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                  <text>Page 86 ° The Daily Sentinel

cOiuMJlJA GAS OFOOIO, INC.
N011CE OF APPUCA110N FOR AUI1IORITY .
TO INCREASE RATES AND CBAIIGES FOR ITS GAS DIS11UBU110N SF.IlVJCF.: AND
FOR APPROVAL OF AN ALTERNA11VE FORM OF REGULATION
AND TO REVISE ITS DEPU:CIA1JON ACCRUAL RATES
AND CHANGE IN ACCOUN11NG MEJ1IODS ·
PUCO CASF.:·NOS. __,l-GA-AIR,-.ei'73-GA-ALT, -.,4-GA-AAM,AND-..?5-GAAAM

I

Meoday. May 26, 2008

www.mydailyseolinel..com

• 1r 211!11
Cum:ul
$)00
$&gt;.4616
$&gt;.2813
$&gt;.2513
$&gt;.19JJ

al Senille S*s Rai1es - Neu
LqeG
D=ripion
Cusuomec Olarge
.
First 2,000 Mcf Delivered """=Mandl
Next 13,000 Mcf Delivered l'tlr Monlb
Next 85..000 Mcf Delivered l'tlr Monlb
oVer 100.000 Mcf Delivered l'tlr Monlb

to R .C . Sc:ction 4909.19, Columbia Gas of Ohio, Inc. ("Columbia~) bereby gives IIOiioe .
that on MU'Ch 3. 2008. iu filed an application widl tbe Public Utilities Commission of Ohio
\(flmmissioafl) requeSting aulhority 10 .amend iu filed ,tariffs to iucrease die rates and charges for
1llllural JIU distribution services. Columbia bas also applied. under R.C . Cbapler 4929, for approval of
a altmlllbve form of regulation.

Poker nm to benefit

a..,.
$65000
$&gt;.4720
jl).2818

Sll.2511

SO.I9S7

Fanners donates
toMLEF, A3
'

Holzer Hospice, A2

$6SOOO
SO.oJ04
SO.oo6S
S00058
$110044

•

~uant

(.qeG1 alln "I• ••f Sa uille ~neutNNu~urallll~.,~:ld
change
Descriplion
"'
Ptopooed
Customec Olargc .
$6SO.OO
$65000
SODI04
S0.4 720
Hrs:t 2,000 Mcf Delivered l'tlr Monlb $1.4616
$1.2813
S0.2878
SO.oo6S
Next 13..000 Mcf Delivered l'tlr Montb
$&gt;.2513
S0.2571
S00058
Next 85..000 Mcf Oelivm:d l'tlr Montb
This notice de5cribes tbe substance of tbe Application. Any interested party seeking de-tailed Over 100..000 Mcf Delivered l'tlr Momb
$1.1913
Sll.1957
infomwioo witb respect to all affected rates. charges,-regulations and practices 111ay in-spect_a oopy
.
of lbe ApplicatiQD, including suJII)Orting schedules and prese~ and proposed rJtte sheets, by cilia" of Full........,dMIIIsl.aqeGr•t III~Scniceltailes-N4n 's-lilll
tbe following methods: by visiting lbe offices of tbe CommisSioo at 180 East Broad Street, lllh lloor, Desaiptioo
CuJrem
Puoposed .
Olangc
ColUillbwi, Ohio, 43215-3793; or by visiting lbe Commission's website at bllp:llwww.puoo.obio~v. OtStomcrOiarge
$&gt;00
$650.00
$65000
selecting DIS, inputting 08-0072 in tbe case loOOip box, and_se-lecting lbe date tbe ~ was FII'SI
2.000 McfDeliven!d l'tlr Montb
$&gt;.4616
S0.-47~
SODI04
ftled. Additionally, a copy of lhe Application and supportmg doc~ may be vtewed at lbe Next 13.,000McfOeliveredl'tlrMODih
$1.2813
S0.2878
$00065
bu&amp;incss office of Columbia a1 200 Civic Center Drive, Colum-bus, Oluo 43215, dunng Dllillllll Next 85..000 McfOelivered l'tlr Mood~
$&gt;.2513
S0.2571
S0.0058
&amp;usincss bours . A notice of inlelll to file Ibis rate increase appli-&lt;:ation and a ropy of tbc proposed Over 1001100 Mcf Delivered Per Mootb
$&gt;.1913
$0.1957
$00044
rates were mailed uo the mayors and legislative aulhorities of tbe communities localed within lbe
areas served by Columbia aud flied wilh lhe Commission on Febnwy I, 2008.
.._. Raroio
15 0oott ~oe DT p 11~ Sutille lbbs- NNuouo-b'w~rlilll
CuJrem
Puopooed
a..,.
Desaiplion
. 1be Application, which contains proposed revis_ions 10 Columbia's Tariff _for Gas Stirv -ice, affecls 0!5(omrr Olargc
$1.0 0
$15000
$150.00
rates and charges and cerutin uerms and conditiOns for natural gas service to all cus-tomers of FII'SI 25 Mcf Delivered Per Monlb
$1.0600
S0.9238
.(0.1362)
Columbin served within all or portions of the counties of Allen,_Asbland, Atbeils, Belmont, CmroR~ Next75 McfDelivered Per Mondl
$&gt;.9800
$0.8504
. ($&gt;.1296) .
Champaign, Clark. Columbiana, Coshocton, Crawford, Cuyahoga, Delaware, Erie, Fairfield,
Frank:Jin, Fulton, Gallia, Greene, Guernsey, Hancock, Haldin. Hanison, Hocking, Holmes, Huron. lr-lllf'a-llfC...a• i Fomonty Sa oal by Mlli'plly C..toC I 1· 'll Railes
·
.
Jackson. Jefferson, Knox, Lawrence, Licking. Logan. Lorain, Lucas, Madison. Maboning , Marion. Columbia bas proposed tbe transfer of customers aurendy sa-ved under its rate sdvO•_Ies
Medina, Meigs, M4lmoe. Morgan, Morrow. Muskingum, Noble. Ottawa. Petry, Pickaway, Ricbland, Murphy Gcoera1 Seuvicc ("MGS", and FuR Requiremmts Murphy Gmrnl Tu••Sf••- .
Ross, Sandusky, Scio10. Seneca, Stark, Tuscarawas, Union, Vmton, Warren, Wasbinguoo, Wayae, Service ("FRMGTSfl) to its SGS, SGTS and FRSGTS rate sdrdnk in ftlCOIIIIition ~ tbcir
Wood and Wyandol, Ohio. The application states thai tbe current rates and charges do not provide a service is DOW provided by Columbia and die fOIIDel' Murphy~ CUSII*1WS ~ be
just and JeaSOIIIble rate of return on Columbia's used and use-ful puopetty as ofDecembcr 3l, 2007, charged lbe applil:able rate dial provides far recovel)' of Columbia~ cost of pmviclin&amp; gas
tbe date ceruain in this case. The Application states thai Columbia requires tbc proposed revenue ~oe to these customers.
iDcrease to provide an OppOrtunity to earn a fair return on its asSets and to R&gt;COVer its costs of
Opcrariion.
.
Fsr.N" •
• fl. Pn p m
far Scltl ds Sa tal Ullller C.......
.
Columbia has ptopoH d die cstaNishment of a new rate for schools sa-ved tbrougbout dJ
Any person, furm, corporation, or .association may file, pursuant to R.C. Section 4909.19, an territory. These change&amp; will CIISUre die oonlimuatiiJD of ilen'ioe to !lCbools lllndcli OMiipl'able
objection 10 such proposed increased rates by alleging !bat such proposals are unjust and dis- to those in effect today under variousllOIIIracts.
criminatory or unreasonable. Recommendations tblit differ from lhe Application may be made by tbe
· Slaff of tbc Commissioll or by intervening parties ·and may be adopted by lbe Commission. 1be Cha riDLaaePa,_.Ch xe
.
. _
existing base rate for all Columbia comm!lllities was determined in a rate filing lbal became effective Columbia bas requested a change in its lariffs to provide for tbe n:plw ..utili of tbe billing~
November l, 1994.
a laue paymenu charge of 1.5% oo any •mpaid hahmoe on all ~ in c:ioess _$2~, to
any unpaid balance al lhe time of issMJnoe of a subsoqumt bill. This provtSlOil lll not
In its Application Columbia is also seeting authority to implement an alternative regula-tioo plan applicable to unpaid balances emting prior to lbe effective dale of lhe ~ in ~ ~ ~
for its gas distribution service. This alternative regulatioo plan consists of two separate rate n:covcty unpaid balances of cuSiomml carolled in paymmt plans pursuant to die Ohio Administrative
mechanisms. lbe first rate reoovel)' IDellbanism will provide Columbia widl tbe abiliuy 10 traCk and Code.
n:cover lbe COSIS of implementing an J.nfmstructure Replacemenu Progtam ("Rider qtl"'). 1be second
rate recovery mecb..Usm will provide Columbia witb tbc ability to reoover lhe costs of implementing c.- Rer-ipU•1U
.
.
..
.
. .
.
a Demand Side Management program ("Rider DSM"). .
Columbia is proposing a change in its Gross Receipts fu Rider ("GRI"'). Oureutly gross
receipts iaxcs are reoovered lbrougb base rates and tbe .lqlpl.icalioo of !be GIIT to gas ~
Ddl"ery Charcc
. .
.
.
.
.
charges. Columbia bas proposed tbe removal of all gross receipts laxc:o from base '*:" wilh .
Columbia is proposing a chang~ in its current rate design for customers served under
Small tbe rider to .be applied to all charges billed by Columbia under all rate sclwluJe'i wilb lbe
General Service ("SGSfl), Small General Transportation Service ("SGTSfl) and ryill Re-qwrernents exception of charges billed on behalf of Columbia's Cu~ CHOICESM Progtam
Small General Transportation .Service ("FRSGTSfl) rate schedules under wbicb most residential providers that may be subject to sales tax charges and charges to customers exempt from
customers are served. These changes provide for the replacement, over a two-year period, of the payment of gross reoeipiS tnes.
·
current Customer Charge and volumetric rate wilh a fixed Monthly Delivery Charge. This change in
rate structure will provide for lhe recovery of no additional revenues, and il will reduce bills during ........ CJf Pt......... Ou g ill Rata
'
.
lhe winter monlhs and will increase bills during lbe summer monlhs, witb no change in the annual The !able below shows tbe proposed percent of change in an customer' s bill for each rate
., bill. Following is a comparison of current and proposed delivery raues for die aforementioned rate scbedule and revenue class based on die average rnonlhly consumption of each revenue class.
Schedules:
·
Total bills for customers d!at purcbase gas dim:tly from Columbia or its CHOKE Program
were calculated througb die use of lbc aYCngC cooSlllliJl4:ion per ()USIOmCI' pel' mooth aad '
Small Geaeral Scrviee Rates- November 2808
Columbia's total expected gas ()()SIS in effect at .lbe time Columbia flied its Noboe of Intent.
Description
Current
cbinge
Proposed
Total bills for cuslolnCR served under Columbia's lraditional tr.ansportatioo rate' !iCIIedules
($6.50)
$0.00
Cusuomer Charge
. $6.50
were calculaled based oo the assumption tbe gas cost rate in effect is Columbia's &lt;DD!"""ity
Monthly Delivery .Charge
$0.00
$13.62
$13.62
expected gas .cost rate in effect at lbc time of lbc filing of tbe Notioe of Intent.
All Gas Consumed Per Mcf Delivered
$1 3669
$0.9952
($03717)

sooo

sn:oo«

.

•

•
-, 11 ll"l~•\ 11 J

t--' 11

.•

• Federer advances

Description
Monthly Oelivcty Charge
'
All Gas Consumed Per Mcf Delivered

Current
$l3 .62 .
$0.9952

Proposed
$20.75
$00000

Change
$7.13
($0.9952)

in French Open.
StiePageBI

BY BIUN J. R&amp;D

TUPPERS PLAINS -

Upcoming proposed legislation could assist the
Easlern

Local · Scbool
District 'Yilh adding classroom ~ 10 ill&gt; 10 year' old elementary school
building. .
Rick
Superintendent

s-ue

al1'ranspor1ation .Scrviee Rates- November 28111
Description
Current
Proposed
Customer Charge
$6.50
.00
Administrative Charge
$6.00
$0.00
Monthly Delivcty Charge
$000'
$13.62
All Gas Consumed Per Mcf Delivered
$1.3669
$0.9952

so

S111a11 Gmeral1'ranspor1ation Scrviee Rates - November 100'
Description
·
Curren!
Proposed
Monthly Delivery Clw:ge
All Gas Consumed Per Mcf Delivered

$13.62
$0.9952

$~.75

$0.0000

Change
($6.50)
($6.00)
$13.62 .
($03717)
. Change
$7.13
(Sil.9952)

Fall RequiJemeQts Small Geae.u al 'frusportatioa Serriae llates -November lOOll
Description
Current
Proposed
Change
Customer Charge
$6.50
$0.00
($6.50)
Monlhly Delivel)' Charge
$0.00
$13.62
$13.62
AU Gas Consumed Per Mcf Delivered ·. $1.3669
$0.9952
($03717)
Full Requitiiiitiits Small Gen. 'l'rUsportatioa Scrviee Rates- November 2009
Description
Current
Proposed
Change
Monthly Delivcty Charge
$13.62
$20.75
$7.13
All Gas Consumed Per Mcf Delivered
$0.9952
$0.0000
($0.9952).
.
.
Customer Charges
Calumbia is proposing an increase in tbe Customer Charge for customers served under General
:Service ("GS"), General Transportation Service ("GTS") and Full Requirements General
:Jransportation Service ("FRGTS") rale schedules. The purpose pf this change is lo provide for
recovery or a greater portion of Columbia's costs tbat do not vary wilh customer usage. This change
wiU provide for the recovery of no additional revenues, and it will reduce bills during the winter
moolhs and will increase bills during the summer monlhs, witb no change in the annual bill.
:. Columbia's is proposing lhe replacement of its minimum bill provision for customers serVed under
:its Large General Service ("LGS"), Large General Transportation Service ("LGTS") 111d Full
:Requirements Large General Transportation Service.("FRLGTS"l with a Customer Charge to provide
for the reoovcty of fixed costs that do not vary widl customer usage. ·

4.6%
6.3%
NlA
NIA

1.9%
3.7%
0.3%
(0.1%)

NIA
Full Rcquin:menus Geocra1 Traosport.ation Service
5.2%
Large General Setvice- Saies
NIA
Large General Transportation Service
NIA
Full Requirementsl»geGenerlll Transportation ServiceNIA

0.4% .
3.9%

• MwpbyGaBSales
14.1%
Full Requirements Murphy Transpoltation Servicc
13.8%
Full Requiroments Cooperative Transportation Sa-vice NlA

11.6%

I D%

1.4%
411%
12.4%

30.8%

Description
.
CustomcrCbarge
.
Firsu25 Mcf Delivered Per Month
Next75McfDeliveredPerMonth
•Over25McfDeliveredPerMonlh

' '

Cwrent
$16.50
$1.3007 .
$1.2784
$1.2784

Proposed

$2625
$1.9915
$1.4136
$1.1374

Change
$9.75
$0.6308
$0.1362
($0.1410)

Paxe A5

INSIDE

• Top readers.
'See . . . A3 .
Social Security
questions and answeiS.
0

SeePageAl
o Hospitalist joiAS stat!

of O'Bieness Memorial
HospitaL See hie Al
o .law You Can Use:
Residency requirements
for Ohio guardians.
SeePageA3

WEATIIER

Clerk Treasurer Dave
Spenoec infonned ·council
of the completion of the
~licati'ons at the most
· recent meeting of Racine
V'tUage CounciL . Spencer
also reported that Saleh EIDabaja
of the Ohio
Department
of
Transportation bas showed
an ' interest in the village's
sidewalk replacement prowhich has been in
lim1bo for several months at
OOOT.
"For the first time I'm
encouraged," Spencer said
of !he project which fillls
under funding for ODOT's
Safe Routes to Schools.
Mayor J. Scott Hiil
reported the village has an
estimate on replacing all·
non-PVC waterlines in two
phases for a projllct which
will total $421,500 for
·phase one and $l8.5,500 for
phase two. Tbe village
gathered the ·estimate to
apply for grants which
could finance the project
which will consist of eightinch C-900
and other
connections for ·service
lines. Line replacement is
proposed on sections of
V.ine Street, Broadway,
Fifth and Sixth Streets,
Main Street Again, the project is dependent on available grants to finance it
with the estimaJc being the
· start of that prooess.
Resident Jay Proffitt also
informed COuncil he'd bad
inquiries about renting two
of his lots . to construction
companies related to the
industry moving into tbe
area. Council said tbey didn' t have a problem with
constructiou trailers being
placed on tbe lots as long as
tbcy complied with village
ordinances relating 10

pipe

•

INDEX
Z SECllONS- l2

PAGES

Annie's Mailbox
Calendars

Classifieds

A3
.A3 .

B3-4

Comics
Editorials /
Movies
''

Obituaries

As
B Section

Sports

A2

Weather

'11

© aooB 0111o v.U., hl!liohiJoi .OI.

,

.4

e1 t

•

~:ance and the flood
p
The klls are behind
tbc post off'~ee aod ·across
from

Krider '·s

Kountry

Kitobeo Restaurant.
Racine Police Marshal
Curtis Jones presented tile
ope01ting and procedures
manual for the police
departlnent. Council is to
review it for any changes.

'Inn -lilcl

L

,..._
J

DeW .

oo

Within die Rider IRP, Columbia proposes to assume all financ-ial responsibiliuy for !lie future'
maintenance, tq!air and replacement of bazardous customer-owned service Jines and prone to
failure risen. Columbia also p10poses ·to implement the Accelerated Mains Rcplw:emmt
Program ("AMRP"), which ooosists of lbe replacement of approximately 3,770 miles of ba'e
steel .pipe, 280 miles pf casl iron pipe and an estimated 360,000 metall.ic service lines. Tbe
AMRP will ·produde substantial benefits dlrougb tbc enbanoement qf pipeline safdy and
reliabil-ity by llddressif1g the .rcplal=lent of an 118ing distribution infmstructure. The AMRP is
also in,tended to foster eoonoinic development in Ohio by re-enginecring those affected gas
distribution systems to malcb the current lind future needs of lhe enviroomeot and lbe
customc'l'll ~ serve.

,_

nae

pumps for a . total .11"\lject
OOSI of $1.8,000 Wilb
vill.age match.

and replacement of customcr~ service Jines !hat have been determined by Columbia to
present an existing or probable~ 10 pmons and ptoperty; (2) ~orderly and systemabc
replacement of, over a period of approXIlllately tbrce years, ccrtam nsers,jdentif:ted by tbe
Com-missioo's Slaff as prooc to faii!U'!:if not ptopetly assembled and installed; (3) · ·
Cobunbia 's ·re-placement of all cast iron and bare steel pipe in its distribution system over a

p

hold" for ftOOVatioos
additional cori&amp;ttuction at
tbe Eastern Elementaly
Sd!ool, aft.e2- a Jll!lC"ting wilb
tbe clirectlx of the Ohio
School
Facilities
Commi55ion,
Michael
Shoemaker, last montb..
Sboemaker also I1lllt with
Southern
Local
Superinteodent Tony Deem

RACINE - The V'dlage
of RaCine bas turned in
two
project1l
for
Community Development
Btock Grants to finance a
new fue truck while the
other affects the cleaning ·
of two water wells.
The sumdaro fife truck
oosts a total of $54,444 with
the village m.atch beiag
$29,444 paid from the
Rllcine F'ure Department.
The other project is the
c.-leaning of w.arer :Wflls Q!le

: • Julia S. Caqlbell, 99
•• Julie E. C8qlbell, 60
• Frank Jllmes lrwil, 00
o Ruby Narm, 76
• o Patrid( 'Voo' Taylor, 47

Rida-IRP
Rider JRP will provide for lbc reoovery of costs inclll1'ed in: (I) tbc fuuure maiiitenance, repair

'

mand
"oo

BY BEnt SeiGEIR'

NIA
(0.6%)

Rider DSM, as adjusted each year, will become eff~tive by May I following tbe Febru-ary
·filing of an application subject to Commission approval . Issues regardiqg lbe allocation of
OSM costs and applicability of tbe Rider DSM to customer classes and/or rate schedules will
be determined prior to and described wilhin the July I, 2008 applicatioo . .

rooms.
Edwards
said to evaluate the district's prechanges in the woO;;s could sent and future needs.
increase
die state's ))011tion
The building is also in
the same day. (See related
10
93
peroent.
need of renovations due to
stoly, page 1.)
board
bas
identified
a
some settling, Edwards
EdWlllds said the le;gislaneed
for
additional
classsaid, and ti.gbting, fite and
IDle is e:q,erud ro .ronsider
new
legidaJ:ion whH:b room space in the primary .electrical system upgrades.
would increase tbe !i.Ute'5 wing of lhe building, due to
"We are waiting on the
pol1ioo of new OOIISinldion an inomase in open enroU- eu:trome of legislation that
rosts for local scboo1 dis- ment and ,growtb within l!be might assist the district With
tricts. Under the owrent district. The process of funding," Edwards said
fumling formula, the state planning building eXcpan- Friday. "We are closely
would provide 80 pmJeD1 of sion began late last year,
PI _ _ , . I w,AS
the funding for ·new class- wben the OSFC was $ked

BSEI!GIENf•MVDAA.YSemNELCOM

3.3%

Columbia is prowsing the establishment of a Cus~ Charge for ~ served un-der its Fui!
Requirements COoperative Transportation Service ("FRcrSfl) rate schedule to re-cover fixed cosus EffectlliC November 30 ·of each year, ColUIIIbi&amp; will file a prc-fililw ootioe OOI!Tllininl es·that do vary witb ·customer usage, Following is a comparison of cumnt and prOjiQied delivery rates timated Rider lRP schedules for die Rider lRP to become effective lbc follow~ May. The
:Cor tbe aforementioned rate schedules. All propoted rate&amp; have been ad-justed to include gross esti-DIIIfed schedules will contain a combiilatioo of actual and projected data !biougb .
:r-IP'II taxes.
December 31 of thai year. By the followq Febnwy 28 Columbia will file 111 updated
•
app~ with schedules supponins lbc Propoeecl · Rider lRP hued on actual 00115 :
:C fll al Service s.lel Rates - No; ember l80I
accumulated dlrougb Deeembcr 31 of lbe preceding year. This proposed rider would apply to .
Description
Cwrenl
Proposed
Change
1bc Sinan Genm1 Service (SGS, SGTS and FRSGTS), Geoeral Service (GS, GTS and
/
$16.50
Customer Charge '
$2625
$9.75
FRGTS) and Murphy Gas (MGS and FRMGTS) rate schedules. •
'
First 25 Mcf Delivered per Monlh
$1.3007
$1.9915
$0.6308
Next 75 Mer Delivered Per Monlh $1.2784
$1.4136
$0.1362
; ~~M
,
()ver 25 Mcf Delivered Per Monlh $1.2784
$1:1374
($0.1410)
Columbia will file an application, cooperatively developed by Columbia, !he Oftiee of tbe :
Ohio Co;mJIIICI'S' Counsel, Commission Slaff and olher interested stakeholders, by July I, .
.Gmenul Traupnrtadoa Service Rates- November 20011
2008, for appri&gt;val of a comprehensive energy efficiency program f9r all residential and :
Description
Curren;
Proposed
Change
C0111111el'Cial customers. These programs will enable customers 10 reduce bills ~ urious ·
Customer Charge
$16.50
$2625
$9.75
conservation progr1rns. Columbia proposes to spend up to an additional $9.3 millioa per yc;ar :
Administrative Charge
$6,0Q
$0,00
($600)
oo such energy efficteocy programs. Columbia would _inilililly increase dollars &amp;~ oo energy .
$1.3607
$1.9915
$0.6308 .
·Firsu25 McfDelivered Per Month
efficiency programs from the currenulevel of $5.5 million per year to $12 .8 millton m 2009.
Ncxt75 McfDelivered Per Moolh $12784
$1.4136
$0.1362
Program fundin&amp; may be increased-·by up tl? an additional $1 million per year in 2010 and ·
Over 25 Mcf Delivered Per Month $12784
Sl .1374
($0.1410)
20 II if energy efficieocy targets are ~t.

:hll Req~lti Geae.ual Tu-ansporfatioa Service Rates- Novtmber 2008

OBITUARIFS

(1.9%)

period of twenty-five yca-~; (4) Columbia's replacement of oompany-owned and customerowned metallic ser\lice lines identified by Columbia during the replacement of all caSI iron
and bare sleel pipe; and, (5) tbe installatioo of Automatic Meier Reading Devices on all meteR
located inside residenoes and small oommcrcial facilities, as well as on inaccessible outside
meters, seiVed by Columbia, which will provide actual meter readings each rnoatb.

\\\,\\111\d.ld\-.entint·l.t•orn

projects

NIA

NIA
NIA
NIA
NIA

2lH)~

forCDBG

2.9%
lSD%

(0.2W&gt;)
3.1%
12.4'1&gt;
. 0.9% '

2-

Racine
applies

-aDd three, al011g With
Industrial Clus
5.2%
1.6%
NIA
(2.1 %)
NIA
l.S%

Edwards said plans

BREID•IIYilAILit'SEHnNEL&lt;XIM

Raue Schedule
Class
Small General Sa-vicc
Small General Transportation Service
SmaliGerlenL Schools Transportation Sa-vicc
Full Requirements Small Gen. Transportation Sa-vice
General ~ice
General 5ervice Schools • Sales
Generall'ranspollation Service . .
General Scbooli Traosport.ation Service

\1\'

Upcoming Legislation could ilicrease state share

&lt;'!

S..U G flltlal Scniee Rat.!s- Novanber ilo89

ll J'-ll\'l

.SPORTS

.lbla

'ts

~ 1 :-;

Middleport • Pometoy, Ohio

.

'

AS

· ·~ .l'lc
· lillttCII(pllcrtoa

Tt:aditionally a Wl8attl is placed in illile Ohio River during the Memorial Day observance in memory of those lost at sea
during war times. Here John Weeks, left, arid Lennie JeWell, toss the wreath on the water.

Memorial Day observance · .
features parade, patriotic tributes
BY Ctwlt.ENE ltoerucH
HOEFLICHOMYOAILYSENTINELCOM

POMEROY - "Whether
a war is popular or llllpopular, the sacrifice is the same
for the more than one million men and women who
have died in ·t he serYice of
this nation in wars and .conflicts since 1775," said Tom
Anderson,
speaker
at
Memorial Day services in
Pomeroy Monday.
Andersml, commande~ of
Drew Webster Post 39,
called for "respect of heroism" and asked tbat "no one
dishonor a sacrifice by
belittling the cause." He
spoke of the need for
Americans to · remember
that freedom isn't free and
that many have its high
price with their li v.es.
"Let us ·n ever lose focus
of what Memorial Day
J!V'&lt;Ins . lt is. not about picnics or auiO races. It is a day
to remember our fallen

Spc. Brandon Williams of Pomeroy, grand!;on of Legionnaire Mick Williams, joined the
Drew Webster Post 39 'honor guard leading the annual Memorial Day parade through
downtown Pomeroy. Spc. Williams who has been in service for four years, w1ll be sh1pp1ng
out to Iraq in July.

"lEFT- •llill.
·S outhertt exploring building.addition
M

AS

'

BY BEnt SERGENT

stllte money to either build a
new addition or renovate
tbc old high school. With
RACINE~ The Soutbem these two options in mind,
Local School Board a1 a the stllte paid for SEM
recent meeting approved Architects to develop_ two
expJoring a plan to possibly plans, one for the addiuon,
add a large addition onto one for the renovation to
Southern Elemeotiuy School , determine whi_ch option
to.~ it a K-12 building
would be fmanctally vr.able.
· SoUthern Local Schools . To renovate ~outhern
Superintendent Tony Deem High School, whtch was
stressed tbc proposal is in built in 1961 , the cost would
Its ·infant stllges but be $8.4 million · with t\le
Southern has come to the state kicking in only $2 ffilltop of the list to receive lion, leaving the public to
BSERGENT•MYDALYSENTJNELOOM

.,.~

•

finance the rematDID!l $6
million . The cost of addmg a.
52,000 square-foot addition
onto Southern Elementary
School to house students in
grades K-12 would cost $9.4
lTIIllion wtth the state kickmg m $7 mlllion and a local
share of $2.3 m1lhon. ~
current . htgb school ' ~
56,000 square feet.
.
Deem satd he along With
the board were " all about
renovau~g unul we saw th:,
$6 mrllron local share:
Deem went 011 to explarn

after bean_o g about a $9 mii lion addmon wtth the state
kicking in $7 million that he
and the board felt lhey owed
it to the people to explore
that opuon a s weiias hear
from that same public a bout
wbal tbey want to see.
"The ultimate test is if w~
have to go to a bond tssue ,
Deem explained. adding at
this early stage he wa sn' t
exactl y s ure how or even if
the fmancin g of the local

'I • n - Sc tits w. AS

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Page A:!

COMM

The Daily Sentinel

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BY mE BEND

The Daily Sentinel

Turday, May Z7. 2001

Top~ders

USDAandSBA
lender seminar··
MAIUEITA The ThuJ'sday, Juae 5. 1008 'wilb
Ullilal s.rs ~t ~egisuation lqinniDg :at
vi A§iadh""' (USDA) Mil 8:30 :a.m. ml the ...,..ij'1ll
be lmMiDg an infapnarinnal startiBg at 9:00 :a.m. .
lhe
Rw:al Dew:l••••-t· will
~~..::;;:; ~~ provide a bttef ova-view Uf
_
DUlOHH!Ca~
.&amp;IN
some of the pmgt&lt;~~m
Farm~:£
Pro:gt2UIS USDA and SBA have to
Qua-w• ..t Loan Programs, affer, :as well :as *"'! how
admini..... · by Rur.al dle~_&lt;Cllllpro•;an
Devdopmcot.
·
eoono~ . "'!muJus ID lbe
'lblft will also be :a Kp- &gt;COIDlDllD1l!es loall ~alden ·
rnentmve from Small · serve. The ~s will be
Business Adminiwation on demonSlr.atm.g bow
(SBA) to OOVCl' dlcir pm- Federal guar.anteed loans
·g&amp;ms and AftPnda Hoyt are a good deal fur bot!:t
from Ohio T«asurer oommmiities and lbe
Ridwd Coldray's Office lenders ~ U$C diem.
will
speat
on
lhe
The ~cati'!nal meeti~
GrowNOW interest rare · winch ts :av.illable at 1:fo
Rduclion program fur busi- oost is o pen m local reguoess loans (ruimedy Linked lated l~ders. To mJih; il
Deposit).
. re.s ervauon or to moctve
Tile Q!!"eling will be held additioll_!ll infunmatiion., calil
a 1he Voioovicb Center, the M'llllelb ARoa Oftioe at
Buildiog 20, Room 131, 740-373-1113, ext. 4 by
1he Ridges, in Athens on June 2.

This wish is an imposition

SdRl!T 'p1halo

Students Wlito particiPate irn fue Acoeleratetil &amp;atiler program at lbe Meigs Mitiltille scmool eam ~oims tor each !book
read. These three stllltilents read the most 1in their~
tive &lt;Qrades, Caltilp ~icmotsom, l melmediate .Aooeleratetil
~ealiler coordinator, '1Bpll1lils. Tille sltildents along 'Witll fi;le
:pOllilts iftley earned ·were Belila Mlllsser, third gtalile, 158
:poims, and Haley W.ilsom, fol!lrtfn &lt;gtalile and over.ill top
fOOiileT, 257 points. The other top realiler, 1001 :pictured, 'was
·GrvHie Hill, Fiifth Gtalile, 245 points.

•

Employee~ivity

i~

~n

f
Hospttah st JOIDS SIAU.l. 0
Q'BI
M
rial
H
.
·
tal
.
.eness emo . . OSpl
•

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Law You Can Use

~-~a

Residency requirements
for Ohio guardians
_,ill/•r
-- pw ,.,..,

Poker run to benefit Holzer Hosptce ~ u~oo. ~Jilll~~
GAlLIPOLIS - Holzer
Medical Center's Employee
Activity Association will
host its secoml annual poker
Jun to benefit Holzer

Hospice.
· · It will

be beld on
· Satmday, J.uly 1'9, and
·everyone is invited to par-

ticipate. Registration will be
held at Paul' 1&gt; Trucli
Accessories and Discount
Glass located .at 1523 Stare
Route 7 NOIIth, Gallipolis,
beside the Kanauga :Drill'e- .
in, beginnin,g at U a.m.
with dte 'last bike in at 5
p .m. The entry fee i s $l2

per person which includes a
meal with bevernge,
Prize money will be
awarded ro tbe first four
~- There will be a·
bike show with cmphies
awanded to the first five
places, 50/5'0 jackpot, door
prizes and Chinese auellion.

. . added 1D the medical stailf at
Holz.er Hospioe · serves O'Bieae!i~
Memorial
patients with a life-limilil1g ~
illness regaFdless of ability ' Di Umlauf is a hospitalist
to pay in Ga!lia, Jarbon, • ~a mat role in impleMeigs and 'SIIImllllltia! · mmting O'Bloness' new
rounlies.
Hospital
Medicine
For mono&lt; infarrrtalioll.. ~ He is also .an
rega-rding the poW- 11111, ' intmial medicine specialist
caU 74().446.1445.
• .mo provides qwrlity medical care to indiv:idwds wbo
hospitalized. He cares
fur impatient$ wlm do not
.h ave a pm;ona1 physici1111 or
whose physicians do not
.tion in your parents' bouse- . admit inpalients.
.
hold changes, be sure m
lin oooper.alion with
.contact Social Sequrity, •I '« patients'
physicians,
:more informatiOn., visit Umbu( monitors patients'
Umlauf received bis mildwww.socialsecmity.gov or are 1brougboot dJcir hospi- icaJ degree fmm dte Ohio
call us toll-free at l..,SOO. 1al stay. Upon discharge, Univ.ersity College of
772-1213 (1'IY 1-l!00-323- infunnatioo ..about patients Osteopathic Medicine ill
077.8). .
is provided to their physi- . Athens . He practiced primaciao&amp;. Umlauf will help ry care medicine .at RiverQueslioo: I'm 43 Y~ palieDts obtain a primary side Medical Inc. in
·old, unemployed and dis- ~ pbysician ifdley do not Steubenville priar ro oomabled. I'd like ID .apply fur 'have a personal physician.
ing to O'Bleness.
Security · - - - - - - - ' - - - - - - - - - - - - Supplemental
Income (SSI}. What documents or other .dUngs do I

·-=

Social Security.questions and answers

will receive a monthly ben- cases a young worker
.efit amount based on your oouid qualify 'for .d isability
own individual eam.illgs: lbeoefit~ with olily I .a nd a
there is no ··mama$e
alf years of work. To
penalty." In fact, it's qmte k:am lhow many credits
1Jhe opposite, because if one you•n need to qualli'y for
. Question: · 1 .applied for member of .a couple earns disability benefits, visit
:mY '~aby's Social Security lower w~ «didn't earn · www ..socialsecurity,go:vJdi
number ·while in the bospi- enough Social Security bpl.an!dl;Juali~3.h~ .. For
tal. [fs illccD ·seweml weeks credits itO .lbc insured for more mfurmatmn, VISit our
and l haven•t ,gonen her mt4remeal. beaifi~s~ ibe · « w,~ite at www.fiOCWseilbe .nilPI- What . &amp;he may lbc • etigtble ,to . wrltycgov &lt;Jr call us toll:sbouLfl ,001 ShoWd 1 ~ . reoeivebenefits::as.u porue free .at 1-800-712-1213
appiyl
. . . ' . · ~ on ~ ih!F;am- ( IT¥ 1 ~800-325"0778).
. Atilftl': 'Sometimes it er s.iCCilll~.'f!or~~­
Qa j3np• I've .been ,get- need to:applyfur~~l?
can Ulrli a ilittle iloqgc:r thaD malloo, ~ti!MD'~~. at
Aaswer: l3ach ase is dif·usual furyoureeardro&amp;v.e. . www,~.p or til\g Social Security disability
benefits
far
,
a
few
years
ferent,
so what y.ou occd . .
.
·
As loqg as you .~ call us fdl-froe ~ il.-tp@·DOW.
fm
scheduled
for
a
may
depend
00
your
~
itua'l'lnmlday
dl..,p
dte plqJCIWQl't in 1he~ ."172-12l3.i(TfY 1~25· roeilical !OlYiew next month. · tiOJL Gen~y. you will thunderstorms in the mom- . Friday-Mostly'
olcai-.
ial, ~ou can rest assuo:d ufiS 0778 ).
·
What
shOuid
1
expect1
need
to
provide
your:
·
.
ill.g,..
Then
mowers
likely
Highs in lthe mid 76s. Lows
being processed. Some
•·A s a part o." your · • "--·al
..__ withaslightebance ·o ftbun- amun!S.S"O.
.
QuestioJI: I've reached
lUIII&gt;iiU.
~~
·Secunty nuuw...,
.states take longer to process
--"cal• :rewew,
·
-·"' be
-"'"'"'
......__ -d ctstmms in me aftetnoon.
Friday
•i"""'t
you will
• B'-"
· .u•w '-"''Ul'lcate
or......,.
- Pllltly
:than others. 'If you need to my full ~ment llj!e. bUt I UII;\Sl
aSked
to
provide
informaproof
of
a~e;
·
·
Highs
in
the
mid
70s.
clqudy
in
1be
·
e
vening
...lben
don't
.(tel
\like
retiring.
ff
.
1
·,show that you applied for
• Housmg .information, Southwest winds aro.urul HI becoming mostly cloudy.
:your baby's card, you can decide to hold oJJ for sev~­ tiion abaut y{)ur., medical
.al
more
years,
will
my
ttutment
and
any
'Cbanges
such
as .a rent reoeipt or mpiL ..Becoming nor:tbwest Lows in the mid 50s .
use the receipt you _glilt at dte
Social
Security
retirement
in
your
medical
condition,
'lease
and
tarunoro's name; · in die afternoon. O!anoe of
Saturday ud S....Uy
hospital w.ben you submitbenefit
increase?
as
well
as
infori'ilation
on
•
Names,
addresses
·and
Rio
9B
percent.
ni&amp;M
Mosdy cloody with
ted your baby's application.
Allswer: Ves .. If you any work you may have phone nwnbers of ~.
1h day lli&amp;fat...Mostly ·a chance af showecli .and
For more information, visit
decide
to
delay
your
retiredone.
Then
a
team
consisthospitals
and
clinics
that
cloudy
with '.a 50 percent ' lhunderstonns. Highs in the
our
website
at
ment
be.neftts
until
after
ing
of
a
disability
.examiner
.1reated
you;
and
dJanre
of
showers. Cooler.. lower 8Gs. Lows in the
\vww.socialsecurity.gov or
,
your
full
retirement
age,
and a doctor will review
•ProofofU:S.cit!mnship LesshumidWi1hiowsinthe. lower 60s. Chance of rain
all us toll-free .at 1-800your
.
benefit
.
will
be
your
file
and
request
your
or
noncitizen status.
lower 50s. Nonh winds 5 10 · 40 peroeut.
772- 1213 (ITY 1-800-325increased
by
a
certain
permedical
reports.
You
might
These
items
willlbelp
us
10
q&gt;h.
S.u nday-,M0sdy cloudy
0778).
.
centage each year- up to a be asked to have a special process ·your case faster and
Wedae.sday•• ,Mosdy with a c hance oj showers
Qilestioo: t work all day total ·o f 8 ~cent. These examination, . which Social more efficiently. We'D :also sunny. Highs .around 10. and thunderstorms. Highs in
and can't call Social · increases, .cllfied delayed Security wiH pay for. When .need inf&lt;mnation on your Northeast winds aJ:Ourul 5 the upper 70s. . Chance of
medical condition
· 50 percent .
Security until late at '.night. retirement credits, will be the review is comnlc:te,
,.
·
d and tteat- mph.
.
ram
added
in
autoinatically
from
Social
Security
will
send
ment,
past
an
current
W
'
'•
V
j
Mostl
Suud
-u.a.t...Most1y
Can I still call outside nor- the time you reach full
.... ·
d ., ___ _,_,
cy _ '
Y
ay .._
lli
1
you a .e tter te ng you . wo..., mcome an uuaDI..tiLl dear. Lows in the mid 40s. doudy with a 30 percent
mal business hours?
retirement
ag~. until (be time whether you still qulrlify to reso.urces. For more infor- Northeast winds .around 5 chance ·of showers. L.ow.s in
~.,.-:Yes. You.can.use
you ·begin taldng benefits or continue receiv;no disablli- mation, visit www.sociaise- .....n~.
·
th
o.ur automated serv:ioes 24 ~h
-.,
·
ca11 us tou-moe
"--e upper 50. s.
age 70, whichever ·ty benefits. If 1he
decision
i~
curuy.gov
or
hours a day, 7 days a week. ·comes first. To help you "made to discontinue beve- at 1-800-772-1213 (1TY 1.: ,......
...,
......,
.....,
.. ---~-;"-:---...:.~----,
to .request 'services such as a ck::tennine how much your
rep1¥CJ"Cllt Medicare &lt;Card benefit .would increase, use ifits, you have the right to 800-325-()778}.
· appeal that decisian. For
fll"l. .&amp;
'2ft- ·r• ftl"
or · 'Social
Secwity our
calculator
at
~a
2U4I~
nt.
Statement, and a variety of www.socialsecurity.gov/OA more information, · visit
·o ther foi'liiJi and . publica- CT/.quick-calc/earJy_late.ht www.socialsecurity.gov or
Question: I'll . tum 65
.,.
,.,
. ·tions. Just call us at l-800- mi. Or call us toll-free ·a t 1- call ' us roll-free at t-1100.t)lta:~nt
77Z,.1213 to ronduct busi- 800-77~-1213 (1TY !1 ~800- :ru..J2B (TfY 1-800-325- years old later this year.
8
1
ness using your. ·touchtone 325-'0778).
01i7 ).
for my
phone or by speech.
· Answer: Gel:temlly, we
..
· .
Representativ.es .are . avail•
~
advise people to file for
.
.
able to help you from 7 a.m.
....-ua ay _lll"'OIle · Medicare benefits 3 months
to 7 p.m. local time. You
QuestioD:
How
old
do
I
·b efore age .6 5. If yo.u are
can also visit our website to
Que&amp;ioa:
l
am
27
years
have
to
be
to
begin
receiv·
already receiving Social
conduct much of your
Security
disabiliold
and
have
applied
to
.
jng
Social
security, you will automatSocial Security business
ty
benefits?
I've
been
receive
Supplemental
ically
be enrolled in
online. For mOn: infonna~
Security
:Income
(SSI)
dis'severely
injured;
but
I'm
Medicare
Parts A and B
lion, visit our website at
still
a
young
guy.
·
ability
benefits
.
I
was
suran
additional 8ppliwithout
www.socialsecurity.gov or
prised
when
the
Social
Answer:
There
is
no
cation. However, ·because
cal1 us toll-free at I -'800Security
·
representative
minimum
age
requirement,
you
must pay a .premium
. 772- 1213 (ITY 1-800-325as long as you have a dis- told me that my payment for Part B coverage•. you
0778). .
ability that keeps you from will be reduced because r have the ·option of tlllllillg
•
working and is expected to Uve ·with my parents. Why it down. Y.ou will neceive a
·
· last at least one year or end is this?
Medicare card about two
Answer: SSl is a needs- · months before age 65.
in death. To qualify for dis.
'
Question: If both my ability benefits you also based progrdDl, so any other
If you would like to
·spouse and I are entitled to must have' worked long and income you receive for Medicare only, you can
Social Security .b enefits, recently enough under including
non-monetary apply by cal1ing 1-800-712.will we each ,get our own Social Security to earn the income such as belp with 1213. Our representatives
full retirement 1ltllounts, or required number of work your billli or other eK.penses there can make
appointis there a reduction?
credits. The number of - can aliect your benefit ment for you at any oonve· Answer: When each wort credilli · you need for payment. Your SSI pay- nient Social Security offioe·
·member of a married cou- disability be.nefits depends ments may be reduced · if and advise you what to
ple works and earns enough ·o n your age when you you are receiving food, bring with you. To .team
"Credits to be eligible for become disabled. YOIII\ger shelter or mon¢tary assis- more about the Mediare
Social Security retirement work.ers don' t need as tance. We consider this-to be program, 'r ead our elcclronic
benefits, their lifetime many . credits as older the 'case if you live in some- publication
at
' -earnings are calculated workers since younger ·o ne -else's household and
www. socialsecuri ty.govtpu·
. independently to determine people haven' t had time to .pay less than your fair mare b5110043.btml or call us
D
their Soc.ial Security bene- build up as much of a wid: of the household expenses. roU-free at 1-800-772- 1213
r
fit amounts. Eacb of you history. ln fact , in some If you move, or if the situa- (ITY 1-800-325--0778).
'MANAGER. ATHENS SOCIAL
SECURITY OFFICE

General

caFd in

Local Weather

•""F'-

.
In June
11·IPO('
""9t
\CI.&gt;rt'bu
Po111e
_ row DaUw Sentinel

t•

MeclkaR

$uppkn-ental

Disability

t).Oint
Btgisttr
will be publishing its',

==~a':JtPP Y

•..;,..,. 1

Retirement

file

an

•
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:

A t - pililtt i l l - law,

:artlllfll6rltoc1Jo.ayflf!IIJIJI11p

liS

'b
;ability. . . . 0011~.,...,

INill ,__. ,._.

-w.Df~or4is­

it is

---

•

And when [ ·thoug ht .it
cotill.dn' t get any wor$C. he
ta]!IOd me. lt took me nearly
a year to come to terms with
what had happened.
P,o ople aren 't always
who they claim ro be. 1
learned lt!his the har.d way. I
truly n~ "Wanting" has
found happiness with her
Internet ]OCI(e .interest. but I
want to make her aware of
the dangers that. lurk
behind the keyboard. Personal Experience in
lAIIIisWie., Ky,
._.,
Louim'Ue~
Unf011t11na1elv, such horror
. stooies are not . limited to
people who . meet online.
iBut we .bope your story will
rermnd our readers to be
cwefuJ: Pr,edators Jurk in all
llcinds of places.
. A~t!IU 's JlllilboiC is rwr.ii11M by #Wtlty MitdJeJJ lll1llf
Mlmcy Sllflll', longtUJu .elli/ton; of du! Aftn fnntlerA'

oolamn. ftease IHfllli1 yoJU
•(/IU!stWns Ito annil!SflflliJ-.
bolfl.'@oomatSLflet,
write

or

to: An!IU 's MailboiC, P.O.
BlliC lltJIPO; Ch.illlzgo, IL
60611.. 'Eo fi.JIIl •Ollt .more
tllbolll Allftie 's Mlli'lbox,
lll1llf l'tlad fl!lltllres !by &lt;Other

Cf!elllOrs Syrulicllte ·w.mers

'lind &gt;CIIrtoonists, il'isit the
· Cr.eators Syndicate Web

page llt www.ctreaton:.com.

~to fllfl1.en1tDI4 OltitJ\- R#=cy ~
'

Q,: If I want m serve as :a guanliu for an Ollio ltii·dent, must I also live iD 0100!
: A.: Gener.ally, yes. This general rule recognizes lihat it is

:natlder to be e1fectiv.e ~s .a guardian ifyou ilive far tiJ:orn your
"'aJTd (that is, l!he person !being served lhnmgh the guardian:ihip~.

.

Q,; lli111eiD NewV-*,:aad mybr.udw, 'lll'ho~aaObio
otesident, wants lD •a · me as panlian fer his y~
~iJdnoA Is 1his possible'!
: ~ A.: ¥es. There JII1C exceptions m the geneml rule fm (J )
parents who name guardians fm .their children (such .as
minor ohildren·er adult children who are incompetent), or (2)
.i;ndivililuals w.bo mune guaFdians for themselves, parents and
.individuals can neminate .a guardian 'in a durable power of
attomey document, or ,in another w.rinen document, including a will, .that m~ certain !ij)OCifi.c legal requirements.
. Q,: Why doeS Ohio law aHOw lbese e"aeptions?
A.: Ohio law respects ·l'he right 0f parents to 'choose a
guardian for their children :who JII1C unable 10 take. care of
.themselves, no matter where the glUII'dian lives. Ohio law
also respects the right of a competent adult to choose his or
her own guardian in !!he event that such care becomes necessary. lin addition, the law .allows a rmnor over the age of
14 ta select his or her own guardian, even if that guardian
lives in another county or state.
Q,: Does Ohio law also ha111e a gmera1 rule about
requiring a gaanliaD lD li111e iD die ame eoun1y as die
~:

. ard"
w
7

· A.: Yes. However, because our society is increasingly
mobile, there ·are many exceptions 10 that rule. Courts are
given much more freedam to appoint .a guardian who is not
a county resident .as long as the guardian is a resident of the
· ~tate.

· Q,: I agreed to 1lel'll!e as :a parcliaD for an Ollio Rliidmt, but now lllave tAl -llle 4lllt 4111' die i&gt;tate: W'tll die.
cowt ftiiiiOVe me as panliall:and ~an Ohio ftSideat iostead'!
.
· A.,: While the law does not require a court to remove a
·guardian who is no longer a resideot (If the state, the court
may do so if such a change is determined to be in the
ward' s best interest.
·
Q,: I am DCJt aa Ohio 1esilleat, but I would like to
apply wile :appointed u gual1dian of someone who li111es
in Ohio. Ouii4o dais!
·
·
A.,: No, not unless you have been nominated under one of
· tbe e~tceptions described above.
Q,~ I live ia OJUo, :and would like m serll/e as a
guardian for .a friead 'lllle is also .an Obio nsid"Jd. Do I
!teed some.Gftiri.lll.-dlority to 4lo tis!
· A,: Yes. Parents are considered to ·be the natural
guardians ef their minor children, but all other guardians
must be appointed by a probate oourt. Letters of
.-Guardianship are the official badge of authority for the
:guardian.
· Q,: What Qlll be dooe if a guanliaaship is dn'l 1 grJd
: bee P'S"'.a a......t panliao lives·out ~the stateer.oounly?
: A..: Parents of minors and aging individuals can name a
;.local person to serve alternately as co-guardian with a
· named guardian who 1ives outside the jurisdiction of the
: local oourts. If there are no local relatives, friends or sup: port persons who qualify, the alternate co-guardian can be
: a local attorney. ·
..
· lAw Yo11 Gut Use is a weekly COII&amp;__.legvl infarrt~~~­
:lioll ooluut provided by • 0100 Stlrte Btu ..tssocilltiolr
: (OSB..t). 'I'IUs tuticle was preptJI'e4 by Dtwi4 A. Zwyer, WI
;oilor11ey cru'l'tllftly sel1'ing II&amp; Director of tile Ollio
• Deve/opiMfttlli Disllbility Couruil, t11111 tUJ .CiuJU:mtut of
:rile OSB,t 's Disabi/i.ty lAw ColllllliJtu, Anidi!s Dppt!llliltg
: in this cobunn ·tue interuled to provide brotld, geund
: infOI'IrllltWn abouJ the lo.w. Before ,.,,yillg t1ais illfomw• tion to o specific legol probkm, fWMiers are wged lo seek
. :;tulvice jro111 an aDomey,

.

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

~·Community Cale_gdar

'

GALLIA • MASON
&amp; MEIGS COUNTIES

:goOO time., I oou1d &amp;.81 with ltd? Do I ~ .a weAding
lbat. Buttoda iiHm~ gift ,e ven lhoqgh I won't be
AIID IIIIRcY Sor·e
is l;oo mWlb fmr me. Now .attending? I IIDUst adrml [
.,._.A ' My llnulllll e1001'}'0ne acts like l am f~l a bit ~ted. 'Ha¥e yeu
and I ha.ve .a :seooniiiOOme at tot:ally !lclfish and mean.
ever hew1l o f llhis? llhe beadt, and t!hcre is. a
John !Juts a tanilly at Cluall'...t a.d IW'uddled
guesftloose on~ ptupa!ly. lmne. I barely · maw dtis
Dear W
We' ve
Weolitenletourtiliiends"lhe man. Is it too muob ·lfar me beard l0f il .and .aren '~ fond
Smiths~ use ttbe :guestboo!ie, to want bim t a die ;;omo- of it. People sbauld not
:and dley ~y briJ1g where el$C! ·l'learie ·maliie cemrin:guests ifeelless
d!eiir mends. One mend!, Daa"t Die lltft
iiilp0ltant illhan others.
~.lOOn,~ li.~ 311 older man wilb
Dear l'lease: We dan'~ Unless lthe IOOOeption is faml!cll:ible lhealfb prob'kms He lbint y.oo are $C'llliW m lly..mily, lthe rtmdal couple
ihas been near death ~ mean. We lhink iit is quite ;an Slwuld entel1tain everyone in
times .and $AfS be w.ants 1IU ~Siliion fm ~ to lbe same ifallhion, even jf
die :at our gueslhoose ~- j!Riillllle you w.oold be illat- lhat means dke and punch
koo.kin£ ltbe 'SCa.~
teRld to fu!d .a &amp;ad Wy in in ilhe lhaokyard. Still, if you
There tmve been :a few ~ ~use. 8,0wever, are ,fuimtdly wil!h the couple,
limes When Jrum has been unless yoo are willing to you mi~ want to send a
rnissil1g from liis lh0tnc :and l &lt;d: lQ' your poo1]!kllty, yoo SIIIldl 'gill, .atoog with your
~We've been :allkcd to llUD to woo't be ;able ito kee,p iliim best wi.Shcs.
tbel!e.adhihmlsetoseei'fbeis :aw~_y. We ;r:ooommend you
Dear Awaie' I read the
!here in case be lklft 100me to . lllJI8y Ills ifamily ilhllt yoo ' ~ ifitnm "Wanting Him,"
die. Oure, we artually found .wJ all '9-1 -~ iii you find a young gill1 Who met her
him :and were wooied ·sidk.
hi:tn and lhey Wi'D lhave to boyiilliend &lt;Online. She was
Tihe 'Smiths fee1 i t's (be handle lllli1gs ilimm ltbcrc, afraid ber parents wanld
least we Qll do to let lrim inolm!ing .all dte watk and diSIII1I"l''"ve.
&lt;dle where be w.ants, :and lihat eJ&lt;I')CIDseS
;inv.o]ved
ID
'lb0se "1hormr stories" are
somehow we ~uld be ifilat- · rremoWng 1!hc: body and · nat .a lways just stories.
tered. I .am 'IIJ'Palled. I &amp;m't cleani~ qp.
Gloanted , two &lt;1f my good
w.imt .anyone to die ;at 'l'lnr
Dar Aenie: · I recently :fciends met 0nli.ne.and they
house. I .am nm dtat familiar recei:ved a wedding iitMta- JII1C ¥ely lhappy. !But [ made
with the pmcess involq ;a tien from ;a fuend. Inside . lhe mistake of befriending
death,lbutcertalnlyil!beFe .ane "ll'as .a !llote explaining dlat wmeone&lt;Online.lithought l
caRs you !lave to lllllke., :a , :tbere 'Was l.imited space 'Ill oould trust ithis guy, ·bm I
body lt(1) be .dealt w,ilib and the recepl!ion :and ·ithcrefore -was wrong. Even though we
;;orne clean lt.ql. •
·we were &lt;Only invited tl!&gt; dte did 111ot 'have a Tomantic
I to:ld our meuds lif John ceremony.
· relationship, he became
were 10 die wh11e ihe was .at
What is the ~ el!i- increasingly
possessive,
the 'beach house lhaq .a quette regarding this mat- C(I)J)llrolling and abusive ,

BY KAnrf Mnu= •

=··

,,._
HMC
Association members invo1Yed planning the J!!Oker
are fl:om the .left, froQt. Mist Miler, Anita
ROberts, ev.ent chamnan; Bethany P.ur1«!y, Holzer H~ representative; Mist Rose; and Pam Roach; .Billd badt. Keilb
Mayo, event co-dlairman; lisa Baker, .Angie Potts; and Usa Halley.
.
•
'

n.,.,.....y, May27, 2oo8

ANNIE,S MAILBOX

mee=·

s,· •

-PageA3

Clubs and

Church will have a sing at 7
p.m. ar the church with the
Nazarene Singers.
·

Thtu'llday, May l9
• POMEROY - Alpha Iota
• M asters, U :30 a.m. at
: Bun' s Party Barn .

Birthdays

·. "organizations
'

•.• .

Churdl events

•
•

Friday, May 30
• HARRISONVILLE
: Harri s~nville Presbyterian
•

.

'

'Dr 'ey,Ju. 3
MIDDLEPORT - The
Rev. O 'DeU Maliley will
celebrate his 80th birthday
on lune 3. Cards may be
sent to him at 160 Beech
St.,
Middleport,
Ohio
457(i().

.
-st.n 4&gt;holo
FatmerS Bank recently donated to tile oomml!lnity phase of the Meigs Local Enrichment Foundation project which orga·
nizers hope win benefit students and residents living in the county's three school distrit&lt;ts. Phase one proposes a multipul]ilOse community compleK made LIP of a rubberized track. designed for walking and running programs; :nature trails
designed for hiking, .biking and jogging putpOSes; a multi-putpose community center designed to support i!Jdoor well ness
and community activities; perfonning arts facilities. Pictured are (from left) Mike Bartrum, MLEF, Paul fleed and Paul
Kloos of 'fanners Bank, Ste11e MI:ISSBI', Frank Blake of Ml.EF.
.
·
·

. ~bt ~allipoli• Ball!' Qtrtbunt,
ltbt Joint tllra·•ant l.tlf•ttr ·
and The DaHy Sentinel
have launched a new page every
Friday called ''Faith and Family".
If yoa have a testimonial story,
life-changing event about yourself
·or even a poem that you would
like to share please email to:
kkelly@mydailytribune.com
nfields@mydailyregister.com
boeftich@mydailysentinel.com
-. Limit your story to
500-750 words.
PlfJise include a phone number ·
in your email.

�.

'

Page A:!

COMM

The Daily Sentinel

••

BY mE BEND

The Daily Sentinel

Turday, May Z7. 2001

Top~ders

USDAandSBA
lender seminar··
MAIUEITA The ThuJ'sday, Juae 5. 1008 'wilb
Ullilal s.rs ~t ~egisuation lqinniDg :at
vi A§iadh""' (USDA) Mil 8:30 :a.m. ml the ...,..ij'1ll
be lmMiDg an infapnarinnal startiBg at 9:00 :a.m. .
lhe
Rw:al Dew:l••••-t· will
~~..::;;:; ~~ provide a bttef ova-view Uf
_
DUlOHH!Ca~
.&amp;IN
some of the pmgt&lt;~~m
Farm~:£
Pro:gt2UIS USDA and SBA have to
Qua-w• ..t Loan Programs, affer, :as well :as *"'! how
admini..... · by Rur.al dle~_&lt;Cllllpro•;an
Devdopmcot.
·
eoono~ . "'!muJus ID lbe
'lblft will also be :a Kp- &gt;COIDlDllD1l!es loall ~alden ·
rnentmve from Small · serve. The ~s will be
Business Adminiwation on demonSlr.atm.g bow
(SBA) to OOVCl' dlcir pm- Federal guar.anteed loans
·g&amp;ms and AftPnda Hoyt are a good deal fur bot!:t
from Ohio T«asurer oommmiities and lbe
Ridwd Coldray's Office lenders ~ U$C diem.
will
speat
on
lhe
The ~cati'!nal meeti~
GrowNOW interest rare · winch ts :av.illable at 1:fo
Rduclion program fur busi- oost is o pen m local reguoess loans (ruimedy Linked lated l~ders. To mJih; il
Deposit).
. re.s ervauon or to moctve
Tile Q!!"eling will be held additioll_!ll infunmatiion., calil
a 1he Voioovicb Center, the M'llllelb ARoa Oftioe at
Buildiog 20, Room 131, 740-373-1113, ext. 4 by
1he Ridges, in Athens on June 2.

This wish is an imposition

SdRl!T 'p1halo

Students Wlito particiPate irn fue Acoeleratetil &amp;atiler program at lbe Meigs Mitiltille scmool eam ~oims tor each !book
read. These three stllltilents read the most 1in their~
tive &lt;Qrades, Caltilp ~icmotsom, l melmediate .Aooeleratetil
~ealiler coordinator, '1Bpll1lils. Tille sltildents along 'Witll fi;le
:pOllilts iftley earned ·were Belila Mlllsser, third gtalile, 158
:poims, and Haley W.ilsom, fol!lrtfn &lt;gtalile and over.ill top
fOOiileT, 257 points. The other top realiler, 1001 :pictured, 'was
·GrvHie Hill, Fiifth Gtalile, 245 points.

•

Employee~ivity

i~

~n

f
Hospttah st JOIDS SIAU.l. 0
Q'BI
M
rial
H
.
·
tal
.
.eness emo . . OSpl
•

•

•

•

Law You Can Use

~-~a

Residency requirements
for Ohio guardians
_,ill/•r
-- pw ,.,..,

Poker run to benefit Holzer Hosptce ~ u~oo. ~Jilll~~
GAlLIPOLIS - Holzer
Medical Center's Employee
Activity Association will
host its secoml annual poker
Jun to benefit Holzer

Hospice.
· · It will

be beld on
· Satmday, J.uly 1'9, and
·everyone is invited to par-

ticipate. Registration will be
held at Paul' 1&gt; Trucli
Accessories and Discount
Glass located .at 1523 Stare
Route 7 NOIIth, Gallipolis,
beside the Kanauga :Drill'e- .
in, beginnin,g at U a.m.
with dte 'last bike in at 5
p .m. The entry fee i s $l2

per person which includes a
meal with bevernge,
Prize money will be
awarded ro tbe first four
~- There will be a·
bike show with cmphies
awanded to the first five
places, 50/5'0 jackpot, door
prizes and Chinese auellion.

. . added 1D the medical stailf at
Holz.er Hospioe · serves O'Bieae!i~
Memorial
patients with a life-limilil1g ~
illness regaFdless of ability ' Di Umlauf is a hospitalist
to pay in Ga!lia, Jarbon, • ~a mat role in impleMeigs and 'SIIImllllltia! · mmting O'Bloness' new
rounlies.
Hospital
Medicine
For mono&lt; infarrrtalioll.. ~ He is also .an
rega-rding the poW- 11111, ' intmial medicine specialist
caU 74().446.1445.
• .mo provides qwrlity medical care to indiv:idwds wbo
hospitalized. He cares
fur impatient$ wlm do not
.h ave a pm;ona1 physici1111 or
whose physicians do not
.tion in your parents' bouse- . admit inpalients.
.
hold changes, be sure m
lin oooper.alion with
.contact Social Sequrity, •I '« patients'
physicians,
:more informatiOn., visit Umbu( monitors patients'
Umlauf received bis mildwww.socialsecmity.gov or are 1brougboot dJcir hospi- icaJ degree fmm dte Ohio
call us toll-free at l..,SOO. 1al stay. Upon discharge, Univ.ersity College of
772-1213 (1'IY 1-l!00-323- infunnatioo ..about patients Osteopathic Medicine ill
077.8). .
is provided to their physi- . Athens . He practiced primaciao&amp;. Umlauf will help ry care medicine .at RiverQueslioo: I'm 43 Y~ palieDts obtain a primary side Medical Inc. in
·old, unemployed and dis- ~ pbysician ifdley do not Steubenville priar ro oomabled. I'd like ID .apply fur 'have a personal physician.
ing to O'Bleness.
Security · - - - - - - - ' - - - - - - - - - - - - Supplemental
Income (SSI}. What documents or other .dUngs do I

·-=

Social Security.questions and answers

will receive a monthly ben- cases a young worker
.efit amount based on your oouid qualify 'for .d isability
own individual eam.illgs: lbeoefit~ with olily I .a nd a
there is no ··mama$e
alf years of work. To
penalty." In fact, it's qmte k:am lhow many credits
1Jhe opposite, because if one you•n need to qualli'y for
. Question: · 1 .applied for member of .a couple earns disability benefits, visit
:mY '~aby's Social Security lower w~ «didn't earn · www ..socialsecurity,go:vJdi
number ·while in the bospi- enough Social Security bpl.an!dl;Juali~3.h~ .. For
tal. [fs illccD ·seweml weeks credits itO .lbc insured for more mfurmatmn, VISit our
and l haven•t ,gonen her mt4remeal. beaifi~s~ ibe · « w,~ite at www.fiOCWseilbe .nilPI- What . &amp;he may lbc • etigtble ,to . wrltycgov &lt;Jr call us toll:sbouLfl ,001 ShoWd 1 ~ . reoeivebenefits::as.u porue free .at 1-800-712-1213
appiyl
. . . ' . · ~ on ~ ih!F;am- ( IT¥ 1 ~800-325"0778).
. Atilftl': 'Sometimes it er s.iCCilll~.'f!or~~­
Qa j3np• I've .been ,get- need to:applyfur~~l?
can Ulrli a ilittle iloqgc:r thaD malloo, ~ti!MD'~~. at
Aaswer: l3ach ase is dif·usual furyoureeardro&amp;v.e. . www,~.p or til\g Social Security disability
benefits
far
,
a
few
years
ferent,
so what y.ou occd . .
.
·
As loqg as you .~ call us fdl-froe ~ il.-tp@·DOW.
fm
scheduled
for
a
may
depend
00
your
~
itua'l'lnmlday
dl..,p
dte plqJCIWQl't in 1he~ ."172-12l3.i(TfY 1~25· roeilical !OlYiew next month. · tiOJL Gen~y. you will thunderstorms in the mom- . Friday-Mostly'
olcai-.
ial, ~ou can rest assuo:d ufiS 0778 ).
·
What
shOuid
1
expect1
need
to
provide
your:
·
.
ill.g,..
Then
mowers
likely
Highs in lthe mid 76s. Lows
being processed. Some
•·A s a part o." your · • "--·al
..__ withaslightebance ·o ftbun- amun!S.S"O.
.
QuestioJI: I've reached
lUIII&gt;iiU.
~~
·Secunty nuuw...,
.states take longer to process
--"cal• :rewew,
·
-·"' be
-"'"'"'
......__ -d ctstmms in me aftetnoon.
Friday
•i"""'t
you will
• B'-"
· .u•w '-"''Ul'lcate
or......,.
- Pllltly
:than others. 'If you need to my full ~ment llj!e. bUt I UII;\Sl
aSked
to
provide
informaproof
of
a~e;
·
·
Highs
in
the
mid
70s.
clqudy
in
1be
·
e
vening
...lben
don't
.(tel
\like
retiring.
ff
.
1
·,show that you applied for
• Housmg .information, Southwest winds aro.urul HI becoming mostly cloudy.
:your baby's card, you can decide to hold oJJ for sev~­ tiion abaut y{)ur., medical
.al
more
years,
will
my
ttutment
and
any
'Cbanges
such
as .a rent reoeipt or mpiL ..Becoming nor:tbwest Lows in the mid 50s .
use the receipt you _glilt at dte
Social
Security
retirement
in
your
medical
condition,
'lease
and
tarunoro's name; · in die afternoon. O!anoe of
Saturday ud S....Uy
hospital w.ben you submitbenefit
increase?
as
well
as
infori'ilation
on
•
Names,
addresses
·and
Rio
9B
percent.
ni&amp;M
Mosdy cloody with
ted your baby's application.
Allswer: Ves .. If you any work you may have phone nwnbers of ~.
1h day lli&amp;fat...Mostly ·a chance af showecli .and
For more information, visit
decide
to
delay
your
retiredone.
Then
a
team
consisthospitals
and
clinics
that
cloudy
with '.a 50 percent ' lhunderstonns. Highs in the
our
website
at
ment
be.neftts
until
after
ing
of
a
disability
.examiner
.1reated
you;
and
dJanre
of
showers. Cooler.. lower 8Gs. Lows in the
\vww.socialsecurity.gov or
,
your
full
retirement
age,
and a doctor will review
•ProofofU:S.cit!mnship LesshumidWi1hiowsinthe. lower 60s. Chance of rain
all us toll-free .at 1-800your
.
benefit
.
will
be
your
file
and
request
your
or
noncitizen status.
lower 50s. Nonh winds 5 10 · 40 peroeut.
772- 1213 (ITY 1-800-325increased
by
a
certain
permedical
reports.
You
might
These
items
willlbelp
us
10
q&gt;h.
S.u nday-,M0sdy cloudy
0778).
.
centage each year- up to a be asked to have a special process ·your case faster and
Wedae.sday•• ,Mosdy with a c hance oj showers
Qilestioo: t work all day total ·o f 8 ~cent. These examination, . which Social more efficiently. We'D :also sunny. Highs .around 10. and thunderstorms. Highs in
and can't call Social · increases, .cllfied delayed Security wiH pay for. When .need inf&lt;mnation on your Northeast winds aJ:Ourul 5 the upper 70s. . Chance of
medical condition
· 50 percent .
Security until late at '.night. retirement credits, will be the review is comnlc:te,
,.
·
d and tteat- mph.
.
ram
added
in
autoinatically
from
Social
Security
will
send
ment,
past
an
current
W
'
'•
V
j
Mostl
Suud
-u.a.t...Most1y
Can I still call outside nor- the time you reach full
.... ·
d ., ___ _,_,
cy _ '
Y
ay .._
lli
1
you a .e tter te ng you . wo..., mcome an uuaDI..tiLl dear. Lows in the mid 40s. doudy with a 30 percent
mal business hours?
retirement
ag~. until (be time whether you still qulrlify to reso.urces. For more infor- Northeast winds .around 5 chance ·of showers. L.ow.s in
~.,.-:Yes. You.can.use
you ·begin taldng benefits or continue receiv;no disablli- mation, visit www.sociaise- .....n~.
·
th
o.ur automated serv:ioes 24 ~h
-.,
·
ca11 us tou-moe
"--e upper 50. s.
age 70, whichever ·ty benefits. If 1he
decision
i~
curuy.gov
or
hours a day, 7 days a week. ·comes first. To help you "made to discontinue beve- at 1-800-772-1213 (1TY 1.: ,......
...,
......,
.....,
.. ---~-;"-:---...:.~----,
to .request 'services such as a ck::tennine how much your
rep1¥CJ"Cllt Medicare &lt;Card benefit .would increase, use ifits, you have the right to 800-325-()778}.
· appeal that decisian. For
fll"l. .&amp;
'2ft- ·r• ftl"
or · 'Social
Secwity our
calculator
at
~a
2U4I~
nt.
Statement, and a variety of www.socialsecurity.gov/OA more information, · visit
·o ther foi'liiJi and . publica- CT/.quick-calc/earJy_late.ht www.socialsecurity.gov or
Question: I'll . tum 65
.,.
,.,
. ·tions. Just call us at l-800- mi. Or call us toll-free ·a t 1- call ' us roll-free at t-1100.t)lta:~nt
77Z,.1213 to ronduct busi- 800-77~-1213 (1TY !1 ~800- :ru..J2B (TfY 1-800-325- years old later this year.
8
1
ness using your. ·touchtone 325-'0778).
01i7 ).
for my
phone or by speech.
· Answer: Gel:temlly, we
..
· .
Representativ.es .are . avail•
~
advise people to file for
.
.
able to help you from 7 a.m.
....-ua ay _lll"'OIle · Medicare benefits 3 months
to 7 p.m. local time. You
QuestioD:
How
old
do
I
·b efore age .6 5. If yo.u are
can also visit our website to
Que&amp;ioa:
l
am
27
years
have
to
be
to
begin
receiv·
already receiving Social
conduct much of your
Security
disabiliold
and
have
applied
to
.
jng
Social
security, you will automatSocial Security business
ty
benefits?
I've
been
receive
Supplemental
ically
be enrolled in
online. For mOn: infonna~
Security
:Income
(SSI)
dis'severely
injured;
but
I'm
Medicare
Parts A and B
lion, visit our website at
still
a
young
guy.
·
ability
benefits
.
I
was
suran
additional 8ppliwithout
www.socialsecurity.gov or
prised
when
the
Social
Answer:
There
is
no
cation. However, ·because
cal1 us toll-free at I -'800Security
·
representative
minimum
age
requirement,
you
must pay a .premium
. 772- 1213 (ITY 1-800-325as long as you have a dis- told me that my payment for Part B coverage•. you
0778). .
ability that keeps you from will be reduced because r have the ·option of tlllllillg
•
working and is expected to Uve ·with my parents. Why it down. Y.ou will neceive a
·
· last at least one year or end is this?
Medicare card about two
Answer: SSl is a needs- · months before age 65.
in death. To qualify for dis.
'
Question: If both my ability benefits you also based progrdDl, so any other
If you would like to
·spouse and I are entitled to must have' worked long and income you receive for Medicare only, you can
Social Security .b enefits, recently enough under including
non-monetary apply by cal1ing 1-800-712.will we each ,get our own Social Security to earn the income such as belp with 1213. Our representatives
full retirement 1ltllounts, or required number of work your billli or other eK.penses there can make
appointis there a reduction?
credits. The number of - can aliect your benefit ment for you at any oonve· Answer: When each wort credilli · you need for payment. Your SSI pay- nient Social Security offioe·
·member of a married cou- disability be.nefits depends ments may be reduced · if and advise you what to
ple works and earns enough ·o n your age when you you are receiving food, bring with you. To .team
"Credits to be eligible for become disabled. YOIII\ger shelter or mon¢tary assis- more about the Mediare
Social Security retirement work.ers don' t need as tance. We consider this-to be program, 'r ead our elcclronic
benefits, their lifetime many . credits as older the 'case if you live in some- publication
at
' -earnings are calculated workers since younger ·o ne -else's household and
www. socialsecuri ty.govtpu·
. independently to determine people haven' t had time to .pay less than your fair mare b5110043.btml or call us
D
their Soc.ial Security bene- build up as much of a wid: of the household expenses. roU-free at 1-800-772- 1213
r
fit amounts. Eacb of you history. ln fact , in some If you move, or if the situa- (ITY 1-800-325--0778).
'MANAGER. ATHENS SOCIAL
SECURITY OFFICE

General

caFd in

Local Weather

•""F'-

.
In June
11·IPO('
""9t
\CI.&gt;rt'bu
Po111e
_ row DaUw Sentinel

t•

MeclkaR

$uppkn-ental

Disability

t).Oint
Btgisttr
will be publishing its',

==~a':JtPP Y

•..;,..,. 1

Retirement

file

an

•
•'

•

:

A t - pililtt i l l - law,

:artlllfll6rltoc1Jo.ayflf!IIJIJI11p

liS

'b
;ability. . . . 0011~.,...,

INill ,__. ,._.

-w.Df~or4is­

it is

---

•

And when [ ·thoug ht .it
cotill.dn' t get any wor$C. he
ta]!IOd me. lt took me nearly
a year to come to terms with
what had happened.
P,o ople aren 't always
who they claim ro be. 1
learned lt!his the har.d way. I
truly n~ "Wanting" has
found happiness with her
Internet ]OCI(e .interest. but I
want to make her aware of
the dangers that. lurk
behind the keyboard. Personal Experience in
lAIIIisWie., Ky,
._.,
Louim'Ue~
Unf011t11na1elv, such horror
. stooies are not . limited to
people who . meet online.
iBut we .bope your story will
rermnd our readers to be
cwefuJ: Pr,edators Jurk in all
llcinds of places.
. A~t!IU 's JlllilboiC is rwr.ii11M by #Wtlty MitdJeJJ lll1llf
Mlmcy Sllflll', longtUJu .elli/ton; of du! Aftn fnntlerA'

oolamn. ftease IHfllli1 yoJU
•(/IU!stWns Ito annil!SflflliJ-.
bolfl.'@oomatSLflet,
write

or

to: An!IU 's MailboiC, P.O.
BlliC lltJIPO; Ch.illlzgo, IL
60611.. 'Eo fi.JIIl •Ollt .more
tllbolll Allftie 's Mlli'lbox,
lll1llf l'tlad fl!lltllres !by &lt;Other

Cf!elllOrs Syrulicllte ·w.mers

'lind &gt;CIIrtoonists, il'isit the
· Cr.eators Syndicate Web

page llt www.ctreaton:.com.

~to fllfl1.en1tDI4 OltitJ\- R#=cy ~
'

Q,: If I want m serve as :a guanliu for an Ollio ltii·dent, must I also live iD 0100!
: A.: Gener.ally, yes. This general rule recognizes lihat it is

:natlder to be e1fectiv.e ~s .a guardian ifyou ilive far tiJ:orn your
"'aJTd (that is, l!he person !being served lhnmgh the guardian:ihip~.

.

Q,; lli111eiD NewV-*,:aad mybr.udw, 'lll'ho~aaObio
otesident, wants lD •a · me as panlian fer his y~
~iJdnoA Is 1his possible'!
: ~ A.: ¥es. There JII1C exceptions m the geneml rule fm (J )
parents who name guardians fm .their children (such .as
minor ohildren·er adult children who are incompetent), or (2)
.i;ndivililuals w.bo mune guaFdians for themselves, parents and
.individuals can neminate .a guardian 'in a durable power of
attomey document, or ,in another w.rinen document, including a will, .that m~ certain !ij)OCifi.c legal requirements.
. Q,: Why doeS Ohio law aHOw lbese e"aeptions?
A.: Ohio law respects ·l'he right 0f parents to 'choose a
guardian for their children :who JII1C unable 10 take. care of
.themselves, no matter where the glUII'dian lives. Ohio law
also respects the right of a competent adult to choose his or
her own guardian in !!he event that such care becomes necessary. lin addition, the law .allows a rmnor over the age of
14 ta select his or her own guardian, even if that guardian
lives in another county or state.
Q,: Does Ohio law also ha111e a gmera1 rule about
requiring a gaanliaD lD li111e iD die ame eoun1y as die
~:

. ard"
w
7

· A.: Yes. However, because our society is increasingly
mobile, there ·are many exceptions 10 that rule. Courts are
given much more freedam to appoint .a guardian who is not
a county resident .as long as the guardian is a resident of the
· ~tate.

· Q,: I agreed to 1lel'll!e as :a parcliaD for an Ollio Rliidmt, but now lllave tAl -llle 4lllt 4111' die i&gt;tate: W'tll die.
cowt ftiiiiOVe me as panliall:and ~an Ohio ftSideat iostead'!
.
· A.,: While the law does not require a court to remove a
·guardian who is no longer a resideot (If the state, the court
may do so if such a change is determined to be in the
ward' s best interest.
·
Q,: I am DCJt aa Ohio 1esilleat, but I would like to
apply wile :appointed u gual1dian of someone who li111es
in Ohio. Ouii4o dais!
·
·
A.,: No, not unless you have been nominated under one of
· tbe e~tceptions described above.
Q,~ I live ia OJUo, :and would like m serll/e as a
guardian for .a friead 'lllle is also .an Obio nsid"Jd. Do I
!teed some.Gftiri.lll.-dlority to 4lo tis!
· A,: Yes. Parents are considered to ·be the natural
guardians ef their minor children, but all other guardians
must be appointed by a probate oourt. Letters of
.-Guardianship are the official badge of authority for the
:guardian.
· Q,: What Qlll be dooe if a guanliaaship is dn'l 1 grJd
: bee P'S"'.a a......t panliao lives·out ~the stateer.oounly?
: A..: Parents of minors and aging individuals can name a
;.local person to serve alternately as co-guardian with a
· named guardian who 1ives outside the jurisdiction of the
: local oourts. If there are no local relatives, friends or sup: port persons who qualify, the alternate co-guardian can be
: a local attorney. ·
..
· lAw Yo11 Gut Use is a weekly COII&amp;__.legvl infarrt~~~­
:lioll ooluut provided by • 0100 Stlrte Btu ..tssocilltiolr
: (OSB..t). 'I'IUs tuticle was preptJI'e4 by Dtwi4 A. Zwyer, WI
;oilor11ey cru'l'tllftly sel1'ing II&amp; Director of tile Ollio
• Deve/opiMfttlli Disllbility Couruil, t11111 tUJ .CiuJU:mtut of
:rile OSB,t 's Disabi/i.ty lAw ColllllliJtu, Anidi!s Dppt!llliltg
: in this cobunn ·tue interuled to provide brotld, geund
: infOI'IrllltWn abouJ the lo.w. Before ,.,,yillg t1ais illfomw• tion to o specific legol probkm, fWMiers are wged lo seek
. :;tulvice jro111 an aDomey,

.

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

~·Community Cale_gdar

'

GALLIA • MASON
&amp; MEIGS COUNTIES

:goOO time., I oou1d &amp;.81 with ltd? Do I ~ .a weAding
lbat. Buttoda iiHm~ gift ,e ven lhoqgh I won't be
AIID IIIIRcY Sor·e
is l;oo mWlb fmr me. Now .attending? I IIDUst adrml [
.,._.A ' My llnulllll e1001'}'0ne acts like l am f~l a bit ~ted. 'Ha¥e yeu
and I ha.ve .a :seooniiiOOme at tot:ally !lclfish and mean.
ever hew1l o f llhis? llhe beadt, and t!hcre is. a
John !Juts a tanilly at Cluall'...t a.d IW'uddled
guesftloose on~ ptupa!ly. lmne. I barely · maw dtis
Dear W
We' ve
Weolitenletourtiliiends"lhe man. Is it too muob ·lfar me beard l0f il .and .aren '~ fond
Smiths~ use ttbe :guestboo!ie, to want bim t a die ;;omo- of it. People sbauld not
:and dley ~y briJ1g where el$C! ·l'learie ·maliie cemrin:guests ifeelless
d!eiir mends. One mend!, Daa"t Die lltft
iiilp0ltant illhan others.
~.lOOn,~ li.~ 311 older man wilb
Dear l'lease: We dan'~ Unless lthe IOOOeption is faml!cll:ible lhealfb prob'kms He lbint y.oo are $C'llliW m lly..mily, lthe rtmdal couple
ihas been near death ~ mean. We lhink iit is quite ;an Slwuld entel1tain everyone in
times .and $AfS be w.ants 1IU ~Siliion fm ~ to lbe same ifallhion, even jf
die :at our gueslhoose ~- j!Riillllle you w.oold be illat- lhat means dke and punch
koo.kin£ ltbe 'SCa.~
teRld to fu!d .a &amp;ad Wy in in ilhe lhaokyard. Still, if you
There tmve been :a few ~ ~use. 8,0wever, are ,fuimtdly wil!h the couple,
limes When Jrum has been unless yoo are willing to you mi~ want to send a
rnissil1g from liis lh0tnc :and l &lt;d: lQ' your poo1]!kllty, yoo SIIIldl 'gill, .atoog with your
~We've been :allkcd to llUD to woo't be ;able ito kee,p iliim best wi.Shcs.
tbel!e.adhihmlsetoseei'fbeis :aw~_y. We ;r:ooommend you
Dear Awaie' I read the
!here in case be lklft 100me to . lllJI8y Ills ifamily ilhllt yoo ' ~ ifitnm "Wanting Him,"
die. Oure, we artually found .wJ all '9-1 -~ iii you find a young gill1 Who met her
him :and were wooied ·sidk.
hi:tn and lhey Wi'D lhave to boyiilliend &lt;Online. She was
Tihe 'Smiths fee1 i t's (be handle lllli1gs ilimm ltbcrc, afraid ber parents wanld
least we Qll do to let lrim inolm!ing .all dte watk and diSIII1I"l''"ve.
&lt;dle where be w.ants, :and lihat eJ&lt;I')CIDseS
;inv.o]ved
ID
'lb0se "1hormr stories" are
somehow we ~uld be ifilat- · rremoWng 1!hc: body and · nat .a lways just stories.
tered. I .am 'IIJ'Palled. I &amp;m't cleani~ qp.
Gloanted , two &lt;1f my good
w.imt .anyone to die ;at 'l'lnr
Dar Aenie: · I recently :fciends met 0nli.ne.and they
house. I .am nm dtat familiar recei:ved a wedding iitMta- JII1C ¥ely lhappy. !But [ made
with the pmcess involq ;a tien from ;a fuend. Inside . lhe mistake of befriending
death,lbutcertalnlyil!beFe .ane "ll'as .a !llote explaining dlat wmeone&lt;Online.lithought l
caRs you !lave to lllllke., :a , :tbere 'Was l.imited space 'Ill oould trust ithis guy, ·bm I
body lt(1) be .dealt w,ilib and the recepl!ion :and ·ithcrefore -was wrong. Even though we
;;orne clean lt.ql. •
·we were &lt;Only invited tl!&gt; dte did 111ot 'have a Tomantic
I to:ld our meuds lif John ceremony.
· relationship, he became
were 10 die wh11e ihe was .at
What is the ~ el!i- increasingly
possessive,
the 'beach house lhaq .a quette regarding this mat- C(I)J)llrolling and abusive ,

BY KAnrf Mnu= •

=··

,,._
HMC
Association members invo1Yed planning the J!!Oker
are fl:om the .left, froQt. Mist Miler, Anita
ROberts, ev.ent chamnan; Bethany P.ur1«!y, Holzer H~ representative; Mist Rose; and Pam Roach; .Billd badt. Keilb
Mayo, event co-dlairman; lisa Baker, .Angie Potts; and Usa Halley.
.
•
'

n.,.,.....y, May27, 2oo8

ANNIE,S MAILBOX

mee=·

s,· •

-PageA3

Clubs and

Church will have a sing at 7
p.m. ar the church with the
Nazarene Singers.
·

Thtu'llday, May l9
• POMEROY - Alpha Iota
• M asters, U :30 a.m. at
: Bun' s Party Barn .

Birthdays

·. "organizations
'

•.• .

Churdl events

•
•

Friday, May 30
• HARRISONVILLE
: Harri s~nville Presbyterian
•

.

'

'Dr 'ey,Ju. 3
MIDDLEPORT - The
Rev. O 'DeU Maliley will
celebrate his 80th birthday
on lune 3. Cards may be
sent to him at 160 Beech
St.,
Middleport,
Ohio
457(i().

.
-st.n 4&gt;holo
FatmerS Bank recently donated to tile oomml!lnity phase of the Meigs Local Enrichment Foundation project which orga·
nizers hope win benefit students and residents living in the county's three school distrit&lt;ts. Phase one proposes a multipul]ilOse community compleK made LIP of a rubberized track. designed for walking and running programs; :nature trails
designed for hiking, .biking and jogging putpOSes; a multi-putpose community center designed to support i!Jdoor well ness
and community activities; perfonning arts facilities. Pictured are (from left) Mike Bartrum, MLEF, Paul fleed and Paul
Kloos of 'fanners Bank, Ste11e MI:ISSBI', Frank Blake of Ml.EF.
.
·
·

. ~bt ~allipoli• Ball!' Qtrtbunt,
ltbt Joint tllra·•ant l.tlf•ttr ·
and The DaHy Sentinel
have launched a new page every
Friday called ''Faith and Family".
If yoa have a testimonial story,
life-changing event about yourself
·or even a poem that you would
like to share please email to:
kkelly@mydailytribune.com
nfields@mydailyregister.com
boeftich@mydailysentinel.com
-. Limit your story to
500-750 words.
PlfJise include a phone number ·
in your email.

�PageA4

OPINION

.The Daily Sentinel

The Daily Sentinel

'IUesclay, May 27, 2008

TUesday,Niay27,2008

Can GOP nform to avoid •Kennedy scenario 'for 2008?

E:v.ery.one lin .aud .areund
multiple scandals over lob- - by "throwing out ·the 25year-old playbook" of calling
AIT!!'lliican ljll!ili1'ict; ris IJ'U1litlg
·bying and earmarks.
111 Claurt.. hp.
....
Democrats
"bad liberals"
lfor Sen. IE()ward ~.
!However, the new House
and
identifying
(140) !J!12.:21!i6. FAX (140Tt12-2157
themselve~
ID-Mass~ on .a perilonal
I(I(!)P leader, iRep. ~ohn
au •AJ' lfy11AIMI.!level. 8 .ut Rt;pulilicllllS .!have
Boehner (Ohio), while a foe as "true oonservatives."
.Jn an echo of!Oavis' House
w ·M!O:tk very !hard 't(!) .a¥Gid
0f eamillltiks, has lbeen ~low
advice,
Alexander said: "I
ttbe lfu1fi!lment of 'his {pOlitic
lla6aJ
in ·devclopin,g a new image
Ohio Va ley PutJ.Ii$bing Co.
.don't
think
indepeildent vot(:al &amp;earn. ·
·
Kulidlwle fonthe party and has largely
going to buy that this
In JID iinteMew lin Mar.cih,
coooentrated .on legislative ers.
Dan Goodridl
~ne4Y llalked .about !the .
'tactics such as ·motions to year. We have to remind votPd!llislile.r
.difference tthat the ''J'%4
recommit andlffiliSS ·WalkeutS er;; of who we am, -whar
we're gOing to do about real
IDemQCI'lll:ic !landslide meant
'to&lt;On:ibao:rass Democmts.
Charlene Ha Tlidl
tfpr the JPIS~e cl 'h"'beral 11ine scatslthey need fora!6Cl- . After !three straight drub- problems like high gas prices
Genera:! Manage.r-ftews IElilittl&gt;r ·
1~is1atiion,
speoificaTiy V-ale, !f:ilibuster'iJIIOOf !ll)lljori- bings,ao~pecia1 elections, ·the and healih care and why what
Medicare. .!He deatlly W,&amp;S 1Y· lbnt idley &lt;Call gain .as 'llllllly GOP seems to !be scrambling our opponent~ want to do is
· tf
'-"- • '"'h .as -sev~n, and possibly
rpull
_
lbqp1ng
or.a sllllillu 'tt!Ulllt"' mode!:ate
R~ublicans to mvent a mew image. 11 wrong. We stay on offense."
"Branding · is an awful
:this y.ear.
across !the fute rto -sunnntt 'looks 'like panic - anQ it is.
word,"
Alexander told me. "lt
Kenncll:y
rrecatleil
110
me
""~
But
late
1s
'
b
etterttiwn
'!16ver,
~shU malee 110 bav ruJMDIUtg M
!hew, ~wo yem:s .after his !DemOOl'llticrinitiarives, much
·So, what'·s to be done? sounds like a trlc:k on the vot~furJmt
:rdigiDJt, ,, Jm .j,itifa:_g du
.Jilllii&gt;v.al iin !the 'Senate ib.lldk iin as ILBJ IJlllllc;d •COII!iei'Vative MCCain lhas "'el '10 (:Onsoli- ers. We ·have io talk ahout valIDeii100111ts.
.J
jiw ~t! tJ&amp;erMf;'i11' •46:ril~ du }ftdDfff ~'962. ~;w.e if.ailed w.ith Sonthern
11n ;the IHC!luse, .as !Rep. 'ifom date 'his message - as writer ue s - and beliefs. We can't
49 senators and what
srudt, t.~r f1j dU' t~ras; o.r • rigltt du
~~~..c~.e ~" palasa;e~ Da\\is, IR-VJI., wamed llast Vuval Le:vin recounts in this force
they
stand
for into three
•"""' "'" ,.-~qpi
week, "the J"!.&gt;litical atmos- week's Weekly Standard ~
fHll'l'k ~~ ~o .usemftk. IIMI. m.pditi:lm .ence
words.
What
we
stand for as a
was the deatien of Jlhere
:faaing
ililouse .· but he has proposed reformist
tlu Gmwrunmt
re4tas Dj~4tu:JeL
1'9M.... We failed &lt;in 1he ~publicans .this 'NCilV.erdber policies on health care, ear- conference is the sum total of
~J1g, lb ut iit passed &lt;in !the · istthe werstilirule'Watergate,"
marks, .education, subsidies, what each of us stands fer."
For himself, Alexander has
-llhe finil Amendnlllnt to the U.5. Cunatlbdiom late w.inter. lfillieen senators v.!hidh cost the GOP -49 seats corporate welfare, energy,
proposed
a five-year "new
just .abs&lt;Iilute1y .Chai\ged &lt;in 1974. ~v.ing lost 3 o seats climate change, education
their votes en the 'basis ef lin 2~ the ((jj(j)]&gt; corild lose and trainirig, securities regu- Manhattan Project for clean
energy independence" that
ithe.etection ·o:if"M:'
2@ ,= fbisyear.
Jation and defense policy.
Actually,
Democrats
So, what are IR.epnblicans
One could ·argue that includes.a bipartisan push for
Taday isl'&lt;Uesday, May 27, the l48thilay ef 2@@8. There piCked &lt;Up ~ust •One Senate doing 10 avDid the !Kennedy McCain '~ stand against plug-in cars, economically
.are 2J;8 da)l_s.1.eft in the year.
seat iu .that e!ec.tion, but it soenario? The presidential "unconditiomil" presidential competitive solar power, carbon fllCIWture, building con· i'aday's Highlight in llfistfl!Y: tQn Ma:y 27., J 937, :the newly ga"'.e ·t hem .a ·ttetal ef 68 standaJ:d"'bearer, Sen.. ~ahn talks with foreign enemies !l111111Pleted Golden Gate iBmdge .connecliilg 'San IFrancisoo vetes.. And Democrats MdCain (Ari'Z. ), has the · as advocated by 'Obama -is servation, nuclear waste stor.arid Marin CoUllty. Calif,, was opened 10 ,pede&amp;tliian rtraffic. pidkel:ltUp 371Rouse ;;eats .as !Jl01en1ia.J tte offer a 1fbeodore a tough, TR -style assertion of · age and fusion energy.
He also supports the
,(Vehiculai- ttafliic ibegan crossin11 the '!:midge the next day.)
'President !Lyndon 3ohnson IRoose;velt-style refonnor •s national security machismo
mandatory
universal health
On this date: [n 1'818, American reformerAmClia .a.enk;; ·scored .a Victl!ll)' e.:er 'Sen. agenda 10 coUIIter (])bama's that -will appeal to ·White
care
proposal
advartced by
Bloomer, whopqpulari'Zed:the gannent1hatbears her name Banry Geldw.ater, IR-Ariz., appelll far Change _. and working-class voters whom
-"'bloomers" - ·was bom in !Homer, N.Y.
61 percent to 39 ;percent. ·
same supPerters think that Obama can't seem to attract. Sens. Ron Wyden, 'iD'Ore.,
.· [n I896,2551JCople were !killed w.hen.atomadosti'IWk'St.
Whenbskedhim w.hether itbe entire OOP shotild folAt the same time, though, and Bob Bennett, R-Utah,
Lauis .andlEastSt.!Louis,llll. ·
·
. it would take Jl J%4-Slyle lowthatlead.
·
McCain .seemed to align that would replace employ· [n, [ 933, W.lilt l!l&gt;isney's Academy Award-winnin,g animat- landslide to pass 'his long"Democrats
own himself with President er-based insurance with indi·ediihort "TheThrt:e'Lirtle .Pigs" wasfirstreleased.
sought goal of universal 'change,'" said iRtl1J. Mark Bush 's low-blow asserti0n vidually purchased "choice"
,: In 1 !13:5, the 'Supreme Coun, in 'Schechter IPoultry health care, .he ;;aid, "'No, f IKiFk, R.JI!l., an original that .a ny negotiation with plans financed by tax credits.
House Minority Whip Roy
~m:poration 1\1. United States, ·stnmk .dow.n 1he Natienal just think. ~We need .additional McCain baCker in a targeted .Iran constitutes Hitler-era
Blunt,
R-Mo., said that his
lndu!!triaiiReco.:ery Act. .
·
iJ])Cl'nocratic votes lin me iieat. "We .can - and we "appeasement." That was a
· : lit [1936, theCunardJineriR'MSIQueen Mary1eft1England Senate .and .a Democratic . ·aught - 1o own ~e 'R' new link to Bush - along colleagues, too, would
im. iitnnaic!len 'IOJ.l\lle lo 'New Voik.
;president ito llead 1heta."
wa~d. II ·think we should with his ta11 and Iraq poli- emphasize "the gas cos!.
:
['94ll. 1the British :rurvy salik tthe Gemum lbatfles'hjp
li'bcJt U5 iJittle .chance tthat .CIIII\pal.gn on ~he theme cies- that will drive away issue," "competition and
choice in health care" and
Jimlar&lt;lk d'f &amp;ance, w.ith ;a aoss .of more !than 2,[00 llivt:s. lKenoedy~ \lfuoice for presi- •,Reform ;fer Reslilts.~"
independent voters. ·
!1'964, -inilqlendent [ndilCii first pii.me llliirii.Gtet; .dent, Sen. 8ariWkObama,IDEver since !Republicans
Senate Republicans, like :Democratic anempts to
~wabanlll Nehru; «lied.
.
1111~. iiiJI.ill ptill ,an l.!m'-Sized 'lost &lt;their Ce11gfes-sional
their House counterparts, simultaneously raise taxes
; In 198Ji,lin Bel~ mpreseotafi¥es tdf BWio JindC!Ilina w:ict.oof :this . y.ear, \but ·~0Iiities lin the 2006 4i)ec- have concentrated since 2006 and give breaks to special
~ WS!AJIDelltsCf ratifiC4Ii]on 100 tthepliol ejumJo:\8, L ~cmiW!y i¢1eaily aS hqping 'lion, ;fhe~
'IVe l!Jeen :talking On tactical maneuvers - fili- interests such 'as trial lawyers.
Republicans clearly have
~. Ktmg!totf.be{Jbineselin a&lt;9lil:7.
. .
lthat ' ·ObanuCil Jibility lle ;aoout"'re. . · "ltheij!attty busters, mainly- but there
been
awakened to the perils
:'
1'993. ti~Ve people w.ert 'lcilled iin a .botribil!g an tthe . :iaract1De!l...loten;lleithe!J101ls · -\Wiithlittle;to'fi ·ow fmdt.
are signs they are developing
facing
them - in November.
flffiiiimuseum,M,artlinFlmmce,ltaly.
·"Will elql811d iQicir &lt;party's
11lllere.certairilywBSJIIDeed · a new approach pegged .to
They still have fiiJe months
' ~ 'Y~ ~1!:!""1· fioriim:...rihe )glii:\'Cmmenf-s at' ~· dbe ~Use ~ tforii:Otooling. iiihe patcybore 2008 requirements.
lw.ODe&amp;&amp; 1111 ;fhe
~lban:il:iin,g.case, w.as ·8ell1eimcd . Senate :and IIIUike at :possthle ;the stBi.n of'DeLay1sm -1he
Senate
Republican to avert Ted Kennedy's fond
i&amp;O U yean; &lt;in iPrismutfter apo1o.gUiinj\ ifm metw.arriin;g :any- Ito 1Jl8SS fiberallegis1ati(!)Q.
placing ,of pow.enoll:er jprin- Conference Chairman Lamar hope- but, in reality, that's
~.iliboutlthedcailly iPJot. . .
.
And lR:epliblicans ha"'e ciple that chiii'llCte!lized the Alexander (Tenn.), who's up precious little time.
(Morton Kondracke. is
: Five y~ :J!!!G: '!'Wo h:aqts ·shet.and :lcilled two knencan every reason to fear that this 'heavy -handed lhy,pe!Jlarti- for re-ele.ction this year, said
flOld'icrs m !ftalluJIIh, a 'bathed of suppett fer Sal:ldam Kennedy dr.e.am might be sanship .o f f&lt;mner iHouse he thinks he and his col- executive · editor of Roll
lllussein. Demicik 1'odd Lee, a ·snspected serial !killer ,()f fulfilled. lin :the Senate, Majonty !Leader
fom leagues can .retain their seats Call, the newspaper of
IW.omen iin LI!!Uisiana, was arrested in A1lant.a. A iltul:ly was IDemocmts can't :gain the iDcLay, R-Texas, .and led to -. "tough year" though it is Capitol Hill.)
n:leued that sbo:wed women who look hormones for yeafs
(ID:a~rillk mA'libei.mer'sm•efhertty,pes ,o:if dementia.
:· One 'Y.ear ~~go: American forces freed 421iidn11Pped ilmqis
WHAT'S A S'EVBN-LJETTiER
jo ;a llliid 1011 :an :al.Qalda !hideout north &lt;Of Baghdad. !Dario
WCilRD !FQR 'DETERMINED'?
fJt,a•diilli woo .a m'itrJibbre:v.i.ated mil:y 500. !Broadway
~ G.o:nDhco Wy1erlliliedin Camarillo, Calif., .at age 75.
• 'IOday'~; Birfllda¥&amp;: Novelist llil.emum Wouk is -93. Actor
Qmstqlber Lee its '86. Actress !Lee Meriwether is 73.
Mnliiciao lbmsc_y Lewis !~ 73.. Actor iLouiJ; Gossett Jlr. ri.s
11. IRilrylhnHmd..,'blues 'Slllgcr 1Ra,¥mond ·s anaers '(111be
Pcr:swm(!)Qs; i s@. .i\ctor Bruce Wertz u 165. 'Singer nwe
[loo1d;Jum iii 63. ~..actress IDee IDee Jlhidgew.ater is :58.
Actor Racbard Scbiff is .5 3. Singer 'Sieult!iie SiOl.IX {'llhe
Creatures, Si0U!Xsie and fhe Banshees) is 5.G.!Rock singermusician Neil IFinli (The Fino IBtothers) is :5(i). Actress
'€a!by Silv.ers 1s 47. (Jomeiliao Adam Caro1lll is 44 ..Actor
Todd Brillges is 43. K1qJper Andre 3000 (Outkast) is 33.
.
·~ ladlikiss is 33. 1V chef .J:amie Oli:ver is 33. Actor
Ethan l&gt;IIII\I)f is 14.
·
·
.
: Thlilllght :for 1I'oday: "Great wisdom i.s ,generous; petty
wisdom is contentious. Great speeCh is 'illlpassioned, ~&gt;mel!
speech .cantankerous." - &lt;Jhuang-l'.zu, Chinese ·essayist
in 2006, .Sm:ah !P.alin
morally significant."
become the overriding con~~.369 B.C.-c.286 B.C).
became AlaSka's youngest
~nd there are bioethicists sideration."
· ·
.and fu.st woman ,governor .
who point to the continuing
Because of Palin's rep uta- .
afterhav.ing_eamedJin;putacosts of rearing a "defective tion as a maverick, and her
tion as ,a .&amp; tetmined and
infant."
(f
initial reduction of state
suctJes!d'ul advru;ate of
Nat
By inspirational contrast, spending (including porkethics reform in politics. ln
Palin, says of her new son, barrel · spending),
life·· .Letter&amp; .10 the .editor ,are .welcome. T&lt;hey should he less the primary, she defeated an
Hentoff · Trig: "I'm looking at him affirming Palin connects
#ran 300 words. All .letters are suilject to editing, must ·be incumbent Republican gov- - - - right now, and I see perfec, with ·voters and has been
signed, and include address and .te.lephope number. No emor and !then aformcrtwolion. Yeah, he has an extra mentioned as a pos sible
unsigned letters will be published. ILette,rs shoulil be in term \)}emocratic .go:vemor.
chromosome. I keep think- vice presidential running
good taste, addl'essing .isswes, not personalities. Letters qf
During !her flfst year in ·problems . with my other ing, in .our world, what is mate for Johil McCain .
thanks to organizations allii individuals will not be ac:cept- office, as reported 'by 1he pregnancies." As a resuh, normal and what is perfect?"
She would be a decided
"ed for publication.
Ass
· "-~~-~~
.· on_..~yfromJ:O, 1lhe Jllld her husband, Todd,
Three days after she gave asset -. an independent
'"' '"'"'uELNU "''"""'
ne:ver had BD"' doubt 1he,v binh, .Palin was back in her Republocan · governor, a
'the old ,guard, pow.erfw w~uld have ~ .child.
::; . Anchorage offtce with her woman. a defender of. life
.1IICillbcrs of
state .G OP
"We've both been very husband and Trig. "I Cali against the creeping culture
(and) stoodupiothe.oilinu:r- · voc.al about being pl'&lt;l-iife," think of so many male can- of death and a fresh face in
{U
SFS21:UII)
estS t1Jat hold ,great·power in ·she ·told the Associated didates," she tells the AP, national politics, described
Reader Sei'Yi«!s
~ka, and with .bipartisan Press. "We under~d that " who watched families in "the Almanac of National
OHio~· httlng
sUP,POrt
in the statehouse, she •every innocent
has won- grow while they were in Politics" a~ ''an avid hunter
· C oactlun Paller
.
·
·
'0
·
. I
.
.
PJlbila'*i """'f
Mondly
woo
.a
tax
oncrease
on
:tbe
oil
deiful
potel1fial."
·
office. There is no reason to and fisher with a killer
ur mam concern m a I s,tones ts .to , through "frfday, 1l1 Co.un Street.
companies'IJIIOfits,"
In .an age when DNA and believe a' woman can't do it smile who wears designer
be .accumoe. ~ !fOU now C){.an anor P.omemy; &lt;Dt&gt;lo.
&amp;l!:onderLaofst ~our_.,~~..:...then, ~
. :f:,~ 'other ~enetiG-selection tests with a growing family. My glasses and heels, and hair
in .a story, ca111he1WWSroom_, (7&lt;40) ·pootage paid It Pomomy.
,, '"UINl" £&lt;
incn:asiqjly determine ·who baby will not be at all or in like _modem sculpture."
992-2156.
.... . . . The ~iHICI•J 'PIWI m;i
1he 'Ohlo Uaw
;n
I lkAt
fourmooths~t, .fuund is "fif'; to !ioin
human any sense neglected."
Still unknown is whether
she w.as g01qg tn have .a beings. ""e are witnessing the
Says . the. gov.ernor of Palin would be as flip-flopOUr nm llllllillilr 1s
child
with
IDoWD
•
syndrome,
debate·
betw.een
sanctity
of
Alaska,
"I will not shirk my ping as McCain on the Bush
. (74D)912-21.;
a condition~cy life versus ~ality of life duties." Taking her stand for ' torture policy · that has so
moderates1o-liCVere JIDCIItal being liiOt'e
n decided in life as a holder of high polit- blighted our reputation in
retardation. A scboo1:friend favor of death. ThisisafCI!uh ical office is all the more the world. But we'd find
funeofmy SODsbadiDiiwn welcomed by internationally valuable in the face of ·not out, as - if chosen as his
·~ Charlene Hoeflich, fxt 12
sy drome, and ll bav.e influential bioethicist Peter only the tennination of fetal running mate - · she would
A¢ Elili : Brian Reed. E•t 14
kno n functioning adults Sin_ger, now · a celebrated lives as not worth continu- create more interest in this
A I E10E: Boih Serge&lt;rt,&amp;t 13
with the extra chromosomes Princeton {lniversity profes- ing before they can· speak already · .largely scripted
of ~t syndrome.
sor, who, ih July 1983, wrote for themselves, but it also pres1denual campaign.
lliowev.cr, as ,a longtime in ":ftldiatrics," the officjal put s a searching light on the
And her presence could
reporter
oodisability
rights.
,
Jo.umal
of
1be
American
growing
"futility"
doctrine
highlight
Obama's extremist
*a 11 - : oa... +ianll, e.n. ,;;
I have dfsoov.cmllthal many .+,caticmy of'Pediatrics: ,
in hospitals - affecting abortion views on whether
· a· llo._: _oa.it, Ext18
fetuses so diagDofied have
"lf·we .compare a severely born people of all ages.
cenain lives are worth liv~.:Judy Clarl&lt;, Elrt. 10
been aborted by parents defective human infant with
Nancy Valko, a medical ing, even a child born after a
Wij 'I I
w~J? have hclco advJ&amp;ed by ll ooob
.
uman animal, a dog ethicist and intensive-care botebed abortion.
· Gene:• "SMJBr
.._....... OM lit
theu doctDp;' Ito ·end the · or pig, tforeXIID1P1e, we wiD nurse 1 consult on these
· (Nat Hento.ff is a nacionalCharlene Hoetlidi,'Eirt. 12
1s Weel&lt;s .
'32.26
goancies
'bca.use
of
the
often
.fiod
'the
nonhuman
1o
lives-worth-living
debates,
ly.renowned
auti!Qrity on the
26 Weel&lt;s
"64.20
ture
"i.mpcl:fcct
quality
of
have
superior
capacities,
has
emphasi:ted
that
"
with
Frrst
Amendmem
and the
52-s
'127.11
e" ?f,suoh ·chil~n.
· both actual and potential, the rise of the modern Bill of Rights and aurlwr of
o............. emn,.
Palin &amp; fim reacuoo to the for ntionality, self-con- bioethics movement, life is many books, including "The
1lt Wwi&lt;B
. '53.55
diagnosis
wu to researCh iclou ness, communication, no longer assumed to have War on the Bill ofRights and
26 Weal&lt;&amp;
., 07.10
the
facts
about
1be condi- and anything else that can the intrinsic value it once the Gathering Resistance.,
52 w..u
'21.21
www.~wdiilll.cun1
tion, 1lipce "l'v.e neVer .had plllu&amp;ibly be considered did , and 'quality of life ' has (Seven Stories Pl'l!ss, 2004).

Dealbs

il!f

n.

iJf

for.,

TODAY IN HISTORY

t

m

.

John McCain, here is your vice president

LETTERS TO THE
EDITOR

The Daily Sentinel

me

-moon.

me

us

He••

--u··

a

-:

·--------:-'-------------------~

'

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Registration extended for watershed day camp

Mirl ~,Taylor
_G ALLIPOLIS- Patrick "Von" Taylor, 47, of Gallipolis,

~ Monday, May 26, 2008, at bis home. Arrangements

will ,be announced by the Deal Funeral Home .

RubJ ~tosema~y ·Nanae ·

are

of

The Daily Sentinel • Page As

;www.mym.ilysentinel.com

_GAI.4JIPOIJIS -Ruby Rosemary Nance, 76, Gallipdlis,

died 'S~dl!y•.May 25, 2008, .in Holzer Medical Center.
She~ survived by her husband, Frank Nance.

· 'Servtces will be 1 p .m. Thursday in the Cremeens
Funeral Chapel, wtth the Rev. Truman Johnson, the Rev.
D~ell J?hnson and the Rev. Donald Johnson officiating.
Bunal will be m the Old MercerviUe Cemetery. Friends
may call from 2 to 4 and 6 to 9 p.m. Wednesday at the
funeral·home, where an evening service will be conducted
at 8 ·p.m.b&gt;' the Rev. James Hall.
·
.!E.x;pressoons of sympathy may be sent to thefamily by
:vtsotrng www.cremeensfuneralhomes.com.
.

. RU}ILAND .- The reg- the new 2.2-acre wetland
ostration deadline has. been constructed.la~ fall.
.
extended for . the fourth
Topics will mclude buds.
annual Leadong Creek •f ish, cr_afts, worms and
Watershed Summer Day compos!In!l, soils, wetlands
Camp to be hell;l lune 4 and and aq_u~l!c bugs, snakes,
5 at the . Metgs SWCD coal numng, flmtknappmg.
Conservatmn . Area near archery, forestry and tree
Rutland. There . is no identifica~on, wildflowers
charge to a~end .the camp and medicmal p~ants .
~ut ~e ~gtstration dead· The camp will be held
line •.s IFnday;
·
from 9 a . ~. to 5 p.m. with
Thts yem: s watershed ~ off t~e at 9 a.m. and
camp,
geared toward pick up endi!lg at 5:30 p.m.
yoongsters ~termg _grades . '[he
~etgs
. SWCD
five through etght, will take Conservation Area ts locaton a different look wtth ed on New Ltma Road
IDIIny actirities focusing on 'between
Rutland
and

Hani&amp;ooville. The camp is
geared towards youngsters
entering
grades
five
through eight, however
children · not in that age
range wanting to attend
may contact the Meigs
SWCD for consideration.
The entire cost of the
camp is provided by funds
from the Meigs Soil and
Water
Conservation
District and the U.S. Fish
&amp; Wildlife ·Service. There
is no fee for campers, and
lunch and s~acks will be
provided.
However
campers
should wear

clothing
suital)le
for
rugged outside use, and
bring plenty of sunscreen
and bug repellent.
Instructors and staff members at camp are from the
Mei~s
SWCD,
Ohio
Envrronmental Protection
Agency, Hocking CoUege,
Ohio Department of Natural
Resources and many others.
To register, or for more
information, contact Raina
Fu!!ts or Jenny Ridenour at
the Meigs SWCD in
Pomeroy at 740-992-4282.
Registration is to the first 50
campers.

State panel: Ohio trauma system flawed, lacks oversight

O~LUMBUS (AP) -.
Clb10 silnlnma systeQ:I osriddied with ~ws and falls
short _ofm~ federal tee·. UETART FALLS - ~ ulie Elizabeth 'Campbell, 60, L:tart o~.ndatrons, A~ of
Falls, dted Tuesday, May 20, 2008 at her residence. ·
medical .experts $Bid rn a
She is survived by her brother, William Campbell Jr of report. · · . .
. .
'New York, N.Y.
A comnuttee of. doctors,
There are no calling honrs or funeral services. Cremation nnrs~s, par~~ed1cs an_d
will take place and the burial of the cremains will be in the hospital .adnumstrators ~s
family cemetery near Oil City, Pa. Cremeens Funeral ~pnng gave the state a faillilome, 'Ra~ine, is in charge of arrangements.
mg grade of 33 .rc;rcent.
~ ~x;presstons of sympathy may be sent to the family by They me_asured Ohio s sysviSiting www.cremeensfuneralhomes.com
tern , agamst 13 · mdicators.
based an federal recommendations.. ,
,Enacted 111 2002, ~h10 s
.'LETART FALLS -Julia S. Campbell, 99, LetMt Falls, trauma law was destgned
to . ensure · th~t t~a~ma
dted Tuesday, May 20, 2008, at her residence.
. She is survived by her son, W'tlliam Campbell of NeW, patoents end up m hospttals
best eqmpped to take care
York, N.Y.
There are no calling hours or funeral services. Cremation
will take place and the burial of the cremains will be in the
family cemetery near Oil City, Pa. Cremeens Funeral
Home, Racine, is in.charge of arrangements.
.Expressions of sympathy may be sent to the family by
fromPageAl
'VlSttmg www.cremeeilsfuneralhomes.com.

·E.c:.n.-w

Wias.ca.....

~f · .them. Such patients medics an~ hospitals to American
College
of
tnclude people severely send cntocally injured Surgeons to be designated a
injured in car accidents, patients to trauma centers, trauma center.
vtctoms of stabbings or the panel said.
Miller said the state needs
gunsh&lt;?t wounds and peo·:What we don't have is its own designation and
ple wtth severe bums or teeth in .the l;lw,". said Dr. accountability system . .
broken bones. ,
Sulney Mi~er, a panel me~"There's no lead agency
. The re~ c_ned several ber and du;ector of Oh10 that has a say over the entire
madequactes, mcl~?mg a State ;l!mversity Medical state trauma system." said
lack of trauma trammg for Center s
bum
center. Kathy Haley, vice . chairdoctors and other hospital 'There's no mandate from woman of the committee
s~ who . tre!it trauma the legislature to look at what and trauma program coordiPfl:lients. Hospttals have goes on once the patient gets nator
at
Nationwide
f~ed to keep records of to the hospital door."
Children's Hospital.
. panents who die at the scene
The committee also said
. Trauma is the leading
of an accide~t, the report said. . there are no . trauma centers cause of death of people
. Th~ Oh10 . Emergency m south~as~m Oh10, whtch ·ages 1.to 44, Haley said.
Me_d ical Servtces board, makes It difficult to treat
The
legislation
has
which overs~s the system, patients wtthm an hour.
pushed more Ohio hospitals
has. ~o authonty .t? enforce
Hospitals must be verified to get into the trauma care
Oh10 S· law requmng para- every three years by ''the business.

Memorial

frank. llrwin

0

'

GALLIPOLIS - Fralik James Irwin, 60, Gallipolis, died
Friday, May 23, 2008, at his residence.
He was preceded in death by his parents, Robert J. and
Eleanor Gill Campbell Irvin.
Services will be I 0 a.m. Wednesday in the Cremeens Funeral
Olapel. Burial will be in the Centenary Cemetery, Green
Township. Friends may call one hour prior to the service.
.

.

.

Local·Briefs
Cbeerleading tryout meeting
. POMEROY - Any students interested in trying out for
a position on the Meigs High School cheerleading squads
needs to attend a meeting Wednesday, May 28, 5 p.m. at the
Bethany Building of Trinity Church, Second Street. The
building is located across from the •P omeroy Post ·Office. If
unable to attend notify Ralph Werry, P.O. Box 2, Pomeroy,
With the name and address and information will be mailed.

. 12-year..old W.Va. _girl
.stung by scorpion at store
.

heroes. Their sacrifice was
important, their sacrifice
was noble, and their sacrifice was permanent," said
Anderson.
The parade .to kickoff the
celebration ·was led by the
Drew, Webster honor guard
plus Spc. Brandon Williams,
who will be leaving for Iraq
in July. Brandson is the
grandson of legionnaire
Mickey Williams. Units o(
the parade included the
Southern Band, wagonload
of elderly ·legionnaires, no
longer able to walk the
route, frretruoks from S.cipio
Township,
Syracuse,
Middleport, Bashan and
Pomeroy, an .antique fue
truck and several cars, horses, Racine Pack 241 , and the
national winners in the
re.ceot archery -contest held
in Louisville.
The program opened with
a welcome from Pomeroy
Mayor John Musser, comments by Gladys Cummings
on · behalf of the Legion

.

,

.

.

.

ChMiel• lloeftlctJphallo

The Southern High School Band under the direction of Chad Dodson mardled in the
Memolial Day parade in Pomeroy and then presented several patriotic selections duling
the observance. · . .
Auxiliary, patriotic selections by the Southern Barid,
and a call from Joe Struble,
legionnaire, to give proper

respect (o the flag. ,
,
A wreath was placed in
the river in tribute to those
lost at sea by ·veterans John

Weeks . and Lenllie Jewell,
and a gun salute concluded
the annual observance of
Memorial Day.
'

2001, it is not a "green
building" and pointed out
construction ' specs change
year to year just as technology has changed.
Deem said if an addition
is financed he doesn't know
what woqld happen to the
existing high school at this
point, sayi11g, "I'm sure part
of it could be saved " He
added he himself is a jadu ·
ate . of · SHS with his own
sentimental attachment to
the structure.
"I have a Jot of blood,
sweat and tears in this
building too.. .!' d love to be
able to keep this building
but the questions is what's
best for the students?''
Deem explained the dis·
trict has an obligation to

explore or.tions for the children and 'it's up to all of us
alumni to make sure 'we're
giving our k.ids the best
opr.ortunities. Bringing the
but! ding green is , a big
thing, neither building is
energy efficient." He also
pointed out the high. school
ts not operating at full
capacity when it comes to
offering the newest technology and electrical hook ups.
The next step is nailing
down an architect and going
through a ratings process
with the architects, develop-·
ing a sketch/rendering of
the addition after community input and developing a
plan . for financing . If
Sauthem decides not,to.,.\!St

on the addition, Deem said
it goes to the bonom of the
list again in terms of receiving state·dollars for ~uilding
and he wasn't sure when
they'd return to the top:
There's no cost to the district during these preliminary stages of developing
the proposal.
.
"The high school is a ·
good building but it doesn't
house today's technologies," Deem stated. "With
all the industry coming into
the area we wailt an attractive school to lure people to
the community."

I

BARBOIJ•RSVILLE, she had been stung by a
W.Va. (AP) - One young scorpion, but . then he saw
shopper at a Wai-Mart in West the critter scurry underneath
Vugmia had to watch out for a box. It was captured by
more than falling prices.
Wai-Mart employees.
A 12-year-old girl picking · Most of the nearly 2,000
up a seedless watermelon kinds of scorpions are not
frol)l a bin was stung danserous to humans.
Sunday ·by a tan, inch-long
Rtchard Coyle, senior
scorpion that had apparently director of international
stowed away in a ·shipment affairs for Wai-Mart, said
froni Mexico.
.
store employees believe the
Megan . Templeton, of problem was with a single
Barboursville, was taken to shipment of watermelons.
"We are very concerned,"
the hospital as a precaution
but later released. Her he said. "This is a very rare
father, .William Templeton, incident. When I spoke with
said the pain was a little the store manager, she said
worse than a bee sting.
in her 17 years she had
He initially didn't believe never heard of something
his daughter when she said like this."

Police say Ohio man leads
police on 3-county chase
MONROE (AP)- Police was spotted going 90 mph in
in southwest Ohio say they · a 55 mph zone.
Bowling says Knight was
chased a speeding driver
with a carload of children on an outing with three chilthrough three coynties, dren and his wife, and tried
finally stopping his car with to outrun police because his
license was suspended.
spike strips.
·
Knight was taken to
Authooties say 28-yearButler
County jail. Police
old Jerry Knight was arrest.e d Monday at about ,9:20 say he's facing a number of
a.ni. after he was zapped charges, including three
counts of child endangering,
with a Taser.
Monroe police Otftcer J.R. reckless operdtioh, speeding
Bowling says police tried to and going the wrong way on
pull Knight over because he a divided highway.

Group aiffis to speed up
construction of new bridge
· CINCINNATI (-'\~) Council of Governments,
Officials say a planning says the group is hoping to
group could help speed up shave three years off the
the · start date for construe- planning proq~ss and begin
tion of a new bridge span- construction aS early as 2012.
ning Oie Ohio River from ' Policinski says the group
Kentucky to Ohio.
must first choose a location
Made Policinski;.executive for the structure, which would
director. of ' the Ohio- replace the heavily travellll!
Kentuc~-Jodiana Regional Brent Spence Bridge.

'

Southern
&amp;omPageAl
share would be put in place
and probably wouldn't
know until fall.
Deem said he·alo!lg with
the board wish to work
with the community and
teachers to try and come up
with what the . addition
might look like if they do
an addition.
"If it's an addition we can
bring that whole elementary
building up to green standards," Deem said about
higher energy ratings. He
added, even though the elementary school was built in

IIHOWTI

FOil

Eastern

would qualify for funding
assistance for an II ,000
, square-foot
addition,
including
ten
900
squarefromPageAl
foot classrooms.
Edwards said the OFSC
watching what is happening completed a master plan as ·
with the bill, and communi"
part
.
of its meetings with
eating
weekly
with him, school teachers and
(Shoemaker)."
administrators, but no cost
Open . enrollment in estimatef have been secured.
Eastern Local was up by 50 No time ,. frame for construcstudents at the beginning of tion has been set, either..
the current school year, and
Eastern High School, built
the district expects to gain in the mid-l950's and com-I 0 students per year, pletely renovated a decade
Edwards said, based on ago, is considered adequate
enrollment
· projections to meet the needs of its stuexamined as part of the dent body, partly due to
additional classroom space
facilities planning process.
Edwards said the district built after the renovation.

Racine
from PageAI
Hill reported the sink hole
at Fourth Street and
Sycamore had been ftll.ed,
saying it was not a, storm or
sewer drain problem but just

a "~t" in the ground that
fonned a sink hole.
Council al.s&lt;i acoepted the
resignation of Councilman
Gary Willford effective at
the end of April. Council has
30 days to appoint someone
to his seat, after that 30
days, Hill may appoint a
person to the vacancy.

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ins111111Ke rate?
Stay local and.call1111
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Home Auto Farm BusinesS

�PageA4

OPINION

.The Daily Sentinel

The Daily Sentinel

'IUesclay, May 27, 2008

TUesday,Niay27,2008

Can GOP nform to avoid •Kennedy scenario 'for 2008?

E:v.ery.one lin .aud .areund
multiple scandals over lob- - by "throwing out ·the 25year-old playbook" of calling
AIT!!'lliican ljll!ili1'ict; ris IJ'U1litlg
·bying and earmarks.
111 Claurt.. hp.
....
Democrats
"bad liberals"
lfor Sen. IE()ward ~.
!However, the new House
and
identifying
(140) !J!12.:21!i6. FAX (140Tt12-2157
themselve~
ID-Mass~ on .a perilonal
I(I(!)P leader, iRep. ~ohn
au •AJ' lfy11AIMI.!level. 8 .ut Rt;pulilicllllS .!have
Boehner (Ohio), while a foe as "true oonservatives."
.Jn an echo of!Oavis' House
w ·M!O:tk very !hard 't(!) .a¥Gid
0f eamillltiks, has lbeen ~low
advice,
Alexander said: "I
ttbe lfu1fi!lment of 'his {pOlitic
lla6aJ
in ·devclopin,g a new image
Ohio Va ley PutJ.Ii$bing Co.
.don't
think
indepeildent vot(:al &amp;earn. ·
·
Kulidlwle fonthe party and has largely
going to buy that this
In JID iinteMew lin Mar.cih,
coooentrated .on legislative ers.
Dan Goodridl
~ne4Y llalked .about !the .
'tactics such as ·motions to year. We have to remind votPd!llislile.r
.difference tthat the ''J'%4
recommit andlffiliSS ·WalkeutS er;; of who we am, -whar
we're gOing to do about real
IDemQCI'lll:ic !landslide meant
'to&lt;On:ibao:rass Democmts.
Charlene Ha Tlidl
tfpr the JPIS~e cl 'h"'beral 11ine scatslthey need fora!6Cl- . After !three straight drub- problems like high gas prices
Genera:! Manage.r-ftews IElilittl&gt;r ·
1~is1atiion,
speoificaTiy V-ale, !f:ilibuster'iJIIOOf !ll)lljori- bings,ao~pecia1 elections, ·the and healih care and why what
Medicare. .!He deatlly W,&amp;S 1Y· lbnt idley &lt;Call gain .as 'llllllly GOP seems to !be scrambling our opponent~ want to do is
· tf
'-"- • '"'h .as -sev~n, and possibly
rpull
_
lbqp1ng
or.a sllllillu 'tt!Ulllt"' mode!:ate
R~ublicans to mvent a mew image. 11 wrong. We stay on offense."
"Branding · is an awful
:this y.ear.
across !the fute rto -sunnntt 'looks 'like panic - anQ it is.
word,"
Alexander told me. "lt
Kenncll:y
rrecatleil
110
me
""~
But
late
1s
'
b
etterttiwn
'!16ver,
~shU malee 110 bav ruJMDIUtg M
!hew, ~wo yem:s .after his !DemOOl'llticrinitiarives, much
·So, what'·s to be done? sounds like a trlc:k on the vot~furJmt
:rdigiDJt, ,, Jm .j,itifa:_g du
.Jilllii&gt;v.al iin !the 'Senate ib.lldk iin as ILBJ IJlllllc;d •COII!iei'Vative MCCain lhas "'el '10 (:Onsoli- ers. We ·have io talk ahout valIDeii100111ts.
.J
jiw ~t! tJ&amp;erMf;'i11' •46:ril~ du }ftdDfff ~'962. ~;w.e if.ailed w.ith Sonthern
11n ;the IHC!luse, .as !Rep. 'ifom date 'his message - as writer ue s - and beliefs. We can't
49 senators and what
srudt, t.~r f1j dU' t~ras; o.r • rigltt du
~~~..c~.e ~" palasa;e~ Da\\is, IR-VJI., wamed llast Vuval Le:vin recounts in this force
they
stand
for into three
•"""' "'" ,.-~qpi
week, "the J"!.&gt;litical atmos- week's Weekly Standard ~
fHll'l'k ~~ ~o .usemftk. IIMI. m.pditi:lm .ence
words.
What
we
stand for as a
was the deatien of Jlhere
:faaing
ililouse .· but he has proposed reformist
tlu Gmwrunmt
re4tas Dj~4tu:JeL
1'9M.... We failed &lt;in 1he ~publicans .this 'NCilV.erdber policies on health care, ear- conference is the sum total of
~J1g, lb ut iit passed &lt;in !the · istthe werstilirule'Watergate,"
marks, .education, subsidies, what each of us stands fer."
For himself, Alexander has
-llhe finil Amendnlllnt to the U.5. Cunatlbdiom late w.inter. lfillieen senators v.!hidh cost the GOP -49 seats corporate welfare, energy,
proposed
a five-year "new
just .abs&lt;Iilute1y .Chai\ged &lt;in 1974. ~v.ing lost 3 o seats climate change, education
their votes en the 'basis ef lin 2~ the ((jj(j)]&gt; corild lose and trainirig, securities regu- Manhattan Project for clean
energy independence" that
ithe.etection ·o:if"M:'
2@ ,= fbisyear.
Jation and defense policy.
Actually,
Democrats
So, what are IR.epnblicans
One could ·argue that includes.a bipartisan push for
Taday isl'&lt;Uesday, May 27, the l48thilay ef 2@@8. There piCked &lt;Up ~ust •One Senate doing 10 avDid the !Kennedy McCain '~ stand against plug-in cars, economically
.are 2J;8 da)l_s.1.eft in the year.
seat iu .that e!ec.tion, but it soenario? The presidential "unconditiomil" presidential competitive solar power, carbon fllCIWture, building con· i'aday's Highlight in llfistfl!Y: tQn Ma:y 27., J 937, :the newly ga"'.e ·t hem .a ·ttetal ef 68 standaJ:d"'bearer, Sen.. ~ahn talks with foreign enemies !l111111Pleted Golden Gate iBmdge .connecliilg 'San IFrancisoo vetes.. And Democrats MdCain (Ari'Z. ), has the · as advocated by 'Obama -is servation, nuclear waste stor.arid Marin CoUllty. Calif,, was opened 10 ,pede&amp;tliian rtraffic. pidkel:ltUp 371Rouse ;;eats .as !Jl01en1ia.J tte offer a 1fbeodore a tough, TR -style assertion of · age and fusion energy.
He also supports the
,(Vehiculai- ttafliic ibegan crossin11 the '!:midge the next day.)
'President !Lyndon 3ohnson IRoose;velt-style refonnor •s national security machismo
mandatory
universal health
On this date: [n 1'818, American reformerAmClia .a.enk;; ·scored .a Victl!ll)' e.:er 'Sen. agenda 10 coUIIter (])bama's that -will appeal to ·White
care
proposal
advartced by
Bloomer, whopqpulari'Zed:the gannent1hatbears her name Banry Geldw.ater, IR-Ariz., appelll far Change _. and working-class voters whom
-"'bloomers" - ·was bom in !Homer, N.Y.
61 percent to 39 ;percent. ·
same supPerters think that Obama can't seem to attract. Sens. Ron Wyden, 'iD'Ore.,
.· [n I896,2551JCople were !killed w.hen.atomadosti'IWk'St.
Whenbskedhim w.hether itbe entire OOP shotild folAt the same time, though, and Bob Bennett, R-Utah,
Lauis .andlEastSt.!Louis,llll. ·
·
. it would take Jl J%4-Slyle lowthatlead.
·
McCain .seemed to align that would replace employ· [n, [ 933, W.lilt l!l&gt;isney's Academy Award-winnin,g animat- landslide to pass 'his long"Democrats
own himself with President er-based insurance with indi·ediihort "TheThrt:e'Lirtle .Pigs" wasfirstreleased.
sought goal of universal 'change,'" said iRtl1J. Mark Bush 's low-blow asserti0n vidually purchased "choice"
,: In 1 !13:5, the 'Supreme Coun, in 'Schechter IPoultry health care, .he ;;aid, "'No, f IKiFk, R.JI!l., an original that .a ny negotiation with plans financed by tax credits.
House Minority Whip Roy
~m:poration 1\1. United States, ·stnmk .dow.n 1he Natienal just think. ~We need .additional McCain baCker in a targeted .Iran constitutes Hitler-era
Blunt,
R-Mo., said that his
lndu!!triaiiReco.:ery Act. .
·
iJ])Cl'nocratic votes lin me iieat. "We .can - and we "appeasement." That was a
· : lit [1936, theCunardJineriR'MSIQueen Mary1eft1England Senate .and .a Democratic . ·aught - 1o own ~e 'R' new link to Bush - along colleagues, too, would
im. iitnnaic!len 'IOJ.l\lle lo 'New Voik.
;president ito llead 1heta."
wa~d. II ·think we should with his ta11 and Iraq poli- emphasize "the gas cos!.
:
['94ll. 1the British :rurvy salik tthe Gemum lbatfles'hjp
li'bcJt U5 iJittle .chance tthat .CIIII\pal.gn on ~he theme cies- that will drive away issue," "competition and
choice in health care" and
Jimlar&lt;lk d'f &amp;ance, w.ith ;a aoss .of more !than 2,[00 llivt:s. lKenoedy~ \lfuoice for presi- •,Reform ;fer Reslilts.~"
independent voters. ·
!1'964, -inilqlendent [ndilCii first pii.me llliirii.Gtet; .dent, Sen. 8ariWkObama,IDEver since !Republicans
Senate Republicans, like :Democratic anempts to
~wabanlll Nehru; «lied.
.
1111~. iiiJI.ill ptill ,an l.!m'-Sized 'lost &lt;their Ce11gfes-sional
their House counterparts, simultaneously raise taxes
; In 198Ji,lin Bel~ mpreseotafi¥es tdf BWio JindC!Ilina w:ict.oof :this . y.ear, \but ·~0Iiities lin the 2006 4i)ec- have concentrated since 2006 and give breaks to special
~ WS!AJIDelltsCf ratifiC4Ii]on 100 tthepliol ejumJo:\8, L ~cmiW!y i¢1eaily aS hqping 'lion, ;fhe~
'IVe l!Jeen :talking On tactical maneuvers - fili- interests such 'as trial lawyers.
Republicans clearly have
~. Ktmg!totf.be{Jbineselin a&lt;9lil:7.
. .
lthat ' ·ObanuCil Jibility lle ;aoout"'re. . · "ltheij!attty busters, mainly- but there
been
awakened to the perils
:'
1'993. ti~Ve people w.ert 'lcilled iin a .botribil!g an tthe . :iaract1De!l...loten;lleithe!J101ls · -\Wiithlittle;to'fi ·ow fmdt.
are signs they are developing
facing
them - in November.
flffiiiimuseum,M,artlinFlmmce,ltaly.
·"Will elql811d iQicir &lt;party's
11lllere.certairilywBSJIIDeed · a new approach pegged .to
They still have fiiJe months
' ~ 'Y~ ~1!:!""1· fioriim:...rihe )glii:\'Cmmenf-s at' ~· dbe ~Use ~ tforii:Otooling. iiihe patcybore 2008 requirements.
lw.ODe&amp;&amp; 1111 ;fhe
~lban:il:iin,g.case, w.as ·8ell1eimcd . Senate :and IIIUike at :possthle ;the stBi.n of'DeLay1sm -1he
Senate
Republican to avert Ted Kennedy's fond
i&amp;O U yean; &lt;in iPrismutfter apo1o.gUiinj\ ifm metw.arriin;g :any- Ito 1Jl8SS fiberallegis1ati(!)Q.
placing ,of pow.enoll:er jprin- Conference Chairman Lamar hope- but, in reality, that's
~.iliboutlthedcailly iPJot. . .
.
And lR:epliblicans ha"'e ciple that chiii'llCte!lized the Alexander (Tenn.), who's up precious little time.
(Morton Kondracke. is
: Five y~ :J!!!G: '!'Wo h:aqts ·shet.and :lcilled two knencan every reason to fear that this 'heavy -handed lhy,pe!Jlarti- for re-ele.ction this year, said
flOld'icrs m !ftalluJIIh, a 'bathed of suppett fer Sal:ldam Kennedy dr.e.am might be sanship .o f f&lt;mner iHouse he thinks he and his col- executive · editor of Roll
lllussein. Demicik 1'odd Lee, a ·snspected serial !killer ,()f fulfilled. lin :the Senate, Majonty !Leader
fom leagues can .retain their seats Call, the newspaper of
IW.omen iin LI!!Uisiana, was arrested in A1lant.a. A iltul:ly was IDemocmts can't :gain the iDcLay, R-Texas, .and led to -. "tough year" though it is Capitol Hill.)
n:leued that sbo:wed women who look hormones for yeafs
(ID:a~rillk mA'libei.mer'sm•efhertty,pes ,o:if dementia.
:· One 'Y.ear ~~go: American forces freed 421iidn11Pped ilmqis
WHAT'S A S'EVBN-LJETTiER
jo ;a llliid 1011 :an :al.Qalda !hideout north &lt;Of Baghdad. !Dario
WCilRD !FQR 'DETERMINED'?
fJt,a•diilli woo .a m'itrJibbre:v.i.ated mil:y 500. !Broadway
~ G.o:nDhco Wy1erlliliedin Camarillo, Calif., .at age 75.
• 'IOday'~; Birfllda¥&amp;: Novelist llil.emum Wouk is -93. Actor
Qmstqlber Lee its '86. Actress !Lee Meriwether is 73.
Mnliiciao lbmsc_y Lewis !~ 73.. Actor iLouiJ; Gossett Jlr. ri.s
11. IRilrylhnHmd..,'blues 'Slllgcr 1Ra,¥mond ·s anaers '(111be
Pcr:swm(!)Qs; i s@. .i\ctor Bruce Wertz u 165. 'Singer nwe
[loo1d;Jum iii 63. ~..actress IDee IDee Jlhidgew.ater is :58.
Actor Racbard Scbiff is .5 3. Singer 'Sieult!iie SiOl.IX {'llhe
Creatures, Si0U!Xsie and fhe Banshees) is 5.G.!Rock singermusician Neil IFinli (The Fino IBtothers) is :5(i). Actress
'€a!by Silv.ers 1s 47. (Jomeiliao Adam Caro1lll is 44 ..Actor
Todd Brillges is 43. K1qJper Andre 3000 (Outkast) is 33.
.
·~ ladlikiss is 33. 1V chef .J:amie Oli:ver is 33. Actor
Ethan l&gt;IIII\I)f is 14.
·
·
.
: Thlilllght :for 1I'oday: "Great wisdom i.s ,generous; petty
wisdom is contentious. Great speeCh is 'illlpassioned, ~&gt;mel!
speech .cantankerous." - &lt;Jhuang-l'.zu, Chinese ·essayist
in 2006, .Sm:ah !P.alin
morally significant."
become the overriding con~~.369 B.C.-c.286 B.C).
became AlaSka's youngest
~nd there are bioethicists sideration."
· ·
.and fu.st woman ,governor .
who point to the continuing
Because of Palin's rep uta- .
afterhav.ing_eamedJin;putacosts of rearing a "defective tion as a maverick, and her
tion as ,a .&amp; tetmined and
infant."
(f
initial reduction of state
suctJes!d'ul advru;ate of
Nat
By inspirational contrast, spending (including porkethics reform in politics. ln
Palin, says of her new son, barrel · spending),
life·· .Letter&amp; .10 the .editor ,are .welcome. T&lt;hey should he less the primary, she defeated an
Hentoff · Trig: "I'm looking at him affirming Palin connects
#ran 300 words. All .letters are suilject to editing, must ·be incumbent Republican gov- - - - right now, and I see perfec, with ·voters and has been
signed, and include address and .te.lephope number. No emor and !then aformcrtwolion. Yeah, he has an extra mentioned as a pos sible
unsigned letters will be published. ILette,rs shoulil be in term \)}emocratic .go:vemor.
chromosome. I keep think- vice presidential running
good taste, addl'essing .isswes, not personalities. Letters qf
During !her flfst year in ·problems . with my other ing, in .our world, what is mate for Johil McCain .
thanks to organizations allii individuals will not be ac:cept- office, as reported 'by 1he pregnancies." As a resuh, normal and what is perfect?"
She would be a decided
"ed for publication.
Ass
· "-~~-~~
.· on_..~yfromJ:O, 1lhe Jllld her husband, Todd,
Three days after she gave asset -. an independent
'"' '"'"'uELNU "''"""'
ne:ver had BD"' doubt 1he,v binh, .Palin was back in her Republocan · governor, a
'the old ,guard, pow.erfw w~uld have ~ .child.
::; . Anchorage offtce with her woman. a defender of. life
.1IICillbcrs of
state .G OP
"We've both been very husband and Trig. "I Cali against the creeping culture
(and) stoodupiothe.oilinu:r- · voc.al about being pl'&lt;l-iife," think of so many male can- of death and a fresh face in
{U
SFS21:UII)
estS t1Jat hold ,great·power in ·she ·told the Associated didates," she tells the AP, national politics, described
Reader Sei'Yi«!s
~ka, and with .bipartisan Press. "We under~d that " who watched families in "the Almanac of National
OHio~· httlng
sUP,POrt
in the statehouse, she •every innocent
has won- grow while they were in Politics" a~ ''an avid hunter
· C oactlun Paller
.
·
·
'0
·
. I
.
.
PJlbila'*i """'f
Mondly
woo
.a
tax
oncrease
on
:tbe
oil
deiful
potel1fial."
·
office. There is no reason to and fisher with a killer
ur mam concern m a I s,tones ts .to , through "frfday, 1l1 Co.un Street.
companies'IJIIOfits,"
In .an age when DNA and believe a' woman can't do it smile who wears designer
be .accumoe. ~ !fOU now C){.an anor P.omemy; &lt;Dt&gt;lo.
&amp;l!:onderLaofst ~our_.,~~..:...then, ~
. :f:,~ 'other ~enetiG-selection tests with a growing family. My glasses and heels, and hair
in .a story, ca111he1WWSroom_, (7&lt;40) ·pootage paid It Pomomy.
,, '"UINl" £&lt;
incn:asiqjly determine ·who baby will not be at all or in like _modem sculpture."
992-2156.
.... . . . The ~iHICI•J 'PIWI m;i
1he 'Ohlo Uaw
;n
I lkAt
fourmooths~t, .fuund is "fif'; to !ioin
human any sense neglected."
Still unknown is whether
she w.as g01qg tn have .a beings. ""e are witnessing the
Says . the. gov.ernor of Palin would be as flip-flopOUr nm llllllillilr 1s
child
with
IDoWD
•
syndrome,
debate·
betw.een
sanctity
of
Alaska,
"I will not shirk my ping as McCain on the Bush
. (74D)912-21.;
a condition~cy life versus ~ality of life duties." Taking her stand for ' torture policy · that has so
moderates1o-liCVere JIDCIItal being liiOt'e
n decided in life as a holder of high polit- blighted our reputation in
retardation. A scboo1:friend favor of death. ThisisafCI!uh ical office is all the more the world. But we'd find
funeofmy SODsbadiDiiwn welcomed by internationally valuable in the face of ·not out, as - if chosen as his
·~ Charlene Hoeflich, fxt 12
sy drome, and ll bav.e influential bioethicist Peter only the tennination of fetal running mate - · she would
A¢ Elili : Brian Reed. E•t 14
kno n functioning adults Sin_ger, now · a celebrated lives as not worth continu- create more interest in this
A I E10E: Boih Serge&lt;rt,&amp;t 13
with the extra chromosomes Princeton {lniversity profes- ing before they can· speak already · .largely scripted
of ~t syndrome.
sor, who, ih July 1983, wrote for themselves, but it also pres1denual campaign.
lliowev.cr, as ,a longtime in ":ftldiatrics," the officjal put s a searching light on the
And her presence could
reporter
oodisability
rights.
,
Jo.umal
of
1be
American
growing
"futility"
doctrine
highlight
Obama's extremist
*a 11 - : oa... +ianll, e.n. ,;;
I have dfsoov.cmllthal many .+,caticmy of'Pediatrics: ,
in hospitals - affecting abortion views on whether
· a· llo._: _oa.it, Ext18
fetuses so diagDofied have
"lf·we .compare a severely born people of all ages.
cenain lives are worth liv~.:Judy Clarl&lt;, Elrt. 10
been aborted by parents defective human infant with
Nancy Valko, a medical ing, even a child born after a
Wij 'I I
w~J? have hclco advJ&amp;ed by ll ooob
.
uman animal, a dog ethicist and intensive-care botebed abortion.
· Gene:• "SMJBr
.._....... OM lit
theu doctDp;' Ito ·end the · or pig, tforeXIID1P1e, we wiD nurse 1 consult on these
· (Nat Hento.ff is a nacionalCharlene Hoetlidi,'Eirt. 12
1s Weel&lt;s .
'32.26
goancies
'bca.use
of
the
often
.fiod
'the
nonhuman
1o
lives-worth-living
debates,
ly.renowned
auti!Qrity on the
26 Weel&lt;s
"64.20
ture
"i.mpcl:fcct
quality
of
have
superior
capacities,
has
emphasi:ted
that
"
with
Frrst
Amendmem
and the
52-s
'127.11
e" ?f,suoh ·chil~n.
· both actual and potential, the rise of the modern Bill of Rights and aurlwr of
o............. emn,.
Palin &amp; fim reacuoo to the for ntionality, self-con- bioethics movement, life is many books, including "The
1lt Wwi&lt;B
. '53.55
diagnosis
wu to researCh iclou ness, communication, no longer assumed to have War on the Bill ofRights and
26 Weal&lt;&amp;
., 07.10
the
facts
about
1be condi- and anything else that can the intrinsic value it once the Gathering Resistance.,
52 w..u
'21.21
www.~wdiilll.cun1
tion, 1lipce "l'v.e neVer .had plllu&amp;ibly be considered did , and 'quality of life ' has (Seven Stories Pl'l!ss, 2004).

Dealbs

il!f

n.

iJf

for.,

TODAY IN HISTORY

t

m

.

John McCain, here is your vice president

LETTERS TO THE
EDITOR

The Daily Sentinel

me

-moon.

me

us

He••

--u··

a

-:

·--------:-'-------------------~

'

---·----

--'

Registration extended for watershed day camp

Mirl ~,Taylor
_G ALLIPOLIS- Patrick "Von" Taylor, 47, of Gallipolis,

~ Monday, May 26, 2008, at bis home. Arrangements

will ,be announced by the Deal Funeral Home .

RubJ ~tosema~y ·Nanae ·

are

of

The Daily Sentinel • Page As

;www.mym.ilysentinel.com

_GAI.4JIPOIJIS -Ruby Rosemary Nance, 76, Gallipdlis,

died 'S~dl!y•.May 25, 2008, .in Holzer Medical Center.
She~ survived by her husband, Frank Nance.

· 'Servtces will be 1 p .m. Thursday in the Cremeens
Funeral Chapel, wtth the Rev. Truman Johnson, the Rev.
D~ell J?hnson and the Rev. Donald Johnson officiating.
Bunal will be m the Old MercerviUe Cemetery. Friends
may call from 2 to 4 and 6 to 9 p.m. Wednesday at the
funeral·home, where an evening service will be conducted
at 8 ·p.m.b&gt;' the Rev. James Hall.
·
.!E.x;pressoons of sympathy may be sent to thefamily by
:vtsotrng www.cremeensfuneralhomes.com.
.

. RU}ILAND .- The reg- the new 2.2-acre wetland
ostration deadline has. been constructed.la~ fall.
.
extended for . the fourth
Topics will mclude buds.
annual Leadong Creek •f ish, cr_afts, worms and
Watershed Summer Day compos!In!l, soils, wetlands
Camp to be hell;l lune 4 and and aq_u~l!c bugs, snakes,
5 at the . Metgs SWCD coal numng, flmtknappmg.
Conservatmn . Area near archery, forestry and tree
Rutland. There . is no identifica~on, wildflowers
charge to a~end .the camp and medicmal p~ants .
~ut ~e ~gtstration dead· The camp will be held
line •.s IFnday;
·
from 9 a . ~. to 5 p.m. with
Thts yem: s watershed ~ off t~e at 9 a.m. and
camp,
geared toward pick up endi!lg at 5:30 p.m.
yoongsters ~termg _grades . '[he
~etgs
. SWCD
five through etght, will take Conservation Area ts locaton a different look wtth ed on New Ltma Road
IDIIny actirities focusing on 'between
Rutland
and

Hani&amp;ooville. The camp is
geared towards youngsters
entering
grades
five
through eight, however
children · not in that age
range wanting to attend
may contact the Meigs
SWCD for consideration.
The entire cost of the
camp is provided by funds
from the Meigs Soil and
Water
Conservation
District and the U.S. Fish
&amp; Wildlife ·Service. There
is no fee for campers, and
lunch and s~acks will be
provided.
However
campers
should wear

clothing
suital)le
for
rugged outside use, and
bring plenty of sunscreen
and bug repellent.
Instructors and staff members at camp are from the
Mei~s
SWCD,
Ohio
Envrronmental Protection
Agency, Hocking CoUege,
Ohio Department of Natural
Resources and many others.
To register, or for more
information, contact Raina
Fu!!ts or Jenny Ridenour at
the Meigs SWCD in
Pomeroy at 740-992-4282.
Registration is to the first 50
campers.

State panel: Ohio trauma system flawed, lacks oversight

O~LUMBUS (AP) -.
Clb10 silnlnma systeQ:I osriddied with ~ws and falls
short _ofm~ federal tee·. UETART FALLS - ~ ulie Elizabeth 'Campbell, 60, L:tart o~.ndatrons, A~ of
Falls, dted Tuesday, May 20, 2008 at her residence. ·
medical .experts $Bid rn a
She is survived by her brother, William Campbell Jr of report. · · . .
. .
'New York, N.Y.
A comnuttee of. doctors,
There are no calling honrs or funeral services. Cremation nnrs~s, par~~ed1cs an_d
will take place and the burial of the cremains will be in the hospital .adnumstrators ~s
family cemetery near Oil City, Pa. Cremeens Funeral ~pnng gave the state a faillilome, 'Ra~ine, is in charge of arrangements.
mg grade of 33 .rc;rcent.
~ ~x;presstons of sympathy may be sent to the family by They me_asured Ohio s sysviSiting www.cremeensfuneralhomes.com
tern , agamst 13 · mdicators.
based an federal recommendations.. ,
,Enacted 111 2002, ~h10 s
.'LETART FALLS -Julia S. Campbell, 99, LetMt Falls, trauma law was destgned
to . ensure · th~t t~a~ma
dted Tuesday, May 20, 2008, at her residence.
. She is survived by her son, W'tlliam Campbell of NeW, patoents end up m hospttals
best eqmpped to take care
York, N.Y.
There are no calling hours or funeral services. Cremation
will take place and the burial of the cremains will be in the
family cemetery near Oil City, Pa. Cremeens Funeral
Home, Racine, is in.charge of arrangements.
.Expressions of sympathy may be sent to the family by
fromPageAl
'VlSttmg www.cremeeilsfuneralhomes.com.

·E.c:.n.-w

Wias.ca.....

~f · .them. Such patients medics an~ hospitals to American
College
of
tnclude people severely send cntocally injured Surgeons to be designated a
injured in car accidents, patients to trauma centers, trauma center.
vtctoms of stabbings or the panel said.
Miller said the state needs
gunsh&lt;?t wounds and peo·:What we don't have is its own designation and
ple wtth severe bums or teeth in .the l;lw,". said Dr. accountability system . .
broken bones. ,
Sulney Mi~er, a panel me~"There's no lead agency
. The re~ c_ned several ber and du;ector of Oh10 that has a say over the entire
madequactes, mcl~?mg a State ;l!mversity Medical state trauma system." said
lack of trauma trammg for Center s
bum
center. Kathy Haley, vice . chairdoctors and other hospital 'There's no mandate from woman of the committee
s~ who . tre!it trauma the legislature to look at what and trauma program coordiPfl:lients. Hospttals have goes on once the patient gets nator
at
Nationwide
f~ed to keep records of to the hospital door."
Children's Hospital.
. panents who die at the scene
The committee also said
. Trauma is the leading
of an accide~t, the report said. . there are no . trauma centers cause of death of people
. Th~ Oh10 . Emergency m south~as~m Oh10, whtch ·ages 1.to 44, Haley said.
Me_d ical Servtces board, makes It difficult to treat
The
legislation
has
which overs~s the system, patients wtthm an hour.
pushed more Ohio hospitals
has. ~o authonty .t? enforce
Hospitals must be verified to get into the trauma care
Oh10 S· law requmng para- every three years by ''the business.

Memorial

frank. llrwin

0

'

GALLIPOLIS - Fralik James Irwin, 60, Gallipolis, died
Friday, May 23, 2008, at his residence.
He was preceded in death by his parents, Robert J. and
Eleanor Gill Campbell Irvin.
Services will be I 0 a.m. Wednesday in the Cremeens Funeral
Olapel. Burial will be in the Centenary Cemetery, Green
Township. Friends may call one hour prior to the service.
.

.

.

Local·Briefs
Cbeerleading tryout meeting
. POMEROY - Any students interested in trying out for
a position on the Meigs High School cheerleading squads
needs to attend a meeting Wednesday, May 28, 5 p.m. at the
Bethany Building of Trinity Church, Second Street. The
building is located across from the •P omeroy Post ·Office. If
unable to attend notify Ralph Werry, P.O. Box 2, Pomeroy,
With the name and address and information will be mailed.

. 12-year..old W.Va. _girl
.stung by scorpion at store
.

heroes. Their sacrifice was
important, their sacrifice
was noble, and their sacrifice was permanent," said
Anderson.
The parade .to kickoff the
celebration ·was led by the
Drew, Webster honor guard
plus Spc. Brandon Williams,
who will be leaving for Iraq
in July. Brandson is the
grandson of legionnaire
Mickey Williams. Units o(
the parade included the
Southern Band, wagonload
of elderly ·legionnaires, no
longer able to walk the
route, frretruoks from S.cipio
Township,
Syracuse,
Middleport, Bashan and
Pomeroy, an .antique fue
truck and several cars, horses, Racine Pack 241 , and the
national winners in the
re.ceot archery -contest held
in Louisville.
The program opened with
a welcome from Pomeroy
Mayor John Musser, comments by Gladys Cummings
on · behalf of the Legion

.

,

.

.

.

ChMiel• lloeftlctJphallo

The Southern High School Band under the direction of Chad Dodson mardled in the
Memolial Day parade in Pomeroy and then presented several patriotic selections duling
the observance. · . .
Auxiliary, patriotic selections by the Southern Barid,
and a call from Joe Struble,
legionnaire, to give proper

respect (o the flag. ,
,
A wreath was placed in
the river in tribute to those
lost at sea by ·veterans John

Weeks . and Lenllie Jewell,
and a gun salute concluded
the annual observance of
Memorial Day.
'

2001, it is not a "green
building" and pointed out
construction ' specs change
year to year just as technology has changed.
Deem said if an addition
is financed he doesn't know
what woqld happen to the
existing high school at this
point, sayi11g, "I'm sure part
of it could be saved " He
added he himself is a jadu ·
ate . of · SHS with his own
sentimental attachment to
the structure.
"I have a Jot of blood,
sweat and tears in this
building too.. .!' d love to be
able to keep this building
but the questions is what's
best for the students?''
Deem explained the dis·
trict has an obligation to

explore or.tions for the children and 'it's up to all of us
alumni to make sure 'we're
giving our k.ids the best
opr.ortunities. Bringing the
but! ding green is , a big
thing, neither building is
energy efficient." He also
pointed out the high. school
ts not operating at full
capacity when it comes to
offering the newest technology and electrical hook ups.
The next step is nailing
down an architect and going
through a ratings process
with the architects, develop-·
ing a sketch/rendering of
the addition after community input and developing a
plan . for financing . If
Sauthem decides not,to.,.\!St

on the addition, Deem said
it goes to the bonom of the
list again in terms of receiving state·dollars for ~uilding
and he wasn't sure when
they'd return to the top:
There's no cost to the district during these preliminary stages of developing
the proposal.
.
"The high school is a ·
good building but it doesn't
house today's technologies," Deem stated. "With
all the industry coming into
the area we wailt an attractive school to lure people to
the community."

I

BARBOIJ•RSVILLE, she had been stung by a
W.Va. (AP) - One young scorpion, but . then he saw
shopper at a Wai-Mart in West the critter scurry underneath
Vugmia had to watch out for a box. It was captured by
more than falling prices.
Wai-Mart employees.
A 12-year-old girl picking · Most of the nearly 2,000
up a seedless watermelon kinds of scorpions are not
frol)l a bin was stung danserous to humans.
Sunday ·by a tan, inch-long
Rtchard Coyle, senior
scorpion that had apparently director of international
stowed away in a ·shipment affairs for Wai-Mart, said
froni Mexico.
.
store employees believe the
Megan . Templeton, of problem was with a single
Barboursville, was taken to shipment of watermelons.
"We are very concerned,"
the hospital as a precaution
but later released. Her he said. "This is a very rare
father, .William Templeton, incident. When I spoke with
said the pain was a little the store manager, she said
worse than a bee sting.
in her 17 years she had
He initially didn't believe never heard of something
his daughter when she said like this."

Police say Ohio man leads
police on 3-county chase
MONROE (AP)- Police was spotted going 90 mph in
in southwest Ohio say they · a 55 mph zone.
Bowling says Knight was
chased a speeding driver
with a carload of children on an outing with three chilthrough three coynties, dren and his wife, and tried
finally stopping his car with to outrun police because his
license was suspended.
spike strips.
·
Knight was taken to
Authooties say 28-yearButler
County jail. Police
old Jerry Knight was arrest.e d Monday at about ,9:20 say he's facing a number of
a.ni. after he was zapped charges, including three
counts of child endangering,
with a Taser.
Monroe police Otftcer J.R. reckless operdtioh, speeding
Bowling says police tried to and going the wrong way on
pull Knight over because he a divided highway.

Group aiffis to speed up
construction of new bridge
· CINCINNATI (-'\~) Council of Governments,
Officials say a planning says the group is hoping to
group could help speed up shave three years off the
the · start date for construe- planning proq~ss and begin
tion of a new bridge span- construction aS early as 2012.
ning Oie Ohio River from ' Policinski says the group
Kentucky to Ohio.
must first choose a location
Made Policinski;.executive for the structure, which would
director. of ' the Ohio- replace the heavily travellll!
Kentuc~-Jodiana Regional Brent Spence Bridge.

'

Southern
&amp;omPageAl
share would be put in place
and probably wouldn't
know until fall.
Deem said he·alo!lg with
the board wish to work
with the community and
teachers to try and come up
with what the . addition
might look like if they do
an addition.
"If it's an addition we can
bring that whole elementary
building up to green standards," Deem said about
higher energy ratings. He
added, even though the elementary school was built in

IIHOWTI

FOil

Eastern

would qualify for funding
assistance for an II ,000
, square-foot
addition,
including
ten
900
squarefromPageAl
foot classrooms.
Edwards said the OFSC
watching what is happening completed a master plan as ·
with the bill, and communi"
part
.
of its meetings with
eating
weekly
with him, school teachers and
(Shoemaker)."
administrators, but no cost
Open . enrollment in estimatef have been secured.
Eastern Local was up by 50 No time ,. frame for construcstudents at the beginning of tion has been set, either..
the current school year, and
Eastern High School, built
the district expects to gain in the mid-l950's and com-I 0 students per year, pletely renovated a decade
Edwards said, based on ago, is considered adequate
enrollment
· projections to meet the needs of its stuexamined as part of the dent body, partly due to
additional classroom space
facilities planning process.
Edwards said the district built after the renovation.

Racine
from PageAI
Hill reported the sink hole
at Fourth Street and
Sycamore had been ftll.ed,
saying it was not a, storm or
sewer drain problem but just

a "~t" in the ground that
fonned a sink hole.
Council al.s&lt;i acoepted the
resignation of Councilman
Gary Willford effective at
the end of April. Council has
30 days to appoint someone
to his seat, after that 30
days, Hill may appoint a
person to the vacancy.

a great Auto
ins111111Ke rate?
Stay local and.call1111
Agent you alreacly
know and trust!

Jessica Dillon

no Ealt liMn Slreet
Pooneroy, OH 451&amp;!1

992-3600 ·
Or~

Ohio Mutual
lnsurmce G!:oolp

us'on 1he·web- www.reedbaur.com
Home Auto Farm BusinesS

�The Daily Sentinel

ACROSS ·THE NATION

PageA6

Inside

Tuesday, May 27, 2008

Bl

·The Daily Sentinel

Jndy sail not tile a;r•w4eot, Pile Bl
Wmp halfway to Cup, Pa!1e 86

NASA Spacecraft lands on Mars ·
BY Des REa•• ....

....
'

entrance

PIITSBURGH (AP) Sinoe even the iong arm of
the law can' t rein in fuel
pnces, the I~ legs of the
law are getting more exerCise these days.
. Bicycle pattols - a community policing tactic that
some law enforcement agencies de-emphasized in recent
years - -are seeing a resurgence as the .price of gasoline
3(llll'08CheS or surpasses $4 a
gallon across the country.

Golfer l'dunw home, . . . 86

The Phoenix .... !Ander plunged iniD \t1e ~· Q( Mars 8l1d
u;; Ill fully landed .in the Red Planet's IIOithOm poW raglon Sunday
ID analyze ooil looking 10&lt; dues to '"' l:Je pastlffe an Mars.

ASSOCIA'!Bl PRESS WRITER

ARLINGTON, Va. President Bush paid tribute
Monday to America's fighting men and women who
died in battle, saying national leaders must have "the
cOurage and character to
follqw their lead" in preserving peace and freedom.
. "On this Memorial Day, I
stand before you as the
commander in chief and try
to tell you how proud I am,"
Bush told an audience of
military figures. veterans
and their families at
Arlington
National
Cemetery. Of the men and ·
women buried in the hal'
lowed cemetery, he . said,
"They're an awesome
bunch of people and the
United States 1s blessed to
have such citizens."
That provoked a standing
ovation from the crowd in a
marble amphitheater where
Bush spoke. . "Whoo-hoo!"
shouted one woman, who
eouldn 't contain her enthusiasm.
Bush and his wife, l.aUTa,
traveled from the White
House across the Potomac
River to the rolling hillsides
of Arlington. Along the
way, one man stood with a
&amp;ign that said: "Bring Our
Troops Home." But. other-.
wise, the
presidential
motorcade on a sparkling
clear spring day was warmly greetlid at the oemetery
by scores of peOJ)].e, including two men in
bats, shirts and shorts made
out of American flag material. Others visited gravesites
where each White tombstone was m;uired with a
.
tiny American tlai!;.
• "From famway fands,l:hey
Were returned ·to cemeteries
like ·this one where broken
hearts reCeived their broken
bodies," Bush said. "They
found peaoe beneath the
white headstones in the land
.they fought to defend It is a
10lemn reminder of the cost
Of freedom tbat the number
of headstones in a place
such as thiS grows with
every new MeliiOrial Day."

.

~

,..,.

cclwuM;..,.

'IlleSday, May Z7, 2008

cardw lui;J aaal;aa
Two
and
lab

LocAL
ScHEDULE
•

__

tPOMEROV - A ~or 4

Dixon almost in 'dreamland'
after Indianapolis 500 win

••'i """

&amp;d101l1 1111!'11ity sporting events tnwolving
teams trom MeiglllftCI Galia counliea.

,_

.... 1

R's?..,
7.7..- ann daiMirs gnM1d
...... ., olher instrumentS

..-od ... _,_.
·-samples

27

•

BY MIKE HARRIS

Oivisfon Ill regionat&amp; at Pickel ingtor:
North High Sct\001, 4 p.m..

10 ched&lt;
for organic~
and oompo91tiol '

aape

1lNrwdov.- 21

INDIANAPOLIS - Scott

'4-D4A ;'wwl....._
'Eastern versus Berlin Hiland at
~High School (Boa"""' Field),

AP

Dixon was exhilarated and

2 p.m.
.
Southom """""' Newall&lt; ca1hOiic ..
Lancaster High School ( - Mold).
Sp.m.

---·

Mars lander prepares·

Dhtiston II regtonals at ByesvlUe .'
-HighSchool, 4p.m.

for.qging mission
be buried inches to a foot
below the surface.
Mission co-scientist R,ay
Arvidson of Washington
University in St Louis is
pleased with Phoenix's
progress so far.
"Like a union worker, it
went right" to work," he said.
Scientists were especially
interested in how the polygon patterns in the ground
formed at Phoenix 's landing ·
site. The fractures look similar to tho se found on
Earth 's polar · regions.
Arvidson said Phoenix
appeared within reach of a
shallow trough that could be
a potential place to dig.
"I was just afraid that it' II
be so flat and homogenous
and that we'd be digging in
soil and we wouldn't know
the . ·context" of how it
formed, Arvidson said
Launched last summer,
Phoenix sailed through 422
million miles of space over
a period of about . 10
months. The riskiest part of
the journey came seven
minutes before landing,
when Phoenix, operating on
autopilot, had to use the
atmosphere's
friction,
deploy its parachute and fire
its do-ren thrusters to slow
to a 5 mph thump. ·
The lander executed the
maneuver a)wost flawlessly.
The only snag CaDle when it
released · the parachute
seven seconds later than
expected. The late timing
caused ·t he . spacecraft to
land slightly down range
from its bull' s-eye mark.
Two hours after touchdown, Phoenix beamed
back a flood of images
revealing the • first-ever
peek of the polar horizon. It
also sent back ima~es of its
unfolded heat shield and
another of its foot planted
in soil next to pebble ~sized
rocks.
Smith, the chief scientist,
said Phoenix slid a bit after
landing ..

AsSOCI,I.T£D PRESS

frtdly. Miy!D
8op 8
LeN 04 RlgiOiwf ftnl:l ·
Thursday winnen; at lanca&amp;ter High
School (Beavers Field). 2 p.m.
··

---

wv--~~
Point
Pleasant vs. Region 111 champion
at Charleston, 7:30p.m. (Cia&amp;r M)
OMolon Ill regional&amp; at Pid&lt;erlngiOn
Nor1h High School. 4 p.m.

T..--...........
,_
__ .

So!yn!or . . 31 .

Oivi~ion II reglonals at Byesville
••eadowblook High School, 11:30 a .m.
WV 5tnt B '-aToum•n•lf:

Class AAA, M and A -

.

11no1s

OHSM ChalT"qlionohipo, TBA

---

letem'=t.lurwi

. AP..,_

Race driller Scott Dixon, of New Zealand, poses with the Borg-Warner Trophy during the tra..ditlonal winner's photo session 911 the st&lt;trt/fjnish line at the Indianapolis Motor Speedway
in Indianapolis on Monday.

scneaming. He also felt
alone, dazed by winning the
Indianapolis 500.
, A day after the biggest
victory of his life, be took a
more leisurely spin around
Indy. He rode slowly around
the 2 1/2-mile oval on a
white ·speedway bus, surrounded by microphones,
notepads and cameras.
And Monday night, he
received a check for almost
$3 million, a record prize
from the richest purse in
open-wheel racing history.
"I don't normally yell too
often," he recalled. ' 'But I
was definitely yelling and I
had a few four-letter words
in there as well to the team.
Winning here, it's like nothing else.
"1 . keep saying to peorle
that's the funniest part o it

because all you're wanting
to do is get back to the pits
and enjoy it with everybody
else. You feel so alone out
there on that (cool-down)
lap, and all you can do is
talk to them on the radio."
He 'II have plenty to talk
about now.
The winner' s share of
$2,988,065, announced at
the annual victory dinner at
the track Monday night,
of
broke
the
record
$1,761,740 for Buddy
Rice's win in 2004. The total
purse-was $14,406,580, topping the $1 0,668,815 set last
year. The only richer prize
package in auto racing is for
NASCAR's Daytona 500 at
about $18 million.
Marco Andretti took home
$782,065, also a record for
third place. Ryan HunterReay, who finished sixth,
received $328,065, including a $25,000 award as

PIIIM-DI-.82

OHSM Championships, TBA

SPORTS BRIEFS

McDyess' 21 points lift Pistons over Celtics
BY LAM! I.ME

lOth Annual Eagle

Basketball Camp
' TUPPERS PLAINS Eastern High School will be
holding · its I Oth Annual
Eagle Basketball Camp on
May 27 ~gh 30 from 9
a.m. to noon for boys and
girls entering grades 4, 5,
and6.
· Cost per player will be $35
pre-reg1stration or $4S the
first day of camp. Included
in the cost will be a camp Tshirt.
Checks should bC: made
payable to Eastern Athletic
Boosters. Checks and registration fonns Should be sent
to Howie Caldwell at 40878
Old Seven Road, Reedsville,
OH 45772 or at Eastern
High School, 38900 SR 7.
~eedsville, OH 45772.
'

{5th Annual Meigs
Football Golf tourney
; MASON, W.Va. - The
·15th Annual Meigs Football,
Golf Tournament will be
~ld Saturday, May 31 , lit
tfle • Riverside Golf Course
at 8:30a.m.
For more information,
contact Mei)ls football
coach Mike Chancey at
740-992-2158 or 740-992~

0064.

2008 Meigs Flag . . .
Football Registtation
RCK;KSPRlNGS
. Registration is now open for
the 2008 flag football season. open to boys and girls
in grades 1-6 beginning
with the 2008-09 school
year. Registration fee is $40
per player, an'd $25 for each
additional sibling.
The games will be played
starting in September on the
Meigs High School practice
field Final date for both
registration and payment is
July I st A workout/combine will be held on J u~
~6th at9 a.m. at Meigs Hi
School. All checks must
inade out tQ Meigs Aag
Football League, P.O. Box
!51, Pomeroy, Ohio 45769.
· To register online or for
inore information go to
www.meigsffl .com or call
YM&gt;-541 -1222.

CoNrACrUs

.
'

1-740-446-2342 ext. 33

Pu-1-7-3008

. i - - 81)01110"¥l&amp;llySentiAel.com
f$OOrt' Staff

Eric RMdolph, Sports w~
(7o!O)

~.

Old. 33

erandolph o mydal!) sarrtinet.oom

8ry8n Wallhw'S, Sports Witter
(740) ~23&lt;42. Old. 33
-.so~.com

Lany Crum, S(larta w...
(740) ~23.42 . eort. 33
lcrumOmydallyregi-.com

ASSOCIATED PRESS

AUBURN IDLLS, Mich.
- The Detroit Pistons provide plenty of fodder for
those who want to criticize
them for only playing their ·
best when down or doubled.
Antonio McDyess doesn't
He often plays with the
most energy on a team that
traditionally peaks and flops
depending on whether 1ts
up, even or behind in a
series.
. Playing his best game
playoff game in perllaps a
decade, McDyess had 21
points and 16 rebounds to
lift Detroit to a 94:-75 seriesevening win over the
Boston Celtics .o n Moilday
night · in Game 4 of the
Eastern Conference finals.
The 33-year-:old McDyess
rejuvenated his injuryplagued career when he
siried with the Pistons in .
2004 ·- shortly · after they
won the NBA title - and
refused to let a broken nose
slow him down this postseason_
.
"You only have so many
opportunities, and they' re
limited, especially for me,"
he said. ''I'm at the end of
my career, and I just feel
like leaving everything out
on the floor.fl
McDyess did just that,
beating the Celtics to loose
balls, defending them with
strength and quickness and
making most of his shots.
Detroit Pistons' Tayshaun Prince, right, shoots over Boston Celtics ' Kevin Garnett during
the first qLiarter of Game 4 of the NBA Eastern Conference basketball finals Monday in

as&gt;..,_

PI n-PL••

a

Auburn Hills, Mich .

·

White Sox
rally in 12th
to top Indians
CLEVELAND (AP) Orlando Cabrera's fourth hit ,
drove in the go-ahead run in
the
&lt; 12th .
inning and
the Chicago
White Sox
b e
I
Cleveland 63 on Monday
night, handing the Indians their ninth
loss in 10 games.
· Boone
Logan
(2-J)
pitched a perfect I 1-3
mnings for the win ' and
Bobby Jenks got the fmal
three outs for his 13th save
in 15 chances.
Jenks allowed two sin,
gles, then ,got Jhonny
Peralta to hit mto a double
play and struck out Franklin
Gutierrez to become the
second-fastest reliever to
notch. I 00 career saves,
doing so in 187 .games.
Kazuhiro Sasaki did it in

a

160.

The White Sox won for
the lOth time in 12 games
and moved 5 · 1-2 games
ahead of the third-place
Indians in the AL Central.
Nick Swisher opened the
12th with a single off righthander Scott Elarton (0-1 ).
Pinch-runner
DeWayne
Wise went to third on a single to right by Alexei
Ramirez and scored on
another single to right tzy
Cabrera, who was then
caught in a rundown trying
for ~rui.
·

Plene-lll•••s.B2

•

Venus ·williams, Federer
winners at French Open
8Y

HU11 U1D

R

IIWCit

.a.5SOCI.a.T£D PRESS

PARis -

Venus Williams
was cruising along with a
ho-hum 6-3, 4-1 lead over
her 35-year-old opponent at
the French Open on Monday .
when suddenly · everything
went awry.
The double-faults piled
up. The forehand errors did,
too, and Williams lost six
consecutive games to fall
behind as a drizzle feU. The
crowd was rooting for the
underdog, applauding . in
unison every time 93rdranked Tzipora Obziler of
Israel earned a point ·
When the No. 8-seeded
Williams would hit a winner, the sounds of lqlplllVal
emanated mainly from her
personal gucat5. "Whooo!"
one of her sisters kept
yelling.
"I told the people in our
box, 'Be ,quiet, so she can.
concentrate,"'
said
Williams' father and coach,
Richard. "Venus is a great
thinker and a great player. I
wasn'tnervousatall."

Eventually, six-time r:wljor
champion Wtlliams 'did
manage to turn things back
around quickly enough{ to
P!Jll out a 6-3, 4-6, 6-2 ,victory over Obziler imd reach
the second round at Roland
Garros before the rain grew
heavier and washed out the
latter ·part of the day ' s
schedule.
"I'm glad at the end that I
figured it out," Williams
said.
Three-time
defending
men's champion Rafael
Nadal was supposed to follow bee on,oeliler
but
his match never began.
Among those who did play
Monday was No. I Rogrc
Fedemr, who wasn't leSied
mucll in a 64, 6-4, 6-3 victory over Sam Querrey of
the United Srates.
"You never think you ' re
going to be the guy that's
going to draw him wben the
draw comes out," the 40dlranked Querrey said. "But
someone has to."
The day' s most significant

coon.

PI zn-Foa•dt.a-

as&gt;,.._
Switzerland's Roger Federer returns the ball to United States player Sam Querrey during
their first round match at the French Open tennis tournament in Paris on Monday.

'

•

�The Daily Sentinel

ACROSS ·THE NATION

PageA6

Inside

Tuesday, May 27, 2008

Bl

·The Daily Sentinel

Jndy sail not tile a;r•w4eot, Pile Bl
Wmp halfway to Cup, Pa!1e 86

NASA Spacecraft lands on Mars ·
BY Des REa•• ....

....
'

entrance

PIITSBURGH (AP) Sinoe even the iong arm of
the law can' t rein in fuel
pnces, the I~ legs of the
law are getting more exerCise these days.
. Bicycle pattols - a community policing tactic that
some law enforcement agencies de-emphasized in recent
years - -are seeing a resurgence as the .price of gasoline
3(llll'08CheS or surpasses $4 a
gallon across the country.

Golfer l'dunw home, . . . 86

The Phoenix .... !Ander plunged iniD \t1e ~· Q( Mars 8l1d
u;; Ill fully landed .in the Red Planet's IIOithOm poW raglon Sunday
ID analyze ooil looking 10&lt; dues to '"' l:Je pastlffe an Mars.

ASSOCIA'!Bl PRESS WRITER

ARLINGTON, Va. President Bush paid tribute
Monday to America's fighting men and women who
died in battle, saying national leaders must have "the
cOurage and character to
follqw their lead" in preserving peace and freedom.
. "On this Memorial Day, I
stand before you as the
commander in chief and try
to tell you how proud I am,"
Bush told an audience of
military figures. veterans
and their families at
Arlington
National
Cemetery. Of the men and ·
women buried in the hal'
lowed cemetery, he . said,
"They're an awesome
bunch of people and the
United States 1s blessed to
have such citizens."
That provoked a standing
ovation from the crowd in a
marble amphitheater where
Bush spoke. . "Whoo-hoo!"
shouted one woman, who
eouldn 't contain her enthusiasm.
Bush and his wife, l.aUTa,
traveled from the White
House across the Potomac
River to the rolling hillsides
of Arlington. Along the
way, one man stood with a
&amp;ign that said: "Bring Our
Troops Home." But. other-.
wise, the
presidential
motorcade on a sparkling
clear spring day was warmly greetlid at the oemetery
by scores of peOJ)].e, including two men in
bats, shirts and shorts made
out of American flag material. Others visited gravesites
where each White tombstone was m;uired with a
.
tiny American tlai!;.
• "From famway fands,l:hey
Were returned ·to cemeteries
like ·this one where broken
hearts reCeived their broken
bodies," Bush said. "They
found peaoe beneath the
white headstones in the land
.they fought to defend It is a
10lemn reminder of the cost
Of freedom tbat the number
of headstones in a place
such as thiS grows with
every new MeliiOrial Day."

.

~

,..,.

cclwuM;..,.

'IlleSday, May Z7, 2008

cardw lui;J aaal;aa
Two
and
lab

LocAL
ScHEDULE
•

__

tPOMEROV - A ~or 4

Dixon almost in 'dreamland'
after Indianapolis 500 win

••'i """

&amp;d101l1 1111!'11ity sporting events tnwolving
teams trom MeiglllftCI Galia counliea.

,_

.... 1

R's?..,
7.7..- ann daiMirs gnM1d
...... ., olher instrumentS

..-od ... _,_.
·-samples

27

•

BY MIKE HARRIS

Oivisfon Ill regionat&amp; at Pickel ingtor:
North High Sct\001, 4 p.m..

10 ched&lt;
for organic~
and oompo91tiol '

aape

1lNrwdov.- 21

INDIANAPOLIS - Scott

'4-D4A ;'wwl....._
'Eastern versus Berlin Hiland at
~High School (Boa"""' Field),

AP

Dixon was exhilarated and

2 p.m.
.
Southom """""' Newall&lt; ca1hOiic ..
Lancaster High School ( - Mold).
Sp.m.

---·

Mars lander prepares·

Dhtiston II regtonals at ByesvlUe .'
-HighSchool, 4p.m.

for.qging mission
be buried inches to a foot
below the surface.
Mission co-scientist R,ay
Arvidson of Washington
University in St Louis is
pleased with Phoenix's
progress so far.
"Like a union worker, it
went right" to work," he said.
Scientists were especially
interested in how the polygon patterns in the ground
formed at Phoenix 's landing ·
site. The fractures look similar to tho se found on
Earth 's polar · regions.
Arvidson said Phoenix
appeared within reach of a
shallow trough that could be
a potential place to dig.
"I was just afraid that it' II
be so flat and homogenous
and that we'd be digging in
soil and we wouldn't know
the . ·context" of how it
formed, Arvidson said
Launched last summer,
Phoenix sailed through 422
million miles of space over
a period of about . 10
months. The riskiest part of
the journey came seven
minutes before landing,
when Phoenix, operating on
autopilot, had to use the
atmosphere's
friction,
deploy its parachute and fire
its do-ren thrusters to slow
to a 5 mph thump. ·
The lander executed the
maneuver a)wost flawlessly.
The only snag CaDle when it
released · the parachute
seven seconds later than
expected. The late timing
caused ·t he . spacecraft to
land slightly down range
from its bull' s-eye mark.
Two hours after touchdown, Phoenix beamed
back a flood of images
revealing the • first-ever
peek of the polar horizon. It
also sent back ima~es of its
unfolded heat shield and
another of its foot planted
in soil next to pebble ~sized
rocks.
Smith, the chief scientist,
said Phoenix slid a bit after
landing ..

AsSOCI,I.T£D PRESS

frtdly. Miy!D
8op 8
LeN 04 RlgiOiwf ftnl:l ·
Thursday winnen; at lanca&amp;ter High
School (Beavers Field). 2 p.m.
··

---

wv--~~
Point
Pleasant vs. Region 111 champion
at Charleston, 7:30p.m. (Cia&amp;r M)
OMolon Ill regional&amp; at Pid&lt;erlngiOn
Nor1h High School. 4 p.m.

T..--...........
,_
__ .

So!yn!or . . 31 .

Oivi~ion II reglonals at Byesville
••eadowblook High School, 11:30 a .m.
WV 5tnt B '-aToum•n•lf:

Class AAA, M and A -

.

11no1s

OHSM ChalT"qlionohipo, TBA

---

letem'=t.lurwi

. AP..,_

Race driller Scott Dixon, of New Zealand, poses with the Borg-Warner Trophy during the tra..ditlonal winner's photo session 911 the st&lt;trt/fjnish line at the Indianapolis Motor Speedway
in Indianapolis on Monday.

scneaming. He also felt
alone, dazed by winning the
Indianapolis 500.
, A day after the biggest
victory of his life, be took a
more leisurely spin around
Indy. He rode slowly around
the 2 1/2-mile oval on a
white ·speedway bus, surrounded by microphones,
notepads and cameras.
And Monday night, he
received a check for almost
$3 million, a record prize
from the richest purse in
open-wheel racing history.
"I don't normally yell too
often," he recalled. ' 'But I
was definitely yelling and I
had a few four-letter words
in there as well to the team.
Winning here, it's like nothing else.
"1 . keep saying to peorle
that's the funniest part o it

because all you're wanting
to do is get back to the pits
and enjoy it with everybody
else. You feel so alone out
there on that (cool-down)
lap, and all you can do is
talk to them on the radio."
He 'II have plenty to talk
about now.
The winner' s share of
$2,988,065, announced at
the annual victory dinner at
the track Monday night,
of
broke
the
record
$1,761,740 for Buddy
Rice's win in 2004. The total
purse-was $14,406,580, topping the $1 0,668,815 set last
year. The only richer prize
package in auto racing is for
NASCAR's Daytona 500 at
about $18 million.
Marco Andretti took home
$782,065, also a record for
third place. Ryan HunterReay, who finished sixth,
received $328,065, including a $25,000 award as

PIIIM-DI-.82

OHSM Championships, TBA

SPORTS BRIEFS

McDyess' 21 points lift Pistons over Celtics
BY LAM! I.ME

lOth Annual Eagle

Basketball Camp
' TUPPERS PLAINS Eastern High School will be
holding · its I Oth Annual
Eagle Basketball Camp on
May 27 ~gh 30 from 9
a.m. to noon for boys and
girls entering grades 4, 5,
and6.
· Cost per player will be $35
pre-reg1stration or $4S the
first day of camp. Included
in the cost will be a camp Tshirt.
Checks should bC: made
payable to Eastern Athletic
Boosters. Checks and registration fonns Should be sent
to Howie Caldwell at 40878
Old Seven Road, Reedsville,
OH 45772 or at Eastern
High School, 38900 SR 7.
~eedsville, OH 45772.
'

{5th Annual Meigs
Football Golf tourney
; MASON, W.Va. - The
·15th Annual Meigs Football,
Golf Tournament will be
~ld Saturday, May 31 , lit
tfle • Riverside Golf Course
at 8:30a.m.
For more information,
contact Mei)ls football
coach Mike Chancey at
740-992-2158 or 740-992~

0064.

2008 Meigs Flag . . .
Football Registtation
RCK;KSPRlNGS
. Registration is now open for
the 2008 flag football season. open to boys and girls
in grades 1-6 beginning
with the 2008-09 school
year. Registration fee is $40
per player, an'd $25 for each
additional sibling.
The games will be played
starting in September on the
Meigs High School practice
field Final date for both
registration and payment is
July I st A workout/combine will be held on J u~
~6th at9 a.m. at Meigs Hi
School. All checks must
inade out tQ Meigs Aag
Football League, P.O. Box
!51, Pomeroy, Ohio 45769.
· To register online or for
inore information go to
www.meigsffl .com or call
YM&gt;-541 -1222.

CoNrACrUs

.
'

1-740-446-2342 ext. 33

Pu-1-7-3008

. i - - 81)01110"¥l&amp;llySentiAel.com
f$OOrt' Staff

Eric RMdolph, Sports w~
(7o!O)

~.

Old. 33

erandolph o mydal!) sarrtinet.oom

8ry8n Wallhw'S, Sports Witter
(740) ~23&lt;42. Old. 33
-.so~.com

Lany Crum, S(larta w...
(740) ~23.42 . eort. 33
lcrumOmydallyregi-.com

ASSOCIATED PRESS

AUBURN IDLLS, Mich.
- The Detroit Pistons provide plenty of fodder for
those who want to criticize
them for only playing their ·
best when down or doubled.
Antonio McDyess doesn't
He often plays with the
most energy on a team that
traditionally peaks and flops
depending on whether 1ts
up, even or behind in a
series.
. Playing his best game
playoff game in perllaps a
decade, McDyess had 21
points and 16 rebounds to
lift Detroit to a 94:-75 seriesevening win over the
Boston Celtics .o n Moilday
night · in Game 4 of the
Eastern Conference finals.
The 33-year-:old McDyess
rejuvenated his injuryplagued career when he
siried with the Pistons in .
2004 ·- shortly · after they
won the NBA title - and
refused to let a broken nose
slow him down this postseason_
.
"You only have so many
opportunities, and they' re
limited, especially for me,"
he said. ''I'm at the end of
my career, and I just feel
like leaving everything out
on the floor.fl
McDyess did just that,
beating the Celtics to loose
balls, defending them with
strength and quickness and
making most of his shots.
Detroit Pistons' Tayshaun Prince, right, shoots over Boston Celtics ' Kevin Garnett during
the first qLiarter of Game 4 of the NBA Eastern Conference basketball finals Monday in

as&gt;..,_

PI n-PL••

a

Auburn Hills, Mich .

·

White Sox
rally in 12th
to top Indians
CLEVELAND (AP) Orlando Cabrera's fourth hit ,
drove in the go-ahead run in
the
&lt; 12th .
inning and
the Chicago
White Sox
b e
I
Cleveland 63 on Monday
night, handing the Indians their ninth
loss in 10 games.
· Boone
Logan
(2-J)
pitched a perfect I 1-3
mnings for the win ' and
Bobby Jenks got the fmal
three outs for his 13th save
in 15 chances.
Jenks allowed two sin,
gles, then ,got Jhonny
Peralta to hit mto a double
play and struck out Franklin
Gutierrez to become the
second-fastest reliever to
notch. I 00 career saves,
doing so in 187 .games.
Kazuhiro Sasaki did it in

a

160.

The White Sox won for
the lOth time in 12 games
and moved 5 · 1-2 games
ahead of the third-place
Indians in the AL Central.
Nick Swisher opened the
12th with a single off righthander Scott Elarton (0-1 ).
Pinch-runner
DeWayne
Wise went to third on a single to right by Alexei
Ramirez and scored on
another single to right tzy
Cabrera, who was then
caught in a rundown trying
for ~rui.
·

Plene-lll•••s.B2

•

Venus ·williams, Federer
winners at French Open
8Y

HU11 U1D

R

IIWCit

.a.5SOCI.a.T£D PRESS

PARis -

Venus Williams
was cruising along with a
ho-hum 6-3, 4-1 lead over
her 35-year-old opponent at
the French Open on Monday .
when suddenly · everything
went awry.
The double-faults piled
up. The forehand errors did,
too, and Williams lost six
consecutive games to fall
behind as a drizzle feU. The
crowd was rooting for the
underdog, applauding . in
unison every time 93rdranked Tzipora Obziler of
Israel earned a point ·
When the No. 8-seeded
Williams would hit a winner, the sounds of lqlplllVal
emanated mainly from her
personal gucat5. "Whooo!"
one of her sisters kept
yelling.
"I told the people in our
box, 'Be ,quiet, so she can.
concentrate,"'
said
Williams' father and coach,
Richard. "Venus is a great
thinker and a great player. I
wasn'tnervousatall."

Eventually, six-time r:wljor
champion Wtlliams 'did
manage to turn things back
around quickly enough{ to
P!Jll out a 6-3, 4-6, 6-2 ,victory over Obziler imd reach
the second round at Roland
Garros before the rain grew
heavier and washed out the
latter ·part of the day ' s
schedule.
"I'm glad at the end that I
figured it out," Williams
said.
Three-time
defending
men's champion Rafael
Nadal was supposed to follow bee on,oeliler
but
his match never began.
Among those who did play
Monday was No. I Rogrc
Fedemr, who wasn't leSied
mucll in a 64, 6-4, 6-3 victory over Sam Querrey of
the United Srates.
"You never think you ' re
going to be the guy that's
going to draw him wben the
draw comes out," the 40dlranked Querrey said. "But
someone has to."
The day' s most significant

coon.

PI zn-Foa•dt.a-

as&gt;,.._
Switzerland's Roger Federer returns the ball to United States player Sam Querrey during
their first round match at the French Open tennis tournament in Paris on Monday.

'

•

�P~ Ba •

The Daily Sentinel

www.mydallyeentlnel.com

Tuesday, May r,, aoos

www.mydailyse,mnel.com

· tltribune - Sentinel - 1\egister
CLASSIFIED

(The Greatest Spectacle in Racing' turns out to be one of the sloppiest·
BvJIMimiE

ous challenge after that
As far as suspense, that
ended on the same lap and in
INDIANAPOLIS
almost the same place.
Getting all the best drivers in Danica Patrick, the spolt's
open-wheel racing on the ·glamour girl, saw her day
same track turned out to be a ended when Ryan Briscoe
lot easier than keeping them pulled out of his pit box too
ibere.
quickly and skidded into the
The story of this year's back of her car, wrecking the
Indianapolis 500 was sup- suspension. After climbing
posed to be a feel~good tale · out, a steamed Patrick began
about the end of a decade- striding purposefully down
long civil war that split the · the lane, yanked off her
wort into rival ' leagues and gloves and looked ready for
so damaged both that they a second collision wi.th
wound up sucking on the Briscoe- !;his time between
fumes of NASCAR as it her fist and his face.
roomed past in popularity
But after she brushed past
and prize money. Instead, one uniformed speedway
the 92nd running of what . official; a plainclothes secuofficer
persuaded
was once called "The rity
Greatest · Spectacle
m Patrick. to cliinb over the pit
Racing" turned out to he one wall and back. in the direcof the sloppiest
tion of the garage. She
There was eight i:autions, stormed past a few waiting
10 crdShes and way too little TV camems and into a sponracing. The best maneuver ~r's hut but eventually
of the afternoon was the one cooled off and reappeared
·
that winner Scott Pixon later.
"Probably best," she conpulled to beat then-leader
Vitor Meira out of the pits ceded, "that I dido 't get
with the yellow flag still fly- down there, anyway."
ing and 29 of the 200 laps
It's tempting to blame the
left to go. The New mess on the II rookies in the
lealander never faced a seri- field, but that wouldn't be
M' SPORTS COLUMNIST

entirely accurate. There
In just three years of raewere 13 in the field in 1997, ing, Andretti already has a
the second year of the split well-earned reputation as a
created when speedway daredevil. He hardly needs
owner Tony George chased to add rc;ck.less to his
off most of the top drivers resume.
and teams and started his
"Stupid? I don't know
own Indy Racing League, about stupid,~ · Andretti
and even that rare was more responded. "Last minute.
entertaining than this one. maybe. I had an awesome
True, the rookies gummed . run on him. Mar: I diveup. lraffic all over the oval, bombed him too
.I don't
but six were still running. at know. ru have to loOk. at the
the end and none was tape. If. so.. I completely
invt;~lved in the mishaps !Jlat apologize."
·
.
dec1dedtheoutcome.
There's nochaneetbepeoAfter Briscoe's parking pie in COlltrol of open-wheel
lot-caliber mishap, the sec- racing will foUow suit .The
ond-worst move probably product and personalities are
belonged to Marco Andretti, .nowhere near as compelling
heir to one of the great as they were before tbe split
names in the sport. The Then again, COIIIpllml to the
grandson of Mario, the patti- last dozen years, the sport is
arch and only Andretti ever on a roll. Palrick fmally WoO
to win one of these, pipched a race earlier this ydr to justeammate Tmiy Kanaan 00. lify some of the hype that
Helio
the low side .while passing surrounded · . her,
him on Lap 106andcauseda · Castroneves
won
011
spinout that ended the "Dancing with the Stars"
Brazilian•s day.
and drew a few .hew fans to
Told afterward that Maroo open-wheel racing, TV oomAndreW said over the team bers are inching up and
radio be was· sorry, Kanaan, SOIIIC new sponsors have
one of the pre-race favorites, come into the fold.
shot back, "He'd better be. It
Eadier this lno!lth. in the
was a very stnpid move."
middtc of . the Democratic

. NASCAR, beginning witlt
veterans lilre Tony Stewart
and extending all the way to
the previous two winners of
the Indy 500, Sam Homish
Jr., and Dario Franchitti.
All of them save
Franchitti. who . broke his
foot in · a recent cmsh were on display when
NASCAR's Coca Cola 600
began Sunday night and a
biggerchunkoftheTVaudience will follow them there.
With peace finally in place
and a chance to grow the
business, it's time for the
people in charge of open·
wheel racin_g to focus their
attention back on the track.
Someone asked Dixon
afterward wbat' it meant to
win the frrst "real" Indy 500
in years. ~ · . ,.,. •
"It's il'ice," · he ' said,
refreshingly candid. "That's
about alii can say about it."
Perfect.

played the wa't. they did.
had 11.
behind biock on a dunk:
"When you re down 2-1 ,
"They bumped us off attempt.
you've got to be despemte," spots and were more physi~·1 thou~ht he bodied him
cal
and
aggressive
all
and
dido t give him anyCassell
said.
from Page Bt ·
The Celtics desperately nit;ht." O;ltics coach Doc thing easy," Pistons coacb
need their stars to play bet- Rivers said. "Usually the flip Saunders said.
"Dice has been our best ter than they did Monday.
winner is the team that was
Detroit scored the frrst 10
player in the postseason,
Boston's Big Three shot more aggressive.
points of the game and startand we're all feeding off his awfully as did most of the
"They had ano-layup rule ed the second quarter with
energy," teammate and Celtics, but the NBA's top- and that's why we made it to an 11-2 run, but led just 43clo~e
friend Chauncey seeded team stayed compel- the line so much."
39 halftime
·
Billups said. "You see how iti,·e for much of the~
McDyess led the Pistons'
Cellics·1&gt;ta~
hard he is work:in,g, and ~ou thankstoastaltdispantyin bahinredattack.,going'8-ofby makjnJ ITof 20
can' t help but play hard.
free ~brows.
14 :- ~:b long jumpers.
tbrows in die fiat biif
Playing hard probably
Kevin Garnett, • Paul
"He's
y comfoil:able
·bile ,.._._.
·
won't be a problem for Pi.en;c and Ray Allen com- ~t now," Rivers said. ·w Bos:i!t~:!f::;,
either team or any player as · bined to miss their fmt , "We have to _g et him out of from~ line ( , . .....- "'-'-"-'
. .·
32 '....., .......
the Eastern Conference seven shots and flllished 11- · his comfort Zone."
·
eld
Ridiald Hlmillton had 20 the fiel ~.Y. in. ~ fourdt
fmals becomes a best-of- for-38 from die field.
tltree series.
· ~said it was adisap- points, Ra~d Wallace _ j1~ wbell it.~·WiiJl-·
Game 5 is Wednesday ~ perfocmance fium. ~ l4 and Billups added .· "W didll' .,.a. ......, . ,
10.
.
... e
,t r&lt;J' .._.. . .
night in Boston, then the ibemo.
~ · pride ourselv.es ·on
.Reserve. J~ Maxiell · we hung in tJK:re
~
Pistons will host Game 6 on
Friday night. If necessary, makjng our teammatei bet- filled in well when Wallace to the · foul .l$e, '
the Celtics will be back at ter and allowing diem (0 was in fool trouble by scor- ·s,aid. "Then. we just ~
make us better," Allen .s;Ud. , ing 1~ POints and playing n't blake plays." ,
·· •
home Sunday night.
Oamdt and 'Pim:e both tough ~fense on Garnett, . Billups essentially auld
Boston's Sam Cassell
wasn' t surprised the Pistons ~ 16 points and Alleb not3bly on a come-from- the win with a 3-pointa,'
.•.

with just undel" 3 minutes
left, making some forget the
Qffensive ·struggles he had
much of the game on his
sore right hamstring.
Deiroit improved to 5.0 in
games following losses in
the playoffs.
"N'&lt;i One likes it, the wa~
our ieam personality is,'
said Saunden, refemng to
the Pisto11s' penchant to
play their best when down
or doubted.
1'be Celtics feU to 1-7 on
tbe road and 0-6 when tmiling after lhnle quarters.
Bostoll ~serve James
Posey scored II JX&gt;ints and
Ke11drick Perkins, who
fouled out, had 10.
The · Pistons attacked
Boston at both ends of the
coutt as they got off to a
strong stan.
They 'led 10.:0 thanks to
McDyess' eight points and

swarming defense that led
to Boston missing 'its frrst
four shots and later having
more turnovers ( 3.) than
points (2).
"We put a lot of emphasis
on the start becauSe that
team is so good when they
Jiet on top," Billups said.
'We didn't want to let them
do that again."
· Notes: McDyess' previous high in points this postseason was 17 and his high
in rebounds was 14. ...
While playi.Iig for Phoenix
against San Antonio in the
1998 playoffs, McDyess
had a career-playoff high 26
points in one game, 19
· rebounds in another and
four blocks in yet another
game agai11st the Spurs. ...
Hamilton played in his
I 14th postseason game,
b~aking Bill Laimbeer's
team record.

came in last 1n the AL with
make it 6-3.
Elarton, c811ed up from a .232 av~. and .sb'anded Tqple-A . . · Buffalo
on 13 baseruJI!K!I'S While going
Saturday, was making his 1-for-l3 with rwmer.s in
fromPageBl
first cdief appearance in the scoring position. ·
The White Sox, next-tomajoJ:s si~ .Sqlt; ,6, 2003,
· After A.J. Pie1Zynski was when be was with Colorado. last in hitting with a .243
intentionally
walked, He bad started 154 .tiriJes in matt entering the ,game,
Ramirez scored on a 155 ~gs since 1999.
weren't much bettel" until ·

. Bytd gave up 10 hits and
three ruas over 6 2-3
innings.
. Chic~o had only two hits
in its previous 17 at-bats
with runners in . scoring
position until Pierzyilski
singled to center off reliever
Rafael Perez with two outs
in lhc sevellth to tie it at 3.
White Sox staner Javier
Vazquez gave up three runs
and nine hits over six
innings.
Nota: Last week, Indians

Pistons

•

~sidential primary, Sen. ing caused some of the most

Hillary Clinton even came promising drivers of this
out to practioo and ~ generation to defect to

driver-owner Sarah ·F1sher
for supporting her. Fisher
got into the race on a shoestring, coming up wi~ a
Sponsor ooly last week and
hoPing a _good finish here
wookf provide the impetus
to rim at least one car for the
rest.of the season:
But that feel-good story,
too, got squashed when the
sJ?inc?ut caused by ~·s
pmcb sent Kanaan s Cill"
spinning down the ttack and
dinlctly into Fisher's path.
"fve been known my
whole career to be able to
get out of incidents like
that," Ftsber said, fighting
bad tears. '"That's the crazy
thing about this sport This is
going to set us back a little
bit.
.
.
"I think," .she added. as the
tears . began floWing, "I've
e~ eveey emotion
lhcie is to it."
Good to know that somebody felt that way. During
.a ll those years that fans were
fon;cd to cboose sides,
~y was looking out for
tbe sport itself. The bicker-

n!e
C"

in.ae

2

'!1.

Indians

groundout . by
Carlos
David DeHuoci
and
Quentin and Jermaine Dye lbonny 'Peraka bit solo
got another intentional homers in.the first and fifth
walk.. Brian Anderson then innioV for Oeveland, but
slapped an RBI double just . the Indians' oJiense contin-.
i nside the frrst-base line to ued to struggle. Clcvelaod

their winning rally.
DeUucci's fifth homer in
the bolitom half tied it .ab.d
the . Indians
copied
Chicago's early effort in the
thild when .their first three

liven

batters all reicbed Slfely,
qut only one run 10i1Rid&lt;q0 a
single by Victor MartineZ w
rilake it 2-1.
.Peralta hit his tOdla.....,...
with one out in the fifth and
Chicago's Jim
bit
his I Oth - and fifth of,d~e
year against his former tam
in the sixth to jet
· Chicago witbin ·•J-2. It~
Thome's 51 7th caRieC
homer, · ~ ", behind
Oakland's Frank. 1hofDl!5
for 18th all-time.

n-

Gallia
County

OH

In One Week With Us
ctassified@!;:'~~ribune.com REACH OVER.285,000 PROSPECTS .
PLUS YOUR
NOW ONLINE

French
fromPageBt
upset was produced by
another American, 106thrii.Ilked Wayne Odesnik:,
who beat No. 29 Guillermo
Canas of Argentina 7-6 (6),
7-6 (3), 7-6 (8). The match
;lasted lhe minimum number
'Of sets yet tilok. 3 hours, 46
minutes.
'There's not too much to
say, I think. he played well,"
said Canas, :who's lost his ·
past six matches, all on clay.
"I didn' t play well at all."
Ttie only · other seeded
man to cut on Day 2 was
No. I 7 Marcos Baghdatis,
the 2006 Australian Open
. runner-up, wbo lost to
Simone Bolelli of Italy in
1 str.right sets. B.aghdatis

Dixon
fromPageBl

for ~ve.
"lt IWa't really lricked in
yet." die new Indy champion uid. "'think: it's going to
take a week or two to reall_y
~it

up.

·

iookic of the year.
"lfs prell)' 1.1001 I only
I&gt;Uoo's total for winning jullt uw tbe pllpel'. ·s eei'll
was more than $1 million fOUI'IICJf 011 ihc front ·P 'F
more ·t han his combioed ..t ~ the milk. It's
amings for his five previ- just die littJc dliDp lilre 1lllt
ous · starts at lndy llld 1bat add to it, you blow, IIIII
moved his career total in die you 1ta1t to feel the a s•
500 to $4,881,997, fifth tic:. alit." ·
JIIDOIIg all drivers.
Nobody di'f*letl · 1blt
Tbe 27·year-old New OW. ifloaeoflhe ,b eltdriZealander was "almost ven in lllc 'IRL's fud)'Car
dumbfounded" when he got SaiH. But beeN•¥ be is
to VICtoly Lane.
qWet
stays
"It's such a strange feel- ' CJIIl al
·on lhc ttack.
tag," he said. "And, for me, • is oftat ovedoobd
I don't show emotions too
In the days leading .to die
much. I don't know, it'1 raoe~ me oo,tn ~ were
almo t ~ you're ia • oolildy glamour girl Danica
dreamlaod...
Patrick., teammate Tony
On Monday morning, Kana.an (considered by
Dixon was still struggling many the best current driver

:!J:aetally

never to have won this rare)
and Marro A!ldretti, the 21year-old scion of the family
that has been trying without
sU«~CSs to win a second 500
since ~adler Mario's

1969 viCtol'y.

·

And it was those three
that drew most of the attention after a sloppy race
. mam:d by eight caution
flags.
·
P'atrick. started fifth and
never ran above sixth once
the race began. She complained repeatedly to her
team about a slow~ and
then got taken out on pit
lane with· 30 laps to go
when Ryan Briscoe spun his
tires and slammed into her
car
out of his pit
The enduring image from
the 92nd Indy 500 most
likely will be that of the 5fnot- I , I 00-pourul Patrick.
stomping toward Briscoe's

coming

pit stall, ripping off her
gloves, looking for a fight
She was stopped by track
security.
· "It's probably a better
idea that I dido 't make it all
the way down there · .anyway,." she .w "d . "Because,
well, as yoti guys know, I'm
a little emotional."
Kanaan and Andretti
appeared to have cars CliPII. ble of I"Uillling with Dixon
until Andretti- crowded his
Andretti Green Racing
teammate just past the midway point in the race.
Kanaan scraped the wall
and collected Sarah Fisher,
ending both their races.
Andretti went on unscatbed
but wound up third llfta" a
late-r.we adjustment by his
team upset ' the car\ ban-

could rellllL

{304) 675-1333

!

I

tJfftee llo~V'~
Monday thru Friday
s:oo a.m~ to s:oo p.m.

Jim Litke is a national
columnist for The
Associatea Press. Write to
him at jlitkeap.org
~ports

KIT &amp; CARLYLE ·

•POLICIES•

~

kltnc111rleecomcaat.net

""""'

'*"'"'

1
u.-

_

Borrow Smart. Contact
. the Ohio Division of
FinanciBI
Office ot

lnstl1ution's
Con&amp;umer

...... -..

or

-~lf'tlel

r ·. rroo:o·

~-~~~pa~
ti:ti: '4U~
4~.
L,~------,1.
LPN'S and
7P
1
Found hair
medium
bltllddwhite
to
tlmefr_
3A·3Pl!lnd ctedicatshort
frie'ndly
DOG pn our
tenely
Page St Middleport 7~ ed staff. Applicants muS1 be
team players
992-64 7.2'. Ask for Emir .

r~

d~pendable,_

r

V.ARDS.W:

~:::;::::==~·
~

r

~

YARD Sw;;.,._ ··--·

,.._ h

JnJMURJYnnwuu.

p1cK up an application_M-F

8:30AM--4::l1PM. AJI eligible

applicants wiN then be con'laded
o.. HOie a--mer
~.....
_,

•

LPN, Staff Del'9topment
·-• ·Coordinator07•0·992 ·
.
.
2 family- sat&amp;- Noble 6472. EO£ &amp; A PartiCipant
Summh Rd . Bam.fipm, rain of the Drug-me WOI'kplaoe

~~~~~~~or:slti~·~ne~
. :allina~~-:~full
sw:. $50, Old refrigerator,
CLASSIFIED INDEX

4:.:4'1 for Sale.~···· ....................... :...._.......... 725
Antlqueo ....................................................... S30
Af*:tmei•IS ,.,.Rent ................................... e40

kept slumping her shoulders
and hangmg ber bead after

U.rtet.....:....................... oao
&amp; ~---.
•---~ ......................... 750

Auction and Fa..

•uto rm•
-~.
~

Auto Rep.lr ......... ......:................................. 770
Autos for Sale ...- .....- ................ .................710
· Bof1W A llotorl.tor S. ............................. 750

n..-.........,. .........................................550

Bu lid .................

au-.
and Buildlnga ....... - .................... 340
-~Opponunlty ..:..............................210
fralnlng ....................................... 140
l:altp ora &amp; . . _ ........................... 790
~•
nt
........, t nar
............. __,................. 780
·
Thanb .......................................... 010
ClllldiEiclert)'Care ....................................... l90
1
Elocbka-hlgeooliou ...............................840
m
I•
1=11
for
.._.
• .,.
E
~"• · -

-

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

"-Y1111"11-·····-......................................... 130
FannEqui!Mt*rt.................... - .................. 6 1 0

.
.

FarmaforAent ............................................ A30
Fa""' for Slle ............................................. 330
For L.MN ..................................................... 4 90

For s.le ·········-····.................- ...................... 585
For Sale"" r..-.........................................HO
Fruita &amp; V.;e' h&amp;ee ..................................... SIO

==..

f l O - - .................. - ...................450

- General Hauitng_........................................eso
Glt I
J..· - - -....................................... 040

4n Excellent way to earn
money. The New Avon . ·

Call Marilyn 300-882·2645
4pt.

C~aner . Spring Clean

up assistance. Call 740-44 t·
1341
AVON! AU Areas! To Bu~ 01
Sell. Shirley Spears, 304·
675-tqQ.
Case ManagementiOMAP:
GaII'""'.
t,...,.ts. ~ FT sa1ary
with benefits. Casolood of

vn.

20

Goacll ...............................,....... 510
HouMe for Rent .......- ................................. 410
ln ·lllmoriam ................................................ozo
.....-..c......................................................130
Lawn &amp; Garden Equipment ..............- -.... Lh:e&amp;ac c• ......................- .............................630

loll Md Found ................................ _......... O&amp;O
Lobi &amp; Acreege .......................... ,................. 350
Ills . . . 1180UI..............................................170
llloc lla_,s --..handiM ...................- ..540
. _.Home Aepolr ................................ -...Mobile Homes for Rent ............................... 420
·• - - f o r Sale ........................... - ...320

llof-r to ~ .............................................220

•-cwcles &amp; 4 WhMiera..........................740
llulltlllrwtrumentl .............. - ................. 570
Pwwonllle ............... _.................................... 005
,_tarSale ................................................ 580
I'll tLI 'i &amp; - g.................................... l20
. Pad &amp;llooat Sen.lcel ...\............. - .......~.....230
~. 1V.&amp; CB

Weekends/Evening
BAIBS in Human

Shitt
Service Fiekl. 2-yrs - " '

ence..,~
...........ngsupportaand

services to ""'ivlduals with
MRIOOMustbe....,.cienlin
•
,..,....,,
Microsoft Word exc.. with
'good organizational skills.
SkiD ooncentration on paper
wori&lt;. Wort&lt;ingKnowfodgeof
Federal, State ind Local
regulations: Must be willing
1o . 1rawl between multiple
servioe ·Sites. Sailry oorrespending with e&gt;tjlefience
and education.
Contact Pamela Sheets PO
at ~14 , fill resu~ 1o
4&lt;6-3987
or
em 'I

.

Courtside Bar and Grill now
seel&lt;ing qualified applicants

lot'. b a -. food rumer
and fine cool&lt;. Apply In per·
soh or call 441 _9371 10
sdledule and Interview. 308
200 1&lt;ve. Gallllalls.
Repair

Equipment

. Technician for Farm and/0'1'
lawn Equipment repair &amp;
maintenance. Must have
experienoe. Must be able to
use ,.,.,,.,..••,..,er on a limited
--·~basis. Compet~ive wages,
modern shop, continuous
company sponsore&lt;l train·
ing, health insurance,
matching relirernent oontri·
bution and paid holidays.
Fax 7-.9104 or Email
jottncarmichaeiOcareq.com

Repair ................ --........... 1410

~ Aelll ~ Wanted ..................................... 360
Set Olllnelri!CIIon ...- ................................ 150
- , Pl&amp;d &amp; Feltillar .............................. 650
. , _ . W - ....................................... 120
SpJioe for Renl ........_............................., ..... 4410
S,.o 11ng Goods ..........................- ............... 520
for Sale ..............................................720
Tl\ldcaforSale. - -.................................... 715
110
V.. For Sale ........ - .................................. 730
• W&amp; led 10 ...., __....................................... 0110
W&amp; led tDIIuy· Fenn Supplles .................. l20
.. W•tled To Do ......--..........._ ...................... 110
W&amp; lid to llent.-...................................... 410

suv·.

.Uphol-, .........,. . . . . . . . . . . . . . .. . . . . .

........ - .........................
072
. ' Yani-QJI"'olla
Y.,. Sd· lloft•or•~*I
.........................074
Yani-.Pt. ·...;_........................-07&amp;

FEDERAL
POSTALJOBS
St7.89·S28.27Alr.. now ho·
ing. For awticatlon and free
~- ~ m, call
•

A'merocan
"" . ~of
labor t·
'

913-599-8226, 24hlrs. emp.
oerv. ·
Help wanted at Darst Home
G
Home .0.
7 992 5023

roup

to · u.......

.nu.rWAN'JD)

lli.IO_____
_.JIIhi
IIDJ-WAN'JID

W.,...;_
l'llol"'.nlu

POST OFFICE NCJrN
HIRING
~- Pay $20/hr or
S57K/yr, irdudes
~ Benoflts. OT.

2750 myrnidwest.com

,....., r~

.......... Our

I

lhlstNW I I

•
100 acres. Gallia Co.
Suttable tor hor11esite, great

_ n l ! y .....

hunting area . 41 9-23fF73ot6

dwtlinp...,e:tiMCiin
...
•niMble on en equal

· 3 acre5 tor Sale on Sandhill
HUD Homes! 3 bed, Oflly Ad $25,000. 304-895-3929
$17,0001 for listings 800620-4946eKA019
MOBILE HOME LOT FOR
llcMng. _...._Sell. Nice. A~NT, 1031 Georges Creek

TURNED DOWN ON

SOCIAL SECURITY ISSI?
NofeeUnles&amp;WeWinl
•
1..fJ88-582·3345

. .__

r..t

lnfannecl a..r: ..,

740-406-4953

1

®

·

«VC
lleha b1ll ffMIIIC.re

u.- ...

our

New 3 Bedroom homes from

$214.36 per month, Includes
many upgrades, delivery &amp;
set-up. (740)3!15·2434

I

Large 211 home in scenic Ad , 441-1111

~uie1 subdivision, gfeat for

hiking. biking and fishing. ~;=:;===:,
1257 sq. fl. vinyl siding. lots
ot
storage, 1 1f2cargarage,
llolH
0 doWn payment. 4 bed- concrete drivoway. Extra
fOR RIM"
rooms. Largo yam. ~ parl&lt;ing &amp; room for boat. L,,--iiiiiioiiiiitit-.,1
Wo - I D 1ft 20 ~ doole. Machod ga-. 74(). Ia~ lot with storage shed $226/mol 3 bed 2 bath
wvsw or LPC licenslltM tn
1-88&amp;-4C)3.2582
tor ¥1 Ills+ in our
367-7129.
large rooms. WJI doset in Bank Re . 1 (Solo 'down
wv·6oo Salary starts at Satellite lnstalters-Become
a ,., I toc::.donl
master. Updates inc
. lude. ye·-. go~APR) for I:-:,~
..- ;o 10 ...,
•&lt;» • 'If"'
528• 1 Aae, Rat ~ Spaciou6 Berber carpet, apptlances. 800-620--4946 &amp; . R027
part of OIM' Ohio lnltallation
,_ly Solvico S
team lot' Dish · FIT,
You can
of a
3BR, 2BA, Lg. Kit &amp; LA, DR, /&gt;JC &amp;Heat pump.
Mooe - - - . . . . , - - - .
~I II t, benefits, trailing, oo truck ~ the as one of Den w/ Flrepljice, 2 car ~ C~ltion, Reduced , 2 bedroom hOuse for rent,
case manager, requ1res a and the wort are aupplied.
anached Garage Rodney
ng 9,900 .. Appraised no pets, (740)992_5858
Bachelor deg&lt;ee and a
Sttt&gt;ng wort&lt; elhlc poailive
$85,000 (740)245·9125
tor $108.000 t t/2 yeal1i - - - - -- Social
~
licenee, attlude, wtll~ 10 leam TOP FIVE ..., P11ce1 to
ago. 740·2Q8·9673 Cell. 2BR on Eastern 4ve. Close
Starting aalary 1s $25,600
is requif8d. Ml81 ~.. drNWort in Ohktl
4br, 1905 N. Main. Reduced 740-441-8232 hm . 204 Ann to Wal-Mart. :$500 rent $500
Prioe 304-675-1545
Or. off Raccoon Creek Rd. dep· Reference' Req 446 ·
lng &amp; ba&lt;l&lt;groond .....chad&lt;. No
4053
-~.
a OptlonFetontes. ~IIIOO-atl3-1991 • ~~-~_:
2 I&gt;C, Pool, Coontry Nice big 2·3 br. home in _ _ _ _ _· _ _ __
·a m-F s·3G-5PM
c .., _ . .
country · ell appl'
Bachefor degree in human
'
·
·
• New Tnlini1g Cia&amp;&amp; st.15 New Haven, $139,500 call
' h
d mnceds . 3 Bedroom House in
· · re...
•~
-~ - 1
after 6pm Wil ,......,
~" -~h
uge hyar · poo · Sy•acuse $500/month •
servK:e
'"-~ area. start- The
Athens-Meigs
.-.,
"''' $800
ing salary ~ $23,600
Educational SeM&lt;:e Center
Cfo8ing Cost 300-5~71 . (740)591 !~t •
deposit Hud App. No Pels.
has a position opening as
ColtTocloyorApply
or
(3tJ.&lt;)675·5332
weekends
1106
KVC provQsifl.home t!l1d ~in Meigs County.
..A-1
~
740·591-0265
tooter care oerv1ceo to chi~ -'J&gt;pllcants should have
1 • -YU
local..,._ -ing "NO
~ HowN
· . Job Ext.1101
DOWN PJ\VMENr proS
3br Brick Ranch,. available 6dren and tamilfes. KVC extenlive uperienoe in
nnlmt:l &amp;... un~• to buy ~·r
FOR ALE
1-oa. Quite Net~ .
ollefs training ond · implementing Cuniculum, -~ ··-..- ~ •-·-•·-·~
SenCr-·-toHR"'"" ~-~onandP~•-·•
homeirtoleadotrenting.
No Pots. 614-575·1813 or
.....,.,,_
~o~V~o~•·· """'"""'' •
·~Mil
• ~()()%financing
14x60 2BR, e)ectric. AJC, 614-915-7624
- ~•
200
llfadford . St.. Developm~
ch ssooo ~.;...:.~;_=-....,
.....
£&lt;_._..._. ..
l880 than ~ cr-"·• 1lr.....,ace. sm. por ·
Charleston, WV 25301. . Plano. Tltis is a t2 month
~
·
.,..,_, =
c 11 fl 6 00p 256 1044· c: MOBIU HOMES
Call
. t·BOCHI35·5277. oontnttct pooition, salary will •
fHmlvcnoN
aa:epted
a a er '. m.
·
RIJII'r
Exl.t27 or Fax (304)347· be besed on cerliflcation
' Paymeni could be the 16X80 3 Bedroom 2 Bath roR
·
gna.
emall andv.perienoeaccordingto Glli)lt!MICerNr College same as rom .
Vinyt Siding Shingle Roof
cgrady0kyc orgKVC
i&amp; salary
~
schedule. {Careers Cbs To Home)
Mortgage
locators. $230 per ~ 740- 385~ 2Br at Johnsons Mobile
Equal Opportunity ~..,...&amp;no. ..... • A c1 m i n i s 1 r a t i v 8 · CaN Toclayt 740 ~~6 ~367, (740)367-QOOO
9948
.
Home Park . Call '4 46 -1409
'"""''fJ'U)"Cil certiflcationllicensure with
·
or 446·2003
1-800-21.(.0452
H
~.
to · Ra ·
68
2002
16x80
Oakwood
3
Bed
- - - - -L.ooldng for a gNII s1rong bad&lt;grourtd it I1IBth&amp;- - - - - . ouse ·~
on
cme
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important and richest open- into the frrst tum in front.
wheel race.
"I think that gave us
He took. the iead for good enough buffer than· Vitor
in .t he pits 29 laps from the couldn't get by," Dixon
end, ~:f out just ahead said. "That was the key
of .e ven
runner-up Vitor moment for me 'and I think
Meira. That appeared to be that won the race."
the key, but Dixon said
Monday, as he rode the
Monday be thought it could media bus at speeds
easily have been the approaching 40 mpb -moment he lost it.
about 180 mph slower thllll
"When you're out front, his. fastest laps Sunday you're a sitting duck." Dixon was e~~nl! being
Dixon said. "I really wouid the Indy 500
pton. But
have prefermd to •be second the 2003 lndyCar champion
· coming out (of the pits). But was also looking toward
the team did a great job and next Sunday's race in
I just llld to deal with being Milwaukee.
up front"
"That championship in
' He called the ensuing 2003 was a long time ago,"
restart "the pivotal moment Dixon said. "We have
forme."
another cllampionship to
Dixon made the start win this year. We' II enjoy
slow« than usual, touohed this for a few days, then get
dling.
his brake for just a moment back. to work. I've got much
In the end, it was Dixon to slow Mcira and the other more to do Jr:!.. man, much
who won the world's most em behind him and shot more to do.

---------------------------i ro~- Iri ~h

Ohio 'llltey

PulilahlnV I I - 11181

GM Mark Shapiro said he
would try "incremental
moves" to improve the
team. Monday. he signed
OF Todd Linden and INF
Jorge Velandia to minorleague
contracts
and
assigned them to Triple-A
Buffalo .... Dellucci was 5for-43 (.116) before his
homer.... White Sox IB
Paul Konerko went G-for-6
in his first game after miss·
ing three with a sore right

"It's hard. I mean, I'm
still in awe of him," the IDISCUCS.
AmCrican said. "Sometimes
"Venus can play a lot bethe · hits shots, ~ 're just ter than she did today," her'
on TV a father said. "After she setlike, 'fve seen
bunch of timc:s."'
tled down, she pulled it
Same goes fur Williams, out.'•
wbo used to be ranked No. 1
He shed no light on whatan4 has bad stretches of ever health issues might be
brilliance. particularly at troubling
her.
Venus
W'unbledon, but never bas Williams was off the tour
been all that suooess~ul at for about a month this year
the French Open. This is the ·
only Grand Slam touma· after having medical tests.
ment at which she's been She hasn't said what tbe
put' die quadetfinals only tests were for - and even
GllllC io 2002, when .she her father said be docsn 't
lost to sister Serena in the ·.k.now.
"Venus never talked to me
final..
.Part of it is that clay dulls about it, and I never asked
her stinging serve. Pan of it her. The only thing I asked
is that moving around on is, 'Are you sure it's time to
clay is tough. Part of it is the come back?' And she said,
sort of inconsistency on dis- ' ¥ es,"' he said. "Does it
play in the middle of have an affect on her or not?
Monday's match, when she This I don' t know."

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l\egister

Announcement ................................ - ...........030

always draws a big coowd at thought I played . more relies on his ~ sa:ye; Rolaod Garros because he · aggressive and e~~;eouted my that once pmdua:d iO ooatrains at a •Paris tennis acad- soots~." ·said Odesnik, ;secutive aces in a •lidL
who was bom. in South 'But Federer had lildc ·~rou,.
emy.
Another product of that Africa and moved · to lhc . ble getting !lelNCs ~· Jim-academy is Anastasia · United States as a toddler. · iting Quem:y to u ai:a
Pavlyuchenk.ova, the 16-.
He's !been tryirig' to lllld compiling ·ll .bmit
year-old Russian who won a improve his clayo()OI,irt pPint's, fiwe of which be
Grand Slam match for the game lately !lo'ith . Feli1; oonvert.ed.
first time by beating Maria Mantilla, a Spaniard once
''He just seems like be
Emilia Salemi oLArgentina .ranked as a~h as lOth. gets ·the raclret on every6-l, 6-1.
Odesnik ac · y calls clay thing," Querrey !¥lid.
"I ju~t play. I don't think. his favorite surface, someThere are those, though,
about the . results," said thing that's rare to hear who
wonder
!lo'hetiier
Pavlyuchenk.ova,
who from an American.
Federer is slipping' a bit
recently fmished hig)l
Querrey also doesn't Consider: The 12-t.ime
school and is the YOQilgest mind playing 00 the red major champion already ...
player in the tournament.
stnff, although he .also said lost seven matches this year.
Odesnik. is only 22, yet be he basically doesn '.t pay too more than for the entire seawas exhausted after his much attention to what is sons of 2004, 2005 and
match and was .clicded by a underfOot.
2006. He also has only one
doctor. He credited n:ccnt
••ne is a young player tide so far.
work with a sporu psychol- who is Cllpable of playing a'
"He's still got all the shots
ogist for helping him play good matoh on clay," of a No. I player," Querrey
well in all of lhose tiebreak.- Federer said, "so I'm glad said.
·ers.
it's ower."
Querrey wanted to forget
"On the big points, I
Querrey is 6-foot-6 and wbom he was facing so he

The Daily Sentinel • Page 83

·

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The Daily Sentinel

www.mydallyeentlnel.com

Tuesday, May r,, aoos

www.mydailyse,mnel.com

· tltribune - Sentinel - 1\egister
CLASSIFIED

(The Greatest Spectacle in Racing' turns out to be one of the sloppiest·
BvJIMimiE

ous challenge after that
As far as suspense, that
ended on the same lap and in
INDIANAPOLIS
almost the same place.
Getting all the best drivers in Danica Patrick, the spolt's
open-wheel racing on the ·glamour girl, saw her day
same track turned out to be a ended when Ryan Briscoe
lot easier than keeping them pulled out of his pit box too
ibere.
quickly and skidded into the
The story of this year's back of her car, wrecking the
Indianapolis 500 was sup- suspension. After climbing
posed to be a feel~good tale · out, a steamed Patrick began
about the end of a decade- striding purposefully down
long civil war that split the · the lane, yanked off her
wort into rival ' leagues and gloves and looked ready for
so damaged both that they a second collision wi.th
wound up sucking on the Briscoe- !;his time between
fumes of NASCAR as it her fist and his face.
roomed past in popularity
But after she brushed past
and prize money. Instead, one uniformed speedway
the 92nd running of what . official; a plainclothes secuofficer
persuaded
was once called "The rity
Greatest · Spectacle
m Patrick. to cliinb over the pit
Racing" turned out to he one wall and back. in the direcof the sloppiest
tion of the garage. She
There was eight i:autions, stormed past a few waiting
10 crdShes and way too little TV camems and into a sponracing. The best maneuver ~r's hut but eventually
of the afternoon was the one cooled off and reappeared
·
that winner Scott Pixon later.
"Probably best," she conpulled to beat then-leader
Vitor Meira out of the pits ceded, "that I dido 't get
with the yellow flag still fly- down there, anyway."
ing and 29 of the 200 laps
It's tempting to blame the
left to go. The New mess on the II rookies in the
lealander never faced a seri- field, but that wouldn't be
M' SPORTS COLUMNIST

entirely accurate. There
In just three years of raewere 13 in the field in 1997, ing, Andretti already has a
the second year of the split well-earned reputation as a
created when speedway daredevil. He hardly needs
owner Tony George chased to add rc;ck.less to his
off most of the top drivers resume.
and teams and started his
"Stupid? I don't know
own Indy Racing League, about stupid,~ · Andretti
and even that rare was more responded. "Last minute.
entertaining than this one. maybe. I had an awesome
True, the rookies gummed . run on him. Mar: I diveup. lraffic all over the oval, bombed him too
.I don't
but six were still running. at know. ru have to loOk. at the
the end and none was tape. If. so.. I completely
invt;~lved in the mishaps !Jlat apologize."
·
.
dec1dedtheoutcome.
There's nochaneetbepeoAfter Briscoe's parking pie in COlltrol of open-wheel
lot-caliber mishap, the sec- racing will foUow suit .The
ond-worst move probably product and personalities are
belonged to Marco Andretti, .nowhere near as compelling
heir to one of the great as they were before tbe split
names in the sport. The Then again, COIIIpllml to the
grandson of Mario, the patti- last dozen years, the sport is
arch and only Andretti ever on a roll. Palrick fmally WoO
to win one of these, pipched a race earlier this ydr to justeammate Tmiy Kanaan 00. lify some of the hype that
Helio
the low side .while passing surrounded · . her,
him on Lap 106andcauseda · Castroneves
won
011
spinout that ended the "Dancing with the Stars"
Brazilian•s day.
and drew a few .hew fans to
Told afterward that Maroo open-wheel racing, TV oomAndreW said over the team bers are inching up and
radio be was· sorry, Kanaan, SOIIIC new sponsors have
one of the pre-race favorites, come into the fold.
shot back, "He'd better be. It
Eadier this lno!lth. in the
was a very stnpid move."
middtc of . the Democratic

. NASCAR, beginning witlt
veterans lilre Tony Stewart
and extending all the way to
the previous two winners of
the Indy 500, Sam Homish
Jr., and Dario Franchitti.
All of them save
Franchitti. who . broke his
foot in · a recent cmsh were on display when
NASCAR's Coca Cola 600
began Sunday night and a
biggerchunkoftheTVaudience will follow them there.
With peace finally in place
and a chance to grow the
business, it's time for the
people in charge of open·
wheel racin_g to focus their
attention back on the track.
Someone asked Dixon
afterward wbat' it meant to
win the frrst "real" Indy 500
in years. ~ · . ,.,. •
"It's il'ice," · he ' said,
refreshingly candid. "That's
about alii can say about it."
Perfect.

played the wa't. they did.
had 11.
behind biock on a dunk:
"When you re down 2-1 ,
"They bumped us off attempt.
you've got to be despemte," spots and were more physi~·1 thou~ht he bodied him
cal
and
aggressive
all
and
dido t give him anyCassell
said.
from Page Bt ·
The Celtics desperately nit;ht." O;ltics coach Doc thing easy," Pistons coacb
need their stars to play bet- Rivers said. "Usually the flip Saunders said.
"Dice has been our best ter than they did Monday.
winner is the team that was
Detroit scored the frrst 10
player in the postseason,
Boston's Big Three shot more aggressive.
points of the game and startand we're all feeding off his awfully as did most of the
"They had ano-layup rule ed the second quarter with
energy," teammate and Celtics, but the NBA's top- and that's why we made it to an 11-2 run, but led just 43clo~e
friend Chauncey seeded team stayed compel- the line so much."
39 halftime
·
Billups said. "You see how iti,·e for much of the~
McDyess led the Pistons'
Cellics·1&gt;ta~
hard he is work:in,g, and ~ou thankstoastaltdispantyin bahinredattack.,going'8-ofby makjnJ ITof 20
can' t help but play hard.
free ~brows.
14 :- ~:b long jumpers.
tbrows in die fiat biif
Playing hard probably
Kevin Garnett, • Paul
"He's
y comfoil:able
·bile ,.._._.
·
won't be a problem for Pi.en;c and Ray Allen com- ~t now," Rivers said. ·w Bos:i!t~:!f::;,
either team or any player as · bined to miss their fmt , "We have to _g et him out of from~ line ( , . .....- "'-'-"-'
. .·
32 '....., .......
the Eastern Conference seven shots and flllished 11- · his comfort Zone."
·
eld
Ridiald Hlmillton had 20 the fiel ~.Y. in. ~ fourdt
fmals becomes a best-of- for-38 from die field.
tltree series.
· ~said it was adisap- points, Ra~d Wallace _ j1~ wbell it.~·WiiJl-·
Game 5 is Wednesday ~ perfocmance fium. ~ l4 and Billups added .· "W didll' .,.a. ......, . ,
10.
.
... e
,t r&lt;J' .._.. . .
night in Boston, then the ibemo.
~ · pride ourselv.es ·on
.Reserve. J~ Maxiell · we hung in tJK:re
~
Pistons will host Game 6 on
Friday night. If necessary, makjng our teammatei bet- filled in well when Wallace to the · foul .l$e, '
the Celtics will be back at ter and allowing diem (0 was in fool trouble by scor- ·s,aid. "Then. we just ~
make us better," Allen .s;Ud. , ing 1~ POints and playing n't blake plays." ,
·· •
home Sunday night.
Oamdt and 'Pim:e both tough ~fense on Garnett, . Billups essentially auld
Boston's Sam Cassell
wasn' t surprised the Pistons ~ 16 points and Alleb not3bly on a come-from- the win with a 3-pointa,'
.•.

with just undel" 3 minutes
left, making some forget the
Qffensive ·struggles he had
much of the game on his
sore right hamstring.
Deiroit improved to 5.0 in
games following losses in
the playoffs.
"N'&lt;i One likes it, the wa~
our ieam personality is,'
said Saunden, refemng to
the Pisto11s' penchant to
play their best when down
or doubted.
1'be Celtics feU to 1-7 on
tbe road and 0-6 when tmiling after lhnle quarters.
Bostoll ~serve James
Posey scored II JX&gt;ints and
Ke11drick Perkins, who
fouled out, had 10.
The · Pistons attacked
Boston at both ends of the
coutt as they got off to a
strong stan.
They 'led 10.:0 thanks to
McDyess' eight points and

swarming defense that led
to Boston missing 'its frrst
four shots and later having
more turnovers ( 3.) than
points (2).
"We put a lot of emphasis
on the start becauSe that
team is so good when they
Jiet on top," Billups said.
'We didn't want to let them
do that again."
· Notes: McDyess' previous high in points this postseason was 17 and his high
in rebounds was 14. ...
While playi.Iig for Phoenix
against San Antonio in the
1998 playoffs, McDyess
had a career-playoff high 26
points in one game, 19
· rebounds in another and
four blocks in yet another
game agai11st the Spurs. ...
Hamilton played in his
I 14th postseason game,
b~aking Bill Laimbeer's
team record.

came in last 1n the AL with
make it 6-3.
Elarton, c811ed up from a .232 av~. and .sb'anded Tqple-A . . · Buffalo
on 13 baseruJI!K!I'S While going
Saturday, was making his 1-for-l3 with rwmer.s in
fromPageBl
first cdief appearance in the scoring position. ·
The White Sox, next-tomajoJ:s si~ .Sqlt; ,6, 2003,
· After A.J. Pie1Zynski was when be was with Colorado. last in hitting with a .243
intentionally
walked, He bad started 154 .tiriJes in matt entering the ,game,
Ramirez scored on a 155 ~gs since 1999.
weren't much bettel" until ·

. Bytd gave up 10 hits and
three ruas over 6 2-3
innings.
. Chic~o had only two hits
in its previous 17 at-bats
with runners in . scoring
position until Pierzyilski
singled to center off reliever
Rafael Perez with two outs
in lhc sevellth to tie it at 3.
White Sox staner Javier
Vazquez gave up three runs
and nine hits over six
innings.
Nota: Last week, Indians

Pistons

•

~sidential primary, Sen. ing caused some of the most

Hillary Clinton even came promising drivers of this
out to practioo and ~ generation to defect to

driver-owner Sarah ·F1sher
for supporting her. Fisher
got into the race on a shoestring, coming up wi~ a
Sponsor ooly last week and
hoPing a _good finish here
wookf provide the impetus
to rim at least one car for the
rest.of the season:
But that feel-good story,
too, got squashed when the
sJ?inc?ut caused by ~·s
pmcb sent Kanaan s Cill"
spinning down the ttack and
dinlctly into Fisher's path.
"fve been known my
whole career to be able to
get out of incidents like
that," Ftsber said, fighting
bad tears. '"That's the crazy
thing about this sport This is
going to set us back a little
bit.
.
.
"I think," .she added. as the
tears . began floWing, "I've
e~ eveey emotion
lhcie is to it."
Good to know that somebody felt that way. During
.a ll those years that fans were
fon;cd to cboose sides,
~y was looking out for
tbe sport itself. The bicker-

n!e
C"

in.ae

2

'!1.

Indians

groundout . by
Carlos
David DeHuoci
and
Quentin and Jermaine Dye lbonny 'Peraka bit solo
got another intentional homers in.the first and fifth
walk.. Brian Anderson then innioV for Oeveland, but
slapped an RBI double just . the Indians' oJiense contin-.
i nside the frrst-base line to ued to struggle. Clcvelaod

their winning rally.
DeUucci's fifth homer in
the bolitom half tied it .ab.d
the . Indians
copied
Chicago's early effort in the
thild when .their first three

liven

batters all reicbed Slfely,
qut only one run 10i1Rid&lt;q0 a
single by Victor MartineZ w
rilake it 2-1.
.Peralta hit his tOdla.....,...
with one out in the fifth and
Chicago's Jim
bit
his I Oth - and fifth of,d~e
year against his former tam
in the sixth to jet
· Chicago witbin ·•J-2. It~
Thome's 51 7th caRieC
homer, · ~ ", behind
Oakland's Frank. 1hofDl!5
for 18th all-time.

n-

Gallia
County

OH

In One Week With Us
ctassified@!;:'~~ribune.com REACH OVER.285,000 PROSPECTS .
PLUS YOUR
NOW ONLINE

French
fromPageBt
upset was produced by
another American, 106thrii.Ilked Wayne Odesnik:,
who beat No. 29 Guillermo
Canas of Argentina 7-6 (6),
7-6 (3), 7-6 (8). The match
;lasted lhe minimum number
'Of sets yet tilok. 3 hours, 46
minutes.
'There's not too much to
say, I think. he played well,"
said Canas, :who's lost his ·
past six matches, all on clay.
"I didn' t play well at all."
Ttie only · other seeded
man to cut on Day 2 was
No. I 7 Marcos Baghdatis,
the 2006 Australian Open
. runner-up, wbo lost to
Simone Bolelli of Italy in
1 str.right sets. B.aghdatis

Dixon
fromPageBl

for ~ve.
"lt IWa't really lricked in
yet." die new Indy champion uid. "'think: it's going to
take a week or two to reall_y
~it

up.

·

iookic of the year.
"lfs prell)' 1.1001 I only
I&gt;Uoo's total for winning jullt uw tbe pllpel'. ·s eei'll
was more than $1 million fOUI'IICJf 011 ihc front ·P 'F
more ·t han his combioed ..t ~ the milk. It's
amings for his five previ- just die littJc dliDp lilre 1lllt
ous · starts at lndy llld 1bat add to it, you blow, IIIII
moved his career total in die you 1ta1t to feel the a s•
500 to $4,881,997, fifth tic:. alit." ·
JIIDOIIg all drivers.
Nobody di'f*letl · 1blt
Tbe 27·year-old New OW. ifloaeoflhe ,b eltdriZealander was "almost ven in lllc 'IRL's fud)'Car
dumbfounded" when he got SaiH. But beeN•¥ be is
to VICtoly Lane.
qWet
stays
"It's such a strange feel- ' CJIIl al
·on lhc ttack.
tag," he said. "And, for me, • is oftat ovedoobd
I don't show emotions too
In the days leading .to die
much. I don't know, it'1 raoe~ me oo,tn ~ were
almo t ~ you're ia • oolildy glamour girl Danica
dreamlaod...
Patrick., teammate Tony
On Monday morning, Kana.an (considered by
Dixon was still struggling many the best current driver

:!J:aetally

never to have won this rare)
and Marro A!ldretti, the 21year-old scion of the family
that has been trying without
sU«~CSs to win a second 500
since ~adler Mario's

1969 viCtol'y.

·

And it was those three
that drew most of the attention after a sloppy race
. mam:d by eight caution
flags.
·
P'atrick. started fifth and
never ran above sixth once
the race began. She complained repeatedly to her
team about a slow~ and
then got taken out on pit
lane with· 30 laps to go
when Ryan Briscoe spun his
tires and slammed into her
car
out of his pit
The enduring image from
the 92nd Indy 500 most
likely will be that of the 5fnot- I , I 00-pourul Patrick.
stomping toward Briscoe's

coming

pit stall, ripping off her
gloves, looking for a fight
She was stopped by track
security.
· "It's probably a better
idea that I dido 't make it all
the way down there · .anyway,." she .w "d . "Because,
well, as yoti guys know, I'm
a little emotional."
Kanaan and Andretti
appeared to have cars CliPII. ble of I"Uillling with Dixon
until Andretti- crowded his
Andretti Green Racing
teammate just past the midway point in the race.
Kanaan scraped the wall
and collected Sarah Fisher,
ending both their races.
Andretti went on unscatbed
but wound up third llfta" a
late-r.we adjustment by his
team upset ' the car\ ban-

could rellllL

{304) 675-1333

!

I

tJfftee llo~V'~
Monday thru Friday
s:oo a.m~ to s:oo p.m.

Jim Litke is a national
columnist for The
Associatea Press. Write to
him at jlitkeap.org
~ports

KIT &amp; CARLYLE ·

•POLICIES•

~

kltnc111rleecomcaat.net

""""'

'*"'"'

1
u.-

_

Borrow Smart. Contact
. the Ohio Division of
FinanciBI
Office ot

lnstl1ution's
Con&amp;umer

...... -..

or

-~lf'tlel

r ·. rroo:o·

~-~~~pa~
ti:ti: '4U~
4~.
L,~------,1.
LPN'S and
7P
1
Found hair
medium
bltllddwhite
to
tlmefr_
3A·3Pl!lnd ctedicatshort
frie'ndly
DOG pn our
tenely
Page St Middleport 7~ ed staff. Applicants muS1 be
team players
992-64 7.2'. Ask for Emir .

r~

d~pendable,_

r

V.ARDS.W:

~:::;::::==~·
~

r

~

YARD Sw;;.,._ ··--·

,.._ h

JnJMURJYnnwuu.

p1cK up an application_M-F

8:30AM--4::l1PM. AJI eligible

applicants wiN then be con'laded
o.. HOie a--mer
~.....
_,

•

LPN, Staff Del'9topment
·-• ·Coordinator07•0·992 ·
.
.
2 family- sat&amp;- Noble 6472. EO£ &amp; A PartiCipant
Summh Rd . Bam.fipm, rain of the Drug-me WOI'kplaoe

~~~~~~~or:slti~·~ne~
. :allina~~-:~full
sw:. $50, Old refrigerator,
CLASSIFIED INDEX

4:.:4'1 for Sale.~···· ....................... :...._.......... 725
Antlqueo ....................................................... S30
Af*:tmei•IS ,.,.Rent ................................... e40

kept slumping her shoulders
and hangmg ber bead after

U.rtet.....:....................... oao
&amp; ~---.
•---~ ......................... 750

Auction and Fa..

•uto rm•
-~.
~

Auto Rep.lr ......... ......:................................. 770
Autos for Sale ...- .....- ................ .................710
· Bof1W A llotorl.tor S. ............................. 750

n..-.........,. .........................................550

Bu lid .................

au-.
and Buildlnga ....... - .................... 340
-~Opponunlty ..:..............................210
fralnlng ....................................... 140
l:altp ora &amp; . . _ ........................... 790
~•
nt
........, t nar
............. __,................. 780
·
Thanb .......................................... 010
ClllldiEiclert)'Care ....................................... l90
1
Elocbka-hlgeooliou ...............................840
m
I•
1=11
for
.._.
• .,.
E
~"• · -

-

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

"-Y1111"11-·····-......................................... 130
FannEqui!Mt*rt.................... - .................. 6 1 0

.
.

FarmaforAent ............................................ A30
Fa""' for Slle ............................................. 330
For L.MN ..................................................... 4 90

For s.le ·········-····.................- ...................... 585
For Sale"" r..-.........................................HO
Fruita &amp; V.;e' h&amp;ee ..................................... SIO

==..

f l O - - .................. - ...................450

- General Hauitng_........................................eso
Glt I
J..· - - -....................................... 040

4n Excellent way to earn
money. The New Avon . ·

Call Marilyn 300-882·2645
4pt.

C~aner . Spring Clean

up assistance. Call 740-44 t·
1341
AVON! AU Areas! To Bu~ 01
Sell. Shirley Spears, 304·
675-tqQ.
Case ManagementiOMAP:
GaII'""'.
t,...,.ts. ~ FT sa1ary
with benefits. Casolood of

vn.

20

Goacll ...............................,....... 510
HouMe for Rent .......- ................................. 410
ln ·lllmoriam ................................................ozo
.....-..c......................................................130
Lawn &amp; Garden Equipment ..............- -.... Lh:e&amp;ac c• ......................- .............................630

loll Md Found ................................ _......... O&amp;O
Lobi &amp; Acreege .......................... ,................. 350
Ills . . . 1180UI..............................................170
llloc lla_,s --..handiM ...................- ..540
. _.Home Aepolr ................................ -...Mobile Homes for Rent ............................... 420
·• - - f o r Sale ........................... - ...320

llof-r to ~ .............................................220

•-cwcles &amp; 4 WhMiera..........................740
llulltlllrwtrumentl .............. - ................. 570
Pwwonllle ............... _.................................... 005
,_tarSale ................................................ 580
I'll tLI 'i &amp; - g.................................... l20
. Pad &amp;llooat Sen.lcel ...\............. - .......~.....230
~. 1V.&amp; CB

Weekends/Evening
BAIBS in Human

Shitt
Service Fiekl. 2-yrs - " '

ence..,~
...........ngsupportaand

services to ""'ivlduals with
MRIOOMustbe....,.cienlin
•
,..,....,,
Microsoft Word exc.. with
'good organizational skills.
SkiD ooncentration on paper
wori&lt;. Wort&lt;ingKnowfodgeof
Federal, State ind Local
regulations: Must be willing
1o . 1rawl between multiple
servioe ·Sites. Sailry oorrespending with e&gt;tjlefience
and education.
Contact Pamela Sheets PO
at ~14 , fill resu~ 1o
4&lt;6-3987
or
em 'I

.

Courtside Bar and Grill now
seel&lt;ing qualified applicants

lot'. b a -. food rumer
and fine cool&lt;. Apply In per·
soh or call 441 _9371 10
sdledule and Interview. 308
200 1&lt;ve. Gallllalls.
Repair

Equipment

. Technician for Farm and/0'1'
lawn Equipment repair &amp;
maintenance. Must have
experienoe. Must be able to
use ,.,.,,.,..••,..,er on a limited
--·~basis. Compet~ive wages,
modern shop, continuous
company sponsore&lt;l train·
ing, health insurance,
matching relirernent oontri·
bution and paid holidays.
Fax 7-.9104 or Email
jottncarmichaeiOcareq.com

Repair ................ --........... 1410

~ Aelll ~ Wanted ..................................... 360
Set Olllnelri!CIIon ...- ................................ 150
- , Pl&amp;d &amp; Feltillar .............................. 650
. , _ . W - ....................................... 120
SpJioe for Renl ........_............................., ..... 4410
S,.o 11ng Goods ..........................- ............... 520
for Sale ..............................................720
Tl\ldcaforSale. - -.................................... 715
110
V.. For Sale ........ - .................................. 730
• W&amp; led 10 ...., __....................................... 0110
W&amp; led tDIIuy· Fenn Supplles .................. l20
.. W•tled To Do ......--..........._ ...................... 110
W&amp; lid to llent.-...................................... 410

suv·.

.Uphol-, .........,. . . . . . . . . . . . . . .. . . . . .

........ - .........................
072
. ' Yani-QJI"'olla
Y.,. Sd· lloft•or•~*I
.........................074
Yani-.Pt. ·...;_........................-07&amp;

FEDERAL
POSTALJOBS
St7.89·S28.27Alr.. now ho·
ing. For awticatlon and free
~- ~ m, call
•

A'merocan
"" . ~of
labor t·
'

913-599-8226, 24hlrs. emp.
oerv. ·
Help wanted at Darst Home
G
Home .0.
7 992 5023

roup

to · u.......

.nu.rWAN'JD)

lli.IO_____
_.JIIhi
IIDJ-WAN'JID

W.,...;_
l'llol"'.nlu

POST OFFICE NCJrN
HIRING
~- Pay $20/hr or
S57K/yr, irdudes
~ Benoflts. OT.

2750 myrnidwest.com

,....., r~

.......... Our

I

lhlstNW I I

•
100 acres. Gallia Co.
Suttable tor hor11esite, great

_ n l ! y .....

hunting area . 41 9-23fF73ot6

dwtlinp...,e:tiMCiin
...
•niMble on en equal

· 3 acre5 tor Sale on Sandhill
HUD Homes! 3 bed, Oflly Ad $25,000. 304-895-3929
$17,0001 for listings 800620-4946eKA019
MOBILE HOME LOT FOR
llcMng. _...._Sell. Nice. A~NT, 1031 Georges Creek

TURNED DOWN ON

SOCIAL SECURITY ISSI?
NofeeUnles&amp;WeWinl
•
1..fJ88-582·3345

. .__

r..t

lnfannecl a..r: ..,

740-406-4953

1

®

·

«VC
lleha b1ll ffMIIIC.re

u.- ...

our

New 3 Bedroom homes from

$214.36 per month, Includes
many upgrades, delivery &amp;
set-up. (740)3!15·2434

I

Large 211 home in scenic Ad , 441-1111

~uie1 subdivision, gfeat for

hiking. biking and fishing. ~;=:;===:,
1257 sq. fl. vinyl siding. lots
ot
storage, 1 1f2cargarage,
llolH
0 doWn payment. 4 bed- concrete drivoway. Extra
fOR RIM"
rooms. Largo yam. ~ parl&lt;ing &amp; room for boat. L,,--iiiiiioiiiiitit-.,1
Wo - I D 1ft 20 ~ doole. Machod ga-. 74(). Ia~ lot with storage shed $226/mol 3 bed 2 bath
wvsw or LPC licenslltM tn
1-88&amp;-4C)3.2582
tor ¥1 Ills+ in our
367-7129.
large rooms. WJI doset in Bank Re . 1 (Solo 'down
wv·6oo Salary starts at Satellite lnstalters-Become
a ,., I toc::.donl
master. Updates inc
. lude. ye·-. go~APR) for I:-:,~
..- ;o 10 ...,
•&lt;» • 'If"'
528• 1 Aae, Rat ~ Spaciou6 Berber carpet, apptlances. 800-620--4946 &amp; . R027
part of OIM' Ohio lnltallation
,_ly Solvico S
team lot' Dish · FIT,
You can
of a
3BR, 2BA, Lg. Kit &amp; LA, DR, /&gt;JC &amp;Heat pump.
Mooe - - - . . . . , - - - .
~I II t, benefits, trailing, oo truck ~ the as one of Den w/ Flrepljice, 2 car ~ C~ltion, Reduced , 2 bedroom hOuse for rent,
case manager, requ1res a and the wort are aupplied.
anached Garage Rodney
ng 9,900 .. Appraised no pets, (740)992_5858
Bachelor deg&lt;ee and a
Sttt&gt;ng wort&lt; elhlc poailive
$85,000 (740)245·9125
tor $108.000 t t/2 yeal1i - - - - -- Social
~
licenee, attlude, wtll~ 10 leam TOP FIVE ..., P11ce1 to
ago. 740·2Q8·9673 Cell. 2BR on Eastern 4ve. Close
Starting aalary 1s $25,600
is requif8d. Ml81 ~.. drNWort in Ohktl
4br, 1905 N. Main. Reduced 740-441-8232 hm . 204 Ann to Wal-Mart. :$500 rent $500
Prioe 304-675-1545
Or. off Raccoon Creek Rd. dep· Reference' Req 446 ·
lng &amp; ba&lt;l&lt;groond .....chad&lt;. No
4053
-~.
a OptlonFetontes. ~IIIOO-atl3-1991 • ~~-~_:
2 I&gt;C, Pool, Coontry Nice big 2·3 br. home in _ _ _ _ _· _ _ __
·a m-F s·3G-5PM
c .., _ . .
country · ell appl'
Bachefor degree in human
'
·
·
• New Tnlini1g Cia&amp;&amp; st.15 New Haven, $139,500 call
' h
d mnceds . 3 Bedroom House in
· · re...
•~
-~ - 1
after 6pm Wil ,......,
~" -~h
uge hyar · poo · Sy•acuse $500/month •
servK:e
'"-~ area. start- The
Athens-Meigs
.-.,
"''' $800
ing salary ~ $23,600
Educational SeM&lt;:e Center
Cfo8ing Cost 300-5~71 . (740)591 !~t •
deposit Hud App. No Pels.
has a position opening as
ColtTocloyorApply
or
(3tJ.&lt;)675·5332
weekends
1106
KVC provQsifl.home t!l1d ~in Meigs County.
..A-1
~
740·591-0265
tooter care oerv1ceo to chi~ -'J&gt;pllcants should have
1 • -YU
local..,._ -ing "NO
~ HowN
· . Job Ext.1101
DOWN PJ\VMENr proS
3br Brick Ranch,. available 6dren and tamilfes. KVC extenlive uperienoe in
nnlmt:l &amp;... un~• to buy ~·r
FOR ALE
1-oa. Quite Net~ .
ollefs training ond · implementing Cuniculum, -~ ··-..- ~ •-·-•·-·~
SenCr-·-toHR"'"" ~-~onandP~•-·•
homeirtoleadotrenting.
No Pots. 614-575·1813 or
.....,.,,_
~o~V~o~•·· """'"""'' •
·~Mil
• ~()()%financing
14x60 2BR, e)ectric. AJC, 614-915-7624
- ~•
200
llfadford . St.. Developm~
ch ssooo ~.;...:.~;_=-....,
.....
£&lt;_._..._. ..
l880 than ~ cr-"·• 1lr.....,ace. sm. por ·
Charleston, WV 25301. . Plano. Tltis is a t2 month
~
·
.,..,_, =
c 11 fl 6 00p 256 1044· c: MOBIU HOMES
Call
. t·BOCHI35·5277. oontnttct pooition, salary will •
fHmlvcnoN
aa:epted
a a er '. m.
·
RIJII'r
Exl.t27 or Fax (304)347· be besed on cerliflcation
' Paymeni could be the 16X80 3 Bedroom 2 Bath roR
·
gna.
emall andv.perienoeaccordingto Glli)lt!MICerNr College same as rom .
Vinyt Siding Shingle Roof
cgrady0kyc orgKVC
i&amp; salary
~
schedule. {Careers Cbs To Home)
Mortgage
locators. $230 per ~ 740- 385~ 2Br at Johnsons Mobile
Equal Opportunity ~..,...&amp;no. ..... • A c1 m i n i s 1 r a t i v 8 · CaN Toclayt 740 ~~6 ~367, (740)367-QOOO
9948
.
Home Park . Call '4 46 -1409
'"""''fJ'U)"Cil certiflcationllicensure with
·
or 446·2003
1-800-21.(.0452
H
~.
to · Ra ·
68
2002
16x80
Oakwood
3
Bed
- - - - -L.ooldng for a gNII s1rong bad&lt;grourtd it I1IBth&amp;- - - - - . ouse ·~
on
cme
job!
matiCI and science pre- Awedl!ed Marmer olo:A::riidlting 8 ~ ~rox. 4 acres, all 2 Bath. 2000 16x70 2BA in Kanauga , total elecAEP.
S42S/rent
forrod This position has """"'" "' ' to ""' ~ P•v•o&amp;$10nally landsc-d. Fieetwood 2 Bed 2 Bath." tric.
lAk&amp;•~oat ., flllhat . . hlne Board. approved benefits.. .n~t8cllot* 12748.
,
, Ranch ~ .house with. 4 t99916x80Fortune3Bed2 $425/dep. 446-4107 "' 441 ·
·
Appl' nts
st
Q ~WANIID
bodloo"'•· lovong room, din- Bath, t997 t4x70 Oakwood 2707
3 Bed 2 Bath. Caytirne 388·
0000 Evening 388-80 17 or MOb~le home and dou·
t Take
Cuslomer
To Do
1
blewide for rent. 740·446·
r
erest,
and 1 fifeplace. 4ddition of a 245-92l3
Service calts on behall of resume, refrerenoe. and • 25 years of exp. caring tor large Florida room com· ==::......_ _ _ _ 4060 or 367-ntl2
2008 3 bedroom 2 bath ...,.
no.-~
copy
. of
OUfl'e!lt -.ty ladies in my homo, pletely cedar open• onto
tklnal home S279 per month Nice 14x60 2br. 2b. in
- . o ( s ) to Jom
rooms patio &amp; poe&gt; area. Heated in
Syracuse: 14w70 2br. $400+
• Night shitt and Day llhltt Coolanzo, Supenntendent, available. Nutritious meal ground poe&gt; endos&amp;d by pri· 740-385-7671 .,
::-=-=.-.:.c..:.c.._ _ _ dep &amp; utilities, (740 )992po&amp;itions awilable
Athe~&amp;-Meig&amp; Educational planning, excellent refer· vacy fencing and landBrand new 3bed 2bath on
7680. 1·74D-416-331 t
Ser~ . CenJer, 320 112 enc:es phonei'IJml:lers~ scaped. finished 2 car + • half acre In Pt. Pleasant.
t New on-site Doctor lot'
East Main St""", l'&lt;ltno!tYi. · For mo&lt;e into. 74(). ga- attached to house OWNER FINANCE AVAIL- Nice and clean 3 bedroom.
~and their
OH -45769.
Application oU6-4300
and finished , heated 3 car
ABLE. 740-446-3570
total
electric.
central
families
~clUne: May 28. 2008.
garage
unattached .
~~see Oh' , Ia
air,water pa1d, country set!2.00 NOON . The .WE~ Uajor Clean, thorough Dr Excellent condition ready to ..___.
10 s rgest I'
I(
CJ.Ion;. ..... ,_, IS an Equal. Opportunity biasic Clean . Home&amp; or tnc::Ne in. $255,000.00, C.ll: display. Midwest 740-828- ~gst
SChoo
,1 D
2750
a em
1stnct
_,-.,
Employer-.
Ol!ioe's Cleaned '!bur 'Nrtf (740)1149-2217
__......_.
740·992-0653 or 416-5393.
P..uooooi/Jodoyt
Cal
..., ....corn
7~
The
SyrtiCU88
Ractne
Reglonol Diltrict i6 _ _....;._ _ _ __
1~YU
,_,..._
lot'
a ..,~and Son ~~~
Ext. 2347
..........,.'Iii
""""'-..;'""""""''
mointenanootl!tbofor with 740-&lt;tHetl6 or 7~OI'VilllucCI
mechanical, etectric:al, .-.cl 2840. No, job 1D big or lo
L_!,.,.~.&gt;~l~t~
,s nW. b;peii&amp;IKAKI in Plint1 ~-=:,_j good mdllkib.
ProWouo 1110 11M-' ing . electriatl. plumbing.
Now Honng Paint&lt;os. Send ...,. lo Plf•tod. Solory ltuitding -liooos. 11-.g
Resume CLA Box 9 c/o Pt. negotiable. Pie.• aend clectr$ and pMios Wld I1IW
Pieosant Regiater 200 Main roaumo with salary ...,..... COI'IIruclion. 30 yom St. l't. Pteasont.
25550 menlO to aHn: Gary rlence.
·
·
Freeman. ~lntondont
DhK&gt;
' "alley ~- ~--- PO Boot 201 ~~ ~
'
~·~ ~"~~. ~
Inc. hiring LPN lot' an ollloe •snJ.(I20t . - ~ling/aide &amp;UI&gt;Of'lllor line illl/IXWII. NO PHONE
~!!_ .
posnooo. Appir at 1480 CAllS PLEASE..
~
Jackson Pike . Galipolia. or
phooe
· 4-lt-1 393.
~wagesaltdboneNOTICb
efois including inoulanoe.
OltO VAI.I.Ft: P\JIItJSHlNG CO. · n """''"'"'~~~~~~
Tree lrirnmor, c1eon dri¥ing
)OU do - - .
,_,., W
IIIIP- knCJw1.
1'011 . know,
edge of tocat trees, preto IOt1d mor-d

.....,., Coclllly Olllco

.

·

Tlt!O! ,
f• l,JIIll)llcli*~
have a M - . t:t.vee on
Counteling Paychology
Placod by adSourctt, net
Soclaf Work You must :::. otforod wl USPS who hinlo.

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hand.

important and richest open- into the frrst tum in front.
wheel race.
"I think that gave us
He took. the iead for good enough buffer than· Vitor
in .t he pits 29 laps from the couldn't get by," Dixon
end, ~:f out just ahead said. "That was the key
of .e ven
runner-up Vitor moment for me 'and I think
Meira. That appeared to be that won the race."
the key, but Dixon said
Monday, as he rode the
Monday be thought it could media bus at speeds
easily have been the approaching 40 mpb -moment he lost it.
about 180 mph slower thllll
"When you're out front, his. fastest laps Sunday you're a sitting duck." Dixon was e~~nl! being
Dixon said. "I really wouid the Indy 500
pton. But
have prefermd to •be second the 2003 lndyCar champion
· coming out (of the pits). But was also looking toward
the team did a great job and next Sunday's race in
I just llld to deal with being Milwaukee.
up front"
"That championship in
' He called the ensuing 2003 was a long time ago,"
restart "the pivotal moment Dixon said. "We have
forme."
another cllampionship to
Dixon made the start win this year. We' II enjoy
slow« than usual, touohed this for a few days, then get
dling.
his brake for just a moment back. to work. I've got much
In the end, it was Dixon to slow Mcira and the other more to do Jr:!.. man, much
who won the world's most em behind him and shot more to do.

---------------------------i ro~- Iri ~h

Ohio 'llltey

PulilahlnV I I - 11181

GM Mark Shapiro said he
would try "incremental
moves" to improve the
team. Monday. he signed
OF Todd Linden and INF
Jorge Velandia to minorleague
contracts
and
assigned them to Triple-A
Buffalo .... Dellucci was 5for-43 (.116) before his
homer.... White Sox IB
Paul Konerko went G-for-6
in his first game after miss·
ing three with a sore right

"It's hard. I mean, I'm
still in awe of him," the IDISCUCS.
AmCrican said. "Sometimes
"Venus can play a lot bethe · hits shots, ~ 're just ter than she did today," her'
on TV a father said. "After she setlike, 'fve seen
bunch of timc:s."'
tled down, she pulled it
Same goes fur Williams, out.'•
wbo used to be ranked No. 1
He shed no light on whatan4 has bad stretches of ever health issues might be
brilliance. particularly at troubling
her.
Venus
W'unbledon, but never bas Williams was off the tour
been all that suooess~ul at for about a month this year
the French Open. This is the ·
only Grand Slam touma· after having medical tests.
ment at which she's been She hasn't said what tbe
put' die quadetfinals only tests were for - and even
GllllC io 2002, when .she her father said be docsn 't
lost to sister Serena in the ·.k.now.
"Venus never talked to me
final..
.Part of it is that clay dulls about it, and I never asked
her stinging serve. Pan of it her. The only thing I asked
is that moving around on is, 'Are you sure it's time to
clay is tough. Part of it is the come back?' And she said,
sort of inconsistency on dis- ' ¥ es,"' he said. "Does it
play in the middle of have an affect on her or not?
Monday's match, when she This I don' t know."

Websites:
www.mydailytribune.com
www.mydailysentinel.com
www.mydailyregister.com

l\egister

Announcement ................................ - ...........030

always draws a big coowd at thought I played . more relies on his ~ sa:ye; Rolaod Garros because he · aggressive and e~~;eouted my that once pmdua:d iO ooatrains at a •Paris tennis acad- soots~." ·said Odesnik, ;secutive aces in a •lidL
who was bom. in South 'But Federer had lildc ·~rou,.
emy.
Another product of that Africa and moved · to lhc . ble getting !lelNCs ~· Jim-academy is Anastasia · United States as a toddler. · iting Quem:y to u ai:a
Pavlyuchenk.ova, the 16-.
He's !been tryirig' to lllld compiling ·ll .bmit
year-old Russian who won a improve his clayo()OI,irt pPint's, fiwe of which be
Grand Slam match for the game lately !lo'ith . Feli1; oonvert.ed.
first time by beating Maria Mantilla, a Spaniard once
''He just seems like be
Emilia Salemi oLArgentina .ranked as a~h as lOth. gets ·the raclret on every6-l, 6-1.
Odesnik ac · y calls clay thing," Querrey !¥lid.
"I ju~t play. I don't think. his favorite surface, someThere are those, though,
about the . results," said thing that's rare to hear who
wonder
!lo'hetiier
Pavlyuchenk.ova,
who from an American.
Federer is slipping' a bit
recently fmished hig)l
Querrey also doesn't Consider: The 12-t.ime
school and is the YOQilgest mind playing 00 the red major champion already ...
player in the tournament.
stnff, although he .also said lost seven matches this year.
Odesnik. is only 22, yet be he basically doesn '.t pay too more than for the entire seawas exhausted after his much attention to what is sons of 2004, 2005 and
match and was .clicded by a underfOot.
2006. He also has only one
doctor. He credited n:ccnt
••ne is a young player tide so far.
work with a sporu psychol- who is Cllpable of playing a'
"He's still got all the shots
ogist for helping him play good matoh on clay," of a No. I player," Querrey
well in all of lhose tiebreak.- Federer said, "so I'm glad said.
·ers.
it's ower."
Querrey wanted to forget
"On the big points, I
Querrey is 6-foot-6 and wbom he was facing so he

The Daily Sentinel • Page 83

·

•

Local Horne Health Agency
now hiring PCA~. STNA'I,

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aw::"mustWoo";::_

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HHAs for Mtiga County

~druglaai.EOE
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ar811. Call 740-Ul · t3n or oomp.anylwagH).O.E .

ollo&lt;ing.
r

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�.Tullday, May 27, 2008

.

www.mydallysentlnel.com

OOP

The Daily Sentinel • P8_9e 85

NEA Crossword Puzzle -

BRIDGE

ACROSS

Phillip
Alder

Ht 'l ~ Sl''

IIIEIT
111191

Srrra~E
29670 Bashan Road
Racine, Ohio
45771

Ntll'lll

--

.. .-..
•

MONTY

West

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• Comple(e
Remodeling

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•

A 10 I 7

Ml-192-1&amp;l1
Stop &amp; Compare

17 Suboide
18 l.MIIe'o

6 5 !

• • 7 43
• K 10 8!

•
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B~GAUS~

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Ttt~lll ~O~NS

YOUNG 'S

CARPE NTER
SERVICE

PON'T wOttt:. ;
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Room ft ftlcnli.
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VC YOUNG Il l
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SENIOR DAY
PVH Wellness
Center
Wednesday,
May
28,2008
•
Bam- Noon
Special events, games.&amp;
prizes
Refreshments
be seM!d

wil

Public is invited!

~

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sur- ;==llel=sp~~w~·•=•llld~=~=l=te~lp~WIII=n~tlld=::;

l8d

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HelpWMflld

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I Pilldiul Nurse

-'/« "•*CII • · lt'lt
Pletiant Valley ~ is cunently
aa:epling applicalions for a full time
Ucensed Practical Nurse and/or Medical
Asst. for a new ·physician office. LPN's.
must have current West Virginia litense.
Send resumes to:
n rrtvalleyn ,.,,,

c/o ..==ftnn

For more .ir\formation

.
(304) 675-7222

1Deere~

.".'-....,_,__.
prisadi 'Ched&lt; 100'11
04JI our
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be used
inventory
at
AKC Yu1kie pups, males WWW . CAREG . COM
only, lot shoiS &amp; wormad Carmichael Equipment. 740$650 304-675-~
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lf4'YIIIerMI

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Rac;ine, Ohio 740-247·2019

Pleasant Valley Hospital is curtently
accepling resumeS for a full-time
l'hanniKl)l
Tedmidan.
Successful
completion af WY Board of Pharmacy
ap!Oifed ll!chnician training program or
equivalent State-l!flistration or Nalion~l­
oertificillion cetilicale as a Phannacy
Tedtnician pn!fem!d. M ~ 2080 hours
as a pharmacy technician trainee. Two
years phannacy tedtnician experience
prefet red. Hospital experience preferred.
Send resi.tmes to:

Cell: 740-416-5047

Owntll'll:

THE BORN LOSER
,.cAA AM'&lt;OOE. G.I\/E. ME f.N ~

,.../1\'( ~ ~'&lt;s, w~ ~'S..,

~~.t.Ot-IICW INFU.\101&gt;1

IN.FL.~TICN ITT~~

w~r

fi'DI&gt;IE.'j F~ Hlfr\

email:

Jon Van Meter &amp;
Paul Rowe

·TO &amp;. BIZDKE.!

(JOt) 6JS.4J40
Orfu:
.
lOU'JS.fi75, or lpply 11111 lille .t

AA/EOE

.

28 Years Experience

EtHERPRISES
• Homes • sePtic
System • Roofing
• Backhoe • Site ·

Preparation • Dozer

REACH"3 COUNTIES

In the year ~~head, a few special people you meet akx1g the road of life wll
turn out to be o1 real
to you When
it comes to ~ callHtf endeavors.
Once you eatallliah a
relationship, nurture It to keep It vital.
GEMINI (May 21~June 20) CotKtmotts may not be optimum when
it comes to your bu~ dealings,
but you'H ha've to admit they wiU turn
ovt to be quite good In the long run .
Tlle reason? 'W:Iu do you- best.
CANCER (June 21-.July 22) -Wilen
a matter of importanoe hi at . stake,
you11 do far better pleading your own
caae than others woUld. Don't even
oonaidef asking a su«ogate tO 8p8ak
for you.

he..,

CR EE K

• Garages • Utilities

• PoJe Barns

Pomeroy, Ohio
740-992-7953 .
740-416-1436
740-5914641

Maalay'a
Racycllag

····2'11
-.z..........

I'M ~INKIIIIG OF

WILL '(01)

,JJST PUT DOWN

'THI5 WA'f '' AI'ID

RUNitiiN6 AWA'&lt; F«DM
~E SO 11Lli'R08A8l.'t'

HELP ME

OKAWA

•THAT WAV'

NEEO A Mf4P..

M~?

- · 1 filii . . . . . ....
•• 7 . . . . .uti.

you may have 10 blink 11f'81 and oompromiae wl1h the other guy. It'll prove
you .w ant what's fair tor both.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Soopt. 22) - By ove&lt;·
l&amp;oking the &amp;hortoominga in pepph!'

WHY 00 SOME PEOPLE
HAVE TO .BE IN CONTl!OI.

,...,r-1

IS THIS ABOUT Yrull.AST
DENTIST APPOINTNCNT?
NO, MY T£ETH AilE.
SENSITIVE, 00 I HAVE
A SOFTEII TOI..ICH.

WHY NOT LET THEM TAKE

CORNER STONE
CONSTRUCTION

only ainoi!trity.
SCORPIO (Oct. 2-4-Nov. 22) - The
only thing that wouk1, turn others off ts
exaggerating hOW mUCh You have to
offer. By turning the attention on 1hem.
. you'll make yoursetf popular.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23-0ec. 21) ~ are lots of opportuntttu for
financial gain if you're wiling to pa~
the OD8t to produce the chanoe. It's
necessary to prime the pump to get
the now you're aeeldng.
CAPRtcORN {Dec. 22·.Mn. 19) Evaluate situations as they are and
no1 simply as you'd 16ke tnem 10 be; if
you dO, what you're hopihg to ~
ed -

COW and BOY
AT A.LL TIMES? HELL01
TIUE AilE. OTHEilS Mlll1£
~IFIED THAN YIXJ,
CH~GE

ONCE
INA, WHIL£?

~~-iii~

_

~...._.;;;:z....AO"--_.

~~==:.:.....::......:~~~~~~-='li==:J~

.:;=

wiH be 1ea.!Hbte and attainable.
·Fantasy obHtenlte&amp; all your abilities.
AOUAR!Us (Jan. 20--Feb. 19. - The

weiHntentioned
ideas likely
and toauggestions
of friends aren't
meas·
ure up to your innate insights, ao
when in doubt, follow your own hunctl·
ee, eepec:ialy when It comes to mate-

tial-.

PISCES (Feb. 20-M8rch 20) -

Etltler:

eno-ge your time In buainesa aftalra
or pl•aaurable pur11u1t•, but don't
aftemPt to .m both' aimultaMOI.MJy.
This is one·of thaN pertoda when the
two .won't mix togathar.
ARIES (Moroll 2H,Il&lt;ll 10) - Olhers
will talk about the tacb you u.. br
aome time to come, w1Wthet tiler are
good or bad. f!or1w.ately, It'll be your
moet cleVer onea that'll get the gi'Nt·
nt attention.
TAURUS (April 2MA.y 20) - Onoo
you miM it a point not to let any one
petWn dcllll:4o1-'ne the type ol activitiet
In .miCh your~ partaka&amp;. the time
you ~ h :;:att ~e~ w11 prow to be
more~ than uaual.

For Remodelilll and N.,. House Building
CaD: MARCUM CONSTRUCTION .

• Room Additions • Garages • Vmyl
and Wood Siding • Roofing • P.ole
'Barns • Patio's Porobes and Decks

.••-.,
..

GRIZZWELLS

47239 Riebel Road, Long Bottom, OH

31U7S.l333 .

m.a,tl)tep.a~~

punch
1
Z7 Hop
·2
30 Troglc ldng 3
3Z CowbciJo'
4

33¥::~·.

PlllpOM
23 Klrghlz
Dlda10K
. IIIOUIII8ino 51
Oog'o reply 24 Pmtlouoly
Veld
28 Aulogn41hs 52

5=-

Coo••
city

........,
Vlbll larce

29 Pilcheo
55 121.
31 Sunburned
lhunttM
. 34 T 56 Allor lUll

CELEBRITY CIPHER
bV Luis can.,.

Gaelrt1~ ~ ncrea:edfrom QIICIIJfu11 tJt~• ~
Ea:h 1!11« mthe dprw IUn09 b ardher
,

IU .-.:1 priM.

Today I cluo: 0 llljUa/5 C

"FE

IKIOLIC, F JFKK JFG."

• WTLWTXKZIG
"FE

NYX JTGL

T EDFIGC

JTZYFGSLYG , SILT

FG

CYS." • YTODN

Z . LDXBTG
PREVIOUS SOLUTION ~ 'They are-: but the~~~in aach P-s
breast, I And their names are engraven oo hono(s · aest." • Lot 91olknr

1. liltl&lt; \"\' ~ll)
.l'E OlC\. IF .'f4E

740-985-4141
Cell: 740-416-1834
25+ Jt:tii'S ~ttu Fru Es~s

SOUP.TO.NUTZ

· 'I&amp;~E'i&gt; UP~
!WMG\1 \..t.~S
- 1\\~~

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in thi_
s space for
$64 per month
•

·--

---

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j

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u R 0 Q u MI2

I I'll

WE J L E

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I

LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) - In order to
get the kind of deal you're hoping for,

}lOUt' relationships Will be ened _greatfy. As a bonus, your gen·
erosity blinds them to .Afr1 frallliea you
mighthaw.
'
UBRA (Sept 23-0ct. 231 - Openlte
along traQ!tional lines. using aooepled
prooeduras, and you can tum a problematiC endeavor into a successful
operation. Modifications aren't need-

PSI CONSTRUCTION

Jilt Jliaiut lfllm

DOWN

45 Oveoty

21 Cooolldicul
-.g
...._
4611Pcn
22Jug-o
I'
II
wide _.t 49
I

dPJ,IIIIy 21,.2008

new

HO I1~ E

J:..o11

20 Fall mo.

av a.... Bede o.o.

_.,.,••.,1111
~

IGIIg

14 Flo!lmond 42 Auc:tionlill
44WJCI
16 5Quealo an
• 11 a

._.,., 'u:
Wecli

David Lewis
740-992.fi971

lion

hll
6 UK.-t
37 Peli&amp;fiJ&amp;il 7 Blood cell
lclr*e
57 -" I 10ft
poll
8 Sob noilily 35Re-. . 11181
38 Rom8n..., 9 PCIIOie
36 Lib
58 Tilly tuber
god
(hyph.)
"-lilting
38a.-..
101.aio
41 Envlr.
ballpak
Rlltgli'o pol
AIDIIIIA

In "Through lt1e Looking-Glass,' Lewi&amp;
canol wrote, 'Now, hera, you '.... h
ta1r.es allltle ruming you can do, to keep
in the same place. H you want 1o got
el&amp;e, you must run at least
twice as fast as thatl'
At the bridge table, running a suh usua'
tv resUis in your goning Somewhere .home in your contract - twice as ~­
Look at the North hand. lbur partner
opens ooe d0¥nond, West 01'8rcall&amp; ooe
heart. you respond ooe spade, and partner rebids one no-1rump. What would
you do now?
Your choices are threa spades, three ootrurnp and four spades. But your thraa
low hearts should sound a warning bell.
· There is a big rislt that I you play in
&amp;padoo, the q&gt;pOnBnts might bagin with
a heart 10 the aoe, heart ruff, lead bed&lt;
to West, second heart ruft.
That doa6n't happen here, but note that
four spades has four lOp losers: one
heart, one diamond and two clubs.
With a long. ruming suh, you do befter
to raise to lhrae ~- First, it's one
trid&lt; - r tor 1t1e game bonus1 and sec·
ond, the lead comas arouna to, not
through, lha oo-trumper.
Against threa oo-trurnp, West would lead
the heart SMn. How should-South p~
the play?
There are """"' top tricics: si• spades
and one heart !given the lead). Two more
are aasily available In diamqnds, and
South should astablist11lose immediately. So, he wins with his heart'king, then
leads tha diamond king. (The curious
should try fUMing dummy's spada suh
wilhoo1 touching diamonds and ·see
what happens to that South hand.)

"

C/o,.=nluru as
2120 Wey Drive
~PI "'"" WVH550

Pas&amp;

??

AstroGraph

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

GS ·

Mit Pler""t WV 15550

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1520 valley ....

please call,

%NEED
A LOTTA
L.EG

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•

BARNEY

Hl'ftold Cattne&amp;ry AU Fll'llillrt

{

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East

If they bid,
think differently

wttY 1&gt;0
GOwS WeAfl lrf£.LS1

oodde••

62 JaM he-

26~

Openlilg lead: • 7

VNGL~ EllNI~,

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Pass

1 NT

7~53-9651

.Rooting • """Pointing

Wesi1.
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bini

61 JMious

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Guttering
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Roofi"l, Siding, GuUers
lnsvred &amp; Bonded

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60 Down under

Z4 T...- S., 64 T - bit

Dealer: Soulll
Vulnerable: Both

H&amp;H

.........

18--

..........

54 Ual\ll Ill

21 r.menting 63 "GGi" al

18 I
K QJ
K Q J 10
Q9 65

•

c.

15 Cop-

I

+A 6Z
+A 74

47 . . _ (lnl.)
Old41 PUih up
8 Tllloct8, e.g. 50 Rum dririk
11 c=aa
52 ~~~
12
In
53 T . . - .....

J 3

Blylh

5 LGnclon'o

13 Running

• 85

44 11111er or

....

"-"

• 611

•New Homes
• Garages .

740-849-2217

ti--!7-GI

.AKQJ87

1 Euniolln

40 Comntatd
43 Badgel

e Pa~~~s~~~~mms r I' I' I. I' r I
IN

6 ~~~~~N~~ lETTERS I

I I I I I .I

SCU-JMETS AHSWEIS $•26 •DI

Sam- 8uyl:r - Veldt - YCldy • !!VERY DAY

w:Vou'reaotoblp.h,.rill,"lbo..-latoldllis...._ Yw : ·
a. bclwewr, obl"s 2 dto do lhe besl you e111 EVEilYDAY.•

ARLO &amp; JANJS

I

\

�.Tullday, May 27, 2008

.

www.mydallysentlnel.com

OOP

The Daily Sentinel • P8_9e 85

NEA Crossword Puzzle -

BRIDGE

ACROSS

Phillip
Alder

Ht 'l ~ Sl''

IIIEIT
111191

Srrra~E
29670 Bashan Road
Racine, Ohio
45771

Ntll'lll

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West

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Remodeling

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Pleasant Valley Hospital is curtently
accepling resumeS for a full-time
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THE BORN LOSER
,.cAA AM'&lt;OOE. G.I\/E. ME f.N ~

,.../1\'( ~ ~'&lt;s, w~ ~'S..,

~~.t.Ot-IICW INFU.\101&gt;1

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email:

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28 Years Experience

EtHERPRISES
• Homes • sePtic
System • Roofing
• Backhoe • Site ·

Preparation • Dozer

REACH"3 COUNTIES

In the year ~~head, a few special people you meet akx1g the road of life wll
turn out to be o1 real
to you When
it comes to ~ callHtf endeavors.
Once you eatallliah a
relationship, nurture It to keep It vital.
GEMINI (May 21~June 20) CotKtmotts may not be optimum when
it comes to your bu~ dealings,
but you'H ha've to admit they wiU turn
ovt to be quite good In the long run .
Tlle reason? 'W:Iu do you- best.
CANCER (June 21-.July 22) -Wilen
a matter of importanoe hi at . stake,
you11 do far better pleading your own
caae than others woUld. Don't even
oonaidef asking a su«ogate tO 8p8ak
for you.

he..,

CR EE K

• Garages • Utilities

• PoJe Barns

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HELP ME

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•• 7 . . . . .uti.

you may have 10 blink 11f'81 and oompromiae wl1h the other guy. It'll prove
you .w ant what's fair tor both.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Soopt. 22) - By ove&lt;·
l&amp;oking the &amp;hortoominga in pepph!'

WHY 00 SOME PEOPLE
HAVE TO .BE IN CONTl!OI.

,...,r-1

IS THIS ABOUT Yrull.AST
DENTIST APPOINTNCNT?
NO, MY T£ETH AilE.
SENSITIVE, 00 I HAVE
A SOFTEII TOI..ICH.

WHY NOT LET THEM TAKE

CORNER STONE
CONSTRUCTION

only ainoi!trity.
SCORPIO (Oct. 2-4-Nov. 22) - The
only thing that wouk1, turn others off ts
exaggerating hOW mUCh You have to
offer. By turning the attention on 1hem.
. you'll make yoursetf popular.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23-0ec. 21) ~ are lots of opportuntttu for
financial gain if you're wiling to pa~
the OD8t to produce the chanoe. It's
necessary to prime the pump to get
the now you're aeeldng.
CAPRtcORN {Dec. 22·.Mn. 19) Evaluate situations as they are and
no1 simply as you'd 16ke tnem 10 be; if
you dO, what you're hopihg to ~
ed -

COW and BOY
AT A.LL TIMES? HELL01
TIUE AilE. OTHEilS Mlll1£
~IFIED THAN YIXJ,
CH~GE

ONCE
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wiH be 1ea.!Hbte and attainable.
·Fantasy obHtenlte&amp; all your abilities.
AOUAR!Us (Jan. 20--Feb. 19. - The

weiHntentioned
ideas likely
and toauggestions
of friends aren't
meas·
ure up to your innate insights, ao
when in doubt, follow your own hunctl·
ee, eepec:ialy when It comes to mate-

tial-.

PISCES (Feb. 20-M8rch 20) -

Etltler:

eno-ge your time In buainesa aftalra
or pl•aaurable pur11u1t•, but don't
aftemPt to .m both' aimultaMOI.MJy.
This is one·of thaN pertoda when the
two .won't mix togathar.
ARIES (Moroll 2H,Il&lt;ll 10) - Olhers
will talk about the tacb you u.. br
aome time to come, w1Wthet tiler are
good or bad. f!or1w.ately, It'll be your
moet cleVer onea that'll get the gi'Nt·
nt attention.
TAURUS (April 2MA.y 20) - Onoo
you miM it a point not to let any one
petWn dcllll:4o1-'ne the type ol activitiet
In .miCh your~ partaka&amp;. the time
you ~ h :;:att ~e~ w11 prow to be
more~ than uaual.

For Remodelilll and N.,. House Building
CaD: MARCUM CONSTRUCTION .

• Room Additions • Garages • Vmyl
and Wood Siding • Roofing • P.ole
'Barns • Patio's Porobes and Decks

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31U7S.l333 .

m.a,tl)tep.a~~

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4

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PlllpOM
23 Klrghlz
Dlda10K
. IIIOUIII8ino 51
Oog'o reply 24 Pmtlouoly
Veld
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LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) - In order to
get the kind of deal you're hoping for,

}lOUt' relationships Will be ened _greatfy. As a bonus, your gen·
erosity blinds them to .Afr1 frallliea you
mighthaw.
'
UBRA (Sept 23-0ct. 231 - Openlte
along traQ!tional lines. using aooepled
prooeduras, and you can tum a problematiC endeavor into a successful
operation. Modifications aren't need-

PSI CONSTRUCTION

Jilt Jliaiut lfllm

DOWN

45 Oveoty

21 Cooolldicul
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4611Pcn
22Jug-o
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wide _.t 49
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new

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Wecli

David Lewis
740-992.fi971

lion

hll
6 UK.-t
37 Peli&amp;fiJ&amp;il 7 Blood cell
lclr*e
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poll
8 Sob noilily 35Re-. . 11181
38 Rom8n..., 9 PCIIOie
36 Lib
58 Tilly tuber
god
(hyph.)
"-lilting
38a.-..
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41 Envlr.
ballpak
Rlltgli'o pol
AIDIIIIA

In "Through lt1e Looking-Glass,' Lewi&amp;
canol wrote, 'Now, hera, you '.... h
ta1r.es allltle ruming you can do, to keep
in the same place. H you want 1o got
el&amp;e, you must run at least
twice as fast as thatl'
At the bridge table, running a suh usua'
tv resUis in your goning Somewhere .home in your contract - twice as ~­
Look at the North hand. lbur partner
opens ooe d0¥nond, West 01'8rcall&amp; ooe
heart. you respond ooe spade, and partner rebids one no-1rump. What would
you do now?
Your choices are threa spades, three ootrurnp and four spades. But your thraa
low hearts should sound a warning bell.
· There is a big rislt that I you play in
&amp;padoo, the q&gt;pOnBnts might bagin with
a heart 10 the aoe, heart ruff, lead bed&lt;
to West, second heart ruft.
That doa6n't happen here, but note that
four spades has four lOp losers: one
heart, one diamond and two clubs.
With a long. ruming suh, you do befter
to raise to lhrae ~- First, it's one
trid&lt; - r tor 1t1e game bonus1 and sec·
ond, the lead comas arouna to, not
through, lha oo-trumper.
Against threa oo-trurnp, West would lead
the heart SMn. How should-South p~
the play?
There are """"' top tricics: si• spades
and one heart !given the lead). Two more
are aasily available In diamqnds, and
South should astablist11lose immediately. So, he wins with his heart'king, then
leads tha diamond king. (The curious
should try fUMing dummy's spada suh
wilhoo1 touching diamonds and ·see
what happens to that South hand.)

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ARLO &amp; JANJS

I

\

�Pap B6 • The Daily Sentinel

Tuesday, May 27, 2008

www.m.ydailyllentinel.com

Osgood blanks Pens again; Red WingS halfway to Cup

Mei2S FFA members
J"eC(
-v-. · at banquet, Aa

8y 1M PaaaL

"All it means to me is that none of the nerves Detroit
ASSOCIAliD PRESS
I'm just confident. and I'm coach Mike Babcock · said
going to tty to do it for as his team had iii the opener,
DETROIT - If the Red long as I can," OSgood said. tbe Red Wings got goal•
Wings keep this up, the next wit's as simple as it gets."
from Stuart and Holmstrom
time they perform · back in Of the 31 teams to win the 4:23 apart.
'
l i = w n could.be along first two games of the finals
Pittsburgh was outshot 8-0
8'
roUie.
at home. 30 have captured and allowed two goals
· · g timely offense the Cup. · Game 3 is before getting a puck on
and perfectionist defense, Wednesday in Pittsburgh, Osgood.
Valtteri Filppula scored
Detroit is not only beating and the Penguins wiU have
the Pittsbur~ Penguins, to win one of the next two to 8:48 into the third with the
they are shuttmg them ouL
force a trip back to Motown. teams skating &lt;k&gt;n-4 .
. With first-period goals
The Penguins are 8.{1 at
Pittsb~ managed only
from lirad Stuart and Tomas MeDon Arena in the postsea- six· shots m the first period,
liolmstrom · and another son and have a 16-game despite four revamped lines,
lockdown effort, the Red winning streak inside the and none came at even
. Wmgs topped the Penguins Igloo, dating to Feb. 24. strength. The Penguins did3.{1 to take a 2.{1 lead in the Detroit needs two wins to n't get much of a lift !With
Stanley Cup finals on lock up its lith Stanley Cup hard-hitting, 42-year-old
title and fourth in II sea- Gary Roberts back in the
Monday nighl
If they can match this sons.
.
.
lineup after a four-game
twice in Pittsburgh. the Red
"We just have to execute," absence, and Dctrott again
Wmgs will return to Detroit Penguins captain Sidney shut · down young scorers
with the Cup in tow.
Crosby said. "Did they real- Crosby and Evgeni Malkin.
Osgood hasn't allowed a
· Puck-possessing Detroit ly get that many scoring
held onto it all night and reg- chances on us? I don't think goal in 137 minutes and 33
litem~ 34 shots. After a 19- they did. They got a few aDd seconds, datin~ to Game 6
save effort in a W series- put them in. We hit a post. against Dallas m the Western
opening win Saturday, Chris and pucks go through us by Conference fmals. For the
osgood stopped 22 in a the net that we don 'I put in. second straight game he
. ~ki_ng-j:hair . game and That's the difference:"
beard adoring chants of':'Qz~
earned his third blanki of
PittsbUrgh coach MiChiil zie, Oz-zie" that easily
~ playoffs ·- 13th o?his Therrien complained about drowned out the large pockcame£,
obstruction by the Red ets of cheering Penguins
· "I play the game as it Wings and diving by fans who made the four-hour
oomes, ~ Osgood said. "I Osgood. The Penguins were drive from Pittsburgh.
love playing behind these uncharacteristically whistled . Penguins goalie .Marcguys. I don't need 40 shOts for two goalie interference Andre Flewy stayed on his
to play the game or to feel penalties, one quickly negat- feet this time upon hopping
good. I'm confident regard- ed a Pittsburgh power play. onto the ice before the open· less. I'm not really into slats
"He's a good actor," ing faceoff, but c.oWdn't get
too much, just into win- Therrien said. "I know our enough of his .lStick on
ning."
players are frustrated right Stuart's drive from inside
1be
often-overlooked now. It's tough to play the. the blue line at 6:55 to keep
Osgood qwns the Red Wmgs gllllle. but Osgood did the the puck from hopping up
record with 50 postseason same thing against Dallas.
and into the neL lt was the
victories, ahead of Hall of
"Our team never goes to defenseman 's first playoff
Farner Teny Sawchuk, and . the goalie. We never did it. goal.
is closing in on his third Cup and we don't target the
Holmstrom has made a
with Detmit - two. as the goalie. You want to . talk • living on scoring from dose
starting netminder.
about experience, he goes to quarters, and did so again
Osgood is the first to post players, and he knows what without infringing on the
crease. Holmstrom passed
shutouts in the ftrst two to do, I guess."
Unlike Game I when the the puck out front to fellow
games of the finals since
New
Jersey's
Milrtin teams played a scoreless Swede Henrik Zetterberg,
Brodeur in 2003 against fust period, the . Red Wmgs who squeezed a shot
~aheim.
·came out flying. Showing between Fleury's pads. As

PIITSBURGH- Glance
at the National League statistics, 3!ld one name ·seems
oot qf place.
\
What is Nate McLouth, a
Pittsburgh Pirates utility
outfielder most of the last
three seasons, doing ·as one
of the league leaders in bat,ling average. home runs,
RBis and most other offensive categories?
. 1be answer: He's fmatly
~g a chance to play and
taking advantage of it,
something he oouldn 't do
the last couple of seasons as
!he Pirates ellperimented
with Tike RedD;Ian, Chris
Duffy and Nyjer Morgan in
Center field.
.- Or, to .McLouth, everyone

· liut him.
"It's been so much easier

..
•

.• Rougl expected to
live 14) to its name at
.MemoriaL See 1'¥ Bl
·

•••

"I .was ready to quit last
year. That's probably the
closest I've ever been,"
Patin&amp; admitted. "I was 30
years old,. l hadn't done
much, I was making enough
to set by hut I wasn't getting
die esults I wanted."
. . Patios showed promise
.11 a young ,age. He led
ftoliot. Southern ColleJe to
dee national cbampi~ps and earned AllA.mericao hooors, but he kU
laboied for nearly a dectde
widlout Jnaking through in
prof"cWooal golf.
'"But tlae thing that al.ways
lliDd; me .l bout Travill was
Iris wOOl:: ethic,
be loved
1be · game," said Lynn

w

•

The dog has not left
Queen's . custody even
though the dog technically
POMEROY - Last night belongs to the viUage and
Pomeroy Council unani- was purohased with donamously decided •.to · give tions from taxpayers. After
Jonesy, the village's drug being placed on suspension
dog, to freddie Alan Queen, from his position as
former bead of the viUage's Pomeroy Assistant Chief of
now defunct K9 unit, Police back in April, Queen
though the decision was not has since filed an appeal of
that suspension in Meigs
without debate.

Bv BETH 5ERGEHT

Uptao
Pittsburgh Penguins goalie Marc-Andre Fleury (29) tums as Detmit Red Wings winger
Henrik Zetterberg (40) of Sweden puts the puck underneath him during first period hockey
action ·in Game 2 of the Stanley Cup finals in Detroit on Monday.: Detroit Red Wings winget
Tomas Holmstrom was credited witll the goal.

the puck trickled tantalizingly close to the goal line,
Holmstmm slammed it in at
11:18.
'
He was called for interference on FleUry in the :fJI"St
period · Saturday, negating a
goal by captain Nicklas
Lidstrom. That's about the
only thing that has gone
right for the Penguins, who
entered the finals 12-2 in the
playoffs.
Now they are the fourth
team this year to fall behind
2.{1 to the Red Wmgs, who
are 9-l at borne. ·
Osgood was as steady as
he needed to be on a night he
didn't see a whole lot of
wod.
"My focus was to win the
two games at home," he
said. "Not ever did I ever

think about getting two
shutouts in a row against
that team."
Malkin has disappeared
since a hard hit from
Mike
Philadelphia's
Richards in the opener of the
East finals. The MVP finalist
has one goal and one assist
in six games and appears to
be tiring at the end of a long

~shy

hasn't figured out
how to get free of Detroit' s
top line of Zetterberg, Pavel
Datsyuk arid Holmstrom,
and · the 20-year..old captain
showed frustration as he
sipped water from a bottle
on the bench.
"They do a good job of
definitely clogging up the
neutral zone and holding
up," Crosby said. "As play·

ers, · you · have to batt!~
through that sometimes and
hope they get the calls." , ·
More frustration and some
chippiness led to late-game.
scuffles. The first was. pre•
dpitated by Roberts' driving
glove hand io the face of
Johan Franzen, who returned
after missing six games following recurring headaches,
He. was back: on the ice f~
his next shift and took 11
roughing penl)lty.
Notes: Only · the 1971·
Chicago Blackhawks failed
to win the Cup after taking
the flfSt two games at home.
... The Penguins ·are 4-4 on
the road, . including three
· shutout losses.. ... Franzen
logged 16 minutes, 21 sec~
onds of ice time in 26 shifts.

.

this season, coming to the homers, 39 RBis, 17 dou- and you can start to build
ballparll: every day knowing bles, 25 walks, a .408 on- off it."
· ·
you re going to play instead base \'efCCntage and a .621
The 26-year..old McLouth
of wondering if you'R: slugpng
percentage, and the Cardinals' Ryan
going to play," McLouth desptte spending much of Ludwick ( .333, 13 homers,
said. ''Before, you'd go to the season as the leadoff or 38 RBis) have arguably
the ballpark and you'd be No. 2 hitter. He has been been the NL's breakthrough
surprised if you were play- battj.ng No. 3 lately and is ,offensive players of the
ing."
·
l5-for"35 (.429) while bat- season. Even if it took
No, the surprise is on the ling there, and is 10-for-17 McLouth's breitthrough a
Pirates. For the second time in his last four games.
. while to occur.
in three seasons, they have
Remarkably, McLouth
"I was always !illid ilf
found a valpable bat in the didn't win the starting ceo- under the radar," he said.
unlikeliest of places: their ter fielder's job until the
McLouth, a small-town
own bench.
final week of ~· beating Michigan kid who always
In 2006, Freddy Sanchez out Morgan, who 1s now in wanted ta play for the
spent the fust month of the Triple-A.
McLouth Wolverines, was signed and
as a utility infielder responded to the promotion sealed to flay for the
before be be$an playing with an 18-game hitting University o Michigan as a
regularly at third base. He streak, the longest in the high school ooenior after batwent on to hit .344, the majOrs to begin the season. . ling .514 at Whitehall High.
highest .average by a Pirates . "Wben you ge~ at-hats ·Major league teams were so
regular since Roberto every day, good things start convinced of his determinaClemc:nte's .145 ~ 1~, to happen •.~ McLouth said.· tion to play oone~~;e ball that
and ~m the NL battmg lltle. "You gel mto a &amp;ythm .at McLouth wasn l drafted
This season, McLouth has lhe plate, you can carry .i t until' the 25th round by
a . .323 average with l2 from one game into the next Pittsburgh.

season

Even then, it took a
$500,000 bonus to sign
him, or about I00 times
more than most 25throunders get. He produced
in the minors from the start.
but always seemed stuck
behind a more highly
regarded prospect, center
fielder Chris Duffy.
That meant the 5-foot-II
McLouth played. mostly as
a comer outfielder who dido 't hit for much power in
the minors. McLouth and
Duffy both made it to the
majors in 200S, but it was
Duffy who played while
McLouth was a spare bat
and a twice-a-week starter.
Duffy's career took .a
downturn in 2006. Angry at
being sent back to the
minors, he dido' t report for
a month. Once be did, anlde
and shoulder injuries .conspired to sideline him for

.

most of the last two sea-

sons.

McLouth played regularly in .August last sea-.,
and he bit seven borne runs
with 17 RBis. But Morgan
dazzled · former manager
Jim Tracy with his defensive skills upon being
called up last September,
and ·MeLouth went back to
the be"nch.
He went quietly, but also
with a sense of determination he carried into the offseason. Once new management arrived and he was
promised a chance to compete in center field,
McLouth ·was certain the
job was his.
"All I wanted was a
chance," McLouth said. "I
haven't played regularly for
a couple of years, so it just
feels good to be back playing again." ·

.

OBITUARIES
: Page AS
• Dixie Knotts

• Eric lillie
.~ Pa!Jick 'Voo' Taylor
::.. Rev. R&lt;lbert Wannouth

.'
.-

fNSIDE
..
~
USnears
•

.·iecoltt tomado year.
See . . . Al ' .
• 511 : 3 relief should
stay safe. See ... A3
• ~.Dei~~ Briefs.
Seer.. AS

·• Tudey wins cake
decptalit 19 cor!I oat
.See PllfleA6

WFATIIER

being the onfy one in the
department who was certified to operate the unit.
Amott was at ftrst reluctant to officially ·sign over
the dog to Queen. He questioned if the dog had some
· sort of monetary worth !hat
could possibly be deducted
from any kind of settlement,

.. Sv BNAH J. REED

Annie's Mailbox ·.' ·.!\3
.
..
Calendars '
, )~ A1
Classifieds
. 82-4

'.

Comics
Editorials

Movies
Qbituaries

Sports
Weather

PO!\.fEROY -In addition to the fatal IOOtorcycle
accident which occurred on
MiddlePort Hill on Sunday
(see related story), several
other accidents kept emer'geney personnel bnsy over
the long holiday weekend.
Around I :30 p.m. on
Sunday, near the time the
moto~cycle
crash took
place, a crash between a car
and an SUV took place on
Ohio 124 in the "S Tum"
between Minersville and
Syracuse. Witnesses said it
appeared the car. hit !iJe
back of the SUV's ure,
causing the SUV to flip fout
times. The car then came to
. a stop near the river..
lAICkily, no one was hurt
and the two oc~upants
inside the SUV were wearing
their
seatbelts.
Syracuse's Engine 34
responded . as well as
Syracuse's medic truck.
They were joined by the
Pomeroy Pulice Department
and the Gallia-Meigs Post
of the Ohio State Highway
Patml. OSP is completing
the official accident ~rt
and details are forthcommg.
Later on Sunday afternoon, a semi-truck carrying
two trailers blocked a section of Ohio 833 when witnesses said it aUegedly
attempted to tum around ip
the road and became stuck.
The road was closed for
almost two bouts and a
wrecker was called to pull
the uuck around in the right
directio11. OSP; the Meigs

PI me -

Man dies
from bike
• • •
nmmJunes
BY BRIAN

•

•

_!..,.•

-·-~

,.

· ~. · " " -

·•r

·· , .

•

•

This weekend aocident involving tWo vehicles resulted in ~ SUV
up on itS top tn
the ":$ Tum' between Minersville and Syraeuse. Mir'acukiusty no one was injured and the
two passengers in the SUV were wearing their sealbelts. Also pictured are emergency personnel from Syracuse.
County Sheritf's Office and
Pomeroy Police Department
were on the scene. OSP is
completing the official accident report and details are
forthcoming.
.
Al!iO on S~y. OSP
reports Tony D. Staicller,4l,
Rutland. was cited with failure to coll1rol wheii .the truck
he was driving allegedly
failed to negotiate ·a curved
portioll of the roadway on
TR 27 in Salisbury Township .
and ran off 1he side of the
road, roUing onto its side.
COUI1IIeY Scoa Kl!nH
On Saturday, OSP reports This semi-truck allegedly attempted to tum around on Ohio
Brandon S. Yonker, 29, 833 and became stuck, halting traffic for around two hours
Pomeroy, was driving his over ttie weekend . A tow truck helped get the vehicle even·
Pin •-a.ddt ''AS tually tumed in the right direction.

·as
A4
As
As
B Section
A6

BREEDOMYDAILYSENTINELOOM

MIDDLEPORT ·
Demolition of the old Park
Street School will be necessary to eliminate safety hazards on the site, Mayor
MichaeJ Gerlach
told
Middleport Village Council.

The building, which sits - demolishing the building,
nellt to the village garage, but has· not yet received an
has been abandoned excel?! estimate.
Gerlach said the roof has
for storage purposes, and IS
n?w considered unsafe for begun to cave in , and
v11lage .em~lo~ees. At threatens the village' s gasoMon~y evemng s regul!!f line tank. He said the excameetmg . of
council, vating company believes
Gerlach said he has spoken
to Jeffers Excavating about
. . . . . - Sdloel. AS

Name of dead in murder/suicide identified
by a relative of the younger
Campbell's
long-time
NEWSGMYOAILYSENTli\ELCOM
boyfriend last week, and
RACINE .- The women Sheriil Robert Beegle said
dead in an apparent homi- their · identifies were not
cidrJsuicide last week have released until a celati ve was
been identified as Julie contacted.
A Meigs County woman
Campbell, 60; and Julia
who was grieving the loss
Campbell, 99, her mother.
lheir bodies were found of her long-time live-in
STAFF REPoRT

p

boyfriend apparent! y killed
her mother and then committed suicide this week.
authorities say.
The . details, including
causes of death , are not
being released pending
autopsy reports from the

OJ

9922136

..

r.• -

I

1

J.

REED

BREEOGMYDAILYSENTINELCOM

MIDDLEPORT
- A
Long Bottom man died
Monday after being struck
by another motorcycle in
Sunday's Memorial Run.
Middleport Police Chief
Bruce Swift said Eric J.
Little, 41, of Long Bottom,
died on Monday at CabeliHuntington Hospital in
Huntin¥toil, W.Va., after
the accident Sunday afternoon on Mill Street. Little
had been transported to the
hospital by medical helicopter.
Little was one of over
I ,000 riding in procession
in the annual bike run,
sponsored by the Meigs
County Bikers Association .
The bikes were traveling
from Pomeroy, through
Middleport and onto Ohio
1 from Mill Street.
According to an accident
report and witness statements, Little was traveling
west on Mill Street when he
dropped off the right side of
the road and lost control of
his 1995 HarleycDavidson.
He was thrown from the
bike and struck by another
motorcycle driven
by
Candice Birch of Shade .
No citations were issued.
but the matter remains
under investigation, Swift
said.

PI

w_1.tdR 1.A5

advice on depot controversy
BY BRIAN J. REED
BREEDCIMYOAILYSENTINEL COM

MIDDLEPORT
Control of the village·
owned freight depot in
Dave Diles Park is creating
an "ongoing controversy,"
according .
to.
Mayor
Michael Gerlach, and· will
be referred to the village
solicitor for clarification.
Meeting
Monday
e vening, village council disc ussed both leasing the
depot to the committee
which oversaw its renovation . and severing the committee ' s control over its use
and placing control with vii·
lage council.
Gerlach said he would dis-

Pllne·•

I

Call us toda,!
c-I a ·= ~
T ss an ' I
773.6400
667.3161

,

cuss the matter with Village
Solicitor Jennifer Sheets. He
said be has received complaints that the committee
has denied permission to
rent the depot for events.
The
committee
has
always had control over
who rents the depot. Its
· rental agreement asks for
specific information about
rental events, and the· com·
mittee re~rves the right to
deny permission to use the
public building for an y putpose at any time .
Some council members
expressed their wish to ·
assume control over · the
building and its use. while

The best local in-house mortgage rates &amp; terms.
Experiencedj·lenders who want your busines~.

by

Dnlc .... A5

Mayor: Old school must come down ·Yillage seeks ,solicitor's

lll S8cnoNs - l2 PMll!ll

c:r

Chief Mark E. Proffitt's
decision to suspend Queen.
At last night's council
· meeting, Musser wd he felt
the dog was an expense to
the village and that Proffitt
was n01 interested in keeping the dog. In addition to
paying for the dog's expenses, the village would also
have to pay to train a new
K9 officer with Queen

BY BEnt Sn:crnr

INDEX

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

County Common Pleas
Court against the Village of
Pomeroy, Mayor John
Musser, Council persons
Shawn · Arnott, George
Stewart, Mary McAngus,
Jim Sisson, Pete Barnhart.
Councilwoman
Ruth
Spaun was the only ·council
member not listed in ·the
action. Spaun abstained
from the vote which upheld

liSEl'IGffiT GMYDAILYSENTINEL()()I,I

IIW:IIan .... M

Marti.~!.

fonner Olentangy
High School athletic :director. "You've got to hand it to
a kid who, after a soccessful
college· career, oonlinues
knocking around the minitours. That takes a lot of
inter ll strength."
Hls struggles aren't over
yet. Perkins has qnalifllld for
just eight toumaiDcilts this
year and earned about
$23,000. He drives the ball
farther than 1be avmtge wur
pro hut not as sttaight, and
his putting is subpar. ·
Latdy, he's bcc:a fcding
· ill his right knee, and an
last week revealed
some fluid and inf1am.ma..
lion.
But Pemns. sayJl OO!hing
will stop him from playing
in bis hometown.
"I was~ happiest person
nn earth," his ~. Troy,
·wrote in an e-mail "My
whOle lamily ill very proud
aC him. He has bad some
very bard times the past
eigbt or nine years. It .was ID
epic Slnlggle. So come the
opening . day
of the
Memorial, we all will be
watching eilher in pcr&amp;On or
hole .
hole on the
lntemct."

Pomeroy tO give up.d ..ug dog

SPORTS

Golfer Travis Perkins
teturns home to play in
Memorial tournament
· : COLUMBUS (AP) .'J.Tavis Peridns has"Waited a
long rime to show his boometown what he's capable of
on a golf course.
. The 30-year-old Perkins,
who
graduated
from
Olentangy High School in
&amp;ub~ Columbus, will
get his chance this week
When he tees otf for the first
time at the Memorial
ToumamenL .Patios fmally
qualified for the POA Tour
dais year 'after sev.en failed

•

•

.

ASSOCIATED PRES.S .

A6

.

Pirates' surprising center fielder McLouth only needed a chance ·
.BY Al.vl Aaltllllllf

~nts flags,

PalniPI
A
674.8200

D4 ilt. AS

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