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                  <text>Pqe 86 • The Daily Swtirel

Big Brown wins Pt-eakltess; poised f~~ 'Iriple Crown :
bi~ sweeping race

. IYIIEnt Ht ••

tract. l die

Corporate sponsor, A2

~ Dutrow's ~
and blown ,....,a Ia

tbiD1: be's going to do just use
fiDe."
.
die past, bis , ...... lic:m&lt;e
: BALTIMORE Not
Big Brown · tied for lbe was ~voted ·fOI" personal
once but twice, jockey Kent
fourth-lowest payoff in 'd rug. use aod he was susPesonneaux sneaked a peek
~s
history wilh pt""'kd for doping
s.
to see if anyone was gaining
Native Danocr in 1953. Sent
Tbe· ~s was llso •
On Big Brown.
off at 1-5 odds, be paid bomcooming
for
$2.40, $2.60 and $2.40. Desonne3!n,dieCajunjock· " I looked between my
Macho Again returned ey who launcbcd his career
legs, under my arms, and
$17.20 and $10.40, while in Maryland in 1987.
they were eight (lenglhs)
behind me," Desormeaux
lcabad
$5.60.
Cheering him on were his
sody was wife, Sonia, and two sons,
Racecar
said. "I stopped pushing. I
founh, foHo
by Stevil, including 9-year..,ld Jacob.
said, 'lbat' s enough."'
Kentucky Bear, Hey Bym. The boy was born with
His big bay colt ran away
Giant Moon, T~s Bo!rachos, · Usher syndrome, a genetic
with lhe Preakness on
Yankee Bravo, Gayego and disoRicr lhat stole his hear:
Saturday and now is pointed
Riley 'J'ud:er.
•
ing at binh and is slowly robsquarely down the path
ln the Daby, Big Brown bing bim of bis sight
toward the Triple Crown.
· statted oo die far outside of
In Cbe wumer's circl~
The 3-year-old wilh the
19 .horses imd used an explo- JacOb said to his modler, '1
perfect record heads for the
sive finishing kick to win by wish Daddy would buy Big
Belmont Stakes in three
4 314 lotlglhs, the tightest BIQwn. Mom, can we buY,
weeks as the fourth . horse
margin in his 5-0 career. He's Big Brown?"
·
this decade to try for the
won
!hose
races
by
a
romBig
Brown
earned
liiple, a sweep last accombined 39 lengths.
$600,000 for die win :ml
plished by Affirmed in 1978.
~ musCular -colt joined boosted his earnings t.Q
Tbe last to uy was Smarty
Majestic Prince (1969), $2,714,500 for lavarooe .~
Jones in 2004.
Triple Crown winner Seattie Sdliavo, oo-ownen ofiEAif
"Wow is all I can say,"
Slew ( 1977) and 'Smarty Stables, and Paul Pompa Jr;
Steve Cauthen, who rode
Jones (2004) as undefeafeel Pompa IIIIII!!'Jd Big Brown ill
Affinned. said by telephone
from Kentucky. "He looks Big Brown, left, (7} with Kent Desormeaux aboard, pulls in front of Gayego .( 12) ridden by IJeJby and ~s win- booor of UPS. a major client
PrettY special. It was like a . Mike Snlith as they run in front of the pack during the 133rd Preakness horse race at oers.
of his Brooldyn crucking
cakewalk for bim. The Pimlico Race Course Saturday in Baltimore.
·
The Victoiy put the sport's business.
·
The festive mood at
angled Big Brown out three- Cide in 2003 and Smarty 1'oc11s back oo racing after
important lhing to me is be Macho Again.
two weeks of fmlziod debate Pimlioo after lhe racc was in
keeps passing all the tests."
Big Brown slipped a bit · wide for clear nmning room. Jones the next year.
"We should have the horse abOut saf~. and breeding ''Sbalp oontrast to the scene •
Trainer Rick Dur:r:ow Jr., while breaking · from lhe As be hit the top of the
who called his shot a1 both middle of an undistin- stretch, Desormeaux simply to get 1he job done," Dutrow followil1g Eight Belles' ata- Churdilll 00wns two wee~
strophic bfieakdown. His ~o. Eight Belles, die filly
d!c Kentucky Deroy and the guished
pack .
and crossed the reins to let Big said.
Big Brown went off as a dominatin.g
performance wlto took on 19 colts and finPreakness, sounded nearly Desormeaux took him off Brown know it was time to
shonet priced favorite lhan ·came in front of a crowd lhat i&amp;bed second. ;!Jrote botli
as confident after Big Brown the pace in front of 112,222 take off.
came back fuH of run after fans.
He didn't even need the Secretariat in 197 3, wbo ·s~ly breathed easier afta- front ankles While galiOJ?ing
putting away the field of II
"He's so strong, be pow- w~. which be initially left went oil to win lhe Triple all 12 IWIIICl'S reliumed safe- out :and bad to be euthanizeCI
!Nilh ease.
e!N out with his back legs behind in the jockey.s' room. Crown, capped by a stun- ly. On die same ttack just oo 1he ttack. llbe first ;time
"I know we have horse and tt;:;Just s!ippec! and be He oou.ld have saved bimself Ding 31-lengtb victory in lhe two years llgO, Kentucky that has happened in tbe
Dtlby winiiiX Babaro broke Deroy.
left There is no question," was s
·ng out m the same the trip back to get it His Belmont.
ult
looks
like
Big
Brown
down
early in die race.
. It was the second 1iime a ·
spot." Desormeaux said. "It horse oovered I 3-16 miles
Dutrow said.
might win d!c Belmont farThe Preak.ness win also horse bad broken doi!ID in
"He's just Shown up every act"•lly was his second pusb in 1.:54.80.
s!CJ!. every way," be added. that: let him out of lbe gate."
"This is the best horse rve Iller lhan · Secretariat,~ said •. means B~g Brown '·s oonncc- ltbc :past .live Triple €roW~}
· Dutrow, raccs. Bad!aro -~ hiS
"I JUst can't imagine him not
Big Brown was folll1b the ever riddeti," DesorlneJuK Paddy Gallagher, · who 'tiolur · · -"
showing
up
for
the first time past the grandstand said.
«rained lOtb-place finisher Desormeaux and principal ciglncearleg41or.tl~~
Yankee Bravo.
owners Michael Iavarone iWt -o f the 2006
s.
Belmont"
behind pacesetter Gayego.
That's saying something.
Penny
· Chenery, IUid Richanl Schiavo who Mally iii lhe;gtlllllistaD4aied
As be did two weeks ago He moved up to third on the
In 1998, the jockey rode
in a Kentucky Derl&gt;y marred first tum, where he stayed all Real Quiet to wins in the Secretariat's owner, said she onoe woru.d on Wall Street that day :at dle ·~t of ~
by the breakdoi!ID of Eight the way. down the back- Derby and Preak.ness only to plans to be ?n band for the -. are headed .~ to their Det:by. winner.taken .away in.
BeUes, the colt named 1or stretch.
·
· be denied Triple Crown history making uy on June New Yort: base wtth a horse :an ambulance. 8811baro was
lhat could make history.
eul!banimd e~gllt months
UPS deliv..-red another stun"My whole job in that first immortality when Victory 7.
"I don't · know whether
It was :an especially mean- bier llecause oflaminitis, an
ning win, this 1iime by 5 114 half-mile was to keep his QaUop stuck bis nose in
lenglhs. Macbo Agam was face clean," Desormeau front at lhe wire in the Secretariat can stay wid1 him illgful trip to the · winner' s &lt;Oftm fatal boof :!fi,sease.
'~here ·was no sadness
second and lcabad Crane said: "There's not a grain of Belmont. The final jewel is or not," she said. "I won't cin:le, ~&gt;mce Dutrow had
was third.
sand on most of his body."
also the longest of the three speculate bow ·that 'would .acoompanied his late father, Satwday, cmiy jiddy allliici-:
"We just ·got beat .by a
The decisive moment races, a grueling I In miles rome out, because we respcolr.d II3ioec Rioluu:d Sr., ~that racin~ might see a
monster,"
said
Julien came just bef~ the final that proved the undoing of haven't seen him atlbat long on past ~ss day.li Riple Crown WlllllCJ' atloog
Leparoux, .who was aboard tum, wbeo Desormeaux War Emblem in 2002, l&lt;unny .a distance. Butyoubaved!at before me two feD cut OYer last.
ASSOCIATED PRESS

'Great Race.to
Study Island,'.A a

Ill•'"'

•

enne:;;

Local projects included in state capital bill

SPORTS
.

··Spurs
advaooe to
.
West fililals. See hie Bl

BY BRIAN J. REED

would qualify for funding
-under the biennial capital
'bill.
POMEROY - The state
Included in the proposed
C~gJital bill i ntroduced in the bill
liTe
$10,000 for
Ohio
House
of improvements to the Court
Representatives Monday Street
mini-park,
and
includes over $200,000 in $35,000 for park improveappropriations for Meigs ments in Syracuse. A total
County projects. ·
of $175,000 is included for
State
Rep .
Jimmy nature and walking trails to
Stewart, R-Albany, said be be completed as part of a
worked with elected offi- larger project proposed by
Meigs
Local
cials and other local leaders tbe
to identify projects that Enrichment Foundation.
BiiEEDOMl'DAILYSENTINEL.COM

AP........,

The Court Street minipark funding would be used
for electrical upgrades.
Past · projects funded
through the capi:al appropriations bill are improvements at the Buffmgton
island Museum, Chester
Courthouse, and construe- .
tion of the Racine skateboard park. Exterior painting, electrical upgrades and
otber improvements to the
COUI)ty
courthouse
in
Pomeroy were completed

t.b~, .; .' ~ .

BY BETH SERGENT
BSEA&lt;/ENT@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

aCcidents

'

BY BETH SERGENT
BSERGENTOMYDAILYSENTINEL:COM

POMEROY -· Alleged
thefts as well as recent traffic accidents are current!y
under ·investigation by the
Pameroy
Palice
hgeA5
Oc;partment, according to
• J. Kalhe:ine Mildhell, 82 Ohief Mlll'k !E. Proffitt.
PnmeFoy
Patrolman
• iMEllvin Pilow, 81
Ronnie Spaun was recently
• Okla E.
:ee. 78
called ItO Weaving Stitches'
on West Main Street where
•the •business reported items
stolen in the amount -of
$94.28.
Wben
Spaun
'I
arrived, .an officer from the
Middlepol't .
Police
Department was also on
scene. Spaun then spoke to
Jamie
Norville,
24,
·
·
·
CIMtrlent IINIIiclh/pllolo
Middlepott,. who allegedly Lara Penin holds the novel "In Search of Alto Pajetan" which llhe co-authored with Kalynn
.ocmfessed to taking scime of ·Seymour, Miranda Gillilan, Sadie Fox, Brayden Kopec and Gregory Priddy, all fourth
the items from the store. .· ·grade!B in the talented and gifted program. Librarian ·Beth Lawson places the books on ·the
Spaun also said Jacinda shelves of the library so other students can enjoy them.
Batey, (age, addl'ess unreportedl. bad paid for some
ttems from the store but had
.oth~ items in her bag she
did not pay for.
"The project allowed stufor students of tbat age
Spaun returned the :items · Bv CHA1L£NE HOEF-UCH
HOEFLICHCMVDAILYSENTINELCOM
group" and described the dents to cooperate and
to Weaving Stitches and
.
. • Rabies vaccili1atiGn
·project as "an depend upon each other for
finished
placed Norville and Batey
POMEROY
.
.
Few
example
of
their hard work, ideas and deadlines as well
under arrest and cited them
-clinic .oonducted.
adults
tackle
tbe
challenge
cooperation,
creativity and as
learning
grammar,
for petty theft in •P omeroy's
SeeP.vA2
of
writing
a
novel
let
along
determination."
spelling, punctuation, comMayors Court.
She explained that the prehension, word processing,
• SOiillhem FFA banquet
In a separate incident.• fourth and fifth graders.
students
were given the first publishing and creativity.
But
at
the
Meigs
Jocinda
. Batey,
34,
Jleld. See . . . .Al
Intermediate
School
fourth
chapter
and
then eacb stu- The students received a copy
Pomeroy, reported the theft
• Mount il!lnion
of three Nintendo D's with and fifth graders in the tal- dent was required to write of the novel, and a copy was
Colege hooarariaJils.
.three games , one cell ented and gifted program one or more additional also placed in the school
phone and $70 from her for language arts took on chapters to complete a 10- library for their friends to
s.r.e.u
home. Patrolman Spaun is the project of writing a class chapter book. Eacb chapter enjoy," said Harris.
investigating the incident -novel. Teacher Cecilia as well as the illustrations in
The fourth grade novel is
and bas a suspect in tbe Harris acknowledged that the novel were their own
..hre-aG.AI
case wbich remains under "it was quite an undertaking original creations.
inv,e stigation.
Spaun was also recently
dispatched to tbe scene of a
bit-skip accident involving
an unidentified vehicle hitting a . Gravely mower
owned by the Village of
Pomeroy. Village employee Charles Fitchpatrick
was mowing grass wbile
driving the Gravely in
front of the former
Millennium Teleservices
P I M! •ari '......U
building on .East Main
Street when he observed a
··-...
car ' approaching. · ·He
motioned for the7 car . to
"get ·over" but it continued
on its ·path, · causing
Fitcbpatrick to juinp . off
Annie's Mailbox ·A3 the Gravely before tbe
vehicle struck it with the
Calendars
driver
leaving the scene.
A3
Fitchpatrick
reported
Classifieds
B3-4 severe damage done to the
and the vehicle, .
. S-y.FF .REPORT
Comics
85 Gravely
a Dodge Intrepid,
reportedly
NEWSOM~I LYSENTINELCOM
•
Editorials
A4 which was allegedly driven
by a fem8Je. The incident
POMEROY - Students
Movies
·As remains under investigaon the Meigs archery
tion.
teams received trophies
Obituaries
As Spaun also investigated a ,
Monday recognizing their
B
Section
recent
crash
hetween
two
.performance at a national
Sports
' vehicles OQ East Main
competition in Kentucky
·As Street in front of Wendy's.
Weather
this nionth.
Grover
C.
·Douglas,
8riltn J . All~
Archers in grades 4
Middleport, was cited for
Meigs County Commissioners Mick Davenport and Jim through 6 won the national
assured clear distance when
Sheets presented awards to Meigs Archery Coaches title in Louisville, Ky. combe allegedly failed to slow
Karen Walker, Dan Thomas, Jeff Jones. Linda Jones, Bill peting against · 47 other
and stuck a vehicle , driven
Prater and Rusty Bookman . Last week, commissioners teams at the elementary
scbool)evel. Meigs middle
declared
Monday Archery Day in the county.
'llltUM lrptltLAS

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.INDEX

FAMILV OWNED SINCE 1996
1830 ~ LOGAN RD 'SE
RT.33 JUS'T SOUTH OF LA~CASlER
LANCAS'IER, OH 43130• &lt;7~653-,2827
SIORE HOURS ~DAV..fRIDAV 9:00-0:0Q, SATURDAY 9:00-5:00

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.

POMEROY
- The
Meigs County Women
Infants Children (WIC)
nutritional program recently
received awards for Best
Practices in Promoting and
Supporting Breast Feeding
and Best Practices . in
Community Relations and
Outreach.
The
awards,
which
included plaques and two
checks for $500 each, were
presented by Ohio WI C.
Current Meigs County
WIC Director Leanne
Cunningham said former
director Debbie Howell
applied for the awards
based on activities and community outreach the agency
pj:rformed last year.
In relation to the .award
for Best Practices in
Promoting ;md Supporting
Breast Feeding, Meigs
County WlC staff attempted
to present breast feeding as .
a societal norm and empower participants to make an
educated decision about
,breast feeding. According to
Cunningham. the goal of the
staff is to establish relationships with participants that .
facilitate trust and open
communication . so mothers
receive the support they
need to reach their breast
feeding goals.
Meigs County WIC also
took part in several activities in honor of Breast
Feeding Awareness Month
including public service
announcements, a presence
at the county fair and in a

· PI•••-WIC.M
Members of the
national champi·
onship archery
team at the elementary level,
represented by
students from
Meigs
Intermediate and
Middle Schools,
received individ·
ual and team
trophies at a ceremony Monday
Meigs High
School.

Meigs archers receive
·awards for perfonnance

.

·ALLPOWER EQUIPMENT

"There are a lot of needs
in the community that n~
funding, and many of those
were discussed during the
planning process," Stewart
said. "But there are a lot of .
regulations as to how tile
money can be spent"
" It is rewarding to assist
with projects through the
capital bill, because past
projects have been beneficial to people in the communities and the county, as
a whole."

Meigs County ·
WICprogram
receives awards

Pomeroy
reports

INSIDE

fftln« 1 IIIICI ihll q
• 'Cii'VIIIIIoolft!lolllr ... •l , ....... f .. .....

several years ago through
the capital budget
Stewart said Syracuse
officials had requested
funding for new windows
and other building repairs at
tbe community center, but
said "brick and mortar" projects like building upgrades
are not permitted in capi:al
appropriations. . Instead,
Stewart said; he met with
officials in each of the com'
tnunities to identify projects
that would qualify. ·

•

4

...

..

•

and bigh school teams finished eleventh of 69 and
-twelfth of 80. respectively.
Taylor Rowe. a sixth
grader at Meigs Middle
School. finished as secondbest male shooter in the
nation in the elementary
.class division. Kassandra
Mullins. an eighth grader on
the Meigs Middle School
Team. was the number-five
female shooter in the middle school division.

'"'~~•••• -

Aida• a. AI

�..

\

Page.A2

COMM

The Daily Sentinel

Tuesday, May 20, 2008

.PageA3

BY·THE'BEND

}he Daily Sentil}~l

Tuesday, May 20,

ANNIE'S MAILBOX

,•

In reo6gnition of National
Hospital Week, Pleasant
Valley Hospital A~Centfy
hosted a Wiffle Ball
.
Toumament for employees:
.and family members.
· Claiming· first place honors
were the Wellness Center
SluggerS, pictured at top
left, whose team members ·
included Darin Smith, ChriS
waus, Debra Long, Paul :
Hanis, Kristi Emer, Scott ·
Wood, Leah Morrow, Travis
Davis, Nicole Rogers,
Morgan Davis, Bill Wray, .
Yvonne Pearson, Jason
King and Heather C1,1ndifV
Clinching 'secorid place :was the Community
Relations' £ye candy
Crew, pictilred at bottom
•Pam ·•
leftI , Whk:h .inCluded
'.. .
'
MiJncf, Amy Leach, Ashley
Thomas, Stacy Wright,
Leigh Ann Gardner, Tanya
· Shobe, Randall Shobe,
Melinda Grimes, Brian Hall,
Jol:\n Beaver, ·Teny Wcas.
Wee lleving. 'Everett
Afilhur, Heidi Sturgeon,
Scott Muncy and M.T.
Blaine. Several other teams
also competed includingthe Pleasant 'Iaiiey Nursing
&amp; Rehabilitation Center,
Pleasant Valley Home
Medical Equpnant lind the
FWH .Patient Senlice&amp;.
.
Several physa- oonlpet. ed in the special event
including Nancy tares, Ml3,
Stephen Rerych, MD and
Wes Ueving, DO.

'
Subm-pholo

Coleen Murphy-Smith ·of the Meigs County Health
Department and Kelley Grueser of the Meigs Veterinary
Clinic prepare for the recent low-cost Rabies Vaccination
Clinic where 86 responsible pet owners brought their animals to be immunized against the deadly disease.

Rabies vaccination
clinic conducted
POMEROY - The Meigs County Hea)th Department
along with 1he Meigs Veterinary Clinic recently conducted
.a Rabies Vaccination Clinic at the clinic.
Approximately 18 cats and 67 dogs were immunized
against the deadly disease, which can be transmitted to
humans via bites particular] y those that result in puncture
wounds . Pet owners .only paid $6 per vaccine to reimburse
the Meigs Veterinary Clinic which supplied the vaccine. No
charge for an office visit was assessed. Meigs County
Health Departmem Sanitarian Coleen Murphy-Smith also
passed out information to.pet owners about rabies.
Rabies is a virus that attacks the brain and nervous system. After a, person or animal · becomes sick with· rabies,
they usually will die. The Health De.partment Is resp{&gt;nsible.
for investigating an imal bites in an effort to identify and to
control rabies transmission. If a residentreceives an animal
bite, the health department places the biting dog, cat or ferret under quarantine usually at the owner's borne. If the animal remains healthy during the quarantine, the person bitten was not ex posed to the rabies virus. Wild animals and
stray animals are usually tested. Unfortunately, this means
the animal must be killed because the test is done on the
brain via the Ohio Department of Health laboratory.
During 2007, no cases of rabies were identified m
Meigs County.

SUbmitted photoe

Southern FFA banquet held
RACINE -The Racine
Southern FFA Chapter
recently hosted its parentmember banquet with 125
members, parents and
guests present with guest
speaker Jodi Roush, State
FFA Reporter.
Members were awarded
for their participation in the
2007-08 contests and recognized for earning their
~rumn~.c~. State
and Arllerican Tiegrees.
ln addition, the new

Corporate sponsor

officer team ..-as installed

6ubolllllocl photo

'

The Rocksprings Rehab Center is a corporate sponsor for
the Gold Wings and Ribs Festival which will take place on
June 6-7. Here Stephanie Cleland, administrator, presents
a check to Bill Quickel, festival chairman, in support of
tourism efforts. With them are Frank Bibbee, referral manager, and Cass Clelan&lt;;l, who handles fund raising and publicity for the festival committee.

&amp;ubm-pholo

Racine Southern FFA students pictured at their recent banquet include front row, Joey
Forester; second row (from left) Rusty Carnahan, Dax Holman, Dustyn Johqson, Ryan Lain
Beegle, Jordan Pickens; third row (from left) Eric Perry, Chris Holter, Ryan Lee Beegle. ·

and includes Pre.aident
Ry.an Lain ~glt, Vice
Lee
President Ry.an
Beegle, 'Secretary Dax
Holman, Treas.u rer Eric
Perry, Repo.rter ltusty
Carnahan,
.S entinel
Dustyn Johnson, Student
Advisor Cbris Holter,
Historian Eric Cundiff,
Parliamentarian
Jack
Goode.

Future depends
on getting along ·
play, or should I talk him
out
of it? Soccer sign-ups
AND MARCY SUGAR
are coming up soon. Dear Annie: My wife .... Soccer Moin
and I have twQ wonderful
Dear Mom: First talk to
children in their early 30s. your son . Explain that his
They live in other cities, teammates are getting
but occasionally visit us older and stronger and he
with their respective com· might have to work much
panions. We have no prob- . harder to keep up. If your
lem with our . son's girl- son loves the sport enough
friend or our daughter's to put up with the teasing,
boyfriend spending the let him play.. Talk to the
night. These are serious coach about your concerns,
adult relationships.
· .., · and make sure there is no ·
The ptoblem is, our bullying. You also should
daughter intensely dislikes see if there are other team s
our
son's
girlfriend, more at your son's ievel .
"Jennifer."
We
admit And by all means, try to
Jennifer is a little ' high- interest him in different
strung, but we get along extracurricular activities.
with ber and understand she For most kids, unles s
could be our future daugh- you' re David Beckham,
ter-in-law.
playing soccer doesn't last
Our daughter now insists forever·, regardless of inter·
she
isn' t comfortable est or aptitude.
Dear
Annie:
Your
around Jennifer. She was
planning to spend her vaca- response to "Disappointed
·tion . with ~s this summer, and Furious" wasn 't strong
but says she won ' t come if enough. Her 14-year-old
Jennifer is around. If we tell daughter posed as a 21our daughter to put up with year-old on the Internet;
Jennifer, she'll say we favor including using someone
· her brother. If I tell our son else's picture, and Mom
that Jennifer cannot stay, turned this Man in to· the
he'll say we are taking his police and the military as a
sister 's side. We. love both predator. Shame on her! In
our children and are not this instance. her daughter is
quite sure bow to handle the the predator. Mom has
situation without alienating caused this young man
one of them.
·
much trouble and maybe ·
We respect your down-to- even hurt his career - a
earth advice. Please help us man who is. serving our
out. - Torn Parents in country, a man who gave his
· Denver
phone number and address.
Dear Denver: Have an . Sell:ual predators don't give
adult discussion with your out their personal informadaughter. Sympathize with tion. Please blast this
her about Jennifer, agree- woman for turning in the
ing that she can be difficult. man, and for not teaching
Then make her understand her daughter moral values
that her future relationship and keeping track of ber
with her brother may activities. She should be
depend on her ability to get furious with her daughter,
along with this woman. not some man she duped.Ask her to do her best for Mother of Many
·
.
the sake of the family and
Dear Mother: We were
make an effort to discov'er amazed at the number of
the good qualities in readers who wanted to tar
Jennifer that her brother and feather this mother. We
sees. Then promise her you agree the man doesn't
will try to arrange these sound like a predator and
sibling
vacations
and Mom needs to watch her
weekend visits so they daughter more closely, but
don't overlap more than we know Mom is acting out
necessary; When they do, if of concern.
you can afford it, periodiAnnie's Mailbox is writcaHy treat one or the other ten by Kathy MilcheU and
sibhng to a romantic week- Marcy Sugar, longtime ediend at a hotel.
tors of the Ann Landers
Dear Annie: My 13-year- column. Please e-nrail your
old son loves playing soc- questions to anniesnuzilcer. He has played with our box@comcast.net, or .write
community sports league to: Annie's Mailbox, P.O.
for nine years.
Box 118190, Chicago, IL
. The problem is, he isn 't 60611. To find out
aggressive enough. Some of about Annie's Mailbox;
the girls play better than he and read features by other
does. Since he is older now, Creators Syndicate writers
I don't want the other boys atul cartoonists, visit the
to laugh at him, which a few Creators Syndicate Web
did last year. Do I let him . page at www.creaJors.com.
BY KATHY MITCHELL

Mrs. Autumn Lisle's fourth grade class was the overall winner of the "Great Race to Study Island."

· ~Great Race.to Study Island'
RACINE - Beginning in
Dutton, Jansen Wolfe and
January, Southern Local
Hannah Hill won the frrst
Elementary students began
leg. The second leg of the
what the district· calls, the
race ran· from March
"Great Race to Study
through April.
The Study Island program
•Island." .The ·Study Island
program is a standardswas made possible through
based program that helps
Title fundmg and CORE
prepare students for the
funding to promote Math
Ob10 Achievement Test or
and Science skills in the dis-OAT. .
trict. Nex.t year, S~uthem
During the school year,
will utilize both Study
,students and teachers utilize
Island and a new standards
· the program within their
based program Classworks,
classrooms to supplement
K-12 . The Classworks proclassroom instruction. This
gram is currently being used
year students ell:ceeding last
in the Meigs Local School
year's totals by answering
District.
404,053 questions with
Students had to answer at
nearly 70 percent accuracy. The individual winners of the second "Great Race to Study least 500 questions to quali"The contest made things l!iland" are Kimberly Timmons first place and $50; second fy for the award. All stuinteresting this year. We had place and $30 went to Tara Eakins; third place and $20 dents answering 500 .corincentives for the both the . went to Jansen WoHe.
rectly .will receive a certifistudents and the teachers,"
cate. The overall winning
·noted Federal Programs "I am very proud of all the $50; second· place and $30 classroom went to Mrs.
·Din;ctor Scott Wolfe. "In bard work our students put went to Tara Eakins; third Autumn Lisle's fourth grade
some cases the teachers were into Study Island and their place and $20 went to and second place went to
ellcited as .the kids to .see classes · this year. Our Jansen Wolfe. Southern Mrs. Donna Norris' eighth
· who woo the . contest. The teachers did a good job Elementary, in an effort to grade. Mrs. Lisle's dass
:race was very competitive.
promoting the competition boost test scores for tlte won the first leg of the race
· · But the main thing we to their students. We have a Ohio Achievement Test, and the overall competition.
. saw was that the percentage lot of positive things going offered a challenge, to stu- Mrs. Norris' class won the
.. of questions answered cor- on . here at Southern dents taking the test by second leg of the race. Mrs.
.rectly jumped significantly Elementary. We hope to offering a reward to the top Lisle's and Mrs. Norris '
. throughout the year. We use continue to build upon our students.
.class will receive a pizza
The "Great Race to Study party for answering the
·Study Island to help the stu- successes."
The winners of the second Island" began at Southern most questions correctly as
dents learn and it has been a
positive influence."
"Great Race · to Study Elementary for third-eighth a class and an over · bead
Southern
Elementary Island"
are
Kimberly grades in January and ran projector or DVD player for
·Principal Shawn Bush said, Timmons first place and through March . . Jeremy their classroom.

as

:Community Calendar
:· Public meetings
Thursday, May 22
M ·
PO MEROY
·
etgs
Soil
and
Water
'Conservation District Board
of Supervisors 11 :30 a.m. at
,the district office , 33101
Hiland Road. Pomeroy.
•. SYRACUSE _ Meigs
'County Board of MRDD,
:regular meeting, 4 p.m. ,
·Carleton School.
:

Clubs and
organizations

America, to be observed at be held at the Faith Valley
the hall. Dinner, 6:30 p.m . Tabernacle Church, Bailey
Run Road, Pomeroy, May
meeting at 7:30p.m.
23 through May 25, 7 p.m.
Thursday, May 22
POMEROY - American each evening. The church is
Cancer Society Meigs · located 1.7 miles off S.R.
County Taskforce, noon, 124 toward Rutland. For
Pomeroy Library, lunch more information oontact
· provided.
Pastor Emmett A. Rawson.
HARRIS_ONVILLE ..
Harnsonvtlle sen~or c~ll­
· zens, I I a.m., Presbytenan
Chun:h, blood pressure
checks taken, pot luck
' • ''
served afterwards.

Church events

Friday, May 23
Thesday, May 20
POMEROY - Calvin: · POMEROY Ladies
:Auxiliary, Drew Webster Pilgrim Chapel, State Route
· Aulliliary,
American 143, revival services continSunday.
:Legion, Post 39, 2 p.m. at uing through
:the Legion hall in the old Evangelist Rev. RoUin
:Salisbury School building. Mitchell; special singing '
'Election
of
officers . nightly. Pastor Charles
McKenzie.
:'Members urged to attend.
POMEROY - Revival
74th
: · CHESTER
;anniversary of Chester services
Chuck
with
_;Council, Daughters of Holsinger, evangelist, will
. ..·- - - - - - - - - - , - - - - - - - - : •'

'

.

•

.•

• --'·

i~

.g.

l '

.

);

:· Mouat Union College honoranans . ·
· ; : ALLIANCE - Rachael Wood of Racine and Jesse
:McKnight of Syracuse have been inducted into Alpha
:l-ambda Delta at Mount Union College.
· · .
for
· Alpha Lambda Delta is a national scholastic
freshmen recognizing academic excellence. To be
•for membership, students must have a 3.5 grade point
: ~ge after the ftrst semester or a 3.5 cumulative grade W''"' .
: ~verage at the end of two semesters .

t''

.

. ' '·(

'~t

Birthdays

.

website advertising rontact:
..

,.

·~:-.

I

'•
r 'I' '
··,

more

Sunday, May 25
SYRACUSE - Phyllis
Harris Baker's 80th birthday will be celebrated with
a party from 1 to 3 p .m.
Sunday at the Syracuse
Community Center. .

.l)Jve·Harris (740) 992-2155
~Irena&amp; DaVis
(740i 992-21ss
..
··~·

-:,&gt;:&lt;t.

.

'!

,~·

''

'·

'..

.

•

..

'

-

II

~•.

t'

''

'.

............
·'

'

...

ACE
•101m ltlCOIIO,__
' • .,.... il!lt(lft, OliO
·AVfl'. Plitt F11i, J'OOlS.
MJ) JWIDWARE
IIOf«&gt;AY- ~va:Q0..6:30

~- 8:00-5:00 SU( 11:00-4:00

QlCJC. ON THE UNKS
·'TO Vl£W SPONSORS.

AD/WEBSITES
•

PIJilNE,: 7MI •• AM

Red Carpet Treatmentt'
·~···"-

"~.,.

:

"'

!

...~

• '"•• f'

YOMrCilfJH!I

and Vpholsury
Cleaning Soluti.&lt;Hr
Mtu1y 0 'Bry&lt;Znl

Owner

P.O. Bor453
r-roy, OIUD 45769 _
TDII F,.., 1-888-992-7(199

' Home

. Or. A.

~ National

Blllel, Opbllltrlll

.c Bank

507 M~lberry Heights •

Pomeroy, OH
'
(740)i92-3279
Toll Free
VIol

•

•

2008

•

�..

\

Page.A2

COMM

The Daily Sentinel

Tuesday, May 20, 2008

.PageA3

BY·THE'BEND

}he Daily Sentil}~l

Tuesday, May 20,

ANNIE'S MAILBOX

,•

In reo6gnition of National
Hospital Week, Pleasant
Valley Hospital A~Centfy
hosted a Wiffle Ball
.
Toumament for employees:
.and family members.
· Claiming· first place honors
were the Wellness Center
SluggerS, pictured at top
left, whose team members ·
included Darin Smith, ChriS
waus, Debra Long, Paul :
Hanis, Kristi Emer, Scott ·
Wood, Leah Morrow, Travis
Davis, Nicole Rogers,
Morgan Davis, Bill Wray, .
Yvonne Pearson, Jason
King and Heather C1,1ndifV
Clinching 'secorid place :was the Community
Relations' £ye candy
Crew, pictilred at bottom
•Pam ·•
leftI , Whk:h .inCluded
'.. .
'
MiJncf, Amy Leach, Ashley
Thomas, Stacy Wright,
Leigh Ann Gardner, Tanya
· Shobe, Randall Shobe,
Melinda Grimes, Brian Hall,
Jol:\n Beaver, ·Teny Wcas.
Wee lleving. 'Everett
Afilhur, Heidi Sturgeon,
Scott Muncy and M.T.
Blaine. Several other teams
also competed includingthe Pleasant 'Iaiiey Nursing
&amp; Rehabilitation Center,
Pleasant Valley Home
Medical Equpnant lind the
FWH .Patient Senlice&amp;.
.
Several physa- oonlpet. ed in the special event
including Nancy tares, Ml3,
Stephen Rerych, MD and
Wes Ueving, DO.

'
Subm-pholo

Coleen Murphy-Smith ·of the Meigs County Health
Department and Kelley Grueser of the Meigs Veterinary
Clinic prepare for the recent low-cost Rabies Vaccination
Clinic where 86 responsible pet owners brought their animals to be immunized against the deadly disease.

Rabies vaccination
clinic conducted
POMEROY - The Meigs County Hea)th Department
along with 1he Meigs Veterinary Clinic recently conducted
.a Rabies Vaccination Clinic at the clinic.
Approximately 18 cats and 67 dogs were immunized
against the deadly disease, which can be transmitted to
humans via bites particular] y those that result in puncture
wounds . Pet owners .only paid $6 per vaccine to reimburse
the Meigs Veterinary Clinic which supplied the vaccine. No
charge for an office visit was assessed. Meigs County
Health Departmem Sanitarian Coleen Murphy-Smith also
passed out information to.pet owners about rabies.
Rabies is a virus that attacks the brain and nervous system. After a, person or animal · becomes sick with· rabies,
they usually will die. The Health De.partment Is resp{&gt;nsible.
for investigating an imal bites in an effort to identify and to
control rabies transmission. If a residentreceives an animal
bite, the health department places the biting dog, cat or ferret under quarantine usually at the owner's borne. If the animal remains healthy during the quarantine, the person bitten was not ex posed to the rabies virus. Wild animals and
stray animals are usually tested. Unfortunately, this means
the animal must be killed because the test is done on the
brain via the Ohio Department of Health laboratory.
During 2007, no cases of rabies were identified m
Meigs County.

SUbmitted photoe

Southern FFA banquet held
RACINE -The Racine
Southern FFA Chapter
recently hosted its parentmember banquet with 125
members, parents and
guests present with guest
speaker Jodi Roush, State
FFA Reporter.
Members were awarded
for their participation in the
2007-08 contests and recognized for earning their
~rumn~.c~. State
and Arllerican Tiegrees.
ln addition, the new

Corporate sponsor

officer team ..-as installed

6ubolllllocl photo

'

The Rocksprings Rehab Center is a corporate sponsor for
the Gold Wings and Ribs Festival which will take place on
June 6-7. Here Stephanie Cleland, administrator, presents
a check to Bill Quickel, festival chairman, in support of
tourism efforts. With them are Frank Bibbee, referral manager, and Cass Clelan&lt;;l, who handles fund raising and publicity for the festival committee.

&amp;ubm-pholo

Racine Southern FFA students pictured at their recent banquet include front row, Joey
Forester; second row (from left) Rusty Carnahan, Dax Holman, Dustyn Johqson, Ryan Lain
Beegle, Jordan Pickens; third row (from left) Eric Perry, Chris Holter, Ryan Lee Beegle. ·

and includes Pre.aident
Ry.an Lain ~glt, Vice
Lee
President Ry.an
Beegle, 'Secretary Dax
Holman, Treas.u rer Eric
Perry, Repo.rter ltusty
Carnahan,
.S entinel
Dustyn Johnson, Student
Advisor Cbris Holter,
Historian Eric Cundiff,
Parliamentarian
Jack
Goode.

Future depends
on getting along ·
play, or should I talk him
out
of it? Soccer sign-ups
AND MARCY SUGAR
are coming up soon. Dear Annie: My wife .... Soccer Moin
and I have twQ wonderful
Dear Mom: First talk to
children in their early 30s. your son . Explain that his
They live in other cities, teammates are getting
but occasionally visit us older and stronger and he
with their respective com· might have to work much
panions. We have no prob- . harder to keep up. If your
lem with our . son's girl- son loves the sport enough
friend or our daughter's to put up with the teasing,
boyfriend spending the let him play.. Talk to the
night. These are serious coach about your concerns,
adult relationships.
· .., · and make sure there is no ·
The ptoblem is, our bullying. You also should
daughter intensely dislikes see if there are other team s
our
son's
girlfriend, more at your son's ievel .
"Jennifer."
We
admit And by all means, try to
Jennifer is a little ' high- interest him in different
strung, but we get along extracurricular activities.
with ber and understand she For most kids, unles s
could be our future daugh- you' re David Beckham,
ter-in-law.
playing soccer doesn't last
Our daughter now insists forever·, regardless of inter·
she
isn' t comfortable est or aptitude.
Dear
Annie:
Your
around Jennifer. She was
planning to spend her vaca- response to "Disappointed
·tion . with ~s this summer, and Furious" wasn 't strong
but says she won ' t come if enough. Her 14-year-old
Jennifer is around. If we tell daughter posed as a 21our daughter to put up with year-old on the Internet;
Jennifer, she'll say we favor including using someone
· her brother. If I tell our son else's picture, and Mom
that Jennifer cannot stay, turned this Man in to· the
he'll say we are taking his police and the military as a
sister 's side. We. love both predator. Shame on her! In
our children and are not this instance. her daughter is
quite sure bow to handle the the predator. Mom has
situation without alienating caused this young man
one of them.
·
much trouble and maybe ·
We respect your down-to- even hurt his career - a
earth advice. Please help us man who is. serving our
out. - Torn Parents in country, a man who gave his
· Denver
phone number and address.
Dear Denver: Have an . Sell:ual predators don't give
adult discussion with your out their personal informadaughter. Sympathize with tion. Please blast this
her about Jennifer, agree- woman for turning in the
ing that she can be difficult. man, and for not teaching
Then make her understand her daughter moral values
that her future relationship and keeping track of ber
with her brother may activities. She should be
depend on her ability to get furious with her daughter,
along with this woman. not some man she duped.Ask her to do her best for Mother of Many
·
.
the sake of the family and
Dear Mother: We were
make an effort to discov'er amazed at the number of
the good qualities in readers who wanted to tar
Jennifer that her brother and feather this mother. We
sees. Then promise her you agree the man doesn't
will try to arrange these sound like a predator and
sibling
vacations
and Mom needs to watch her
weekend visits so they daughter more closely, but
don't overlap more than we know Mom is acting out
necessary; When they do, if of concern.
you can afford it, periodiAnnie's Mailbox is writcaHy treat one or the other ten by Kathy MilcheU and
sibhng to a romantic week- Marcy Sugar, longtime ediend at a hotel.
tors of the Ann Landers
Dear Annie: My 13-year- column. Please e-nrail your
old son loves playing soc- questions to anniesnuzilcer. He has played with our box@comcast.net, or .write
community sports league to: Annie's Mailbox, P.O.
for nine years.
Box 118190, Chicago, IL
. The problem is, he isn 't 60611. To find out
aggressive enough. Some of about Annie's Mailbox;
the girls play better than he and read features by other
does. Since he is older now, Creators Syndicate writers
I don't want the other boys atul cartoonists, visit the
to laugh at him, which a few Creators Syndicate Web
did last year. Do I let him . page at www.creaJors.com.
BY KATHY MITCHELL

Mrs. Autumn Lisle's fourth grade class was the overall winner of the "Great Race to Study Island."

· ~Great Race.to Study Island'
RACINE - Beginning in
Dutton, Jansen Wolfe and
January, Southern Local
Hannah Hill won the frrst
Elementary students began
leg. The second leg of the
what the district· calls, the
race ran· from March
"Great Race to Study
through April.
The Study Island program
•Island." .The ·Study Island
program is a standardswas made possible through
based program that helps
Title fundmg and CORE
prepare students for the
funding to promote Math
Ob10 Achievement Test or
and Science skills in the dis-OAT. .
trict. Nex.t year, S~uthem
During the school year,
will utilize both Study
,students and teachers utilize
Island and a new standards
· the program within their
based program Classworks,
classrooms to supplement
K-12 . The Classworks proclassroom instruction. This
gram is currently being used
year students ell:ceeding last
in the Meigs Local School
year's totals by answering
District.
404,053 questions with
Students had to answer at
nearly 70 percent accuracy. The individual winners of the second "Great Race to Study least 500 questions to quali"The contest made things l!iland" are Kimberly Timmons first place and $50; second fy for the award. All stuinteresting this year. We had place and $30 went to Tara Eakins; third place and $20 dents answering 500 .corincentives for the both the . went to Jansen WoHe.
rectly .will receive a certifistudents and the teachers,"
cate. The overall winning
·noted Federal Programs "I am very proud of all the $50; second· place and $30 classroom went to Mrs.
·Din;ctor Scott Wolfe. "In bard work our students put went to Tara Eakins; third Autumn Lisle's fourth grade
some cases the teachers were into Study Island and their place and $20 went to and second place went to
ellcited as .the kids to .see classes · this year. Our Jansen Wolfe. Southern Mrs. Donna Norris' eighth
· who woo the . contest. The teachers did a good job Elementary, in an effort to grade. Mrs. Lisle's dass
:race was very competitive.
promoting the competition boost test scores for tlte won the first leg of the race
· · But the main thing we to their students. We have a Ohio Achievement Test, and the overall competition.
. saw was that the percentage lot of positive things going offered a challenge, to stu- Mrs. Norris' class won the
.. of questions answered cor- on . here at Southern dents taking the test by second leg of the race. Mrs.
.rectly jumped significantly Elementary. We hope to offering a reward to the top Lisle's and Mrs. Norris '
. throughout the year. We use continue to build upon our students.
.class will receive a pizza
The "Great Race to Study party for answering the
·Study Island to help the stu- successes."
The winners of the second Island" began at Southern most questions correctly as
dents learn and it has been a
positive influence."
"Great Race · to Study Elementary for third-eighth a class and an over · bead
Southern
Elementary Island"
are
Kimberly grades in January and ran projector or DVD player for
·Principal Shawn Bush said, Timmons first place and through March . . Jeremy their classroom.

as

:Community Calendar
:· Public meetings
Thursday, May 22
M ·
PO MEROY
·
etgs
Soil
and
Water
'Conservation District Board
of Supervisors 11 :30 a.m. at
,the district office , 33101
Hiland Road. Pomeroy.
•. SYRACUSE _ Meigs
'County Board of MRDD,
:regular meeting, 4 p.m. ,
·Carleton School.
:

Clubs and
organizations

America, to be observed at be held at the Faith Valley
the hall. Dinner, 6:30 p.m . Tabernacle Church, Bailey
Run Road, Pomeroy, May
meeting at 7:30p.m.
23 through May 25, 7 p.m.
Thursday, May 22
POMEROY - American each evening. The church is
Cancer Society Meigs · located 1.7 miles off S.R.
County Taskforce, noon, 124 toward Rutland. For
Pomeroy Library, lunch more information oontact
· provided.
Pastor Emmett A. Rawson.
HARRIS_ONVILLE ..
Harnsonvtlle sen~or c~ll­
· zens, I I a.m., Presbytenan
Chun:h, blood pressure
checks taken, pot luck
' • ''
served afterwards.

Church events

Friday, May 23
Thesday, May 20
POMEROY - Calvin: · POMEROY Ladies
:Auxiliary, Drew Webster Pilgrim Chapel, State Route
· Aulliliary,
American 143, revival services continSunday.
:Legion, Post 39, 2 p.m. at uing through
:the Legion hall in the old Evangelist Rev. RoUin
:Salisbury School building. Mitchell; special singing '
'Election
of
officers . nightly. Pastor Charles
McKenzie.
:'Members urged to attend.
POMEROY - Revival
74th
: · CHESTER
;anniversary of Chester services
Chuck
with
_;Council, Daughters of Holsinger, evangelist, will
. ..·- - - - - - - - - - , - - - - - - - - : •'

'

.

•

.•

• --'·

i~

.g.

l '

.

);

:· Mouat Union College honoranans . ·
· ; : ALLIANCE - Rachael Wood of Racine and Jesse
:McKnight of Syracuse have been inducted into Alpha
:l-ambda Delta at Mount Union College.
· · .
for
· Alpha Lambda Delta is a national scholastic
freshmen recognizing academic excellence. To be
•for membership, students must have a 3.5 grade point
: ~ge after the ftrst semester or a 3.5 cumulative grade W''"' .
: ~verage at the end of two semesters .

t''

.

. ' '·(

'~t

Birthdays

.

website advertising rontact:
..

,.

·~:-.

I

'•
r 'I' '
··,

more

Sunday, May 25
SYRACUSE - Phyllis
Harris Baker's 80th birthday will be celebrated with
a party from 1 to 3 p .m.
Sunday at the Syracuse
Community Center. .

.l)Jve·Harris (740) 992-2155
~Irena&amp; DaVis
(740i 992-21ss
..
··~·

-:,&gt;:&lt;t.

.

'!

,~·

''

'·

'..

.

•

..

'

-

II

~•.

t'

''

'.

............
·'

'

...

ACE
•101m ltlCOIIO,__
' • .,.... il!lt(lft, OliO
·AVfl'. Plitt F11i, J'OOlS.
MJ) JWIDWARE
IIOf«&gt;AY- ~va:Q0..6:30

~- 8:00-5:00 SU( 11:00-4:00

QlCJC. ON THE UNKS
·'TO Vl£W SPONSORS.

AD/WEBSITES
•

PIJilNE,: 7MI •• AM

Red Carpet Treatmentt'
·~···"-

"~.,.

:

"'

!

...~

• '"•• f'

YOMrCilfJH!I

and Vpholsury
Cleaning Soluti.&lt;Hr
Mtu1y 0 'Bry&lt;Znl

Owner

P.O. Bor453
r-roy, OIUD 45769 _
TDII F,.., 1-888-992-7(199

' Home

. Or. A.

~ National

Blllel, Opbllltrlll

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2008

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�~e Daily Sentinel

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The Daily Sentinel

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(740) 1Jg~=:-~Ax~·~157 .

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Ohio Valley Publishing Co.

.•

Dan Goodrich

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Charlene Hoeflich

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www.mydally...tfnel.eom

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Publisher.

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General Manager-News Editor

.
:
Congrts.s .shall malee no law raptcting an
: tstabli.shmmt of religion, or prohibiting the
•
: fret exercise thereof; or abridging the frwlom
of speech, or of the pras; or the right of the
. people peaceably to assemble, and to petition
the Governmmt for a redras ofgritN~.
-The Am Amendment to the U.S. ConstitUtion
'

TODAY IN HISTORY
•

OPINION

Page A4
Tuesday, May 20, 2008

.

"What kind of 1\mCrica
are we going to leave to our
lcidsT' The question is the
bi~t cliche in Ametican
polttics - and the least seriously addressed major issue.
Because, in fact, the nowretiring baby boom generatioo is passing on to its cbildreo an America buried il) ·
debt, wOefully short on savings and inve&gt;Uueut and fac:. · Coalition, Walker traveled
ing stupendous tasks we don't the country on a ·"fiSCal
have any idea how to finance. wake-up tour" to make peoThc Unitid States. ahady . pie aware of the unsustainranks far behind its major abili"
economic com-'titors in
ty of America's long!"'
tenn finances.
·
health care outcomes, educa- · The ltiller statistic that
tiona! performance, environ- tour particili·ants em'2S40amental quality and national ized
savings - threatening the· ~ ~ at, by . __:
country's wOrld leadership Social Securirr.~fcare
and standard of living. · · and Medicaid, plus interest
The person .who. sounds on the national debt - are
the alarm· about all this bet- scheduled to consume 20
ter _than anyone else - and percent of gross domestic
deserves to be vice presi- product, or what the federal
dent on either party's ticket · government now spends for
-is David Walker, recently . all its functions.
resigned as the bead of the
That's practically a dictioGovernment Accountability nary definition of "unsusOffice and now CEO of the tainable." It means that the
Peter Peterson Foundation.
next generation of workers
A former Reagan admin~ will have to have its taxes
istration official, Walker ran more than doubled . .
- and transformed -the
In reams of reports and
GAO on an independent, pungent speeches, Walker
bipartisan basis. He could- has struck a loud series of
n't deliver any state or con- gongs about all levels of debt
stituency, but he· d mark and unfunded obligations,
either party's presidential the challenges of an aging
nominee as a determined, · population and the rousevisionary reformer.
quences of inaction. He also
From a fusty agency spe- outlined ~posed solutions
cializing in microanalysis · - .all politically difficult
and known as the General
Walker's principal m,antra
Accounting Office, Walker is "no more entitlement progave GAO a new name and grams that are not paid for."
turned it into a broad-gauge . Last week he denounced
i~vestigato~ ?f ~aste and a · congressional plans to spend
breless act1vtst m the cause $52 billion over l 0 years on
of economi': sanity.
a new Gl bill guaranteeing
Along With representa- college benefits to veterans.
tives from the Heritage
"No matter how laudable
fuundation, the Brookings the purpose or well-intenlnstitution and the Concord · tioned the program," he

said, "if it's that ~t,

dellt -

and lack of savings
- of Ordinary citizens that
.we ought to pay for 11."
He also declared the used to be offset by rising
Medicare prescription drug home values but no longer is.
bill passed in 2003 "the · "We· ve not only burdened
moSt fiscally irresponsible our children with debt,"

legislation in decades." · ·
Tbe easiest-to-understand
level of "national debt" is
"debt held by the public" the accumulation of federal
fiscal deficits. This number
·has climbed during the
Bush administration from
$3.4 trillion to $5 trillion,or 36.8 pen:ent of the gross
domestic product
According to the GAO,
that will rise to 62.7 pen:ent
of the GOP by 2020 and 250
ptJcent by 2040. The highest
that figure has ever ruched
was I09 percent in 1946.
As Walker ,pointed out to
me in an interview, postWorld War II U.S. debt was
all owed to Americans.
Now, half of it - and 75
percent of new debt - is
owed to foreigners.
But there are othec measures of excessive debt accumulated by the United States.
As of March 2008, the federa1 government's total outstanding debt, including sums
owed by Social Security and
other trust funds, was $9,4
trillion, up from $5.6 trillion
when Bush took office.
Then there is the total of
long-term
obligations
incurred by current federal
law - mainly, retirement
benefits and Medicaid for
the poor- which comes to·
an astounding $53 trillion
over~ next 75 years, representing 90 percent of the
total net worth of American
households, or $175,000 per
person or $410,000 per fulltime worker. .
.
Piled on top of all that
comes America's huge trade.
imbalance .and the personal

LANGSVILLE -Julia Katherine Dartt Mitchell, 82, of
Jacks Road, Langsville, passed away on Sunday, May 18,
· · 2008 at Darst Group Home, Pomeroy.
Boin May 13, 1926 at Ward. W.Va. to the late John and
Edith Heideman Dartt. She was a member of Bradbury ·
Church of Christ, Middleport, former Past Matron of
Evaneeline Chapter # 172 OES, MiddlepQrt.
She is surv1ved by a daughter, Teresa Chandler,
Charleston, W.Va.;· sons, Kenneth Franldin Mitchell, Paul
David (Donna) Mitchell, all of Langsville, Edward
Lawrence (Kim) Mitchell, Charleston, W.Va.; grandchildren, Heather (David) Capehart, David Lee . (Misty)
Mitchell, Raymond Chandler, Karen (Darrell) Carter, Ben
Mitchell, Travis (:handler, Alex Mitchell; five great grandchildren; sisters, Alice Johnson, East Bank, W.Va., Dolly
ldings, Ashland, Ky., Thelma Young, Dunbar, W.Va.,
Joanna (David) Brooks, Culloden, W.Va., bJ others, Charles
(Jean) Dartt, Aurora, Robert "Pumpkin" Dartt, Johns
Island, S.C.; and several nieces and nephews.
In addition to her parents, she was preceded in death by
husband Delbert Franklin Mih;hell; brothers, John and
James; sister, Dorothy. ·
A funeral service will be held at II a.m., Thursday, May
.22 at Birchfield Funeral Home, Rutland, with Thomas
Runyon officiating. Burial will follow at Miles Cemetery, ·
Rutland. Family will receive friends from 6-9 p.m.,
Wednesday evening at the funeral home. .
Tbe family asks that in lieu of flowers donations be made
to Bradbury · Church of Christ, 39558 Bradbury Road,
Middleport, 45760.

Walker told me, "but we' r~
not.investing in them. We're
not investing in them, hilt we
expect them to pay the bills." ·
A just-issued repon by the
children's advocacy gro\lp.
First Focus, shows that fed. era! outlays for children's
programs has increased by
only $2.8 billion in the past
four years, while spending
for seniors increased by
$140 billion.
As Walker put it in a recent
speech, "curreiJt fiscal policy
is creating an unfair and
unethical
relationship
between today's citizens and
tomorrow's taxpayers. Baby
boomers and current retirees
benefit from today's higher
spending and lower tax policies, while our children and
grandchildren will be expect· ed to pay the bill for toda:{s
excessive consumption."
Walker advocates a series
of reforms, starting with
shaving future . entitlement
benefits, controlling health
care costs and changing the
tax code to reward savings
and investment
He'd be a challenge for
either party's ticket or administration. And yet.-Walker has
the best strategy of anyone to
answer the question: "What
kind of America will we
leave to our kids?" It's really
the moSt imponant question
of the 2008 election. If ' the
next president ·won't nominate Walker - as I expect
then he or she emphatically
should listen to him.
(Morton Kondracke is
exec~tive editor of Roll
Call, the newspaper of
Capitol Hill.) ·

· Mehin Rl'ssel11roWnie' Pilaw

.

DeathS
Olda E. Weelhee
GALLIPOUS FERRY, W.Va.- Olda E. Weethee, 78, of
Gallipolis Ferry, W.Va. died May 18, 2008 in Cqlumbus,
She was preceded . in death by her husband, John W.
· Weethee, Sr.
· · Funeral services will be held on Wednesday, May 21,
2008 at II a.m. at the Anderson-McDaniel Funera} Home
in Pomeroy, Ohio with Rev. porsal Messick officiating.
Burial will follow at the Weethee Family Cemetery.
Visiting hours will be on Tuesday from 6 to Sp.m. at the
funeral home. A registry is available ouline at www.andersonmcdaniel.com.
.
•

•Local Weather

The Daily Sentinel

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••. 0

·Sergen1/pllc*
The Meigs County WIC nutritional program recently received awalds from Ohio WIC for its various programs.
The staff
of Meigs County WIC are pictured (from left) with the awards, including two checks for $500 each: Charity Stobart, Sarah
·
Dalton, Nora Ellis, Janet Jones, Leanne Cunningham.
lies while also promoting the Primary Care Office.. for through small group presen- ·
breast feeding awareness in medical aDd public health tations, written materials
the community.
professionals in the area. ·and individual consultation
fnmPageAl
In relation to the Best Program attendees received that resulted in improved
Practices in Community information on· research community awareness of
. coordinated effort with Relations and Outreach focusin,g on breast feeding WIC services.
In addition to providing
Unison, the development of award, Meigs County WIC and disease prevention.
clients
with their services,
Also
contributing
to
with
The
Meigs
coonlinated
a billboard promoting breast
receiving
this
award,
the
said WIC also
Cunningham
County
Cardiovascular
feeding.
Cincinnati local staff used data to attempts to be a gateway for
According
to Program,
Medical
Center determine and reach out to ·referrals and service collabChildren's
Cunningham, the agency
attempts to provide breast and Holzer Medical Center geographically underserved oration with other agencies
feeding education to wrc to provide a presentation populations and provided which ultimately benefits
information those same clients.
participants and their fami- entitled ··Breast. Feeding in nutritional

WIC

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Otuo wu;:

: RACINE - A funeral service celebratin$ the life of
Melvin Russell "Brownie" Pillow, 81, of Racine, fonnerly
of Buckeye Lake, will be held at II a.m. Tuesday, in the
Chapel of the Hoskinson Funeral Horne, Kirkersville, with
...
Pastor Randy Clay as celebrant
Burial with full military honors will follow at Glen Rest
. Memorial Estates, Reynoldsburg, by the Licking Co
Veterans Alliance.
'
Brownie died Thursday evening in Gallipolis following
an extended illness.
He was bom in Johnstown, on Jan. 18, 1927, the son of
the late William Thomas and Hattie Boardman Pillow. He
served honorably in the US Army during WWII .
He was employed by the Ohio Department of Natural
Resources for 37 years, 17 years as state park manaf: at
Buckeye Lake State Parle. He was a fonner deputy s riff
in Licking, Fairfiel4 and Franklin Counties.
·
Along with his· brother-in-law he operated Sherm &amp;
. Mel's french fry stand at the Lancaster fair for over 40
years. He operated the f~ly food concession at Buckeye
Lake amuseq~ent park for many years. He was a member of
Hebron Lodge #116, F. &amp; A.M .• Racine American Legion,
A.A.S.R. Valley of Columbus, and a former member of the
Pataskala IOOF lod~e.
.
.
.
Above all, he enJoyed spending time with his family,·
loved animals especially .horses and his beloved dog
"Lily". He was also an avid nature lover enjoying the beauty of Meigs County and all of Southern Ohio.
He is survived by his loving family: his wife, the fonner
Nrnma Clay, whom he married on Dec. 17, 1955; his
daughters Darla Blade (Roy "Beaf' Hall), Darlene Pillow;
his grandson Jacob Pillow, all of Racine; his brothers and
sisters: Willis (Janet) Pillow of Ravenna, Gladys (Harold)
Fe!Xo of Columbus, Ralph Pillow of Westerville; and
many, many nieces and nephews.
Fnends may call Monday from 5-8 p.m. at the Hoskinson Writing "MacKenzie's Lab," a sci8nce fiCtion tale, were fifth
Funeral Home, 285 East Main St in Kilkersville; where an graders from left, Emily Deem, Sam Ash, Matthew Foster
on-line guest book, video tribute and condolences may be ' and Matthew Smallwood.
.
·
.·
·
.sent to the family at www.hoslcinsonfuneal.com.

Ulhich McCain would be president?

-oy.

The Daily Sentinel • Page A5

www.mydailysentinel.com

Obituari~

To get US. priorities
right, Walker should -be our next VP
.

Today is tuesday, May 20, the f41 st day of 2008. There
.
' Today's Highlight in History: One hundred years ago, on
May 20, 1908, actor James Stewart was bQrn in Indiana, Pa.
On this date: In 1506, explorer Christopher Columbus
. died in Spain.
·
In 1861, North Carolina voted to secede from the Union.
. In 1902, the United States ended a three-year military
· presence in Cuba as the Republic of Cuba was established
· under its first elected president, Tomas Estrada Palma.
In 1927, Charles Lindbergh took off from Roosevelt
Field in Long Island, N.Y., aboard the Spirit of St. Louis on
· his historic solo flight to France.
.
In 1932, Amelia Earhart took off from Newfoundland to
become the first woman to fly solo across the Atlantic.
(Because of weather and equipment problems, Earhart set
_ down in Northern Ireland instead of her intended destina- tion, France.)
In 1939, trans-Atlantic mail service began as a Pan
American Airways plane, the Yankee Clipper, took off from
Port Washington, N.Y.• bound for Europe.
In 1961, a white mob attacked a busload of Freedom
Riders in Montgomery, Ala., prompting the federal govern•
: ment to send in U.S. marshals to restore order.
In 1969, U.S. and South Vietnamese forcescapturedAp Bia
Mountain, refeired to as "Hamburger Hill" by the Americans,
following one of the bloodiest battles of the Vietnam War.
In 1988, Laurie Dann, 30, walked into a Wmnetka, Ill.,
PRIMARY . MATH ...
elementary school classroom, where she shot to death 8year-old Nicholas Corwin and wounded several other chil: dren. After wounding a young man at his home, Dann took ·.,
her own life.
· In 1993, an estimated 93 million people tuned in for the
final first-run episode of "Cheers" on NBC.
Five years ago: The Bush adrninisttalion, concerned that ·
: a wave of attacks overseas could spread to the United
· States, raised the terrorism alert level to orange. The Uoiled
: States banned all beef imports from Canada after a lone
case of mad cow disease was discovered in the heart of
Canada's cattle country.
· -One year ago: President Bush · welcomed NATO
Secretary-General Jaap de HoOp Scheffer to his Crawford,
· J'exas, ranch, to review strategy on a flurry of issues. A gunman fired nearly 300 shots during a rampage in Moscow,
Idaho, that killed three people and wounded three others.
(The shooter, Jason Hamilton, took his o.wn life.) A pair of
~vestment ~ agreed to acquire Alltel CQrp., the ~Jfth.. b1ggest U.S. WJrtless company and owner of the nation's
• lar2est geographic network, in a deal worth $27.5 billion.
· foday's Birthdays: Actor James McEachin is 78. Singer
Joe Cocker is 64. Singer-actress Cher is 62. Actor-comedi. an -Dave Thomas is 59. Musician Warren Cann is 56. Ron
: Reagan is 50. Rock musician Jane Wiedlin (The Go-Go's)
: is 50. Actor Bronson Pinchot is 49. TV personality Ted
'
As the no-holds-barred
· Allen is 43. Rapper Busta Rhymes is 36.
Senate and · the House fill on the Supreme Court,
~
Thought for Today: "H I had my career over again? · battle for. the Democratic
passed an amendment to an proudly disclosed that the
nomination
· Maybe I'd say to myself, speed it up a little." - James · presidential
appropriatiOJ\s bill requiring models for his nominees
mertifull y nears an end,
Stewart, American ~r (1908-1997). ·
·
that the Anny Field Manual would be the present chief
renewed
attention
is
being
forbidding toJture - be justice, John Roberts, and
.'·, - - , - - - - - - - - ' - - - - - - - focused oo the several John ·
expanded
to include the CIA Associate Justice Samuel
•.
Nat
McCains
bearing
the
among all the other nontor- Alito. (He has previously
LETTERS TO THE
Hentoff . turing branches of the ser- added William Rehnquist)
RepQblican ~- Having
•
EDITOR
wntteo that I cannot vote for
Robens and Alito have
- - - - · vices, McCain voted against
Obama
because
he
is
Barack
it.
And
the
president
vetoed
shown hardly any concern
· Letters to the editor eire welcome. They should be less
the legislation - with sup- for the Bush administration's
· than 300 words. All letters are subject to editing, must be an extreoust on abortion
extrajudicial . and often
· : signed, and include address and telephone number. No who refused to even save a essential to our reputation in po~ from McCain.
sudden
jive
baby
resulting
·
the
world:
"a
decent
respect
McCain's
willingness,
as
covert disregard for the
• unsigned letters will be published. Letters should be in
from
a
botched
abortion,
.I
the
·
·
f
he
has
stated,
to
insulate
the
Consti(jttion's checks and
. good taste, addressing issues, not personalitieS. Lettt:rs of alSo have concerns about die to
opwons o mankind."
. thanks to organizations and individuals will noi be acceptWhat haS severely eroded CIA from the International balances on the ever-gT:Pwconsistency of some of the worldwide respect for us, Convention Against Torture ing surveillance and databased for publication.
McCain's positions.
including the respect of some and Other Cruel, Inhuman or ing of Americans and the
The First Amendment of•our primary • against Degrading Punishment that brazen disregard of the most
being the foundation of o1ir the homicidal
·sts, are it has so often violated may elemental due process at
constitutional self-govern- the CIA's "rendi · ." CIA connect to his admiration for Gtiantanamo Bay, Including
ment, I recall McCain's agents
lel'rorism Dick Cheney, a key protec- the often brutal conditions of
(USPS 213-911o)
cooirnent about the McCain- suspects
of tor of the CIA's methods. As confinement. There are likeReader Services
Ohio~~
- llhlng
Feingold "clean elections" ~taly·and other countries and quoted in Matt ' Welch's ly to be no trials there unti I
~
CaiT:ICtlon Polley
law that directly and signif!- ''rendered" them to such "McCain: The Myth of a ilie next administration.
11
:: Our rnollri oouoem In a1 11 to Pub!- ..e.y " ""'"""· -Y
cantly
silences the
nations as Egypt, Jordan and · Maverick".
(J'algrave
The Bush legacy includes
ltlrough Friday, 111 .Court St-.
f
f opinions
d
: be ...:ura~e. H you know of an enor . Pomeroy. . Ohio. . . Second-aau
o a range . _o a. vocacy Mor0coo, known for 1Dr111r- Macmillan, 2007), McCain so much inore contempt for
,; 1n a otoiy, call ! h e - at (740) poo11g0 paJd 81 Pomemy.
~ups ~t cru~ial porn~ dur- . iog their prisoners, thereby says Cheney is "as capable the rule of law, from which
' ; _ 882·2156.
111w Jtor. 1 1 w - " -·..., . _mg presidential ~gns. _. extracting i.nfur!nation .that and sensible a public .sef\!ant ..the Constitutipn has. to be .
:
..
lhoOhloNewop"""r•uociatioO. ·
·
lntheM"~q26NewYm 1· nllt·evenft CIA. with its as I've known" (page 149). · rescued. We nOW mow, for
•
Our ...... IIUIIIIIIr •
l'cit:s 1&lt;:. Send "'**- ..,.,.,.·
Tunes, Matt Welch, a fo~ "s~ial poWer-s;'' Could My ~st concern about ·. instance, that .the telepliones
•
liono
·~o
·Dolly
Sonlinoe,
111
Court
1.os Ange.'1es 11lllle&amp; edi•,or,
e(740) tll2-21iie.
McCain IS whether, lis our of Arnetican civilian attorS1!w«.
Ohio 457119.
ese renditions have
quoted McCain: "I would been valuable propaga!!da next president, he will rec- neys ·representing . Gitmo
Dwpwba•lt eAiitlloitt are:
rather have a clean govern- and recruiting tOolS · for AI ognize
his
enormous prisoners are bugged by the
ment than one, w~ quote Qaeda and other terrorists. respons.ibiijty to restore the Justice
- Depanment!
News
Fu:st
Amendment
rights
are
Also
helpful
to
our
enemies
Constitution's
separation
of
McCain
has
often empha- . Chal1ene lloellich, Ext 12 '
being respected, that has are the CIA's secret prisons powers. In both parties, also sized protecting the values
n : .,. . Bri::n - · Ext. 14
become corrupt." 1be in various parts of the 10cluding many indepen- · of "who ·we are as
ftiPDt'- . Belh Sergont, Ext. 13
straight-talk express rides world, where "enhanced dents, there is a stait real- Americans." Those values
over free speech.
.
interrogation techniques," ization that the Bush admin- are in the oath he will take if
As .the torrent of money as President Bush approv- istration has expanded uni- he becomes president. After
on ~ ~ of the current ingly calls them, are prac- lateral presidential powers · being sworn m, will he write
presulentJal race makes ticed, including wa:terboard- IDQre radically than any a classified signing staleclear -. throllgb large loop- ing (d'!!!:1, which the sus- other in ~can history.
men! reserving his sole right
'·
holes m that Taw - presi- pectis
to believe he is . However, whatever can to remterpret that oath?
lptbt
dential politics is far from immediately about to drown be accomplished to restore
(Nat Hentoff is a natiOII·
General Manager
~ . . . . . CcN.illly
cleaner,
even as the First unless he opens up to his that core of the Constitution ally renowned authority on
Clw1eneilioefllth, Ext. 12
13'32.26
Amendment is now serious- torturers).
·
by the next president's lead- the First Amentltnent and
26Weeks
'6420
52'127.11
ly diminished.
McCain ~as won much ership and congressional the Bill of Righls and autlwr
Also, 3!\ noted in the April approbation~ere and around legislation can be b)ocl(.ed of many books, including
.-.om~.com
aut.llle ..... CowitJ
1 Newsweek, McCain the world as an insistent by the Supreme Court. On "The War 011 the Bill of
13 Weeks .
•
'53.55
pledges his election will opponent of the United . May 6, McCain, noting that Rtg~s ant!, ~he Gathering
'107. tO
26 Weeks
mean a return to what States tonuring prisoners. Bush's successor may have · Resistance. (Seven Stories
www.mydlit}w; ltiPJI.QOm
52 Weeks
'21&amp;21
Thomas Jefferson insisted is But recently, when bOth the two (or more) vacancies to Press, 2004 ).

. are 225 days left in the year.

Tuesday, May 20, 2008

.

•'

'

"
I

I
' I

Thesday-Mostly cloudy.
Showers likely in ·the morning...Then a chance ofshowers in the afiemoon. H1ghs m
'the mid 60s. Northwest
winds 5 to 10 mph. Chance
of rain 70 percent.
Thesday nigbL •• Mostly
cloudy with a 20 percent ·
chance of showers. Lows in
the mid 40s.
Wec~Jwsday_.Partly sunny
·with a 30 percent chance of
showers. Highs· in the mid
60S. Northwesi'wilids
5 to I 0
•
&gt;.
.
..mph..

Wedn day n'/A Mostly
cloudy wi~ a 20 percent
chance of showers. Lows in
the mid 40s. Northwest
winds around 5 mph.
Thunday... Partly sunny
in the ' moming ...Then
becoming ~ostly cloudy.
Highs in the u~ 60s.
Thursday mghL.Partly
cloudy. Lows in the lower

"Lou's Dini's Last Ttiok" was written by fifth graders from
left, Austin Wolfe, Katelyn Hysell , Haley Kennedy and
Jordan Amold.

·

tery and find the culprit of
the criine. Writing the novel
were Haiey
Kennedy,
Katelyn Hysell, Jordyn
fnmPageAl
Arnold, and Austin Wolfe.
The second fifth grade
titled, "In Search of Alto
novel
is "MacKenzie's Lab,"
Pajetan," It is an adventure
a
science
fiction tale about a
story about two friends who
child
who
makes a machine
sbrch for a lost city of gold
in the jungle, their encounter and acquires enormous
with wild animals and the . st:ningth. The story tells of his
shelter they seek in secluded adventw"es in a football game
settings as they tra~o~el with his friends and the
through the jungle in search dilemma they face playing
of the treasure. Lts authors , football with a super friend.
were Lara Perrin, Kal yon Matthew ~rnallw~ Emily
Seymour, Miranda Gillilan, Deem, Matthew Foster, and
Sadie Fox, Brnyden Kopec Sam Ash are the authors.
and Gregory Priddy.
•·
The fifth grade novel is
GAA ..
titled, "Lou Dini •s Last
.· "·· '..
Trick, a mystery story about
a magician who steals
$50,000 during a magic
AUthors of "ln Search of Alto Pajetan" were talented and show. This story is about the
gifted foutttl gt:aders, from left, Gregory Priddy, Kalynn adventures of a detective
Seymour, Lara Penin, and Sadie Fox, and back, Brayden and his friend as they search
for clues to solve the my&gt;Kopec and Miranda Gillilan.
·

TAG

o- ..

~.,- ae~:

'

•

"

• 1:J , , &lt;(;

~

Archers
fromPageAl

40s. .
. Friday

and Fri...y
nilbLMostly clear. Highs
in the mid 60s. Lows in tbe

inid 40s.

.

~~~----~~---------

Local Stoeks
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. fnmPageAl
by Jennifer A. Ogden,
Columbus.
· Shannon . J.
Korn,
Pomeroy, reported a vehi-

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General Manager-News Editor

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:
Congrts.s .shall malee no law raptcting an
: tstabli.shmmt of religion, or prohibiting the
•
: fret exercise thereof; or abridging the frwlom
of speech, or of the pras; or the right of the
. people peaceably to assemble, and to petition
the Governmmt for a redras ofgritN~.
-The Am Amendment to the U.S. ConstitUtion
'

TODAY IN HISTORY
•

OPINION

Page A4
Tuesday, May 20, 2008

.

"What kind of 1\mCrica
are we going to leave to our
lcidsT' The question is the
bi~t cliche in Ametican
polttics - and the least seriously addressed major issue.
Because, in fact, the nowretiring baby boom generatioo is passing on to its cbildreo an America buried il) ·
debt, wOefully short on savings and inve&gt;Uueut and fac:. · Coalition, Walker traveled
ing stupendous tasks we don't the country on a ·"fiSCal
have any idea how to finance. wake-up tour" to make peoThc Unitid States. ahady . pie aware of the unsustainranks far behind its major abili"
economic com-'titors in
ty of America's long!"'
tenn finances.
·
health care outcomes, educa- · The ltiller statistic that
tiona! performance, environ- tour particili·ants em'2S40amental quality and national ized
savings - threatening the· ~ ~ at, by . __:
country's wOrld leadership Social Securirr.~fcare
and standard of living. · · and Medicaid, plus interest
The person .who. sounds on the national debt - are
the alarm· about all this bet- scheduled to consume 20
ter _than anyone else - and percent of gross domestic
deserves to be vice presi- product, or what the federal
dent on either party's ticket · government now spends for
-is David Walker, recently . all its functions.
resigned as the bead of the
That's practically a dictioGovernment Accountability nary definition of "unsusOffice and now CEO of the tainable." It means that the
Peter Peterson Foundation.
next generation of workers
A former Reagan admin~ will have to have its taxes
istration official, Walker ran more than doubled . .
- and transformed -the
In reams of reports and
GAO on an independent, pungent speeches, Walker
bipartisan basis. He could- has struck a loud series of
n't deliver any state or con- gongs about all levels of debt
stituency, but he· d mark and unfunded obligations,
either party's presidential the challenges of an aging
nominee as a determined, · population and the rousevisionary reformer.
quences of inaction. He also
From a fusty agency spe- outlined ~posed solutions
cializing in microanalysis · - .all politically difficult
and known as the General
Walker's principal m,antra
Accounting Office, Walker is "no more entitlement progave GAO a new name and grams that are not paid for."
turned it into a broad-gauge . Last week he denounced
i~vestigato~ ?f ~aste and a · congressional plans to spend
breless act1vtst m the cause $52 billion over l 0 years on
of economi': sanity.
a new Gl bill guaranteeing
Along With representa- college benefits to veterans.
tives from the Heritage
"No matter how laudable
fuundation, the Brookings the purpose or well-intenlnstitution and the Concord · tioned the program," he

said, "if it's that ~t,

dellt -

and lack of savings
- of Ordinary citizens that
.we ought to pay for 11."
He also declared the used to be offset by rising
Medicare prescription drug home values but no longer is.
bill passed in 2003 "the · "We· ve not only burdened
moSt fiscally irresponsible our children with debt,"

legislation in decades." · ·
Tbe easiest-to-understand
level of "national debt" is
"debt held by the public" the accumulation of federal
fiscal deficits. This number
·has climbed during the
Bush administration from
$3.4 trillion to $5 trillion,or 36.8 pen:ent of the gross
domestic product
According to the GAO,
that will rise to 62.7 pen:ent
of the GOP by 2020 and 250
ptJcent by 2040. The highest
that figure has ever ruched
was I09 percent in 1946.
As Walker ,pointed out to
me in an interview, postWorld War II U.S. debt was
all owed to Americans.
Now, half of it - and 75
percent of new debt - is
owed to foreigners.
But there are othec measures of excessive debt accumulated by the United States.
As of March 2008, the federa1 government's total outstanding debt, including sums
owed by Social Security and
other trust funds, was $9,4
trillion, up from $5.6 trillion
when Bush took office.
Then there is the total of
long-term
obligations
incurred by current federal
law - mainly, retirement
benefits and Medicaid for
the poor- which comes to·
an astounding $53 trillion
over~ next 75 years, representing 90 percent of the
total net worth of American
households, or $175,000 per
person or $410,000 per fulltime worker. .
.
Piled on top of all that
comes America's huge trade.
imbalance .and the personal

LANGSVILLE -Julia Katherine Dartt Mitchell, 82, of
Jacks Road, Langsville, passed away on Sunday, May 18,
· · 2008 at Darst Group Home, Pomeroy.
Boin May 13, 1926 at Ward. W.Va. to the late John and
Edith Heideman Dartt. She was a member of Bradbury ·
Church of Christ, Middleport, former Past Matron of
Evaneeline Chapter # 172 OES, MiddlepQrt.
She is surv1ved by a daughter, Teresa Chandler,
Charleston, W.Va.;· sons, Kenneth Franldin Mitchell, Paul
David (Donna) Mitchell, all of Langsville, Edward
Lawrence (Kim) Mitchell, Charleston, W.Va.; grandchildren, Heather (David) Capehart, David Lee . (Misty)
Mitchell, Raymond Chandler, Karen (Darrell) Carter, Ben
Mitchell, Travis (:handler, Alex Mitchell; five great grandchildren; sisters, Alice Johnson, East Bank, W.Va., Dolly
ldings, Ashland, Ky., Thelma Young, Dunbar, W.Va.,
Joanna (David) Brooks, Culloden, W.Va., bJ others, Charles
(Jean) Dartt, Aurora, Robert "Pumpkin" Dartt, Johns
Island, S.C.; and several nieces and nephews.
In addition to her parents, she was preceded in death by
husband Delbert Franklin Mih;hell; brothers, John and
James; sister, Dorothy. ·
A funeral service will be held at II a.m., Thursday, May
.22 at Birchfield Funeral Home, Rutland, with Thomas
Runyon officiating. Burial will follow at Miles Cemetery, ·
Rutland. Family will receive friends from 6-9 p.m.,
Wednesday evening at the funeral home. .
Tbe family asks that in lieu of flowers donations be made
to Bradbury · Church of Christ, 39558 Bradbury Road,
Middleport, 45760.

Walker told me, "but we' r~
not.investing in them. We're
not investing in them, hilt we
expect them to pay the bills." ·
A just-issued repon by the
children's advocacy gro\lp.
First Focus, shows that fed. era! outlays for children's
programs has increased by
only $2.8 billion in the past
four years, while spending
for seniors increased by
$140 billion.
As Walker put it in a recent
speech, "curreiJt fiscal policy
is creating an unfair and
unethical
relationship
between today's citizens and
tomorrow's taxpayers. Baby
boomers and current retirees
benefit from today's higher
spending and lower tax policies, while our children and
grandchildren will be expect· ed to pay the bill for toda:{s
excessive consumption."
Walker advocates a series
of reforms, starting with
shaving future . entitlement
benefits, controlling health
care costs and changing the
tax code to reward savings
and investment
He'd be a challenge for
either party's ticket or administration. And yet.-Walker has
the best strategy of anyone to
answer the question: "What
kind of America will we
leave to our kids?" It's really
the moSt imponant question
of the 2008 election. If ' the
next president ·won't nominate Walker - as I expect
then he or she emphatically
should listen to him.
(Morton Kondracke is
exec~tive editor of Roll
Call, the newspaper of
Capitol Hill.) ·

· Mehin Rl'ssel11roWnie' Pilaw

.

DeathS
Olda E. Weelhee
GALLIPOUS FERRY, W.Va.- Olda E. Weethee, 78, of
Gallipolis Ferry, W.Va. died May 18, 2008 in Cqlumbus,
She was preceded . in death by her husband, John W.
· Weethee, Sr.
· · Funeral services will be held on Wednesday, May 21,
2008 at II a.m. at the Anderson-McDaniel Funera} Home
in Pomeroy, Ohio with Rev. porsal Messick officiating.
Burial will follow at the Weethee Family Cemetery.
Visiting hours will be on Tuesday from 6 to Sp.m. at the
funeral home. A registry is available ouline at www.andersonmcdaniel.com.
.
•

•Local Weather

The Daily Sentinel

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••. 0

·Sergen1/pllc*
The Meigs County WIC nutritional program recently received awalds from Ohio WIC for its various programs.
The staff
of Meigs County WIC are pictured (from left) with the awards, including two checks for $500 each: Charity Stobart, Sarah
·
Dalton, Nora Ellis, Janet Jones, Leanne Cunningham.
lies while also promoting the Primary Care Office.. for through small group presen- ·
breast feeding awareness in medical aDd public health tations, written materials
the community.
professionals in the area. ·and individual consultation
fnmPageAl
In relation to the Best Program attendees received that resulted in improved
Practices in Community information on· research community awareness of
. coordinated effort with Relations and Outreach focusin,g on breast feeding WIC services.
In addition to providing
Unison, the development of award, Meigs County WIC and disease prevention.
clients
with their services,
Also
contributing
to
with
The
Meigs
coonlinated
a billboard promoting breast
receiving
this
award,
the
said WIC also
Cunningham
County
Cardiovascular
feeding.
Cincinnati local staff used data to attempts to be a gateway for
According
to Program,
Medical
Center determine and reach out to ·referrals and service collabChildren's
Cunningham, the agency
attempts to provide breast and Holzer Medical Center geographically underserved oration with other agencies
feeding education to wrc to provide a presentation populations and provided which ultimately benefits
information those same clients.
participants and their fami- entitled ··Breast. Feeding in nutritional

WIC

-

...... **

•

Otuo wu;:

: RACINE - A funeral service celebratin$ the life of
Melvin Russell "Brownie" Pillow, 81, of Racine, fonnerly
of Buckeye Lake, will be held at II a.m. Tuesday, in the
Chapel of the Hoskinson Funeral Horne, Kirkersville, with
...
Pastor Randy Clay as celebrant
Burial with full military honors will follow at Glen Rest
. Memorial Estates, Reynoldsburg, by the Licking Co
Veterans Alliance.
'
Brownie died Thursday evening in Gallipolis following
an extended illness.
He was bom in Johnstown, on Jan. 18, 1927, the son of
the late William Thomas and Hattie Boardman Pillow. He
served honorably in the US Army during WWII .
He was employed by the Ohio Department of Natural
Resources for 37 years, 17 years as state park manaf: at
Buckeye Lake State Parle. He was a fonner deputy s riff
in Licking, Fairfiel4 and Franklin Counties.
·
Along with his· brother-in-law he operated Sherm &amp;
. Mel's french fry stand at the Lancaster fair for over 40
years. He operated the f~ly food concession at Buckeye
Lake amuseq~ent park for many years. He was a member of
Hebron Lodge #116, F. &amp; A.M .• Racine American Legion,
A.A.S.R. Valley of Columbus, and a former member of the
Pataskala IOOF lod~e.
.
.
.
Above all, he enJoyed spending time with his family,·
loved animals especially .horses and his beloved dog
"Lily". He was also an avid nature lover enjoying the beauty of Meigs County and all of Southern Ohio.
He is survived by his loving family: his wife, the fonner
Nrnma Clay, whom he married on Dec. 17, 1955; his
daughters Darla Blade (Roy "Beaf' Hall), Darlene Pillow;
his grandson Jacob Pillow, all of Racine; his brothers and
sisters: Willis (Janet) Pillow of Ravenna, Gladys (Harold)
Fe!Xo of Columbus, Ralph Pillow of Westerville; and
many, many nieces and nephews.
Fnends may call Monday from 5-8 p.m. at the Hoskinson Writing "MacKenzie's Lab," a sci8nce fiCtion tale, were fifth
Funeral Home, 285 East Main St in Kilkersville; where an graders from left, Emily Deem, Sam Ash, Matthew Foster
on-line guest book, video tribute and condolences may be ' and Matthew Smallwood.
.
·
.·
·
.sent to the family at www.hoslcinsonfuneal.com.

Ulhich McCain would be president?

-oy.

The Daily Sentinel • Page A5

www.mydailysentinel.com

Obituari~

To get US. priorities
right, Walker should -be our next VP
.

Today is tuesday, May 20, the f41 st day of 2008. There
.
' Today's Highlight in History: One hundred years ago, on
May 20, 1908, actor James Stewart was bQrn in Indiana, Pa.
On this date: In 1506, explorer Christopher Columbus
. died in Spain.
·
In 1861, North Carolina voted to secede from the Union.
. In 1902, the United States ended a three-year military
· presence in Cuba as the Republic of Cuba was established
· under its first elected president, Tomas Estrada Palma.
In 1927, Charles Lindbergh took off from Roosevelt
Field in Long Island, N.Y., aboard the Spirit of St. Louis on
· his historic solo flight to France.
.
In 1932, Amelia Earhart took off from Newfoundland to
become the first woman to fly solo across the Atlantic.
(Because of weather and equipment problems, Earhart set
_ down in Northern Ireland instead of her intended destina- tion, France.)
In 1939, trans-Atlantic mail service began as a Pan
American Airways plane, the Yankee Clipper, took off from
Port Washington, N.Y.• bound for Europe.
In 1961, a white mob attacked a busload of Freedom
Riders in Montgomery, Ala., prompting the federal govern•
: ment to send in U.S. marshals to restore order.
In 1969, U.S. and South Vietnamese forcescapturedAp Bia
Mountain, refeired to as "Hamburger Hill" by the Americans,
following one of the bloodiest battles of the Vietnam War.
In 1988, Laurie Dann, 30, walked into a Wmnetka, Ill.,
PRIMARY . MATH ...
elementary school classroom, where she shot to death 8year-old Nicholas Corwin and wounded several other chil: dren. After wounding a young man at his home, Dann took ·.,
her own life.
· In 1993, an estimated 93 million people tuned in for the
final first-run episode of "Cheers" on NBC.
Five years ago: The Bush adrninisttalion, concerned that ·
: a wave of attacks overseas could spread to the United
· States, raised the terrorism alert level to orange. The Uoiled
: States banned all beef imports from Canada after a lone
case of mad cow disease was discovered in the heart of
Canada's cattle country.
· -One year ago: President Bush · welcomed NATO
Secretary-General Jaap de HoOp Scheffer to his Crawford,
· J'exas, ranch, to review strategy on a flurry of issues. A gunman fired nearly 300 shots during a rampage in Moscow,
Idaho, that killed three people and wounded three others.
(The shooter, Jason Hamilton, took his o.wn life.) A pair of
~vestment ~ agreed to acquire Alltel CQrp., the ~Jfth.. b1ggest U.S. WJrtless company and owner of the nation's
• lar2est geographic network, in a deal worth $27.5 billion.
· foday's Birthdays: Actor James McEachin is 78. Singer
Joe Cocker is 64. Singer-actress Cher is 62. Actor-comedi. an -Dave Thomas is 59. Musician Warren Cann is 56. Ron
: Reagan is 50. Rock musician Jane Wiedlin (The Go-Go's)
: is 50. Actor Bronson Pinchot is 49. TV personality Ted
'
As the no-holds-barred
· Allen is 43. Rapper Busta Rhymes is 36.
Senate and · the House fill on the Supreme Court,
~
Thought for Today: "H I had my career over again? · battle for. the Democratic
passed an amendment to an proudly disclosed that the
nomination
· Maybe I'd say to myself, speed it up a little." - James · presidential
appropriatiOJ\s bill requiring models for his nominees
mertifull y nears an end,
Stewart, American ~r (1908-1997). ·
·
that the Anny Field Manual would be the present chief
renewed
attention
is
being
forbidding toJture - be justice, John Roberts, and
.'·, - - , - - - - - - - - ' - - - - - - - focused oo the several John ·
expanded
to include the CIA Associate Justice Samuel
•.
Nat
McCains
bearing
the
among all the other nontor- Alito. (He has previously
LETTERS TO THE
Hentoff . turing branches of the ser- added William Rehnquist)
RepQblican ~- Having
•
EDITOR
wntteo that I cannot vote for
Robens and Alito have
- - - - · vices, McCain voted against
Obama
because
he
is
Barack
it.
And
the
president
vetoed
shown hardly any concern
· Letters to the editor eire welcome. They should be less
the legislation - with sup- for the Bush administration's
· than 300 words. All letters are subject to editing, must be an extreoust on abortion
extrajudicial . and often
· : signed, and include address and telephone number. No who refused to even save a essential to our reputation in po~ from McCain.
sudden
jive
baby
resulting
·
the
world:
"a
decent
respect
McCain's
willingness,
as
covert disregard for the
• unsigned letters will be published. Letters should be in
from
a
botched
abortion,
.I
the
·
·
f
he
has
stated,
to
insulate
the
Consti(jttion's checks and
. good taste, addressing issues, not personalitieS. Lettt:rs of alSo have concerns about die to
opwons o mankind."
. thanks to organizations and individuals will noi be acceptWhat haS severely eroded CIA from the International balances on the ever-gT:Pwconsistency of some of the worldwide respect for us, Convention Against Torture ing surveillance and databased for publication.
McCain's positions.
including the respect of some and Other Cruel, Inhuman or ing of Americans and the
The First Amendment of•our primary • against Degrading Punishment that brazen disregard of the most
being the foundation of o1ir the homicidal
·sts, are it has so often violated may elemental due process at
constitutional self-govern- the CIA's "rendi · ." CIA connect to his admiration for Gtiantanamo Bay, Including
ment, I recall McCain's agents
lel'rorism Dick Cheney, a key protec- the often brutal conditions of
(USPS 213-911o)
cooirnent about the McCain- suspects
of tor of the CIA's methods. As confinement. There are likeReader Services
Ohio~~
- llhlng
Feingold "clean elections" ~taly·and other countries and quoted in Matt ' Welch's ly to be no trials there unti I
~
CaiT:ICtlon Polley
law that directly and signif!- ''rendered" them to such "McCain: The Myth of a ilie next administration.
11
:: Our rnollri oouoem In a1 11 to Pub!- ..e.y " ""'"""· -Y
cantly
silences the
nations as Egypt, Jordan and · Maverick".
(J'algrave
The Bush legacy includes
ltlrough Friday, 111 .Court St-.
f
f opinions
d
: be ...:ura~e. H you know of an enor . Pomeroy. . Ohio. . . Second-aau
o a range . _o a. vocacy Mor0coo, known for 1Dr111r- Macmillan, 2007), McCain so much inore contempt for
,; 1n a otoiy, call ! h e - at (740) poo11g0 paJd 81 Pomemy.
~ups ~t cru~ial porn~ dur- . iog their prisoners, thereby says Cheney is "as capable the rule of law, from which
' ; _ 882·2156.
111w Jtor. 1 1 w - " -·..., . _mg presidential ~gns. _. extracting i.nfur!nation .that and sensible a public .sef\!ant ..the Constitutipn has. to be .
:
..
lhoOhloNewop"""r•uociatioO. ·
·
lntheM"~q26NewYm 1· nllt·evenft CIA. with its as I've known" (page 149). · rescued. We nOW mow, for
•
Our ...... IIUIIIIIIr •
l'cit:s 1&lt;:. Send "'**- ..,.,.,.·
Tunes, Matt Welch, a fo~ "s~ial poWer-s;'' Could My ~st concern about ·. instance, that .the telepliones
•
liono
·~o
·Dolly
Sonlinoe,
111
Court
1.os Ange.'1es 11lllle&amp; edi•,or,
e(740) tll2-21iie.
McCain IS whether, lis our of Arnetican civilian attorS1!w«.
Ohio 457119.
ese renditions have
quoted McCain: "I would been valuable propaga!!da next president, he will rec- neys ·representing . Gitmo
Dwpwba•lt eAiitlloitt are:
rather have a clean govern- and recruiting tOolS · for AI ognize
his
enormous prisoners are bugged by the
ment than one, w~ quote Qaeda and other terrorists. respons.ibiijty to restore the Justice
- Depanment!
News
Fu:st
Amendment
rights
are
Also
helpful
to
our
enemies
Constitution's
separation
of
McCain
has
often empha- . Chal1ene lloellich, Ext 12 '
being respected, that has are the CIA's secret prisons powers. In both parties, also sized protecting the values
n : .,. . Bri::n - · Ext. 14
become corrupt." 1be in various parts of the 10cluding many indepen- · of "who ·we are as
ftiPDt'- . Belh Sergont, Ext. 13
straight-talk express rides world, where "enhanced dents, there is a stait real- Americans." Those values
over free speech.
.
interrogation techniques," ization that the Bush admin- are in the oath he will take if
As .the torrent of money as President Bush approv- istration has expanded uni- he becomes president. After
on ~ ~ of the current ingly calls them, are prac- lateral presidential powers · being sworn m, will he write
presulentJal race makes ticed, including wa:terboard- IDQre radically than any a classified signing staleclear -. throllgb large loop- ing (d'!!!:1, which the sus- other in ~can history.
men! reserving his sole right
'·
holes m that Taw - presi- pectis
to believe he is . However, whatever can to remterpret that oath?
lptbt
dential politics is far from immediately about to drown be accomplished to restore
(Nat Hentoff is a natiOII·
General Manager
~ . . . . . CcN.illly
cleaner,
even as the First unless he opens up to his that core of the Constitution ally renowned authority on
Clw1eneilioefllth, Ext. 12
13'32.26
Amendment is now serious- torturers).
·
by the next president's lead- the First Amentltnent and
26Weeks
'6420
52'127.11
ly diminished.
McCain ~as won much ership and congressional the Bill of Righls and autlwr
Also, 3!\ noted in the April approbation~ere and around legislation can be b)ocl(.ed of many books, including
.-.om~.com
aut.llle ..... CowitJ
1 Newsweek, McCain the world as an insistent by the Supreme Court. On "The War 011 the Bill of
13 Weeks .
•
'53.55
pledges his election will opponent of the United . May 6, McCain, noting that Rtg~s ant!, ~he Gathering
'107. tO
26 Weeks
mean a return to what States tonuring prisoners. Bush's successor may have · Resistance. (Seven Stories
www.mydlit}w; ltiPJI.QOm
52 Weeks
'21&amp;21
Thomas Jefferson insisted is But recently, when bOth the two (or more) vacancies to Press, 2004 ).

. are 225 days left in the year.

Tuesday, May 20, 2008

.

•'

'

"
I

I
' I

Thesday-Mostly cloudy.
Showers likely in ·the morning...Then a chance ofshowers in the afiemoon. H1ghs m
'the mid 60s. Northwest
winds 5 to 10 mph. Chance
of rain 70 percent.
Thesday nigbL •• Mostly
cloudy with a 20 percent ·
chance of showers. Lows in
the mid 40s.
Wec~Jwsday_.Partly sunny
·with a 30 percent chance of
showers. Highs· in the mid
60S. Northwesi'wilids
5 to I 0
•
&gt;.
.
..mph..

Wedn day n'/A Mostly
cloudy wi~ a 20 percent
chance of showers. Lows in
the mid 40s. Northwest
winds around 5 mph.
Thunday... Partly sunny
in the ' moming ...Then
becoming ~ostly cloudy.
Highs in the u~ 60s.
Thursday mghL.Partly
cloudy. Lows in the lower

"Lou's Dini's Last Ttiok" was written by fifth graders from
left, Austin Wolfe, Katelyn Hysell , Haley Kennedy and
Jordan Amold.

·

tery and find the culprit of
the criine. Writing the novel
were Haiey
Kennedy,
Katelyn Hysell, Jordyn
fnmPageAl
Arnold, and Austin Wolfe.
The second fifth grade
titled, "In Search of Alto
novel
is "MacKenzie's Lab,"
Pajetan," It is an adventure
a
science
fiction tale about a
story about two friends who
child
who
makes a machine
sbrch for a lost city of gold
in the jungle, their encounter and acquires enormous
with wild animals and the . st:ningth. The story tells of his
shelter they seek in secluded adventw"es in a football game
settings as they tra~o~el with his friends and the
through the jungle in search dilemma they face playing
of the treasure. Lts authors , football with a super friend.
were Lara Perrin, Kal yon Matthew ~rnallw~ Emily
Seymour, Miranda Gillilan, Deem, Matthew Foster, and
Sadie Fox, Brnyden Kopec Sam Ash are the authors.
and Gregory Priddy.
•·
The fifth grade novel is
GAA ..
titled, "Lou Dini •s Last
.· "·· '..
Trick, a mystery story about
a magician who steals
$50,000 during a magic
AUthors of "ln Search of Alto Pajetan" were talented and show. This story is about the
gifted foutttl gt:aders, from left, Gregory Priddy, Kalynn adventures of a detective
Seymour, Lara Penin, and Sadie Fox, and back, Brayden and his friend as they search
for clues to solve the my&gt;Kopec and Miranda Gillilan.
·

TAG

o- ..

~.,- ae~:

'

•

"

• 1:J , , &lt;(;

~

Archers
fromPageAl

40s. .
. Friday

and Fri...y
nilbLMostly clear. Highs
in the mid 60s. Lows in tbe

inid 40s.

.

~~~----~~---------

Local Stoeks
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Dtllr &amp;liUcll laptlnS . . . . 4

. fnmPageAl
by Jennifer A. Ogden,
Columbus.
· Shannon . J.
Korn,
Pomeroy, reported a vehi-

PROUD TO·BE APAl« OF YOUR Llffi.

pJft. ET cloelng , . - f l l l actiuiN for 1My1t, 20111, piO-

-bJE:Ist&amp;d....,__

The Daily Sentinel

ciall e:IYitarw....., -In
Q ·~ tilt Ill (740) "1......1 -

we.

•

Agent you already
lmow and trust!

Jessica Dillon

Baur Insurance Agency
no East Mltin 5treet
Pontera,. OH 45769

992-3600

. fl
( Huv MutlW
ln-.unmce Group

Or visrt us on !he web- m .reedbaur.com
Home
AU1o Farm Bus1ness

••o in Point
1'1181 (3114)1744174.

~"

PI
:: sit:ir

cle she" was driving on East
Second Street near the
Meigs County Courthouse
was recently struck by (!II
older model, white Chevy
truck which kept going.
Damage was done to
Kom's mirror on the driver's side.

Need a great Auto
insurance rate?
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�\

- PageA6

NATION • WORLD

The Daily Sentinel

fnside '

. Tuesday, May 20, 2008.

Nighttime crnshes, no seat
belts - more fatalities

~a

jiiiii'Wi:lpt

BZ
~-

by~ people between I~
31111 10 duriDg dlis yea-'s
"CCidr It or T!Ckt~ pmlirilj
· WASIDNGlON - MOre campaign .tbrougb JUDC 1:
dun two-thiRJs of young ~ -say IIIey will be . .
' drivers and pas~gus in,g rirtrts to mQtori$f&lt;&gt; .00

Bl

The Daily Sentinel

' lllllll!tflrl·ln-•••··-·~ . . . . I.,... )

BYKEIITww•s

I

,

..

O!p . . . . . .

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

.;\SSOCIA.l'EO PRESS '1/J t UB1

i tiDed in oi;gbttime car
msbcs amn't wearing seat
belts - deadly proof of
what can happen when
· young people don't heed
: parents• pleas aDd aulhori1 lies· dlreats to Mclick iL~
Though seat belt use acb!, ally is rising digbtly oaliionwide, flllality figuR:s published Monday . otfered a
· llOIDber OOntr.ast as Law
ellfuR:cment Launched its
ann11al pre-MelDIJiial O.ay
, drive
to
persuade
Amrric.alis to buckle up.
. · Total bdt UliC
to s2
peu:ent last year- from 81
peroent in '2006 - diC govcmment said. 11welve ·!&gt;1aleS

rose

W

of 90 pement or
bran:, 1m by Hawaii and
Washingi.On.. Only d!ree
were below 10 . percent:
WOiker walks act:oss debris in front Of the blast area of a seclioll undBroonslluction at the Hilton Ho1te1 WheJe an eqJio- Albpsas, Massachuselt!i
sion ripped ltlrough thellools Monday in San Djego. The explosion fBIItbrougboutdowAIOwrl rodkedtheh~J!eloodercoo- and Newlf.ampshire.
slruction and 13 woriter.; were injured, five criticallr. alilthorilies said.
.
But lh.e ocws was baldly
l3tei

·liP,._

A

fail to wear lbeir lle8t belts. a
message ddt will be ~
ported by a $1.5 ~
adwmi~ rnmpaipl.
.
Gabrida Suoa. a ieDior
at Calvin Coolidge High
Schl»l in Wasbi!:\glon, is a
believer from pemtnal
experienre. But she also
1mderstands d!e pro,lem
among t....,a,gers iii gencr.aL
Sbe arul ihec IDOlbe(
avoided injuries two years
ago when tbeic car ttinocd
on its side on a l3ill--slictoo

road. Po1ih Welle wearing
!heir seat belts.
,
.Samn ~&gt;aid peer FsSIIm
am 1il!l!DPlfimes play a m'le m
teens oat bncldi~
"lbey dcm't want to 1leCD1
like a nmd -und diciJ:·
· friends,~ ibe said.
. ·
Said NHTSA adminiSl!l:a~
t« Niro'le Nascm: ~
frequently biiD,g a Moombi•
·natitm of inexpcricnce ;and

up:

· ·San l;.;~;a.re:!:~:; ~~u£~r=:~
Exp.losi·on d.·a·111ages
·ni·e·go
building
s1·te·
14
hurt · ::::~:,~~~ ~~;!:r=r:;
.
. . .
'
.
.:
---

.

,.

·

BY A1 1 !SON Hoc 1 lAIIi

ASSOCIATED I'RESS WRnER

·

.

·

betWeen the ~es of 16 and
· 20 Who were killed in car

Nason said .t he :a,gem:y ms
urgffig states to adopllicensi

Natioo.al Hi;gbway Traffic

drivil1g wi1h other~

·

jlledJaniCJ!l fllihlre.
~ want to rule out all
possibilities before making aD
official report, but we're pre.tty oonfideot lbat's how it's

=da~i~;~a: !!}~~·!'!::=

bomb, bomb, bomb, tclrorist, teo'Orist, terrorist"
1be site was SIJITOl•nded
by firefighters and utility
crews,andalruckwitb lhe
llllll'kings of lhe Bureau .o f.

· !leSsioo ·Of lbe bolel

Rum die of dle y.oung lD0l:Orists and

Hensel l'be'lps passengers who were killed
o-:nwtioo Co. ·
were not wealiog seat belts.
A woman who answered
That pm1ion of .die stwly
dlepboneatGreeley,COlo.- focused on :2006 data and
based .. Hensel Phelps' llidnotelllllm»eotheryean;.
Soulbem C:aliiiomia fll8ion- : The pwblem isn't j ust
al bcadqlllU1lers refemd . with lteens. The peocentage
. questions to C&amp;CCU!i\'CS at ' of unbuckled drivers alld
tbe 10ite, who were oat palise~crs who died
immediately
available. ni.gbt is weD up in the 6())s
· Hensel l'bclps o1licials did · tbmUBh the :age of 44. It
not im!DP11iately respond to declines to 52 pcroent for
questlions sent by e-maiL
people :SS-64 and 41 peroent.
tmikh:,

1

SAN DIEGO-Anapparently accidental explosion
rockal.a Hilton hotel under goingtoromeout,~besaill
oonSiiRICIIiOD Mooday, uyurThe blast damaged doors Al.oobol, Tobacoo, Fu-earms
inf; l4wO!tAn,fiveofdiem four d!rougb ~ven of die . andfuplosivt!lianived.··
l)ritic.11ly, lllllholities said.
building, Mayor Jeny
The Pales bascbalheam.,
Three of the five in a:iti- Slll!deft said.
wbicb plays at Petro Pari:
cal oondition were in .a hosThe hotel near the .San.. acmss fmm the oon\1Cll1ioo
pita! bum Wlit, fire ~- Diego Convention Center center· .P•nned to bost diC
incnt spokesman ·MaurKle sl;lowed 1iCrious damage aud St. Louis ~s Monday
Luque said. N'me 01be.r vic- debris littered_a driveway ni!ltt, as scheduled, said
rims had serious-m-minor beneath one oorner of dle SaudyA.Idcrson,libcream's
Associated Press wrirer forlhoseolderduudbat . .
injuries, a11thorities said.
structure. Facade material chief n&lt;'¥11Jlive officer.
F.Di.or Spa
. gat cori.tribKted to · Safely officials say dlcy
Some wotters were dangled from tbe SIJUCiiUD:,
Bruoc Ragland, who oms this .r.eport.
, areem,pbasiringseatbeltuse
burned and others were drapes danglled out win- an enll}' pte at dJCgadjnm,
injured by flying debris, dows, - aod a ta:ge•equjp- Wd be waslootiq rijl!'..f '
Luque said. The building ment wilh &amp;lllb aud CJie · b11jldin,g vJicD the
did notbwnaftcrd!cexplo- ~~;~ •. .
~blew~~" &lt;
sion, whicb Luque said
-;sl::aadw:d 1he s~-aDai'III:Kwala~
appeared to be acctdcnt.al.
bllil~ to detmnine if shed: wave.
was just like watcbin&amp;
· UCSD .Medial Center dlrzc wem my o1her victims..
WJlli 1mlting 10 injilred, said More than 400 coolillUrtion a Bruoc W'tllis movie, ~
l)r. Irving Jacoby, .~ttt:nding wOlh:Jis - a t die site at ~lmo-:. 'Die Hanl,"'
emctgcncy room physician. the lime, .S mifiuaid.
·
land wd.
.
Three were in the lHim unit,
Matt McBride, ~
»'Sio!y Hilton San
oiJc with bWns over 35 pel'- . 1118?~F" of die Tm Ash bar Diego Bayfront botel was
. cent of his body. .
about 150 yards away. ad scbedulecf · to .
in

.at

CaD iCreate

distt:aclions for

die driver ·and increase the
!illfety risks.
Anne
McCam,

'

,.
resemrc'becwiththeVUEifii.a-

~ basedlnsuranoelnsliitutdoi

Higbw~ Safety,

DIJted lbat

·seatbcltuse.at:nillbttends~

bemueh lowecacmss:.all:a,ge
:gmups. ·
·
liatal crashes mvolviAg
teena,gen; at oiptt .are ~
Dikely to inmlv.e risk fadiD ·
iiuob Jlli aloobo\ she said,
llhct.ailmeto.weara!ielltbe1t
'"may be patt ofa more~al~ of llisk-ukiing.~

so

"''t

o· p e n

~c~al=a:~!ns! ~~
. g~dlec:= =~eb~...m

beat," said Dr. BRICe Potenza
of dle bospital's bum unit.
San Diego Deputy FireRescue aricf Pmy Peake
said the blast~ in an
area of the building oontain~
~· electric !~fid other
utiliiles and lhat rt appears
to have been caused by .a

in!l.

He said be and have U'90 IIJIJiDS andWO!kem.ftnlJe as ~ dian .lfD-;000 square feet of
saw ·SIIIOke oomc ·out of 1lie ~ tiJIIIle.

building but ao flames.
"lt loobld like .a bomb.~
McBride ~d.. "It shook 1he
whole bUilding like a bomb.
The ~vCIIb was wbat ~
us. Everybody was saying

Kmima Zlli, d!cvirepres--

idcllt fur :icw 4evelopmcDl

we remember dtose who have passed away
and are espedally dear to us.

On !Mol:day, Uay 26, Mlliill pillish

bjjiAI!IIi.They llill be sililar1o:lhe sanple below:

lJIOUidGpCDOD ~de. Sbc

said Hilton ·b adn'Uabn pas-

DaiiC.I

: YANGON,
Myanmar die agency said. "In idditioo, woflrers, especially bealth
(AP) - Myanmar's junta, .a cress ·t o alreaiy relatively and medical ~rsonnel.fl
facin~ global outrage for inaocessible locations is set said Singapore s Foreign
spurrung intemationala!isis- to remain VeJY dilfiouh."
Minister George Yeo.
tance, appeared to relent
The
organization
Myanmar agRed to open
Monday, saying it would remained ooJWel'llCd ab0ut its doors to medical ·teams
~ow its Asian neighbors to . dtc . distributioil of relief . from all ASEAN countries,
. oversee .the distribution of suwlies, saying "Reports Yeo said. ASEAN meliibcr
foreign relief to cyclone inchcate dial in most of lhc 1bailand had already sent
survivors.
·
bigger affe«ed townships, teams in, Jlli did oon-ASEAN
It also approved a visit by basic Fclicf and food is neighborS india and Olin.a..
U.N. Secretary-&lt;:lcneral. Ban available but much less so
Myanmar
· Foreign
Ki-moon arid .prepared to in the
remote areas."
Minister Nyan Wm told the
host · a meeting of aid
It added thai there sermed meeting dJat losses from the
ciloocn. while claiming that to be problems even at some cyclone arc expected to ·b e
'losscs from the May ~-3 dis- of the~ relief camps ''well ova- US$}0 billion.~
aster exceeded $10billion.
set up by tbc govemment·
ASEAN and the U.N.
As Tuesday dawned, a "While significant telief .is jointly annGunced
an
-~y official period· of, . ~etting tbrough. there are · ASEAN-UN lnterrimonal •
moumml began for the .. iji1icatioos,.llllillWlting fills.. Pledgill,g Conf~cc to
dead, which numbered more ttatioo amoog mariy . dis- sect. .'SOIIJC. of dle oecdc:d
111m 78,000, acoording to plaocd OOmiJ!lU!ities ."
funding, to be held this
official figures. ~other
My.,.mar, ~~to S•~ in Yangon.
will
56;000 ~le are IDlSStng.
cntrta:Jes from u SoL&gt;'..
..., Conferenre
Cooditions, especially in Asia ~. pnmitM'Id fOCQS on die orecls Of ilhose
the
bani-hit
low-lying Moodaye~W:itwouldlktliban alfo:tltd by dle cydonc, and
~waddy Delta, remain pre- into the cyclooe-dcvW 1 d sect ·intemalional support
carious for survivors, who areauoo•aw ml~dis- .m l fi!I!M!Cjal assistance fur
tacc disease, malnutrition and lrilw* foreign assjlgp:.
dle
bummjtxi.
exposure to the clementS.
Ia SinPJI!Cife, u eme~"- an .ltlllpiJ!DiiC to ma:t ·die DlOiit
. Heavy rain fell again amcy .......Ung d fOl'Cign uqop!l d!allmges. • ..w:1l a
Monday,
said
the nijnjsren :from 'lllc ~0 00118· ioallrrtr.mu:ewouydfults;"
lntemational Federation of tJ:ies of die A......wioo d
said their MDJI'"'"•w.•
Red Cross and Red Crescent Southeast Asian N2tions
British ·Seae~a~y of Stile
Societies, noting thai such agreed to tiCl up an ASEAN- for
lnrern.tiooal
wcalber can have the benefit led task f01ee for distribut- Development
Douglas
of providing clean water for in,g ~ign ai~. / .
.
Alexander
welcomed
.lbosc able to caleb the down"This mecjRm.tsm w1ll ASEAN's initiative but add·
pour with plastic sheeting.
facilitate the effective distri- that his government is "con- .
·"However, the rain for bution and ulilizatioo of tinning to press the Burmese
many others simply adds to / assistance from the intema- govCl'lliiiC8t ·t o accept direct
the misery as they look for-; tional co~unily, incJudin!l assistance in the affec:ed
ward to their l81h night in the expeditious and cffoc_- areas from the UK and otJJer
often wretched conditions," tive deployment of . relief major dooors."

·--·

I

...

tluMgluwt time

...,.

lallaMiiMDMA
faaiiJ
.

l We bOO! )Oil ia ,our1hougbluod 11IOl1lOl'i&lt;s ion:ver.
2. May God aJdlcyou in His lllDS, now 111111 fomvcr.
3. Forevttmissed,JICvcr forgot10n. May Godilold you in tll&gt;'jla!m of
Hisblnd.

•

protect JOII

~

I,.....
.

.

4. Tllllli; you for:lhc wondclful days we slwed togcfbcr. My JDP
Will :be with you umil we meet again.
5. The days"" sbm:d were sweet. j long to ... you ape mtGod's
bcavealy glory,
6. Y0111 001113ge 111111 bmvery itill inspilr us aiL and tile memory ofyour .
omilc fills 1IS with joy 111111llllghlor.
1. 'lbougb oot of sight. yoo 'U forever be in my boort and mind. ·
·8. The days may come 111111 go, llut 1hc tilll&lt;6 we sbm:d will always mnlin.
9.. May God's lllgCis guide yoo and (liO!tlCt yoo 1broughout time.
· 10. fou wm alight.in our life that bumsfon:ver in ourbcarts.
Jl . May God's·gnces obinetwer you for all tim:.
12.\'oo are ia our tbougbts 111111 Jlliyers from Olll!Ding ID~.ud from
year 10 year.

\.

'

ro IDtUF.I YOU&amp; WWJ) ONE IN 'l1fiS SPf.CW. W!\',

.

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Widl F 1:11 .. IM
'
Ul c.tSL, Par1ny, OH 4S7~
DUDIJN&amp;. fti)NF.SDAI, lW' 21, 5 ...

.;:•

., . , .

·l 'blc pliblish my tribute io the special Memory Page on Monday, May

N~~~a.~--------~--------------------------:
· Rebrinnship to

me'-----:----------- Number of welected ,.,,..,_,......__

Dalcofpassin&amp;------1

-------------------l n-~U.az---------------------------------~Da!ecibidb

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apottlng ~ linii'Dhtlng
•....,. !from .. ...... ndta.llill ,1l0ilf1HB,

idKtDI

w.~hy

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Lady Eagles·beat 1\imble 4-3 in Hoc~ makeup game

Eastem111'-f&lt;lld, 511)11!1.

.._SaC'

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-·-·-1-01------

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· atlllniD!OlHS. 6

p.m.

Winllof &lt;if l'ortsmoutll ~n-Ile

·~ vome YOTBUS SDUlhem .at Uinfonl
.Sdloal.
•:so p.m.
~ · 111

diiitricbi at&lt;Oak.HIII, 4p:m.

!"f-,~n......
=::Wil~- Uni~
at

odlf!tlo-. 5p.m.

1IIOiliDn St. ·lloooPh -

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$outtoem at

~le~HighScloaol,5pJm.

- ! I dilllrlcls ai'Oek HHI, 411).111.

1'ltw , X a

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QIJR!o Grande. '5 ·pm.

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Bt&lt;OakiHIII,.-4&gt;m.

GWUSlER . -

Tbe

lady T~mcats made it
intercstiqg by scoring rwo
runs in lihe b(JI!tom of ltbe
se¥enth, but il wasn't
enough :as il:he Eastern Lady
Eagles ·defeated Trimble 43 MoD!llay .e vening iii a TlliVaB.ey GonfCJrcnoe Hockling
Division makeup :game.
Eastern (.8-111 fimshes
the season .at 6-4 ·in tihe
TVC
Hockin,g,
while
Trimble ends ;at 4-fi.
'IOO!Idl 1tbc Lady Eagles
concluded d!eir season
Sa1111rd.ay in ~otionals, oonference :games must be

~oumarnent

p 1 a ·y ,
Monday•s
game gave
C
a
two teams
IDe
·rare
•oppontunity to go out with a
wm lin 2008.
Sophomo1:e
Sami
Cummins earned the victo· ry for Eastern. She sllruck
out two lb~tters and walked
five in pitclllrig the oomplete •g ame.
7

S e .n i o J"
C .a s s i e
·Hauber led
the Lady
E a g _I .e s
offensively
with a double, . two
h1ts,
and
two · (lBls,
w h t ~ e
. ._
I • ~C 11 m m 1 n s
r e acb e d
base in all four of her plate
appearances, Tegistering .a
do11ble, three walks, and
IWQ runs scored.
The other Eastern hitters
were all freshmen. Megan
~o.
C arn=an
·d011bl· e d , an d·
Allie Rawson ~d iBritney ,

Morrison both sin·g led. walked for the second time,
Senior Kelsey Holter also and Holter knocked her in
had .an RBI.
...JUi4i: hits by Morrison and
The Lady Eagles got runsUli11ber.
.
from senior Ryan D~vis and
The Lady 'Cats got on the
fireshman Ashley Milia-] as board in the bottom ·Of the
well.
.
fiolllth on tw{) singles sand. Eastern opened the ~r- wiched around a double.
mg m ~e first after Miller
Then in the bottom of the ·
was hit by a pltch. She seventh a two-out rally
scored on·Camah~n·s do11- saw twd hits and two walks
ble three batters later, ·
· The visitors wollld add add mns . two and rtu:ee
two more in the second before semor S&lt;tsha Collins .
inning. Davis .a nd Cummins and Raw.son combmed to
·b oth walked, and Hauber get the t.hiTd out and end the
smacked a two-RBI double game.
to right field
bump the
lead to 3"11.
E
- " 4.Tri..-s
120 100 0
462
_
lt · wollld go to 4-'0 two T
OO..' 100 2
361
innings later. Cummius WP- cummins: LP- walton

to

Spurs hold otT Home~, . advance to West finals
IIY 3

II

Mum.

ASSOCIA~

PRESS

.NEW ORLEANS - A I
title
defense endures for tt;be
Annual Eagle
playoff-sawy San Antonio'
~kethltll Camp
Spurs.
Manu Ginobili sooired 26
points, ibitllling four free
thrnws iii the liinal minute,
sending llhe Spurs ~o lihe
Westem · Conference finals
With a 9l·S2 victory ·over
the New Oiileans Hornets on
Monday night i n Game 7 of
their seoond-oouncilliel'ii.es.
Tony P&lt;rrlrer added 17
points. ilicllllllilg a ,crucial
JlllllpCI' iii the liinal minute,
as ilihc Sptli'S held oli a late
tally to become the first
PY .lo£ KAY
team in llhls series to win ·on
ASSOCIATED
PRESS
1tbc mad.
"We really believed we
CINCINNATI Less
Dad .a cluutcc w win 3n lthe
than
a
month
after
the
NFL
road bere," said Spurs fur·reinstated Odell Thurman
ward Tun Duncan, who bad
from his two.'year suspen16 points and 14 rebounds.
sion, the troubled linebacker
~It's juit:a iotofcoofide:noe.
is out of a job.
A ~ot of games WJ!b" our
The Cincinnati Bengals
lbclt."
.
sta11nchly
supported
W,jtb .a nucleus of Chris
Thurman
during
his
suspenPaul, David West anciiiYson
sion
for
violating
the
Chandler, &lt;the Hornets
Ieag11e's
substance
abuse
~ar destined for ·greater
and cond11ct policies. But
d:rings, !but now is not their
when he didn 't show up for .
time.
vol11ntary
workouts that
'One ttbing I want tbem to
represented
a chance to
remember when dtey statt
catch ·up; they decided
workil\g out oeJct season is
they'd had 'enough.
:how they feel :tii.ght n@w,fl 1
Thurman was waived on
said Hlm!Cts .coach Bymn .
Monday,
leaving his onceSoon, .adding he was proud .
promising
career at the
.of iris team, which did not
crossroads again.
make the pl~yoff&gt;i last sea"Everything was fme two
son, for puslllrig the Spurs
ago," .agent Safarrah
weeks
as far as it did.
Lawson
said in a phone
"Yo11 have to go through
interview
shortly after
some things .before you can
Thunnan was released. "He
really 11nderstand 'how good
·left
for a week to deal with
it's going to feel when you
the
death
of his grandmothget 1t0 il'hat next level," Scott .
er,
and
he
dido 't make it
oootinued. ''Yo11 don 'l ·go
back.."
~
fmnmot making ,playoffs to
Now, his road back to the
winnin,g a cham.Pionship. !It
NFL
will have to go through
2111 Mftes ~La
just doesn't wade dun way.
some
other team.
1115"' •·...,.;
... We'a !headed in right .
Thurman failed to attend
FUJill
.direaion.~
the
team's three voluntary
APphalo
Now :the Spurs and tbeir
oil-field
worko11ts last week,
San
Antonio
Spurs
forward
Tim
Duncan
(21)
shoots
over
New
Orleans
Hornets'
Tyson
ROCKSPRINGS
championship ring.laden
Chandler (6) and 'Morris P~erson (9) in the first half of Game 7 of the NBA Western
kgistration
is
now
open
far.
- 'lllt-nurr-.~ 82
Conference semifinal basketball series Monday in New Orleans.
tbe 2008 flag football season. open to 'boys and gids ----~------------------,--------------.,--------

1-.
.

LBOdeU
Thurman
released
byBengals'

•·a.uf t•••

.
•n•·-·. ..--.u
Deds
· '. strea~
. k ·ends as 1\n,ln
b. k ~ 6-5 •
R .
~ers come ·ac .•or ·· wm
I

~!~~ecsi~h~

in . grades 1-6 beginning

per nlaycr, and 525 for caob

'

...

Mddltiooal sib:J.ini.

LOS ANGELES (AF) homering in his fifth straight
Rookie Blak.e DeWitt' s game and Brandon Phillip'
The games 'Will be played
~in ·~ondlc ·
bases-loaded RBI single was 4-for-5 with an RBI sin14eigs High Sdlool practice
with one out in the ninth gle, helping the Red' build a
inning
lifted . the Los 4-0 lead through the first
fidd:
• Final
- and me.. bod!.
. .
Angeles Dodgers to a 6-5 three innings against Bnid
,a;~A
comeback
win
over Penny.
Cincinnati ~on Monday
With
shortstop
Jeff
&amp;inc will be held 00 ~ful
16th at ·9 a.m..at Meigs ·
night, snapp~ the Reds' Keppingcr on the; disabled
School All ¢becks must ·
s1x-gllllie wmn1Di streak:
list beca11se of a broken left ·
· . illldC out to Me~ ~
. Russell Martin led off the icnee cap, utilityman Jerry ,
~~ · P.O. Bllx
·.·.ruilt!t . •_..against . Dav.id Hai(ston Jr. st!lrte!i at ,shon ....
· 15l, Pomaoy. Ohio 45769.
Weathers (1-3) with an . for the Reds and committed
n":Jii1Ci .mtine ·o r for
inf.eld single up the middle ·a two,base throwing error
· llCe iilformation go to
and continued to second on
Martin's
routine
P'w.meialftl,com or call
when shortstop P~11l Janish gro11ndcr - allowing two
1~541- [222.
threw
the baD over the head runs to score and trimming
•• •
of first baserrum Joey Vouo Cincinnati' s. lead to 4-2 in
and into the dugout. .
· the third. ·
Martin
advliilced
on
Jeff
Janish' replaced Hairston
~U.s·
Kent's
groundout,
and
in
the eighth inning fqr
••
Weathers
intentionally defensive purposes.
•: H~IIKL33
walked James Loney and
Dunn increased the Reds·
!'i-- 1-7&lt;!0 44UIOOII
Matt
Kemp
before
DeWitt
margin
to three runs with an
.,._ -IPOI'Wemmf(Wfdoii,VIW001iotlrtini0181.oom
stroked an opposi.e-fleld hit RBI single in the fifth. but
to left. He is 6-for-6 with 12 . the Dodgers carne right back
&amp;tc .... lplh,IJ ,,,. ......
RBls in bases-loaded situa- in the bonom half to tie it
(1«11 UI\ZM:i!, ._ 33
tioos.
against Bronson Arroyo on
••tdt411••~w;ltiii81.com
Kemp
finished
with
four
two-out RBI singles by
.
.
hits.
.
Loney.
Kemp and De Witt .
..,_ W 7 1a, Spol:lil Wrtler
Takashi
Saito
(2-1) . The Reds. coming off
(:1&lt;10) &lt;146-23&gt;C2; 00&lt;1. 33
......_.IT~ibune .oom
pitched a perfect ,ninth for three-game sweeps against ·
.
the victory.
.
Florida. and Cleveland. took
. 't ,ny en.. tpoi:IIIWdlilr
Cincinnati
Reds'
Bronson
Arroyo
pitches
against
the
Los
Angeles
Dodgers
in
the
first
inning
Adam Dunn tie~ a
(7&lt;10) us 23&gt;C2, - 33
b ' 82
of a baseball game ori Monday in Los Angeles.
Cincinnati club record by
aumel'fl)tdii:JI r .com

::10

.

7

,..,._

I
I

·l ;qed
· ce·g ardless,
and though
most seasons
end
with a Joss
ibeca11se of

ERANOOL!'HOMI'DAILYSEM"INELCOM

w=:::

. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Ia
··~~ .: ...

(.ocAL ScuF.oULE

·" *

·SEND 18.00 PEl usnNG • .. 1% IF ftmJIE INWJDED

1•*'••m.1

•

I

......,..

more

•

page devliled 10 those .no are gone but not

for Hilton Holds Gip., said
sbe didn't koow if 1bc hotel ·

· opens· ~oorto , ............ ..
help from Asian neighbors MarGod'•M•

'

a~~

'

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I-·
"

�\

- PageA6

NATION • WORLD

The Daily Sentinel

fnside '

. Tuesday, May 20, 2008.

Nighttime crnshes, no seat
belts - more fatalities

~a

jiiiii'Wi:lpt

BZ
~-

by~ people between I~
31111 10 duriDg dlis yea-'s
"CCidr It or T!Ckt~ pmlirilj
· WASIDNGlON - MOre campaign .tbrougb JUDC 1:
dun two-thiRJs of young ~ -say IIIey will be . .
' drivers and pas~gus in,g rirtrts to mQtori$f&lt;&gt; .00

Bl

The Daily Sentinel

' lllllll!tflrl·ln-•••··-·~ . . . . I.,... )

BYKEIITww•s

I

,

..

O!p . . . . . .

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

.;\SSOCIA.l'EO PRESS '1/J t UB1

i tiDed in oi;gbttime car
msbcs amn't wearing seat
belts - deadly proof of
what can happen when
· young people don't heed
: parents• pleas aDd aulhori1 lies· dlreats to Mclick iL~
Though seat belt use acb!, ally is rising digbtly oaliionwide, flllality figuR:s published Monday . otfered a
· llOIDber OOntr.ast as Law
ellfuR:cment Launched its
ann11al pre-MelDIJiial O.ay
, drive
to
persuade
Amrric.alis to buckle up.
. · Total bdt UliC
to s2
peu:ent last year- from 81
peroent in '2006 - diC govcmment said. 11welve ·!&gt;1aleS

rose

W

of 90 pement or
bran:, 1m by Hawaii and
Washingi.On.. Only d!ree
were below 10 . percent:
WOiker walks act:oss debris in front Of the blast area of a seclioll undBroonslluction at the Hilton Ho1te1 WheJe an eqJio- Albpsas, Massachuselt!i
sion ripped ltlrough thellools Monday in San Djego. The explosion fBIItbrougboutdowAIOwrl rodkedtheh~J!eloodercoo- and Newlf.ampshire.
slruction and 13 woriter.; were injured, five criticallr. alilthorilies said.
.
But lh.e ocws was baldly
l3tei

·liP,._

A

fail to wear lbeir lle8t belts. a
message ddt will be ~
ported by a $1.5 ~
adwmi~ rnmpaipl.
.
Gabrida Suoa. a ieDior
at Calvin Coolidge High
Schl»l in Wasbi!:\glon, is a
believer from pemtnal
experienre. But she also
1mderstands d!e pro,lem
among t....,a,gers iii gencr.aL
Sbe arul ihec IDOlbe(
avoided injuries two years
ago when tbeic car ttinocd
on its side on a l3ill--slictoo

road. Po1ih Welle wearing
!heir seat belts.
,
.Samn ~&gt;aid peer FsSIIm
am 1il!l!DPlfimes play a m'le m
teens oat bncldi~
"lbey dcm't want to 1leCD1
like a nmd -und diciJ:·
· friends,~ ibe said.
. ·
Said NHTSA adminiSl!l:a~
t« Niro'le Nascm: ~
frequently biiD,g a Moombi•
·natitm of inexpcricnce ;and

up:

· ·San l;.;~;a.re:!:~:; ~~u£~r=:~
Exp.losi·on d.·a·111ages
·ni·e·go
building
s1·te·
14
hurt · ::::~:,~~~ ~~;!:r=r:;
.
. . .
'
.
.:
---

.

,.

·

BY A1 1 !SON Hoc 1 lAIIi

ASSOCIATED I'RESS WRnER

·

.

·

betWeen the ~es of 16 and
· 20 Who were killed in car

Nason said .t he :a,gem:y ms
urgffig states to adopllicensi

Natioo.al Hi;gbway Traffic

drivil1g wi1h other~

·

jlledJaniCJ!l fllihlre.
~ want to rule out all
possibilities before making aD
official report, but we're pre.tty oonfideot lbat's how it's

=da~i~;~a: !!}~~·!'!::=

bomb, bomb, bomb, tclrorist, teo'Orist, terrorist"
1be site was SIJITOl•nded
by firefighters and utility
crews,andalruckwitb lhe
llllll'kings of lhe Bureau .o f.

· !leSsioo ·Of lbe bolel

Rum die of dle y.oung lD0l:Orists and

Hensel l'be'lps passengers who were killed
o-:nwtioo Co. ·
were not wealiog seat belts.
A woman who answered
That pm1ion of .die stwly
dlepboneatGreeley,COlo.- focused on :2006 data and
based .. Hensel Phelps' llidnotelllllm»eotheryean;.
Soulbem C:aliiiomia fll8ion- : The pwblem isn't j ust
al bcadqlllU1lers refemd . with lteens. The peocentage
. questions to C&amp;CCU!i\'CS at ' of unbuckled drivers alld
tbe 10ite, who were oat palise~crs who died
immediately
available. ni.gbt is weD up in the 6())s
· Hensel l'bclps o1licials did · tbmUBh the :age of 44. It
not im!DP11iately respond to declines to 52 pcroent for
questlions sent by e-maiL
people :SS-64 and 41 peroent.
tmikh:,

1

SAN DIEGO-Anapparently accidental explosion
rockal.a Hilton hotel under goingtoromeout,~besaill
oonSiiRICIIiOD Mooday, uyurThe blast damaged doors Al.oobol, Tobacoo, Fu-earms
inf; l4wO!tAn,fiveofdiem four d!rougb ~ven of die . andfuplosivt!lianived.··
l)ritic.11ly, lllllholities said.
building, Mayor Jeny
The Pales bascbalheam.,
Three of the five in a:iti- Slll!deft said.
wbicb plays at Petro Pari:
cal oondition were in .a hosThe hotel near the .San.. acmss fmm the oon\1Cll1ioo
pita! bum Wlit, fire ~- Diego Convention Center center· .P•nned to bost diC
incnt spokesman ·MaurKle sl;lowed 1iCrious damage aud St. Louis ~s Monday
Luque said. N'me 01be.r vic- debris littered_a driveway ni!ltt, as scheduled, said
rims had serious-m-minor beneath one oorner of dle SaudyA.Idcrson,libcream's
Associated Press wrirer forlhoseolderduudbat . .
injuries, a11thorities said.
structure. Facade material chief n&lt;'¥11Jlive officer.
F.Di.or Spa
. gat cori.tribKted to · Safely officials say dlcy
Some wotters were dangled from tbe SIJUCiiUD:,
Bruoc Ragland, who oms this .r.eport.
, areem,pbasiringseatbeltuse
burned and others were drapes danglled out win- an enll}' pte at dJCgadjnm,
injured by flying debris, dows, - aod a ta:ge•equjp- Wd be waslootiq rijl!'..f '
Luque said. The building ment wilh &amp;lllb aud CJie · b11jldin,g vJicD the
did notbwnaftcrd!cexplo- ~~;~ •. .
~blew~~" &lt;
sion, whicb Luque said
-;sl::aadw:d 1he s~-aDai'III:Kwala~
appeared to be acctdcnt.al.
bllil~ to detmnine if shed: wave.
was just like watcbin&amp;
· UCSD .Medial Center dlrzc wem my o1her victims..
WJlli 1mlting 10 injilred, said More than 400 coolillUrtion a Bruoc W'tllis movie, ~
l)r. Irving Jacoby, .~ttt:nding wOlh:Jis - a t die site at ~lmo-:. 'Die Hanl,"'
emctgcncy room physician. the lime, .S mifiuaid.
·
land wd.
.
Three were in the lHim unit,
Matt McBride, ~
»'Sio!y Hilton San
oiJc with bWns over 35 pel'- . 1118?~F" of die Tm Ash bar Diego Bayfront botel was
. cent of his body. .
about 150 yards away. ad scbedulecf · to .
in

.at

CaD iCreate

distt:aclions for

die driver ·and increase the
!illfety risks.
Anne
McCam,

'

,.
resemrc'becwiththeVUEifii.a-

~ basedlnsuranoelnsliitutdoi

Higbw~ Safety,

DIJted lbat

·seatbcltuse.at:nillbttends~

bemueh lowecacmss:.all:a,ge
:gmups. ·
·
liatal crashes mvolviAg
teena,gen; at oiptt .are ~
Dikely to inmlv.e risk fadiD ·
iiuob Jlli aloobo\ she said,
llhct.ailmeto.weara!ielltbe1t
'"may be patt ofa more~al~ of llisk-ukiing.~

so

"''t

o· p e n

~c~al=a:~!ns! ~~
. g~dlec:= =~eb~...m

beat," said Dr. BRICe Potenza
of dle bospital's bum unit.
San Diego Deputy FireRescue aricf Pmy Peake
said the blast~ in an
area of the building oontain~
~· electric !~fid other
utiliiles and lhat rt appears
to have been caused by .a

in!l.

He said be and have U'90 IIJIJiDS andWO!kem.ftnlJe as ~ dian .lfD-;000 square feet of
saw ·SIIIOke oomc ·out of 1lie ~ tiJIIIle.

building but ao flames.
"lt loobld like .a bomb.~
McBride ~d.. "It shook 1he
whole bUilding like a bomb.
The ~vCIIb was wbat ~
us. Everybody was saying

Kmima Zlli, d!cvirepres--

idcllt fur :icw 4evelopmcDl

we remember dtose who have passed away
and are espedally dear to us.

On !Mol:day, Uay 26, Mlliill pillish

bjjiAI!IIi.They llill be sililar1o:lhe sanple below:

lJIOUidGpCDOD ~de. Sbc

said Hilton ·b adn'Uabn pas-

DaiiC.I

: YANGON,
Myanmar die agency said. "In idditioo, woflrers, especially bealth
(AP) - Myanmar's junta, .a cress ·t o alreaiy relatively and medical ~rsonnel.fl
facin~ global outrage for inaocessible locations is set said Singapore s Foreign
spurrung intemationala!isis- to remain VeJY dilfiouh."
Minister George Yeo.
tance, appeared to relent
The
organization
Myanmar agRed to open
Monday, saying it would remained ooJWel'llCd ab0ut its doors to medical ·teams
~ow its Asian neighbors to . dtc . distributioil of relief . from all ASEAN countries,
. oversee .the distribution of suwlies, saying "Reports Yeo said. ASEAN meliibcr
foreign relief to cyclone inchcate dial in most of lhc 1bailand had already sent
survivors.
·
bigger affe«ed townships, teams in, Jlli did oon-ASEAN
It also approved a visit by basic Fclicf and food is neighborS india and Olin.a..
U.N. Secretary-&lt;:lcneral. Ban available but much less so
Myanmar
· Foreign
Ki-moon arid .prepared to in the
remote areas."
Minister Nyan Wm told the
host · a meeting of aid
It added thai there sermed meeting dJat losses from the
ciloocn. while claiming that to be problems even at some cyclone arc expected to ·b e
'losscs from the May ~-3 dis- of the~ relief camps ''well ova- US$}0 billion.~
aster exceeded $10billion.
set up by tbc govemment·
ASEAN and the U.N.
As Tuesday dawned, a "While significant telief .is jointly annGunced
an
-~y official period· of, . ~etting tbrough. there are · ASEAN-UN lnterrimonal •
moumml began for the .. iji1icatioos,.llllillWlting fills.. Pledgill,g Conf~cc to
dead, which numbered more ttatioo amoog mariy . dis- sect. .'SOIIJC. of dle oecdc:d
111m 78,000, acoording to plaocd OOmiJ!lU!ities ."
funding, to be held this
official figures. ~other
My.,.mar, ~~to S•~ in Yangon.
will
56;000 ~le are IDlSStng.
cntrta:Jes from u SoL&gt;'..
..., Conferenre
Cooditions, especially in Asia ~. pnmitM'Id fOCQS on die orecls Of ilhose
the
bani-hit
low-lying Moodaye~W:itwouldlktliban alfo:tltd by dle cydonc, and
~waddy Delta, remain pre- into the cyclooe-dcvW 1 d sect ·intemalional support
carious for survivors, who areauoo•aw ml~dis- .m l fi!I!M!Cjal assistance fur
tacc disease, malnutrition and lrilw* foreign assjlgp:.
dle
bummjtxi.
exposure to the clementS.
Ia SinPJI!Cife, u eme~"- an .ltlllpiJ!DiiC to ma:t ·die DlOiit
. Heavy rain fell again amcy .......Ung d fOl'Cign uqop!l d!allmges. • ..w:1l a
Monday,
said
the nijnjsren :from 'lllc ~0 00118· ioallrrtr.mu:ewouydfults;"
lntemational Federation of tJ:ies of die A......wioo d
said their MDJI'"'"•w.•
Red Cross and Red Crescent Southeast Asian N2tions
British ·Seae~a~y of Stile
Societies, noting thai such agreed to tiCl up an ASEAN- for
lnrern.tiooal
wcalber can have the benefit led task f01ee for distribut- Development
Douglas
of providing clean water for in,g ~ign ai~. / .
.
Alexander
welcomed
.lbosc able to caleb the down"This mecjRm.tsm w1ll ASEAN's initiative but add·
pour with plastic sheeting.
facilitate the effective distri- that his government is "con- .
·"However, the rain for bution and ulilizatioo of tinning to press the Burmese
many others simply adds to / assistance from the intema- govCl'lliiiC8t ·t o accept direct
the misery as they look for-; tional co~unily, incJudin!l assistance in the affec:ed
ward to their l81h night in the expeditious and cffoc_- areas from the UK and otJJer
often wretched conditions," tive deployment of . relief major dooors."

·--·

I

...

tluMgluwt time

...,.

lallaMiiMDMA
faaiiJ
.

l We bOO! )Oil ia ,our1hougbluod 11IOl1lOl'i&lt;s ion:ver.
2. May God aJdlcyou in His lllDS, now 111111 fomvcr.
3. Forevttmissed,JICvcr forgot10n. May Godilold you in tll&gt;'jla!m of
Hisblnd.

•

protect JOII

~

I,.....
.

.

4. Tllllli; you for:lhc wondclful days we slwed togcfbcr. My JDP
Will :be with you umil we meet again.
5. The days"" sbm:d were sweet. j long to ... you ape mtGod's
bcavealy glory,
6. Y0111 001113ge 111111 bmvery itill inspilr us aiL and tile memory ofyour .
omilc fills 1IS with joy 111111llllghlor.
1. 'lbougb oot of sight. yoo 'U forever be in my boort and mind. ·
·8. The days may come 111111 go, llut 1hc tilll&lt;6 we sbm:d will always mnlin.
9.. May God's lllgCis guide yoo and (liO!tlCt yoo 1broughout time.
· 10. fou wm alight.in our life that bumsfon:ver in ourbcarts.
Jl . May God's·gnces obinetwer you for all tim:.
12.\'oo are ia our tbougbts 111111 Jlliyers from Olll!Ding ID~.ud from
year 10 year.

\.

'

ro IDtUF.I YOU&amp; WWJ) ONE IN 'l1fiS SPf.CW. W!\',

.

.

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1

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'-_,_:__ ~: _:_,..:

Widl F 1:11 .. IM
'
Ul c.tSL, Par1ny, OH 4S7~
DUDIJN&amp;. fti)NF.SDAI, lW' 21, 5 ...

.;:•

., . , .

·l 'blc pliblish my tribute io the special Memory Page on Monday, May

N~~~a.~--------~--------------------------:
· Rebrinnship to

me'-----:----------- Number of welected ,.,,..,_,......__

Dalcofpassin&amp;------1

-------------------l n-~U.az---------------------------------~Da!ecibidb

·~

~~--------------------------~numbu~-------

ICity
1
·- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - Stitllt~~e~--- :u,p----:1
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M*"O:edl ....
'1'81 DAIL\' SEN'DNFJ..
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fcuc:or ·" lllhadw.u upDOI"I'ingiiigh

apottlng ~ linii'Dhtlng
•....,. !from .. ...... ndta.llill ,1l0ilf1HB,

idKtDI

w.~hy

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GWUSlER . -

Tbe

lady T~mcats made it
intercstiqg by scoring rwo
runs in lihe b(JI!tom of ltbe
se¥enth, but il wasn't
enough :as il:he Eastern Lady
Eagles ·defeated Trimble 43 MoD!llay .e vening iii a TlliVaB.ey GonfCJrcnoe Hockling
Division makeup :game.
Eastern (.8-111 fimshes
the season .at 6-4 ·in tihe
TVC
Hockin,g,
while
Trimble ends ;at 4-fi.
'IOO!Idl 1tbc Lady Eagles
concluded d!eir season
Sa1111rd.ay in ~otionals, oonference :games must be

~oumarnent

p 1 a ·y ,
Monday•s
game gave
C
a
two teams
IDe
·rare
•oppontunity to go out with a
wm lin 2008.
Sophomo1:e
Sami
Cummins earned the victo· ry for Eastern. She sllruck
out two lb~tters and walked
five in pitclllrig the oomplete •g ame.
7

S e .n i o J"
C .a s s i e
·Hauber led
the Lady
E a g _I .e s
offensively
with a double, . two
h1ts,
and
two · (lBls,
w h t ~ e
. ._
I • ~C 11 m m 1 n s
r e acb e d
base in all four of her plate
appearances, Tegistering .a
do11ble, three walks, and
IWQ runs scored.
The other Eastern hitters
were all freshmen. Megan
~o.
C arn=an
·d011bl· e d , an d·
Allie Rawson ~d iBritney ,

Morrison both sin·g led. walked for the second time,
Senior Kelsey Holter also and Holter knocked her in
had .an RBI.
...JUi4i: hits by Morrison and
The Lady Eagles got runsUli11ber.
.
from senior Ryan D~vis and
The Lady 'Cats got on the
fireshman Ashley Milia-] as board in the bottom ·Of the
well.
.
fiolllth on tw{) singles sand. Eastern opened the ~r- wiched around a double.
mg m ~e first after Miller
Then in the bottom of the ·
was hit by a pltch. She seventh a two-out rally
scored on·Camah~n·s do11- saw twd hits and two walks
ble three batters later, ·
· The visitors wollld add add mns . two and rtu:ee
two more in the second before semor S&lt;tsha Collins .
inning. Davis .a nd Cummins and Raw.son combmed to
·b oth walked, and Hauber get the t.hiTd out and end the
smacked a two-RBI double game.
to right field
bump the
lead to 3"11.
E
- " 4.Tri..-s
120 100 0
462
_
lt · wollld go to 4-'0 two T
OO..' 100 2
361
innings later. Cummius WP- cummins: LP- walton

to

Spurs hold otT Home~, . advance to West finals
IIY 3

II

Mum.

ASSOCIA~

PRESS

.NEW ORLEANS - A I
title
defense endures for tt;be
Annual Eagle
playoff-sawy San Antonio'
~kethltll Camp
Spurs.
Manu Ginobili sooired 26
points, ibitllling four free
thrnws iii the liinal minute,
sending llhe Spurs ~o lihe
Westem · Conference finals
With a 9l·S2 victory ·over
the New Oiileans Hornets on
Monday night i n Game 7 of
their seoond-oouncilliel'ii.es.
Tony P&lt;rrlrer added 17
points. ilicllllllilg a ,crucial
JlllllpCI' iii the liinal minute,
as ilihc Sptli'S held oli a late
tally to become the first
PY .lo£ KAY
team in llhls series to win ·on
ASSOCIATED
PRESS
1tbc mad.
"We really believed we
CINCINNATI Less
Dad .a cluutcc w win 3n lthe
than
a
month
after
the
NFL
road bere," said Spurs fur·reinstated Odell Thurman
ward Tun Duncan, who bad
from his two.'year suspen16 points and 14 rebounds.
sion, the troubled linebacker
~It's juit:a iotofcoofide:noe.
is out of a job.
A ~ot of games WJ!b" our
The Cincinnati Bengals
lbclt."
.
sta11nchly
supported
W,jtb .a nucleus of Chris
Thurman
during
his
suspenPaul, David West anciiiYson
sion
for
violating
the
Chandler, &lt;the Hornets
Ieag11e's
substance
abuse
~ar destined for ·greater
and cond11ct policies. But
d:rings, !but now is not their
when he didn 't show up for .
time.
vol11ntary
workouts that
'One ttbing I want tbem to
represented
a chance to
remember when dtey statt
catch ·up; they decided
workil\g out oeJct season is
they'd had 'enough.
:how they feel :tii.ght n@w,fl 1
Thurman was waived on
said Hlm!Cts .coach Bymn .
Monday,
leaving his onceSoon, .adding he was proud .
promising
career at the
.of iris team, which did not
crossroads again.
make the pl~yoff&gt;i last sea"Everything was fme two
son, for puslllrig the Spurs
ago," .agent Safarrah
weeks
as far as it did.
Lawson
said in a phone
"Yo11 have to go through
interview
shortly after
some things .before you can
Thunnan was released. "He
really 11nderstand 'how good
·left
for a week to deal with
it's going to feel when you
the
death
of his grandmothget 1t0 il'hat next level," Scott .
er,
and
he
dido 't make it
oootinued. ''Yo11 don 'l ·go
back.."
~
fmnmot making ,playoffs to
Now, his road back to the
winnin,g a cham.Pionship. !It
NFL
will have to go through
2111 Mftes ~La
just doesn't wade dun way.
some
other team.
1115"' •·...,.;
... We'a !headed in right .
Thurman failed to attend
FUJill
.direaion.~
the
team's three voluntary
APphalo
Now :the Spurs and tbeir
oil-field
worko11ts last week,
San
Antonio
Spurs
forward
Tim
Duncan
(21)
shoots
over
New
Orleans
Hornets'
Tyson
ROCKSPRINGS
championship ring.laden
Chandler (6) and 'Morris P~erson (9) in the first half of Game 7 of the NBA Western
kgistration
is
now
open
far.
- 'lllt-nurr-.~ 82
Conference semifinal basketball series Monday in New Orleans.
tbe 2008 flag football season. open to 'boys and gids ----~------------------,--------------.,--------

1-.
.

LBOdeU
Thurman
released
byBengals'

•·a.uf t•••

.
•n•·-·. ..--.u
Deds
· '. strea~
. k ·ends as 1\n,ln
b. k ~ 6-5 •
R .
~ers come ·ac .•or ·· wm
I

~!~~ecsi~h~

in . grades 1-6 beginning

per nlaycr, and 525 for caob

'

...

Mddltiooal sib:J.ini.

LOS ANGELES (AF) homering in his fifth straight
Rookie Blak.e DeWitt' s game and Brandon Phillip'
The games 'Will be played
~in ·~ondlc ·
bases-loaded RBI single was 4-for-5 with an RBI sin14eigs High Sdlool practice
with one out in the ninth gle, helping the Red' build a
inning
lifted . the Los 4-0 lead through the first
fidd:
• Final
- and me.. bod!.
. .
Angeles Dodgers to a 6-5 three innings against Bnid
,a;~A
comeback
win
over Penny.
Cincinnati ~on Monday
With
shortstop
Jeff
&amp;inc will be held 00 ~ful
16th at ·9 a.m..at Meigs ·
night, snapp~ the Reds' Keppingcr on the; disabled
School All ¢becks must ·
s1x-gllllie wmn1Di streak:
list beca11se of a broken left ·
· . illldC out to Me~ ~
. Russell Martin led off the icnee cap, utilityman Jerry ,
~~ · P.O. Bllx
·.·.ruilt!t . •_..against . Dav.id Hai(ston Jr. st!lrte!i at ,shon ....
· 15l, Pomaoy. Ohio 45769.
Weathers (1-3) with an . for the Reds and committed
n":Jii1Ci .mtine ·o r for
inf.eld single up the middle ·a two,base throwing error
· llCe iilformation go to
and continued to second on
Martin's
routine
P'w.meialftl,com or call
when shortstop P~11l Janish gro11ndcr - allowing two
1~541- [222.
threw
the baD over the head runs to score and trimming
•• •
of first baserrum Joey Vouo Cincinnati' s. lead to 4-2 in
and into the dugout. .
· the third. ·
Martin
advliilced
on
Jeff
Janish' replaced Hairston
~U.s·
Kent's
groundout,
and
in
the eighth inning fqr
••
Weathers
intentionally defensive purposes.
•: H~IIKL33
walked James Loney and
Dunn increased the Reds·
!'i-- 1-7&lt;!0 44UIOOII
Matt
Kemp
before
DeWitt
margin
to three runs with an
.,._ -IPOI'Wemmf(Wfdoii,VIW001iotlrtini0181.oom
stroked an opposi.e-fleld hit RBI single in the fifth. but
to left. He is 6-for-6 with 12 . the Dodgers carne right back
&amp;tc .... lplh,IJ ,,,. ......
RBls in bases-loaded situa- in the bonom half to tie it
(1«11 UI\ZM:i!, ._ 33
tioos.
against Bronson Arroyo on
••tdt411••~w;ltiii81.com
Kemp
finished
with
four
two-out RBI singles by
.
.
hits.
.
Loney.
Kemp and De Witt .
..,_ W 7 1a, Spol:lil Wrtler
Takashi
Saito
(2-1) . The Reds. coming off
(:1&lt;10) &lt;146-23&gt;C2; 00&lt;1. 33
......_.IT~ibune .oom
pitched a perfect ,ninth for three-game sweeps against ·
.
the victory.
.
Florida. and Cleveland. took
. 't ,ny en.. tpoi:IIIWdlilr
Cincinnati
Reds'
Bronson
Arroyo
pitches
against
the
Los
Angeles
Dodgers
in
the
first
inning
Adam Dunn tie~ a
(7&lt;10) us 23&gt;C2, - 33
b ' 82
of a baseball game ori Monday in Los Angeles.
Cincinnati club record by
aumel'fl)tdii:JI r .com

::10

.

7

,..,._

I
I

·l ;qed
· ce·g ardless,
and though
most seasons
end
with a Joss
ibeca11se of

ERANOOL!'HOMI'DAILYSEM"INELCOM

w=:::

. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Ia
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·SEND 18.00 PEl usnNG • .. 1% IF ftmJIE INWJDED

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more

•

page devliled 10 those .no are gone but not

for Hilton Holds Gip., said
sbe didn't koow if 1bc hotel ·

· opens· ~oorto , ............ ..
help from Asian neighbors MarGod'•M•

'

a~~

'

..

I-·
"

�•

Page 82. The Daily~

•••

www.mydiillysentinel.com

Qtribune- Sentinel-l\egiiter
CLASSIFIED

throws to dose lihe gap to not rocovc:r.
Aher a tight first quarter.
SB-SO.
Michael Finley then me 'S purs opened ltbe. ~­
~ witib a 3-pointer ood period wi!lt a 11-'S rua.
.md Patker added a jumper, capped by PM\er"s driving
'San Antonio up 63- lay.up as he was fouled.
trio of Duncan. Gin&lt;ibili lllld pUllting
giving San AntDnio a .36Parter will be traveling Ito 5&lt;1.
New Orleans finatly 25 lead.
Los A&lt;lge'les to face ·lihe
Paul's driving floater off
began
to look overLaker!; in Game I c}f l:he
the
·glass ·tnmed l!be tide.
whelmed
by
the
magrutnde
Western Conference linals
sparking
a 114) run that
of l!be moment, ev.e n misson Wednesday night.
West ·l ed the Hornets ing open 'Shots. Peja i,nc1ucilod 3s by Stojakovic
with 20 points, While Paul Stojak:ov:ic shot ;an aitball and M on-is Peterson.
baseline
and Jannero Pargo each on :an open 3-p&lt;lint Stojakovic 's
jumper
brielly
put
lllew
added 18. Chandler had 13 attempt. West missed .a n
12-foolieJ:.
The &lt;nleans ahead 37-36, but
points and 15 rebounds for open
Homets
sbot
S.,Of-17
for Ginobili .came lbact with a
the Homets, who cut .a
3, Parker a driving layup
deficit as large as 11 ·OOwn l!be ·quaJ1ter.
"What we 1did tol!lay was and Duncan .a sb01t fade lO
to three inside the final two
better D i n the third put San Antonio right bac1c
play
minutes.
Popovich said. in b:lont.
quarter,"
While the Homet:s mlm·Ginoj,iti tlhen hit two
aged to hold Duncan under "We held tibem ·d own and it
20 points by crowding l!he really was about .that for more 3s on consecutive
possessions, restering the
inside, bis Spurs ~am­ US~"
New Orleans continued Spurs' .double·-ciligit mead at
mates combined for 12 3pointers to keep alive their to play solid defense 49-38 with under a minute
c'hance to win back-to- inside. holding Duncan in to go in l!he half. , .
At that point, l!he Spurs
back titles for the first check .a nd limiting San
Antoruio to 6--of-18 shoot- were 8"1if-15 on 3s, with
ti~~e knew the shots were i ng in the •quarter. But that Ginobili bitting ifoUL The
oonllr.a~
going to be there. It bap- didn't help much witib me Hornets, , by
pened today that we just Spurs hitting clutch shots looked tight .at time!;, missing ;f;i ve of nine free
made more," said Ginobili, · from outside.
Finley added another 3. throws, with Paul missirig
who made four 3-pointers.
··we just let it fly.as did Robert. Horry, and three.
:
After Ginobili and P~lll
The win also gave Spurs Ginooili' s firee ·throws gave
coach GFegg Popovich wo San Antonio a 71-54 lead exchanged driving tiloatefs
in l!he iitnal seconds of me
playoff victories, moving !late .in '~he perioa
Bnoyedbyahome .crow.d haLf, 1lle Spurs led Sl-42.:
him into a tie with Larry
· 'Brown for third on the d!at stood throughout the . .Notes: The Hornets fd,l
carc;er list.
foU111lh quarter, the Hornets to 0-5 in &amp;econd-oound
The Hornets had .c~o.Jiii- fought back to make a series. .. . This manks t:lie
nated the !third quarters of game of it, largely behind .first time the Spurs have
their three previ.o us bome P.argo, wbo had done little gotten past second round
game,s in this · series. This in this series. He scored one season .after winning :a
&lt;tiime.cthe S:purs. who have sev.en straight on . four free titile. ... Home teams were
won four tides in ilhe previ~ · throws sandwiched around 22-3 in ·the second «lund ilf
cus rune seasons, had :an a 3-pointer, pulling the ,t his season's playoffs. w.i(b
answeL It was llheirc~ Hornets to SJ-77 with 3:10 'Detroit, the Lakers .and
Spurs getting the 0nly rutMi
card: stingy defense.
to go_
The Hornets, .down by
Pargo made anether 3 to wins. ... · A replay review
.nine to open the period. cut .it to 83-8@ with .about I wiped out. what •initially
could not manage consecu- V2 minutes to go, then was called as a three-sh(Jt
ti ve baskets throughout the anempted another fer the foul at the first quatiter
quarter, never getting clos- tie with a minute left, but .it horn, when Ginobili was
called for blocking an
rattJed cut.
·e r than seven.
New Orleans w.e nt nearl,y
Parker ,cJrained a jumper Paul's half-court !heav~.
a tiJFee-minute ostretdh on !lhe o~her end with 50 l'he replay showed ~e
wil!hout a !basket ibefulle s.ec(i)Jlds left to make it 85- eKpired just befofe the folil
IPaul hit a pair of free 80, and New Orleans could and the release of t!he shd.

Lester throws no-bitter against Royals Advance
BY J-y Go! a

from first baseDWJ Kevin White Sox oo Julv 14. 1956.
Youkilis, WOO made: a nice Hall of Farner Noian Ryan is
sooop on shortstop Julio dte only odler .person io hisBOSTON - Jon Lester Lugo's throw after David tory to no-hit the Royals.
can now add pitching a no- De.!esus hita grounder in the · "Just trying to finish tlle
hiner to his already amazing third.
game," Lester said in an onUst of accomplishments.
The fans at fic:.nway Park field interview. "I ·c an'•t lie,
The 24-year-old lefty, who really got into it for the final it went lhrough my head a
:survived cancer to pitch the out of l!be seventh, risiog 1!!l .couple llimes .in the nioth."
·World Series clincher for the their feet wben Lester
Luke Hochevar (3-3)
Boston Red Sox last fall, · fli!Uied Guillen on a 93 mph allowed seven runs on five
shut down Kansas City 7.0 fastball. They remained hits and six walls in six
Monday night for the first s):allding for the •entire ninth innings for Kansas City.
&lt;OQ-hitter in the majors this inning, even as Ge~man which.had won six of its last
season.
walked and 100ved around seven.
"Really. words can't to third base when Tony
The Red Sox took advandescribe ·i t right now,- Pena and DeJesus grounded tage of Hochevar with five
Lester said.
out.
runs in fue third, sooring
Lester ,(3-2) allowed just
With flashes pqpping .and .their first run on a double
two baserun~;~ers, walking the fans screaming at full play and t:heli loading the
!lilly Butler in the second throat, Callaspo fell behind bases ·o n wal.ks '3fter
mnmg and Esteban German 0-2. He fouled ~ne off .and. Ellsbury tripled. Manny
.
. took a ball before reaohmg Ramitez wallred •til bring in
.to open the nmth.
Lester struck out moe, for a high and ~utsule 1-2 anot!her run and then Mike
:fannmg ~berto Callaspo to fastball to end the $3lfle·
Lowell hit a high popup thai
end the game before p~mpLester and Vantek w~e was dropped by second
Mike
mg both fi~s m the an:.. lt mobbed by teammates run- baseman
was Lester s first maJor m~g out of the dugout as:th~ (Jrudzielanek for another
league complete ~ame, and speakers played "Tess1e,' two runs.
.
the VICti)ry anthem the Red
Youkilis bounced a line
what a way to do 1t.
Catchher beeJasonbehinyardJtethk, WSoxldadSopted throtlu~h
drive over the shart wall in
w h o as . n .
e
or
enes ll es 1~ •OUT right to make it 5-0. Varitek
h
·
'plate for a record four no- seasons. Lester was ms.ll'll- dded tw
hitters, lifted his pitcher into mental in the second. earn- ~ . t~
o-run omer 10
the air.
ing the victory inGame 4 at
e SIX :
.
Then Lester, pitcher, who Colomdo less than a year
Notes •. The Royals remmissed the -end ·o f the 2006 after chernotber.apy cured statedC John Buck from the
season after be 'was diag- hi.s cancer.
bereav.ement
hst
a?d
.nosed with '.' a rare funn of
After Lester hugged optloned . ~~tcher Matt
:non-Hodgkin's lymph@ma, Franeona. the pitcher tipped TupiiWI ~o Tnple-AOmaha
met manager Teny lfranoona his bat to 1be fans for one Bu7k ~!IDS sed. the weeke~d
mot for a long, 'hard mot:e big clleel:.
scnes m Aonda t.G be w1th
embrace.
"He.' s ·nat just a good icid ~s wife, who had cmnplica"JJe just said he was 'PfOUd because he 1brew ·a oo-bit- trons m. her pregnancy. 'She
of me:' Lester 'Said. "J've ter," Franoona said. "He"s a :g ave b1rtih to twm sons
been throu_gh a lot the last good lcid because !he's -a Cooper and . Brody on
oouple of years. He's been good lid."
Thursday, about .12 w~ks
like a second dad to me. It
Bosum•s .last oo-!hitter was cady; the team satd lbe sitUwas just a special moment pi~ by &lt;lay BIICbb0lz, .alien. has s~oe stal!iliud ...
right there ."
who
shut deWlll ilhe Ramirez lhigh-fiv.e~ a !fan
Center fielder Jacoby Baltit:oore Otioks in just his down 1he left-field line ·after
Ellsbury made a diving second majO( league stan making a ·catch .... Gui'l:len
catch of Jose Guillen ·~ line last Sept. I.
was chosen as the AL player
. the
Mel Parnell was the last of the week. He went 11drive to end the fourthbest defensive play of the iRed Sox lefty to 'throw a no- for-24 with two homers and
night. Lester also got help hitter, beating the Chicago B RBls last week.
ASSOCIATED PRESS

JWO

I

·'

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I

l

Red Wmgs he3ded.badr to Staoley Cup finals
Trophy ro play for the Cup and tis 55tl1 victory - .his
ASSOCIATED PRESS
sinoe they did w in :!002. 41ltb for Detroit, passing
TI:mt .also was 'l!be iast ilime Hatl of Farner Fe.r.ry
DALLAS- Dominant in they were in the :li.nals.
·Sawchuk for the fumchise
the regular season, superb
As good .as Oetmit was the record.
;Deuloit's
w,alloping
again in the postseasan, the first 82 games, the !ked
Detroit !&lt;¢ Wings are head- Wmgs wene.even better for knockout punch sheuldn 't
ed back to the Stanley Cup much -of 1he last six wcclt~. bav.e been a surprise; The
finals.
They went nearly a ~nth Red W'wgs beat Nashville 3. With gusto, too.
between losses, winning a '0 ro .end the opening mund,
· Just when the Red Wings frimchise-record
. nine then crushed ·Colorado 8-2
lost consecutive games and sliratght playaff games. It to end the second round.
While the end was ugly,
were starting to look vulner- was the l011gest mn b¥ any
able, they bounced back team m l5 yean; and 1t put the 'Stars. had their best .poststrong in Game 6 of the them a wm away from elim:_ &lt;Season since 2000, when
Western Cenference finals, inating the fiifib-seeded they were defendif\g Cup
getting first-period goals Stars.
ch;unpions;and made it baCk.
from Kris Draper, Pavel
Oa!laswooGames4auil:5 to .t he conference fina\s.
Datsyuk and Dallas Drake by ~imiting Detroit to a ,gOlil Dallas .dethroned reining
on their way to knocking out eadh game, The Red Wings .champion Anaheim, then
the Dallas Stars 4-1 on exceeded thal output in the ousted San lose io fue secMonday night.
first period Monday, with a1l ond !fOIIiK'I. finishing it off
Now Detroit goes from three goals coming o.n with a four..overtime thriller.
worrying about becoming ·uncontes•-" ... .,..s Tight i.n
Mll&gt;~be
that marathon
the"""'
.net. Hetuik
~·
the third team to blow a 3-0 ·front cf""'
series lead to trying to win Zettcrberg 'lidded · a shGrt- sapped them at the start of
its fourth championship in handed goal early in the sec- this seri.es .. A:nd maybe their
II seasons. The Red Wiogs ond period and the series two-game ally SliPPed .them
for Game 6.
will face the Pittsburgh was all but over then.
Penguins, with the first two
Red Wings goalie Chris Dallas didn;t even have a
games at Joe Louis Arena . . Osgood didn't have to de shot when the B-ed Wings
The league did not immedi- much the first two periods, gat their iftrst goal and they
ately say when the serie.s then got busy in the third. wasted their fillS! six power
· He passed all but one test, plays. On one cf them, they
would begin. ·
Detroit will be the home getting beat by Stephane bad &lt;1 chance for a 5-on-3
team because it had more Robidas during a power advantage
until
Brad
regular-season points play.
Winchester got called for
Osgood improved to 1'0-2 boarding seconds after offimost in the league, in fact.
The Red Wings are the first this postseason. lt ·was his cials signaled for a delayed
recipient of the Presidents' 1OOth career playoff game penalty.

rromr.Bt

BY JAIME • ._

He was suspended the first round and were
for the ftrSt four games of looking at ways to shuffle
the 2006 season after failing the.i r linebackers.
to show up for a drug test
''The NFL providbd Odell
fromPageBl
Commissioner
Roger the opportunity to earn his
Goodell extended the sus- way back onto our team, but ·
when he was in Georgia fol- pension to a full season we have not seen the right
lowing· the death of his
._..
when'
Thurman
was
arresu::u
steps &lt;taken by him," .U :wis
grandmother. The Bengals
.
are installing a new defense, on a drunken dri vmg said in a statement "With .
and wanted him to practice. charge;· Henry was a: pas- ·OUT offseason work io
. ''I was just told by coach senger in t!he . vehicle, but progress ,and neltlll talent
(Marvin) Lewis that he had- wasn't charged. Goodell added at our linebacker
n 't been· in the building later extended Thurman's position, we've determined
·
h.
·
suspenswn through . ~ -ifs.best to keep moving in a
enoug h smce IS remstate- 2007.se.ason as w.ell, se.ttu1g .:· ·,..o•-1•00. that dlies not·.
ment, arid they decided to . 000di
£ h
""""'
nons or IS return.
include Odell." ·
g o in a different direction,"
Lawson said.
Thunn~ met them ~d
Lewis declined to be
was on his way to full rem- 111
• ._,;6wed.
ln the past · two months,
t te
t
h
Good 11
"'"~
the Bengals have filially cut s a men · w en
,e
While it's a long shot for
~lowed him to start workto si~tn with another
ties with their most-pun- tog out at Paul Brown
"i'
ished players.
Stadium in Sanllllt)'. He was team - . h1s latest arrest
. ReeeiverChris Henry was fully reinstated 00 April21 , could ~l'ID- a fuU-season
released on .April 3 after he and had been wot:ki1lg out.
~spenston 1f be gets back
· was ,arrested for .t ht fifth . . The Bengali ftnally gave 11110 1he league - eomoone
time. Henry h11d already · up on him when be went mljbt aJve Thunnllf! ~noth·
served multiple suspensions back to ·Georaia . for the er c:bance at • truntmum
from the NFL. including funeral of his ~r. lillary.
miss.illg the firlit eight who raised him, and didn't
Lawton waa aurprlsed
&amp;lUlie of last season.
retllrn for the voluntary that the Be.npl1let hfro ao.
Now, one of his best workouts. Lawson iaid
·~11 traveled • long,
friends is gone from the Thurman stayed in ·&lt;Jeoriia bard toad to get back., to $C:t
team, toO.
.
tO take care of UlatterSrelii.t• reinstated," UWSOD Sill d.
Thurman, a second-round cd to his grandmother.
· "It's unfortunate that, ultidraft pick from Georgia,
The Bc11gals are install~ mately, the death of his
sbowed promise as a rookie a new ~nse under coordt- grandmother sidetracked
in 2005, when he .Jed the nalor'Mikt Zimmer. They him and made football not
lelUJ1 in tackles and led all
drafiod Southern California . the No. I priority over the
NFL rookies with five inter- linebacker Keith Rivers in last month."

··Ends
rmn._Bt
a 2-0 lead with Ut srn,Jes
by Phillips 'i n 1lhe first
il;lning and ·C orey PallteniOO
in the second.
·
Dunn, who came in 3-Jor25 lifetime against Penay
with a home run 1llld ] 3
strikeouts, dFove a 1-t pitch
into the pavilion seats· iin
right-center for a 4-'(ll.ea.d in
the third after Phillips led
off with . a single and stale
second. He now shared 'the
franchise mark with Ted
Kluszewski (1954), Johnny
Bench (1972) and1ea!IUnate
Ken Griffey Jr. (2003).
Dunn's home run streak is
the longest Gf ·his eight-year
career. He is three •behind
the major league record
shared by Dale Long, Don

E-mail
classified@mydallytribune.com

tlribune

Ofltee 11o~~
Monday thru Friday
a.m. to 5:00 p .• m.

..,......-..._ r

- ~

(

~

'

---.·-· :
.F

~

.

.

~~

=·

4 wry cute puppies, mixed
breed in need of lovlng

homes. 2 (M). 2

1765 or ~1's1D3

Absolute Top Dollar · .&amp;ii-

·r·

ing $1«l;QOO 3Q4.674-5999 heat pump/ Qentral air.
Dr 304-675-1566
· $21 ,000 (740)44Hl684

·-

ldfters. lltlar trained. -

Giwa ._... 2 Femakt'f1'1ied
Beagle 7 ·M. old PIOilllies.
740-94i-2188.

t

Outbotrnd/lnbound Call
Center
Dey and Elloning Shifts

'P---At11IQIPII8f8

0LASSifED INDEX

....... ,.Sote ............................. -._..,........725

.--. . ....-................
. . . . . . .-..................
.---·-4411
........

-~,..
=:·;·::~-~nt:-·-....

1130

~neutafor RMt ....................

Auctlan- flu tl8rlolt.............................OIO
Autahrla,&amp;Aci II 1118 .......... ,, __•••• -710
...... Rotoolr--...- ....................................'7711

for s.te.............................................:no

.

-

at Par S1.,
Mar Mason,
#39 af tNV
2264
Second
or
Par Mar #40 15C71'1ye Awe.,
Pomeroy, 011

-

Far""-····-···-···············-······················-

.. for s.te ..........._ ..... - ..................................515
· Fors.teorTrade .........- .............................510
: Frullla
trl ......................-.......:........ .
............,_.._ ................... A50

vew

:• ~
.......
--~··········-····-·····....4110
Qlus
w..............................- .....................t40
.....................:........... -·········~···· .....08D

:

' ltlf •

Qrlln,_•..;..~......- · - · - · -............140 .

: tlslp . .ltiiiCI·-··-·--············--·---·····110

• ...._ 61+ cu

cts ......... __.................-110

• ..... for 11*..........:..._ ..........,.. ~ ......._110
: Hal II hold Gcloet. ..... - ..............- ••--510
~
10
: In • .IRM ..ii .......................................... - •• 020

. ...... for ..... _,.. . . . . . . . . .,. . -.......

' ............................................................ 110
· ......... a.den Equlpmllnt ........................ IIO
: U II~ • ·........................ , ........................110

--

• Lost..SFound ............................................
: Loel i. -...:. ••ge .........:..........._ ...........--110
~

•·

r:

Ia

aaDI:.:........................·...- ..........- .17D

.IJ . . ~ .. ,..,..,..o•••••••••oo••

r

.. ~ ...... -

-

r• . ._

~

-

11 ·

f . . . . IIOI.... _,........

_

........ ........,........... 57D

~•••••••oo•••n••--•-••••••••••"'QDS

s. .......,............._ .............-..-·

: ..... for
5&amp;11
• l'luiNIInlll ttl .............................. - ......120
: Jlnt 111 "1W 1111 wlcet ................-..............210
• Radio TV l CB ..__,................ ,..•;,.........110
I
•
. ' .... ~
... l~·
~ ................. ,..- ........... : SciiDIIlllnl!lluctton"..... " ........ - ....--..--150
. .... ' ....... ::..tttlax ..........._ ................150

: . . It

il W. II L ..........., ........- ........,....128

-

• ..... for _ _....,....................- ....~......
• •
Iii.. (ioodl,._•••....•.............• - ............. 510
'
• IUV'•
for a._......-............... -....-·--·--·0 TI'UCICS for Slote .........................- ......,.......... 715

.

•• •

1111 , _. .................................................8711
• , . . for Slote...............................................730
: ... lid 10 Buy ,._..................... _ ............010
• · .., 1 ' 10 Buy- Fltmt Suppll• ... .......ao
' w t t To Do.-.........................- ............ 110
. W. t I 1D Ront .......- ...................----4111
Yft .... Q 17 1! rn'l8........................,...........072
. • Yenl tell ,_sierowllllddlo.................--..074
· Yenll8le-PI.f'IDIUitl ................. -........,.... 01t

condtlion, 1 aCTelolbeaUIIful
coun1ry view 5400.00 a
month for more info. call
~304-8_.:.95-_.:.3568_.:._ _ __
Mobile home and dou·

lltlO

tn 1111o :a
25 IIHfS of "''I· coring for

_,Y ladies mmy home.

---

....... ....,. ormlioMI
origin, or ...,.irMnfiDn to

. . . . . . which

,_.. . . heNIIw
lnlonMd thcl ..l
g 11 iiF ildiNf tln
w. 1uc
..
_...,.on .,aqUII

vdabtc ...,._,til

· ·

QllfiiUB. 4.6 acres Reduced

~s=-675-2694

I

ing, . hea~ i~, mll8age 1'8imburMment.
1-800-21C-0452
~ ~ ~·
- ·lif"'lii :
2 _..
buUon and paid holidays. ~County 'E.tiiBigetiCy ~ ~ Aoci ...WG
F8K 7&lt;11).4.&lt;6-9104 01 Email SeMa!isaocoplingapptica· """""'"' '' '" '"'"
· joiln&lt;:armiohaeilcarorq.com tions for ltle lcflowing Pol1· ...,..,_,,.,.
.
Time
poeitions: EMT,
Poremedic and llllpot&lt;:hMo• :,
••.., 2 """""
,_...., needod in1modiately. Barn· Pol1-timo Oilpatdl pooition
2pm. Minimum c1 s:K&gt;. per pays $10.00 per hOur.
&lt;loy. - - . : ! 0 5 1
~con be ptcRd

=,

~-otDOIII-.e
i'.,.,:,IC;""-=~
Group Home. 7'11).11112-5023 Wlnfiold Rd- WV

2 bedroom apartment for
rent in Middleport, no petS,
(740)992·51l58
212 3rd Ave. 3 rooms and

One Acre W/4 Br.mobile
home,alt&amp;lectric.Broad Aun
W.Va.. 2 mi. from powe'
Ptant on a paved road ,nice
quiet.304173-555018823418
.;________
Trailer for Sale in New
Hall8n, in Trailer Park 304·

bath. tumished, no pets.
Rent + Dep. 74o-441-Q245
.

r

.

1

for hlt&lt;ing.l!lldng andfloiWng.

r

i

I

3 acres for Sale on Sandhill
Ad $25 .000. 304-895·3929

-;=:::;;:==:,
a
r1V

Ellm V!ew
A I nt
pat'

•2&amp;3

JllfHS

bedroorrt apartment&amp;

Ce
&amp; •r
• ntral heat ...,..,.
WaShe-.. """'"•
r..... ,,..r ...........,.,
•All electric- B\leragrtg
$50 560/monlh
-

•Owner pays water. &amp;ewer,
trash ,

(304)8e2·3017
•
•
.

.

.

I "G-Ioc:i.. ,....
--u:-111:-n--,-.-nd-:-2
g

1257 oq. fl . vinyl s&lt;llltl.lots
l:fot.lil;s
atstorave. 11/2cargarage, .
MW.Jloo'"
concrete driveway. Emtl --.
..n.-o.v. &amp;
· for boat ·
P--·~
"'l""
· $226/mo! 3 bed. 2 bath,
large lot wittl storage shea Bri Repo! (5% _ ,, 20
Largo TODI11S. Wn clooet in yean;, 8% APR) lor tmtngs
master. Updates include. 10S0CJ.620-494Ei ex. R027
Berber coq&gt;et. ~.
A!C&amp;Hao1
.
pump.IIOVIG 1br• .House in New Haven .
-1ELL.
No Pets. $300 monlh plus
'Cotdllan. Pr~ reduofid,' I daposll :Ml4;-S93-0B96
Uking $89,900 . Appraioed
for $108,000 1 112 )'80"' 2 - - toose for rem.

0

BMU!Hul Apm.ot
EotatH. 52 Westwood
Ofive, trom 5365 to $560.
740--«6·2568.
Equal
Housing Opportunity. This

I

:

1&lt;ll\:e. Large211 h~ll- .
• nic quiet IKibOivision, grNI

Apartment , !Milia~
$540 m~ . same Deposit
plus electriC, washer, dryer
hookup, No Pets _ :JC.l4..6740023 or 304-61D-0776

30r.

instttutKm is an Equal
Opportunity Provider and
~
f1llK,.....;
. Emp"&gt;ye•.
CON:':--VE'::Nic-E:cNT=~::-yc-L-:cOC-::-:cAT:c·
30 acre farm . 3BR , 2BA ED &amp; A-•BI.£t
home, 7 stall hOrse bam in
rrwn.Townhouse
apartmen1s.
Vinton area. 740-388-93
and/or small houses FOR
l.ms &amp;
RENT. Call (7..0)«1- ~1,
·
Aau:AGE
, for app~cation &amp; information_

F~..

FOR SALE : 219 interest in
acreage located in Mason
County. We&amp;t Virninia. 2005
·•
appraisals of land with
mtproyements and separate
·- ·
lsal ~tlnM:~T appra
. t....,.... .. ,er.
garage
unattached . totaled, over $400,000. FAX
Exoellen1 condition read6,; reply to 912-236-B782
;:::~~.OOO:OO.
MOBILE HOME LOj FOR
•
RENT, 1031 Georges Creek
Open House Sat .&amp; Sun lfd. ~1 · 1111
5117&amp;5118 2pm t.o Spm .

- .1ft

] CIJ:-441 _, 111 , hm no pets, (740)992·5858

Bedroom Apts. at Village
Manor and Riverside Apts. in
Middktport from $327 to
ss92 74o-992-5064 Equal
H
ousmg Oppor1unf1y.
Modern 1 BR Apt. Call 4463736

.:...C"-----..OVE IN SPECIAL 5100
OFF ~ 2 br apr 6 miles
. from
Hotze• . Hoopilal. ~ pi~
Oepoort. Some paid.
"18·52BB or 988-E130

rooms. Large yard. Cl:wered 7.w-.208-9673 CeiL 7&lt;10- 3 Bedroom House in Nice guiet 28 R apt.
die*.. Atlached garage. 7t0- .... ,-8232 204 Ann Ot off Syra~ . SSOOimonttl + References
&amp;
deposit
Raccoon Creek Rei _
depolit Hud App. NO f1rts . required. No Pam. C46-l 271
367 _7129 _

'-r

Mo'"""'

New3Bedroomhomesfrom
$214.36 per month . Includes
many upgrades. delivery &amp;
set·LtP-(7j'0)385·2434
.

==

'

ear..

or

House for sale in Racine
- · 4 acres, 811
Bl'88. •
"+'.., ...... _
~ 510
·
11 t d
d
'"''"''"'"' na ~ an scape ·
Rahou ~ 4
'""'' ..,,,...
se ..,,,,
bldiOCNni, living room, din·
mg room, kitchen , large ramity room, central air, gas heat
and 1 fireplace. Adrit~n of a
large Flo~da room com·
plotely ~or opens onto
patio &amp; pool area. Heated~
ground pool enclosed by pn·
vacy feocing and land··
scaped. Finished 2 car
garage atlattMJd. to house
and ltn~hed &amp; heated 3 car

""": • .
· '"""'"' IU d&lt;llg «:reen and - ·
'1UIINED DOWN ON
applical.,. for flN and gfOUf1d drodl. 01111 HIOO·
LPN 'I. Apply at .1&lt;180 .27H358 fo1.f 8:30 to :110. ' : : ;
.-&amp;·S82-334
Jacaon Ptka, Ga~. SEO-WDV
1
5
lfl"'r" ~1-1393 for Offtoe or apply at 1•56 .(
JackBoo Plko, pl1onri ~1·
INiuiJ;'liiN · "
9263 for Paasport(Private
·l bu
I
Care Office. Competitiw ~lo
CDIIoll
MJil SAu:
and inr:iLJd. (Canlera etooe To Home)
ing ~ 'insurance and Call Toctayl 7~ .
down pl,yi'IWit.
bed- ago.
4

SI•••S

1BR Apt. in Spring \/dev,
WfD
hookups.
Visit
www.spring-va!ley·proper·
ties.com or call 339-0362

USED HOMES Nice 3BR
HQUH for Sale GaUipolis from $1.900 down . Save
ferry, WV behind Chevron $5.000! Midwest 74D-828·
older home 4br, 2 car 2750 mymil:lwest.com

eo.. .•

$7.116 por flour, llhlft - .
.
hournary.Must&lt;- afligh - a n a l Lawn. Oare
&amp;Chool ·dipk)ma or GED. services. Free Esttmates.
ctean criminal ti1toJy, ~ 74()-..M6_.963

.NEW20C114br-2:ba 1,700SQ
fl from $399 mo. Midwest
740-828-2750
":'Y"lidwesthome.eom ,

~~~~~I~-~""~~·~ -:-:-:-=-:-=
882-3336

or

t"

il in

_af .. tow.o..r

auattfied

· wit, ·fi.cio •. ....;.: ·

lwiltnat

:lauwlnUir lleCIIIPt
lld•lk:c•ca•tslor,...

I

'"-:-•.•ndlllli2iiibeiidriiioomiiiiiiaapa_n,...

display. Midwest 740·828· Pomeroy and Middkfport,
2750
oecuri1y dopcsi1 requirad , no
m~idwest.com
pets, 7._0.992~2218.

..--,calor. ......-....

OHIOVAllEYPllBLI
lNG CO. recommen
that VOU do business
people you know, a
10 send mone
through the mail &amp;.mil yo,_.

-

~
MMI: RtNr

.F M.....,.Aclaf1•
- - n 1 - .,
''eny

1 1 do

limttltion

'•
.NOT:( L

-

ing CDs1 and ZERO DOWNI 740' 992.2458

- - - - - - - ments, tumiShed and ut11ur·
Modutlnl see Ohio's 6argesl nished , !lind houSM in

Th•l•u

~
. rill'. 01fiQefs . - in"!&gt; ~~

Eastern School Distrid.
740-992.()653 Of 416-5393.

~tother.oer.l

p;'*'l••·
or
d' imh lii:oi• .-.....on ·

fl"'"'

•·.
.
..
OhiDNaJlet 'Honit' Healttr,
lno. hiring STNA, CNA,
Horne Aido6 and
Peraonal ca..~ f.utl
Time and ..... Diem poli-

Nice and dean 3 :bedloom,
electric, central
air, water paid, oountTy set·
ling

total

do
Landr
Improvements. Bankruptcy

p;ci&amp;IWa,lhnhdonor
dlwe;fmhoatiot•...

)'68f expe11811C8, calll-866·

4060 or 367-Tllk!

Traler11&gt;r nmt 11e1go County.
Locatolli. MLE. 74().446.3570
Pine GIIM! Rd. In country
-rat Fund&amp; just rolea&amp;ed Racine, Olllo. s btl, 2
for Land Owners. No clo&amp;· bd.$400M.$olll0dop.llr oood

ad...._

priyate&amp;semi-private rooms
aviilable . Nutrilious mOl
planning, excellent references phone numbers upon
request. For more inlo. 740-

ing.
for application
and free
governement
job intp,
call
American Assoc. d Labor191J.s91HI226. 24/hrs. amp.

1cr rent. 7 -

-

wm

rour

2nd ~-. Gal""""""'.
....-------Equipment
Repair
Technician fof Farm ard'or
L.awn Equipment repair &amp;
mai~ . Must have
- • " " ' · Musl be - l o
Ull computer on a iimit&amp;d
buis. eorr.,otitiYe wages,
modem shop, continuous
COf11)BJly &amp;pOf'I80r9d train-

3br.&amp; 2ba . double wide, au:.

I ,..,.._... _ ::~~~~~\:

'lltil

IIDIWANTID ..

•
~.__ _ _ _ __ .

:j

~Bar anct !?rill now

required. 740-367-()632

2 Balh, 2000 16K70
Ft9etwood 2 Bed 2 Bath.
1999 16KBO Fortooe 3 Bad 2·
Baltl, 1997 14K70 Oakwood

. --

Local company locking for
parHkne delivery person.
Appkcant must halo'e a valid
driver's license; have good ,
ha~~e investigated· the
...........
customer relation skills and ·
be able to mutti·task well.
·;·-"::"';===~
POST OFFICE NON
Appticanf5 will be subject lo
HIRING
MIN;y
background check before
..twg.:pay $20ihr 01
hiring. ~ you would like lo
10 Lo.\N
$51Kiyr, includes
'-------'·
apply, please send· your
fec:tlraiBenefits. OT.
. . . -..........-*"1
re&amp;ume to: P.O. 801( 469,
**~ei'IC::IE•*
Gallipolis, Ohio 45631 CLA Place&lt;J by adSouroe. not
offered w/ USPS who hires.
Bo!l101 .
1-mAr""f\¥'
= ·•"'2582
Borrow Smart. Conla,..
""
Love 1o cook?
Always Roglanal ft.-......___
the Ohio Oivision ot
•
experimenting with new A&amp;J Truokmg
·
js Be9king Flnancial
lnsttluticn's
idaas1 ~may be who we quaUf190 COL-A drivers to Office of Consum!'
are looMlg tor. A local com- operate semi-dumps tor Affairs W 04&amp; you rafi.
pany is in need of an tndivid- regional routes. We feature nance
nome . 0
ual who is inspirad to c:oo1L ..,catlrwr1 hOme - · -in a loan. ~
be able lo and - 1 Insurance ot ., ..,.._for any lamo
o~ile 8ild manage on 401(k) vacaiiOil bonus~ adwnce ~-;,j
Industrial kltch8n , pr&amp;pare and sadety award&amp;
tees or tnsurance. Call the
and inYentory food SloQ{, as .......t:.-.. ...~ musl be _
Oftice of Consume
~·..,.....,.. 23
1 · ~- totltree at 1-81J6.
. '""'I as inc:omlng Yf'., haw 8 minimum
and
outgotng
foods. ,.ar ol Wihii16iical drMng
to learn if the
lndMdual w11 be f1MIPOI'ISib'e
mortga
Qrok
Busy ...-am oeeklng full .
.
_.;,IW ' clean MVR.
11" .
or .~..
' limerelillbkt~. MUst fortoodp;ep&amp;rlltioi•, presan- Prior e:.;perience with semi- lender
IS
properly
have at least 3 )'88nii tood tation and quality to compa· 00mps and roii'"'Ofts is help- licensed. {This rs a public
prep experience. Bidwell ~Y standards. If you .are ful. Contact Kent iU 800. service anno~ncement
,.... day and -""!! shill llltorested In applying, 46?·a366'"' fiH out appi;ca· from lhe Oh10 ValleY
awai1&amp;i:H. Leave message pleue Hnd~resu_me _
io lion at .~~-COI'I'J. Pubtishing Company)
7&lt;10-4o&lt;1·7360
,
•, P.~.
Galhpol&lt;s, EOE · ·• •-"""' :
·
~ 45631 C Bore 101
·
.
·
. ~ ...,....
.

".,.....,_for-..................._. .,.. .
•

nUTo•~

368-1100 1011 tree

~:..:,,............. -.:!...:......110 . llllllllng ·qualtfied iiJipt!Cants
runner
4211 for bal1andor. : ..... ~for s.te....................,....... -.120 and line cook. Aj1pty In per·
• ......, 10 "-l............................- ...........,...ZID son or call 441 ·9371 to
' -cci11&amp;4WIIMien..........,...............740 ~ and interview. 308

.........

2002 16KBO Oakwood 3 Bed

www.·comics.com

N&amp;A,tnc.

An .Excehnt way to earn -----~­
money. The New Avon.
Home Health Care South
Call Marlyn 304-88.2,2645
East Ohio is currently hiring
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Sentinel
Or Fa To {140) 992-2157

Mattingly and ·Gri.ffey, Angels in Anaheim, but ·was
whose homer streak caine pushed baclc a day because
with the Seattle Mariners.
of arm stiffness.
'
Griltey. who 'began this . Notes:
•Gri.li[ey
a"d
&amp;even-game road tnp need- Dodgers CF Andruw Jones
ing lhree home runs to are among four players in
become the sixth player history to hit 5&lt;1 bo:nterli :aDd
wi.th 600, bad twe singles in win .a Gold Glove in die
five ttips to ·the plate -but same season. 1lhe ,others ate
has gone 83 at~bats since his Willie Mays and AleK
· .....
"''
Previous ·bonier on .April 23 ·Ro dr'1guez. .. . c·memo
against Houston's Chris · manager Dusty Baker bas .a
Sampson. The longest 14-23 record .llg1linst !canis
'homer drought of Junior's managed by Joe Tollft,
career was 10 I at -bats in iocluding a 5-7 ·llllll'k. duriqg
J 990 with Seattle, his sec- interleague play; 1ihe Reds
·end season in l!he big . . and ·Dodgers split a t.w0leagues. .
·
t , st
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a 'Uu:au
and .nine ruts ·o ver five . American Ball Park. :..
innings with three strikeouts Torre and Baker were teamand thnee .walks.
mates very briefly with the
Penny allowed five runs, 1968 Atlanta 'Braves. Baker
nine hits and four walks in played his ftrst six big
six ·inniogs and struck out league games that season,
two.
and Torre was traded to St.
Penny was scheduled to Louis in March 1'969 for
pitch Sunday against t he Orlando Cepeda.

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Page 82. The Daily~

•••

www.mydiillysentinel.com

Qtribune- Sentinel-l\egiiter
CLASSIFIED

throws to dose lihe gap to not rocovc:r.
Aher a tight first quarter.
SB-SO.
Michael Finley then me 'S purs opened ltbe. ~­
~ witib a 3-pointer ood period wi!lt a 11-'S rua.
.md Patker added a jumper, capped by PM\er"s driving
'San Antonio up 63- lay.up as he was fouled.
trio of Duncan. Gin&lt;ibili lllld pUllting
giving San AntDnio a .36Parter will be traveling Ito 5&lt;1.
New Orleans finatly 25 lead.
Los A&lt;lge'les to face ·lihe
Paul's driving floater off
began
to look overLaker!; in Game I c}f l:he
the
·glass ·tnmed l!be tide.
whelmed
by
the
magrutnde
Western Conference linals
sparking
a 114) run that
of l!be moment, ev.e n misson Wednesday night.
West ·l ed the Hornets ing open 'Shots. Peja i,nc1ucilod 3s by Stojakovic
with 20 points, While Paul Stojak:ov:ic shot ;an aitball and M on-is Peterson.
baseline
and Jannero Pargo each on :an open 3-p&lt;lint Stojakovic 's
jumper
brielly
put
lllew
added 18. Chandler had 13 attempt. West missed .a n
12-foolieJ:.
The &lt;nleans ahead 37-36, but
points and 15 rebounds for open
Homets
sbot
S.,Of-17
for Ginobili .came lbact with a
the Homets, who cut .a
3, Parker a driving layup
deficit as large as 11 ·OOwn l!be ·quaJ1ter.
"What we 1did tol!lay was and Duncan .a sb01t fade lO
to three inside the final two
better D i n the third put San Antonio right bac1c
play
minutes.
Popovich said. in b:lont.
quarter,"
While the Homet:s mlm·Ginoj,iti tlhen hit two
aged to hold Duncan under "We held tibem ·d own and it
20 points by crowding l!he really was about .that for more 3s on consecutive
possessions, restering the
inside, bis Spurs ~am­ US~"
New Orleans continued Spurs' .double·-ciligit mead at
mates combined for 12 3pointers to keep alive their to play solid defense 49-38 with under a minute
c'hance to win back-to- inside. holding Duncan in to go in l!he half. , .
At that point, l!he Spurs
back titles for the first check .a nd limiting San
Antoruio to 6--of-18 shoot- were 8"1if-15 on 3s, with
ti~~e knew the shots were i ng in the •quarter. But that Ginobili bitting ifoUL The
oonllr.a~
going to be there. It bap- didn't help much witib me Hornets, , by
pened today that we just Spurs hitting clutch shots looked tight .at time!;, missing ;f;i ve of nine free
made more," said Ginobili, · from outside.
Finley added another 3. throws, with Paul missirig
who made four 3-pointers.
··we just let it fly.as did Robert. Horry, and three.
:
After Ginobili and P~lll
The win also gave Spurs Ginooili' s firee ·throws gave
coach GFegg Popovich wo San Antonio a 71-54 lead exchanged driving tiloatefs
in l!he iitnal seconds of me
playoff victories, moving !late .in '~he perioa
Bnoyedbyahome .crow.d haLf, 1lle Spurs led Sl-42.:
him into a tie with Larry
· 'Brown for third on the d!at stood throughout the . .Notes: The Hornets fd,l
carc;er list.
foU111lh quarter, the Hornets to 0-5 in &amp;econd-oound
The Hornets had .c~o.Jiii- fought back to make a series. .. . This manks t:lie
nated the !third quarters of game of it, largely behind .first time the Spurs have
their three previ.o us bome P.argo, wbo had done little gotten past second round
game,s in this · series. This in this series. He scored one season .after winning :a
&lt;tiime.cthe S:purs. who have sev.en straight on . four free titile. ... Home teams were
won four tides in ilhe previ~ · throws sandwiched around 22-3 in ·the second «lund ilf
cus rune seasons, had :an a 3-pointer, pulling the ,t his season's playoffs. w.i(b
answeL It was llheirc~ Hornets to SJ-77 with 3:10 'Detroit, the Lakers .and
Spurs getting the 0nly rutMi
card: stingy defense.
to go_
The Hornets, .down by
Pargo made anether 3 to wins. ... · A replay review
.nine to open the period. cut .it to 83-8@ with .about I wiped out. what •initially
could not manage consecu- V2 minutes to go, then was called as a three-sh(Jt
ti ve baskets throughout the anempted another fer the foul at the first quatiter
quarter, never getting clos- tie with a minute left, but .it horn, when Ginobili was
called for blocking an
rattJed cut.
·e r than seven.
New Orleans w.e nt nearl,y
Parker ,cJrained a jumper Paul's half-court !heav~.
a tiJFee-minute ostretdh on !lhe o~her end with 50 l'he replay showed ~e
wil!hout a !basket ibefulle s.ec(i)Jlds left to make it 85- eKpired just befofe the folil
IPaul hit a pair of free 80, and New Orleans could and the release of t!he shd.

Lester throws no-bitter against Royals Advance
BY J-y Go! a

from first baseDWJ Kevin White Sox oo Julv 14. 1956.
Youkilis, WOO made: a nice Hall of Farner Noian Ryan is
sooop on shortstop Julio dte only odler .person io hisBOSTON - Jon Lester Lugo's throw after David tory to no-hit the Royals.
can now add pitching a no- De.!esus hita grounder in the · "Just trying to finish tlle
hiner to his already amazing third.
game," Lester said in an onUst of accomplishments.
The fans at fic:.nway Park field interview. "I ·c an'•t lie,
The 24-year-old lefty, who really got into it for the final it went lhrough my head a
:survived cancer to pitch the out of l!be seventh, risiog 1!!l .couple llimes .in the nioth."
·World Series clincher for the their feet wben Lester
Luke Hochevar (3-3)
Boston Red Sox last fall, · fli!Uied Guillen on a 93 mph allowed seven runs on five
shut down Kansas City 7.0 fastball. They remained hits and six walls in six
Monday night for the first s):allding for the •entire ninth innings for Kansas City.
&lt;OQ-hitter in the majors this inning, even as Ge~man which.had won six of its last
season.
walked and 100ved around seven.
"Really. words can't to third base when Tony
The Red Sox took advandescribe ·i t right now,- Pena and DeJesus grounded tage of Hochevar with five
Lester said.
out.
runs in fue third, sooring
Lester ,(3-2) allowed just
With flashes pqpping .and .their first run on a double
two baserun~;~ers, walking the fans screaming at full play and t:heli loading the
!lilly Butler in the second throat, Callaspo fell behind bases ·o n wal.ks '3fter
mnmg and Esteban German 0-2. He fouled ~ne off .and. Ellsbury tripled. Manny
.
. took a ball before reaohmg Ramitez wallred •til bring in
.to open the nmth.
Lester struck out moe, for a high and ~utsule 1-2 anot!her run and then Mike
:fannmg ~berto Callaspo to fastball to end the $3lfle·
Lowell hit a high popup thai
end the game before p~mpLester and Vantek w~e was dropped by second
Mike
mg both fi~s m the an:.. lt mobbed by teammates run- baseman
was Lester s first maJor m~g out of the dugout as:th~ (Jrudzielanek for another
league complete ~ame, and speakers played "Tess1e,' two runs.
.
the VICti)ry anthem the Red
Youkilis bounced a line
what a way to do 1t.
Catchher beeJasonbehinyardJtethk, WSoxldadSopted throtlu~h
drive over the shart wall in
w h o as . n .
e
or
enes ll es 1~ •OUT right to make it 5-0. Varitek
h
·
'plate for a record four no- seasons. Lester was ms.ll'll- dded tw
hitters, lifted his pitcher into mental in the second. earn- ~ . t~
o-run omer 10
the air.
ing the victory inGame 4 at
e SIX :
.
Then Lester, pitcher, who Colomdo less than a year
Notes •. The Royals remmissed the -end ·o f the 2006 after chernotber.apy cured statedC John Buck from the
season after be 'was diag- hi.s cancer.
bereav.ement
hst
a?d
.nosed with '.' a rare funn of
After Lester hugged optloned . ~~tcher Matt
:non-Hodgkin's lymph@ma, Franeona. the pitcher tipped TupiiWI ~o Tnple-AOmaha
met manager Teny lfranoona his bat to 1be fans for one Bu7k ~!IDS sed. the weeke~d
mot for a long, 'hard mot:e big clleel:.
scnes m Aonda t.G be w1th
embrace.
"He.' s ·nat just a good icid ~s wife, who had cmnplica"JJe just said he was 'PfOUd because he 1brew ·a oo-bit- trons m. her pregnancy. 'She
of me:' Lester 'Said. "J've ter," Franoona said. "He"s a :g ave b1rtih to twm sons
been throu_gh a lot the last good lcid because !he's -a Cooper and . Brody on
oouple of years. He's been good lid."
Thursday, about .12 w~ks
like a second dad to me. It
Bosum•s .last oo-!hitter was cady; the team satd lbe sitUwas just a special moment pi~ by &lt;lay BIICbb0lz, .alien. has s~oe stal!iliud ...
right there ."
who
shut deWlll ilhe Ramirez lhigh-fiv.e~ a !fan
Center fielder Jacoby Baltit:oore Otioks in just his down 1he left-field line ·after
Ellsbury made a diving second majO( league stan making a ·catch .... Gui'l:len
catch of Jose Guillen ·~ line last Sept. I.
was chosen as the AL player
. the
Mel Parnell was the last of the week. He went 11drive to end the fourthbest defensive play of the iRed Sox lefty to 'throw a no- for-24 with two homers and
night. Lester also got help hitter, beating the Chicago B RBls last week.
ASSOCIATED PRESS

JWO

I

·'

I
I

l

Red Wmgs he3ded.badr to Staoley Cup finals
Trophy ro play for the Cup and tis 55tl1 victory - .his
ASSOCIATED PRESS
sinoe they did w in :!002. 41ltb for Detroit, passing
TI:mt .also was 'l!be iast ilime Hatl of Farner Fe.r.ry
DALLAS- Dominant in they were in the :li.nals.
·Sawchuk for the fumchise
the regular season, superb
As good .as Oetmit was the record.
;Deuloit's
w,alloping
again in the postseasan, the first 82 games, the !ked
Detroit !&lt;¢ Wings are head- Wmgs wene.even better for knockout punch sheuldn 't
ed back to the Stanley Cup much -of 1he last six wcclt~. bav.e been a surprise; The
finals.
They went nearly a ~nth Red W'wgs beat Nashville 3. With gusto, too.
between losses, winning a '0 ro .end the opening mund,
· Just when the Red Wings frimchise-record
. nine then crushed ·Colorado 8-2
lost consecutive games and sliratght playaff games. It to end the second round.
While the end was ugly,
were starting to look vulner- was the l011gest mn b¥ any
able, they bounced back team m l5 yean; and 1t put the 'Stars. had their best .poststrong in Game 6 of the them a wm away from elim:_ &lt;Season since 2000, when
Western Cenference finals, inating the fiifib-seeded they were defendif\g Cup
getting first-period goals Stars.
ch;unpions;and made it baCk.
from Kris Draper, Pavel
Oa!laswooGames4auil:5 to .t he conference fina\s.
Datsyuk and Dallas Drake by ~imiting Detroit to a ,gOlil Dallas .dethroned reining
on their way to knocking out eadh game, The Red Wings .champion Anaheim, then
the Dallas Stars 4-1 on exceeded thal output in the ousted San lose io fue secMonday night.
first period Monday, with a1l ond !fOIIiK'I. finishing it off
Now Detroit goes from three goals coming o.n with a four..overtime thriller.
worrying about becoming ·uncontes•-" ... .,..s Tight i.n
Mll&gt;~be
that marathon
the"""'
.net. Hetuik
~·
the third team to blow a 3-0 ·front cf""'
series lead to trying to win Zettcrberg 'lidded · a shGrt- sapped them at the start of
its fourth championship in handed goal early in the sec- this seri.es .. A:nd maybe their
II seasons. The Red Wiogs ond period and the series two-game ally SliPPed .them
for Game 6.
will face the Pittsburgh was all but over then.
Penguins, with the first two
Red Wings goalie Chris Dallas didn;t even have a
games at Joe Louis Arena . . Osgood didn't have to de shot when the B-ed Wings
The league did not immedi- much the first two periods, gat their iftrst goal and they
ately say when the serie.s then got busy in the third. wasted their fillS! six power
· He passed all but one test, plays. On one cf them, they
would begin. ·
Detroit will be the home getting beat by Stephane bad &lt;1 chance for a 5-on-3
team because it had more Robidas during a power advantage
until
Brad
regular-season points play.
Winchester got called for
Osgood improved to 1'0-2 boarding seconds after offimost in the league, in fact.
The Red Wings are the first this postseason. lt ·was his cials signaled for a delayed
recipient of the Presidents' 1OOth career playoff game penalty.

rromr.Bt

BY JAIME • ._

He was suspended the first round and were
for the ftrSt four games of looking at ways to shuffle
the 2006 season after failing the.i r linebackers.
to show up for a drug test
''The NFL providbd Odell
fromPageBl
Commissioner
Roger the opportunity to earn his
Goodell extended the sus- way back onto our team, but ·
when he was in Georgia fol- pension to a full season we have not seen the right
lowing· the death of his
._..
when'
Thurman
was
arresu::u
steps &lt;taken by him," .U :wis
grandmother. The Bengals
.
are installing a new defense, on a drunken dri vmg said in a statement "With .
and wanted him to practice. charge;· Henry was a: pas- ·OUT offseason work io
. ''I was just told by coach senger in t!he . vehicle, but progress ,and neltlll talent
(Marvin) Lewis that he had- wasn't charged. Goodell added at our linebacker
n 't been· in the building later extended Thurman's position, we've determined
·
h.
·
suspenswn through . ~ -ifs.best to keep moving in a
enoug h smce IS remstate- 2007.se.ason as w.ell, se.ttu1g .:· ·,..o•-1•00. that dlies not·.
ment, arid they decided to . 000di
£ h
""""'
nons or IS return.
include Odell." ·
g o in a different direction,"
Lawson said.
Thunn~ met them ~d
Lewis declined to be
was on his way to full rem- 111
• ._,;6wed.
ln the past · two months,
t te
t
h
Good 11
"'"~
the Bengals have filially cut s a men · w en
,e
While it's a long shot for
~lowed him to start workto si~tn with another
ties with their most-pun- tog out at Paul Brown
"i'
ished players.
Stadium in Sanllllt)'. He was team - . h1s latest arrest
. ReeeiverChris Henry was fully reinstated 00 April21 , could ~l'ID- a fuU-season
released on .April 3 after he and had been wot:ki1lg out.
~spenston 1f be gets back
· was ,arrested for .t ht fifth . . The Bengali ftnally gave 11110 1he league - eomoone
time. Henry h11d already · up on him when be went mljbt aJve Thunnllf! ~noth·
served multiple suspensions back to ·Georaia . for the er c:bance at • truntmum
from the NFL. including funeral of his ~r. lillary.
miss.illg the firlit eight who raised him, and didn't
Lawton waa aurprlsed
&amp;lUlie of last season.
retllrn for the voluntary that the Be.npl1let hfro ao.
Now, one of his best workouts. Lawson iaid
·~11 traveled • long,
friends is gone from the Thurman stayed in ·&lt;Jeoriia bard toad to get back., to $C:t
team, toO.
.
tO take care of UlatterSrelii.t• reinstated," UWSOD Sill d.
Thurman, a second-round cd to his grandmother.
· "It's unfortunate that, ultidraft pick from Georgia,
The Bc11gals are install~ mately, the death of his
sbowed promise as a rookie a new ~nse under coordt- grandmother sidetracked
in 2005, when he .Jed the nalor'Mikt Zimmer. They him and made football not
lelUJ1 in tackles and led all
drafiod Southern California . the No. I priority over the
NFL rookies with five inter- linebacker Keith Rivers in last month."

··Ends
rmn._Bt
a 2-0 lead with Ut srn,Jes
by Phillips 'i n 1lhe first
il;lning and ·C orey PallteniOO
in the second.
·
Dunn, who came in 3-Jor25 lifetime against Penay
with a home run 1llld ] 3
strikeouts, dFove a 1-t pitch
into the pavilion seats· iin
right-center for a 4-'(ll.ea.d in
the third after Phillips led
off with . a single and stale
second. He now shared 'the
franchise mark with Ted
Kluszewski (1954), Johnny
Bench (1972) and1ea!IUnate
Ken Griffey Jr. (2003).
Dunn's home run streak is
the longest Gf ·his eight-year
career. He is three •behind
the major league record
shared by Dale Long, Don

E-mail
classified@mydallytribune.com

tlribune

Ofltee 11o~~
Monday thru Friday
a.m. to 5:00 p .• m.

..,......-..._ r

- ~

(

~

'

---.·-· :
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~

.

.

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=·

4 wry cute puppies, mixed
breed in need of lovlng

homes. 2 (M). 2

1765 or ~1's1D3

Absolute Top Dollar · .&amp;ii-

·r·

ing $1«l;QOO 3Q4.674-5999 heat pump/ Qentral air.
Dr 304-675-1566
· $21 ,000 (740)44Hl684

·-

ldfters. lltlar trained. -

Giwa ._... 2 Femakt'f1'1ied
Beagle 7 ·M. old PIOilllies.
740-94i-2188.

t

Outbotrnd/lnbound Call
Center
Dey and Elloning Shifts

'P---At11IQIPII8f8

0LASSifED INDEX

....... ,.Sote ............................. -._..,........725

.--. . ....-................
. . . . . . .-..................
.---·-4411
........

-~,..
=:·;·::~-~nt:-·-....

1130

~neutafor RMt ....................

Auctlan- flu tl8rlolt.............................OIO
Autahrla,&amp;Aci II 1118 .......... ,, __•••• -710
...... Rotoolr--...- ....................................'7711

for s.te.............................................:no

.

-

at Par S1.,
Mar Mason,
#39 af tNV
2264
Second
or
Par Mar #40 15C71'1ye Awe.,
Pomeroy, 011

-

Far""-····-···-···············-······················-

.. for s.te ..........._ ..... - ..................................515
· Fors.teorTrade .........- .............................510
: Frullla
trl ......................-.......:........ .
............,_.._ ................... A50

vew

:• ~
.......
--~··········-····-·····....4110
Qlus
w..............................- .....................t40
.....................:........... -·········~···· .....08D

:

' ltlf •

Qrlln,_•..;..~......- · - · - · -............140 .

: tlslp . .ltiiiCI·-··-·--············--·---·····110

• ...._ 61+ cu

cts ......... __.................-110

• ..... for 11*..........:..._ ..........,.. ~ ......._110
: Hal II hold Gcloet. ..... - ..............- ••--510
~
10
: In • .IRM ..ii .......................................... - •• 020

. ...... for ..... _,.. . . . . . . . . .,. . -.......

' ............................................................ 110
· ......... a.den Equlpmllnt ........................ IIO
: U II~ • ·........................ , ........................110

--

• Lost..SFound ............................................
: Loel i. -...:. ••ge .........:..........._ ...........--110
~

•·

r:

Ia

aaDI:.:........................·...- ..........- .17D

.IJ . . ~ .. ,..,..,..o•••••••••oo••

r

.. ~ ...... -

-

r• . ._

~

-

11 ·

f . . . . IIOI.... _,........

_

........ ........,........... 57D

~•••••••oo•••n••--•-••••••••••"'QDS

s. .......,............._ .............-..-·

: ..... for
5&amp;11
• l'luiNIInlll ttl .............................. - ......120
: Jlnt 111 "1W 1111 wlcet ................-..............210
• Radio TV l CB ..__,................ ,..•;,.........110
I
•
. ' .... ~
... l~·
~ ................. ,..- ........... : SciiDIIlllnl!lluctton"..... " ........ - ....--..--150
. .... ' ....... ::..tttlax ..........._ ................150

: . . It

il W. II L ..........., ........- ........,....128

-

• ..... for _ _....,....................- ....~......
• •
Iii.. (ioodl,._•••....•.............• - ............. 510
'
• IUV'•
for a._......-............... -....-·--·--·0 TI'UCICS for Slote .........................- ......,.......... 715

.

•• •

1111 , _. .................................................8711
• , . . for Slote...............................................730
: ... lid 10 Buy ,._..................... _ ............010
• · .., 1 ' 10 Buy- Fltmt Suppll• ... .......ao
' w t t To Do.-.........................- ............ 110
. W. t I 1D Ront .......- ...................----4111
Yft .... Q 17 1! rn'l8........................,...........072
. • Yenl tell ,_sierowllllddlo.................--..074
· Yenll8le-PI.f'IDIUitl ................. -........,.... 01t

condtlion, 1 aCTelolbeaUIIful
coun1ry view 5400.00 a
month for more info. call
~304-8_.:.95-_.:.3568_.:._ _ __
Mobile home and dou·

lltlO

tn 1111o :a
25 IIHfS of "''I· coring for

_,Y ladies mmy home.

---

....... ....,. ormlioMI
origin, or ...,.irMnfiDn to

. . . . . . which

,_.. . . heNIIw
lnlonMd thcl ..l
g 11 iiF ildiNf tln
w. 1uc
..
_...,.on .,aqUII

vdabtc ...,._,til

· ·

QllfiiUB. 4.6 acres Reduced

~s=-675-2694

I

ing, . hea~ i~, mll8age 1'8imburMment.
1-800-21C-0452
~ ~ ~·
- ·lif"'lii :
2 _..
buUon and paid holidays. ~County 'E.tiiBigetiCy ~ ~ Aoci ...WG
F8K 7&lt;11).4.&lt;6-9104 01 Email SeMa!isaocoplingapptica· """""'"' '' '" '"'"
· joiln&lt;:armiohaeilcarorq.com tions for ltle lcflowing Pol1· ...,..,_,,.,.
.
Time
poeitions: EMT,
Poremedic and llllpot&lt;:hMo• :,
••.., 2 """""
,_...., needod in1modiately. Barn· Pol1-timo Oilpatdl pooition
2pm. Minimum c1 s:K&gt;. per pays $10.00 per hOur.
&lt;loy. - - . : ! 0 5 1
~con be ptcRd

=,

~-otDOIII-.e
i'.,.,:,IC;""-=~
Group Home. 7'11).11112-5023 Wlnfiold Rd- WV

2 bedroom apartment for
rent in Middleport, no petS,
(740)992·51l58
212 3rd Ave. 3 rooms and

One Acre W/4 Br.mobile
home,alt&amp;lectric.Broad Aun
W.Va.. 2 mi. from powe'
Ptant on a paved road ,nice
quiet.304173-555018823418
.;________
Trailer for Sale in New
Hall8n, in Trailer Park 304·

bath. tumished, no pets.
Rent + Dep. 74o-441-Q245
.

r

.

1

for hlt&lt;ing.l!lldng andfloiWng.

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i

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3 acres for Sale on Sandhill
Ad $25 .000. 304-895·3929

-;=:::;;:==:,
a
r1V

Ellm V!ew
A I nt
pat'

•2&amp;3

JllfHS

bedroorrt apartment&amp;

Ce
&amp; •r
• ntral heat ...,..,.
WaShe-.. """'"•
r..... ,,..r ...........,.,
•All electric- B\leragrtg
$50 560/monlh
-

•Owner pays water. &amp;ewer,
trash ,

(304)8e2·3017
•
•
.

.

.

I "G-Ioc:i.. ,....
--u:-111:-n--,-.-nd-:-2
g

1257 oq. fl . vinyl s&lt;llltl.lots
l:fot.lil;s
atstorave. 11/2cargarage, .
MW.Jloo'"
concrete driveway. Emtl --.
..n.-o.v. &amp;
· for boat ·
P--·~
"'l""
· $226/mo! 3 bed. 2 bath,
large lot wittl storage shea Bri Repo! (5% _ ,, 20
Largo TODI11S. Wn clooet in yean;, 8% APR) lor tmtngs
master. Updates include. 10S0CJ.620-494Ei ex. R027
Berber coq&gt;et. ~.
A!C&amp;Hao1
.
pump.IIOVIG 1br• .House in New Haven .
-1ELL.
No Pets. $300 monlh plus
'Cotdllan. Pr~ reduofid,' I daposll :Ml4;-S93-0B96
Uking $89,900 . Appraioed
for $108,000 1 112 )'80"' 2 - - toose for rem.

0

BMU!Hul Apm.ot
EotatH. 52 Westwood
Ofive, trom 5365 to $560.
740--«6·2568.
Equal
Housing Opportunity. This

I

:

1&lt;ll\:e. Large211 h~ll- .
• nic quiet IKibOivision, grNI

Apartment , !Milia~
$540 m~ . same Deposit
plus electriC, washer, dryer
hookup, No Pets _ :JC.l4..6740023 or 304-61D-0776

30r.

instttutKm is an Equal
Opportunity Provider and
~
f1llK,.....;
. Emp"&gt;ye•.
CON:':--VE'::Nic-E:cNT=~::-yc-L-:cOC-::-:cAT:c·
30 acre farm . 3BR , 2BA ED &amp; A-•BI.£t
home, 7 stall hOrse bam in
rrwn.Townhouse
apartmen1s.
Vinton area. 740-388-93
and/or small houses FOR
l.ms &amp;
RENT. Call (7..0)«1- ~1,
·
Aau:AGE
, for app~cation &amp; information_

F~..

FOR SALE : 219 interest in
acreage located in Mason
County. We&amp;t Virninia. 2005
·•
appraisals of land with
mtproyements and separate
·- ·
lsal ~tlnM:~T appra
. t....,.... .. ,er.
garage
unattached . totaled, over $400,000. FAX
Exoellen1 condition read6,; reply to 912-236-B782
;:::~~.OOO:OO.
MOBILE HOME LOj FOR
•
RENT, 1031 Georges Creek
Open House Sat .&amp; Sun lfd. ~1 · 1111
5117&amp;5118 2pm t.o Spm .

- .1ft

] CIJ:-441 _, 111 , hm no pets, (740)992·5858

Bedroom Apts. at Village
Manor and Riverside Apts. in
Middktport from $327 to
ss92 74o-992-5064 Equal
H
ousmg Oppor1unf1y.
Modern 1 BR Apt. Call 4463736

.:...C"-----..OVE IN SPECIAL 5100
OFF ~ 2 br apr 6 miles
. from
Hotze• . Hoopilal. ~ pi~
Oepoort. Some paid.
"18·52BB or 988-E130

rooms. Large yard. Cl:wered 7.w-.208-9673 CeiL 7&lt;10- 3 Bedroom House in Nice guiet 28 R apt.
die*.. Atlached garage. 7t0- .... ,-8232 204 Ann Ot off Syra~ . SSOOimonttl + References
&amp;
deposit
Raccoon Creek Rei _
depolit Hud App. NO f1rts . required. No Pam. C46-l 271
367 _7129 _

'-r

Mo'"""'

New3Bedroomhomesfrom
$214.36 per month . Includes
many upgrades. delivery &amp;
set·LtP-(7j'0)385·2434
.

==

'

ear..

or

House for sale in Racine
- · 4 acres, 811
Bl'88. •
"+'.., ...... _
~ 510
·
11 t d
d
'"''"''"'"' na ~ an scape ·
Rahou ~ 4
'""'' ..,,,...
se ..,,,,
bldiOCNni, living room, din·
mg room, kitchen , large ramity room, central air, gas heat
and 1 fireplace. Adrit~n of a
large Flo~da room com·
plotely ~or opens onto
patio &amp; pool area. Heated~
ground pool enclosed by pn·
vacy feocing and land··
scaped. Finished 2 car
garage atlattMJd. to house
and ltn~hed &amp; heated 3 car

""": • .
· '"""'"' IU d&lt;llg «:reen and - ·
'1UIINED DOWN ON
applical.,. for flN and gfOUf1d drodl. 01111 HIOO·
LPN 'I. Apply at .1&lt;180 .27H358 fo1.f 8:30 to :110. ' : : ;
.-&amp;·S82-334
Jacaon Ptka, Ga~. SEO-WDV
1
5
lfl"'r" ~1-1393 for Offtoe or apply at 1•56 .(
JackBoo Plko, pl1onri ~1·
INiuiJ;'liiN · "
9263 for Paasport(Private
·l bu
I
Care Office. Competitiw ~lo
CDIIoll
MJil SAu:
and inr:iLJd. (Canlera etooe To Home)
ing ~ 'insurance and Call Toctayl 7~ .
down pl,yi'IWit.
bed- ago.
4

SI•••S

1BR Apt. in Spring \/dev,
WfD
hookups.
Visit
www.spring-va!ley·proper·
ties.com or call 339-0362

USED HOMES Nice 3BR
HQUH for Sale GaUipolis from $1.900 down . Save
ferry, WV behind Chevron $5.000! Midwest 74D-828·
older home 4br, 2 car 2750 mymil:lwest.com

eo.. .•

$7.116 por flour, llhlft - .
.
hournary.Must&lt;- afligh - a n a l Lawn. Oare
&amp;Chool ·dipk)ma or GED. services. Free Esttmates.
ctean criminal ti1toJy, ~ 74()-..M6_.963

.NEW20C114br-2:ba 1,700SQ
fl from $399 mo. Midwest
740-828-2750
":'Y"lidwesthome.eom ,

~~~~~I~-~""~~·~ -:-:-:-=-:-=
882-3336

or

t"

il in

_af .. tow.o..r

auattfied

· wit, ·fi.cio •. ....;.: ·

lwiltnat

:lauwlnUir lleCIIIPt
lld•lk:c•ca•tslor,...

I

'"-:-•.•ndlllli2iiibeiidriiioomiiiiiiaapa_n,...

display. Midwest 740·828· Pomeroy and Middkfport,
2750
oecuri1y dopcsi1 requirad , no
m~idwest.com
pets, 7._0.992~2218.

..--,calor. ......-....

OHIOVAllEYPllBLI
lNG CO. recommen
that VOU do business
people you know, a
10 send mone
through the mail &amp;.mil yo,_.

-

~
MMI: RtNr

.F M.....,.Aclaf1•
- - n 1 - .,
''eny

1 1 do

limttltion

'•
.NOT:( L

-

ing CDs1 and ZERO DOWNI 740' 992.2458

- - - - - - - ments, tumiShed and ut11ur·
Modutlnl see Ohio's 6argesl nished , !lind houSM in

Th•l•u

~
. rill'. 01fiQefs . - in"!&gt; ~~

Eastern School Distrid.
740-992.()653 Of 416-5393.

~tother.oer.l

p;'*'l••·
or
d' imh lii:oi• .-.....on ·

fl"'"'

•·.
.
..
OhiDNaJlet 'Honit' Healttr,
lno. hiring STNA, CNA,
Horne Aido6 and
Peraonal ca..~ f.utl
Time and ..... Diem poli-

Nice and dean 3 :bedloom,
electric, central
air, water paid, oountTy set·
ling

total

do
Landr
Improvements. Bankruptcy

p;ci&amp;IWa,lhnhdonor
dlwe;fmhoatiot•...

)'68f expe11811C8, calll-866·

4060 or 367-Tllk!

Traler11&gt;r nmt 11e1go County.
Locatolli. MLE. 74().446.3570
Pine GIIM! Rd. In country
-rat Fund&amp; just rolea&amp;ed Racine, Olllo. s btl, 2
for Land Owners. No clo&amp;· bd.$400M.$olll0dop.llr oood

ad...._

priyate&amp;semi-private rooms
aviilable . Nutrilious mOl
planning, excellent references phone numbers upon
request. For more inlo. 740-

ing.
for application
and free
governement
job intp,
call
American Assoc. d Labor191J.s91HI226. 24/hrs. amp.

1cr rent. 7 -

-

wm

rour

2nd ~-. Gal""""""'.
....-------Equipment
Repair
Technician fof Farm ard'or
L.awn Equipment repair &amp;
mai~ . Must have
- • " " ' · Musl be - l o
Ull computer on a iimit&amp;d
buis. eorr.,otitiYe wages,
modem shop, continuous
COf11)BJly &amp;pOf'I80r9d train-

3br.&amp; 2ba . double wide, au:.

I ,..,.._... _ ::~~~~~\:

'lltil

IIDIWANTID ..

•
~.__ _ _ _ __ .

:j

~Bar anct !?rill now

required. 740-367-()632

2 Balh, 2000 16K70
Ft9etwood 2 Bed 2 Bath.
1999 16KBO Fortooe 3 Bad 2·
Baltl, 1997 14K70 Oakwood

. --

Local company locking for
parHkne delivery person.
Appkcant must halo'e a valid
driver's license; have good ,
ha~~e investigated· the
...........
customer relation skills and ·
be able to mutti·task well.
·;·-"::"';===~
POST OFFICE NON
Appticanf5 will be subject lo
HIRING
MIN;y
background check before
..twg.:pay $20ihr 01
hiring. ~ you would like lo
10 Lo.\N
$51Kiyr, includes
'-------'·
apply, please send· your
fec:tlraiBenefits. OT.
. . . -..........-*"1
re&amp;ume to: P.O. 801( 469,
**~ei'IC::IE•*
Gallipolis, Ohio 45631 CLA Place&lt;J by adSouroe. not
offered w/ USPS who hires.
Bo!l101 .
1-mAr""f\¥'
= ·•"'2582
Borrow Smart. Conla,..
""
Love 1o cook?
Always Roglanal ft.-......___
the Ohio Oivision ot
•
experimenting with new A&amp;J Truokmg
·
js Be9king Flnancial
lnsttluticn's
idaas1 ~may be who we quaUf190 COL-A drivers to Office of Consum!'
are looMlg tor. A local com- operate semi-dumps tor Affairs W 04&amp; you rafi.
pany is in need of an tndivid- regional routes. We feature nance
nome . 0
ual who is inspirad to c:oo1L ..,catlrwr1 hOme - · -in a loan. ~
be able lo and - 1 Insurance ot ., ..,.._for any lamo
o~ile 8ild manage on 401(k) vacaiiOil bonus~ adwnce ~-;,j
Industrial kltch8n , pr&amp;pare and sadety award&amp;
tees or tnsurance. Call the
and inYentory food SloQ{, as .......t:.-.. ...~ musl be _
Oftice of Consume
~·..,.....,.. 23
1 · ~- totltree at 1-81J6.
. '""'I as inc:omlng Yf'., haw 8 minimum
and
outgotng
foods. ,.ar ol Wihii16iical drMng
to learn if the
lndMdual w11 be f1MIPOI'ISib'e
mortga
Qrok
Busy ...-am oeeklng full .
.
_.;,IW ' clean MVR.
11" .
or .~..
' limerelillbkt~. MUst fortoodp;ep&amp;rlltioi•, presan- Prior e:.;perience with semi- lender
IS
properly
have at least 3 )'88nii tood tation and quality to compa· 00mps and roii'"'Ofts is help- licensed. {This rs a public
prep experience. Bidwell ~Y standards. If you .are ful. Contact Kent iU 800. service anno~ncement
,.... day and -""!! shill llltorested In applying, 46?·a366'"' fiH out appi;ca· from lhe Oh10 ValleY
awai1&amp;i:H. Leave message pleue Hnd~resu_me _
io lion at .~~-COI'I'J. Pubtishing Company)
7&lt;10-4o&lt;1·7360
,
•, P.~.
Galhpol&lt;s, EOE · ·• •-"""' :
·
~ 45631 C Bore 101
·
.
·
. ~ ...,....
.

".,.....,_for-..................._. .,.. .
•

nUTo•~

368-1100 1011 tree

~:..:,,............. -.:!...:......110 . llllllllng ·qualtfied iiJipt!Cants
runner
4211 for bal1andor. : ..... ~for s.te....................,....... -.120 and line cook. Aj1pty In per·
• ......, 10 "-l............................- ...........,...ZID son or call 441 ·9371 to
' -cci11&amp;4WIIMien..........,...............740 ~ and interview. 308

.........

2002 16KBO Oakwood 3 Bed

www.·comics.com

N&amp;A,tnc.

An .Excehnt way to earn -----~­
money. The New Avon.
Home Health Care South
Call Marlyn 304-88.2,2645
East Ohio is currently hiring
-AVON--!A-11-Anlos--1-To_B_u_y-or Ho~e Health Aides for .
Sell. Shirley Spears, (!()4. Me&lt;gs CO.. you musl be cer·
.67 5-~ 429 tified"'r o~mly hawt one

• . _ . . .... Slote ............................. 750

lc.e_,,,,..,,,., ..., ..,._..,_.......... 190

_304-_59_3_6.,-862-::. -.,-4bi, 2 N:., Pool, Country
'New Haven, $139,500 call
after 6pm Will he~ wllh
~ Casi304&lt;59H871

seN.

Jlulldlntl SttPPIIM...- ........................:......... 550

b_
I ..:au
oUOO.
.,
•
"Ill
I Io J i o- o O O - O O_ _ _,_OOOoOoo
'
-~

2BRmAd&lt;lav;tl.,.clwdistrict, referenoes '&amp; deposit

(740)367-&lt;lOOO

Lost·
fomale ·Gorman
1~ ~1
Wirehair, ·
Elft. 234'1
Alfred/Boarwallow/Shade.
UIIU' . .~,.~
•
friendly, IBW1Ii'd (740)696· - - . , - - - - - 1011
AcCepllng oppWcations for
ftLIERU.
~------ pan-time cashiers, must be
LOST: Fomal&lt;i Siamese a..u - to work all shift~
J&gt;OSfo\l.JOBS ·
Cet. 600 blocl&lt;
AYe. no phone calis ptease, apply $17.B9-$28.27ihr.. now hit·

or·First
' !~~~~~~~~in~G~a~llipoi~~~7:~~:D5:,1

1sxoo 3 Bedloom 2 Bo1ll
Vir¥ Siding. Shin~ Roof.
$2:JJ per month . 740-3859948

r---""!:'---.

jallo.lo-•. -

· ~own/gray,

3br.2be.lglivlngnxlm,1car
attached garage must sail
~9.000 Sunset ln pt
Pleasant 304..S12·5021 or

Mortgage

!'JJII Benofito

c.tll'odi!Yl

2Br at Johnsons Mobile
Home Park. Gall ~6-2003

, • -~~
3 Bed 2 Balh. Ds!'time 388L.ocal mmpany offoring "NO 0000 Evenmg 38B.ao17 or
245-9213
DOW~ PAYMENT" programs tor you to buy your 2008 3 bedroom 2 bath seohome instead' 01 renting.
tional home $279 ·per month
• 100% financing
740·385·7671..
• Less t11an ·perfocl credit
Brand new 3bed 2bath on
accepted
+.half acre in Pt. Pleasant
• Payment could be the
same as romt
OWNER FINANCE AVAIL·

0

llt!uWANIIIII

sa.a- +aanuo

"'"lo good home, boautlful

~

3.65 amaB 0 G1'98Rbrier to Holzer. Excellent condi- 645-3592 or 740-367-0654
EsUda!; on Sandhll ~ -ask- tion. Shingle roof. all electric,

kittens. c:allaJ &amp; ligor striped. ·
~ -----Fnlelogocdhorne,boautiful
44&amp;4177
FT

.

r ~~ I

~

3br, 2 t/2 ba, &amp; FR. 2 car 14170 1996 Si&lt;yline Mobile 2BR $4SOI&lt;Iep. 5450/ram +
ga1'8lle &amp; in ground Pool on Home. On rented lot, close utilities, on private lot. 7.-cl-

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'

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wr/gold
coins,
any
10K/1"4Kti8K gold jnetry,
·T4H.Q.Mll doiul •gold, pn1 1935 •US
T - - · You mitN CUIT8nc:y, :proof/mint - ·
-Gt\'E.IIIttiMYtl
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diamond&amp;. MTS COin ·Shop,
151 2nd ~.- Gllllpol~.
1• U6'2842

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1 yr old J..abni.Doodle. call 741).38!Hl88&lt;1
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spayod, ' highly
.
'
8
energeti:: 675-2151
~· I8M'8 • measage.
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can
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a
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Brandon~

tew~tiforle•JNHillon

..,

' l:.ar*fillhlnka--................................... 010

Cincinnati Reds' Adam Dunn .hits a twcH'un home run to drive In teammate
against the Los Angeles Dodgers In the third inning of a baseball game on Monday In LOs

It

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llotar.._
..........................:7!10
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SA
'UI"'ds
Slla lid llldHde
TCI flelp Get a i D1-._,

ond Bulldlngs ............................. iMO

'

Now you con have boidet"Sand QI"'JPhics

WoQIAds

HOW m WRITE MAD

OJ:IMxtunllf-··················-···..···.210
B~T..:Mog ....................................... 140

·--J

l\egt~ter

Sentinel
Or Fa To {140) 992-2157

Mattingly and ·Gri.ffey, Angels in Anaheim, but ·was
whose homer streak caine pushed baclc a day because
with the Seattle Mariners.
of arm stiffness.
'
Griltey. who 'began this . Notes:
•Gri.li[ey
a"d
&amp;even-game road tnp need- Dodgers CF Andruw Jones
ing lhree home runs to are among four players in
become the sixth player history to hit 5&lt;1 bo:nterli :aDd
wi.th 600, bad twe singles in win .a Gold Glove in die
five ttips to ·the plate -but same season. 1lhe ,others ate
has gone 83 at~bats since his Willie Mays and AleK
· .....
"''
Previous ·bonier on .April 23 ·Ro dr'1guez. .. . c·memo
against Houston's Chris · manager Dusty Baker bas .a
Sampson. The longest 14-23 record .llg1linst !canis
'homer drought of Junior's managed by Joe Tollft,
career was 10 I at -bats in iocluding a 5-7 ·llllll'k. duriqg
J 990 with Seattle, his sec- interleague play; 1ihe Reds
·end season in l!he big . . and ·Dodgers split a t.w0leagues. .
·
t , st
nth t ""--'-•
At&lt;royo allowed five runs game se .a mo
a 'Uu:au
and .nine ruts ·o ver five . American Ball Park. :..
innings with three strikeouts Torre and Baker were teamand thnee .walks.
mates very briefly with the
Penny allowed five runs, 1968 Atlanta 'Braves. Baker
nine hits and four walks in played his ftrst six big
six ·inniogs and struck out league games that season,
two.
and Torre was traded to St.
Penny was scheduled to Louis in March 1'969 for
pitch Sunday against t he Orlando Cepeda.

u-.

Website&amp;:
.-,ww.mydailytl'ibune.com
www.mydailysentinel.com
www.mydailyregister.com

(740) 446-2342 (740) 992-2156 (304) 675-1333

.ception~.

Thurtn3n

In One Week With Us·
REACH ·OVER 285,000 PROSPECTS
PLUS ·YOUR AD NOW ONLINE

M!IIJL!bmi 1
3BA. 1 balh. LA. FA. OR,
MJIISAl£
Ktt.. Full Bawment. 1.5
·
- S-·m
-·-·
.,_ · y S-tem
,_ · .-.. ~--..A..__...
Gallipolis. $112,000. 740- 1 - ~~- "~ ·~·~.
6&lt;1~
1BA, $2"1l0.00 7CO-M,5·
2138

13041£75·5332 weelllinds
740-591.{)265
. '
:b, 1ba.
Fumished.
InHa
Will
be--· toRem
""'·
·- •
6·1-1)8. 5475/monlh Plus
dopooi1304·773-9507

cr70IH657
------Ta!ll
Townhou&amp;e
At&gt;ortments. V&lt;lry St&gt;ar:i&lt;&gt;IO.
2 Bedrooms. CIA. 1 1/2
Bath. Mull Pool &amp; Baby
Pool. l'sllo, Start~.

~~o:-:~~~~
: ·. :r:ISHOP
CLASSIFIEDSI• :.;~~:::
• Rot9
•
.
(7&lt;0)367.Q507
~

•

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·

••"nil Idly, lily 20,21101
AllfYOOP

www:ft¥' .., ae ditael,c:om

The Daily Sentinel• Pllge 85

NEA Crossword Puzzle

BRIDGE
PhiHp
Alder

-

• ID
K J

n

1

•DDt••
11.F
'II

........

•K652
9Q104

4

1 .s..IJ

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"' 7 43

24tlen's

2 lis. Tyler
3Sub4 ~llilogod

Dealer: Soulh

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• .Ioiii

Pin

IMtSSJUitflli) Wlwll. .
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5

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=

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a

FIRE

1 ,,_

AWAY.
DEE-DEE !l

~s:r..: /~~

•'*'""'
~GJ!ionl; hrand/or
.a fUll time
l.io:t rsecl PradXal
.M I!IIDI

Nllnie

HOW MY MAW

must ·have wnaot ·West Vltginia license.
SendRSUmeSto:
.
n
1--n
n,
-r
I

1"/•1'

m

ZSJIV61rlllile
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tWV255SI

Orfu:
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FOLDS ·'EM 1!".

I i r~

kTHAT'S
NOT .. .

" '_::! • •" ::: :;.

C.\RrUHEP

iti

I

only once.
Hel1!, 'South ·~gns "" In foor '~~**·
_, guaoaos .woll to load a ·top.o~..,O!I\­
ing tean nine. H001 should South continue?
With 'this layout there ~ a risk that
declarer wlllcoe one ipade, twO hearts
and 8 dub. The key play OCCUIS at bia&lt;
one. Sinoe East is marked with the aoe
and jack of haarts, Sou11l must .play
dummy's queen. East wins with his aoe,.
but cannot return the sun wittlotf con-ceding a 1riclt. Daclarer wins East's diamond-queen shill in his hand Mill tile
ace, draws1wo rounds of 1rumps, than
diolodges 1IJe club aoa. This 8Siablishes
a ~ lb Sout!l's ·hearlloser.

~T'SNOT

Asst. for a new physKHn Olfe. li'N's

SE RVI CE

.. .

e•

IT
'WilEd b2 JIG
Unconditional ·IIUif·
,antea . •Local rafatencas. fur·
111stood. E - 1975.
Cali 24 HIS. (7-40) -

MimE

·o87o, ~ogeTS
~poafJng.

-

Rllclllle, Ohio

7~47-3115

Clift: 7411:416-5047
....U:
j1illl&amp;idhril. . ..coft"'

Owiw·a:

.........

Jonv.nlllller .•

11tE 80iWI LDSER
r

~

WEAAI&gt;~~Uol.~ ·

r---~ 'TOI:lfo,'l',:t&gt;.Rl&gt;l'"' 1~

~l J08, WllllEJlR;)JCf ~

Nola- H·-1ril6 dum~r¥'s heart

.,_,._..... 1'-1 WAAi-~,

l~~ ~~~E:.liE.'IH

10 at trick one, ha shoold ~1. 'Easl PIIIIS
1he heart jack, 1orning out Soulll'sl&lt;ing
Doclaror ta1o1o 'the 1wo top ttumps, then
l&lt;nocks out1he cliO&gt; aoa. H,..,..r, when
. West wins with his ace. he cashes the
spade queen and returns 1he heart
eight, giYing 1he delense one Sllllde. two
hearts and one club lor down one.

~mP"£!K.~

~l~L~!

by Luis Campos ·
Celetrty ~ ~' Ill! t'llllftd trom qooti11011S oy famous ~ PQS1111J -~
ED lellfJ mh cipher ores tor anr.ther

TodBys due: Aequa/sD

"GIISt. lUlL FDVSO GWCJ GOD VRHL

'
•1 LDll NWZS

..,

1' ASSIGoi&gt;IED
01/Eit ,,.., f'\OioiTH ...GO.
T~...T

,._.,

E

good Hme, you pn:::Jbabtv won't.
VIRGO (Aug . 23-Sepl. 22) - 1M* 1Wico
about speaking out •t someone in public ,
ewn If this parson dlnerles a tongue-

I

lashing. Too many peaple might only

MYTLJIN.l

IT'S
t«JW I KNOW WHY

Place Your

Adln

Daily

Regiteror
ltun For FREE In

And It

~~'l\e~~~~~_;:..·-~

HlT OOGS All£
SO~APJ&gt;Y

. .

BUT I STILL
WANNA T~W LP.

..,..--.,)
r~---.....:t

CORNER STONE
CONSTRUCTIOI!

.-

...
•'

,,_

l-·

AQUARIUS -(Jan.

Someone you tool

I

19)

8
.•

A•

your

ary

h•l.fb• V¥;1tgiw

f:•P

a ,_. •.
·

ARIES (Moret\ 21-Aprll18)- 'Obu """""'
won,
be in 1M mood to naw 'fOUl' Ideal
opln6onl c:hlillenged . , lhil time, 10

1 I" g _.

Of

wou n.m fn1g • anoopy J)efM)f'l, be
lrT'IAn and tum the eubftlOt 1011.11y on ntm

wt1UUid

c.a:MARCUM

"'TIIIJIIUS
.......

-

Baros • Patio's, l'01clx~

,...,. ..-

-

11-mllSS

IIO·Mo!IIIOl - .Tialoo .,.,.
_.. ""'' . . .. lr1

10 1101 I

.

lftttt

~popaiOI.

47239 Riebel RO&lt;Id, Long Bottom, OH

ntDdy

~~·I

f'ICM. OfWI~.ap ttnr efhii!IAI\i&amp;niAQII 'fOI.I
_.haw in ~ oommerollol delllngl. It

1

740-985-4141
Cell: 74()..416-1834

~5+ ,_., C'!J',.....

~ ... \Tif

~'TIT~

Fret Eolim • r ,

Advertise
in this space for
$64 ··
month
(

''

61G.Ai,

IOU- ·-

·

1=N·,
~

R £ II I R T

"Ifyou fiDd. pdl-..itla&lt;IIO

obstal:lcs.~die pofdliOI

lect=d, "it pobtlbly .

I

I'
UNSCWAM&amp;E lETT~S I
FOR ANSWU
,

you

doesn't lead-."
Comphlte tho cnuddo quoiN .
~~ lillinv In tho ·millllng devek&gt;p from stop No. 3 Wiow.

PRINT NUMBEaEo

lfTTERS IN SQUARES •

IIIIIIII

CW•Dood•-•hlda.-.Wir&amp;il
I

Desipaid, ''GivuGift!lfOOODTASIE."

ARLO&amp;JANIS

-

~t.ntklnl.l ~ 'to UM

I'. TREAE
I• .I. I. _

'*.m

one .
compatttor

:

SCVMUTS ANSWRS's •19 •01
Symbol - T~q~e- Adapt - A&amp;l-t - GOOD TAStE

might not: be responsive to your generous olterings. When an mdtvktual doMn't
want to be pltlc.led, tttere S A:l'thing any·

GARFIELD

:p .

I

. ...J.L..I._,,
' •...J.-.1.-J.

bo--

20-Feb.

"""""to

P1· I I I

1-"'T,:;-7Tl-. !"I'TI::-'aT'l-1 0

you will

you are about your ptanl, don't glw him
or her ammunition to llhoot you down .

'

.

WMI. mc:xe about YDUf nlhn '"""' • than
aelualty Oo anything llboltl them. Being
productNe is the only thing that wit1 make

........... Rogo- of how •nxlouo

-- ~

l
5

.... -..,... ......He ....-

stuff l'lappen.

• E C ·W I i

WUDEN

will reeent n and uaualfy end up feeling
wry nwch the .-.pergnat.
CAPRICORN (Doc, 22-Jon. 18) - This
could tie one Of thOM day&amp; When

. ,...

.,

SCORPIO {Qct. 24-NDV. 22) - H something isn't financially panning out, or
someone i8 indebted to you, don't put
any more good money after bed. Cut
ycur ~ ~ tJ'I b~dening them
furlhoi.
'
SAGITTARKJS (Nov. 23-Doc. 21 ) - HIs
never a good time 10 gel into' a finget'·
poWrting contest with anybody, and this t&amp;

HVMTRH

I I' 1· I' I I

hear your · tirade and thiM: you attl the
bad guy or gat.
UBRA(Sepl. 23-0ct. 23)- H you should
mllke • milt.Ma, t. the firwt one to tM'I1
up to ft and rectlly 1hlngl .. eerty u po&amp;alt»e. H,l be .wor. If you attempt to hide
your error OJ~ 1he blame on another.

Ht.Wi' LP. MAilTIN,

VS0 . "

&lt;&gt;w 1c fDrm fovr ,;mple ~ .

(May
2hlune
20) Assu.,.,tions usually prove to be both
counterproductive and unwise. so take
care that you don't presume something
important without having any knowtadQB
of its factualneaa.
CANCER (June 2, ..Juty 22) - Should
someone tell you something In confi-dence, make note of what vou just
teamed about the teller; ThiS person
can'1 keep a &amp;ea"et. Don't becOme a
future victim.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) - It mlgh1 be
smarter to giw your mgrets with mgard
to attending a social event If y.ou -know
from experience 1h81 you wMI teet uncomfortable. If ya'u beUc!Ne you won't have a

7

GNS TMCMPRHGS •I

R.arronge letters of 1he
0 lour
Xfl!rnbled word.! bo-

111),._,21, '-

GEMINI

~

EDOUI$H .H ,

by CLAY R. I'OUAN ·;....;.·- - - -

to mow forward .

---·
--

JODF G ·NWG

MO

~-= ~~~.;,&amp;t.~s· :
-----ldttod

in a TlltW direction, you might find~
reasons to make some major changes in
the way you select your friends. H's time

fOOP .QUESTIONS"

fOIJSA

PREVIOUS SOLUTION - 'Canada ~ a country wllose main elq)Orts are
·

In the year Bl188d, ·becauH of lttaetyle
~nges or past experier'lol!la taking yOu

DO '1'00 HAVE~

'

ilocl&lt;ey playe~&gt; and cold fronts.· · Piene E. Trudeau

.......17 ,,.

l',t..I'EI&lt;

.

tRES

G___

BIG NAtE

REACH 3 COUNTIES

mllgllzine

........

CELEBRITY CIPHER

Graa:Jb

Ol ll\85,-0l MUMBERS,
Ol COIIN~IE5 Ol STATES •.

4,_,_ .

lt-

·F WH M 0 Z S 0 G S A P l

.Astro-

~H

'Rcc

LD~

'

THE

14Va. .......

slam.
lliue, ~ iua riok 1hoi ~ wll b·
got1his ........ '- 11u1 n·1011 ~

~· ---..------

HOW MY MAW
COOKS IT !~" ...

10f-

-r-

·oow LONG 'FOl&lt;E tilE S'lOPS SAYIN'
~T'S NOT

-

30 DurDe
54 - - citizen
.31 Nul his
36locull37 Science .

.• Eur.llidlne 17 Uloe 1ihar

Vesternay I mentioned 1t1e Jacoby
Forcing Raile. Mer opanor bids one
tlean or one ·spade, ._,oor !lids two
no-1Tump 10 1111ow 01 1eas1 four-cam support and·game-lorcing Ylilueo or more.
Suppose, !hough. that you do not wn
to remember opener's mnge in
ttis systarn. Then use a '18Sp01 iSEI of
three no-1T~ as your foroing raiae. lA
four·spade response should be preempti...,, •llhooring a - hand wllll 'lols
•of spades.) In raply,
/DUI
of his stit wtlh no slam . - , m bids
·ony1hing else when thinking about a

;)
'P 1'"4.._
-'1• ••illlil? . 1 1
rot Wiley ~ is ~uuently

t 'Swlled

.w e

Sc:oocll

25---~
•*'"

• Thrcb

S78ouqnet

•

D I I I I49
:c
'26 I
W-'s
Fridp. .
income
SOIIIi I a
21Pulcs .. bar
Bern
52-lie•
2lliloo-

court

Etil
Pass
Pass

lnsle ad of two~
use three ft0:4rulnp

IT Ml'fNS TO If A
01110 SOJrf,

,..

W&lt;llt
Pus -s NT
Pus IPaas

t&amp;

..--

lptlll""

50umpow
6Enlnlll
7 Or8g :lnlo

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"":::~,

-_.
53--·
-

i .Neunalist

.A I 8 74
9 K 52
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--.... 11 :

22111ike ·lille u .......
Houdini
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.
23 S,Wijllulioo, " VI ' I' '
e.g.
45-

( DOWN

�.

·

••"nil Idly, lily 20,21101
AllfYOOP

www:ft¥' .., ae ditael,c:om

The Daily Sentinel• Pllge 85

NEA Crossword Puzzle

BRIDGE
PhiHp
Alder

-

• ID
K J

n

1

•DDt••
11.F
'II

........

•K652
9Q104

4

1 .s..IJ

4

-

1&lt;0· 8

• LO
9lJ6!1

-

• ·Q JJ082,
"' 7 43

24tlen's

2 lis. Tyler
3Sub4 ~llilogod

Dealer: Soulh

- ... ... ..
,
·-: :. ....-. ..... . .
...

\

~

-L •

~=~

• .Ioiii

Pin

IMtSSJUitflli) Wlwll. .
• .•

5

a

=

M

a

FIRE

1 ,,_

AWAY.
DEE-DEE !l

~s:r..: /~~

•'*'""'
~GJ!ionl; hrand/or
.a fUll time
l.io:t rsecl PradXal
.M I!IIDI

Nllnie

HOW MY MAW

must ·have wnaot ·West Vltginia license.
SendRSUmeSto:
.
n
1--n
n,
-r
I

1"/•1'

m

ZSJIV61rlllile
,_.;#
tWV255SI

Orfu:
~-...,-§

sa i

FOLDS ·'EM 1!".

I i r~

kTHAT'S
NOT .. .

" '_::! • •" ::: :;.

C.\RrUHEP

iti

I

only once.
Hel1!, 'South ·~gns "" In foor '~~**·
_, guaoaos .woll to load a ·top.o~..,O!I\­
ing tean nine. H001 should South continue?
With 'this layout there ~ a risk that
declarer wlllcoe one ipade, twO hearts
and 8 dub. The key play OCCUIS at bia&lt;
one. Sinoe East is marked with the aoe
and jack of haarts, Sou11l must .play
dummy's queen. East wins with his aoe,.
but cannot return the sun wittlotf con-ceding a 1riclt. Daclarer wins East's diamond-queen shill in his hand Mill tile
ace, draws1wo rounds of 1rumps, than
diolodges 1IJe club aoa. This 8Siablishes
a ~ lb Sout!l's ·hearlloser.

~T'SNOT

Asst. for a new physKHn Olfe. li'N's

SE RVI CE

.. .

e•

IT
'WilEd b2 JIG
Unconditional ·IIUif·
,antea . •Local rafatencas. fur·
111stood. E - 1975.
Cali 24 HIS. (7-40) -

MimE

·o87o, ~ogeTS
~poafJng.

-

Rllclllle, Ohio

7~47-3115

Clift: 7411:416-5047
....U:
j1illl&amp;idhril. . ..coft"'

Owiw·a:

.........

Jonv.nlllller .•

11tE 80iWI LDSER
r

~

WEAAI&gt;~~Uol.~ ·

r---~ 'TOI:lfo,'l',:t&gt;.Rl&gt;l'"' 1~

~l J08, WllllEJlR;)JCf ~

Nola- H·-1ril6 dum~r¥'s heart

.,_,._..... 1'-1 WAAi-~,

l~~ ~~~E:.liE.'IH

10 at trick one, ha shoold ~1. 'Easl PIIIIS
1he heart jack, 1orning out Soulll'sl&lt;ing
Doclaror ta1o1o 'the 1wo top ttumps, then
l&lt;nocks out1he cliO&gt; aoa. H,..,..r, when
. West wins with his ace. he cashes the
spade queen and returns 1he heart
eight, giYing 1he delense one Sllllde. two
hearts and one club lor down one.

~mP"£!K.~

~l~L~!

by Luis Campos ·
Celetrty ~ ~' Ill! t'llllftd trom qooti11011S oy famous ~ PQS1111J -~
ED lellfJ mh cipher ores tor anr.ther

TodBys due: Aequa/sD

"GIISt. lUlL FDVSO GWCJ GOD VRHL

'
•1 LDll NWZS

..,

1' ASSIGoi&gt;IED
01/Eit ,,.., f'\OioiTH ...GO.
T~...T

,._.,

E

good Hme, you pn:::Jbabtv won't.
VIRGO (Aug . 23-Sepl. 22) - 1M* 1Wico
about speaking out •t someone in public ,
ewn If this parson dlnerles a tongue-

I

lashing. Too many peaple might only

MYTLJIN.l

IT'S
t«JW I KNOW WHY

Place Your

Adln

Daily

Regiteror
ltun For FREE In

And It

~~'l\e~~~~~_;:..·-~

HlT OOGS All£
SO~APJ&gt;Y

. .

BUT I STILL
WANNA T~W LP.

..,..--.,)
r~---.....:t

CORNER STONE
CONSTRUCTIOI!

.-

...
•'

,,_

l-·

AQUARIUS -(Jan.

Someone you tool

I

19)

8
.•

A•

your

ary

h•l.fb• V¥;1tgiw

f:•P

a ,_. •.
·

ARIES (Moret\ 21-Aprll18)- 'Obu """""'
won,
be in 1M mood to naw 'fOUl' Ideal
opln6onl c:hlillenged . , lhil time, 10

1 I" g _.

Of

wou n.m fn1g • anoopy J)efM)f'l, be
lrT'IAn and tum the eubftlOt 1011.11y on ntm

wt1UUid

c.a:MARCUM

"'TIIIJIIUS
.......

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Baros • Patio's, l'01clx~

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IIO·Mo!IIIOl - .Tialoo .,.,.
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10 1101 I

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47239 Riebel RO&lt;Id, Long Bottom, OH

ntDdy

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f'ICM. OfWI~.ap ttnr efhii!IAI\i&amp;niAQII 'fOI.I
_.haw in ~ oommerollol delllngl. It

1

740-985-4141
Cell: 74()..416-1834

~5+ ,_., C'!J',.....

~ ... \Tif

~'TIT~

Fret Eolim • r ,

Advertise
in this space for
$64 ··
month
(

''

61G.Ai,

IOU- ·-

·

1=N·,
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R £ II I R T

"Ifyou fiDd. pdl-..itla&lt;IIO

obstal:lcs.~die pofdliOI

lect=d, "it pobtlbly .

I

I'
UNSCWAM&amp;E lETT~S I
FOR ANSWU
,

you

doesn't lead-."
Comphlte tho cnuddo quoiN .
~~ lillinv In tho ·millllng devek&gt;p from stop No. 3 Wiow.

PRINT NUMBEaEo

lfTTERS IN SQUARES •

IIIIIIII

CW•Dood•-•hlda.-.Wir&amp;il
I

Desipaid, ''GivuGift!lfOOODTASIE."

ARLO&amp;JANIS

-

~t.ntklnl.l ~ 'to UM

I'. TREAE
I• .I. I. _

'*.m

one .
compatttor

:

SCVMUTS ANSWRS's •19 •01
Symbol - T~q~e- Adapt - A&amp;l-t - GOOD TAStE

might not: be responsive to your generous olterings. When an mdtvktual doMn't
want to be pltlc.led, tttere S A:l'thing any·

GARFIELD

:p .

I

. ...J.L..I._,,
' •...J.-.1.-J.

bo--

20-Feb.

"""""to

P1· I I I

1-"'T,:;-7Tl-. !"I'TI::-'aT'l-1 0

you will

you are about your ptanl, don't glw him
or her ammunition to llhoot you down .

'

.

WMI. mc:xe about YDUf nlhn '"""' • than
aelualty Oo anything llboltl them. Being
productNe is the only thing that wit1 make

........... Rogo- of how •nxlouo

-- ~

l
5

.... -..,... ......He ....-

stuff l'lappen.

• E C ·W I i

WUDEN

will reeent n and uaualfy end up feeling
wry nwch the .-.pergnat.
CAPRICORN (Doc, 22-Jon. 18) - This
could tie one Of thOM day&amp; When

. ,...

.,

SCORPIO {Qct. 24-NDV. 22) - H something isn't financially panning out, or
someone i8 indebted to you, don't put
any more good money after bed. Cut
ycur ~ ~ tJ'I b~dening them
furlhoi.
'
SAGITTARKJS (Nov. 23-Doc. 21 ) - HIs
never a good time 10 gel into' a finget'·
poWrting contest with anybody, and this t&amp;

HVMTRH

I I' 1· I' I I

hear your · tirade and thiM: you attl the
bad guy or gat.
UBRA(Sepl. 23-0ct. 23)- H you should
mllke • milt.Ma, t. the firwt one to tM'I1
up to ft and rectlly 1hlngl .. eerty u po&amp;alt»e. H,l be .wor. If you attempt to hide
your error OJ~ 1he blame on another.

Ht.Wi' LP. MAilTIN,

VS0 . "

&lt;&gt;w 1c fDrm fovr ,;mple ~ .

(May
2hlune
20) Assu.,.,tions usually prove to be both
counterproductive and unwise. so take
care that you don't presume something
important without having any knowtadQB
of its factualneaa.
CANCER (June 2, ..Juty 22) - Should
someone tell you something In confi-dence, make note of what vou just
teamed about the teller; ThiS person
can'1 keep a &amp;ea"et. Don't becOme a
future victim.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) - It mlgh1 be
smarter to giw your mgrets with mgard
to attending a social event If y.ou -know
from experience 1h81 you wMI teet uncomfortable. If ya'u beUc!Ne you won't have a

7

GNS TMCMPRHGS •I

R.arronge letters of 1he
0 lour
Xfl!rnbled word.! bo-

111),._,21, '-

GEMINI

~

EDOUI$H .H ,

by CLAY R. I'OUAN ·;....;.·- - - -

to mow forward .

---·
--

JODF G ·NWG

MO

~-= ~~~.;,&amp;t.~s· :
-----ldttod

in a TlltW direction, you might find~
reasons to make some major changes in
the way you select your friends. H's time

fOOP .QUESTIONS"

fOIJSA

PREVIOUS SOLUTION - 'Canada ~ a country wllose main elq)Orts are
·

In the year Bl188d, ·becauH of lttaetyle
~nges or past experier'lol!la taking yOu

DO '1'00 HAVE~

'

ilocl&lt;ey playe~&gt; and cold fronts.· · Piene E. Trudeau

.......17 ,,.

l',t..I'EI&lt;

.

tRES

G___

BIG NAtE

REACH 3 COUNTIES

mllgllzine

........

CELEBRITY CIPHER

Graa:Jb

Ol ll\85,-0l MUMBERS,
Ol COIIN~IE5 Ol STATES •.

4,_,_ .

lt-

·F WH M 0 Z S 0 G S A P l

.Astro-

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THE

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slam.
lliue, ~ iua riok 1hoi ~ wll b·
got1his ........ '- 11u1 n·1011 ~

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HOW MY MAW
COOKS IT !~" ...

10f-

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·oow LONG 'FOl&lt;E tilE S'lOPS SAYIN'
~T'S NOT

-

30 DurDe
54 - - citizen
.31 Nul his
36locull37 Science .

.• Eur.llidlne 17 Uloe 1ihar

Vesternay I mentioned 1t1e Jacoby
Forcing Raile. Mer opanor bids one
tlean or one ·spade, ._,oor !lids two
no-1Tump 10 1111ow 01 1eas1 four-cam support and·game-lorcing Ylilueo or more.
Suppose, !hough. that you do not wn
to remember opener's mnge in
ttis systarn. Then use a '18Sp01 iSEI of
three no-1T~ as your foroing raiae. lA
four·spade response should be preempti...,, •llhooring a - hand wllll 'lols
•of spades.) In raply,
/DUI
of his stit wtlh no slam . - , m bids
·ony1hing else when thinking about a

;)
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-'1• ••illlil? . 1 1
rot Wiley ~ is ~uuently

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income
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Bern
52-lie•
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Pass

lnsle ad of two~
use three ft0:4rulnp

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01110 SOJrf,

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45-

( DOWN

�Tueeday, May zo, zoo8

. P • B6 • The Oilly Se11tiroel

James, Cavaliers
come up short'of title
.

Holzer Medical
Center honors
nurses,A7

.

BYT•WI• a

-'SSOCIATED PRESS

·I

- INDEPENDENCE
They lost their season opener on Halloween, and their
finale in hallowed swmundings.
In between, tbe Oeveland
Cavatim; endured contract
holdouts, overcame key
injUries and were transfonncd by an extreme roster
mat""ver general manager
Danny Ferry believed would
bring · superstar LeBron
~ames the necessmy help to
win it all.
However, the nubulence
proved to be. ~ much. . .
The Cavaliers bumpy nde
ended sbon of an NBA title.
"lbis is not a fun day,"
Ferry said Monday, less than
M iloJm; after the Cavaliers
lost Game 7 in their quarterfinals series against Boston.
~'It's .a tough ·end ,t o the sea-

better and find ways to
improve your team and your
roster. Those are the things
we' ll start to dig into in a
more objective way now that
the season's over."
AI the top oJi Ferry's ,todo list will be lhe futures of
guards Delopte West and
Daniel
Gibson,
both
restricted free agents.
The club's most reliable
outside shooting threat,
Gibson missed the final two
games of the Boston series
with a separated left shoulder. West, who came over
in the !!-player superswap
at the trading deadline, was
Cleveland's second-best
player in Game 7 against
1100."
the Celtic&amp;, scoring 15
One year after ma!cing the points with five assists. At
finals for the fim time, the
Cavaliers got through only
one round of this postseason. They ran into the
reVived Celtics, who won
just 24 games a season ago
but .acquired · stars Kevin
~ and Ray Allen in
trades last summer and are
eight more victories (rom a
l71!b cham,pionship.
James, who in his fifth
~ as a pro won· the
scoring title, a second AUStar MVP and raised .his
game to unimagined levels,
didn't speak with reporters
as the Cavaliers gathered for
the final time as a team
before parting ways for the

times, be showed potential
to be tbe ttaditional point
guard who could take some
pressure off lames.
Ferry praised boih players and seems content with
bis i:lub• s· cWTmt makeup,
although be's likely to soon
alter iL
Ferry bas shown he isn't
afraid to tweak things.
When the Cavs wem stumbiing along in February,
Ferry dealt half of his
.a ctive roster to get. West,
Szczerl&gt;iak, Ben Wallace
and Joe Smith, all of whom
gave Oeveland productive
minutes, just not enough of
them.
A quick glance at
Sunday's Game 7 final box
underscores the Cavs'
, twnultuous season. Of the
nine players who faced the
Celtic&amp;, only · three - '
James, Jones .and Zydrunas
llgauskas - played for
coach Mike Brown in ·t he
Oct. 31 opener against

Dallas.
D!&amp;uskas has never experieDccd one like il The 7foot-3 center, wbo hopes to
play for Lithuania in this
summer's Olympics, said it
was a season of endless
hurdles for lhe Cavs, beginning with a fall trip to
China, followed by contract
holdouts by Anderson
Varejao
and
Sasha
Pavlovic.
. All much as losing stings~
the 10-year veteran and
lone player left from a
Cleveland team that won
just 1"7 games five seasons
ago can handle the pain.
Tough as it was, Ibis season can help.
'
"That's the good thing
about being here now, if
you don't win a cbampionshiJ) .it's considered a
fail~m:, " · ·he said. "lhat's
how we look at it. Making Cleveland cavaliers fu!ward LeBron James reacts aftef
the playoffs or just winning being called for a foul during 1be fitst half of Game 7 of an
a series is not good enough NB~ · Eastem Conference semffiinal baskellla'll serieS
·against Ule Boston Celtics in 8ostoo on Sunday.
for us anymore." ·

,.,._

'.

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio
'ji l l ! '1~ • \ol. ,) - .:\o.:.!l..J.

'

. ·~ 8t.ts get fist piddn
teA lollely. See . . Bl

BY Bmt Sa rr
BITe-II.YSENinNELoou

c .. .r.c.M~t
1U Pine Sllwt I CO..H~

Jtl ... JliJ

7t0 ttl 0007

......

•

'.'

PARKERSBURG, W.Va. -The C8
begin !illJJiti"ng introductory letters in the next few weeks to those
involved in its comJI!nnity and wod:ei follow-up studies.
The panel was chGsea. to COQduct a study
· to determine if lhen: is a link between the
chemical C8 and disease in bmnans ~s
County residents wbo live « wOit « bave
lived and wlllted in 1he Thppen Pl:aiBO•Ilkr and Pomeroy w~ sysllmli 1ftR:
included iD the study.
.
.
The dwnir;tl was med in tbe manufac-

I

1-.IIJ

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........... d .

· 'I'

.

·Gf-'f''¥111

·~
A
ilnduilirlg
I

,

-.

4ldiclf

,I.Jite!U in tbe mid-Ohio Valley,
jnc!vdjoJdle .. . . . . County, W.Va. I) 1 II ·

Tbe study iJ ........... ... p tbc ldllo:matl ma claswction lawsuit filed by a-

datu.of \\bod Qwn!ly. W.Va., who a!lepl
thlt
)lOOblems were the n:sult Of C8 ·

J!e!h"

contamJ.nlliloo
The . S~ Panel rondncting die follow~ studies is independent of the eadier

r1

··~..s.r...u

• Blind Ohio deli

TODAY'S
NUMBER IS:

"

'\

1

.holls n:!liied tea &amp;as.
:s. ... AI
:;. "Science Carl1l "'08'
.9IWs flee eel• :aronal
· a IBBD!. See Pille AI
• Police: Drug ouenlose
·i lay kled co lege

.....

R~fiU&amp;t F~y Oryp11

I

'.

I

1•• J. REED

BfEEDeMYDAa.I'SENTlNELaJM

:~

,.

ture m'leflpa IDd - y Olber pmdnrts,lllll
- 4 :ted in die 1ocal. water supplies aod

SeePileM
.• ScllMl8m R=A
il&amp;L. .B ra:ai ..
d!Qsils .See , . A7
. • Ot esl:ors.le

R I1 del • CC:a•-111dal•

:

,..., m.Miitlt&amp;s

'"'1' * If S'l. .....
Clla1wi18Ky.

Tubing

I

Place

wbil:h......,.

;.... A3
;.• Xavier Whillow, 3

•O.tlli...s

Mft I OUft&amp;'lt INC.
YOIU" Ana-'s #I FIIIOr
Ollleriag o.kr! .

"..

nv••al aid the fire depalt.
· Racine Marshal ~&amp;
Jones :and Syracuse Chief of
. Police S~n Smi~
spoke to Racme Council
about a tentative plan I ternJI001IY fix to be put in
befOR an official meJge£_
Rd'S llfQdy provide.

,..

s.r..u
• LDc:al erwa.
s.ir...u

....a:r.

.Re med

QliDII1UI1ilies similar to the

plan could be 6nalimt This and write cJtattons in .dris renwive arrangement of
tentative plan would teSult Racine, in effect e:tpanding oommisSions was l~al and
in Smith commissioning the officers' juri&amp;ditUoo..
. be added be needed to cbeck
Jones and Racine officer
1ooes said tiOOu written in wilfl die village' s insurance
Kevin Dugan for service in Syracuse wquld stay in company. As Mayor, Hill is.
Syracuse and Jones com- SJiliOUse' s Mayors Court, the bead of t!le village' s
missiOning Smith for ser- rick""S wrilta1 in Racine police department just as .
vice in Racine. What this would . stay in Racine's Syracuse
Mayor
Eric
means is, Jones and Dugan Mayors Comt, no matter Omni)1gbam is bead of his
would be pcnniaed to make
wrmethe Iicht. village' s police depaltment.
mests and write citations in
Hill told Jones and Smilh
,
Jones also told Hill he d
Syracuse and Smith would be would cbcck wilb dJe vii..
- p ,,,.,
be pennitted to make arrests !age's sOlicitor to mate sure

OBrroARIES · ·Scieooe Panel will

:I.A.:JI.Ur.
. '•
• Forh Recon1

. F. .•

Village

Dkigtt
way to serve

ing legislative dJreat wbidl
could elimiMte mayor's
•oowt in ~ wilb ~s
dian I ,000 n:sidenrs, Racme
and SyJ:acusc an: &lt;XII1Sidcring
.a D1tigtl of police foroes.
. The proposal is tentarive 11
belt but as Racine Mayo"
SooaHillputit.l ltbisweek's

==========
I ....ftl~W"no,W

CPAP ·Hn hlnn
*'II

·
of Racine
o::cit
this
may 6e
:a bealer
bodl

RACINE - Wtlb a !loom-

.

Blways politically correct
when a&amp;lced about issues
fr:lated to Oevelarid' s roster,
tnade it clear be wants Ferry
to improve the Cavaliers now.
: "I think what we have is
, (
yery good, but we need to ·
continue to !j!'l better, we
know that," J,funes said. "If
that means some personnel
changes that need to happen,
then ' so be it. The teams
around us in the league are
l)Ontinuing to get better."
· I ames then rattled off a
roll call of teams, including
Orlando, the Los Angeles
. Lalcers, Detroit, Boston and
New Orleans, who have
improved over the past year.
Not surprisingly, four af
those teams are still alive in
the playoffs. .And it's not
shocking that all four have
more stars than Cleveland,
which still lacks a proven
offensive complement far
James. .
Although be bas tried, the
23-year-old can' t do it alone.
The Cavaliers are over the
salary cap, which will prohibit Feriy from being active .
during
free
agency.
However, Cleveland does
have nearly $30 miiiion in
expiring contracts- Wally
Szczerl&gt;iak's $13 million
and Damon Jones $4.5 mil~ ·
lion among them - to dan• . gle. The
. : club might ;elect to
-~.-""'&lt;{)uy out lbl!Id Eric .Snow's
• · .. · , $1" mi1l,ibn contriCfror next

\\\\\\ , Jll\tl;.uJ~ ,t·nt llu:l.t.·nlll

.!CH•X

would merge police forces

'

BY Bt

iMd W!d

\}\'\:.!I

C8 follow-up
studi~ to 'begin

summer.

Boston Garden.
Afterward, 1ames, who is

\\111'\l "l)\)

SPORTS
•.

PLAY COVERALL BINGO

CPAP
fal''
s.., 'lz

.

•

•

WIN UPTO $1,000 !!!

While a few of his teammates assessed Oeveland's
strange season for the
media, James remained on
the other side of the team's
~ce facility.
'He made ·his final statement Sunday.
James scored 45 points,
matching Boston's Paul
Pierce (41 points) in a bas. lcet-for-baslcet game of "H0-R-S-F' that rekindled 20year-old . memories of the
$Pring day when Larry Bird
~Dominique Wlllinsoneuppod .e ach other inside the

. Hospital
.
by
American ~ed Cross, AS

&lt;ipeiab praises :money
:nJiV. See . . . AI
: • ~ tJud( driver

:nged in deatl ot

=Pno aossi 1Q guard.

:s.r...u
••
•
-

w-&amp;\TIIElt
.

i.UI I

p d

.as

•-• ,

til daliDC whO
, .. . lnles,

~1befol.mar

it jar;, De q 'IY1! r
• ........ who died-- .

Racine discusses
banning vici~ dogs

lettiamo..hi;aara
~· ·Ill
.......

-.

t

BY 8ErH Sen x Mr
BflEAiENTeUVDAILYSENTINELCOM

RACINE - After a pit bull allegedly
auacW dogs -on Vme Street, then went after
Racine POOce Marshal Curtis Jones and had
to be shot recently, the village ma,t,:w con. _sider banning vicious dogs comp Ciy.
Jooes brought dJe idea to council after the
shooting of the pit bull. Jones said the pit
bull was running lose 011 Vme Stmet where
it auaclced a dog at aoother residence. Jones
restrained the dog on a cable and chain until
the dog warden could arrive but the pit bull
broke the table and jumped into another
fencea-in-yatd with dogs. }ones said lhe pit
bull then went after tlie dogs in ·the yard
;which scattemd, causing dJe pit bull to jump
two more fences until .Jones caught up to iL
Jones said the oog then started to come II
bim aggressively so be di&amp;cbat!ed
. . one Shot
into the animal but die dog "kq!t 011 going"
IICCOI'di.ng to Jones. Eventually the dog was
..

· - · · AJ

Bingo winner
.

..-.

D

"JOIII'IIIM

INDEX
.'

llCIIIOD.:

A110, the - Cavs have a
tint-round pick (No. 19
overall) and the two exceptions ($S.5 million midlevel
and $1.8 million biannual)
to improve their talent jiool.
Last year, Celtic&amp; GM .
Danny Ainge figlqed out a
~ to get Allen on draft day
ore shocking the hoops
world wben he lured Gamea
· away from MIDnesota.
Ferry may have a similar
blockbuster in mind. Over
the · next few weeks,
Cleveland's GM plans to
evaluate the Cavs from top
to bottom.
"We'll do a deep dive with
my Slaff, the coaching staff,
to fizure out bow we can get
better," he said. "That 's what
this is about now at this time
of year, finding ways to get

Sl!ciaoNs :- 16 P.MliiS
~nnie's
Mailbox
A7
,
f=alendars .
:: :11

Ul10'.....

DiueMcVey
M.A. · CCC..A

215:&amp; Sll6 ....
Pt. "
;, wv 155!1

aw-a:

AudicikJsiot

tha 'J' • •

Su e••A•

£7.tim

Slit
594-3571

I

I

'tJ
M• , I n rA
41
s c z n al!rtel

L*A

ATHENS

':

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...

0

•

Meigs BaDd salutes seniors, recognizes accomplishments
aulae I' s

W.ovies

~

(740) 446-7619
2'JS Wilt v

C!assifieds
Comics
Editorials

JIU7S.7tl6
Fu: 31U7S.7317

r:r

Weather

1*'" at a

We have a witallll1 L.ewia M. f'tlllin of
Clifton, W.Va., a &amp;Ubecriber to bolh The

Obituaries

Sports

a.... llo Jfllc:hlphoeo

Meigs band di,aor Toney Dinges&amp;, c:etdel', presents L.inds8y McKinney, with the Arion A~rd , ·trn~ top
symbol of mcogz ilion. Other recipieuts of irophies from the left -re JT ~urchett , outstanding mus1e1an;
Beoca Hanstine and C•w f'&amp;Uerson, flag captains;~Tyler Little, entertainer's award; Bradley ,Jones,
director's award; Seth Johnson, and Michael Ball, 110 percent awards; and JessiCa Sheets, flag captain.

B section
A8

CI__.GIIov.ae,Ptnnt ,, sea.

Daily Sentinel and The Point Pleasant
Re.;{slar, is the winner of the Bihgo game.
His prize is $500 since more than 30 number&amp; -re drawn before anyone had a
bingo. The number which made f'eters a
winner was 56, announced on May 19. The
game which tool! a COV8I1III to win began in

Maroh. Peklrs, 18ft, dilplaya hill winning
· card. He was joilllld lor the picture by David

•

•

. '

Hania, Sentinel adwMtiaing zepi eseiltative.

,_

..

wbo had been selected to play in band teamw&lt;llk is really impor,
HOEFLICHeloiY!lo\ll~COM
the Ohio University District 17 tant," said the director.
Following a tradition of an
honors band which is panicipaPOMEROY - Retleftions on tion by invitation only; and open microphone for graduates,
accomplishments of ~eigs praised the five eighth graders the senior band members remiMarauder band members :·over wbo qualified to came into the nisced about their years in the
the past four years bighligbted · high school band early.
band. They spoke of the good
the annual end-of-year banque,t
Dingess commended the band times, the lessons learned, things
held Monday nigbt
Meigs members for their hilrd wort: and never to be forgotten, and experiHidl School.
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