; ..'"!noYe &amp; tridge furn~l No Pebo, • Lea&amp;B PIU&amp;
•~par mo.,
""&gt;'· Sowrily Deposi1 ReQuirod.
258 Stale St. No Smoking, (7-10)967-o547.
No pats. 740-446-3667
_ _ _ _..;..__ _ _

5400

FOR SALE: 219 imerest in
2 bedroom apartmen1 tor
aaeage located in Mason
,~~ West v· .. · 2005 rent in Middleport, no pets,
-·•·
•rgonoa.
app ro I of I d (740)992-5858
1sa s
an
~===~---

Twin Rivers Tower is acc8pt-

~---

inn

'-

3br.

Apartment, available

;;:::::===~·

i--.:'""*;::;,:IIel=rr:.:...JI

•

r10 '

astern

.....
.......

•

"'11e,

Jlou;J;How

52 Westwood
:lllxm;
Orive, from $365 to $560.
!4()-4.46-2568.
Equal
L
Housing Opportunity. This
$226/mol S bed . 2 bath. institution Is an Equal
~! (5% ,down. 20 Opportunity P'rovider aild
- .. II% APR) lor listings Employer.
Opan 9-2. Clo9odTues. 939CONVENIENTLY LDCAT _ 2899 or otter 2pm 140-3671101).62[)..4946 eo&lt;. Rll27

and

SHEDs-:
GMIAGESBARNS

-''------John lloer A 1947 Tractor,
Electric Start +tlgh '&amp; Low
Transmission. New Rims,
nres &amp; Paint. 2002 Hard
Top· For CJ7 Jeep, 2003
Kawasaki mule, Call 949-

2305 tor lntorma1;0&lt;1,
Goc:Dii
Wanrto buy a 14')(50' all
electric mobile home.reaGood Used Fum.
appli- sonably priced. 304-682anoes. Going our of busi- 3418 Of 304-674-6915.
ness sale. Everything must
go. 76 Vine St. Gallipolis OH.
I.J\~-,oa(

- A p i a.• -

.£mtes.

1:

E

wa~tnvo Gallipolis, 'O hio, 740-446.
9m. 4, 5, 6' 8fl1 T 3PT.
Finishlng ·mowers starting at
$699.00 and.up. Hurry while
~ last

.. ·• ......,............ .., ""
'"""
1~ ~ u.~ --~'~. 1 ~
·~ ·~ ~- ~
apartment
for
1he
imprrNements and separate 212 3KI Ave. S rooms and elderlyfdisabled, call 675timber appraisal, together, bath, fumishei:l, no pets .
6679
tolbtd. 011er 5400,000. 'FAX Ren1 + Oep. 7-40-441~245
•
"""y 10 912·2~782

MOBILE HOME LOT FOR $540 month. same Deposit
RENT, 1031 GeOtg&amp;s Creek plus electric. washer. dryer
Act, 441 -1'11 1
hookup, No FJets. 304-6740023 or 304-61 o-on6

Phillip
Alder

at

W W W C A R E Q . C0 M
Carmichael Equipment 74044&amp;-2412 ,
-------Jim's Form Equipmant Inc. .

2 50
1

r-------==::::c:

Ellrn View

ts

.a-b

.•

!GIJ
I~

~ lb1:Nr

·r

~

-~~~~~--UIIED--1!-TB!I.-

31Jr,&amp;2ba. double wide. 'eo«:.

month fvr more info. call 3736
304-895 •3568
Nice

quiet

home and dou- "Referenoes

2BR
&amp;

apt."

1

99 Buick 'leSabre 4 DA ..
3800 ENG,auto,all power,
10 mort old iemale German cold afr,EX. Shape ·$3600
Shepherd $15Q.OO 304-675- Call949-2045 evening

IQR&amp;U:.
J.o,_..;,iiiiiiiiiiiio-,.1.
-.

deposH ·6262

~wide ·tor rent. 740-446- required. No Pets. 446-1271 - - - - - - - - Police ~mpounds! Cars from
AKC Yorkie pups males
only, 1st shots &amp; 'wormed
Al'Aim.tEN!!;
Ta+ong applications: Modem $650 304-675-1946
!UIIbNr
1BR. no pels , $295/rent - - - - - - - ~-...iiliiiiiilili.-,..1. includes water. $200/dep. r-Kc
Reg
M'
...,
44&amp;-36H
"".
.
, In1a1ure
1 and 2 bedroom apart:Pinschers, - 7 weeks old,
ments, furnished and untur-shots • wormed. 740-388-.
8788
pished. and houses in
Pomeroy and Middleport, N
a~r~ Reg Border Co!Me P""""· 6
security deposit ll!qlllmd, no ~IWOJ
~pets. 740-992·2218.
wks old. First shots and
wormed. Imported . blood
...... 740-379-9110
4060 or 367-7762

r

or 709-1657

I.:...c.c.:...=----,.;;.;.;;;...;,.,.,.,=""'"--,

SHOP

Pleasanl Valley Hospital is current!
. accepting applicalions for a full tim
experienced Registered Nurses .i
Medical/Surgical. Applicants must have
current West Virginia license. or eligible t
obtain.
Send resumes to:
P'eli ot Vll11ey ltospit.ll

c/DHII-a--

379-2151 or 794-1098

Thursday,
Saturday
&amp; miles.
door. excellern
conSunday.
(740~7300
dltion 4
$4000
or best offer.
Modem 1 Bedroom Apt. , ._..;.;-~;_;.;.;....., 379-2732
Colt (740)446-(l390
PEl's

condition, 1acrelotbeauttful
counhy view $400.00 a Modem 1 BR Apt can 446-

Mobll8

r

REGIStERED NURSES

UUQ

1999 Pontiac Bonneville
SSE. $4000 or ·best otter.

$500!,

Hcmdas, . Chevys,
~~ps, Fords, &amp; more:l tor
Msttngs BOIJ.62Q..4876 ex V435
Quality cars, truCks, vans
starting .at $1500 to $8300.
Financing available with
warranty.
'COOK
MJI C!JRS 328 Jackson Pilre.
74044&amp;o103

11'11~~~---.,
rl5

'l'lluJ&amp;s

-IIWI. SALE

15!0 'VIIIIey Drift
POint "--'t,IIN ;1!5550
(304) 675-4340
Fax to:
(304) 675-Q97S

$500 Coverall!!!
Playing at

124 Highland Ave.
Point Pleasant
In (West Virginia Jobs
Foundation Bingo Hall)
Doors open at 4:00
· 2 pack min .

~

""'-

2!1670 Bashan ROad
l!acine, Ohio
45'171

7-1.7

Hours
7:00 "M • 8:00 PM

Help W.nled

~;;::::::::::::::::::::..:::::~::::::~

BOD.Y SHOP
ASSis·-....
1 _.....
.

• New l'lmnes
. • Garagt!s
•Complete
Remodeling

·

~-

Nerth
OHS..Qfi
• A o2
• 7 5
•• 4
6KQJ 1098

West

IIONTY

•Q roasa
~

S.Utb
1•
%t

PRICE

Rooon Additioas, ~~&lt;modeling, Mela1 ,&amp;

...-.......

3 NT

ll.otfs, ·~Decks,~

fRANK I EARNEST

Wf¥~E l&gt;'i&gt; YOIJ
t.tA!ZN
'

SC~OOL.

Nr&gt;w OJnn for
Sprilfg

BARNEY

"0U"'C5

Trimming

CARPENTER

&amp;Remova1
*Pmmpt and Quality

Work

Specials

10 jn. Bos(on Ferns
Now $5.00
While they last, (Wer .
2000 to choo!ie from .
flowering &amp; Foliage
·Basket.s, Bedding &amp;
vegetable Flats
4 in. foliage pot
Shrubs &amp; Azaleas
Open M-S 9-5

The selecled candidate will assist wilh
estimaling, scheduling, and other duli!$ as
needed. Musl hove excellent
relation skills. Must be cletcil oriented.
Experience in body shop worlt prelerred
but not required. Full hme posmon wilh
Clo.ed Sunday
generous benefits. lmmediole opening.
992-577,
Please submit resume Ia:
41251081 ·m
Malfr D'r rt lody A., M• I
Don Woocflord
. ~111'1111 Auto Repa
830 East Stote Slreet, Athens, OH 45701
740-378-6484

*Reasonable Rates
*lnsured
*Experienced
ReferenL"es Availahle!
Cali Gary Stanley @

HOW COME WE
DON'T GIT
SHOP CLASS IN
GI&lt;ADE SCHOOL,
MIZ P.

•n-.
_...,_

IIIIDOm.Addttiona I

:Rwt•

IEioctricii.PIIIIIIbing

:Roofing • oun.r.
Vinyl Siding &amp; P - .

lhttD •ncl PDrot: Dlclln:
WII036725

1HE -BORN LOSER

"'iov Kl~~ mcr ~'&lt;~

{'..'t£

~t'&gt;Oit 01-1 t&gt;1611iM. J:-=-

740-591-8044

~Astro-

-~!r~-

I•

FFT~

FOOH'
fffH'.

Parts

fOOFF''
rHFF! ,

w14oottf'·
FOO~

Joh!'!IOO'I Ttw

Service

or o441--D941

s'port,2 dr. ,auto,soft top,

EQUIPMENT TRAILffiS,
CARGO EKPRESS
&amp;
H 0 M E S T E AD E A
CARGO/CONCESSION
TRAILERS. B+W GQOSENECK
HITOHES.
CARMICHAEL
EQUIP·
M(NT IC AflMICHAEL
TRAILERS SALES &amp; SEAVICE. SPECIAL 20FT
GOOSENECK FLATBED
$3999. VIEW OUR ENTIRE
TRAILER INVENIDRY AT
WWW .C AAMICHAEL ·
TRAILERS.COM 740-446·
3825

- .....
·-,.....,._

:,UNUTS

~~llE CPEE~\

: ~E«E'S TilE WORLD F~M0\15
SS6EANT OF Ti-lE I=O~EI6N
LE610N LEADING IllS TROOPS
ACROSS TilE DESERT..

· E'I~E 8P81SES

=~;~:,;:;

-------95 GMC 314 ton ..4 2500.
V-11. high mUtl6. runs good,
$2,500 (7-10)992-0730

r

AS TllEif MARCH LINDER
A MOONLIT SK&lt;f, TilE'&lt; SING
A STIRRING F161lT SONG ..

il!fP.;.;....,;...;,;,---.
VAMl
JloRSAi.E

There's a strong possibility you will end
up having jurisdiction in some manner
over the affaifS of ethers. Handle it as
best you can, because· it'll prove to be
significant to your future.
·
TAURUS, (April 2o-May 20) - You will
find yoursetf involved in a partnership
arrangement. Make a concerted effort tC!
be a team player, ewn If you don 't want
any part of the enterprise. Don't be a
spoilspOrt.
GEMINI (May 21-June 20) - EW!n If all
.!&lt;.
05 • L.J:..i-C......_-l.:...:.....lis=l you're trying to do Is include a friend in
an assignment. qon't ask your pal to .
carry out a task that he or she can't do as
well as you. Yo'ur friend will feel inferior.
CANCER (June 21·July 22) - You've
heard it all before. Personal actions and
initiatives are never as satisfyi'ng as
those you do for unselfish reasons. This
will be the case for you today. Which will
You choose?
LEO (July 23·Aug. 22) - You ~now bet1er than to base an important jiJCigment
· call on cursory information, yet tt:at may
be eKactiy 'what vou'll do if you're not
careful. Try to analyze all of your altema ~
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) - :Don't take
lhe cost of a spec:al job for granted withcui first checking other available

Voyager,
99 Plymouth
140,000 miles. V-6 , runs
$2.500. (740)992-

COW and BOY
Ml\llTIN THINKS I

I HAVE TO PICK AN
·IN5TI1UMENT FOI1 SCHOOL

Yamaha

SHOULD PLAY OBOE.

. JW(l TH 15 WEEK AND I

IT'S LIKE THE

:cANT DECIDE WHICH ONE.

CLAIZIN£T,aJT
AWESOME12.

:· (

· KVl 100

Virago, 2 helmets, ·12971
miles. $2800. Call 304-5935010, 882·2516 Of 675-6955
2004 HOnda Gotdwing and
Escapade
trailer. Low
mjteage. 740..&amp;4&amp;8.132
Honda 90 TRX 4 wheelers,
like new, patd $2500 each,
asking S1400 each. Extreme
50 4 wheeler paid $1100
a91ong f~ 741)'-2*1306

..ION 09Eli' TOO MUCH
. OR~INTHE

rlkl~~~

. ~TONIGHT.••

For Remodeling lllld New H-.~
Call: MARCUM CONSTRUCTION
88 W,_go

Motor""""·

2311, ioldod, .....,. ' · 18
'"I'll highWI!Y. 110,000' .... 5
new tires, S6300. U1·7007

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

-·-

47239 Riebel Road, Long Bouom, OH

740-985-4141

Cell: 740-416-1834
25+ ~ trpnielf(!t FrH EstiIIA&amp;EMEHT
WATEIIPAOOfiHG
UIMH&lt;ibol*' ll1o1lme guorlntN, Loc.l ..... &amp;¥ .... turnllhed. Enill lwd 1875.

Cal

24 (740) 0110, Flogoro Vr!'als: pnxAHJQJ.

61 See or he1r

19 Numbera to
crunch
DOWN
21 Jingle
23 Beluga
1 While

.Advertise
iqthis spac~ for
$~4 r month

19 Column

product
24 They prooe- 2 Weirdo
cute perpo 3 I, to .

44Broezy
46 Ringmnllr

1ype

20 lnsuranC&lt;!

Wallpng

Skirt INIIA

giant.
22 Gullet
23 Plow into

25 Way bock

"ANighlt"
heni

when

27 Popa1 or

giftl
6 Bite
c.-a
34 Kindolbul 7 Turltilhtltle 28 More
36 Bulllighl
8 Halloo •
tracllble

~
-"bird

37 Down

·-

47 Zig . .
·opposite

48 Not theirs
49 SiH..
mineral
51 Monecliclt
53 Wheel buy
(2 '!fdo.)
55 Tenn
of

--

9 n .. o~u,
11 Pat011
12 Fluctulte

56Spe-'s

57r.:

31 1111'1'
c ~ otle
(hyph.).
4013 tumor or
criel
K-1
4l! Fish catcher 17 Greek
43 Zen riddle
-

=

colorer

S(C~lA-~t.~s·
IW11orllor CIAT L •POIUN -

. . .OhQI..

I

ISEE
THIIT.

sources. Ask various professionals about
what you'll get for your monev. ·
LIBRA (Sept. 23·0ct. 23) -Do strive to
be a warm and generous person to all
you encounter, but don'llat a well-k~wn
freeloader take advantage of you. This
person is lying In watt for another suoker.
Remain on guard .
SCORPIO (Oct. 24·Nov. 22)- Your per·
sonality and good looks may rescue V0\1
lmm many tight spots, bul not so today
- especially if those with whom you are
dealiqg are nol tans to begin with. Don't
make~ings hard on yourlietf.
SAGITIARIUS (Nov. 23·Dec. 21) Allbaugh you m1ght be privy to some
valuable Information, unless you know
what to 00 with it a rare opportunity wiM
slip' by. Chedt with an UXJ1ert if you sus·
pect that you have ~omething .
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jon . 19)- To be
effective m business. you must know hOw
to capitalize on your assets. Be careful
nqt to giye more away tt:an necessary in
Order 10 gain what might be an insignlfi·
amount. '
.
AQUARIU~ '(Jon. 20-Feb 19). - T....
• care not to toss In the towel prematurely
If you should make some blundenl early
an.Ttm. t1 your ally: and gtv.n enough of
~- you onould bo 10
whatev-

cam

•r m--. were mactt

"""*"

PISCES (Fob. 20-Ma""' 20)-11 ll,...r
wM to pla01 too much ltODk In promil·
.. mado. eond~iont boyond
ono'l ~~ con -~ ~ .. urp 11111. 11
might. be 1hl IOdly 1hl1 tno ono
pei'IOI'I ~u Din cOunt an 11 yourMif.
AAIES (Maroh 21-Apr-111&amp;) -1\y not 10
Ilk 1 trllnd 10 do ony!hlng he or
1111 b e l - 11 100 dltllouft to hlndoo.
'I'Du 'll only CllUII embaffUII'Minl.

SOUPTONUTZ

-

'?/·Jt-'"""

Ionon 1/1 1lto

lour ICf1ltllbl.d wordl bo.
low to lorn! four 1im!&gt;lt words.

0

~~

:A!iERN·II.
·
I I Is _ .

1 2
_ 1

~==~
It 0 fT R

"It's good 10 ~and
fmget,. the mother told her
daughter ~Smiliag sbe
· added, "It's also good to
furget what you bave

Ie ~"

.---------.

TOMDEH

1--rl~l•.;.:,.l:;....:;...l~:.:.,.1--1
L.-L._L._-1.. ....l.-l.._.

the ehucl&lt;le quctod

by fllliog m1ho mioslng ...,!do
you d-lop fronr s1e1&gt; No. 3 beloW.

I' I' I' I' I' .1·

rl

A PaiNT N\JIIBfiiEO 11
'1:1' LfnERS
•

11

A UNSCI!I.M8i.E FORI
V ANSWER
.

lllllll'll

ti\186.

02 HD Ultra Classic. 24,000
mites,
blaoklchrome.
$14,000. 7-10-339-0031

· Wida so ma~ ·
Choices, it's easy tO
aet carried away
'With our
listinp
in dae dassifiedst

a, Bomtoo- aoot

~

1995

lellover

cover

Frldoy, May 16, 21101

l"ff ~ .

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

EBY INTEGRITY KIEFER $6995.00.
1999 ChO'Jy
BUILT,
'·vAll"EV Tr_aoke_r 5 spd 4x4,$4495.00.
HO-RSE /Li l/ESTOCK R1ver_v.ew Motors 2 BIOOks
TRAILERS, LOAD IMA.)( above
. McDonalds,

Eu1
Pass
Pass
Pass

ace and cruises home.

._...F-~

5000 Ford Diesel tramor. 2004 Ford Ranger 4 Dr 4x4
Front eld .._.,, new tire&amp;. auto Xtt off-road Treme; pkg'
good point/Bhtjpe. 645-5946 $89G5.00. 2002 lsuzu

5!1 Smeltoty
Conjoclute
I tiel 60

18~

CELEBRITY CIPHER

· tiary Curtis- Owner
Barber ' ~ Au1o

YOU YOUNG-UNS
STILL NEED ALL
. YORE F~S

SERVICE

StAt 124
aeedlvllle, OH'
FOI1Ilel"ly

ONE ...
TWO ...
1Hl&lt;EE ...

ICf'lllctling
5I Mom's mom

ooly man wno is really lree is 1he one
who can turn down an invitation to dinner without giving an excuse; Was
Oscar Wilde a lree man? He said, ,
must decline your invitation owing to a
subsequen1 engagemen1.' One could
argue that that was nCJI: giving an excuse.
At 1he bridge table, you are lree to issue
a game invi!alion when you hove 1D-12'
]»nts. And Wyoo also haw a six-card
surt, you may bid your surt twioe, first a1
1he one- or lwo-levol , !hen allhe lhreelevel, wllh a jump Hneceesary.
In lttis auclion. because North made his
first response ailh'11wo-level, .he rebids
a quiellhree clubs. South, with a spade
S!Opper and 15 high-card po;nts, lakes a
shot. at three no-trump.
Would I'OU have rebid two no-If"""' with
that North colleclion? Thai would irMte
game, but rt would ns« panner's passing, and you don~ ...mro play in two notrump wi1h a good long surt l~e that and
a side entty. You want to be in three noby Luis Campos
trump·or lo makelhal surt trump. So. you
Celetrtty Opher C'YPOP'IIS life Cl"ids:l from ~ by \atr'()US l)eCCIIe. p8sl and peaeft.
might rebid lttree no-trump.
Each ISler mthe CIPher sland5 tor ardhef
West leads 1he spade s~ againsl tllree
TOOB{s clue: N equalS C
no-trump. How should South plan 1he
play?
· "Z DBKJJI SFM'I'l RCZMY K 'M IACZMO
Deelarer has four lop lricks.'The olher
Z SF ZL K HZLRKYB. ZA NFPJS WB
five winners can come from dummy's
Zf Z .SZSM'R JBKDM TDFH ZA ."
club surt, but assuming 1he delender with
1he club aoe will hold up that card unlil
- LZMOBD TZFMK KVVJB
1he second round ollhe surt, South w~l
need a dummy anh)'. To ensure this, he
. PREVIOUS SOLUTION - 'l.o"' Is a serious men181 disease.' - Plalo
wins 1he first lriok in his hand with 1he
spade king. Then he drives outlhe club · 'Love: a ~ary insanity Cll8ble by marriage.' - Arilbrose Bierce

Residential and New

Stanley Tree-

24
3 ...,.
Pass

~

French author ..IJies Renard said, '1lle

'

7A!i9 St. llt. 11i0 • wlp&lt;*s

Nortb

Pass
Pass
Pass

With a long suit,
rebid three

fLEMfNTA~Y

,4LG~fMY?

740.446.9200

Wf':st

16 -Mow

::,
54

2&amp; c.te IU 29 High ICiwlo1 4
ctea
5
30-32 llowrate

Opening lead: • 6

Harvey Road Mason. WV

---!111

A7 6 I

Dealer: South
Vulnerable: Both

PSI CONSTRUCTION

.....
.....

52__,_

14 Pati6Kiii
.
gacldeM
15 Papoicle

Sooth
• KI
WAQ£4 3
t AQ72
• 53

111411 mo. pd

10 Year&lt;

1

10 0.0 lllif

East
• J 9 7
• J 10 8
•

Answer to PreYioul: PuEzll

47Chlmp

"-all up 50 .
_.
.,_

1 Wl1;1
6

t 10 9 B

.2

SIDp &amp; Compare

Ist Rocui lo left abnve
Ma.wn Go/fCourse

Construction
Can he ·installed over
your e ~isting roof
Insulated roof&lt; to
save on -your Heating
and Air COnditioning
oost

K 9 2

t K J 53

J.II!-1IJI

Strotton

HUBBARDS
GREENHOUSE
· Syracuse, Ohio

l:lelp W.med .

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

45 Ogle

12e-

·con4*Jk TNe c.re

Free BINGO!!

1st Pack Free

Briggs &amp;

AA/EOE

~=======~======~

.

]114--882-3294
Servicing Lawn
Tractors. Mowers.
Tiller&lt;. Murtay.
Craftsman, Mnl,

Pomero Ohio

·mdillardOdonwood.com
Also -on 1lte web ot www.don wood .com
. E.O.E.

New Bingo Startup
Saturday, May 17th

~

met(

or apply on-line at
W\WI.]lvalley.org

for more information you may conlacl
Marl. Dillard ol (740) 589-3636 or

Mason County Youth
football League

,.,

'
~

.

H·Honest
1- lnlcgrily
S-Service

.

Reg'd e1ac1&lt; Angus bulls ••-

Furnished Apt, _2nd AVe.NE
--w-...
2001 Neon. auto, nice &amp;
Upstairs, All Utilities pd. Steel Beams: ·Pipe Rebar clean . 88,000 miles. 53500
28R $4501dap. ·$4501rent + 18R, Mo Pets, GallipoAis, For
Concr-ete ,
Angte, obo. 256-1539
utitlties, on private lot. 740- Call 446-9523
Channel, Flat Bar, Steel ~------&amp;45-3592 or 740-367-0654
2006 Jeep Wrangl8r, 6
Gfacloua L.Mng 1 and 2 Gra1ing
For
Drains, speed, soft top. ~6.000 miles
2Br at Johnsons Mobile Bedroom Apts. at Vil&amp;age Driveways ·&amp;Walkways. l&amp;l $16,90b. 441-9335or416Homo Pari&lt;. Call «6-2003 ManorondflM!.- Apts. in Scrap Metals Open Monday, oooo ....._..message.
Middleport, tram $327 to Tuesday, Wednesday &amp;
2BR in Addavnle sdlool d;s- $592: 740-992-5064. Equal Friday, Bam-4'30pm. Close&lt;l 91 eu;ot&lt; Century, 13Sk

tric:t,
reterences
&amp; deposit Housing Opportunity.
required.
74D-367-o632

e

"'-'W..........,
•.....,..,. ..,..,.,.

-==~====~;:======;

I26304'::~- 7~$1100-$1300

8 ·

I

Help w----.o
••"""

751-6872
------- I
'Polled Hereford bulls for
aale, (740)949-2193

auto,good air, good tires.22
mpg-good cond. 740-9920255 ..

.

]114--77~5861

'::=======-===~====

~ 993 Ford Tarsus WagonV6

J.ll!-zt11
MASON MOWER

1,~------_.1

'"'IJrW""

.......,

-.

::.~

fit yoor needs
Pomeroy, Ohio

7896
Limousine
Bull.
1 yr _
2 bodloom house for ran1. ED•AffllRIWILEI
- - - - - - -. Black
old, t.300ths.
S900.
CaiiJR
no- (740)992-sa58
Townhouse
eponmems. Sole: Bertler Carpet $5.95 740-256-8160 or oell 304-

2br House on Redman RENT. Call (740)441-1111 Mollohan
yd remnantsCarpal.
$40.00 &amp;
up.
2212
Ridge Rd. $40o daposH. for application &amp; information. Eastern Ave, Gallipolis, Oh
$375 mon1h 304-675-6406
740-446-7#4
3 Bd. ...... in Pomeroy.
Ml!iaiJJ.ANHous
1 112 bath .... lull base.....- IJeiF
ment, 2 car garage, $650.
•2&amp;9 bedroom apartments
7-10-949-2303.
• Central heat &amp; AJC
3 Bedroom House in • Washerlr:tryer hookup
Syracuse. $500/month +
•Ail electrio- averaging
dopoon Hud App. No - - SS0-$60/month
Hot Ttb I Sw;m Spa Outlet.
(304)675-5332 w&lt;!!ll&lt;ends
•Owner pays water, sewer, $1000 off. Huge selection.
740-SIHl265
trash
New Styles. free 'Delivery.
Syrocuse 4~ bedroom
(31M)II82-3017
Top Oual~y. .606-929-5655
across
street
from
Cammunl1y lkr"'*ng. roterJET
AERATION MOTORS
enoes requiretl, (740)992•
••oo
'Rapa;rod, New &amp; RebuiH In
7511
or 591 ~
StDOk. Call Agn .Evans, 1Momu:lloMFs
800-537·9528.

-

-

All buildings ..-e
aJStmD :built to

j

andlor small houses FOR

NEA Crossword Puzzle

BRIDGE

USED HOMES l'lico 3BR 1BR Apt. in Spring Volley, Tara
Td'Nnh0U50 Have I'OU priced a John .
from $, .900 down. Sa\18 WID
hookups.
Visit ~. Very Spacious. Deere lately? You'll be sur-

2750 myrrn-.&lt;;om
ties.com or call 331Hl362
·--~-~---, 1

The Daily Sentinel • Page 87

I.

WJM.mydailysc;,ntinel.com

SCU-JA.liTS ANSWERs 5' II • 0 8
r.Ji: - Gllarl- Bring- Dolage - GET in UNE
AcD to
"'t's not easy to solve problems one lila
time wiiCII they refuse to GET in LINE."

her-.

ARLO &amp;JANIS

�~.- 15,2008

"CROSS

$5,000! Midwest 740-828- www.spring-tfalley-proper- 2 BedrOoms, C/A, 1 112 · prised! Cheat out our used

i

1..ors &amp;
ACIIFAGE

I

L.,-~;::;;::;;:;;,_,.11

Balh. Adul1 ·" "" &amp; Bally invento'}'

"""· Patio. S1art $425Mo.
pd
BF!; ..'"!noYe &amp; tridge furn~l No Pebo, • Lea&amp;B PIU&amp;
•~par mo.,
""&gt;'· Sowrily Deposi1 ReQuirod.
258 Stale St. No Smoking, (7-10)967-o547.
No pats. 740-446-3667
_ _ _ _..;..__ _ _

5400

FOR SALE: 219 imerest in
2 bedroom apartmen1 tor
aaeage located in Mason
,~~ West v· .. · 2005 rent in Middleport, no pets,
-·•·
•rgonoa.
app ro I of I d (740)992-5858
1sa s
an
~===~---

Twin Rivers Tower is acc8pt-

~---

inn

'-

3br.

Apartment, available

;;:::::===~·

i--.:'""*;::;,:IIel=rr:.:...JI

•

r10 '

astern

.....
.......

•

"'11e,

Jlou;J;How

52 Westwood
:lllxm;
Orive, from $365 to $560.
!4()-4.46-2568.
Equal
L
Housing Opportunity. This
$226/mol S bed . 2 bath. institution Is an Equal
~! (5% ,down. 20 Opportunity P'rovider aild
- .. II% APR) lor listings Employer.
Opan 9-2. Clo9odTues. 939CONVENIENTLY LDCAT _ 2899 or otter 2pm 140-3671101).62[)..4946 eo&lt;. Rll27

and

SHEDs-:
GMIAGESBARNS

-''------John lloer A 1947 Tractor,
Electric Start +tlgh '&amp; Low
Transmission. New Rims,
nres &amp; Paint. 2002 Hard
Top· For CJ7 Jeep, 2003
Kawasaki mule, Call 949-

2305 tor lntorma1;0&lt;1,
Goc:Dii
Wanrto buy a 14')(50' all
electric mobile home.reaGood Used Fum.
appli- sonably priced. 304-682anoes. Going our of busi- 3418 Of 304-674-6915.
ness sale. Everything must
go. 76 Vine St. Gallipolis OH.
I.J\~-,oa(

- A p i a.• -

.£mtes.

1:

E

wa~tnvo Gallipolis, 'O hio, 740-446.
9m. 4, 5, 6' 8fl1 T 3PT.
Finishlng ·mowers starting at
$699.00 and.up. Hurry while
~ last

.. ·• ......,............ .., ""
'"""
1~ ~ u.~ --~'~. 1 ~
·~ ·~ ~- ~
apartment
for
1he
imprrNements and separate 212 3KI Ave. S rooms and elderlyfdisabled, call 675timber appraisal, together, bath, fumishei:l, no pets .
6679
tolbtd. 011er 5400,000. 'FAX Ren1 + Oep. 7-40-441~245
•
"""y 10 912·2~782

MOBILE HOME LOT FOR $540 month. same Deposit
RENT, 1031 GeOtg&amp;s Creek plus electric. washer. dryer
Act, 441 -1'11 1
hookup, No FJets. 304-6740023 or 304-61 o-on6

Phillip
Alder

at

W W W C A R E Q . C0 M
Carmichael Equipment 74044&amp;-2412 ,
-------Jim's Form Equipmant Inc. .

2 50
1

r-------==::::c:

Ellrn View

ts

.a-b

.•

!GIJ
I~

~ lb1:Nr

·r

~

-~~~~~--UIIED--1!-TB!I.-

31Jr,&amp;2ba. double wide. 'eo«:.

month fvr more info. call 3736
304-895 •3568
Nice

quiet

home and dou- "Referenoes

2BR
&amp;

apt."

1

99 Buick 'leSabre 4 DA ..
3800 ENG,auto,all power,
10 mort old iemale German cold afr,EX. Shape ·$3600
Shepherd $15Q.OO 304-675- Call949-2045 evening

IQR&amp;U:.
J.o,_..;,iiiiiiiiiiiio-,.1.
-.

deposH ·6262

~wide ·tor rent. 740-446- required. No Pets. 446-1271 - - - - - - - - Police ~mpounds! Cars from
AKC Yorkie pups males
only, 1st shots &amp; 'wormed
Al'Aim.tEN!!;
Ta+ong applications: Modem $650 304-675-1946
!UIIbNr
1BR. no pels , $295/rent - - - - - - - ~-...iiliiiiiilili.-,..1. includes water. $200/dep. r-Kc
Reg
M'
...,
44&amp;-36H
"".
.
, In1a1ure
1 and 2 bedroom apart:Pinschers, - 7 weeks old,
ments, furnished and untur-shots • wormed. 740-388-.
8788
pished. and houses in
Pomeroy and Middleport, N
a~r~ Reg Border Co!Me P""""· 6
security deposit ll!qlllmd, no ~IWOJ
~pets. 740-992·2218.
wks old. First shots and
wormed. Imported . blood
...... 740-379-9110
4060 or 367-7762

r

or 709-1657

I.:...c.c.:...=----,.;;.;.;;;...;,.,.,.,=""'"--,

SHOP

Pleasanl Valley Hospital is current!
. accepting applicalions for a full tim
experienced Registered Nurses .i
Medical/Surgical. Applicants must have
current West Virginia license. or eligible t
obtain.
Send resumes to:
P'eli ot Vll11ey ltospit.ll

c/DHII-a--

379-2151 or 794-1098

Thursday,
Saturday
&amp; miles.
door. excellern
conSunday.
(740~7300
dltion 4
$4000
or best offer.
Modem 1 Bedroom Apt. , ._..;.;-~;_;.;.;....., 379-2732
Colt (740)446-(l390
PEl's

condition, 1acrelotbeauttful
counhy view $400.00 a Modem 1 BR Apt can 446-

Mobll8

r

REGIStERED NURSES

UUQ

1999 Pontiac Bonneville
SSE. $4000 or ·best otter.

$500!,

Hcmdas, . Chevys,
~~ps, Fords, &amp; more:l tor
Msttngs BOIJ.62Q..4876 ex V435
Quality cars, truCks, vans
starting .at $1500 to $8300.
Financing available with
warranty.
'COOK
MJI C!JRS 328 Jackson Pilre.
74044&amp;o103

11'11~~~---.,
rl5

'l'lluJ&amp;s

-IIWI. SALE

15!0 'VIIIIey Drift
POint "--'t,IIN ;1!5550
(304) 675-4340
Fax to:
(304) 675-Q97S

$500 Coverall!!!
Playing at

124 Highland Ave.
Point Pleasant
In (West Virginia Jobs
Foundation Bingo Hall)
Doors open at 4:00
· 2 pack min .

~

""'-

2!1670 Bashan ROad
l!acine, Ohio
45'171

7-1.7

Hours
7:00 "M • 8:00 PM

Help W.nled

~;;::::::::::::::::::::..:::::~::::::~

BOD.Y SHOP
ASSis·-....
1 _.....
.

• New l'lmnes
. • Garagt!s
•Complete
Remodeling

·

~-

Nerth
OHS..Qfi
• A o2
• 7 5
•• 4
6KQJ 1098

West

IIONTY

•Q roasa
~

S.Utb
1•
%t

PRICE

Rooon Additioas, ~~&lt;modeling, Mela1 ,&amp;

...-.......

3 NT

ll.otfs, ·~Decks,~

fRANK I EARNEST

Wf¥~E l&gt;'i&gt; YOIJ
t.tA!ZN
'

SC~OOL.

Nr&gt;w OJnn for
Sprilfg

BARNEY

"0U"'C5

Trimming

CARPENTER

&amp;Remova1
*Pmmpt and Quality

Work

Specials

10 jn. Bos(on Ferns
Now $5.00
While they last, (Wer .
2000 to choo!ie from .
flowering &amp; Foliage
·Basket.s, Bedding &amp;
vegetable Flats
4 in. foliage pot
Shrubs &amp; Azaleas
Open M-S 9-5

The selecled candidate will assist wilh
estimaling, scheduling, and other duli!$ as
needed. Musl hove excellent
relation skills. Must be cletcil oriented.
Experience in body shop worlt prelerred
but not required. Full hme posmon wilh
Clo.ed Sunday
generous benefits. lmmediole opening.
992-577,
Please submit resume Ia:
41251081 ·m
Malfr D'r rt lody A., M• I
Don Woocflord
. ~111'1111 Auto Repa
830 East Stote Slreet, Athens, OH 45701
740-378-6484

*Reasonable Rates
*lnsured
*Experienced
ReferenL"es Availahle!
Cali Gary Stanley @

HOW COME WE
DON'T GIT
SHOP CLASS IN
GI&lt;ADE SCHOOL,
MIZ P.

•n-.
_...,_

IIIIDOm.Addttiona I

:Rwt•

IEioctricii.PIIIIIIbing

:Roofing • oun.r.
Vinyl Siding &amp; P - .

lhttD •ncl PDrot: Dlclln:
WII036725

1HE -BORN LOSER

"'iov Kl~~ mcr ~'&lt;~

{'..'t£

~t'&gt;Oit 01-1 t&gt;1611iM. J:-=-

740-591-8044

~Astro-

-~!r~-

I•

FFT~

FOOH'
fffH'.

Parts

fOOFF''
rHFF! ,

w14oottf'·
FOO~

Joh!'!IOO'I Ttw

Service

or o441--D941

s'port,2 dr. ,auto,soft top,

EQUIPMENT TRAILffiS,
CARGO EKPRESS
&amp;
H 0 M E S T E AD E A
CARGO/CONCESSION
TRAILERS. B+W GQOSENECK
HITOHES.
CARMICHAEL
EQUIP·
M(NT IC AflMICHAEL
TRAILERS SALES &amp; SEAVICE. SPECIAL 20FT
GOOSENECK FLATBED
$3999. VIEW OUR ENTIRE
TRAILER INVENIDRY AT
WWW .C AAMICHAEL ·
TRAILERS.COM 740-446·
3825

- .....
·-,.....,._

:,UNUTS

~~llE CPEE~\

: ~E«E'S TilE WORLD F~M0\15
SS6EANT OF Ti-lE I=O~EI6N
LE610N LEADING IllS TROOPS
ACROSS TilE DESERT..

· E'I~E 8P81SES

=~;~:,;:;

-------95 GMC 314 ton ..4 2500.
V-11. high mUtl6. runs good,
$2,500 (7-10)992-0730

r

AS TllEif MARCH LINDER
A MOONLIT SK&lt;f, TilE'&lt; SING
A STIRRING F161lT SONG ..

il!fP.;.;....,;...;,;,---.
VAMl
JloRSAi.E

There's a strong possibility you will end
up having jurisdiction in some manner
over the affaifS of ethers. Handle it as
best you can, because· it'll prove to be
significant to your future.
·
TAURUS, (April 2o-May 20) - You will
find yoursetf involved in a partnership
arrangement. Make a concerted effort tC!
be a team player, ewn If you don 't want
any part of the enterprise. Don't be a
spoilspOrt.
GEMINI (May 21-June 20) - EW!n If all
.!&lt;.
05 • L.J:..i-C......_-l.:...:.....lis=l you're trying to do Is include a friend in
an assignment. qon't ask your pal to .
carry out a task that he or she can't do as
well as you. Yo'ur friend will feel inferior.
CANCER (June 21·July 22) - You've
heard it all before. Personal actions and
initiatives are never as satisfyi'ng as
those you do for unselfish reasons. This
will be the case for you today. Which will
You choose?
LEO (July 23·Aug. 22) - You ~now bet1er than to base an important jiJCigment
· call on cursory information, yet tt:at may
be eKactiy 'what vou'll do if you're not
careful. Try to analyze all of your altema ~
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) - :Don't take
lhe cost of a spec:al job for granted withcui first checking other available

Voyager,
99 Plymouth
140,000 miles. V-6 , runs
$2.500. (740)992-

COW and BOY
Ml\llTIN THINKS I

I HAVE TO PICK AN
·IN5TI1UMENT FOI1 SCHOOL

Yamaha

SHOULD PLAY OBOE.

. JW(l TH 15 WEEK AND I

IT'S LIKE THE

:cANT DECIDE WHICH ONE.

CLAIZIN£T,aJT
AWESOME12.

:· (

· KVl 100

Virago, 2 helmets, ·12971
miles. $2800. Call 304-5935010, 882·2516 Of 675-6955
2004 HOnda Gotdwing and
Escapade
trailer. Low
mjteage. 740..&amp;4&amp;8.132
Honda 90 TRX 4 wheelers,
like new, patd $2500 each,
asking S1400 each. Extreme
50 4 wheeler paid $1100
a91ong f~ 741)'-2*1306

..ION 09Eli' TOO MUCH
. OR~INTHE

rlkl~~~

. ~TONIGHT.••

For Remodeling lllld New H-.~
Call: MARCUM CONSTRUCTION
88 W,_go

Motor""""·

2311, ioldod, .....,. ' · 18
'"I'll highWI!Y. 110,000' .... 5
new tires, S6300. U1·7007

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

-·-

47239 Riebel Road, Long Bouom, OH

740-985-4141

Cell: 740-416-1834
25+ ~ trpnielf(!t FrH EstiIIA&amp;EMEHT
WATEIIPAOOfiHG
UIMH&lt;ibol*' ll1o1lme guorlntN, Loc.l ..... &amp;¥ .... turnllhed. Enill lwd 1875.

Cal

24 (740) 0110, Flogoro Vr!'als: pnxAHJQJ.

61 See or he1r

19 Numbera to
crunch
DOWN
21 Jingle
23 Beluga
1 While

.Advertise
iqthis spac~ for
$~4 r month

19 Column

product
24 They prooe- 2 Weirdo
cute perpo 3 I, to .

44Broezy
46 Ringmnllr

1ype

20 lnsuranC&lt;!

Wallpng

Skirt INIIA

giant.
22 Gullet
23 Plow into

25 Way bock

"ANighlt"
heni

when

27 Popa1 or

giftl
6 Bite
c.-a
34 Kindolbul 7 Turltilhtltle 28 More
36 Bulllighl
8 Halloo •
tracllble

~
-"bird

37 Down

·-

47 Zig . .
·opposite

48 Not theirs
49 SiH..
mineral
51 Monecliclt
53 Wheel buy
(2 '!fdo.)
55 Tenn
of

--

9 n .. o~u,
11 Pat011
12 Fluctulte

56Spe-'s

57r.:

31 1111'1'
c ~ otle
(hyph.).
4013 tumor or
criel
K-1
4l! Fish catcher 17 Greek
43 Zen riddle
-

=

colorer

S(C~lA-~t.~s·
IW11orllor CIAT L •POIUN -

. . .OhQI..

I

ISEE
THIIT.

sources. Ask various professionals about
what you'll get for your monev. ·
LIBRA (Sept. 23·0ct. 23) -Do strive to
be a warm and generous person to all
you encounter, but don'llat a well-k~wn
freeloader take advantage of you. This
person is lying In watt for another suoker.
Remain on guard .
SCORPIO (Oct. 24·Nov. 22)- Your per·
sonality and good looks may rescue V0\1
lmm many tight spots, bul not so today
- especially if those with whom you are
dealiqg are nol tans to begin with. Don't
make~ings hard on yourlietf.
SAGITIARIUS (Nov. 23·Dec. 21) Allbaugh you m1ght be privy to some
valuable Information, unless you know
what to 00 with it a rare opportunity wiM
slip' by. Chedt with an UXJ1ert if you sus·
pect that you have ~omething .
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jon . 19)- To be
effective m business. you must know hOw
to capitalize on your assets. Be careful
nqt to giye more away tt:an necessary in
Order 10 gain what might be an insignlfi·
amount. '
.
AQUARIU~ '(Jon. 20-Feb 19). - T....
• care not to toss In the towel prematurely
If you should make some blundenl early
an.Ttm. t1 your ally: and gtv.n enough of
~- you onould bo 10
whatev-

cam

•r m--. were mactt

"""*"

PISCES (Fob. 20-Ma""' 20)-11 ll,...r
wM to pla01 too much ltODk In promil·
.. mado. eond~iont boyond
ono'l ~~ con -~ ~ .. urp 11111. 11
might. be 1hl IOdly 1hl1 tno ono
pei'IOI'I ~u Din cOunt an 11 yourMif.
AAIES (Maroh 21-Apr-111&amp;) -1\y not 10
Ilk 1 trllnd 10 do ony!hlng he or
1111 b e l - 11 100 dltllouft to hlndoo.
'I'Du 'll only CllUII embaffUII'Minl.

SOUPTONUTZ

-

'?/·Jt-'"""

Ionon 1/1 1lto

lour ICf1ltllbl.d wordl bo.
low to lorn! four 1im!&gt;lt words.

0

~~

:A!iERN·II.
·
I I Is _ .

1 2
_ 1

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"It's good 10 ~and
fmget,. the mother told her
daughter ~Smiliag sbe
· added, "It's also good to
furget what you bave

Ie ~"

.---------.

TOMDEH

1--rl~l•.;.:,.l:;....:;...l~:.:.,.1--1
L.-L._L._-1.. ....l.-l.._.

the ehucl&lt;le quctod

by fllliog m1ho mioslng ...,!do
you d-lop fronr s1e1&gt; No. 3 beloW.

I' I' I' I' I' .1·

rl

A PaiNT N\JIIBfiiEO 11
'1:1' LfnERS
•

11

A UNSCI!I.M8i.E FORI
V ANSWER
.

lllllll'll

ti\186.

02 HD Ultra Classic. 24,000
mites,
blaoklchrome.
$14,000. 7-10-339-0031

· Wida so ma~ ·
Choices, it's easy tO
aet carried away
'With our
listinp
in dae dassifiedst

a, Bomtoo- aoot

~

1995

lellover

cover

Frldoy, May 16, 21101

l"ff ~ .

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

EBY INTEGRITY KIEFER $6995.00.
1999 ChO'Jy
BUILT,
'·vAll"EV Tr_aoke_r 5 spd 4x4,$4495.00.
HO-RSE /Li l/ESTOCK R1ver_v.ew Motors 2 BIOOks
TRAILERS, LOAD IMA.)( above
. McDonalds,

Eu1
Pass
Pass
Pass

ace and cruises home.

._...F-~

5000 Ford Diesel tramor. 2004 Ford Ranger 4 Dr 4x4
Front eld .._.,, new tire&amp;. auto Xtt off-road Treme; pkg'
good point/Bhtjpe. 645-5946 $89G5.00. 2002 lsuzu

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Conjoclute
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CELEBRITY CIPHER

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Barber ' ~ Au1o

YOU YOUNG-UNS
STILL NEED ALL
. YORE F~S

SERVICE

StAt 124
aeedlvllle, OH'
FOI1Ilel"ly

ONE ...
TWO ...
1Hl&lt;EE ...

ICf'lllctling
5I Mom's mom

ooly man wno is really lree is 1he one
who can turn down an invitation to dinner without giving an excuse; Was
Oscar Wilde a lree man? He said, ,
must decline your invitation owing to a
subsequen1 engagemen1.' One could
argue that that was nCJI: giving an excuse.
At 1he bridge table, you are lree to issue
a game invi!alion when you hove 1D-12'
]»nts. And Wyoo also haw a six-card
surt, you may bid your surt twioe, first a1
1he one- or lwo-levol , !hen allhe lhreelevel, wllh a jump Hneceesary.
In lttis auclion. because North made his
first response ailh'11wo-level, .he rebids
a quiellhree clubs. South, with a spade
S!Opper and 15 high-card po;nts, lakes a
shot. at three no-trump.
Would I'OU have rebid two no-If"""' with
that North colleclion? Thai would irMte
game, but rt would ns« panner's passing, and you don~ ...mro play in two notrump wi1h a good long surt l~e that and
a side entty. You want to be in three noby Luis Campos
trump·or lo makelhal surt trump. So. you
Celetrtty Opher C'YPOP'IIS life Cl"ids:l from ~ by \atr'()US l)eCCIIe. p8sl and peaeft.
might rebid lttree no-trump.
Each ISler mthe CIPher sland5 tor ardhef
West leads 1he spade s~ againsl tllree
TOOB{s clue: N equalS C
no-trump. How should South plan 1he
play?
· "Z DBKJJI SFM'I'l RCZMY K 'M IACZMO
Deelarer has four lop lricks.'The olher
Z SF ZL K HZLRKYB. ZA NFPJS WB
five winners can come from dummy's
Zf Z .SZSM'R JBKDM TDFH ZA ."
club surt, but assuming 1he delender with
1he club aoe will hold up that card unlil
- LZMOBD TZFMK KVVJB
1he second round ollhe surt, South w~l
need a dummy anh)'. To ensure this, he
. PREVIOUS SOLUTION - 'l.o"' Is a serious men181 disease.' - Plalo
wins 1he first lriok in his hand with 1he
spade king. Then he drives outlhe club · 'Love: a ~ary insanity Cll8ble by marriage.' - Arilbrose Bierce

Residential and New

Stanley Tree-

24
3 ...,.
Pass

~

French author ..IJies Renard said, '1lle

'

7A!i9 St. llt. 11i0 • wlp&lt;*s

Nortb

Pass
Pass
Pass

With a long suit,
rebid three

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Craftsman, Mnl,

Pomero Ohio

·mdillardOdonwood.com
Also -on 1lte web ot www.don wood .com
. E.O.E.

New Bingo Startup
Saturday, May 17th

~

met(

or apply on-line at
W\WI.]lvalley.org

for more information you may conlacl
Marl. Dillard ol (740) 589-3636 or

Mason County Youth
football League

,.,

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~

.

H·Honest
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Reg'd e1ac1&lt; Angus bulls ••-

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28R $4501dap. ·$4501rent + 18R, Mo Pets, GallipoAis, For
Concr-ete ,
Angte, obo. 256-1539
utitlties, on private lot. 740- Call 446-9523
Channel, Flat Bar, Steel ~------&amp;45-3592 or 740-367-0654
2006 Jeep Wrangl8r, 6
Gfacloua L.Mng 1 and 2 Gra1ing
For
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1 112 bath .... lull base.....- IJeiF
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•2&amp;9 bedroom apartments
7-10-949-2303.
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dopoon Hud App. No - - SS0-$60/month
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•Owner pays water, sewer, $1000 off. Huge selection.
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trash
New Styles. free 'Delivery.
Syrocuse 4~ bedroom
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Top Oual~y. .606-929-5655
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street
from
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enoes requiretl, (740)992•
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or 591 ~
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BRIDGE

USED HOMES l'lico 3BR 1BR Apt. in Spring Volley, Tara
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Visit ~. Very Spacious. Deere lately? You'll be sur-

2750 myrrn-.&lt;;om
ties.com or call 331Hl362
·--~-~---, 1

The Daily Sentinel • Page 87

I.

WJM.mydailysc;,ntinel.com

SCU-JA.liTS ANSWERs 5' II • 0 8
r.Ji: - Gllarl- Bring- Dolage - GET in UNE
AcD to
"'t's not easy to solve problems one lila
time wiiCII they refuse to GET in LINE."

her-.

ARLO &amp;JANIS

�•

Pqe B8 • The Daily Sentinel

Thursday, Mf)' 15, 2008.

www.mydailysentinel.com

2008 Meigs County

Duval still plugging away,
trying to reclai•n past glory
BY PAuL NE:U&amp;UiRI

top-ranked player, supplanting Woods in the
standings. He became the
DULUTH, Ga. - David first golfer ever to shoot 59
Duval got started on the in the final round of a tournext tournament in his lat- nament, closing with an
est comeback at one of his eagle on the 18th hole of
favorite restaurants.
the 1999 · Bob Hope
Waffie House.
Chrysler Classic. He has
· "I had eggs, chicken, won 13 tournaments oil. the
toast, grits and a double PGA Tour and 19 around
order of hash browns,'' the world, the last of them
Du:val said, breaking into a · seemingly the one that
smile that has seemed so would propel his career to
hard to ~uster through even greater heights.
much of hts golfing career.
Instead, after winning the
"Gotta have the double 2001 British Open, Duval
. order of hash browns."
went. into a free fall. He
Now, if only Duval could slumped to 80th on the
order up the shots ~at once money list in 2002 and
made h1m !he world s No. I 2ll th the following year.
player.
He was more likely to shoot
. It's been seven years 80 as he was to break. par,
Since he was that aloof, · as likely to hit someone in
buffed-up golfer in the • the gallery as be was the
.
dark, Wf!iparoun~ sunglass- fairway.
"It's a lot more fun when
es, striking fear mto lesser
P!ay~rs and_ IQOking ~ve?' you're shooting 66 every
bit hke th1s generation s day,''
be
conceiled
most worthy challenger to Wednesday, before heading
off to play in the pro-am for
Tiger Woods.
But, instead of playing this week's AT&amp;T Classic
the · Tom Watson role .to in suburban Atlanta.
Along the way, Duval
Woods' Jack Nicklaus,
Duval became the guy who fc:&gt;und clari~y in his personwould have trouble com- allife - marrying, becompeting at Q-school. He still ing a father, insisting he
has his PGA ,Tour card, but had ·discovered a greater
that has more to do with purpose tlian hitting a golf
personal hardship than any- ball. Some even wondered
thing he's done lately on if family bliss ruined his
the course.
career, taking . away that
Duval played in only competitive edge he once
seven tournaments in 2007, held over everyone not
stepping aside to be with named Tiger.
his wife during a difficult
Duval scoffs at those who
pregnancy. He's · played say you can't be a loving
eight times this year on a husband and dad - and
"family crisis" waiver, but successful golfer.
bas yet to make a cut. Yep,
"Jack .Nicklaus did it
the guy who's won nearly pretty well," be said. "If
$17 million in his career . anything, I would think it
has yet to earn a single dol- would be the other way.
lar in 2008.
.
You would be so hyper. He's also heavier than he focused, you'd get that
was in his prime, carrying a much more . out of your
noticeable bulge around his effort."
midsection. He is li!\ted at
While he doesn't like
l80 pounds, but be's proba- looking baek, Duval points
bly closer to 200 and says to back problems as the
he needs to lose about 20 main culprit in his decline.
-pounds. But Duyal insists He began to swing so his
be's happy with his life and back wouldn't burt, and he
confident he can turn things soon bad no idea where the
around.
ball was going.
''I'm a lot closer to play"When I was swinging
ing great golf than my great, I hit the golf ball
scores indicate,'' said dead straight," he said. "I
Duval, whose averaging faced a problem that thounearly 75 strokes per round sands and thousand6 of
anddoesn' trankanyhigber golfers have faced. I'd get
than 106th in the myriad of on the tee and I wouldn't
-categories kept by the PGA know where to aim because
Tour. "When I'm swinging I didn't know if I was going
well, nobody hits the golf to hit it . right or left or
straight. It almost ~omes
ball any better than I do."
He was mice the world's a cliche, but it's very diffiASSOCIATED PRESS

cult to play this game, especially professionally, if you
can't eliminate half the golf
course."
Duval's fellow players
arc sympathetic ID his
plight; · but know there's
more to the mao that the
numbers ho . writes on his
card. Once viewed as canstic and unapproachable,
he's now friendlier to those
around him - the media
included and draws
plenty of cheers from the
backers in the gallery, who
can certainly relate to what
be's going through.
"I don't think David
wants my empathy, to be
honest with you;·· Paul
· Goydos said. "He's a good
man. He's well-read. He's
smart. I think be 's as happy
as he's ever been in his life
with his family situation.
Sometimes. I think we
overrate the importance of
hitting a little white ball
around a big grass field ."
Then, Goydos added, "I
shouldn't say this because
it's not my place, but if you
asked David if he was happier when he was No.. I in
the world or today, I think
you'd be surprised by the
answer."
Duval figures he can still
have it all: happiness at
home and on the course.
For starters, he. admittedly
needs to get in better shape,
having cut back on his
once-brutal
workout
regime because he was
tired of his body hurting so
much.
. "Ffiiiikly," he said, "I'm
in the same boat right now
with a lot of people, where
I need to lose a few pounds
and get healthier."
He's 1;0nvinced that his
swing isn'tthat far off. The
main thing holding him
back at this point is a lack
of confidence.
Not surprisingly, Duval's
psyche· is still a bit fragile . ·
In his prime, be figured
. those few errant shots he
bit were an anomaly, and
quickly cast them aside.
Now, he's prone to still be ·
thinking about a bad swing
when he lines up to take the
next one.
"I'm motivated to do it. I
have the desire to do it,-'' be
said. "I've just got to keep
going."
With that, Duval headed
for the course, his trademark sunglasses perched on
the back of his head while
he tried to look forward.

Reds' Keppinger to mi~ 4-6
~eeks with broken kneecap
CINCINNATI (AP) Shortstop Jeff Keppinger
will be sidelined for 4-to-6
weeks with a broken left
kneecap,
leaving
the
Cincinnati Reds without
their best clutch hitter and
their most consistent hitter
so far.
Keppinger fouled a pitch
off his knee during a 5-3 win
over Florida on Tuesday
iright. He stayed in the game
f~ two innings, but t~
himself out when the pam
and swelling in the knee
itarted limiting his range.
_ He went for a medical test
911 Wedlleiiday to judie the
severity of the i'nlctm, IUid
doctors gave the estimate for
his return. -

Griffey Jr. and Brandon
Phillips slumped, Keppinger
has been the Reds' most
consistent hitler. He's batting a team-hiRh .324 and is
among the Nt' leaders in
clutch hillin4, batting .406
with runner&amp; m ICOring poli-

WI'IPPed and immobilized
by i brace wben he wllkcd

' The. Reds called !II' Paul into · the clubhouse on
Janish . from
Tnple-A CIU~ Wedneiiday.
"There's llOihin&amp; I really
Louisville lo take his roster
can
do about it, just sit IJJd .
spot. The 25-year-old shortwait
and let it beal," he said
. stop bas never played in the
"I had a long talk with ·Griff
ID8JOfS.
last
night when I was on the
Manager Dusty Baker
trainer's
table. He calmed
plans to use Jerry Hairston
Jr. at shortstop for now, me down a lot. I was strugworking Janish in slowly. gling with it last night, but
lie told me to relax and
Hairston is batting .316.
everything
will take care of
. "He (Janish) is a true
$hortstop, but Jerry's doing itself."
Janish, a fifth-round pick
a ~t job offens1vely and
in
the June 2004 draft, was
we ve been having trouble
offensively," Baker said. promoted to TriplecA for the
"You've got to have some first time last season and
offense to replace {I key batted .221 in 55 games. He
changed his s~ a little
offensive guy.'
was bat. Keppinger opened the sea- over the winter,
son at Shortstop because ~ .293 when he was
ed up.
Alex Gonzalez is recovering
"I'm
a little more comfortfrom a compression fracture
in his left knee. Gonzalez able" Janish said
- "I've had
s.uffered the injury early dur- st:reUs when I did well in
ing spring training and isn't the past. Last year it just
kind of snowballed on me. n
close to returning.

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio
.) 0

.

., '

.~

~·

'.'

• 1-

•

( I'\,.., • \ ul. .)-. :\o .

-

• Tornadoes win
sedional final.
Page.Bl

APphO«i

Cleveland Indians' C.C. Sabathia pitches to Oakland Athletics' Emil Brown In the ninth
inning of a baseball game Wednesday in Cleveland. Sabathia struck out Brown, his 11th
strikeout of the game, to complete a 2~ shutout.
:

BY BRIAN

OurruARIES
.PageA3
• Ralph Lany Durst, 65
• Leo G. Martin, rrT

.

!
'

'

nese

For lhe Record.
SeePageA3
~ • The Good Tmes.
SeePage AS
• Something for
evel}'body. See Page A6
• Ohio inspector says
A.G. investigation to
. be wide-ranging.
' See Page A8

i.

~~

.... .....-

J. REED

.BREED.MYOAILYSENTINELOOM

Annie's Mailbox
A2 ·
'
A2
Calendars
Bs-6
. classifieds
. .
B7

Editorials
A4
· i!"aith • Values
As-7
Movies
As
88
NASCAR
Obituaries
A3
BSection
Sports
A2.

Weather

I
.
1 .ADOIBif; ----~------

'c,'MO&amp;OIIio ValleyP

.

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~----------~---------~-~------~--------~
,

: .

COmics
..,

t eN..1w·

,

.

.

7

••
•· 1

•

''• (,'

,...

BRIM J. REED

· MIDDLEPORT - Local
flower, fruit and vegetable
grower.&gt; are invited back to
Middleport this· suminer to
participate in a weekly
fanners' market.
The first farmers' market
of the season will be held
from 4 to 7 p.m. on May-30,
acoording to Brenda Pbalin
of
the
Middlepon ·
Community Association.
Vendors are not required to
register, and there will be no
charge to set up for sale. The
market will be held each
week during the same hours
in tbe village-owned parlcing
lot next to Fantily Dollar.
This will be the third summer the village has hosted a
farmers ' market in the
downtown shopping district. Phalin said last year's
lilllliet was small but business was consistent from
week to week. It was sponsored by the Middlepon
Development Group with
support from the Meigs
County Health Department.
. Phalin · said she and
Mayor Michael Gerlach
have
received
many
requests to bring the market back to the village this year. and said participants
in the Athens Farmers'
Market, many of whom

"···-"'
Power

Commissioners declare Monday 'Archery Day'· outage .
iliuM
affects 899

· 2 SacnoNS - 16 PAGI!S

I JW 6e
.... ...._._
.
I
~
. 1 .... , 'aaltsiDPfr uu.,-flr,ra,,..•m n'd!ll 8ytlr -{
I fltll-r ••rllla.rnl Alo1'6d till ltl~·lll••••n-wil
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WVWfO.AI tutr tdU• sMc•ttPirH ''llllfJia•ln
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.

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.

BY

I!REEO.MYDAILVSENTINEL.COM

Care" Coordinator
y McDaniel.
Activities include at b!illS to 20 minutes of physical activitY tailoml to meet
the needs of the client. even if that client
is chair or wheelchair bound .The group
also plays cornbole and other games that
improve band-eye coordination. ·
The group · also does some kind of
craft and plays a lot of trivia games
such as "remember when...
types
of memory games help exercise the
brain to assist those widt memory loss
and to keep the memories of others
sharp. McDaniel said these types of
activities are important since medical
studies have shown human beings lose
one percent of their brain function per
.
year after the age of 50.
Still, the biggest asset 9f her group is
socialization, according to McDaniel.
That socialization includes reading the
daily new~r each day and discussing it.
h meetinll is also based
around a topic includmg everything
from politics to dogs. Speaking of ·
dogs. Shaggy, the once-homeless dog
o~ downtown Pomeroy recently made a
VISit to the group. Shaggy VISited .both
clients and volunteers who'd read
about her story in the newspaper.
A few years ago, Shaggy was herself
isolated much like some of the ~lients .
who come to the group. Rolland Frank Hudnall, a member of the "Partners in Care" senior support group visits
Eastman, a former volunteer, used to
with Shaggy. The group is also reaching out to seniors with depression and
...... ..ec:...AJ
isolation issues.
·

of ..
. AQush faniiV coming.
SeePageA2
• Reception planned.
SeePageA2
.• Hanisonville Alumni
·· reunion planned.
.See . , .. A2 .

-~

-----..-~-~!!"Yi

\t1111,..,, nrl'l&lt; I ~~~·n

Farmers'
Market

·

=·s camaraderie

lNsmE.
-·
• National-.ftllriln

I

INDEX ·-

' ..
r-------------·------..
--..
.-------.
I................ ~A··~~.in,,

n

Thornton was not required to post
a cash bond, but signed a $5,000
personal recognizance bond after his
court appearance. A final pre-trial on
the charges was set for May 29. .
'The two original counts against
the three-term commissioner allege
that he failed to file financial disclosure statements for 2005 and
2006, as· all elected officials are
required to do. The report discloses
souroes of income and other financial information to help protect
against cOnflicts of interest.
'The charges carry a maximum
~~ty of 30 days in jail and ~250

POMEROY - Isolation is a major
problem and for some seniors · they
might go days without seeing another
human being but help is available.
. The . Meigs County Council on
fl, gi~fs support group "P~er:- in
Care was founded to deal w1th clients
living with Alzheimers and memory loss
but now the .~p is branching out into
assisting seruors with depression, isolation and that accompanying loneliness.
Pepression. isolation and loneliness are
romhated
by
and activities,
· ..to- ''Partlus -in

D tlt1 on ..... A2

I

Medical Center ance was April 3, but that date was
from the county continued until April 10, and he
sheriff's . depart- failed to appear on that date. A secment before he Qnd continuance was granted for
could appear on medical reasons, although a" medthe charRes.
ical excuse provided by Holzer
Sheriff Robert Medical Center indicated he was
Beegle did not say bospitaliwt April 11-16. A third
what Thornton's coatinuance request ·was denied,
specific medical and the bench warrant was issued
complaint was, but after he failed to appear for the May
Thornton has cited 1 initial appearance as scheduled.
illness .as his reaBeegle said Thornton was not
son for not appearing -on the charges. jailed Wednesday, and was released
Thornton was granted two contin- from custody when he was transuances prior to a court date on May paned to the hospital . Thornton wali ·
l. His flfSt scheduled court appear- not charged with failu:rt to appear.

Bv Bmt SERGENT

BY

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released on bond

BSERGENTOMYDAA.YSENmELOOM

WEATHER

I

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'·Pal"blers in Care'
!=~
Group battles more than memory loss Middleport

0 Wednesday, May 21, 2008
0 PVH Main Entrance
ONoon
· 0 Speeial gift to all who attend
0 Public is cordially invited
Ftll' -.a~ abottt tllil 1p«ld ewnl .
til' 111 l«rn MGte abt1111 HOiplee til' dw ~wm,." .
. Orl6fSI/pp.wt ~·~ pii!IIH cdl, (J04) 61S.7101J.

REED

POMEROY -Meigs County
Commissioner Jeffrey Thornton was
· released on a personal recognizance
bond Thursday after .pleading innocent to charges he failed to fl_le
reqliired financial disclosure reports
with the Ohio Ethics Commission.
Thornton appeared 911 his own
before Judge Steven L. Story yesterday. On Wednesday, Thornton was
taken into custody on a bench warrant
after he allegedly failed to appear on
· the two founh-&lt;legree misdemeanor
counts, but was transported to Holzer

Sabathia powers Cleveland past A's1
CLEVELAND (AP) Sabathia (3-5) tied his sea- Peralta went 2-for-4 with
Indians manager Eric. Wedge son high for strikeouts, two doubles, snapping an Q,
is certain he's never before walked two and won con- for-15slump.
_
seen what his starting staff is secutive starts for the first
Oakland has been held
accomplishing:
time ·this season. He has a scoreless in its past 23
· C.C. Sabathia pitched a 1:49 ERA over his past five innings at Cleveland. The
five-hitter and struck out II starts.
A's put two on in the fifth~
in the Indians' major leagueSahathia pitched his sixth but Rajai Davis bit into an
leading seventh sbutour\·a 2-. shutout, his flfst since a five• inning-ending forceQut
0 victory over the Oakland hitter .against Kansas City
"It was another well,
Athletics on Wednesday last June 5.
pitched game," A's manager
night that moved Cleveland
"He was outstanding Bob Geren, "What are you
into the AL Central lead.
tonight." Wedge said. "His going to do? It seems like ·r
The Indians, who took a rhythm was dead on. He did have said this before. It
half-game
lead
over a good job moving his fast- seems like I sat here and said
Minnesota, bad not been ball. His breaking ball was the same thing 24 hours
alone in first this year and effective to both left- and ago."
·
hadn't even held a share of right-handed · hitters. There
Sabathia punctuated his
the lead since the opening were · situations where he _ complete game by striking
week.
·
had to make pitches to finish out Jack Cust and Emil
Cleveland starters have · off innin~s. and he did that." Brown in the ninth inning. .
pitched 43 1-3 consecutive
Sabath1a had lost his prior
"That's the Cy Young
scoreless innings since two starts to Oakland this Sabathia that normally steps
Friday.
season,'allowing a combined up," said Mike Sweeney,
"It's pretty special stuff 13 runs and 18 hits in 8 2-3 who was 2-for-4. "He made
what they're r,utting ·togeth- innings.
his pitches. In his last couple
er right now, •· Wedge said.
"Sonie of the swings they starts (against the A's), he
"They're going well beyond were taking tonight, he must was over the pia~. Tonight
the call of duty right now. have been pretty special," he was living on the corWe just wannhem to give us Cleveland third baseman ners."
·
a chance to win."
Casey Blake said.
Sweeney had a prediction
The consecutive scoreless
Grady Sizemore and Ryan about Sabathia, the reigning
streak is the longest by an Garko homered off Joe AL Cy Young Award winIndians starting staff since Blanton. Sizemore homered ner, who is the final year of
they tossed 47 scoreless on Blanton's second pitch of his contract.
innings in August 1948. It's the night, and Garko con"If he pitches like that the
the longest by a major nected in the fourth.
rest of the year, the contract
league team in one season
Blanton (2-6) allowed four Johan Santana signed will
since a 54-inning streak by hits in seven innings, struck look cheap," Sweeney said,
Baltimore's starters from out four and walked two. He referring to the $137.5 mil·
Sept.l-7,1974,accordingto . lost for the fourth time in lion, six-year deal Santana
the Elias Sports Bureau.
five starts.
signed with the New York
Cleveland became the fiTS!
"Runs are going to be few Mets.
team to pitch five shutouts in and far between," Blanton
Notes: Sizemore bas three
an eight-game span since said of facing Sabathia. leadoff home runs this seaOakland from July 12-19, "You just have to go out son and 14 in his career, the·
there and keep it close."
second-mOst in franchise
2002, according to Elias.
"It feels really good,"
Cleveland has won seven history
behind
Kenny
Sabathia said. "Everyone is of nine and at 21 -19 moved Lofton's 18.. .... Cleveland
working hard. Everyone to two games over .500 for shut out.Oa!c!and in back-towants to be that guy each the flfSt time .since starting back gam~~r the first time
night"
the season 2-0. Jhonny since 1966. '

J.

BREEO.MYOAILYSENnNELOOM

.

.

I· Rill.\\ . :\1 \'

:.! ll

Thorttton

SPORTS
.
.

Annual PVH Hospice iribute

~ ~ ..-.or:

•

•

tion.
Keppinaer lud the knee

.

•

•

Butterfly Release &amp; Celebration
While Adam Dunn, Ken

Corporate sponsor, A3

Graduates edition
inSide today's Sentinel

.

'

POMEROY
-Meigs
County Commissioners proclaimed Monday "An:hery
Day" kl recognize the
MeigsAn:hccyTeam, which
compc:tM sucilessfully at a
tournament last week in
Louisville, Ky.
The teams, made up of
Meigs Middle ' School and
ltigh School students, com.
peted successfully against
schools from 23 states.

They will receive · their
awards
on
Monday,
Commissioner
Mick
Davenport said.
Commissioqers signed a.
proclamation honoring the
. teams at. Thursday after- ,
~·s ~gular meeting. .
Commissiooers approved
annual appropriations as f~llows: $3T,OOO to The O~o
State
.
Umve~aty
CooJ,&gt;Cratave
Extensaon
Service (first of tlwe ~yments); $7,000 to the Metgs
County
Agricultural

Society; $900 to the Albany
Independent Fair; $44,025
to the Special Fund, Meigs
Soil and 'Water Conservation
District; $3,500 to the Meigs
County Historical Society
(fusJ oftwo payments); and
$12,000 to the · .L itter
Prevention and · Recycling
~.
A bad was a~arded to
Karr Construcuon . Co.,
Chester, _for construcllon of
new stalfS ~ the Chester
Academy building, which
commissioners own. The

bid of $48,000 was opened
at last woek's regular ineeting. The work will he paid
for through the Community
Development Block Grant
formula ~gram.
Co~ssioners also: , .. ;,
• Approved appoinune11t
of Blllbara Chapman direc- .
tor of·the
of Job
and Family Services to
serve on the Workforce
Investment Act board, to
replace Michael Swishef.

Department

PI PI - A I ..., . AJ

Meigs hires coaches, handles personnel changes
BY CHiARI.ENE Hoc ICII
HOEfl.IQ1•MYIWI.vsa(rwa.OOM

POMEROY- Numerous
personnel matters including
the .hiring of head coaches
were handled during this
week's meeting of the Meigs
Local Board of Education at
Meigs High School.
Head coaches hired were
Mike Chancey, football ;

" ...,

....

Rick Ash,
volleyball; trators for additional serBennie Ewing, boys basJcet- vices provided ·during the
ball; Carl Wolfe, girls bas- put school year were
ketball ; Dave Fife, girls approved for Kristin Acree
and
Jeremy and Rusty Bookman, Tide
softball,
Grimm, baseball. Also hired one building administratorS,
and Mary Hawt, district- we~ Ralph Werry, high
school cbeerleading coach, wide test coordinator. In
and Laura Hardgrove, addition stipends were
Middle School cheerleader. approved from Marilyn
In addition stipends of Meier and Rusty Bookman
$2,500 for building adminis- to provide after scliool SC7-

.
'·'

".

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'I

I'

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•

vices for the PEP grant in the
same amount as last year.
In other personnel matters
extended service payment
to close and inventory
scboollibraries of five days
each were awarded to
Marge Barr and Connie
Halley, Meigs Primar ·
School; Beth .Lawson and
..............
~
AJ

BSERGENT•MVDAJLVSENilNEL.OOM

DYES VILLE
- Late
yesterday .morning .a problem with a Sl!~lation on ·
Side · · Hill · Road
in
Northwestern
Meigs ·
County left 899 American
Electric Power customers in
the dark. according to an
AEP spokesperson.
Meigs EMS initially dispatched fire departments
·from Columbia and Scipio
Townships to Side Hill Road
after a caller reported a frre ~
at the substation. The AEP
spokesperson sai ~ there was
no fire though tjlere was a
"little voltage" visible.
The spokesperson said a
transmission line switch
failed al the substation at
which time customers were
taken out of service while the
switch and line were repaired.
Then. when woaters attempted to pm customers back
PI 17111104 J'LAS

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