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                  <text>lted Wmgs grab 3-llead over Penguins
. .

•

~k

1M PaaaJ..

his
to the net 2:26 int.o off the outside of the net,
ASSllCWm ~
the ~d. Brooks Orp1k s and the red goal light
PITTSBURGH _ The cl~ng attempt . from switched on - giving the
Detroit
Red
Wings behmd the _net was kept in . home fans false hope. 1be
&gt;qeck:ed the . Pittsburgh by Detrmt defenseman Penguins didn't record a
l"eelgums· home-ice advan- .Brad Stuart, wbo sent the shot during the two-man
tile and gave themselves a bouncing puck back down edge.
.
sbo
(9w.
"There's DO doubt we
· t 10 hoist the Stanley
Rookie center Darren needed to get that goal,~
Cup
in
Hockeytown.
H
1 chipped it to ~udler, Therrien said. "We didn't
Jiri Hudler snapped a
em
thini-period tie for tile Red who snapped a drive off ell.ecute well. We got a
Wings, ....00 rallied from an Marc-Andre Aeury's left good chance to tie up the
arm
. and inside the phst for game right there, and we
eul.y deficit to beat the h fifth f
~nguins . 2_1 Saturday ts ., o the playoffs. didn't do the job."
llight and gl'llh a _ lead in That was enough to band · The night didn' t start out
3 1 . ·
ihe finals.
~eury his first home loss in the Red Wings' favor,
m 19 home starts, dating to even though an octopus
troit will get the j'irst
otDe
three potential chances Nov. 21.
splattered in the Pittsburgh
•
"
It
feels
good,
especially
end
near the completion of
tu win me Cup blld home
Ml Game 5 on Monday in .dthis building,~ Hudler the national anthem. DaH.as
Rtght.
su . " lfs a lot of fun, Drake took a roughing
~ 1be Penguins were a per- obviously, in. the Stanley penalty that Jed to Marian
Cect 9-'0 in the Igloo during Cup finals. It was kind of .a Hossa's power-play goal
die postseason and hadn't lucky goal, but 1"11 take it." early in the. first, before
lost at home since falling in
Chris Osgood made 22 Lidstrom tied it for the Red
a . shootout to San Jose on saves to improve to 13-3 in Wmgs 4: 15 later.
f!lb. 24 _ a span of 17 the ,postseason. He has Bact in the friendly congmcs. Now they ll'lill have all~wed four goals in the fmes of the· lgloo, the
~figure out how ito win at sene&amp;. Aeury stopped 28 Penguins scored for the
foe L&lt;&gt;uis Arena to force shots.
.
fourth straight perioo on
llbe
series
back . to
Pittsburgh had .a golden home ice after being shut
chance to ti~ it just past ~e aut for two games. In .an
Pittsburgh for Game 6.
•That'D be a tough task IDidway pomt of the thrrd another enoouragmg stgn
~ oonsidering tiiey whenAndreasLilja's inter- fromtherallyingPenguins,
oiuldn't even score a goal ference penalty on Sidney they beat Osgood with a
iii two games there to open Crosby gave the Penguins a power-play goa);
d!e series.
.
5-on-3 power play for 1:27.
Sergei Gonchar let go a
.: ·Six teams have survived ~rosby bad .~e best scor- shot that Osgood stopped,
ltiqg enough to reach Game mg opportumty, but Selke but Hossa got to the
Tafter b'ailing 3-1 in the Trophy fina}ist Henrik. rebound .at the right post,
~ 11ut only the 1942 Zetterbet;g !lied up .the -deftly moved the puck
Peng~ins captain'11 stjck at from ba!ikhand-to-forehand
to Maple Leafs who fe~ hehinci 3-'0 to the , the nght post IIDlil didn't .and tuck~ it, in at 2:51 on
R.ed Wmgs - came all the allow htm to get off ·a shpt. the Pengurns second sOOt,
w.ay back to win.
"I' ve been telling people Hossa's lOth of . the play,Pittsburgh wonld !have to for :drree years how good offs was Pittsburgh'5 secWin twice in Mot0wn, Zetterber~ is," Red W"mgs ood goal in 12 power-play
WbCF~ th~ Red Wings are'9- . ~oa~h . M~e Ba~k :;aid. chances_ in the series.
· 1. dunng the postseason, to Th1s tsn t a surpnse to me.. Detroit also has struggled
c_a,pture the StanleyC\Jp for He's just a .conscientious on .the advantage, coming
the third time. Detroit is on ·good two-way player. So is in with two goals on 19
~brink of title No. II and (Pavel) Datsyuk, but we opportunities against the
. Its fourth m 11 seasons.
hav~ a lot of good players." Penguins. The Red Wings
. "It nev.er gets old, but we
W1th less than a minute clicked 2 seconds after
'ltaven't won anything yet," left · in the advantage, Pasca1 Dupuis' crossC!lptain Nicklas l.idstrom Peng~ins .coach. Michel checking peiullty expired.
!'llld.
Themeo called tnneout to
The Penguins nearly
.u dl
t
"" R d · ,L , tru glin
d
.
· nu er se up we ' e g1ve trns s g
g .power- e.scape ,u nscathed when
Wings when he smacked tin play unit a rest. It didn't Mn ~albot made a good
a hack'bande.r iiro~ the h?t- lbclp. .
.
. defenSive play near the
tam ,of the nght rucle w1tb
Ev,geru Ma:lkin put a shot right point 'but c0uldn"t

quite nudJe the puck out of
tile zone. Detroit moved
tbe puck back around; aud
Brian Ralfask:i slid a jlass
left to defense partner
Lidstrom, who after a
slight backward curl ripped
a drive that got by Fleury
7:06 into the first.
The rants all week. by,
Therrien
regarding
obstruction he felt was
committed by · tile Red
Wings might have been
beard by officials, who
!landed Pittsburgh three.
first-period power plays.
1be last was a holding call
,.,..;,st
Kri·s ""'"""r.
-eouo-.Pittsbw:gh produced six ,
of its nine sbots - not
including Hossa's drive off
the crossbar- in the period during power plays and
allowed 14 shots to Detroit.
Tbe momentum off
Pittsburgh's 3-2 win in
Game 3 continued in the
Pe~ns' direction before
the opening faceoff when it
was announced that Detroit •
top-line forward Tomas .
Holmstrom wouldn't play
duetoabamstringinjury. .
Holmstrom, always a
presence in front especially ,
on the power play, was hurt·
Wednesday in Game 3
when he was kttocked into
the . net by Pittsburgh
defensemao Hili Gill.
The good fortune didn't
last~ the Penguins fell to
Il-l m the playoffs when
scoring frrst.
.
Notes: Darren Mcc.ty,
w.h o hadn"t played since
Gamel, took Holmst:rom's
place in die 'liDeup•. ··- the ,
Red Wings . blocked nine
shot5 in the first period, the
same amount the Penguins
got through to Osgood. ...
A moment of sil.enoe was
belci before dJe game for
\(ancouver D Luc Boumon,
who was killed ThUI!IIdav in
· ~
a motorcycle aocii1 if in
Canada. .. . . Matkin, .an
MVP finali.st; bas Dlt'p oints
in the series.
· '· ·

.Blue Angels win third
sb:oaigh.t J'PO'ional
crown
.
~
a

·

8Y • • 11 wmas

titles in the 100m dash and
~LY11!111UNE.COM the long jump _ inciPding
a new stadium t«XJ~d in the
BYESVILLE- The l&lt;JI!B field event.. Gei,ger broke
trip was iadoed w011h it for former teammate Felicia
the Gallia Academy sms Close's 2005 t«X:JJd of 18
1Iack and field team, aglin feet., 2 inches by more tban
- as •'-u"' Blue Ange1s IliD one i!Jch, leapin!! a distmn"
away with their thinl of 18 f~t, 3.25 inches. She
straight regional c.r own . also woo the lOOm dash
Saturday
during
the wilh a time of 1'2.26 secDivision
D
Southeast
ds
R . nal T k.
d fi' ld on ·
.
eg~o
rae an
1e
Jackson - a sopboiDOI'e
~onsbips .
at - -l1ad the fifth and final
.
brook HighSchool. championship for 1he Blue
1he Blue Angels - 'lhe Angels in tbe 400m dash,
rei«niog two-time stile run- r\nerl"
. .
__ _.. 0 f
c...---g a wmnmg .._..
ner-ups - outscored 47 51153 seoonds Jactson had
other schools by at least ~ secood-f~ qualify12.5 points, posting a team ing time as weUinthe200m
Qlly of 10. Tbe Angels also dash, but withdrew &amp;om her
won five championships m foUI111 event.
17 'COIIIpelitions and qualiClose_ a sopbomule _
tied four different athletes was disqualified in the
in six events to oen week- semifinals of tbe lOOm hurend's 02 . state toumamerit dies. but l'edcemcd henielf
at Jesse Owens Stadium in in .the 300m hurdles by fin- .
Columbus.
ishing fourth witb a lime of
The quartet of A1exis 47.48 lieGODds - die final
QeF, Tonia Logan, Kara event that the Blue Angels
Ja:bo,!.~ B~ Cl~ will qna1ifir4 for1state in.
~tatgf~WSt:nps to Logan - juniol' - just

:be
S~IJIICo.

0

.,.._

tWo of the da • tid

during the 4xiOO-i:e~

011

4x200m relays.

a:d

.
.
Geiger Logan Jackson
and Cl~ ,tm;,ke 'their own
stadium recoro in the
4xl1JOID relay set just last
spring, posting a time of
49.67 seooods. 1be old stadium mark was 49.93 sec-

onds.

They

•
-,.1 ( I'\ I"" •

·

also ,julit missed
brealtiJig their stadi~
record from a year B!lO m
~ 4~ relay, postulg a
WlDDlDg time of 1:44.~.
Afte! ~orne coru:usJOn. ~
.qualifymg - w~ch ong1~y led to a disqualifica: : fd ~en a R:.hetfOOm
rela ·~ge s woothane
ondy~;.]
~':r. Last .ayear
~s
""""-atime from thi · ll1tet
.
also 1:44,47. s qu
was '
&lt;Jeiger- a junior- also
~apairofiodividual

· Midcllepert • Pomeroy, Ohio
ll 1..... 1&gt; \' .. Jl , .. :J. :!OUR

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.

Parties agree on AMP appeal hearing date

SPORTS
•

~ Pialce, Bryn sli* it .
,t)Ut and make lblle .

Natural Resources sides on or before July 2
· BY BEnt S ; If
· Appeals Commission, all on!er will either grant or the
Defense Council, Chicago, which basically brings
rtrrHYDM.YSEM1NEL.CXlU . patties are agreed oo Feb. 2, deny the requests.

•·
2009 as the date for the . The spokeS(&gt;CTSOn did
COLUMBUS - AD par- ;a(1!tal bearing at ERAC's confmn all parties respondties involved in the appel- offices in Columbus. A ed. by yestenlay's deadline
laot bearing regarding the ·'Spok:esperson. said even in submitnng a joint case
Ohio
Environmental . tfiOugh 1be parties have management schedule and
Prot.ecti011
Agency~s .agreed to a date, ERAC · joint status reports in the
i5suaDoe
a final air pel'- .~ issue an order to final- ··case. The reports basically
mit-w-install for the ooal- ize the plan.
include an update of com. fired pows- plant ~sed
1he order, wbil:h will deal . munications between the
by American Murucipal witb the .appellant bearing parties for ERAC to review,
.Power-Ohio bave agreed on as well as othef dates for as well as witness lists aud
a date for that hearing. · · discovery ·cut off, witness other issues associated with
Acoording to the Ohio ' Jim, etc., will likely be case managOOJent.
Enviilolunental
Review issned later this week. The
The appeal was filed by

.HBAfiE' See .......

«

tall~e ~i==ln~~=

rou:;'n;e" ~bi~

same.

Ohio's tough
economy hitting
suburbs hard, too, A6

Holzer Clinic hosts
annual service
awards banquet, A2

dash, finishing fifth with a

ti~26d~~s _

Ul., Ohio Environmental
Council, Columbus, the
Sierra Club, San Francisco,
Calif. and the National
Parks
· Conservation
Association,
Knoxville,
Tenn. (which is not to be
confused with the federal
goverlunent's National Park
Service) in March against
OEPA Director Chris
Kodensk:i and AMP-Ohio.
1be completed certified
record is due from both

the 3200m runner-up from a
·
fahd to ualify

Rutland still
without
fiscal officer

i:'"lileragothird strai~t~ to

Columbus in that t::ventafter
fmishiog fifth widl a time of
12:05.92 - 20 scooeds
slower than her district tide
one week .ago. Adkins was
also sixth in die i600nuun
wilhatime ofS:3l.48. .
But .the ladies" regi~
three-peat was not die only
good fommes to fall •
Gallia Academy at MHS, as
senior Luke Watts bec!I!!M'
the second Blue Devil polevaulter ·in four years to
moveGiftothebigbestlevel
inCoOhio.l
·
.
Di
. • • ~ ete results of lhe
Sou~t
1evtston
·
11 Uk' and
F'dd
CJb~nion:c at B ville
are a!aitablc '::n dae~ ~t
·www,baumspage.oom.

ERAC up to date on the formalities of the case up until
this point.
The air permit-to-install
regulates air emissions from
the proposed facility's two
coal-fired utility boilers, a
natural gas-fired aux.iliary
boiler, a gypsum, bottom oil
and fl~ ash landfill , material
handhng equipmel)t and
cooling cells that would he
built along Ohio 124 in
Letart Falls .

. BY BETH SERGENT
aseRGENTOMYDAILYSENTINELCOM

0BDUARIES
..
...

INsiDE
••

FREE
DELIVERY

zna
ZBD-1)-n.l
• JM; lurllt!S

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S1NIF Roan
IEWSIIIIVOM.YSEMTliiEL.COM

MIDDLEPORT

.

.• , 1

'!

"*

was held recently at the
Riverbeod Arts Council.
Jim Mourning p:isc:nted
tbe Middleport High School
AJumni Scholarship to
Ktny Gibbs, son o( Greg
and llobio Gibbs, grandson
of 1946 alumnae Dorotby
01ilds Gibbs.
Nancy Roller Cale presented $400 Su.SIIII Parle:
Memorial Scholarsbips to

lJif'(l
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'

Annie's Mailbox

~.
Oassifieds

Comics
~

463 INDUSTRY DRIVE • JACKSON, OH 45640
{740) 286-2139

..

ltlovi::es

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obituaries
SJ»orls

A3
A3
83-4

Bs
A4
As
As
BSec:tion

I

••

_
a.-,..

a ........

..,.......

1960
alumnae
Lynn
Buchanan Kitchen; Jennifer
Marie Schmidt, daughter of
Scott and Dee Schmidt,
granddaughter of 1959
alumnae Peggy Farmer
Harrah;
Steven
Tyler
Stew~. son of George· and
Mary Stewart, grandson of
1952 alumnae Eleanor
Satterfie)d Blaelllnar; and
Alell.8 .Breanne Venoy,
daughter of Mark and
Melinda Venoy, ,granddaughter of 195 3 alumni
Bill and Carolyn Demosky.
Since 1961 , 19 I students
have received scholllfShips

Jimlnr 31
AIJirly).

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of over $75,000 from the ·
Susan G. Padl: Fund. The
board of trustees is Judy
Sauer Crooks, Nancy Roller
Cale, and Cinda Sauer
Harris. Recipients must
have a grade point average
of at least 3.5 and be a direct
descendant of a Middlepon
alumnus.
The
Crawford-GrayLewis Scholarship was presented by Nancy Miller
Beaver to Patti Vining,
daughter of Greg and
Brenda Vllling.
~fi-•-W"tt

Archers at Ohio State House .

Sojka named ·
URG president
STAFF REPORT
NEWSOMYOALLYSENTINELCOM

RIO
GRANDE
Gregory S. S'ojka. Ph.D ..
has been appointed president of the University of
Rio •Grande. He and three
others were appointed to
administrative positions by
the Board of Trustees of the
university.
Board Chairman Steven
t.M 8 . Chapman announced
several high administrative
appointments 10 go inlo
effect immediately.
. "Appointment of these individuals is long
overdue."
Chapman
. said. "Each
haspafmned
admir.,bly
over the past
tWo yean;, and
has repeatedly
proven their Gregory s.
abilities. The Sojka, Ph.D.
Board takes
great pride in making these

. Blllbara "'Bobbie.. Hatfield.
PhD .. was appointed Provost
and Vice President of
Academic Affairs and Barry
Thompson. PhD. was named
Dean 'Of the College of
liberal Arts and Sciences. All
three have served as interims
in these positions since
January. 2006.

~. Nallonal
C~agantiiWI

r-

•

.

anx&gt;intJnents."

1he 2.0112 Ohio Stlltt

c. ~

lloUCAI...

Ull 1lbenl al1he
Mai~Aid•r Team
wtidl D:lk hallie a
11.-l anllll a1d •Y
ctaf\llonahip .in 1he
al •• *"'J tiChool
d;;{
--hanoredl-illylf1he
Ohio Slllla Howe
•OhiO'strlf
tl hiiiAod•r
Nao .
4J!t*nd" lily . .

honornl indude

We~~llw ·

.

............ -1;16c. ............ ..,~._._t.,.._Cit~-

Emily ~Catherine Alleman,
daughter of Jeff and
Susanna Alleman, granddaughter of 1951 alumnus
tosooe Wllle. who I1COl!:ll'ltAI
the award in her beU!f.
Kaley Nicole Davis, daughter of Tun aud Connie
Davis; ganddaughter of
1958 ,almrmae Carol Blaker
Oiler;
Brandon Gene
Dodsoo, daughter of Brit
Dodson and Jodi MOO'OW,
great-grandson of 1931
alunma R.utb Biggs Dodson;
Leslie
Lynn Kitchen,
daughter of Todd and Mary
Kitchen, gnmddaughter of

"'

INDEX
REASOR OUTDOOR EQUIPMENT CO.

- The

annual Middl~ High
School Alumni Banquet

a-...........
c.a.,..
........... .·u a ,

--

.

MiddlepOrt alumni award scholarships

WFA'DIEil

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fiee·-AS

TIIEF

S.' •

lhe Rivw.Qty fillips wll tate aldie 10M on .a 1:01D8dic: romp through the schemes of two blaok 511MP trying to sneak
Into their g andl111hao"s wll and llVDid a bln ahat1t i!' 'tie, Cheal and Genuflect" at 7 p.m. June 13 and 14 at Meigs
Elen•'llai'f Sdlool. Acast of eight is ()onstantly nnting into and out of closets, opening and shutting doors, climbing up
and down .stairs. To 81 this, Md mistlllfen Ji!:lal'llllies, trading partners and places, a baby, a nun and plastic flowers. Cast
memh"'s DiXie Sayre, Tom Reed, Seltl Algabtite and Nathan Becker are pictured in a soene from the farce.

• Fonner re s'denl
rtanlld ()()lllllalder.
See . . . A3
•. Ky. and Ohio battle
Over- boUlder pJftecj from
)river. ·See , . A3
• Local Briefs.
.

.

RUTLAND - Despite
hiring a new fiscal officer in
April, the Village of
Rutland is still hoping to fill
the position . after newly
hired.
Lynn ' Ramage
resigned the post.
Before Ramage resigned
the post, Mayor Lowell
Vance said she told council
that she felt Laura Curtis,
the newly hired water/sewer
clerk could do the job and
was quick to pick up on
training. Vance said council
asked Ramage to think
about resigning at its last
meetin,g but if she did decide
to leave the position, council
seemed agreeable to consider Curtis for the position.
Vance said at this time
both Curtis and Middleport
Fiscal Officer Susan Baker
(formerly Rutland 's Fiscal
Officer) are helping with
the duties of the office. A
final decision on whether
or not council will hire
Curtis for additional duties
as fiscal officer will likely
come up at next week· s
regular meeting.
Ramage was hired as fiscal officer for 20 · hours a
week at $7.50 per hour for
the flfSt sill. months with the
pay rate to be increased

Gille

wa

fl

..

•

·-....,as

�~

PageA2 .

SERVICE AWARDS

:The Daily Sentinel

'

Tuesday, June a. 2008

•

GALLIPOLIS - On Friday, May 16,
Holzer Clinic hosted its annual Service
• Awards Banquet at the French Art Colony.
There were 57 employees recognized.
John Cunningham , Holzer Clinic associate a!Jministrator, was master of cere-

monies, and Hol.zec Clinic Vice-~sident
Jon Sullivan, MD, and Clinic Administrator
Robert E. Daniel presented the service
awards.
"Any company trying to compete must
figure out a way to engage the . mind of

.

Church events

·Clubs and
. tions .
orgamza

.:
; :.

.

p.m .• Middleport Masonic
Temple. Work in Entered
Apprentice
degree.
Refreshments.
POMEROY · - Ladies
Auxiliary of Drew Webster
, Post 39, regular meeting , 2
p.m ., legion hall .
· Thunday, June 5
TUPPERS PLAINS
VFW Ladies Auxiliary, 7
p.m.
Friday, June 6
POMEROY " PERJ
Chapter 74, Meigs County.
I p.m . at the Mulberry
Community Center. Paul
Reed and John Musser to
talk on the workings and
plans of the Community
Improvement Corporation.

Public meetings

a

Other events

·:.. Fortner resident named conunander
;.
·:
::
'
··

. '

.

S u - photos

Dr. Jon Sullivan, vice-president of Holzer Clinic, and Robert Daniel, chief administrator tor
· · Holzer Clinic, r:ecognize Nancy Oowell for 40 years &lt;If •service.

Dr. Jon Sullivan and Robelt Oarniel recognize Fran Mullins, David .Reymond and Carol
McDaniel lor 35 years o1 S8Mce.

Ky. and Ohio _battle.over boulder pulled from river
BY JOE 81ESK
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

.
':
:
·:
::
:·
;..
·'

..
: Or. Jon Sullivan and Robert OIIJI:Iiel mc~&amp;lilm
• ye~rs of S81Vice.
. .

.,... ..·
&lt; ' •

J

SOUTH SHORE. Ky. lt's an 8-ton boulder that for
decades sat, mostly forgotten, in the middle of the
river that separates Ohio
and Kentucky. It was a nav~: igation marker for boaters
···. that became the canvas for
: · such fine art as a stick fig: : ure-like face with two dots
~ : .for eyes and a dot for a ·nose
.
·• · chiseled into it. ·
Was it marked by Native
Americans? Or was it more
of an amusement for .the
people
who
plastered
names on it such as Kitiney,
D. Ford. F. Ayers and J.
White?
Now, this lowly piece of
sandstone iaken from the
ohio River is at the center
of a debate akin to two kids
ftghting in the schoolyard
over a ball . In some quar·
ters, it's known as "Our
Rock War."
·
1t all began in September
when an Ohio historian
pulled the rock from the
water.
,
Like many locals on the
Kentucky side of the river,
retired teacher Nita Cropper
• was outraged .

2008

This kind of
flirting is harmful.

Saturday, June 7
Tbunday, JUDe 1l
SYRACUSE - Sutton
CHESTER
- Shade
River Lodge monthly stated Township Trustees will
SIIDiby, June 8
meeting,
7:30
p.m . meet 7 p .m. Syracuse
RUTLAND -Rutland
Village hall.
Refreshments.
Fnee wm · Baptist Church,
Tuesday, June 10
Bv KATHY MITCHELL ·
~lebrating Children Day
ROCK SPRINGS
AND MARCY SUGAR .
wtth Sunday School, 10
Township
Salisbury
a.m ., followed by sermon
Trustees, regular meeting,
Tuesday, June 3
Dear Annie: I've been
for youths, then cookout,
6:30 . p.m., home of
REEDSVILLE
Olive
married
to "Beth" for 18
games, prizes, all area chi!Township Trustees , 7:30 Manning Roush.
months.
We have our ups
dren invited .
RUTLAND . - Rutland
p.m., township garage.
and downs; but it's a solid
Villajle Council, regular marriage.
Wednesday, June 4
·
POMEROY
- Meigs meeting, 7 p,m..,civic center.
Beth is close friends with
County Board of Health,
"Chuck.," man she dated
regular ·meeting, 5 p.m.,
.back in higli school. He's a
conference room Meigs
good guy whom I trust and ·
Tuesday, June 3
County Health Department. .
Friday, JUDe 6
respect, but sometimes I'm .
. MIDDLEPORT - Stated
MASON, W.Va. - OH- a · bit uncomfortable with
PAGEVILLE - Scipio
meeting of Middleport
Township Trustees, 6:30 Kan Coin Club exhibition, their friendship and how
City Natio!W Bank.
p:m., Pageville Town Hall.
Lodge #363, F&amp;AM, 7:30
close they are.
To make matters worse.
about a week ago I came
across Beth's cell phone
and the text inbox was
.
open. I noticed a few notes
and was cotnmissioned as a Ribbon, Army Service from Chuck, saying he
RUTLAND - Capt. Earl
second lieutenant in the Ribbon, Overseas Service would do anything for her.
R. Fields was named comTransportation Corps and Ribbon, and the Air He addressed her as
mander of Headquarters and
completed Transportation Assault badjle.
Headquarters Co., 13th
"Babe." I wanted to be sure
Located m Fort Hood, I wasn't misreading the
Basic
School · Officer
Sustainment
Command
Tex., Headquarters and context of these messages ,
Course at Fort Eustis, Va.
(Expeditionary).
His awards include the Headquarters'Company was so I delved deeper.
Fields, born in Fremont,
Bronze Star medal, Army first activated in I %5. It Unfortunately, her mesis the son of Rev. Earl and
medal, deployed in support of sages to him had the same
Commendation
Kresha Fields, former
Joint Service Achievement Operation lraqi Freedom II tone. In one, she texted
Rutland ·residents and now
medal , Army Achievement in 2004. It then deployed as about being naked in ·the
residing · in Friendsville,
Joint
Logistics bathtub, and in another, she
medal, Good Conduct the
Tenn. His wife, Marteena, .
Command
to
New
Orleans, mentioned a sex dream she
medal, National Defense
better known as Darlene, is
Service
medal,
Iraqi La. to assist with humanitar- had about him.
the daughter of Henry and
efforts . following
Campaign medal, Global ian
Hester Eblin of Rutland.
When I questioned Beth,
Hurricanes
Katrina and she shrugged it off and said
Service
War
on
Terrorism
He entered the U.S . Army
Expeditionary
medal, Rita.
in I 989, and completed basic
c.pt. Earl .Fields
nothing was going on
Most recently, it deployed between them . I do trust
Global War on Terrorism
training at .Fort Dix, NJ.,
medal,
Non- in support of Operation them both, but I feel these
Service
and AIT at Fort Devens, B A. in pollical science.
iraqi Freedom 06-08 in
Commissioned
Officer
He
received
his
officer
Mass. He graduated Ohio
messages are inappropriate
University in 1991 with a commission through ROTC Professional Development August, 2007.
and neither one should be

.
::
;.
::
•:
::
:-

..

Tuesday, June a,

ANNIE'S MAILBOX

·: Community Calenru.r

ees and physicians. T~ is a celebrati 011
of your efforts in ~~ past and our success
well into the future .
Photography was provided by J.T.
Holland, Holland Photography, and The
Bob Stewart Band seJVed as entertainment.

every employee. This is especially rrue in
service industries, where nearly all of the
company's value is delivered to customers
by mdividual employ~ ." Cunningham
said . ··our success over the years at Holzer
Clinic is wholly attributable to our employ-

PageA3

BY THE BEND

. The Daily Sentinel

Holzer Clinic hosts annual serVice awards banquet

•

"lt belon~s to the state of
Kentucky,' said Cropper,
an 81-year-old from South
Shore. "We taught our children and grandchildren
that if you ·took something
that was not yours, without
permission, you had to
return it. That was stealing."
Cropper, who lives on
land that has been in her
f&amp;ni.ly since 1807, said she
remembers people who had
seen the rock and said they
fished off it.
The historian, Steve
Shaffer of Ironton, Ohio.
said people
overreacting. The rock, he said, was
ne~lected and in danger of
bemg damaged or lost forever. For now, the disputed
boulder. rests on some old
tires ·in a dusty comer of a
Portsmouth, Ohio, city
maintenance garage, about
l 00 miles southeast of
Cincinnati,
Shaffer says he deserves
praise for saving the rock.
"They want to punish
PortstiWuth and they want
to punish me and they want
to put this rock back in the
river," Shaffer said.
For years , the rock was a
navigation marker for

boaters along the river and
also indicated the river's
water levels, showing
itself when . the river
dipped and hiding in higher water.
.
Postcards and newspaper
accounts dating back to the
early 1900s mention the
rock.
A Sept. 29, 1908, article
from The Portsmouth Daily
Times says more than 1,000
people flocked to the rock
with "the water being so
low that the historic relic is
now piainl y visible to the
naked eye."
Somewhere during its history, a stick figure-like face
was chiseled onto it. People
carved names and . initials
onto it, including one marking that reads "EDC - Sep.
I 856."
But the rock had been
mostly submerged since the
1920s.
George Croth~rs, the
director of the University of
Kentucky's William S.
Webb
Museum
of
AnthrOpology and Office of
State Archaeology, said the
rock was a protected
archaeological object that
was registered with the state
in 1986 .

;are

Removing the rock damaged it because such artifactS are best preserved 'in
their natural environment,
, Crothers said.
"You remove it from thl
river and now it's just a
rock with some names on
it,"
he
said.
"They
destroyed that (historical)
context when they did ·
that."
Kentucky's elected officials also insist that the rock
belongs to their state. A .
Kentucky grand jury is
investigating whether crimi"
oai charges shou\d be filed
and Portsmouth Mayor
James Kalb has been s11bpoenaed to testify. Earlier
this spring, Kentucky lawmakers adopted a resolution
condemning the rock's
removal and deruariding its
retum. Ohio hiwmakers are considering a couhter-resolution cal!.in~ on Kentucky to
abandon tls claim to the
rock.
The Kentucky attorney
~eneral's office has gotten
mvolved and a group of
state officials recently
held a news conference
calling for the boulder's
return.

~Wr:!s~s ~Y·:u~

::a

..
Confused
Dear Hurt: Beth lost our
sympathy when she sent
lel\t messages about having
sex dreams and being naked
in the tub. This type of flirting isn't harmless because it
deliberately
gives
the
impression that she's interested in more than friend-.
ship. She may not intend to
cheat, hut it is disrespectful
to you and your marriage to
make the ex-boyfriend (or
anyone else) think she is
looking around. Tell her to
knock it off.
Dear Annie: We have a
lovely 7-year-old grandson . My daughter-in-law
had in vitro fertilization,
as she. couldn't conceive
and was approaching 40.
The problem is, when he
reaches the age of 13 , she
wants to explain the procedure to our grandson and
tell him that although his
dad is his biological father,
technically, she is not his
mother.
I am against this. it is bad
enough to tell children they
are adopted . After I was told
I was adopted (and I loved
my parents), down deep, it
. was never the same for me.
In vitro mothers are a whole
new ballgame. Many girls

donate eggs for the mone) .
There is no bond . The donor
has no interest in meetini!
her child :
Am I wrong to discourage ·
my daughter-in-law from
telling the boy? He is a very
sensitive child . - Mom-inLaw Meaning Well
Dear Mom-in-Law: Yes,
you are wrong. We reali ze
your adoption experience is
coloring your feelings on
the subject , but it 's up to
the parents whether or not
to give their . child th is
information . We will say.,
however, that since others
know the boy was conceived through IVF, it is
only a matter of time before
someone spills the beans, .
so it 's best if the child
learns his origins from hi s
parents as soon as he can
understand. Also , at some
point , your grandson is
entitled to have his genetic
information. If you want to
help your son and daughter-in-law
with
thi s
process, suggest they contact Resolve (resolve.org)
at 1-888-623-0744.
Dear
Annie:
Your
answer to "One Foot Ou t
the Door" was from outer
space . If my husband
brought in an extra $6 ,000
by donating sperm or any thing else , I'd throw a
party.

fin~~cfa~n:i~~o~1~~ t~~:!~

ago. so I donated blood . J
didn't make $6 ,000, but I .
did make - enough to buy
groceries, Christmas presents and treat myself
twice to a spa day. No , I
did not tell my husband
about it. I don 't bother him
for every detail of his life .
and I don't tell him every
.detail of mine. You should
have told "One Foot" to
get over it. - Sarah
Dear Sarah: You were
short of money so you
treated yourself to a spa
day? Twice? · They don ' t
pay for blood · anymore ,
but we think when som.e ~
one is donating bodily flu ids and fathering children.
the spouse should be
aware of it.

Annie's Mailbox is ,written by Kathy Mitchell and
Marcy Sugar, longtime editors of the Ann Landers
column. Please e-mail your
questions to anniesmailbox@comcast.net, or write
to: A.nnie's Mailbox, P.O .
Box 118190, Chicago, Jt
60611. To find out more
about Annie's Mailbox ,
and reaJ features by other
Creators Syndicate writer.~
and cartoonists, visit til e
Creators Syndicate Web
page at www.creators.com . .

•

.,
..

;~ Local Weather

...

•
•

'

•

::
;·
::
::
··
:'
:·

Tuesday...Partll sunny
with a chance o ·showers
and thunderstorms in the
morning ...Then
mostly
clouily with showers and
thunderstorms likely in the
afternoon. Highs in ·the
lower 80s. Southeast winds
· · around 5 mph .. Jncreasing
. to south 10 to 15 mph in the
: : afternoon . Chance of rain
· : 60 percent .
·
: : tuesday nigbt.. .Showers
: : and thunderstorms liktily.
: · Locally heavy rainfall pos; : sible. Not as cool with lows
-: in the upper 60s. South
; : winds I 0 to 15 inph. Chance
: : of rain 70 percent.

·\

Or. Jon Sullivan and Robert Daniel n~cognize June Stout, Vicki Wilcox Joan Anderson
Van Ellis, Jessie ·Beaver and Nancy MIAns for 20 years of service. • '
'

•
•
• IE.P ~I :

•

a.oe

:. O.e.lan (P"ftHlt- 5.11

. . Qwlllli........ (IIUD'O) -

&lt; 5.114

&gt;
Cllr Hlhlll&lt;tldlnldlnl (('NA&amp;I»Q) • : Oollnl (MYIE! - tDAI

•
•

GAO

: . D.!P4iol (NYIE) - otT...

Dr: Jon SUllivan ADd Ro f 2 o.iel treCDgnize Melissa Hutchinson, Deborah lves Shirley
,PJIC8, ,._. Rataou, ~ ,Ctuubew, Kathy P~rson , Karen Campbell,
: . · Dr. Jon Sullivan and Robert Daniel teCOgl1ize Vid&lt;i ofalllb1, Wenda Hunt, Jodi Fellure, Hamm, ~ NOlan, l&lt;lilhy ....,, «amn Deal, Robena Hams, Emogene Simms, Opal
: Jennifer Haynes, Jason Crawlurd, K1m Ballinger, tee Jellers and Jennifer McClelland for Grueset", V1oky Haas, -Brad kJar, Julia Cilualls, 'rmcy Caldwell, Tina Baker Nancy Gard
: 10 years d service.
·
Cheryl fluff and Jeaunette Speno. for live years of service.
'
· ·
' .

..

Tequella

•

•

·,

•

• . Ul ..... (IIY8E) -U.77
· . Gouw..a CNYSEI - lUI'
Gou•lll EleCtriC (MYIE) - 111.41
........ U.tkteCMi (MYIE) -

...,

Qtbt ~allipolts mail!' Qtrtbunet
Qtbt l)oint -'ltasant l\tgisttr
. and The Daily Sentinel .
have lauched a new page every
Friday caUed "Faith and Family".
.. If you have a testim()nial story,
life-changing event about yourself
or even a poem that you would·
like to share please email to:
I

MID (NASDAQ) - IUS
. · w•id Inc. (NT8EI - sua
·: 1111 ~ (NYIE) - 311.1t
: eob Eana (NAIO~- • . •
· . I ... •• (IIYIIE) - 50.71
:. ~~ (IIA&amp;I»Q)
·: -Tt.l2

•

Wedaesday ... Showers
and thunderstorms like! y.
Highs in the mid 80s .
Southwest winds 10 to I 5
mph with gusts up to 25
mph. Chance of rain 70 percent.
W.edaesclay
Bight-.
Mostly cloudy with showers
and thunderstorms likely.
Lows in the mid 60s. South
winds around 5 mph .
Chance of rain 60 percent.
'Oiuniday...Partly sunny.
Highs in .the lower 90s.
'f"~Mu:sday liigllt fllrou&amp;la
Friday
aiglat •..Partly
cloudy. Lows in the upper
60s. Highs in the lower 90s.

.

. . . . . . . (MYSEJ-&lt;11.11
Kn.- (NYSE) - 27.51

' - ' - . . . . . CNYSEI- 11M
Nowf\A 1laootMm CNYSE"I M .77

BIT (NY8EI - 111.1'3
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P I I g (IIY8E) - 17.15
, ...... (IIA8I)j!IQ) - ,,...

hoeflich@mydailysentinel.com
Limit your story to
500-750 words.

Jlo I 11 (NY8E) - 57.115
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IUO
. . . . II ldl • (MIDMI) -

...,...llo*:ll ... -

....

.

kkelly@my~lytribune.com
nfields@my~lyregister.com

Ohio ..,...., . . . Corp. (NASDAQ)- Z5.t0

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t¥ w t (IIYIE) 57
"' wly'a (IIYIE)
21.71
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LQG (IIYIE)
Z1 AZ
- IIIi 11 I (IIYIE) - 11.?2
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...

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p.w:. ET I I • . , - " ' . . _
·--~
. -.,....
,.....tlrEi
• .,.,._....,_

Please include a phone n"wnber
in your email.

c1:t:1 IIIII lu a - . : - . In

Ills J. at P•l ,..,_, l.eltiJ
MO In Point
PI
nt at (IIM)174-0tf4.
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to ..C.
•

'

�~

PageA2 .

SERVICE AWARDS

:The Daily Sentinel

'

Tuesday, June a. 2008

•

GALLIPOLIS - On Friday, May 16,
Holzer Clinic hosted its annual Service
• Awards Banquet at the French Art Colony.
There were 57 employees recognized.
John Cunningham , Holzer Clinic associate a!Jministrator, was master of cere-

monies, and Hol.zec Clinic Vice-~sident
Jon Sullivan, MD, and Clinic Administrator
Robert E. Daniel presented the service
awards.
"Any company trying to compete must
figure out a way to engage the . mind of

.

Church events

·Clubs and
. tions .
orgamza

.:
; :.

.

p.m .• Middleport Masonic
Temple. Work in Entered
Apprentice
degree.
Refreshments.
POMEROY · - Ladies
Auxiliary of Drew Webster
, Post 39, regular meeting , 2
p.m ., legion hall .
· Thunday, June 5
TUPPERS PLAINS
VFW Ladies Auxiliary, 7
p.m.
Friday, June 6
POMEROY " PERJ
Chapter 74, Meigs County.
I p.m . at the Mulberry
Community Center. Paul
Reed and John Musser to
talk on the workings and
plans of the Community
Improvement Corporation.

Public meetings

a

Other events

·:.. Fortner resident named conunander
;.
·:
::
'
··

. '

.

S u - photos

Dr. Jon Sullivan, vice-president of Holzer Clinic, and Robert Daniel, chief administrator tor
· · Holzer Clinic, r:ecognize Nancy Oowell for 40 years &lt;If •service.

Dr. Jon Sullivan and Robelt Oarniel recognize Fran Mullins, David .Reymond and Carol
McDaniel lor 35 years o1 S8Mce.

Ky. and Ohio _battle.over boulder pulled from river
BY JOE 81ESK
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

.
':
:
·:
::
:·
;..
·'

..
: Or. Jon Sullivan and Robert OIIJI:Iiel mc~&amp;lilm
• ye~rs of S81Vice.
. .

.,... ..·
&lt; ' •

J

SOUTH SHORE. Ky. lt's an 8-ton boulder that for
decades sat, mostly forgotten, in the middle of the
river that separates Ohio
and Kentucky. It was a nav~: igation marker for boaters
···. that became the canvas for
: · such fine art as a stick fig: : ure-like face with two dots
~ : .for eyes and a dot for a ·nose
.
·• · chiseled into it. ·
Was it marked by Native
Americans? Or was it more
of an amusement for .the
people
who
plastered
names on it such as Kitiney,
D. Ford. F. Ayers and J.
White?
Now, this lowly piece of
sandstone iaken from the
ohio River is at the center
of a debate akin to two kids
ftghting in the schoolyard
over a ball . In some quar·
ters, it's known as "Our
Rock War."
·
1t all began in September
when an Ohio historian
pulled the rock from the
water.
,
Like many locals on the
Kentucky side of the river,
retired teacher Nita Cropper
• was outraged .

2008

This kind of
flirting is harmful.

Saturday, June 7
Tbunday, JUDe 1l
SYRACUSE - Sutton
CHESTER
- Shade
River Lodge monthly stated Township Trustees will
SIIDiby, June 8
meeting,
7:30
p.m . meet 7 p .m. Syracuse
RUTLAND -Rutland
Village hall.
Refreshments.
Fnee wm · Baptist Church,
Tuesday, June 10
Bv KATHY MITCHELL ·
~lebrating Children Day
ROCK SPRINGS
AND MARCY SUGAR .
wtth Sunday School, 10
Township
Salisbury
a.m ., followed by sermon
Trustees, regular meeting,
Tuesday, June 3
Dear Annie: I've been
for youths, then cookout,
6:30 . p.m., home of
REEDSVILLE
Olive
married
to "Beth" for 18
games, prizes, all area chi!Township Trustees , 7:30 Manning Roush.
months.
We have our ups
dren invited .
RUTLAND . - Rutland
p.m., township garage.
and downs; but it's a solid
Villajle Council, regular marriage.
Wednesday, June 4
·
POMEROY
- Meigs meeting, 7 p,m..,civic center.
Beth is close friends with
County Board of Health,
"Chuck.," man she dated
regular ·meeting, 5 p.m.,
.back in higli school. He's a
conference room Meigs
good guy whom I trust and ·
Tuesday, June 3
County Health Department. .
Friday, JUDe 6
respect, but sometimes I'm .
. MIDDLEPORT - Stated
MASON, W.Va. - OH- a · bit uncomfortable with
PAGEVILLE - Scipio
meeting of Middleport
Township Trustees, 6:30 Kan Coin Club exhibition, their friendship and how
City Natio!W Bank.
p:m., Pageville Town Hall.
Lodge #363, F&amp;AM, 7:30
close they are.
To make matters worse.
about a week ago I came
across Beth's cell phone
and the text inbox was
.
open. I noticed a few notes
and was cotnmissioned as a Ribbon, Army Service from Chuck, saying he
RUTLAND - Capt. Earl
second lieutenant in the Ribbon, Overseas Service would do anything for her.
R. Fields was named comTransportation Corps and Ribbon, and the Air He addressed her as
mander of Headquarters and
completed Transportation Assault badjle.
Headquarters Co., 13th
"Babe." I wanted to be sure
Located m Fort Hood, I wasn't misreading the
Basic
School · Officer
Sustainment
Command
Tex., Headquarters and context of these messages ,
Course at Fort Eustis, Va.
(Expeditionary).
His awards include the Headquarters'Company was so I delved deeper.
Fields, born in Fremont,
Bronze Star medal, Army first activated in I %5. It Unfortunately, her mesis the son of Rev. Earl and
medal, deployed in support of sages to him had the same
Commendation
Kresha Fields, former
Joint Service Achievement Operation lraqi Freedom II tone. In one, she texted
Rutland ·residents and now
medal , Army Achievement in 2004. It then deployed as about being naked in ·the
residing · in Friendsville,
Joint
Logistics bathtub, and in another, she
medal, Good Conduct the
Tenn. His wife, Marteena, .
Command
to
New
Orleans, mentioned a sex dream she
medal, National Defense
better known as Darlene, is
Service
medal,
Iraqi La. to assist with humanitar- had about him.
the daughter of Henry and
efforts . following
Campaign medal, Global ian
Hester Eblin of Rutland.
When I questioned Beth,
Hurricanes
Katrina and she shrugged it off and said
Service
War
on
Terrorism
He entered the U.S . Army
Expeditionary
medal, Rita.
in I 989, and completed basic
c.pt. Earl .Fields
nothing was going on
Most recently, it deployed between them . I do trust
Global War on Terrorism
training at .Fort Dix, NJ.,
medal,
Non- in support of Operation them both, but I feel these
Service
and AIT at Fort Devens, B A. in pollical science.
iraqi Freedom 06-08 in
Commissioned
Officer
He
received
his
officer
Mass. He graduated Ohio
messages are inappropriate
University in 1991 with a commission through ROTC Professional Development August, 2007.
and neither one should be

.
::
;.
::
•:
::
:-

..

Tuesday, June a,

ANNIE'S MAILBOX

·: Community Calenru.r

ees and physicians. T~ is a celebrati 011
of your efforts in ~~ past and our success
well into the future .
Photography was provided by J.T.
Holland, Holland Photography, and The
Bob Stewart Band seJVed as entertainment.

every employee. This is especially rrue in
service industries, where nearly all of the
company's value is delivered to customers
by mdividual employ~ ." Cunningham
said . ··our success over the years at Holzer
Clinic is wholly attributable to our employ-

PageA3

BY THE BEND

. The Daily Sentinel

Holzer Clinic hosts annual serVice awards banquet

•

"lt belon~s to the state of
Kentucky,' said Cropper,
an 81-year-old from South
Shore. "We taught our children and grandchildren
that if you ·took something
that was not yours, without
permission, you had to
return it. That was stealing."
Cropper, who lives on
land that has been in her
f&amp;ni.ly since 1807, said she
remembers people who had
seen the rock and said they
fished off it.
The historian, Steve
Shaffer of Ironton, Ohio.
said people
overreacting. The rock, he said, was
ne~lected and in danger of
bemg damaged or lost forever. For now, the disputed
boulder. rests on some old
tires ·in a dusty comer of a
Portsmouth, Ohio, city
maintenance garage, about
l 00 miles southeast of
Cincinnati,
Shaffer says he deserves
praise for saving the rock.
"They want to punish
PortstiWuth and they want
to punish me and they want
to put this rock back in the
river," Shaffer said.
For years , the rock was a
navigation marker for

boaters along the river and
also indicated the river's
water levels, showing
itself when . the river
dipped and hiding in higher water.
.
Postcards and newspaper
accounts dating back to the
early 1900s mention the
rock.
A Sept. 29, 1908, article
from The Portsmouth Daily
Times says more than 1,000
people flocked to the rock
with "the water being so
low that the historic relic is
now piainl y visible to the
naked eye."
Somewhere during its history, a stick figure-like face
was chiseled onto it. People
carved names and . initials
onto it, including one marking that reads "EDC - Sep.
I 856."
But the rock had been
mostly submerged since the
1920s.
George Croth~rs, the
director of the University of
Kentucky's William S.
Webb
Museum
of
AnthrOpology and Office of
State Archaeology, said the
rock was a protected
archaeological object that
was registered with the state
in 1986 .

;are

Removing the rock damaged it because such artifactS are best preserved 'in
their natural environment,
, Crothers said.
"You remove it from thl
river and now it's just a
rock with some names on
it,"
he
said.
"They
destroyed that (historical)
context when they did ·
that."
Kentucky's elected officials also insist that the rock
belongs to their state. A .
Kentucky grand jury is
investigating whether crimi"
oai charges shou\d be filed
and Portsmouth Mayor
James Kalb has been s11bpoenaed to testify. Earlier
this spring, Kentucky lawmakers adopted a resolution
condemning the rock's
removal and deruariding its
retum. Ohio hiwmakers are considering a couhter-resolution cal!.in~ on Kentucky to
abandon tls claim to the
rock.
The Kentucky attorney
~eneral's office has gotten
mvolved and a group of
state officials recently
held a news conference
calling for the boulder's
return.

~Wr:!s~s ~Y·:u~

::a

..
Confused
Dear Hurt: Beth lost our
sympathy when she sent
lel\t messages about having
sex dreams and being naked
in the tub. This type of flirting isn't harmless because it
deliberately
gives
the
impression that she's interested in more than friend-.
ship. She may not intend to
cheat, hut it is disrespectful
to you and your marriage to
make the ex-boyfriend (or
anyone else) think she is
looking around. Tell her to
knock it off.
Dear Annie: We have a
lovely 7-year-old grandson . My daughter-in-law
had in vitro fertilization,
as she. couldn't conceive
and was approaching 40.
The problem is, when he
reaches the age of 13 , she
wants to explain the procedure to our grandson and
tell him that although his
dad is his biological father,
technically, she is not his
mother.
I am against this. it is bad
enough to tell children they
are adopted . After I was told
I was adopted (and I loved
my parents), down deep, it
. was never the same for me.
In vitro mothers are a whole
new ballgame. Many girls

donate eggs for the mone) .
There is no bond . The donor
has no interest in meetini!
her child :
Am I wrong to discourage ·
my daughter-in-law from
telling the boy? He is a very
sensitive child . - Mom-inLaw Meaning Well
Dear Mom-in-Law: Yes,
you are wrong. We reali ze
your adoption experience is
coloring your feelings on
the subject , but it 's up to
the parents whether or not
to give their . child th is
information . We will say.,
however, that since others
know the boy was conceived through IVF, it is
only a matter of time before
someone spills the beans, .
so it 's best if the child
learns his origins from hi s
parents as soon as he can
understand. Also , at some
point , your grandson is
entitled to have his genetic
information. If you want to
help your son and daughter-in-law
with
thi s
process, suggest they contact Resolve (resolve.org)
at 1-888-623-0744.
Dear
Annie:
Your
answer to "One Foot Ou t
the Door" was from outer
space . If my husband
brought in an extra $6 ,000
by donating sperm or any thing else , I'd throw a
party.

fin~~cfa~n:i~~o~1~~ t~~:!~

ago. so I donated blood . J
didn't make $6 ,000, but I .
did make - enough to buy
groceries, Christmas presents and treat myself
twice to a spa day. No , I
did not tell my husband
about it. I don 't bother him
for every detail of his life .
and I don't tell him every
.detail of mine. You should
have told "One Foot" to
get over it. - Sarah
Dear Sarah: You were
short of money so you
treated yourself to a spa
day? Twice? · They don ' t
pay for blood · anymore ,
but we think when som.e ~
one is donating bodily flu ids and fathering children.
the spouse should be
aware of it.

Annie's Mailbox is ,written by Kathy Mitchell and
Marcy Sugar, longtime editors of the Ann Landers
column. Please e-mail your
questions to anniesmailbox@comcast.net, or write
to: A.nnie's Mailbox, P.O .
Box 118190, Chicago, Jt
60611. To find out more
about Annie's Mailbox ,
and reaJ features by other
Creators Syndicate writer.~
and cartoonists, visit til e
Creators Syndicate Web
page at www.creators.com . .

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Tuesday...Partll sunny
with a chance o ·showers
and thunderstorms in the
morning ...Then
mostly
clouily with showers and
thunderstorms likely in the
afternoon. Highs in ·the
lower 80s. Southeast winds
· · around 5 mph .. Jncreasing
. to south 10 to 15 mph in the
: : afternoon . Chance of rain
· : 60 percent .
·
: : tuesday nigbt.. .Showers
: : and thunderstorms liktily.
: · Locally heavy rainfall pos; : sible. Not as cool with lows
-: in the upper 60s. South
; : winds I 0 to 15 inph. Chance
: : of rain 70 percent.

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Or. Jon Sullivan and Robert Daniel n~cognize June Stout, Vicki Wilcox Joan Anderson
Van Ellis, Jessie ·Beaver and Nancy MIAns for 20 years of service. • '
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Dr: Jon SUllivan ADd Ro f 2 o.iel treCDgnize Melissa Hutchinson, Deborah lves Shirley
,PJIC8, ,._. Rataou, ~ ,Ctuubew, Kathy P~rson , Karen Campbell,
: . · Dr. Jon Sullivan and Robert Daniel teCOgl1ize Vid&lt;i ofalllb1, Wenda Hunt, Jodi Fellure, Hamm, ~ NOlan, l&lt;lilhy ....,, «amn Deal, Robena Hams, Emogene Simms, Opal
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Qtbt ~allipolts mail!' Qtrtbunet
Qtbt l)oint -'ltasant l\tgisttr
. and The Daily Sentinel .
have lauched a new page every
Friday caUed "Faith and Family".
.. If you have a testim()nial story,
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Wedaesday ... Showers
and thunderstorms like! y.
Highs in the mid 80s .
Southwest winds 10 to I 5
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mph. Chance of rain 70 percent.
W.edaesclay
Bight-.
Mostly cloudy with showers
and thunderstorms likely.
Lows in the mid 60s. South
winds around 5 mph .
Chance of rain 60 percent.
'Oiuniday...Partly sunny.
Highs in .the lower 90s.
'f"~Mu:sday liigllt fllrou&amp;la
Friday
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60s. Highs in the lower 90s.

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Tuesday, June 3, 2008

.....·
~The
••

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' .•
'•.•
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PageA4

OPINION

Daily Sentinel

Tue~~June3,2008

•

••

The Daily Sentinel

'Assassination'flap is the latest media.'Aha!' moment

"assassination." But he was exploitation of racial differThis ought to be the laSt
clobbered
for it. The conse- ences - her reference to
word
on
the
flap
over
Sen.
111 Court Sb..t • POIMioy, Ohio
.
quence - maybe it would "hardworking white workHill31)' Rodham Clinton's,
(740) 992-2158 • FAX (740J 992-2157 .
ers," his comparing Obama
have happened anyway D-N.Y., use of the word
·
-.mydallyMntiMI.com ·
was the nominallon (and to. Jesse Jackson -justify
"assaSsination": ridiculous!
.
election)
of Richard Nixon. their reputation · for ruth·
Or,
if
two
words
are
nec'
Molton
Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
"Aha!"· moment lessness.
'
Another
esS31)', how about: Enough
Kl;lndladce
Obama,
too,
has
been
sinoccurred in 1972. Sen.
already!
.
••
Edmund · Muskie was the gJed oilt for "Aha!" treatClinton is being hamDan Goodrich
•
front-runner
for
the ment, as in his reference to
not
for
anything
she
mered
Publisher
"bitter" rurall&gt;ennsylvanians
Democratic
nomination
until
actually did or said - or
even meant - but because the frenzy to the conslal,lt the infamous "crying inci- and his wife's assertion that
'"'
Charlene Hoeflich
;:!
the media and her political feeding demands of the 24f7 dent" in New Hampshire, she'd never been "proud" of
General
Manager-News
Editor
critics
want to diminish news cycle, but this is far . after which he. was deemed America until he began win~
:.::
emotionally unfit for the Ding primaries.
what little chance she has from the whole story.
White House by a media that · Obama arguably would be
left to win the -De~ratic
Clinton
had
cited
.........
.
favored his militantly anti- inore susceptible to "Aha!"
presidential nomination.
Kc~y's death as a June
~~ Congres~ shall make no law rupecting an
Cli,nton has given volj:rs. marker - and used the "a" Vietnam War rival, Sen. moments than Clinton
because he's so much less
plenty of legitimate reasons word - on several previous George McGovern.
est4blishment of religion, or prohibiting the
known
and embarrassing ·
Muskie claimed to his
doubt whetller she ought ~ions. She did so in an
Sfru exercise thereof; or abridging the freedom _ to
to be president, but talking interview with Time .in dying day that be hadn't statements might be taken
~'i of speech, or of the press; or the right
the
about the assassination of March and in a Washington, cried - but was brushing ·to reveal n:IOre that's new
snowflakes - as be about his _character.
:dPeople peaceably to assemble, and to petition Sen. Robert F. Kennedy D.C., s~h earlier this away
the Manchester
denounced
Yet it's Clinton who has
isn't one of them.
month w1th lots of journalists
~ the Government for a rulress ofgriwancu.
It's as clear. as day what present. No one cared to Union-Leader's attacks on received the · big "Aha!"
·'Clinton was talking aboutto make a big deal out of it then. his wife. McGovern got with . the "assassination"
- The Firat Amendment to the u.s. Conatltutlon the · Sioux
Falls-Argus
But suddenly, the media nominated - ·and went on flap, and it's hard not to
conclude that Obama's
Leader editorial board. last week seemed to be in to lose 49 states to Nixon.
Another victim of "Aha!" media claque wants her not
Look at the videotape. Her need of an "Aha!" moment,
emphasis was all on the when it collectively obsess- journalism was Vermont to do further damage to its
..
word "June" - not "assas- es on some action, state· Gov. Howard Dean, whose chosen candidate's chances
:: Today is Tuesday, June 3, the !55th day of 2008. There sination" - ·and she clearly ment or incident ·t o !lemol- "scream" .at .a post-Iowa of winning the election.
Every time she beats
was citing some history to ish a disfavored candidate caucus rally in 2004 seemed
ire 211 ditys left in the year.
·
Obama
by double digits in a
to
justify
media
Judgments
: Today's Highlight in History: Two hundred years ago, on JUstify ~r stayin~ in the with exaggerated attention.
primary,
every time exit polls
:J)ne 3, 1808, Jefferson Davis, the ftrst and oruy president Democrattc race mto next
I've seen it happen before. that he was too flighty to be
show that white working;m the Confederate States of America, was born in Christian month.
In the ftrst presidential cam- a serious candidate ..
class or Hispanic voters are
.
The
"screain"
sot~nded
Yet
·
the
media
went
:QJ.inty, Ky.
.
paign I ever covered - the
reluctant to vote for him and
crazed
on
television,
whose
• ·On this date: In 1621, the Dutch West lndi;t Comfany berserk because she men- 1968 race, long before the
;mcei ved its charter for a trade monopoly in parts o the tioned Kennedy's assassina- 2417 era - the ruling lions microphones picked up every tiine she comes nearer
tion in recalling the June 4 of print political journalism Dean's voice clearly. . But · to winning the Democratic
:Americas and Africa.
:In 1888, the poem ~·casey at the Bat," by Ernest California primary in 1968. decided arrogantly that reporters at his rally said he popular vote, the more doubt
tawrence Thayer, was frrst published, in the San Francisco And some can't let it go Michigan Gov. · George was shouting because he there is that he can beat Sen.
.6aily Examiner. .
even yet.
Romney was not smart couldn't be heard in the hall . John McCain, R"Ariz.
So, on Friday, the media
You
can't
say
that
In 1935, the French liner Normandie set a record on its
Clinton was accused of enough to be president.
super-hyped
her use of the
damNixon/McGovem-level
maiden voyage, arriving in New York after crossing the "breaking a taboo," of comWhen he went to Vietnam
word
"assassination."
It got
age
was
doneDean
wasn't
Atlantic in just four days.
·
mitting a "huge gaffe," of on an inspection tour .in 1967
· · In 1948, the 200-inch reflecting Hale Telescope at the "going beyond the pale," of and accused generals there going to win. anyway - but front-page treatment in
Palomar Mountain Obsetvatory in California was dedicated. revealing secret, · uncon- of trying to "brainwash" he was disqualified on false nearly every newspaper on
'In 1963, Pope John XXIU died at age 81; he was suc- scious death wishes for Sen. him, it was his "Aha!" pretenses.
Saturday and was Topic A
~ed by Pope Paul VI.
There are plenty of legiti- on the Sunday talk shows.
Barack Obama, D-IU., even moment The press and his.
··'In 1965; astronaut Edward White became the fust of inciting nut cases.
adversaries had all the evi- mate flaws in Clinton and her MSNBC, the Obama news
·American to "wal.k" in space, during the 'flight (){_Gemini 4.
Some commentators dence they needed ·that he CJ?IIdidacy - some of them channel, kept the story
- · In 1968,' pop artist Andy Warhol was shot and critically demanded she apologize to wasn't up to the presidency revealed in other "Aha!" going even into Thesday.
:wounded in his New ·York ftlm studio, known as . ''The Obama, even though she and hi~ candidacy collapsed. moments this year. Making Enough already!
Factory," by Valerie Solanas, an actress and self-styled mil- . never mentioned him or
(Morton Kondracke is
There was as little wrong up stories about dodging gunifant feminist.
alluded.to him in any way.
with what Romney said ftre in Bosnia does reiilfooce executive editor of Roll
·In 1989, Iran's spiritual leader, Ayatollah Ruhollah
Call, the newspaper of
What's going on here7 about "brainwashing" as doubts about her honesty.
Khomeini, died.
Her and her husband's Capitol Hill.)
Various analysts attributed what Clinton said about
Ten years ago: President Clinton urged Congress to
:renew normal tiade benefits fo,r China, saying good rela·tions with Beijin~ were crucial amid fears of a nuclear arms
IJice in South Asm. A high-speed train derailed in Escbede,
Germany, killing 101 people.
·
IT'S A
YV£S5AINT
Five years ago: World leaders closed out a summit in
~UREt.IT.
Evian, France, by pledging to rebuild Iraq and combat the
threat of nuclear weapons in Iran and North Korea. Arab
·leaders pledged to renounce terror and help end violence
'against Israel, standing in solidarity with President Bush at
·a ·sunimit in Egypt. Sammy Sosa, was ejected in the frrst
·ibning of Chicago's 3-2 win over the Tampa Bay Devil
- ~ys after umpires found cork in bis shattered bat ·
·
• One year ago: After attending the MTV Movie .Awards,
Paris Hilton reported to jail to serve a 45-day sentence for
ti probation violation in an alcohol-related reckless driving
ease.·(Hilton was released after three days behind bars for
"an unspecified medical condition, but a Los Angeles
County judge ordered her back to jail.)
-:· Today's Birthdays: Actor Tony Curtis is 83. TV prodUOO'
~uck Bams is 79. Actress Irma P. Hall is 73. Author Larry
'l'~cMurtry is 72. R...9Ck ~i!lger Ian Hunter (Mott 1be Hoople)
;s· 69. Rock musician Richard Moore· is 59. Singer Deoeice
Williams is 57. Rock musician Billy PoweU (Lynyrd
'Skynyrd) is 56. Singer Dan Hill is 54. Actor Scott Valentine
iii 50. Rock musician Kerry King (Slayer) is 44. CNN host
for civilization.
many parts of the world.
On · May 15, 25 ClA
'Anderson Cooper is 41. Country singer Jamie 0' Neal is 40.
During
their
ca?llp!ligns,
I
"Americans," Atran conagents and one U.S. Me
-Actress-singer l.alaine (wLizzie McGuire'') is 21.
·
have
not
heard
from
'
B
arack
tinued, "sense that this is a •
• Thought for Today: "Never be haughty to the bumble; Foroe colonel went on trial
Obama, .John McCain or fateful election for our
'never be humble to the haughty." - Jefferson Davis, in Milan, Italy, on charges
Hill31)' Clinton on whether Republic; they may not
they kidnapped Italian resi;Confederate president ( 1808· 1889 ).
·
they will, if elected, act to realize how important it is
dent Hassan Mustafa Osama
Nat
end this shame of the for the world as a whole."
Nasr and sent him to Egypt,
Heirtoff
United States. (McCain, of
..,
·where
he
was
·
toJJUred,·
The present polls do not
LETTERS TO THE
course, strongly favors indicate this pnority among
including having eleclrodes
"special powers" for the our electorate of the world's
~ to .v.arious llody
EDITOR
CIA.) And if the Democrats stake, let alone our own hispans. This is What the ClA
·I
:·;Leners to the editor are welcome. They shoidd be less calls "an e~;~-~· reo...... ....__,
ly ignore the absolute ban continue to control the next toric human-rights values,
jim 300 words. Allleners are subject to editing, nwst be . ditioo" - flying
telrorism ODtllltUJ'e in Articl.e 3 of die Congress, their congres- in this election. It could
'f¥ned, and include. address and telephone fJIIIIIMr. No
sional leaders Harry help if one of the presiden•unsigned leners will be published. . Leners -shmdd be in snspc'rls to nations lmown European Convention · on Reid and Nancy Pelosi tial candidates were to
good taste. addressing issues, IWt persOfllllit~s. Letters of for to~ prisoneJ:Ii, Human Rights, is ..also have been indifferent to remind voters of bow our
tbanks to organiZJltions and individuals williWt be accept· including pnsoners from unlawful to kidnap peop~e erasing the stain of our values have boen transmo- ·
whom the ClA could not and ttanspon them to otbir
ed for publication.
be)ng a torture nation.
grified since 9/11 by the
extract information.
OOUJllries to be tortured.
In reaction to the .presi- present administration -· as
These opmlliv~ of .o ur
Further lowering world
legendary ClA were caugbt respect for our all-~n dent's veto of the legislation msisted on by Dick Cheney
·8Cidet-N?"ffl. having ICi't a ibameful post~9/ll hUDtaD· that would order the CIA to in an intetview on NBC's
•
clear trail of ceU-pbone. rights record George W . recognize basic human "Meet the Press" on Sept.
8) vetoed a rights, Scott Atran - il 16, 2001:
calls
and bills paid at expen- · Bulih (on
-:-· Reader Services
(USPS 21=~
·~we' ve got to spend time
~iv~ l~ian _hotels. Also ibilJ passed by the House and research scientist at New
York's
John
Jay
College
-;
ConKtionPollcr
Ang
in
the shadows in the intelliindicted m this contemptu- Salate dial required die ClA
' :.ou .
.
. '
....,.,y ..... 11001., ·Mol'ldq
crimi(which
specializes
in
genee world. A lot .o f what
QUS violation of the io 1ldhcte to tbe Army Flcld
.. r mam COIIC8111 In all stones I&amp; to through Frida~, 111 Couf1 snet,
nal
law),
the
University
of
needs to be done here wiD
Conventions
Manual'li
roles
of
in~­
lo.ternatioual
· ·be aocurale. ff you l&lt;oow ol an enor P""*"*'. Ohio.
--.,....
Michigan
and
France's
have
to be done quietly,
Against
"'brture
are
memdon
tblt
forbid
tor111«
·: :!"'a~- Clllllhe newoioom at (7-40) 1101'191 .peld
National
Center
for
witbout any discussion,
~of the Italian ~-1«- .akady a mandate for .U of
992-2156.
,
•
n 1 . The ·ucnuc PraM n
t.()hiotl $ . $ f
WlhNt.
~ ~_, of~~ our odw:r MJDCd aen'Miet. . Scie?itific. Research - made . using sources and methods
, •
• Send -**- CCMNCOur lllllln ..., bet ..
plicit Wt~ die ~ • dlis
As Ai"'n lily ~ the vjtal point in a New YO!t that are available to our
111
Ccurl
lawless
~QI,
said
of . . . p!llhmnng ~spe­ TIJiles letter (March 11) that: intelligence agencies, if
(74111_41_
8bMt, PotiOUj, Ohio 457'11.
The Umte4 States• . of Cial power" for the CIA: "America is currently caught we're going to be successDD.:;.-lt:na•-11•'1 I'IDfW.,.:.
ooutse, refuacs to tmdte "The Bulih .a4ministtation in a battle between the .COm- ful. That's the world these
S&amp;tlti fpMDit ......
... cw ..............
the 26 Amcdl:ana oa 1rial. continues its stubbona and peting metOrics of ... tribal- . folks operate in, ~ so it's
One-"10.21
After all, d1e president m.tiess dilil'egard for basic ISm ... and of humanity. going to be vital for us to
. - . Challene 1 -. Ext 12
o..... "111M repeatedly
aseures tile wOOd decency and vlllues the Given our singular military use any means at our disOlllly
..
· Jhpc ..... Brian-.Ext. 14
that "the United Stiles does Qoited States should model. andcqltural power in today's posal, basically, -to. achieve
I I -" "'· _ , Sefglant, Ext. 13
oot ~." ·' ·
· The president's action fur- world, no less than the future our objecbve."
- - -"11.21'
liunh« diminishing our dtcl' oornpouods :tbe incalcu- of 250 years of human-rights
Is ~ca to· be a model
. , a •....,., ..,.. "......_ rtpalllioe,
rests
on
liow
developmeot
to the world by resembling
kaliwt tml lab&amp;e damage to United
... 17 -DaveHanio, Ext. 15
•
of
aA
iljlaiiS ia beiaJ s.t.ta• studios • ·bome this intema1 Ameticao hatde our enemic;s1 Who will WE
-1D ·h
is resolwd"
,-;
beld afW diie
~~ ~
~
0' - - D I M I. Ext16 eaiptiou q, '"'II pe; S 1 tn be, then7 So this can indeed
111-o--:.: Jvttt Ciotk, Ext. 10
I
lmow
that
may
sound
be a fateful election - and
Feb. 11 flllill , ~ · p · Coapn, . U.S.
EuropeM c..tL ol
.J =&lt; u native
Edward like a form of jingoism, but oot only for our Republic.
'
llicbb. I"' U .,, ..... M ~1· D-Mall., a . Sea. consider wbo the -other pow- (Nm HelllQjf is a IW1ionGGo.enr~~••••......,
ments -;- •
~ 1 J'ioick Lally, 0-Vt., 111110- erful future nations could be ally rerwwMd authorit y on
Ctw1aeltoeftict1, Ext 12
13 WMica
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Eoooona: tepOltll4 -iron! ~~~'""' billi iD 11mllld - - for years ahead: Olina in rhe First Amerulmt!nt · and
26WNI&lt;a
'114.20
cieportina
....•itl6vidual to
to aid CIA I'Cilditioas. particular. Jf the United the Bill ofRighzs and author
52'l27.11
a state wile«: I.e
~ aJl' but die UUs bave oot lllO¥ed States' cultural and morel of many books, including
r ..... o~.oom
a.' til ...... C. .,
risk of .,..._ or
ill-. ~ • . , . Coo&amp;rcu .lito a resonanoe can be regained,
War on ~ Bill of
'1~:~ twotrilr....~
aujor . . il ibe dc&gt;it'im We: will :be a force f« basic Rrg~ts an&lt;!. tM Gathering
deceocy and humane values ResiStance (Seven Stories
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apiiiQiklmqmw· uu.omcmeol-.,.,....asm during the Continuing war Press, 2004).

•

...

Deaths

Middleport
·from Page At

Ellsel Gibbs

..

Local Briefs

...

POMEROY - The Meigs County TB Clinic and Meigs
County Health Department wiU be open until6 p.m. tonight
for evening setvices.
.

;r

of

- ~

There were no applications this YllM for the educational
McComas-Moore
Scholarship.
.
Alunmi President Myron
Duffield was the emcee.
Diane Van Cooney Lynch,
vice-president, welcomed
the alumni. Rev. Clifford
ColeQlan gave the invocation. All recited the Pledge
of Allegiance.
Kathy McElhinny Mullins,
secretary, and Texanna White ·
Wehrung, treasurer, gave
their respective reports.
The Sundae' Shoppe in
The Plains provided the
meal served by Southern
Band Boosters.
Bob DeLay, Class of 1957,
spoke about two alumni with
high achievements in the U.
S. Navy, Rear Admiral
William W. Outerbridge,
who sunk a Japanese submarine attempting to enter Pearl
Harbor just hours before the
attack on Dec. 7, 1941 , and
Rear Admiral Arthur Clark,
Ret.,
former
Fleet
Maintenance Officer, U.S.
Atlantic Fleet.
Myron Duffield introduced the reunion classes. ·
Entertainment after the dinqer and meeting inc! uded
re- enactment of the Lucky
game, which used to be held
at the old Temple Theater,
now the Riverbend Arts
Council.
Patricia Taylor won a
donated afghan . Numerous
orange and black prizes
donated by alumni were
given as door prizes. The
grand door prize, an afghan,
was won by Diane Stumbo
.
Williams.
Monetary prizes were
won by Elaine Davis Preece,
Lois Smith Rosenbaum,
Donna Featherstone, and
Robert Hennesy.
Table favor~ were provid- ·
ed by the MHS Alumni
Association.
The B ucktown Band, consisting of Duffield, Cale,
Mullins , Lynch, Bob and
Donna Byer, Nancy Miller
Beaver, Virginia Grogan

LETART, W.Va .. - Ethel Louise "Sis" Gibbs 89 of
Letart, W.Va., died June 2, 2008 at Pleasant Valley Hospital .
Her husband, Herbert R. Gibbs, preceded -h er in death .
V;sitation will be from 6-9 pm. on Wednesday at FoglesongThcker Funeral Home in Mason, W.Va. Funeral will be at I
pm. on Thursday,June 5, 2008 at the funeral home.
·
Burial will be at Union Cemetery.

Evening hours

'

Rummage sale ·
· MIDDLEPORT - A rummage sale will be held from 9
a.m. to 3 p.m. on Friday and Saturday at the Heath United
Methodist Church in Middleport. A bake sale will be held
in conjunction with the sale on Friday.

.

..
:TODAY
IN HISTORY
.

United .States shamed ·again in Europe

:.:The .Daily Sentinel·

May

Ohio~~
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"!he

The Daily Sentinel • Page As

www.mydailysentinel.com

....

•..

.

Yard/bake sale
SYRACUSE - The Syracuse Community · Church,
Second Street, will host a yard/bake sale beginning at 9
a.m., Friday and Saturday. All proceeds go to finance local
children going to church camp .

Community yard sale set
RUTLAND - A community yard sale will take place 8
a.m.· 8 p.m .• Friday and 8 a .m. to 6 p.m., Saturday at the
Rutland Civic Center. Concessions will be sold.
A table can be rented for $10 or two tables for $15 for
both days. A varieiy of vendors are invited. Joan May, an
orgaqizer of the event, hopes the word is spread to those in
the local Amish community, inviting them to sell their
goods as well as other artisans wishing to sell crafts, produce, etc. If anyone wishes to donate to the yard sale or has
questions,call742-2121, 742-3172,742-3022.

Boil advisory
POMEROY - Tuppers Plains-Chester Water District
will shut down water service from 9:30 a.m, to 2 p.m. on
Ohio 7 from Chester to Warehouse Road, Warehouse Road,
Baum Additional Road, Lakewood Road, Pomeroy Pike
from Ohio 7 to Epp.Je Road:
.
A boil advisory will be in effect until4 pm. on Friday.

Rutland

Patrolman Randy Smith,
have been oil local patrol for
around 20 to 25 total hours a
fromPageAl
week. Smith has not been
officially hired by council
thereafter to $8 per hour. yet. and is wof19ng in the
Curtis currently is hired as capacity of an auxili31)' offiwater/sewer clerk for 35 cer at this time. Vance said
.hours per week at $7 50 per his frrst official day was last
hour for the first six months · Saturday during the youth
with an increase thereafter league's pardde.
to $8 per hour.
Vance said he hopes to
Vance
also reported increase the officers' hours
Rutland Police Officers, to include 35 to 40 hours of
Chief Steve Williams and local patrols per week.
'

URG
from Page Al
Paul Harrison, who se:ves
as Vice President for
Administrative and Student
.
. ed
Serv1ces,
was appo:nt
Chief Operations Officer
for the university.
Sojka has served at Rio
Grande since 1994 · as
Provost and Vice President
of Academic Affairs until
the
Interim
assuming
Presidency in 2006. His
PhD. in English is from
lndiana University, where
he also earned a Master's
degree. His undergraduate
degree is from SUNY
Fredonia.
Prior to serving at Rio
Grande ,
Sojka
was
Academic Vice President at
Lewis
Clark
State
University in Idaho, Dean
of the University of
Wyoming's Casper College
Upper Division Center in
.Wyoming,
Associate
Professor and Chair of the
American
Studies
Department at Wichita ·State
University in Kansas- He
also taught at · North
Carolina State University
and Bowling Green State
U!Uversity.
·
He is married · to Jane
Sojka, Ph .D ., Associate
Marketing Professor and
Freeman Chair holder at
Ohio University. They have
three daughters.
Hatfield began as a
mathematics professor at
Rio Grande in 1990 and
served as School of Math
ar l Sciences Chair. and
Liberal Arts Dean until
ber
appointment
as
Interim Provost .
Her
Ph.D.
is
from
the
University of Kentucky.
Sbe holds an Ed.S . from
Mississippi
State
University as well as an
M.Ecl. from University of
~ Missi ssippi. Her
undergraduate degree was

Holman, and Wehrung, performed as a comedy group.
Members closed the
meeting with the singing of

the MHS Fight Song and
the MHS Alma Mater.
A dance was held follow ing the dinner .with music
by Gary Ginther, "Frank
and Friends."
Attending were : 1935:
Edison Baker; 1938: Vu-ginia
Pierce Nelson, Swanton;
earned at Mississippi State
1940: Charles Entsminger,
University.
s-outh Charleston , W.Va.;
Hatfield is married to 1942:
Robert
Mitch ,
Steve . Hatfteld, Ph.D.,
.
w"
Barb
Whee Img,
. va.;
ara
retired mathematics profes- HackeU.
Mullen, Pomeroy;
sor at Marshall University. Joe Young, Salesville; 1943:
They have one daughter and Ann Kelly Bailey, guest
in Gary Bailey, Lois Roush
two _gtandchildren
Roanoke, Va.
Thompson began as an Cunningham, guests Paul
Anthropology Pro(essor at and Nancy Cunningham,
Rio Grande in 1981 and Syracuse; Mary Seines
has served as Chair of the M1.tch , Whee1·mg, w."va.;
Glaze Pullins ,
School of Social Sciences Anna
Indianapolis,
Ind., Rowena
before assuming his posi Young,
Salesville.
Warren
tion as Interim Dean . His
1944: Jeanne Anne Young
Ph.D ., in anthropology
Bradbury,
guest Mary Hawk ,
was
earned
at
the
Syracuse;
1946: · Richard
University .of Arizona at
Bailey;
Kathryn
Russell
. Tucson in 1973. His
Master's . also in anthro- Evans, Dorothy Childs
pology was earned in 1969 Gibbs, guest R~h Gibbs.
al tb·e University of New Haven, W. a.; Lou:se
Glaze Radford, Pomeroy; AI
Arirona at Tucson and his Scarberry, guest Emelyn
undergraduate work in
Scarberry, Thunnan, Roy
anthropology was com·
ple.ted at the University o( Evans, Canal Winchester;
New
· Mexico
at 1947: Oara Belle Gilmore
Riley, guest Ted Riley; 1948:
Albuquerque in 1967.
William Russell, ~uest
Thompson is married to Marian Russell , Marietta,
Judithe Thompson who is
Dorothy . Chase . Anthony,
co"director of the Honors
Program at Rio Grande Harry Featherstone, guest
Donna
Featherstone,
with her husband and Wooster. John and Marilyn
teaches a variety of social Fultz, Jim Haggerty, Milton ,
science, anthropology and
Mary I Tholl13l!
W.Va.,
political science courses Maggied, guest Zo Maggied,
as an adjunct professor. Chirleston, W.Va., Lorraine
They have two children. Riggs Neff, Ravenswood,
and are soon to be grand- W.Va., Dorothy Miller
parents .
Roach, Dorothy Duffield
Harrison started at Rio Sampson, guest Marcia lvey,
Grande as Vice Presiden! Sciotoville; Ken. Sauer, guest
of
Institutional Janet Sauer, Sunnyvale ,
Advancement in I 988, Calif.
after retiring from the U.S .
1949:
Kitty
Bachtel
Navy. He holds a B .S. in Dallas, Agoum Hills , Calif.;
mathematic s
from David Diles, guest Kay
University of Louisville
and has served as viCe
president ·for admi~istra·
live and student servtces at
Rio since 1992 .
He and his wife, Jean.liv.e
in Gallipolis . They have two
children and seven grandchildren.
·
"We appreciate this vote
. of confidence by our board.
We _wliJ work b1gether to
contmue to prov:de qualit~
ed~catton to our students,
Sojka srud.

•

Emily Alleman

Haley Davis

Kerry Gibbs

Leslie KHchen

Steven Stewart
Diles, A.~ns, John F.
Dudding, Racine, Hazel
Ginther,
guests
Gary
Ginther, Joyce Mills, Upper
Arlin
y- · · Gro
· gton, lfglll!3
gan
Holman, Robert Mills. guest
Joyce Mills, Pomeroy;
Rosem31)' Fisher Moore,
Columbus; 1950: Grace
Montgomery
Abbott,
Pomeroy, Mary "Poochie"
Gilmore Brewer, Jean Searls

rf

Craig, Naomi Overtu
Durst; guests M31)' Ann
Durst,
Nancy
Ehman,
· bards
Gallipolis, Robert Ric
'
Columbus, Charles Stobart,
Phoenix, Ariz., Raymond
Walburn·, 1951: James Buel_l,

Knightdale, N.C.; Cliff and
Frances Chase Coleman,
Jackson, Roger Dillar_d,
Pomeroy, Myron Duffield,
Don Payne , Dayton, Betty
Ashley
Snow-Rosser,
Athens, Roscoe Wise.
1952 : Carolyn Litchfield,
guest Otis Litchfield, Point
Pleasant , W.Va., Nancy
Miller Heave~, guest Lowell
Beaver, Eleanor Satterfield
Blaettnar. Pomeroy ; June
Seines Duffield, June
Kl
M Smart
.
oes , guest
anmng
Kloes,
Bill
Taylor,
Columbus; 1953: Robert
Byer, guest Donna Byer.
Syracuse. Bill Darst, guest
Mary Ann Darst, . Lima,
Paddy J o Lamben Doolittle,
guests George and
FrankSteve
d
Doolittle, Berea,
an
Shirley Eastep, Dayton.
Lois Smith Rosenbaum ,
·guest Richard Rosenbaum.
Groveland , Calif., Charlene
and
Dick
Stoltenhoff,
Larry
Hertford , N.C.;
Wiley, New Haven, W.Va.,
Marilyn Ebersbach Wolfe,
Racine.
B
1954: Barbara
ow1es
Setzer. Rae · Ann Mills
Gwiazdowsky, Carl Taylor,
guest Pat Taylor, Columbus;
Stanley
and
Barbara
Saunders ; 1955 : Sharon
Riley Ashley, Ron Fultz,
Westerville, Sheila Stover
Hubbard, Lancaster, Brady
Huffman , lri.s VanCooney
Stanley, Franklin; .1956:
Jerome Beach, Columbus,
Nancy Roller Cale. Ernestine
Asbury McComas, James
Mourning, · guest Carol
Mourning. Diana Chancey
Stobart, Phoenix, Ariz ., John
Vroman , Lakeland, Fla.,
Juanita Hawkins Walker,
guest E. Thomas Walker. J .T.
Stein , Greenwood , lnd.,
Mary Carolyn Miller Wiley,
New Haven, W.Va. , Marlene
Knapp Yeauger, . Canal
Wmcbester.
1957: · James Bowles,

Patti VIning
guests Linda Bowles, Gene · Bill
McCool, Dublin,
and Mary Oiler, Point William Stobart, guest
Pleasant, Stephen Coats, Sondra Stoban, Canal
West Plains, Mo.; Bob Winchester; Mr. and Mrs.
DeLay,
Sugar
Grove, Keith Bowles .
Gordon Guthrie, guest
1962: Darla SChafer Smith,
Linda Myers, Cleveland, guest
Clifford
Smith,
Richard Hovatter, Jane Reynoldsburg,
Texanna
Harris Huffman., Edward White Wehrung, guest Craig
Kitchen,
guest
Janet Wehrung; 1963: Carolyn
Kitchen , Gallipolis Ferry, Russell Collins, guest Ri~;k
W.Va., Edward McComas , Collins , Pomeroy, Janet
Las Vegas, Nev., Barbara Baker Downie , Pomeroy,
Capteina Mora, guest Don Jeanne
Bowles Gross ,
Mora, Pomeroy,
Gahanna, Charlotte Davidson
1958: Phyllis Stanley Hanning. . Pomeroy. Rich
Baker, Kay Darst Barnett, Hays, London, Arland King ,
· gton, N .c., ·sandra Pomeroy, Sarah Bechtle
W1-1mm
Fultz Brown, Gene Crooks, Klontz, Lancaster.
. guest
Nancy
Crooks,
1964: Ellen Dutton KieQI,
Annapolis, Md., Mike Saratoga Springs, N.Y.; Jm!y
Erwin, guest Judy Erwin, Wildermuth Allensworth_,
Marilyn
A orence, S .C ., Dale L1'ttle, Reynoldsburg,
S
A d
R
guest Jennie Little, Pomeroy,
wan
n erson ,
on
Roy Long, Pomeroy, Ronald Hanning, Pomeroy, Cinda
Miller, Carol Blaker Oiler, Sauer Harris, Darryl StumbO,
Stockport, Vera Covert Lehigh, Fla.; 1965: David
Rundle, guest Michael Casci, Martha Fowler King,
Rundle. Columbus, Warren Pomeroy, Diane VanCooney
Stover, guest Vivian Stover. Lynch , Many Nicholsoi\.
Nashville , Tenn. . Alan
Lancaster, Judy VanCooney Wallace, Canal Winchester,
Stuber, Greenfteld, Ind ., Judy Moore Webb, guest
Fredrick and June Edwards Dan Webb, Lancaster, Judy
Thomas, Cheshire, Jeanette Kerns Well , guest Lan:y
.Crooks Thomas, guest Dan Well. Shade , Christine Bahr
Thomas, Charlotte Lightfoot Williams, Gallipolis.
.
VanMeter, Pomeroy; Milton
1967 :
Alberta
Lil!l~
Wayland,
guest
Dave Endicott, Point Pleasa:Jt,
Winefordner, Big Prairie , W.Va ., Mike and Debra
James Wilson, guest Jean Gerlach , Marilyn Stumbo
Wilson. Sandus~y. B~ara Meier. Kathy McElhinny
Forrest Hysell. Cmcmnaii . . Mullins, guest Randall
1959: Edward Crooks, Mullins; 1968: Carol King
Janet Stoban Jordan, guest Brewer, - guest · Darrell
Pete Jordan, Evans, W.V~.. Brewer; Debra King Finlaw,
Herschel ~napp, Sabma ; guest Steve Finlaw, Pomeroy,
1960: Erm~ Hall, Lynn Candace Bahr Pope. Bidwell,
Buchanan Kitchen, Mason, and William Swan.
W.Va., Olivia
Bowles
Lockett , Shaker Heights ,
UHA .. D
Pete Werner, Germany,
Diana Stumbo Williams,
Lehigh. Fla.; 1961 : Tom
SIIOWT1IIES FOR TUES. 6IOMI8
Anderson, gues? Steve SDA!Ill
.
Skipp, Judy Sauer Crooks, nt: crrr• ,.,
~.,.a
l1IE STIIANGEIIS' ,. , Ul, ltl, 121.
11IE VISITOI' iPC-lll
4S . . tl5.
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•

�'

Tuesday, June 3, 2008

.....·
~The
••

.•
' .•
'•.•
•

PageA4

OPINION

Daily Sentinel

Tue~~June3,2008

•

••

The Daily Sentinel

'Assassination'flap is the latest media.'Aha!' moment

"assassination." But he was exploitation of racial differThis ought to be the laSt
clobbered
for it. The conse- ences - her reference to
word
on
the
flap
over
Sen.
111 Court Sb..t • POIMioy, Ohio
.
quence - maybe it would "hardworking white workHill31)' Rodham Clinton's,
(740) 992-2158 • FAX (740J 992-2157 .
ers," his comparing Obama
have happened anyway D-N.Y., use of the word
·
-.mydallyMntiMI.com ·
was the nominallon (and to. Jesse Jackson -justify
"assaSsination": ridiculous!
.
election)
of Richard Nixon. their reputation · for ruth·
Or,
if
two
words
are
nec'
Molton
Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
"Aha!"· moment lessness.
'
Another
esS31)', how about: Enough
Kl;lndladce
Obama,
too,
has
been
sinoccurred in 1972. Sen.
already!
.
••
Edmund · Muskie was the gJed oilt for "Aha!" treatClinton is being hamDan Goodrich
•
front-runner
for
the ment, as in his reference to
not
for
anything
she
mered
Publisher
"bitter" rurall&gt;ennsylvanians
Democratic
nomination
until
actually did or said - or
even meant - but because the frenzy to the conslal,lt the infamous "crying inci- and his wife's assertion that
'"'
Charlene Hoeflich
;:!
the media and her political feeding demands of the 24f7 dent" in New Hampshire, she'd never been "proud" of
General
Manager-News
Editor
critics
want to diminish news cycle, but this is far . after which he. was deemed America until he began win~
:.::
emotionally unfit for the Ding primaries.
what little chance she has from the whole story.
White House by a media that · Obama arguably would be
left to win the -De~ratic
Clinton
had
cited
.........
.
favored his militantly anti- inore susceptible to "Aha!"
presidential nomination.
Kc~y's death as a June
~~ Congres~ shall make no law rupecting an
Cli,nton has given volj:rs. marker - and used the "a" Vietnam War rival, Sen. moments than Clinton
because he's so much less
plenty of legitimate reasons word - on several previous George McGovern.
est4blishment of religion, or prohibiting the
known
and embarrassing ·
Muskie claimed to his
doubt whetller she ought ~ions. She did so in an
Sfru exercise thereof; or abridging the freedom _ to
to be president, but talking interview with Time .in dying day that be hadn't statements might be taken
~'i of speech, or of the press; or the right
the
about the assassination of March and in a Washington, cried - but was brushing ·to reveal n:IOre that's new
snowflakes - as be about his _character.
:dPeople peaceably to assemble, and to petition Sen. Robert F. Kennedy D.C., s~h earlier this away
the Manchester
denounced
Yet it's Clinton who has
isn't one of them.
month w1th lots of journalists
~ the Government for a rulress ofgriwancu.
It's as clear. as day what present. No one cared to Union-Leader's attacks on received the · big "Aha!"
·'Clinton was talking aboutto make a big deal out of it then. his wife. McGovern got with . the "assassination"
- The Firat Amendment to the u.s. Conatltutlon the · Sioux
Falls-Argus
But suddenly, the media nominated - ·and went on flap, and it's hard not to
conclude that Obama's
Leader editorial board. last week seemed to be in to lose 49 states to Nixon.
Another victim of "Aha!" media claque wants her not
Look at the videotape. Her need of an "Aha!" moment,
emphasis was all on the when it collectively obsess- journalism was Vermont to do further damage to its
..
word "June" - not "assas- es on some action, state· Gov. Howard Dean, whose chosen candidate's chances
:: Today is Tuesday, June 3, the !55th day of 2008. There sination" - ·and she clearly ment or incident ·t o !lemol- "scream" .at .a post-Iowa of winning the election.
Every time she beats
was citing some history to ish a disfavored candidate caucus rally in 2004 seemed
ire 211 ditys left in the year.
·
Obama
by double digits in a
to
justify
media
Judgments
: Today's Highlight in History: Two hundred years ago, on JUstify ~r stayin~ in the with exaggerated attention.
primary,
every time exit polls
:J)ne 3, 1808, Jefferson Davis, the ftrst and oruy president Democrattc race mto next
I've seen it happen before. that he was too flighty to be
show that white working;m the Confederate States of America, was born in Christian month.
In the ftrst presidential cam- a serious candidate ..
class or Hispanic voters are
.
The
"screain"
sot~nded
Yet
·
the
media
went
:QJ.inty, Ky.
.
paign I ever covered - the
reluctant to vote for him and
crazed
on
television,
whose
• ·On this date: In 1621, the Dutch West lndi;t Comfany berserk because she men- 1968 race, long before the
;mcei ved its charter for a trade monopoly in parts o the tioned Kennedy's assassina- 2417 era - the ruling lions microphones picked up every tiine she comes nearer
tion in recalling the June 4 of print political journalism Dean's voice clearly. . But · to winning the Democratic
:Americas and Africa.
:In 1888, the poem ~·casey at the Bat," by Ernest California primary in 1968. decided arrogantly that reporters at his rally said he popular vote, the more doubt
tawrence Thayer, was frrst published, in the San Francisco And some can't let it go Michigan Gov. · George was shouting because he there is that he can beat Sen.
.6aily Examiner. .
even yet.
Romney was not smart couldn't be heard in the hall . John McCain, R"Ariz.
So, on Friday, the media
You
can't
say
that
In 1935, the French liner Normandie set a record on its
Clinton was accused of enough to be president.
super-hyped
her use of the
damNixon/McGovem-level
maiden voyage, arriving in New York after crossing the "breaking a taboo," of comWhen he went to Vietnam
word
"assassination."
It got
age
was
doneDean
wasn't
Atlantic in just four days.
·
mitting a "huge gaffe," of on an inspection tour .in 1967
· · In 1948, the 200-inch reflecting Hale Telescope at the "going beyond the pale," of and accused generals there going to win. anyway - but front-page treatment in
Palomar Mountain Obsetvatory in California was dedicated. revealing secret, · uncon- of trying to "brainwash" he was disqualified on false nearly every newspaper on
'In 1963, Pope John XXIU died at age 81; he was suc- scious death wishes for Sen. him, it was his "Aha!" pretenses.
Saturday and was Topic A
~ed by Pope Paul VI.
There are plenty of legiti- on the Sunday talk shows.
Barack Obama, D-IU., even moment The press and his.
··'In 1965; astronaut Edward White became the fust of inciting nut cases.
adversaries had all the evi- mate flaws in Clinton and her MSNBC, the Obama news
·American to "wal.k" in space, during the 'flight (){_Gemini 4.
Some commentators dence they needed ·that he CJ?IIdidacy - some of them channel, kept the story
- · In 1968,' pop artist Andy Warhol was shot and critically demanded she apologize to wasn't up to the presidency revealed in other "Aha!" going even into Thesday.
:wounded in his New ·York ftlm studio, known as . ''The Obama, even though she and hi~ candidacy collapsed. moments this year. Making Enough already!
Factory," by Valerie Solanas, an actress and self-styled mil- . never mentioned him or
(Morton Kondracke is
There was as little wrong up stories about dodging gunifant feminist.
alluded.to him in any way.
with what Romney said ftre in Bosnia does reiilfooce executive editor of Roll
·In 1989, Iran's spiritual leader, Ayatollah Ruhollah
Call, the newspaper of
What's going on here7 about "brainwashing" as doubts about her honesty.
Khomeini, died.
Her and her husband's Capitol Hill.)
Various analysts attributed what Clinton said about
Ten years ago: President Clinton urged Congress to
:renew normal tiade benefits fo,r China, saying good rela·tions with Beijin~ were crucial amid fears of a nuclear arms
IJice in South Asm. A high-speed train derailed in Escbede,
Germany, killing 101 people.
·
IT'S A
YV£S5AINT
Five years ago: World leaders closed out a summit in
~UREt.IT.
Evian, France, by pledging to rebuild Iraq and combat the
threat of nuclear weapons in Iran and North Korea. Arab
·leaders pledged to renounce terror and help end violence
'against Israel, standing in solidarity with President Bush at
·a ·sunimit in Egypt. Sammy Sosa, was ejected in the frrst
·ibning of Chicago's 3-2 win over the Tampa Bay Devil
- ~ys after umpires found cork in bis shattered bat ·
·
• One year ago: After attending the MTV Movie .Awards,
Paris Hilton reported to jail to serve a 45-day sentence for
ti probation violation in an alcohol-related reckless driving
ease.·(Hilton was released after three days behind bars for
"an unspecified medical condition, but a Los Angeles
County judge ordered her back to jail.)
-:· Today's Birthdays: Actor Tony Curtis is 83. TV prodUOO'
~uck Bams is 79. Actress Irma P. Hall is 73. Author Larry
'l'~cMurtry is 72. R...9Ck ~i!lger Ian Hunter (Mott 1be Hoople)
;s· 69. Rock musician Richard Moore· is 59. Singer Deoeice
Williams is 57. Rock musician Billy PoweU (Lynyrd
'Skynyrd) is 56. Singer Dan Hill is 54. Actor Scott Valentine
iii 50. Rock musician Kerry King (Slayer) is 44. CNN host
for civilization.
many parts of the world.
On · May 15, 25 ClA
'Anderson Cooper is 41. Country singer Jamie 0' Neal is 40.
During
their
ca?llp!ligns,
I
"Americans," Atran conagents and one U.S. Me
-Actress-singer l.alaine (wLizzie McGuire'') is 21.
·
have
not
heard
from
'
B
arack
tinued, "sense that this is a •
• Thought for Today: "Never be haughty to the bumble; Foroe colonel went on trial
Obama, .John McCain or fateful election for our
'never be humble to the haughty." - Jefferson Davis, in Milan, Italy, on charges
Hill31)' Clinton on whether Republic; they may not
they kidnapped Italian resi;Confederate president ( 1808· 1889 ).
·
they will, if elected, act to realize how important it is
dent Hassan Mustafa Osama
Nat
end this shame of the for the world as a whole."
Nasr and sent him to Egypt,
Heirtoff
United States. (McCain, of
..,
·where
he
was
·
toJJUred,·
The present polls do not
LETTERS TO THE
course, strongly favors indicate this pnority among
including having eleclrodes
"special powers" for the our electorate of the world's
~ to .v.arious llody
EDITOR
CIA.) And if the Democrats stake, let alone our own hispans. This is What the ClA
·I
:·;Leners to the editor are welcome. They shoidd be less calls "an e~;~-~· reo...... ....__,
ly ignore the absolute ban continue to control the next toric human-rights values,
jim 300 words. Allleners are subject to editing, nwst be . ditioo" - flying
telrorism ODtllltUJ'e in Articl.e 3 of die Congress, their congres- in this election. It could
'f¥ned, and include. address and telephone fJIIIIIMr. No
sional leaders Harry help if one of the presiden•unsigned leners will be published. . Leners -shmdd be in snspc'rls to nations lmown European Convention · on Reid and Nancy Pelosi tial candidates were to
good taste. addressing issues, IWt persOfllllit~s. Letters of for to~ prisoneJ:Ii, Human Rights, is ..also have been indifferent to remind voters of bow our
tbanks to organiZJltions and individuals williWt be accept· including pnsoners from unlawful to kidnap peop~e erasing the stain of our values have boen transmo- ·
whom the ClA could not and ttanspon them to otbir
ed for publication.
be)ng a torture nation.
grified since 9/11 by the
extract information.
OOUJllries to be tortured.
In reaction to the .presi- present administration -· as
These opmlliv~ of .o ur
Further lowering world
legendary ClA were caugbt respect for our all-~n dent's veto of the legislation msisted on by Dick Cheney
·8Cidet-N?"ffl. having ICi't a ibameful post~9/ll hUDtaD· that would order the CIA to in an intetview on NBC's
•
clear trail of ceU-pbone. rights record George W . recognize basic human "Meet the Press" on Sept.
8) vetoed a rights, Scott Atran - il 16, 2001:
calls
and bills paid at expen- · Bulih (on
-:-· Reader Services
(USPS 21=~
·~we' ve got to spend time
~iv~ l~ian _hotels. Also ibilJ passed by the House and research scientist at New
York's
John
Jay
College
-;
ConKtionPollcr
Ang
in
the shadows in the intelliindicted m this contemptu- Salate dial required die ClA
' :.ou .
.
. '
....,.,y ..... 11001., ·Mol'ldq
crimi(which
specializes
in
genee world. A lot .o f what
QUS violation of the io 1ldhcte to tbe Army Flcld
.. r mam COIIC8111 In all stones I&amp; to through Frida~, 111 Couf1 snet,
nal
law),
the
University
of
needs to be done here wiD
Conventions
Manual'li
roles
of
in~­
lo.ternatioual
· ·be aocurale. ff you l&lt;oow ol an enor P""*"*'. Ohio.
--.,....
Michigan
and
France's
have
to be done quietly,
Against
"'brture
are
memdon
tblt
forbid
tor111«
·: :!"'a~- Clllllhe newoioom at (7-40) 1101'191 .peld
National
Center
for
witbout any discussion,
~of the Italian ~-1«- .akady a mandate for .U of
992-2156.
,
•
n 1 . The ·ucnuc PraM n
t.()hiotl $ . $ f
WlhNt.
~ ~_, of~~ our odw:r MJDCd aen'Miet. . Scie?itific. Research - made . using sources and methods
, •
• Send -**- CCMNCOur lllllln ..., bet ..
plicit Wt~ die ~ • dlis
As Ai"'n lily ~ the vjtal point in a New YO!t that are available to our
111
Ccurl
lawless
~QI,
said
of . . . p!llhmnng ~spe­ TIJiles letter (March 11) that: intelligence agencies, if
(74111_41_
8bMt, PotiOUj, Ohio 457'11.
The Umte4 States• . of Cial power" for the CIA: "America is currently caught we're going to be successDD.:;.-lt:na•-11•'1 I'IDfW.,.:.
ooutse, refuacs to tmdte "The Bulih .a4ministtation in a battle between the .COm- ful. That's the world these
S&amp;tlti fpMDit ......
... cw ..............
the 26 Amcdl:ana oa 1rial. continues its stubbona and peting metOrics of ... tribal- . folks operate in, ~ so it's
One-"10.21
After all, d1e president m.tiess dilil'egard for basic ISm ... and of humanity. going to be vital for us to
. - . Challene 1 -. Ext 12
o..... "111M repeatedly
aseures tile wOOd decency and vlllues the Given our singular military use any means at our disOlllly
..
· Jhpc ..... Brian-.Ext. 14
that "the United Stiles does Qoited States should model. andcqltural power in today's posal, basically, -to. achieve
I I -" "'· _ , Sefglant, Ext. 13
oot ~." ·' ·
· The president's action fur- world, no less than the future our objecbve."
- - -"11.21'
liunh« diminishing our dtcl' oornpouods :tbe incalcu- of 250 years of human-rights
Is ~ca to· be a model
. , a •....,., ..,.. "......_ rtpalllioe,
rests
on
liow
developmeot
to the world by resembling
kaliwt tml lab&amp;e damage to United
... 17 -DaveHanio, Ext. 15
•
of
aA
iljlaiiS ia beiaJ s.t.ta• studios • ·bome this intema1 Ameticao hatde our enemic;s1 Who will WE
-1D ·h
is resolwd"
,-;
beld afW diie
~~ ~
~
0' - - D I M I. Ext16 eaiptiou q, '"'II pe; S 1 tn be, then7 So this can indeed
111-o--:.: Jvttt Ciotk, Ext. 10
I
lmow
that
may
sound
be a fateful election - and
Feb. 11 flllill , ~ · p · Coapn, . U.S.
EuropeM c..tL ol
.J =&lt; u native
Edward like a form of jingoism, but oot only for our Republic.
'
llicbb. I"' U .,, ..... M ~1· D-Mall., a . Sea. consider wbo the -other pow- (Nm HelllQjf is a IW1ionGGo.enr~~••••......,
ments -;- •
~ 1 J'ioick Lally, 0-Vt., 111110- erful future nations could be ally rerwwMd authorit y on
Ctw1aeltoeftict1, Ext 12
13 WMica
'32.21
Eoooona: tepOltll4 -iron! ~~~'""' billi iD 11mllld - - for years ahead: Olina in rhe First Amerulmt!nt · and
26WNI&lt;a
'114.20
cieportina
....•itl6vidual to
to aid CIA I'Cilditioas. particular. Jf the United the Bill ofRighzs and author
52'l27.11
a state wile«: I.e
~ aJl' but die UUs bave oot lllO¥ed States' cultural and morel of many books, including
r ..... o~.oom
a.' til ...... C. .,
risk of .,..._ or
ill-. ~ • . , . Coo&amp;rcu .lito a resonanoe can be regained,
War on ~ Bill of
'1~:~ twotrilr....~
aujor . . il ibe dc&gt;it'im We: will :be a force f« basic Rrg~ts an&lt;!. tM Gathering
deceocy and humane values ResiStance (Seven Stories
.~..._._-:.61·
Obviolllil)'•.ifitii6Jdlid..
-~m,illltJtaliiiM.c::om
.,.
·~
..... "
A-for
·-~-· · ·ofcu!IIIMI-Midourlaw·
.-...-&amp;
.. _ _.......
'-----~__,,....------------· ~ , ,.,....,.
apiiiQiklmqmw· uu.omcmeol-.,.,....asm during the Continuing war Press, 2004).

•

...

Deaths

Middleport
·from Page At

Ellsel Gibbs

..

Local Briefs

...

POMEROY - The Meigs County TB Clinic and Meigs
County Health Department wiU be open until6 p.m. tonight
for evening setvices.
.

;r

of

- ~

There were no applications this YllM for the educational
McComas-Moore
Scholarship.
.
Alunmi President Myron
Duffield was the emcee.
Diane Van Cooney Lynch,
vice-president, welcomed
the alumni. Rev. Clifford
ColeQlan gave the invocation. All recited the Pledge
of Allegiance.
Kathy McElhinny Mullins,
secretary, and Texanna White ·
Wehrung, treasurer, gave
their respective reports.
The Sundae' Shoppe in
The Plains provided the
meal served by Southern
Band Boosters.
Bob DeLay, Class of 1957,
spoke about two alumni with
high achievements in the U.
S. Navy, Rear Admiral
William W. Outerbridge,
who sunk a Japanese submarine attempting to enter Pearl
Harbor just hours before the
attack on Dec. 7, 1941 , and
Rear Admiral Arthur Clark,
Ret.,
former
Fleet
Maintenance Officer, U.S.
Atlantic Fleet.
Myron Duffield introduced the reunion classes. ·
Entertainment after the dinqer and meeting inc! uded
re- enactment of the Lucky
game, which used to be held
at the old Temple Theater,
now the Riverbend Arts
Council.
Patricia Taylor won a
donated afghan . Numerous
orange and black prizes
donated by alumni were
given as door prizes. The
grand door prize, an afghan,
was won by Diane Stumbo
.
Williams.
Monetary prizes were
won by Elaine Davis Preece,
Lois Smith Rosenbaum,
Donna Featherstone, and
Robert Hennesy.
Table favor~ were provid- ·
ed by the MHS Alumni
Association.
The B ucktown Band, consisting of Duffield, Cale,
Mullins , Lynch, Bob and
Donna Byer, Nancy Miller
Beaver, Virginia Grogan

LETART, W.Va .. - Ethel Louise "Sis" Gibbs 89 of
Letart, W.Va., died June 2, 2008 at Pleasant Valley Hospital .
Her husband, Herbert R. Gibbs, preceded -h er in death .
V;sitation will be from 6-9 pm. on Wednesday at FoglesongThcker Funeral Home in Mason, W.Va. Funeral will be at I
pm. on Thursday,June 5, 2008 at the funeral home.
·
Burial will be at Union Cemetery.

Evening hours

'

Rummage sale ·
· MIDDLEPORT - A rummage sale will be held from 9
a.m. to 3 p.m. on Friday and Saturday at the Heath United
Methodist Church in Middleport. A bake sale will be held
in conjunction with the sale on Friday.

.

..
:TODAY
IN HISTORY
.

United .States shamed ·again in Europe

:.:The .Daily Sentinel·

May

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"!he

The Daily Sentinel • Page As

www.mydailysentinel.com

....

•..

.

Yard/bake sale
SYRACUSE - The Syracuse Community · Church,
Second Street, will host a yard/bake sale beginning at 9
a.m., Friday and Saturday. All proceeds go to finance local
children going to church camp .

Community yard sale set
RUTLAND - A community yard sale will take place 8
a.m.· 8 p.m .• Friday and 8 a .m. to 6 p.m., Saturday at the
Rutland Civic Center. Concessions will be sold.
A table can be rented for $10 or two tables for $15 for
both days. A varieiy of vendors are invited. Joan May, an
orgaqizer of the event, hopes the word is spread to those in
the local Amish community, inviting them to sell their
goods as well as other artisans wishing to sell crafts, produce, etc. If anyone wishes to donate to the yard sale or has
questions,call742-2121, 742-3172,742-3022.

Boil advisory
POMEROY - Tuppers Plains-Chester Water District
will shut down water service from 9:30 a.m, to 2 p.m. on
Ohio 7 from Chester to Warehouse Road, Warehouse Road,
Baum Additional Road, Lakewood Road, Pomeroy Pike
from Ohio 7 to Epp.Je Road:
.
A boil advisory will be in effect until4 pm. on Friday.

Rutland

Patrolman Randy Smith,
have been oil local patrol for
around 20 to 25 total hours a
fromPageAl
week. Smith has not been
officially hired by council
thereafter to $8 per hour. yet. and is wof19ng in the
Curtis currently is hired as capacity of an auxili31)' offiwater/sewer clerk for 35 cer at this time. Vance said
.hours per week at $7 50 per his frrst official day was last
hour for the first six months · Saturday during the youth
with an increase thereafter league's pardde.
to $8 per hour.
Vance said he hopes to
Vance
also reported increase the officers' hours
Rutland Police Officers, to include 35 to 40 hours of
Chief Steve Williams and local patrols per week.
'

URG
from Page Al
Paul Harrison, who se:ves
as Vice President for
Administrative and Student
.
. ed
Serv1ces,
was appo:nt
Chief Operations Officer
for the university.
Sojka has served at Rio
Grande since 1994 · as
Provost and Vice President
of Academic Affairs until
the
Interim
assuming
Presidency in 2006. His
PhD. in English is from
lndiana University, where
he also earned a Master's
degree. His undergraduate
degree is from SUNY
Fredonia.
Prior to serving at Rio
Grande ,
Sojka
was
Academic Vice President at
Lewis
Clark
State
University in Idaho, Dean
of the University of
Wyoming's Casper College
Upper Division Center in
.Wyoming,
Associate
Professor and Chair of the
American
Studies
Department at Wichita ·State
University in Kansas- He
also taught at · North
Carolina State University
and Bowling Green State
U!Uversity.
·
He is married · to Jane
Sojka, Ph .D ., Associate
Marketing Professor and
Freeman Chair holder at
Ohio University. They have
three daughters.
Hatfield began as a
mathematics professor at
Rio Grande in 1990 and
served as School of Math
ar l Sciences Chair. and
Liberal Arts Dean until
ber
appointment
as
Interim Provost .
Her
Ph.D.
is
from
the
University of Kentucky.
Sbe holds an Ed.S . from
Mississippi
State
University as well as an
M.Ecl. from University of
~ Missi ssippi. Her
undergraduate degree was

Holman, and Wehrung, performed as a comedy group.
Members closed the
meeting with the singing of

the MHS Fight Song and
the MHS Alma Mater.
A dance was held follow ing the dinner .with music
by Gary Ginther, "Frank
and Friends."
Attending were : 1935:
Edison Baker; 1938: Vu-ginia
Pierce Nelson, Swanton;
earned at Mississippi State
1940: Charles Entsminger,
University.
s-outh Charleston , W.Va.;
Hatfield is married to 1942:
Robert
Mitch ,
Steve . Hatfteld, Ph.D.,
.
w"
Barb
Whee Img,
. va.;
ara
retired mathematics profes- HackeU.
Mullen, Pomeroy;
sor at Marshall University. Joe Young, Salesville; 1943:
They have one daughter and Ann Kelly Bailey, guest
in Gary Bailey, Lois Roush
two _gtandchildren
Roanoke, Va.
Thompson began as an Cunningham, guests Paul
Anthropology Pro(essor at and Nancy Cunningham,
Rio Grande in 1981 and Syracuse; Mary Seines
has served as Chair of the M1.tch , Whee1·mg, w."va.;
Glaze Pullins ,
School of Social Sciences Anna
Indianapolis,
Ind., Rowena
before assuming his posi Young,
Salesville.
Warren
tion as Interim Dean . His
1944: Jeanne Anne Young
Ph.D ., in anthropology
Bradbury,
guest Mary Hawk ,
was
earned
at
the
Syracuse;
1946: · Richard
University .of Arizona at
Bailey;
Kathryn
Russell
. Tucson in 1973. His
Master's . also in anthro- Evans, Dorothy Childs
pology was earned in 1969 Gibbs, guest R~h Gibbs.
al tb·e University of New Haven, W. a.; Lou:se
Glaze Radford, Pomeroy; AI
Arirona at Tucson and his Scarberry, guest Emelyn
undergraduate work in
Scarberry, Thunnan, Roy
anthropology was com·
ple.ted at the University o( Evans, Canal Winchester;
New
· Mexico
at 1947: Oara Belle Gilmore
Riley, guest Ted Riley; 1948:
Albuquerque in 1967.
William Russell, ~uest
Thompson is married to Marian Russell , Marietta,
Judithe Thompson who is
Dorothy . Chase . Anthony,
co"director of the Honors
Program at Rio Grande Harry Featherstone, guest
Donna
Featherstone,
with her husband and Wooster. John and Marilyn
teaches a variety of social Fultz, Jim Haggerty, Milton ,
science, anthropology and
Mary I Tholl13l!
W.Va.,
political science courses Maggied, guest Zo Maggied,
as an adjunct professor. Chirleston, W.Va., Lorraine
They have two children. Riggs Neff, Ravenswood,
and are soon to be grand- W.Va., Dorothy Miller
parents .
Roach, Dorothy Duffield
Harrison started at Rio Sampson, guest Marcia lvey,
Grande as Vice Presiden! Sciotoville; Ken. Sauer, guest
of
Institutional Janet Sauer, Sunnyvale ,
Advancement in I 988, Calif.
after retiring from the U.S .
1949:
Kitty
Bachtel
Navy. He holds a B .S. in Dallas, Agoum Hills , Calif.;
mathematic s
from David Diles, guest Kay
University of Louisville
and has served as viCe
president ·for admi~istra·
live and student servtces at
Rio since 1992 .
He and his wife, Jean.liv.e
in Gallipolis . They have two
children and seven grandchildren.
·
"We appreciate this vote
. of confidence by our board.
We _wliJ work b1gether to
contmue to prov:de qualit~
ed~catton to our students,
Sojka srud.

•

Emily Alleman

Haley Davis

Kerry Gibbs

Leslie KHchen

Steven Stewart
Diles, A.~ns, John F.
Dudding, Racine, Hazel
Ginther,
guests
Gary
Ginther, Joyce Mills, Upper
Arlin
y- · · Gro
· gton, lfglll!3
gan
Holman, Robert Mills. guest
Joyce Mills, Pomeroy;
Rosem31)' Fisher Moore,
Columbus; 1950: Grace
Montgomery
Abbott,
Pomeroy, Mary "Poochie"
Gilmore Brewer, Jean Searls

rf

Craig, Naomi Overtu
Durst; guests M31)' Ann
Durst,
Nancy
Ehman,
· bards
Gallipolis, Robert Ric
'
Columbus, Charles Stobart,
Phoenix, Ariz., Raymond
Walburn·, 1951: James Buel_l,

Knightdale, N.C.; Cliff and
Frances Chase Coleman,
Jackson, Roger Dillar_d,
Pomeroy, Myron Duffield,
Don Payne , Dayton, Betty
Ashley
Snow-Rosser,
Athens, Roscoe Wise.
1952 : Carolyn Litchfield,
guest Otis Litchfield, Point
Pleasant , W.Va., Nancy
Miller Heave~, guest Lowell
Beaver, Eleanor Satterfield
Blaettnar. Pomeroy ; June
Seines Duffield, June
Kl
M Smart
.
oes , guest
anmng
Kloes,
Bill
Taylor,
Columbus; 1953: Robert
Byer, guest Donna Byer.
Syracuse. Bill Darst, guest
Mary Ann Darst, . Lima,
Paddy J o Lamben Doolittle,
guests George and
FrankSteve
d
Doolittle, Berea,
an
Shirley Eastep, Dayton.
Lois Smith Rosenbaum ,
·guest Richard Rosenbaum.
Groveland , Calif., Charlene
and
Dick
Stoltenhoff,
Larry
Hertford , N.C.;
Wiley, New Haven, W.Va.,
Marilyn Ebersbach Wolfe,
Racine.
B
1954: Barbara
ow1es
Setzer. Rae · Ann Mills
Gwiazdowsky, Carl Taylor,
guest Pat Taylor, Columbus;
Stanley
and
Barbara
Saunders ; 1955 : Sharon
Riley Ashley, Ron Fultz,
Westerville, Sheila Stover
Hubbard, Lancaster, Brady
Huffman , lri.s VanCooney
Stanley, Franklin; .1956:
Jerome Beach, Columbus,
Nancy Roller Cale. Ernestine
Asbury McComas, James
Mourning, · guest Carol
Mourning. Diana Chancey
Stobart, Phoenix, Ariz ., John
Vroman , Lakeland, Fla.,
Juanita Hawkins Walker,
guest E. Thomas Walker. J .T.
Stein , Greenwood , lnd.,
Mary Carolyn Miller Wiley,
New Haven, W.Va. , Marlene
Knapp Yeauger, . Canal
Wmcbester.
1957: · James Bowles,

Patti VIning
guests Linda Bowles, Gene · Bill
McCool, Dublin,
and Mary Oiler, Point William Stobart, guest
Pleasant, Stephen Coats, Sondra Stoban, Canal
West Plains, Mo.; Bob Winchester; Mr. and Mrs.
DeLay,
Sugar
Grove, Keith Bowles .
Gordon Guthrie, guest
1962: Darla SChafer Smith,
Linda Myers, Cleveland, guest
Clifford
Smith,
Richard Hovatter, Jane Reynoldsburg,
Texanna
Harris Huffman., Edward White Wehrung, guest Craig
Kitchen,
guest
Janet Wehrung; 1963: Carolyn
Kitchen , Gallipolis Ferry, Russell Collins, guest Ri~;k
W.Va., Edward McComas , Collins , Pomeroy, Janet
Las Vegas, Nev., Barbara Baker Downie , Pomeroy,
Capteina Mora, guest Don Jeanne
Bowles Gross ,
Mora, Pomeroy,
Gahanna, Charlotte Davidson
1958: Phyllis Stanley Hanning. . Pomeroy. Rich
Baker, Kay Darst Barnett, Hays, London, Arland King ,
· gton, N .c., ·sandra Pomeroy, Sarah Bechtle
W1-1mm
Fultz Brown, Gene Crooks, Klontz, Lancaster.
. guest
Nancy
Crooks,
1964: Ellen Dutton KieQI,
Annapolis, Md., Mike Saratoga Springs, N.Y.; Jm!y
Erwin, guest Judy Erwin, Wildermuth Allensworth_,
Marilyn
A orence, S .C ., Dale L1'ttle, Reynoldsburg,
S
A d
R
guest Jennie Little, Pomeroy,
wan
n erson ,
on
Roy Long, Pomeroy, Ronald Hanning, Pomeroy, Cinda
Miller, Carol Blaker Oiler, Sauer Harris, Darryl StumbO,
Stockport, Vera Covert Lehigh, Fla.; 1965: David
Rundle, guest Michael Casci, Martha Fowler King,
Rundle. Columbus, Warren Pomeroy, Diane VanCooney
Stover, guest Vivian Stover. Lynch , Many Nicholsoi\.
Nashville , Tenn. . Alan
Lancaster, Judy VanCooney Wallace, Canal Winchester,
Stuber, Greenfteld, Ind ., Judy Moore Webb, guest
Fredrick and June Edwards Dan Webb, Lancaster, Judy
Thomas, Cheshire, Jeanette Kerns Well , guest Lan:y
.Crooks Thomas, guest Dan Well. Shade , Christine Bahr
Thomas, Charlotte Lightfoot Williams, Gallipolis.
.
VanMeter, Pomeroy; Milton
1967 :
Alberta
Lil!l~
Wayland,
guest
Dave Endicott, Point Pleasa:Jt,
Winefordner, Big Prairie , W.Va ., Mike and Debra
James Wilson, guest Jean Gerlach , Marilyn Stumbo
Wilson. Sandus~y. B~ara Meier. Kathy McElhinny
Forrest Hysell. Cmcmnaii . . Mullins, guest Randall
1959: Edward Crooks, Mullins; 1968: Carol King
Janet Stoban Jordan, guest Brewer, - guest · Darrell
Pete Jordan, Evans, W.V~.. Brewer; Debra King Finlaw,
Herschel ~napp, Sabma ; guest Steve Finlaw, Pomeroy,
1960: Erm~ Hall, Lynn Candace Bahr Pope. Bidwell,
Buchanan Kitchen, Mason, and William Swan.
W.Va., Olivia
Bowles
Lockett , Shaker Heights ,
UHA .. D
Pete Werner, Germany,
Diana Stumbo Williams,
Lehigh. Fla.; 1961 : Tom
SIIOWT1IIES FOR TUES. 6IOMI8
Anderson, gues? Steve SDA!Ill
.
Skipp, Judy Sauer Crooks, nt: crrr• ,.,
~.,.a
l1IE STIIANGEIIS' ,. , Ul, ltl, 121.
11IE VISITOI' iPC-lll
4S . . tl5.
AlexaVenoy

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.PageA6

OHIO

The Daily Sentinel

Tuesday, June 3, 2008

.inside
Pmg

I

•

farce

Bl

· The Daily Sentinel

Meigs I1Jall'cl seuen, ... 82

Glme" ..... 82

Slllti lfiiO'• _.... at Ftmdl, . . . 86
BY THE ASSOC'ATED PREss

T

poverty. 'There are many

of Jess than $25,000 a year,

''

more people living paycheck the Slones teeter just above·

he high cost 9f food .to paycheck. B)' the grace of
and gasoline and loss God, many of us are two pay
of jobs in Ohio is hit- checks away from bemg
ting suburbafl families hard. . homeless or hungry."
forcing more to turn to food
The Salvation Army also
itlimps and 'other assistance has seen an increase· in the
to help pay their bills.
number of families who get
Officials
with
the emergency assfstance in serSjl!vation Army of Greater vice units that cover tradiCieveland have seen signif- tionally higher illeome areas
icant increases in the use of such as Brecksville. North
the agency's food, utility- . Royalton, Solon, Chagrin
assistance and · other pro- Falls and Strongsville.
grams by fJJ'St-lime users
In suburban Columbus.
who have lost jobs or expe-· the Slone family is not livrienced foreclosures.
ing in poverty by government standards.
The issues are similar at
But Ken Slone and his
the agency's downtown and wifi n .....:
suburban locations, said
e, """"e, and their chiiPhilip Mason, director of . drenUndsey, 4,andRyan. 7·
4evelopment
for
the live on an inoomc so low they
,"alvation Army of Greater must rely on food pantries,
"
thrift stores and government. aeveland.
subsiclillld health care.
In 2006, the Salvation
The Slones live in the
Army served 52,000 people Westerville school district.
in Cleveland and its sub- The solid suburban trapurbs. In 2007. the agency pings of the area sometimes
helped 78,300 people, and clash with the reality of
the numbers continue to rise their budget.
this year.
"It's very bumbling," said
. "There is a myth that Ruthie Slone, 35, a college
there is no poverty in the ltl'3duate who lost her marsuburbs," Mason said. keling job foor years ago. "I
1bat is not true any longer. never thought I would be in
. "Unfortunately,
we've this situation."
~fined the defmition of
With a hoosehold inconie

the federal poverty line of
$-21 ,200 for a famiry of four.
They are frugal and carry
little debt but still struggle
to be self-sufficient, the
Slones said.
·
Columbus doesn't have the
bombed-out look of some
Rust Belt cities. The large
number 'of people ~oyed
by state government and,
Ohio State University has
traditionally sheltered ~
city and its suburbs frpm
economic
downturns,
altbougb less !iO recently.
About one in 10 students
· in the Dublin schOOl district,
northwest of Columbus,
receive free or ·reducedprice lunches. About ! 3 percent of students in suburban
Worthington are eligible for
tree lunches.
·
"People don't have any
idea there are families living in the Dublin school district living in poverty." said
Evelyn Bebm, a vice president at the Mid-Ohio Food

Bank . . ·

In the Cleveland area,
more families are reaching
out for help through the 2-11/First Call for Help liile, a
referral service to health
and human . services agen'

__.....,... __

• ·

I)

·

·

ASSOCIATED PRESS WAITER

·

·
COLUMBUS (AP) -An Ohio man accused of plotting
terrorist bombings against Americans overseas could have
~aced life in prison.
. .
Instead, a plea agreement offered ChristoP.her Paul
allows for a 20-year prison term, a reduction similar to sentences received by two Ohio acquaintances who have
already plead¢ guilt.Y to terrorism-related charges.
l'aul, 44, a U.S. c1ti,zen who grew up in the Columb~
suburb of Worthington, was to IJe tried in federal court next
year. But he is instead ex~ted to plead guilty Thesday 10
'?ne count of conspiracy to use a weapon o~ mass _desuucbon - specifically bombs - m· terronst attacks, in
exchange for a 20-year prison sentence, documents show.
_The plea agreemell( filed ¥~ il!!ljt;atq.. ~ ~.S.
District Court Judge Gregory Frost must silfl approve the
deal. The ~greement notes both Paul and the government
have the nght to withdraw fr; t111M ~doesn't accept the 20-year sentence recomniendation.
. The U.S. Attorney's Office declined to commen~. Paul's
l!tlomey, Jim Gilbert, said the documents speak for themselves.
An indictment filed in April 2007 alleged that Paul trave~ to Pakistan and Afghanistan beginning in 1990 to meet
members of al-Qaida and to attend terrorist training camps
· with a goal of carryinjl out holy war attacks.
·. The gbvemment wd Paul was so devoted to the cause
that he told an al-Qaida member he was angry the ,group
would ever consider scaling back inilitary operations. Paul
said he was committed to such operations even if others
were D?t•. according_ to the government's indictment.
Paul JOmed al-Qlllda and traveled to Germany in 1999 to
train co-conspirators to use explosives 10 attack European
andU.S.targets,theindictmentsaid. He'saccusedofplotling to bomb government buildings overseas and European
vacation spots frequented by American tourists.
The mdictment does not name specific ~sorts or build~
ings that might have been targeted, bul · gives , U.S .
embassies, military bases and consular premises as exampies.
.
Paul's alleged terrorist ties have long surprised fonner
classmates. who knew him better as a middle school
·wrestler who turned 10 gymnastics at his high school in
Worthington, a quaint old suburb on the north side of
Columbus.
·
.The Justice Department has accused Paul and two other
men of ai,scussing terrorist attacks during an August 2002
.
meeting at a coffee shop in suburban Columbus.
One of the men, lyman Faris, a U.S. citizen originally
from Pakistan, pleadrd guilly in May 2003 to providing
~aterial support for terrorism.·Faris was convicted of plothog to destroy the Brooldyn Bridge and sentenced to 20
' years in prison in an agreement negotiated down from 30
years.
. The other man, Somali immigrant Nuradin Abdi~
guilty in July to one charge of coospirinJ:rv~llllllt;
!,'i_al support to terrorists. He had been
ed with piaunmg to bomb an unspecified Columbus-area shopping
mall, an attack that never occurred, and faced up to 80
years in prison.
. .
·
Re.is serving a 10-year sentence after which he will be
~eported to Somalia. Abdi wu originally offered an even
lighter sentence that would have meant almost no time
behind barS beyGnd what he had already served.

Ohio schools wo~
about top !Ugh sdtooi
grads leavmg·s tate
CINCINNATI (AP) - Ohio educators say more of this
rear's class of hip-achieving high school seniors are head, to colleges llld universilles out of state.
ellcrson Blaetbum-Smilh of Ohio State's undergraduate
lJ(In$sions offioe llllys all the state's public colleges are
worried . . the tren1t
.
Figures for the last decade show that Ohio's colleges and
universities bave attracted about 84 peroent of the state's
college-bound seniors. The National Center for HiJdlec
Educatioo Management Systems says that ranks OhiO :J7th
in the natipn.
.
Eric F.~pgemut, chancellor of the Ohio Board of Regents,
~ys one of Gov. Ted StricldaJid's top priorities is to ktlep
Ohio's top shllieaMs in the state . .
.
-. Strickland bu pusbed to freeze tuition at Ohio's ;PUblic
.cOIJep, whicb ve among the natioi!'s most expensive.
I

BY JOHN McCARTHY

.

l

Ci - A lldledl.6l ol I

.....

-

•...., -""'! -

-

I

----'m'

. OHSAA
Choo, ........ T1IA
.

.

(IHSM Chool....... T1IA

2nd annual Southern
"iiusdin' Tornado''
AP photo

Ken Slone and his wile Ruthie play with their four-year-old daughter Lindsey, May 30 in
Columbus. The high cost of food and gasoline and loss of jobs in Ohio is hitting suburban
families hard, forcing more to tum to food stamps and other assistance to help pay their
bills. Slone and his family live on an income so low they must rely on food pantries, thrift
stores and government-subsidized health care. .
·
cies in Cuyahoga, Medina
and Geauga counties.
In 2007, the riumber .of
pantr:y · reque~ts
food
· mcreased by 35 percent, util- .
ity bill payment requests by
41 percent and rent payment
requests by 24 percent, said
Stephen Wertheim, director

of 2-1-1 Call For Help.
resources have been cut. In
In addition, the number of December, Medina Coonty
residents in Medina County lost some state aid and had
w~~ jlOt cash assistance for to reduce the total amount
uuhues, shelter and gas of annual cash assistance to
more than doubled between help the working poor pay
2006 and 2007 , Mason said. for utilities, shelter or car
While the number of peo· repairs from $1,500 to $750
pie in need steadily rises. per family, Mason said.
.'

Republicans, realize the
hole in the budget and have .
not moved either of the bills

..

.

...

·

in
the
.....
Le~islature to Gov. Ted Adams,
a
Sidney
KENO COMiNG: Majpri~ Republicans on the state
Stockland's idea to bring a Republican who introduced
~rd that govems sP.e'idill{J outside the budget indiKeno lottery game to Ohio's one ·of the bills, knows he
i:ated they Wouldn't Oj:lpoS&amp;'l! contract to fund Ohio's
bars and restaurants has all doesn't have the clout get
new Keno game.
:.·:-but evaporated.
his bill 10 budge. Only two
···· ;· ·
The state Controlling legislative sessions _ on
THE SWITCH: The ~blicans blocked the funding in
Board, made up of six June 1O-Il
remain
March, saying the idea needed public hearings first.
lawmakers
and
a before lawmakers leave for
Strickland representative, the summer.
ANY OPPOSITION? Anti-gamblinggroupslearcasinos
on Monday again delayed
. "I'm optimistic but I'm
might not be far -behind; but Gov. Ted Strickland sliD
approval of a contract to also pragmatic," Adams
opposes fuH·blown
and the state keeps the
o~rate the game. But it said Monday.
$73 million a year Keno
to
d1d so only because the
contract's current holder is
as~~ th~, Ohio Lottery
.. .
~ ·:....:.. ....... ~·
"Cofi'lmlsS'ion ·to reconsllU:r
its decision to change ven,~·. 1 ~!&gt;"'
,
.
·"In Mlii'Cn, the same panel
delayed the vole because
they wanted public hearings
on the bill. Then, two lawThank You Tribute ...
~ers introduced legislallon that would have kept
Keno 011t of Ohio. Each got
To Be PubUshed In The SUnday Times- Sentinel
one hearing only. ·
June 15th!
Strickland says the game
and the $73 million he
expects in revenues the frrst
year are neoessary to help
~lug an estimated $733 mil- lion budget hole.
·
Controlling lioard mem·
ber Rep. Jay Hottinger. a
Ne'Yark Reyublican and
c~arrman o . the H_ouse
FIDaDce CoiDIDittee; saJ.d he
likely wooldn't ob~ once
the contract issue ts cleared
up. ln March, Hottinger had
called the ideil a short-term
fix that would create more
problems than it would
solve because it would burt
the poor.
Lottery Director Michael
DQiau said the game should
start on schedule. The delay
only affects the testing
schedule for the new con~tO!', he said.
,
It JUSt means we U have
to w01k harder and longer at
the lottery," Dolan said.
Keno is a bin~o-like game
where the · wJDDings are
based on bow many correct
numbers ~ player .chooses .
~yers will use vtdeo teemmals ~nnected t? the
game onlme. It w~ be
~ every four mmutes
to terminals m bars, restau£ants and other adult
venues.
The contract before lhe
Controlling .Board, which
will be awarded to Atlanta-.
based lntralot Inc., is worth
$164 million over I0 years
Circle One: A. 1X3 Gnltlag ...$12.00 B: 1X5 Greeting with Plcture...$15.,
beginning July I, 2009.
Providence,
R.l.-based
Flllher'sNM!e'- - : - - - - - - -- -- -:-- - - - - Gtech' Corp ., the current
contractor, will oversee
Keno until then, Dolan said ,
Yo.~~ ----~-------------Tbe · Ohio
Lotte
Commission hears Gtecb~
appeal of the switch in -con~~·· ----------------------~~------------------b:alliQrs on Thesday.
Keno has drawn bowls
Cllftll 1 f7Jp
PPh:IOI:-:·~;;h~~;;;;-:-of protest from anti-gamSend ·CGupon IIIII Pafllllllll lo: The Dally Sentinel "Fall• 's Dlly" .
bling and church groops
,
P.O. Box 729, Pomeloy, Ohio G711
since
Strickland
announced it as part of his
budget correction plan in
January.
But Hou111e Speaker Jon
Husted
and
Senate
President Bill Harris, both

..

-·

et Everyone Know Bur-ma Is Soinec»ne
Very Special With ·A Father's Day

On Sunday,

Happy
father's Day

(Your Father's
Name) ·

Love ·

Happy

•

Basketball Camp
•

· RACINE Southern
IIigh School will be hosting
its second annual Southern
"Hustlin'
Tornado"
Basketball
Camp
on
Monday, June 16 through
Thursday, June 19 ,from 9
ll-111. to noon for boys and
girls
entering
second
~gbsixlh~.

. The camp will be conducted by SffS head basketball
coach Jeff Caldwell, and
Climp instructors will be
members of the coac~J
staff along wilh cunmt
former varSity basketball ·
players
at
Southern.
Fundamentals
will
be
~sed with awards being
given for oompetitioos in 3on-3, hone anil free throws.
Cosl of the camp is $35 or
$60 for two campeni from
tbe same family. All campm
will
receive
T-shirts_
Registration will be from
g:30 to 9:00 a.m. on tbe first
da)' of the camp. · ·
... Checks should be .written
to the Southern Athletic
Boosters and brought with
the campm name, grade,
!Jome and emergency pbotie
numbers, t-shin size, and
parent's
signah1re.
If .
campers brougl\1 home a
aimp form from school, they
~fill out the camp form
with the mquired information. If participants have
questions lbey should call
Coach Caldwell at 9493129. .

2008 Meigs F1ag
Football Registration
: ROCKSPRINGS
~egistration is currently
~ for the 2008 flag foottiall season to boys and girls
41 grades 1-6 beginning with
lhe 2008-09 school year.
~sttation fee is $40 per

~~b~~-

for each
:·The games will be pl;lyed
liartingin~onthe

:ifr:f
date fur~~
istration and pa)'IDC!It is July

I st. A wlllkoutfcombine will
be held on July 26th al9 a.m.
at MHS. All checks must be
made out 10 Meigs Flag
Foolball Lague, P.O. Box
15 I, Pomauy, Ohio 45769.

For more information go

to ww\V.meigiffi.COQl or cllJ
740-541-1222.

(Your Father's
Name)

Love

•

Utley bits 21st wbile GritJey
stays at 599; Reds lose S-4
BY Rae M•1111111

Citizens Bank Park, but
Griffey didn't get a chance
to take hiS hacks. He wasn't
PHILADELPillA
in the starting lineup
Owe Utley made tw!&gt; div- benu1se of general soreness,
in&amp; backhanded calcl!es, hit thoug~ he should start
another homer, bam:led into Thesday night Griffey hit
a caleber and tried to bunl. No. 599 at home Saturday
for'a base hit
against A tlan1a The only
Wale'!ing ~ tbe beDch. .. players to reach 600 are
Ken Griffey lr. ·saw one of Bany · Bonds, Hank Aaron,
lbe lop players in the majors Babe Ruth, Willie Mays and ·
ell? whatever it takes to get a Sammy Sosa.
wm. .
.
Utley ~ent deep for the .
. Jumor remamed one· shy fifth sttmght game, tying a
of 600 home runs after get- club recon1 he shares with
ling the night otf, but Utley Dick Allen, Mike Schmidt
hit his major league-leading and Bobby Abreu. Utley
21st homer to help the also homered in five consecPhiladelphia Pbillies beat ulive games earlier this seadie Cincmnali Reds 5-4 on son.
"He's swinging the bat as
Monday night
"He's one of the best good as I've ever seen him
around," · Reds m,anager and be's doing it every · Philadelphia Phitlies' Chase Utley sMgS a tine drive hit by Cincinnati Reds' Joey \lotto for
Dustv Baker said of Utley.
the third out in the seventh inning of a baseball game Monday in Philadelphia. The Phillies .
· Balls were flying out of
PI 171 Ml Rr 1 112
won 54.
ASSOCIATED PRESS

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

NBA Rnals - Celtics versus Lakers

APpholos Los Angeles 'lakers player Kobe Bryant, right, gives Jerry West, known as
Boston Cettlcs forward Paul Pieroe (34) reacts to a basket in front of Detroit Mr. Clutch during a Hall of Fame career with the Lakers, a shoulder rub after
Pistons forward Tayshaun PrinCe (not pictured) in the second half during the lakers beat the San Antonio Spurs 10092 in Game 5 of the NBA
Game 1 of the NBA Eastern Conferenoe basketball finals in Boston.
Western Conference basketball finals last Thursday in los Angeles .

Pierce, Bryant stick it out and make it to the NBA finals
WALTHAM. Mass. (AP)
- Paul Pierce and Kobe
Bryant were playing pickup basketball in a lfCLA
gym last snmmef, a couple
of frustrated NBA stars trying to sweat away the
memory of a disappointing
season. Talk soon turned to
trl!Ck:s.
.
Bryant bad lashed oot at
Lakers management for
assembling a team that
hadn't won a playoff series
in three years. Boston. bad
gone four years, and Pierce
worried that he might
become the trade bait that
kick-starts the rebuilding·
process.
·
· "I remember being in ·t he
gym with. Kobe, and me

and him were arguing over
who was 'ioing to get traded ftrst, ' Pierce said
Monday after the Celtics
beld their frrst practice in
preparation for the NBA
·
finals.
"He went public about
gettinF, traded, ... and I was
like, Shoot, I'm going to
getting traded before you,•
and betting that it would
happen. That's what so
crazy, now we're both here
.sitting in the lmals, where
a year ago we were both i}l
the gym."
No one wound up paying
otf the undisclosed stakes .
Instead, both players stuck
with the only NBA teams
they've ever known artd

earned the. chance to play
for a championship.
Game I of the best-ofseven series is Thursday
,
night in Boston.
Bryant has ·already won
three NBA titles, teaming
up with Shaquille O ' Neal
to win in consecutive years
from 2000-02 . They made
one more run at it in 2004,
losing to Detroit in the
finals before O'Neal was
traded away; it was
Bryant'' team, for better or
worse.
The Lakers missed the
playoffs the next year for
JUSt the second time in
almost 30 years, follqwed
by two straight first-round
losses that left Bryant won-

~atchingup

dering.
Then, he snapped.
Bryant called the team's
front office a mess and said
he wanted to be traded.
Then he said he dido 't.
Then he said he did.
In the middle of the hubbub, he found himself share
ing a post-pickup swig of
water with Pierce
"Both of us kind of being
in the same boat - the
irony that we're both in the
finals . is cool," Bryant said
after the Lakers practiced
al their workout facility in
El Segundo, · Calif. , on
Monday. "It's good for
both of us to be here. He's
a great guy."
Pierce had his own prob-

'ftlll

ARLINGTON,
Texas
(AP) -Casey Blake homered twice and matched a
career high with seven RBls
: NJEW YORK - ·Before
before Ben Francisco hit a
Brown
make a run
tiebreaking two-run homer
winning the Triple
to power the Cleveland
Olo'o\111. his slightly cracked
Indians past the Texas
front hoof needs some
Rangers 13-9 on Monday
wott.
night.
Kentucky Derby and .
Francisco's homer in the
D:abless w~ is wearseventh came · on the fJJ'St
a second set of stainless
pitch by reliever Joaquin
Benoit, breaking an 8-8 tie
after the Indians had blown
a five-run lead .
Blake hit two-run homers
in the · second and third
innings, then added a threerun double in the fourth that
made it 8-3. The seven RBis
are the mosl by an American
League player this season .
Josh Hamilton, chosen
Monday as the AL player of
the month for May to
become the first player to
win the monthly award in
lpi'U.,...
April and May the same sea33
son, homered in his third
straight game for Texas. The
Cleveland Indians third baseman casey &lt;Blake fields a ground ball in the bottom of the third two-run shot was his ALbest I 6th and increased his
inn"- of a baseball game against tlie Texas R~rs in Arlington, Texas, on Monday. .

can

u.,._

I

!ems.
The Celtics had been
accumulating young talent
like AI Jefferson. ·oelome
West, Ryan Gome s, Rajon
and
Ken dri ck
Rondo
Perkins, but they had few
wins - · 24, to be exac t to show for it. When the
draft lottery didn't yie ld a
potential star lik e Greg
Oden or Kevin Durant , the
team's next title see med far
in the future.
"We· were at a point
where we were fru strated
with the moves. The most
obvious thin g tu do was to
trade your star player for
some young pieces and

PlriM -Ruts. 82

Blake has two HRs, seven
RBis in Indians' 13-9 win ·

Brown's
hoof

Father's Day

·(Your Name) .(Your Name)

•

• PCP

uc

Documents say ~hio Panel poised to OK money ft)f~no contract
man •o plead guilty
malleged.terror plot o;~~i~:BUS
~:!ow~~1~:~:~~~:
.

lhesday, June 3, 2008

•

'

majors-leading RBI total' to
65 in his 58 games.
Marlon Byrd tied the
game in the fifth with .his
fourth career grand slam, oft'
left -hander Aa,ron Laffey.
Masa Kobayashi (3-2)
allowed a hit and a run wjth
three strikeouts in I 2-3
innings.
Eddie Guardado (0- 1)
came ou at the stan of the
seventh. an d struck out
Grady Sizemore for the second out after allowing a single to No. 9 hiuer Asdrubal
Cabrera. Benoit then left a
breaking bal l over the plate
for Franci sco, whose third
homer skimmed the top of
the left-field wall and
snapped his 3-for- 15 slide.
David Dellucci added
another two-run homer
Benoit in the eighth. a 405foot shot to straightaway
center. Blake then flew out
to center before Benoit
walked four consecutive
bauers. the last to Francisco
on four pitches. for another

off

Pl•••-•••s ,81

�•

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.I

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.PageA6

OHIO

The Daily Sentinel

Tuesday, June 3, 2008

.inside
Pmg

I

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farce

Bl

· The Daily Sentinel

Meigs I1Jall'cl seuen, ... 82

Glme" ..... 82

Slllti lfiiO'• _.... at Ftmdl, . . . 86
BY THE ASSOC'ATED PREss

T

poverty. 'There are many

of Jess than $25,000 a year,

''

more people living paycheck the Slones teeter just above·

he high cost 9f food .to paycheck. B)' the grace of
and gasoline and loss God, many of us are two pay
of jobs in Ohio is hit- checks away from bemg
ting suburbafl families hard. . homeless or hungry."
forcing more to turn to food
The Salvation Army also
itlimps and 'other assistance has seen an increase· in the
to help pay their bills.
number of families who get
Officials
with
the emergency assfstance in serSjl!vation Army of Greater vice units that cover tradiCieveland have seen signif- tionally higher illeome areas
icant increases in the use of such as Brecksville. North
the agency's food, utility- . Royalton, Solon, Chagrin
assistance and · other pro- Falls and Strongsville.
grams by fJJ'St-lime users
In suburban Columbus.
who have lost jobs or expe-· the Slone family is not livrienced foreclosures.
ing in poverty by government standards.
The issues are similar at
But Ken Slone and his
the agency's downtown and wifi n .....:
suburban locations, said
e, """"e, and their chiiPhilip Mason, director of . drenUndsey, 4,andRyan. 7·
4evelopment
for
the live on an inoomc so low they
,"alvation Army of Greater must rely on food pantries,
"
thrift stores and government. aeveland.
subsiclillld health care.
In 2006, the Salvation
The Slones live in the
Army served 52,000 people Westerville school district.
in Cleveland and its sub- The solid suburban trapurbs. In 2007. the agency pings of the area sometimes
helped 78,300 people, and clash with the reality of
the numbers continue to rise their budget.
this year.
"It's very bumbling," said
. "There is a myth that Ruthie Slone, 35, a college
there is no poverty in the ltl'3duate who lost her marsuburbs," Mason said. keling job foor years ago. "I
1bat is not true any longer. never thought I would be in
. "Unfortunately,
we've this situation."
~fined the defmition of
With a hoosehold inconie

the federal poverty line of
$-21 ,200 for a famiry of four.
They are frugal and carry
little debt but still struggle
to be self-sufficient, the
Slones said.
·
Columbus doesn't have the
bombed-out look of some
Rust Belt cities. The large
number 'of people ~oyed
by state government and,
Ohio State University has
traditionally sheltered ~
city and its suburbs frpm
economic
downturns,
altbougb less !iO recently.
About one in 10 students
· in the Dublin schOOl district,
northwest of Columbus,
receive free or ·reducedprice lunches. About ! 3 percent of students in suburban
Worthington are eligible for
tree lunches.
·
"People don't have any
idea there are families living in the Dublin school district living in poverty." said
Evelyn Bebm, a vice president at the Mid-Ohio Food

Bank . . ·

In the Cleveland area,
more families are reaching
out for help through the 2-11/First Call for Help liile, a
referral service to health
and human . services agen'

__.....,... __

• ·

I)

·

·

ASSOCIATED PRESS WAITER

·

·
COLUMBUS (AP) -An Ohio man accused of plotting
terrorist bombings against Americans overseas could have
~aced life in prison.
. .
Instead, a plea agreement offered ChristoP.her Paul
allows for a 20-year prison term, a reduction similar to sentences received by two Ohio acquaintances who have
already plead¢ guilt.Y to terrorism-related charges.
l'aul, 44, a U.S. c1ti,zen who grew up in the Columb~
suburb of Worthington, was to IJe tried in federal court next
year. But he is instead ex~ted to plead guilty Thesday 10
'?ne count of conspiracy to use a weapon o~ mass _desuucbon - specifically bombs - m· terronst attacks, in
exchange for a 20-year prison sentence, documents show.
_The plea agreemell( filed ¥~ il!!ljt;atq.. ~ ~.S.
District Court Judge Gregory Frost must silfl approve the
deal. The ~greement notes both Paul and the government
have the nght to withdraw fr; t111M ~doesn't accept the 20-year sentence recomniendation.
. The U.S. Attorney's Office declined to commen~. Paul's
l!tlomey, Jim Gilbert, said the documents speak for themselves.
An indictment filed in April 2007 alleged that Paul trave~ to Pakistan and Afghanistan beginning in 1990 to meet
members of al-Qaida and to attend terrorist training camps
· with a goal of carryinjl out holy war attacks.
·. The gbvemment wd Paul was so devoted to the cause
that he told an al-Qaida member he was angry the ,group
would ever consider scaling back inilitary operations. Paul
said he was committed to such operations even if others
were D?t•. according_ to the government's indictment.
Paul JOmed al-Qlllda and traveled to Germany in 1999 to
train co-conspirators to use explosives 10 attack European
andU.S.targets,theindictmentsaid. He'saccusedofplotling to bomb government buildings overseas and European
vacation spots frequented by American tourists.
The mdictment does not name specific ~sorts or build~
ings that might have been targeted, bul · gives , U.S .
embassies, military bases and consular premises as exampies.
.
Paul's alleged terrorist ties have long surprised fonner
classmates. who knew him better as a middle school
·wrestler who turned 10 gymnastics at his high school in
Worthington, a quaint old suburb on the north side of
Columbus.
·
.The Justice Department has accused Paul and two other
men of ai,scussing terrorist attacks during an August 2002
.
meeting at a coffee shop in suburban Columbus.
One of the men, lyman Faris, a U.S. citizen originally
from Pakistan, pleadrd guilly in May 2003 to providing
~aterial support for terrorism.·Faris was convicted of plothog to destroy the Brooldyn Bridge and sentenced to 20
' years in prison in an agreement negotiated down from 30
years.
. The other man, Somali immigrant Nuradin Abdi~
guilty in July to one charge of coospirinJ:rv~llllllt;
!,'i_al support to terrorists. He had been
ed with piaunmg to bomb an unspecified Columbus-area shopping
mall, an attack that never occurred, and faced up to 80
years in prison.
. .
·
Re.is serving a 10-year sentence after which he will be
~eported to Somalia. Abdi wu originally offered an even
lighter sentence that would have meant almost no time
behind barS beyGnd what he had already served.

Ohio schools wo~
about top !Ugh sdtooi
grads leavmg·s tate
CINCINNATI (AP) - Ohio educators say more of this
rear's class of hip-achieving high school seniors are head, to colleges llld universilles out of state.
ellcrson Blaetbum-Smilh of Ohio State's undergraduate
lJ(In$sions offioe llllys all the state's public colleges are
worried . . the tren1t
.
Figures for the last decade show that Ohio's colleges and
universities bave attracted about 84 peroent of the state's
college-bound seniors. The National Center for HiJdlec
Educatioo Management Systems says that ranks OhiO :J7th
in the natipn.
.
Eric F.~pgemut, chancellor of the Ohio Board of Regents,
~ys one of Gov. Ted StricldaJid's top priorities is to ktlep
Ohio's top shllieaMs in the state . .
.
-. Strickland bu pusbed to freeze tuition at Ohio's ;PUblic
.cOIJep, whicb ve among the natioi!'s most expensive.
I

BY JOHN McCARTHY

.

l

Ci - A lldledl.6l ol I

.....

-

•...., -""'! -

-

I

----'m'

. OHSAA
Choo, ........ T1IA
.

.

(IHSM Chool....... T1IA

2nd annual Southern
"iiusdin' Tornado''
AP photo

Ken Slone and his wile Ruthie play with their four-year-old daughter Lindsey, May 30 in
Columbus. The high cost of food and gasoline and loss of jobs in Ohio is hitting suburban
families hard, forcing more to tum to food stamps and other assistance to help pay their
bills. Slone and his family live on an income so low they must rely on food pantries, thrift
stores and government-subsidized health care. .
·
cies in Cuyahoga, Medina
and Geauga counties.
In 2007, the riumber .of
pantr:y · reque~ts
food
· mcreased by 35 percent, util- .
ity bill payment requests by
41 percent and rent payment
requests by 24 percent, said
Stephen Wertheim, director

of 2-1-1 Call For Help.
resources have been cut. In
In addition, the number of December, Medina Coonty
residents in Medina County lost some state aid and had
w~~ jlOt cash assistance for to reduce the total amount
uuhues, shelter and gas of annual cash assistance to
more than doubled between help the working poor pay
2006 and 2007 , Mason said. for utilities, shelter or car
While the number of peo· repairs from $1,500 to $750
pie in need steadily rises. per family, Mason said.
.'

Republicans, realize the
hole in the budget and have .
not moved either of the bills

..

.

...

·

in
the
.....
Le~islature to Gov. Ted Adams,
a
Sidney
KENO COMiNG: Majpri~ Republicans on the state
Stockland's idea to bring a Republican who introduced
~rd that govems sP.e'idill{J outside the budget indiKeno lottery game to Ohio's one ·of the bills, knows he
i:ated they Wouldn't Oj:lpoS&amp;'l! contract to fund Ohio's
bars and restaurants has all doesn't have the clout get
new Keno game.
:.·:-but evaporated.
his bill 10 budge. Only two
···· ;· ·
The state Controlling legislative sessions _ on
THE SWITCH: The ~blicans blocked the funding in
Board, made up of six June 1O-Il
remain
March, saying the idea needed public hearings first.
lawmakers
and
a before lawmakers leave for
Strickland representative, the summer.
ANY OPPOSITION? Anti-gamblinggroupslearcasinos
on Monday again delayed
. "I'm optimistic but I'm
might not be far -behind; but Gov. Ted Strickland sliD
approval of a contract to also pragmatic," Adams
opposes fuH·blown
and the state keeps the
o~rate the game. But it said Monday.
$73 million a year Keno
to
d1d so only because the
contract's current holder is
as~~ th~, Ohio Lottery
.. .
~ ·:....:.. ....... ~·
"Cofi'lmlsS'ion ·to reconsllU:r
its decision to change ven,~·. 1 ~!&gt;"'
,
.
·"In Mlii'Cn, the same panel
delayed the vole because
they wanted public hearings
on the bill. Then, two lawThank You Tribute ...
~ers introduced legislallon that would have kept
Keno 011t of Ohio. Each got
To Be PubUshed In The SUnday Times- Sentinel
one hearing only. ·
June 15th!
Strickland says the game
and the $73 million he
expects in revenues the frrst
year are neoessary to help
~lug an estimated $733 mil- lion budget hole.
·
Controlling lioard mem·
ber Rep. Jay Hottinger. a
Ne'Yark Reyublican and
c~arrman o . the H_ouse
FIDaDce CoiDIDittee; saJ.d he
likely wooldn't ob~ once
the contract issue ts cleared
up. ln March, Hottinger had
called the ideil a short-term
fix that would create more
problems than it would
solve because it would burt
the poor.
Lottery Director Michael
DQiau said the game should
start on schedule. The delay
only affects the testing
schedule for the new con~tO!', he said.
,
It JUSt means we U have
to w01k harder and longer at
the lottery," Dolan said.
Keno is a bin~o-like game
where the · wJDDings are
based on bow many correct
numbers ~ player .chooses .
~yers will use vtdeo teemmals ~nnected t? the
game onlme. It w~ be
~ every four mmutes
to terminals m bars, restau£ants and other adult
venues.
The contract before lhe
Controlling .Board, which
will be awarded to Atlanta-.
based lntralot Inc., is worth
$164 million over I0 years
Circle One: A. 1X3 Gnltlag ...$12.00 B: 1X5 Greeting with Plcture...$15.,
beginning July I, 2009.
Providence,
R.l.-based
Flllher'sNM!e'- - : - - - - - - -- -- -:-- - - - - Gtech' Corp ., the current
contractor, will oversee
Keno until then, Dolan said ,
Yo.~~ ----~-------------Tbe · Ohio
Lotte
Commission hears Gtecb~
appeal of the switch in -con~~·· ----------------------~~------------------b:alliQrs on Thesday.
Keno has drawn bowls
Cllftll 1 f7Jp
PPh:IOI:-:·~;;h~~;;;;-:-of protest from anti-gamSend ·CGupon IIIII Pafllllllll lo: The Dally Sentinel "Fall• 's Dlly" .
bling and church groops
,
P.O. Box 729, Pomeloy, Ohio G711
since
Strickland
announced it as part of his
budget correction plan in
January.
But Hou111e Speaker Jon
Husted
and
Senate
President Bill Harris, both

..

-·

et Everyone Know Bur-ma Is Soinec»ne
Very Special With ·A Father's Day

On Sunday,

Happy
father's Day

(Your Father's
Name) ·

Love ·

Happy

•

Basketball Camp
•

· RACINE Southern
IIigh School will be hosting
its second annual Southern
"Hustlin'
Tornado"
Basketball
Camp
on
Monday, June 16 through
Thursday, June 19 ,from 9
ll-111. to noon for boys and
girls
entering
second
~gbsixlh~.

. The camp will be conducted by SffS head basketball
coach Jeff Caldwell, and
Climp instructors will be
members of the coac~J
staff along wilh cunmt
former varSity basketball ·
players
at
Southern.
Fundamentals
will
be
~sed with awards being
given for oompetitioos in 3on-3, hone anil free throws.
Cosl of the camp is $35 or
$60 for two campeni from
tbe same family. All campm
will
receive
T-shirts_
Registration will be from
g:30 to 9:00 a.m. on tbe first
da)' of the camp. · ·
... Checks should be .written
to the Southern Athletic
Boosters and brought with
the campm name, grade,
!Jome and emergency pbotie
numbers, t-shin size, and
parent's
signah1re.
If .
campers brougl\1 home a
aimp form from school, they
~fill out the camp form
with the mquired information. If participants have
questions lbey should call
Coach Caldwell at 9493129. .

2008 Meigs F1ag
Football Registration
: ROCKSPRINGS
~egistration is currently
~ for the 2008 flag foottiall season to boys and girls
41 grades 1-6 beginning with
lhe 2008-09 school year.
~sttation fee is $40 per

~~b~~-

for each
:·The games will be pl;lyed
liartingin~onthe

:ifr:f
date fur~~
istration and pa)'IDC!It is July

I st. A wlllkoutfcombine will
be held on July 26th al9 a.m.
at MHS. All checks must be
made out 10 Meigs Flag
Foolball Lague, P.O. Box
15 I, Pomauy, Ohio 45769.

For more information go

to ww\V.meigiffi.COQl or cllJ
740-541-1222.

(Your Father's
Name)

Love

•

Utley bits 21st wbile GritJey
stays at 599; Reds lose S-4
BY Rae M•1111111

Citizens Bank Park, but
Griffey didn't get a chance
to take hiS hacks. He wasn't
PHILADELPillA
in the starting lineup
Owe Utley made tw!&gt; div- benu1se of general soreness,
in&amp; backhanded calcl!es, hit thoug~ he should start
another homer, bam:led into Thesday night Griffey hit
a caleber and tried to bunl. No. 599 at home Saturday
for'a base hit
against A tlan1a The only
Wale'!ing ~ tbe beDch. .. players to reach 600 are
Ken Griffey lr. ·saw one of Bany · Bonds, Hank Aaron,
lbe lop players in the majors Babe Ruth, Willie Mays and ·
ell? whatever it takes to get a Sammy Sosa.
wm. .
.
Utley ~ent deep for the .
. Jumor remamed one· shy fifth sttmght game, tying a
of 600 home runs after get- club recon1 he shares with
ling the night otf, but Utley Dick Allen, Mike Schmidt
hit his major league-leading and Bobby Abreu. Utley
21st homer to help the also homered in five consecPhiladelphia Pbillies beat ulive games earlier this seadie Cincmnali Reds 5-4 on son.
"He's swinging the bat as
Monday night
"He's one of the best good as I've ever seen him
around," · Reds m,anager and be's doing it every · Philadelphia Phitlies' Chase Utley sMgS a tine drive hit by Cincinnati Reds' Joey \lotto for
Dustv Baker said of Utley.
the third out in the seventh inning of a baseball game Monday in Philadelphia. The Phillies .
· Balls were flying out of
PI 171 Ml Rr 1 112
won 54.
ASSOCIATED PRESS

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

NBA Rnals - Celtics versus Lakers

APpholos Los Angeles 'lakers player Kobe Bryant, right, gives Jerry West, known as
Boston Cettlcs forward Paul Pieroe (34) reacts to a basket in front of Detroit Mr. Clutch during a Hall of Fame career with the Lakers, a shoulder rub after
Pistons forward Tayshaun PrinCe (not pictured) in the second half during the lakers beat the San Antonio Spurs 10092 in Game 5 of the NBA
Game 1 of the NBA Eastern Conferenoe basketball finals in Boston.
Western Conference basketball finals last Thursday in los Angeles .

Pierce, Bryant stick it out and make it to the NBA finals
WALTHAM. Mass. (AP)
- Paul Pierce and Kobe
Bryant were playing pickup basketball in a lfCLA
gym last snmmef, a couple
of frustrated NBA stars trying to sweat away the
memory of a disappointing
season. Talk soon turned to
trl!Ck:s.
.
Bryant bad lashed oot at
Lakers management for
assembling a team that
hadn't won a playoff series
in three years. Boston. bad
gone four years, and Pierce
worried that he might
become the trade bait that
kick-starts the rebuilding·
process.
·
· "I remember being in ·t he
gym with. Kobe, and me

and him were arguing over
who was 'ioing to get traded ftrst, ' Pierce said
Monday after the Celtics
beld their frrst practice in
preparation for the NBA
·
finals.
"He went public about
gettinF, traded, ... and I was
like, Shoot, I'm going to
getting traded before you,•
and betting that it would
happen. That's what so
crazy, now we're both here
.sitting in the lmals, where
a year ago we were both i}l
the gym."
No one wound up paying
otf the undisclosed stakes .
Instead, both players stuck
with the only NBA teams
they've ever known artd

earned the. chance to play
for a championship.
Game I of the best-ofseven series is Thursday
,
night in Boston.
Bryant has ·already won
three NBA titles, teaming
up with Shaquille O ' Neal
to win in consecutive years
from 2000-02 . They made
one more run at it in 2004,
losing to Detroit in the
finals before O'Neal was
traded away; it was
Bryant'' team, for better or
worse.
The Lakers missed the
playoffs the next year for
JUSt the second time in
almost 30 years, follqwed
by two straight first-round
losses that left Bryant won-

~atchingup

dering.
Then, he snapped.
Bryant called the team's
front office a mess and said
he wanted to be traded.
Then he said he dido 't.
Then he said he did.
In the middle of the hubbub, he found himself share
ing a post-pickup swig of
water with Pierce
"Both of us kind of being
in the same boat - the
irony that we're both in the
finals . is cool," Bryant said
after the Lakers practiced
al their workout facility in
El Segundo, · Calif. , on
Monday. "It's good for
both of us to be here. He's
a great guy."
Pierce had his own prob-

'ftlll

ARLINGTON,
Texas
(AP) -Casey Blake homered twice and matched a
career high with seven RBls
: NJEW YORK - ·Before
before Ben Francisco hit a
Brown
make a run
tiebreaking two-run homer
winning the Triple
to power the Cleveland
Olo'o\111. his slightly cracked
Indians past the Texas
front hoof needs some
Rangers 13-9 on Monday
wott.
night.
Kentucky Derby and .
Francisco's homer in the
D:abless w~ is wearseventh came · on the fJJ'St
a second set of stainless
pitch by reliever Joaquin
Benoit, breaking an 8-8 tie
after the Indians had blown
a five-run lead .
Blake hit two-run homers
in the · second and third
innings, then added a threerun double in the fourth that
made it 8-3. The seven RBis
are the mosl by an American
League player this season .
Josh Hamilton, chosen
Monday as the AL player of
the month for May to
become the first player to
win the monthly award in
lpi'U.,...
April and May the same sea33
son, homered in his third
straight game for Texas. The
Cleveland Indians third baseman casey &lt;Blake fields a ground ball in the bottom of the third two-run shot was his ALbest I 6th and increased his
inn"- of a baseball game against tlie Texas R~rs in Arlington, Texas, on Monday. .

can

u.,._

I

!ems.
The Celtics had been
accumulating young talent
like AI Jefferson. ·oelome
West, Ryan Gome s, Rajon
and
Ken dri ck
Rondo
Perkins, but they had few
wins - · 24, to be exac t to show for it. When the
draft lottery didn't yie ld a
potential star lik e Greg
Oden or Kevin Durant , the
team's next title see med far
in the future.
"We· were at a point
where we were fru strated
with the moves. The most
obvious thin g tu do was to
trade your star player for
some young pieces and

PlriM -Ruts. 82

Blake has two HRs, seven
RBis in Indians' 13-9 win ·

Brown's
hoof

Father's Day

·(Your Name) .(Your Name)

•

• PCP

uc

Documents say ~hio Panel poised to OK money ft)f~no contract
man •o plead guilty
malleged.terror plot o;~~i~:BUS
~:!ow~~1~:~:~~~:
.

lhesday, June 3, 2008

•

'

majors-leading RBI total' to
65 in his 58 games.
Marlon Byrd tied the
game in the fifth with .his
fourth career grand slam, oft'
left -hander Aa,ron Laffey.
Masa Kobayashi (3-2)
allowed a hit and a run wjth
three strikeouts in I 2-3
innings.
Eddie Guardado (0- 1)
came ou at the stan of the
seventh. an d struck out
Grady Sizemore for the second out after allowing a single to No. 9 hiuer Asdrubal
Cabrera. Benoit then left a
breaking bal l over the plate
for Franci sco, whose third
homer skimmed the top of
the left-field wall and
snapped his 3-for- 15 slide.
David Dellucci added
another two-run homer
Benoit in the eighth. a 405foot shot to straightaway
center. Blake then flew out
to center before Benoit
walked four consecutive
bauers. the last to Francisco
on four pitches. for another

off

Pl•••-•••s ,81

�Page B2 • The Daily Sentinel

I
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Tuesday, June 3, 2003

www.mydailyseotinel.com

Tuel day, June 3, 2008

--

I

www.mydailyeenUt181.com

sprinters

mrlbune - Sentinel - ~egi,tet

-

CLASSIFIED

'

Gallia
County

•
•

OH
Web5jtes:

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

..-..
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SUbnlllled p11011&gt;
A group of sprinters on the Meigs High School boys track team have broken ·a long-standing record during the 2008 season. Seniors Branden Fisher and CorneliUS English, JUnior
Crockett crow, and sophomore Jeremy Smith make up the 4x200-meter relay team, and on
numerous occasions this season they combined to set a new MHS record m the event.
Their final best time of 1:32.23 came at the regional finals 1n Byesville and was over a second faster than their previous best from the district finals. The old record t1me. set 1n 1969
by Mike Grate , Elbert Williams, Roy
and Rich Hawley, was 1:36.54. P1ctured

•.. -

-:. L - - - - - - - - --;.":-::.....:..:...::.....:-'-P·ittsburgh Penguins Marian Hossa (18) ce~bl:ates ·wi1Jl teaml!llates Sidney Crosby, rear,
and Pascal Qupu is (9) after soorting agairnst !!he Detroit Red Wings during the first period of
Game 5 of the NHL Stanley Cup Fmals MomdiJY in Detroit. Pittsburgh won 4-3 in triple overtime to extend the ser.ies. Game 6 •will be Wednesday in Pittsburgh.
·

'

plloto

Vaugha~.

Pens stay alive.with triple overtime win.

-

above, from left to right, are Asher. Crow, aSSIStant coach Lon Carter, English, and Smith.

GARS lands 16 on AU-SEOAL teams

BY IRA PooBJ.

their first loss in Pittsburgh - ry.
.
on Sawn:lay iR Game 4 to
Sykora's goal ended the
set up their · championshi,P fifth-longest
game
m
DETROIT- Not so fast, chances.
Stanley Cup finals history.
• Motor City. The Detroit Red
Early on, a Penguins' win The second assist went to
· Wings' road to the Stanley in this one seemed likely defenseman
.
Sergei
Cup has ariother stop to after ·they scored twice .i n Gonchar, who missed the.
• make.
tbe fll'St period aDd carni.ed a first t~o overtime periods
· Against .all odds, the 2--l lead inro ·t he third. after crashing headfirst into
Pittsburgh Penguins stayed However, lhe .Red Wings the ebd boards in the second
alive in the Stanley Cup tied it on Pa\le] Datsyuk's period. Gonchar took the ice
• · fmais with a 4-3 victory in powerae goal at 6:43 !lfld to help Pittsburgh's strugfor the ftrst tune · gl'ing power play.
• Game 5 that ended on ~ went .
Sykora's goal9:57 into lbe 2:40 ~ater when Bnan
"The game was so lo11g:
lbird overum~ Monday Rafalski scored. ·
. .
wanted ro help our guys,
night
,·
The patty was on m the Gonchar said. "I started
• With Jiri Hudler serving a final_ .minute.. Pengums feeling better at the end of
. 4-minute penalty for high- goal1e Marc-Andre Aeury .llhe second overtime, se (
sticking, ·Sykora wound up was · .on the bench, the thought there was a chance.
in the right ·circle and ripped Pittsburgh net was · c:mpty Anyway I could help, [ had
a drive past Chris Osgood to and the . ·seconds tlck&lt;:d to oome back, so the goal
end the marathon that lasted down ll?walld Detroit _s ;.,as wait until the power
• 4 i 12 hours.
·
fowdl Stailley Cup champt
The series beads back to .i mslf· ~ II
,
- play. They ,p ut me on the ice .
. Pittsburgh for Game 6 on
~ T=~ut the for the ~power play and we
'" dn da · "h
~--s L~-'- into l b. c i r seats scored.
.
. ·
.. e · es · Y mb"'t.
"""he ~. _..
the
That wnt finally clicked
"We have .a great thing w n
uc::
gv.,.,
·
"'Ah
h.
going right now. We just Penguins''ieaSOOwld!asec- ~ It~ ...... . c ance.wanted to win this game (Inc! Whack. of .die . puck at I.JICludmg two m overume
tonight," Sykem said. ''We lhe JCft
w!.lh· 34.3 sec- - - .after converung o~ly
didn't really look ahead. onds left in Fe~atio11 . . twwe m 17 chanCils dunng ·
Now we're .going bact: FJewy kepi diem ·alive with the frrst four games.
Road ,teams nave won. I 0
home. We've got nothing to ·.a ,brilfuuit 55-salle . effort,
lose. We know what we including 24 in ow.e111iime.
of the. !]last 12 , overtime
have to do and hopefully we
Now, the treasured .trophy games m the finals and are
can bring it back here to will go back into its .crate 15-4 smce 1990..
Detroit." ·
and · head to Pennsylvania
Marian Hossa and Adam
The Red Wings, who fell where the Red Wings will Hall J?Ut the Penguins in that
. to 9-2 at home in the post- have another shot at !herr pos1t1on by· sconng 6:04
season, gave the Penguins llth title in franchise histo- apart in tbe frrst.

.

ASSOCIATED PRESS

.!

STA:FF REPORT

allowed Galli a 'Aeadem y to
land 14 players and two
coaches on this season's
GALLIPOLIS - A good league-best honorees - as
spring just got ,~tter fui: .the well .a s one ,player !Of ilbe
athletes at Galtia Academy y.ea~:. · the Blu!e Angels High School, as the blue ....,_......._.,02-0}in
Devils and Blue Angels oollectively landed 16 people tbeSI30AL 's.b in~
At'Ued ·seven ~ an
on
the
2008
Att- -the llist.
well ,. one ICiOliCb
Southeastem Ohto Athletic
·League te.a ms f~?r spring and one MVP. 'Ole Blue
Devils bad !five a:pr~ta­
· ·
spoJts.
GAHS finished frrst in the tives in lCDIIi.s - includinJl
SEOAL South ln softball one roach qf the year-· ,and
and tied for the Sou:th three:!ielwions in haseiWL
Jiin Niday 'was named die
Division liit1e in tennis, as
well · as · placing · as the SEOAL South &lt;coach 10f the
SEOAL 'South runner-ap iin year iin,g uiding the &amp;!gel~ Ito.
baseball. Collectively. !lb.ose a scbOI!l,-best 20 winS and .a
respective teams also fin. sectional crown. He .was
ished second, tied. f@r thiid joined by All-SEOAi.
and fourdl overall in the .repelllers Kimber Davis,
SEOAL.
.
Amy Noe and Blittyn
Those high team fmishes SaiJJIA,ers. Other frrst•ti:me

softball selections were
Brittany Miller, Lindsay
Niday, Hannah Cunningham
and this year ' s MVP Courtney Shriver.
The tennis squad was led
by coach of the year Jim
Osborne, who guided his
team to at least a share of the
division title for the fourth
consecutive year. Quinton
Nibert was a repeat selection, while Joan Sojka,
Jordan Cornwell and Kamal
Dayal all earned their first
All-SEOAL nominations.
The baseball team ·which won · its second
straight sectional title this
year- had repeat selections
for Nick Stevens and John
Paul .Finnicum, while Jeff
Goldeo was selected for the
frrst time. •
·

SPORTS@MYDAILYTRIBUNE.coM

as

How you can have borders and IJI'Ophics
~
oddedtoyourdassifiedods
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Borders $3.00/per ad
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Graphics SOC for smaU
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Monday thru Friday
8:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m.
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WRITE M. AD
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Should Include TheR . _
To Help Get• POftlle-..

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tllerighltoldtl,
rejoct ....... 1111'

ocl'otonyltmo.

......
Muot

0
0

This ••• ; ;

Post

Finals
from PageBl
rebuild from there," said
Pierce. the longest-tenured
Celtics player since· the
original Big Three.
"l pretty much thought it
was over. I can't even
explain it. I thought I was
going to be a Los Angeles
Clipper; I tho ugh t 1 was
going to be anywhere but
tbe Celtics," he said. "Alii
know i~ if I was·n 't a
Celtic, right now I'd be
home ."
Instead, the Celtics built
around Pierce, adding Ray
Allen and Kevid Garnett in
'one of the most dramatic
· overhauls in league history. The team that went 245!1 with a bunch of young
P'layers won 66 games this
year and put the Celtics in

the fmals for the first time Gasol joined them,e;he
since 1-987.
Lakers won 12 of ei r
"I get the !]lleasure of next 13 games and ent
seei ng him play every 28-9 the rest of the way
night, but they could have before going 12-3 against
went a different way," Denver, Utah and San
· Garnett said. "I'm glad to Antonio in the playotis.
see the organization stand . That led them back · to ,
behind a guy ·Who has been Soston, archrivals from 10
able to give his all for pfevious
championship
them, for tbem to step up series ; the Celtics hav.e
and .actually give. him won eight. Celtics coach
some ·players and ~orne Doc Rivers, who watched
help, so that be can reach the Bryant drama unfold
his. goals as a basketball from afar, said he wouldn't
player.
want it any other way.
"When you'r.e a com " I was just happy he
petitor, man, the one thing stayed out West" where he
you want is a chance. They would only face Boston
obviously w.e nt out and twice a year, Ri.vers Sllid.
made the right deals. So "B ut I 'm glad it worked
my hat goes off to them."
out the way it worked out.
The Lakers made a deal Just like Paul Pierce is a
of their own, acquiring · Celtic, Kobe is a Laker:"
Pau G a sol from the
Grizzlies on Feb. I to help . AP Sporrs Writer John
turn around a team that Nadel contributed ro rh•s 1
had shown promise' before story from El Segundo,
losing five of seven. After Calif

Sunday.
Ian Kinsler led off ·t he
Texas fiftll with a double
and came home on Michael
single.
After
Young's
Hami~ton
singled and
run.
Milton
Bradley
walked to
Dellucci had a leadoffl
load
the
bases,
Byrd
hit the
double fn the second before
Blake's homer .to left-cen~ Rangers': fifth grand slam
ter. Blake's next homer, his this season.
Young and Kinsler both
• sixth of the season, went to
went
3-for-5 tn extend their
almost the same spot. Shin- ·
soo Choo followed that with hitting streaks, Young to 18
an infield single and scored consecutive games for the
on a double by Cabrera.
longest in the .AL this seaThe Indians loaded the . son, one · mofe than
.. bases with two outs i:n the Kinsler's ' career-best streak.
• fourth, on a walk and two The Rangers finished with
singles, before Slake dou- IS hits, one · less than
bled into the right-field oor- Cleveland, which got tlu:ee. ner. That bases-clearing hit hit games from Blake. and
: came on the I OOth - and Jhonny Peralta.
·
last - pitch thrown hy
Laffey allowed eight runs
• rookie Doug Mathis.
and ·11 hits over ftve
•
Mathis started in place of innings . , Since
being
Vicente Padilla, who was recalled April 28 from
: placed on bereavement Triple-A Buffalo, he had
· · leave while still home in his allowed only seven earned
· : native Nicaragua dealing runs in six. previous starts
: · with a personal family mat- - and four ofthose came in
;. ter. Padilla left the team his flfSt game back.
•

•

..

· Reds
fmm.PageBl
night," PhiUi!l~ manager
Charlie Manuel said. ·
Pedro fc::lj.z .md. Chris'
Coste also con.nel:ted for the
NL East-leading Phillie&amp;.
Rookie: sensation Jay Bruce
and Edwin J;:ncarnacion
went deep for the Reds.
Kyle Kendrick (5-2)
pitched just well enough to
earn the win, gi vin~ up four
·runs and ftve hits m S 1-3
innings. . Chad Durbin
pitched I 2-l scoreless
IDDings, Tom Gordon tossed
a .pelfect eighth and Brad
Lidge fmished for his 14th'
save in as many chances.
"The bullp«?n did a great
job," Kendrick said.
Reds starter Bronson
Arroyo was hurt by the
longball . Arroyo (4-5)
allowed five runs and ·10
hits in 4 1-3 innings. It was
his shortest outing si nee

r~1
·Player, schOol

Raven ·oine, .rAthens

Grade

Whitney c-..s, Albens

40

__0

·Robin Mor~. Athens
1·2
Jessica Harris. 'Logarr""
l
~ 12
Dakota Seymour, Logan•
12
Ariel Zugg, logan"
·12
.layne Cilrpenter, Marieria• ·
'1
Cheliea Hutchloon,_Ma10
Krissy Sutton, Marlena
12
Laktn Horner, Warrun12
Stephanie Koon, Warren..
12 .
Katie Lianez, Zanesville•
11
Rachella A9"ssler, Zano&amp;YIIIe
H
Player of 1tJB Year: layne'Ca..,._, &lt;Ma.()oach of tne Year: Jim Huitblblet:vat. Logan

.

-lllhiiOioon

Player, school
'
Paige Dempsey, QhllliCOit1e
Hannah Cunningham, G·atlipdlis
Kimber Davis, Galipolis"'
Brittany Miller, Gallipolis

Gra&lt;le
· ~.2
9
!JI'I

.~2
~2

Lindsay Niday, 'Gaii!P.olio

~.0

Amy Noe. Gallipolis''
Brittyn Saunders, Gallipolis'"
Courtney Shriwn, Q~lljpolts
Janey Marris. Ironton
Edi Taylor. Ironton•

il.i1
9
10
U

Haley Riegel, Jadcson

1'12

Lauren Parker, Jackson
Emily Hopkins, Portsmouth"
Heather Krekeler, Portamouth-

12
1~
·-11

Player ot the Year: CO_urtney Sh~. ,GW'jp •

Coach of the Year: Jim Niday, Gattlpotla

-1El511'

Pieyer, •chool

1,

' Connor Lavelle, ~thens
Sam Miner, '~thent*
Christian Sh.DW&amp;tter, IA..1hene

1~

10
!Ul
• 11

Larry Wu, Athens
Shaun Ludwin, l.Dpl,

'12

Josh Messmer, 'Logon · .
.Zach Mullen, Manetta
AIO&gt;C Stem. Marlena

12

Player ollhe Yoor:'Som...,,Coach ollhe -.:,~o~~-.~

givinjl up seven wns in I 1-.
3 ,inrungs agaiilst Atlanta on
May4 . .
Utley lined a two-run shot
into the right -center field
seats to give the Phillies a 20 lead in the. first. Utley is
on pace to hit 58 homers, 26
more than his Clll'tlCr high lin
2006.The R\COfd for second
basemen is 42, set by
Rogers Hornsby in 1922
and tied by Davey Johnson
in 1973.
Utley isn't just doing it
with his bat. He robbed foey
Votto leading off the seventh and made almost the
exact play on Votto again to
end the game.
In the · third, Utley
slammed into catcher David
Ross, but was out trying to
score on Ryan Howard's
double. He put down a near.perfect bunt that just rolled
foul leading off the ~billies'
seventh.
Utley. hears "M- V-P"
chants almost every home
game. If he ends up winning
the award, it'll give the

9
10

&lt;Cluimon Nibert, GallipoliS"
,!&lt;&gt;!In Sqjka; Gallipolis
OttrrietriU&amp;-G~s. Ironton·
.e - Sllcy, Jlokoon,
· 1'hDI1ulo Khoury, Portsmouth
Player of lhe Year; John lod'o. Chillicothe

"'

"'

11

11

12
12
12
11

Coach of the Year: Jim OsbOrne, Gallipolis

BASEBALl. .

-n

fiorth Dlvlolon

;Player. ochool .
Jared Cline, Athens

Grade

11
12

Eberts, Athens
Pat Angle, logan

10

~2

Jullln Wahl, Logan•
1Evan •Brod&lt;l118iet, 'Marietta
&lt;Corey Hooper, Warren
David Lemon, Warren

11
12
12

Tyler Spence, Warren

11

Dan Wagner, Wanen"
12
~.T. Bunling, Zanesville
11
Cole.Hudoon, z..,..ville ·
10
S~&gt;an. Mlltor, z.-v~~~e·
12
wade Kaido. Zanesville ,
10
Player .at the ¥ear: Shayne Miller, ZanesviUe
Coach ot'the Year: David BatD Zanesville
1

1

Souitl OMolon

G!llde

Donni&amp;, Cl\iflicothe
Seth Jlawos, Chillicothe•

12

John Finnicum, GallipOlis'

12 •

Jeff Gokten, GaHipolis

GniPe

.-.,llngsMtwrt-.ct ln

10

GObe'SoymlllJr, Chillicothe
,Jofdan Cornwell, Gallipolis
Kamal Dayal, 'Gallipolis

!Niok SI!Mons, l'laltipolis•

•Nick Lawi&amp;. i(Pnton
~· Coyan, Joot&lt;son••
'.!.ntllD!II"Malone, Jackson

Kyle Newsom. Jackson .
6!niltl. Jackson

Jahn .__, Poi'!Smouth'
Howard Harcha. Portsmouth
· Joot1 •Mrero, Portsmoulh
PWrar ,at the Year: Tyrus Coyan, Jackson
:pooch of the Year: lance RolSton. Jaoklon

· Phillies an MVP three-peat
following Howard and
Jimmy Rollins:
Bruce hit an oppositefield drive that just cleaied
lhe left-field wall to .cut it to
2--4. in the fourth. It was
Bruce's third homer in his
tim seven games. The 21~-old center fielder ~as
n on a tear smce gettmg
called up from Triple-A last
week, hitting .577 with
three homers and seven
RBis.
After Bruce's fiTS I three
at-bats, he was 2-for-3,
making him 15-for-25 overall. The last player to have
at :least IS hits in Ibis first 25
major league at-bats was
Chris C. Jones of the 'Reds
iB I 991, according to the
Elias Sports Bureau. Jones
went 15-for-25 from April
.
27 to June 28.
Bruce flied out lin his fmal
at-bat in the eighth.
"Hopefully he keeps_it
and other guys get hot. '
Baker srud.
·
Feliz hit a two-run homer

.ur,

11

12

.12 .

12
12
~,

11
12

~'

.

.

~2

12
10

after Geoff Jenkins led off
Philadelphia's fourth with a
double. ,Coste followed with
a solo shot to make it 5-1.
Encarnacion led off the
fifth with a homer to left.to
get the Reds within 5-2.
Adam Dunn's two-run
double off Durbin with two
out~ in the sixth cut it to S- ·
4. Kendrick left after Bruce
singled to put two runners
on with one · out. Durbin
retired Brandon Phillips on
a fly to right, but Dunn hit a
liner into the gap in rightcenter.
The. Phillies
chased
Arroyo in the ftfth after singles by Utley and Pat
Burrell and a walk to
Jenkins loaded the bases
with one out. But Gary
Majewski came in and
retired Feliz on a doubleplay grounder to escape the
jam and keep it close.
Notes: Reds SS Jerry
Hairston extended his hitting streak to a career-high
I 0 games with a sixthinning single.

That's lhe word from
subscribers who read
our newspaper daily
for captivating news
stories, dining and
entertainme[lt reviews,
travel deals, local
weather reports and
much more!

AJOB

IN THE
CLASSIFIEDS

•

....

lntormecl thld all

Grade
9

Tyler Allen, Chillicothe
John lolls, Chillicothe'

. P,_, 6Chool

.

--

ettnewhlchilin
vkllltion of the -.. Our

South DMaion

~~.~

,ttl not

knowlngly8dvett!MfMI'Itl tor ,..,

r~~~
16XBO 3 Bedroom 2 Beth
Vinyl Siding. Shingle Roof.
S230 per month.' 74()..385 -

9948.

�Page B2 • The Daily Sentinel

I
-I

Tuesday, June 3, 2003

www.mydailyseotinel.com

Tuel day, June 3, 2008

--

I

www.mydailyeenUt181.com

sprinters

mrlbune - Sentinel - ~egi,tet

-

CLASSIFIED

'

Gallia
County

•
•

OH
Web5jtes:

www.mydailytribune.com
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..-..
...' -..-...
.• .

•

•

-· .-

-' .

SUbnlllled p11011&gt;
A group of sprinters on the Meigs High School boys track team have broken ·a long-standing record during the 2008 season. Seniors Branden Fisher and CorneliUS English, JUnior
Crockett crow, and sophomore Jeremy Smith make up the 4x200-meter relay team, and on
numerous occasions this season they combined to set a new MHS record m the event.
Their final best time of 1:32.23 came at the regional finals 1n Byesville and was over a second faster than their previous best from the district finals. The old record t1me. set 1n 1969
by Mike Grate , Elbert Williams, Roy
and Rich Hawley, was 1:36.54. P1ctured

•.. -

-:. L - - - - - - - - --;.":-::.....:..:...::.....:-'-P·ittsburgh Penguins Marian Hossa (18) ce~bl:ates ·wi1Jl teaml!llates Sidney Crosby, rear,
and Pascal Qupu is (9) after soorting agairnst !!he Detroit Red Wings during the first period of
Game 5 of the NHL Stanley Cup Fmals MomdiJY in Detroit. Pittsburgh won 4-3 in triple overtime to extend the ser.ies. Game 6 •will be Wednesday in Pittsburgh.
·

'

plloto

Vaugha~.

Pens stay alive.with triple overtime win.

-

above, from left to right, are Asher. Crow, aSSIStant coach Lon Carter, English, and Smith.

GARS lands 16 on AU-SEOAL teams

BY IRA PooBJ.

their first loss in Pittsburgh - ry.
.
on Sawn:lay iR Game 4 to
Sykora's goal ended the
set up their · championshi,P fifth-longest
game
m
DETROIT- Not so fast, chances.
Stanley Cup finals history.
• Motor City. The Detroit Red
Early on, a Penguins' win The second assist went to
· Wings' road to the Stanley in this one seemed likely defenseman
.
Sergei
Cup has ariother stop to after ·they scored twice .i n Gonchar, who missed the.
• make.
tbe fll'St period aDd carni.ed a first t~o overtime periods
· Against .all odds, the 2--l lead inro ·t he third. after crashing headfirst into
Pittsburgh Penguins stayed However, lhe .Red Wings the ebd boards in the second
alive in the Stanley Cup tied it on Pa\le] Datsyuk's period. Gonchar took the ice
• · fmais with a 4-3 victory in powerae goal at 6:43 !lfld to help Pittsburgh's strugfor the ftrst tune · gl'ing power play.
• Game 5 that ended on ~ went .
Sykora's goal9:57 into lbe 2:40 ~ater when Bnan
"The game was so lo11g:
lbird overum~ Monday Rafalski scored. ·
. .
wanted ro help our guys,
night
,·
The patty was on m the Gonchar said. "I started
• With Jiri Hudler serving a final_ .minute.. Pengums feeling better at the end of
. 4-minute penalty for high- goal1e Marc-Andre Aeury .llhe second overtime, se (
sticking, ·Sykora wound up was · .on the bench, the thought there was a chance.
in the right ·circle and ripped Pittsburgh net was · c:mpty Anyway I could help, [ had
a drive past Chris Osgood to and the . ·seconds tlck&lt;:d to oome back, so the goal
end the marathon that lasted down ll?walld Detroit _s ;.,as wait until the power
• 4 i 12 hours.
·
fowdl Stailley Cup champt
The series beads back to .i mslf· ~ II
,
- play. They ,p ut me on the ice .
. Pittsburgh for Game 6 on
~ T=~ut the for the ~power play and we
'" dn da · "h
~--s L~-'- into l b. c i r seats scored.
.
. ·
.. e · es · Y mb"'t.
"""he ~. _..
the
That wnt finally clicked
"We have .a great thing w n
uc::
gv.,.,
·
"'Ah
h.
going right now. We just Penguins''ieaSOOwld!asec- ~ It~ ...... . c ance.wanted to win this game (Inc! Whack. of .die . puck at I.JICludmg two m overume
tonight," Sykem said. ''We lhe JCft
w!.lh· 34.3 sec- - - .after converung o~ly
didn't really look ahead. onds left in Fe~atio11 . . twwe m 17 chanCils dunng ·
Now we're .going bact: FJewy kepi diem ·alive with the frrst four games.
Road ,teams nave won. I 0
home. We've got nothing to ·.a ,brilfuuit 55-salle . effort,
lose. We know what we including 24 in ow.e111iime.
of the. !]last 12 , overtime
have to do and hopefully we
Now, the treasured .trophy games m the finals and are
can bring it back here to will go back into its .crate 15-4 smce 1990..
Detroit." ·
and · head to Pennsylvania
Marian Hossa and Adam
The Red Wings, who fell where the Red Wings will Hall J?Ut the Penguins in that
. to 9-2 at home in the post- have another shot at !herr pos1t1on by· sconng 6:04
season, gave the Penguins llth title in franchise histo- apart in tbe frrst.

.

ASSOCIATED PRESS

.!

STA:FF REPORT

allowed Galli a 'Aeadem y to
land 14 players and two
coaches on this season's
GALLIPOLIS - A good league-best honorees - as
spring just got ,~tter fui: .the well .a s one ,player !Of ilbe
athletes at Galtia Academy y.ea~:. · the Blu!e Angels High School, as the blue ....,_......._.,02-0}in
Devils and Blue Angels oollectively landed 16 people tbeSI30AL 's.b in~
At'Ued ·seven ~ an
on
the
2008
Att- -the llist.
well ,. one ICiOliCb
Southeastem Ohto Athletic
·League te.a ms f~?r spring and one MVP. 'Ole Blue
Devils bad !five a:pr~ta­
· ·
spoJts.
GAHS finished frrst in the tives in lCDIIi.s - includinJl
SEOAL South ln softball one roach qf the year-· ,and
and tied for the Sou:th three:!ielwions in haseiWL
Jiin Niday 'was named die
Division liit1e in tennis, as
well · as · placing · as the SEOAL South &lt;coach 10f the
SEOAL 'South runner-ap iin year iin,g uiding the &amp;!gel~ Ito.
baseball. Collectively. !lb.ose a scbOI!l,-best 20 winS and .a
respective teams also fin. sectional crown. He .was
ished second, tied. f@r thiid joined by All-SEOAi.
and fourdl overall in the .repelllers Kimber Davis,
SEOAL.
.
Amy Noe and Blittyn
Those high team fmishes SaiJJIA,ers. Other frrst•ti:me

softball selections were
Brittany Miller, Lindsay
Niday, Hannah Cunningham
and this year ' s MVP Courtney Shriver.
The tennis squad was led
by coach of the year Jim
Osborne, who guided his
team to at least a share of the
division title for the fourth
consecutive year. Quinton
Nibert was a repeat selection, while Joan Sojka,
Jordan Cornwell and Kamal
Dayal all earned their first
All-SEOAL nominations.
The baseball team ·which won · its second
straight sectional title this
year- had repeat selections
for Nick Stevens and John
Paul .Finnicum, while Jeff
Goldeo was selected for the
frrst time. •
·

SPORTS@MYDAILYTRIBUNE.coM

as

How you can have borders and IJI'Ophics
~
oddedtoyourdassifiedods
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Borders $3.00/per ad
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Monday thru Friday
8:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m.
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WRITE M. AD
SU1:1 Jfl.ltMs

Should Include TheR . _
To Help Get• POftlle-..

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rejoct ....... 1111'

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This ••• ; ;

Post

Finals
from PageBl
rebuild from there," said
Pierce. the longest-tenured
Celtics player since· the
original Big Three.
"l pretty much thought it
was over. I can't even
explain it. I thought I was
going to be a Los Angeles
Clipper; I tho ugh t 1 was
going to be anywhere but
tbe Celtics," he said. "Alii
know i~ if I was·n 't a
Celtic, right now I'd be
home ."
Instead, the Celtics built
around Pierce, adding Ray
Allen and Kevid Garnett in
'one of the most dramatic
· overhauls in league history. The team that went 245!1 with a bunch of young
P'layers won 66 games this
year and put the Celtics in

the fmals for the first time Gasol joined them,e;he
since 1-987.
Lakers won 12 of ei r
"I get the !]lleasure of next 13 games and ent
seei ng him play every 28-9 the rest of the way
night, but they could have before going 12-3 against
went a different way," Denver, Utah and San
· Garnett said. "I'm glad to Antonio in the playotis.
see the organization stand . That led them back · to ,
behind a guy ·Who has been Soston, archrivals from 10
able to give his all for pfevious
championship
them, for tbem to step up series ; the Celtics hav.e
and .actually give. him won eight. Celtics coach
some ·players and ~orne Doc Rivers, who watched
help, so that be can reach the Bryant drama unfold
his. goals as a basketball from afar, said he wouldn't
player.
want it any other way.
"When you'r.e a com " I was just happy he
petitor, man, the one thing stayed out West" where he
you want is a chance. They would only face Boston
obviously w.e nt out and twice a year, Ri.vers Sllid.
made the right deals. So "B ut I 'm glad it worked
my hat goes off to them."
out the way it worked out.
The Lakers made a deal Just like Paul Pierce is a
of their own, acquiring · Celtic, Kobe is a Laker:"
Pau G a sol from the
Grizzlies on Feb. I to help . AP Sporrs Writer John
turn around a team that Nadel contributed ro rh•s 1
had shown promise' before story from El Segundo,
losing five of seven. After Calif

Sunday.
Ian Kinsler led off ·t he
Texas fiftll with a double
and came home on Michael
single.
After
Young's
Hami~ton
singled and
run.
Milton
Bradley
walked to
Dellucci had a leadoffl
load
the
bases,
Byrd
hit the
double fn the second before
Blake's homer .to left-cen~ Rangers': fifth grand slam
ter. Blake's next homer, his this season.
Young and Kinsler both
• sixth of the season, went to
went
3-for-5 tn extend their
almost the same spot. Shin- ·
soo Choo followed that with hitting streaks, Young to 18
an infield single and scored consecutive games for the
on a double by Cabrera.
longest in the .AL this seaThe Indians loaded the . son, one · mofe than
.. bases with two outs i:n the Kinsler's ' career-best streak.
• fourth, on a walk and two The Rangers finished with
singles, before Slake dou- IS hits, one · less than
bled into the right-field oor- Cleveland, which got tlu:ee. ner. That bases-clearing hit hit games from Blake. and
: came on the I OOth - and Jhonny Peralta.
·
last - pitch thrown hy
Laffey allowed eight runs
• rookie Doug Mathis.
and ·11 hits over ftve
•
Mathis started in place of innings . , Since
being
Vicente Padilla, who was recalled April 28 from
: placed on bereavement Triple-A Buffalo, he had
· · leave while still home in his allowed only seven earned
· : native Nicaragua dealing runs in six. previous starts
: · with a personal family mat- - and four ofthose came in
;. ter. Padilla left the team his flfSt game back.
•

•

..

· Reds
fmm.PageBl
night," PhiUi!l~ manager
Charlie Manuel said. ·
Pedro fc::lj.z .md. Chris'
Coste also con.nel:ted for the
NL East-leading Phillie&amp;.
Rookie: sensation Jay Bruce
and Edwin J;:ncarnacion
went deep for the Reds.
Kyle Kendrick (5-2)
pitched just well enough to
earn the win, gi vin~ up four
·runs and ftve hits m S 1-3
innings. . Chad Durbin
pitched I 2-l scoreless
IDDings, Tom Gordon tossed
a .pelfect eighth and Brad
Lidge fmished for his 14th'
save in as many chances.
"The bullp«?n did a great
job," Kendrick said.
Reds starter Bronson
Arroyo was hurt by the
longball . Arroyo (4-5)
allowed five runs and ·10
hits in 4 1-3 innings. It was
his shortest outing si nee

r~1
·Player, schOol

Raven ·oine, .rAthens

Grade

Whitney c-..s, Albens

40

__0

·Robin Mor~. Athens
1·2
Jessica Harris. 'Logarr""
l
~ 12
Dakota Seymour, Logan•
12
Ariel Zugg, logan"
·12
.layne Cilrpenter, Marieria• ·
'1
Cheliea Hutchloon,_Ma10
Krissy Sutton, Marlena
12
Laktn Horner, Warrun12
Stephanie Koon, Warren..
12 .
Katie Lianez, Zanesville•
11
Rachella A9"ssler, Zano&amp;YIIIe
H
Player of 1tJB Year: layne'Ca..,._, &lt;Ma.()oach of tne Year: Jim Huitblblet:vat. Logan

.

-lllhiiOioon

Player, school
'
Paige Dempsey, QhllliCOit1e
Hannah Cunningham, G·atlipdlis
Kimber Davis, Galipolis"'
Brittany Miller, Gallipolis

Gra&lt;le
· ~.2
9
!JI'I

.~2
~2

Lindsay Niday, 'Gaii!P.olio

~.0

Amy Noe. Gallipolis''
Brittyn Saunders, Gallipolis'"
Courtney Shriwn, Q~lljpolts
Janey Marris. Ironton
Edi Taylor. Ironton•

il.i1
9
10
U

Haley Riegel, Jadcson

1'12

Lauren Parker, Jackson
Emily Hopkins, Portsmouth"
Heather Krekeler, Portamouth-

12
1~
·-11

Player ot the Year: CO_urtney Sh~. ,GW'jp •

Coach of the Year: Jim Niday, Gattlpotla

-1El511'

Pieyer, •chool

1,

' Connor Lavelle, ~thens
Sam Miner, '~thent*
Christian Sh.DW&amp;tter, IA..1hene

1~

10
!Ul
• 11

Larry Wu, Athens
Shaun Ludwin, l.Dpl,

'12

Josh Messmer, 'Logon · .
.Zach Mullen, Manetta
AIO&gt;C Stem. Marlena

12

Player ollhe Yoor:'Som...,,Coach ollhe -.:,~o~~-.~

givinjl up seven wns in I 1-.
3 ,inrungs agaiilst Atlanta on
May4 . .
Utley lined a two-run shot
into the right -center field
seats to give the Phillies a 20 lead in the. first. Utley is
on pace to hit 58 homers, 26
more than his Clll'tlCr high lin
2006.The R\COfd for second
basemen is 42, set by
Rogers Hornsby in 1922
and tied by Davey Johnson
in 1973.
Utley isn't just doing it
with his bat. He robbed foey
Votto leading off the seventh and made almost the
exact play on Votto again to
end the game.
In the · third, Utley
slammed into catcher David
Ross, but was out trying to
score on Ryan Howard's
double. He put down a near.perfect bunt that just rolled
foul leading off the ~billies'
seventh.
Utley. hears "M- V-P"
chants almost every home
game. If he ends up winning
the award, it'll give the

9
10

&lt;Cluimon Nibert, GallipoliS"
,!&lt;&gt;!In Sqjka; Gallipolis
OttrrietriU&amp;-G~s. Ironton·
.e - Sllcy, Jlokoon,
· 1'hDI1ulo Khoury, Portsmouth
Player of lhe Year; John lod'o. Chillicothe

"'

"'

11

11

12
12
12
11

Coach of the Year: Jim OsbOrne, Gallipolis

BASEBALl. .

-n

fiorth Dlvlolon

;Player. ochool .
Jared Cline, Athens

Grade

11
12

Eberts, Athens
Pat Angle, logan

10

~2

Jullln Wahl, Logan•
1Evan •Brod&lt;l118iet, 'Marietta
&lt;Corey Hooper, Warren
David Lemon, Warren

11
12
12

Tyler Spence, Warren

11

Dan Wagner, Wanen"
12
~.T. Bunling, Zanesville
11
Cole.Hudoon, z..,..ville ·
10
S~&gt;an. Mlltor, z.-v~~~e·
12
wade Kaido. Zanesville ,
10
Player .at the ¥ear: Shayne Miller, ZanesviUe
Coach ot'the Year: David BatD Zanesville
1

1

Souitl OMolon

G!llde

Donni&amp;, Cl\iflicothe
Seth Jlawos, Chillicothe•

12

John Finnicum, GallipOlis'

12 •

Jeff Gokten, GaHipolis

GniPe

.-.,llngsMtwrt-.ct ln

10

GObe'SoymlllJr, Chillicothe
,Jofdan Cornwell, Gallipolis
Kamal Dayal, 'Gallipolis

!Niok SI!Mons, l'laltipolis•

•Nick Lawi&amp;. i(Pnton
~· Coyan, Joot&lt;son••
'.!.ntllD!II"Malone, Jackson

Kyle Newsom. Jackson .
6!niltl. Jackson

Jahn .__, Poi'!Smouth'
Howard Harcha. Portsmouth
· Joot1 •Mrero, Portsmoulh
PWrar ,at the Year: Tyrus Coyan, Jackson
:pooch of the Year: lance RolSton. Jaoklon

· Phillies an MVP three-peat
following Howard and
Jimmy Rollins:
Bruce hit an oppositefield drive that just cleaied
lhe left-field wall to .cut it to
2--4. in the fourth. It was
Bruce's third homer in his
tim seven games. The 21~-old center fielder ~as
n on a tear smce gettmg
called up from Triple-A last
week, hitting .577 with
three homers and seven
RBis.
After Bruce's fiTS I three
at-bats, he was 2-for-3,
making him 15-for-25 overall. The last player to have
at :least IS hits in Ibis first 25
major league at-bats was
Chris C. Jones of the 'Reds
iB I 991, according to the
Elias Sports Bureau. Jones
went 15-for-25 from April
.
27 to June 28.
Bruce flied out lin his fmal
at-bat in the eighth.
"Hopefully he keeps_it
and other guys get hot. '
Baker srud.
·
Feliz hit a two-run homer

.ur,

11

12

.12 .

12
12
~,

11
12

~'

.

.

~2

12
10

after Geoff Jenkins led off
Philadelphia's fourth with a
double. ,Coste followed with
a solo shot to make it 5-1.
Encarnacion led off the
fifth with a homer to left.to
get the Reds within 5-2.
Adam Dunn's two-run
double off Durbin with two
out~ in the sixth cut it to S- ·
4. Kendrick left after Bruce
singled to put two runners
on with one · out. Durbin
retired Brandon Phillips on
a fly to right, but Dunn hit a
liner into the gap in rightcenter.
The. Phillies
chased
Arroyo in the ftfth after singles by Utley and Pat
Burrell and a walk to
Jenkins loaded the bases
with one out. But Gary
Majewski came in and
retired Feliz on a doubleplay grounder to escape the
jam and keep it close.
Notes: Reds SS Jerry
Hairston extended his hitting streak to a career-high
I 0 games with a sixthinning single.

That's lhe word from
subscribers who read
our newspaper daily
for captivating news
stories, dining and
entertainme[lt reviews,
travel deals, local
weather reports and
much more!

AJOB

IN THE
CLASSIFIEDS

•

....

lntormecl thld all

Grade
9

Tyler Allen, Chillicothe
John lolls, Chillicothe'

. P,_, 6Chool

.

--

ettnewhlchilin
vkllltion of the -.. Our

South DMaion

~~.~

,ttl not

knowlngly8dvett!MfMI'Itl tor ,..,

r~~~
16XBO 3 Bedroom 2 Beth
Vinyl Siding. Shingle Roof.
S230 per month.' 74()..385 -

9948.

�.I

tueu,_,, June 3, 2Cl08

· Page B4 • The Daily Sentinel

I

IllS:

In 11

J

www.mydailya entinel.com

AL.LEYOOP

The Daily Sentinel • Page B5

cur

NEA Crossword Puzzle

BRIDGE ·

ACROSS

IIIMr•arytl

NIIIICY Hubbard
Patterson
41r1136 • SI1JI4
and
Rllci'Did Patterson

Phillip
Alder

-............ -Co....
100 · -

·

Anniversary
June3,2818

.1MB£ . . . lOT RJR
IIENT, 1031 ~ 01011&lt;

,__.

._.,.,.,

S)'TICUsc. &lt;lbio

I

~
Specials
16 in. Bosroo F&lt;ms
Now SS.OO
While lbey las~ over
2llOO 10 choose from.
Aowering .t Foli.,c
Baskets, Bodding .t
Vegelable Allis
4 in. folil,ge pot
Slnub!l &amp; Azaleos
OpcnM-S9-5
Oosed Sunday

2 bectoom lor' rent.
flO (7&lt;10)1182.o5158

Loved and mj rd
Cbllclrm and Grmdchildrea

99Z..s776

,.....

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HUBBARilS ·
GUENIIOUSE .

• 110 J -t I
• '8 'II J

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·Gnces

•Complete

Rernodeling

Halt aloM c

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FRANK &amp; EARNEST

A ltfAI&gt;elf IN aiiCAGO ASICS ..Wf'IY ISri'T
.
IT A 6001&gt; 1/)fA TO
/
mo.tMONfY AT

WIZA,P,

A PlfOIUM1"

AWSWE,S

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TOO NAI'IY

you'

YOUNC'S

QUESTloNS

Ct\ RPENTER

...

11/TflftEPTIOftiS. .

SERV ICE
BARNEY
I'M SORRY YOU AN'
ROY BROKE UP, SUI&lt;!,
BUT THAI&lt;'$

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www.r r •• , ar

If so, you qualify for a

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V"WI-\~T E.L:'£ CAA '100~ ~ '\r·~ ~TO~ YOU-,
TI\E. ::,to:..'{R()U(.f.TIN&amp; GO:&gt;T
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Cell: 740-416-5047

Jon Van 11111111' •

11111111:

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111.._

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AIJ piiiiS

THE SONIc_ SouNDS Of
'ENSLP.VE THE MOLWSK"
WILL &amp;E &amp;LASTif\16 OUT
' OF RA~IOS

Apaibtt&amp;tta

WOIU.bWIDE !

lEut
•

Pass

nom

740-441-9010

.

_,

.

.,_.

1 Ewa.661os 30 ..... part 51 Applerivll
8 T110 f~te 31 l1oat
52 Topple~

an-

-T32 In lhe

1 51op
'"'the goa

54Taloe

vicinity

10 Ovo

34_,

a!iw, tthowing •ataelly ;four spades. (A

l

North made a prH11ipliw leap to 1hToe
heao1s. He would usually haw! a &lt;oond
with bur Marts.and nine 'losers, not one
wi!h lour ftaarts and 111osors. But these
days loumament playeos olton """"'
crtll)' bkls 111m 1hls. They hope 1o win
more on 1he ~ 1han 'they loee on
1he roundabouts.

Wes1 kltt1hat he could not go quietly, bu1
had nO!Nng ballsr'lhan a balancing double And East hoped tor the bos1 on
Wes11ed 'his lowes! oiamond. East 01011
witl1 lis king and accu~ sltlllad 10
the spade king. When Weioo ent:oU!BgOd
with lis eiijhl, Eosl continued wilh the
spade queen and ~is 1hlnl spade 10
Wesl's ace. Then West, alsO dofen&lt;ling
peofeclly, played ~$ 13th iipBdo, which
Easl rufled With his heart iaok to ellecl
an upj,on:ut. A11er South ovetTUII!HI with
his heart ~ing, West got 1he .setting triok
wilh his .hoart queon.
11 is similar when West is in two spades.
North leads 1he heart t 0. SOUih wins
with his lting and catthe&amp; 1he club king,
North dropping 1he jaok, Pllll'ing h~
low with a doublotoo. The_,.., oon1inues wilh 1he club """· a club ruff and
a heart to Soulh's ace.Then South leads
his last club 111111 North ruffs wi1h hs
spade jad&lt;, which ef1ec1a an uppernut,
promoting • spade tria&lt; 1or South.

CEI FBRITY QPHER
br Luil Canp

•
:

~ ~ ~ lA! Cf.u:llrom ~by ianv.Js jllllpll! . pas! ard presat.
Each IBIIet in . . ~ stard61of II'ICJihef
•

Tooay's r1ue: o-~ u
"IIVL

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ltiMENol(S

lUi. L'SXZ«IV ZCS. XOCXL CML: K'P:
IIHIIl' IIVL XNJLMSI'LSR

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•

HLCICS -

PREVIOUS SOLUTION - '1lasaball is reassuring. II makes me feel as ff the
W1l!ld ~ not going 1o blow up."· Poet Shaoon Olds
-

=

s~~}'\-~t-~s·::

IILIIDitQa '"""" of tite
Ofour
1Cnlnobltd wcrds boo

By--- -

low 1C IDrm four shlq)lt words.·

w......., ...... ,,ZOGI

LUTEGL.

In arrangements or lnvOtvements where
you are tree 10 call your own Shots, you
wlll do quite· well In the year ahead .
Converaaty, When ano1her Is running the
show, tl will put ltmtiB on your talents and

SL Uf H

I

him or her any better.
CANCER (June 21 -July .22) Past
respoo&amp;iblltlie&amp; tha1 you tailed to oom-

oould plrt 1he oq.-&lt;e on you ao

· this time. The sooner you fulfill these

"'"""'· lho

q.._, you can get on wiih

(Ju&lt;y

The 5tUdcol was bCnting
•
himself for bis mistake. The·•
teaclter cOunseled him by :
saying. "Don't be tQugber ;•
on yolll'!ielf tban life -: on-:·
A Cemple1o tho· chuckle qiiOiool
V by iilling In 'rl\e missing wardfi

I

p ;A
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_..,.:._·
;,..:.,::..;;,.;..,--!
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own affairs.

23-Aug. 22) - 11 you ""'
uoco-rtablo al a social gatheo;ng,
keep your teelings and thoughts to yourself. Your whining wlll Dnly spoil the fun
tor everyone else and compound your

1
I"

rou ~lop from Jtap _No. 3 ~
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anguish .

221 _The only ~ PRINT NUMBf UO LETTERS ,N
way to satisfy your ambitions Is_to rotl up \ ::;=::'::HE::&gt;
::£=SQ=U=A::RE:::S:::;=.;;:::=;:=;=:=~*=*~=;
your &amp;leeYes and do your beSt to aooom- \
I

plftlh them. Blam;ng olheo's will only.,.;_
"""'you 1mm achieving an}llhlng worthy

LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct 231 - _ , what
intltl'vsti; your lialeners upp&amp;rm01it m

For

ANew Home?

ClASSIFIEDS. t v~

The Gallipolis~ Lodge
No. 107 will hold their annual

300 2nd Ave. GINipolia, OH
(across
1he city 1*1\) .

....

zt~

4j - -

37111ellllh

skiNs.

Phone._
· -------------------

Kipling Shoe Co.

Syhesl&amp;i

1l!l8-SJl8de response IIIOUid 1'8118 guaranltoed at tOast a ·fiw.Ciod suH.) Then

VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept.

10%-20%

45-dly
46 Filii 1111 1i

The
auction
· with ND1'1h
knoooing
.no·""o.Waot'&amp;--neg-.

own

$17.99
Olher select items

•

3 Qoip- 26 Worlo in the 41 Au ur ••
350olto
.t· S....
UIWIIUOIII - ~
inhSeine ·S T-end 2 7 -'a
~ ....
36 F1iclicat
lhlm
sur..,.,,..

GEMtNI (May 21-June 20) - Don't put
yoUlliBif in a position to need the support
at 'someone who has caused you much
di9comfon in the .past. This person hasn't
d'langed, and It i110'1 likely you'll tolerate

• City/State/Zip _____ _ __

NIKE - K·Swiss .
Flip Flops

-.1

by Well?

LEO

(Shop Locally)
Tuesday· Saturday

.

n; · :a :

44 _ . . , . . .

10025 T.-y or

-....

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ftaao1s by Sooth 111111 1"1' spades

-

your

GAS SAVER
SALE

23

1 Foagu""d
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· 'llttis deal oontains an unusual duality.
How can lhe - . . . ~JN~~~il againsl

... BUT SOI1E't&gt;'\'1' SOON.

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________________~

Caring Pet
Cremations
. GVC

21 Hal lOll

Uve by the sword,
or boxing glove?

-

u.tl or drop ~ IIIIa couponlllong
wllh li copy ol your photo 1D to
Ohio 'IIIIey Publlahing P.O. Box 4111, G.!Npolla, OH 454131 :

I

....,._ _..,;,._ ...... -,QAT l Pou.AN

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Slls in 211 Mo.llurllyn to
191411
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4Natlll-

6/l213Sto9/S/97

On their 50th Wedding

41 ER p1ct1n

Soccer Shoot
SU!l!iay, June 8, 2008. It will
. be held at lhe Elks Fann on
SA 588. Sign up will start at
1:30 p.m. with lhe competition
starting at 2:00. Competition is
open to all boys and gills born
qn 8131/1993 or after. There
will be four age 91'014!5 with
boys and girii4Miionl.
Tr'ophies wiH be awaraed for
firll, IICOild, and hrd placit ,i)

-=II division. This event is
free of charge, {10 oome on out
and ·bring a friend.

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

TrY the

Expound upon topics about which others

COli and BOY

gg· ..........

Classified&amp;!!

STRAWBERRIES .ot Vlrgl'e
llony _ , , East of
s,acuee on Rt. 12~ . You
con piCk.

your. conversations, and you will draw
others to you Iitie -a moth to a flame .

PSI

TOO BAll IT TAKES NINE
MONTHS OF Ell!JC,6,T10Nfll
MISERY TO TI1UL Y
API'IIECIAJE TH£ Mf\GIC
Attl FI1EEDOM OF THIIEE

CONSTRUCTION

.L--3'1,. MMHS OF

Jlv=.
. Big Sole! 3 pt. ~Tillers
• •• 5', ~· &amp; T plows IOid - ·
Jlms Fann Equipment. 740446-9777

CORNER STONE
CONSTRUCTION
RoofitYJ, Siding;

UV, INTEGRITY, KIEFER

Doors, WinOOw&amp;,

BUILT,
VALLEY
HORSE/LIVESTOCK
TRAILERS, LOAD MAX
EQUIPMENT TRAILERS,
CARGO £XPAESS &amp;
*i 0 ME STEAD E R
CA'RGOICONCESSION
llWLERS. S.W GOOSENECK
HITCHES.
CARMICHAEL
EQUIPMENTIC A R MICHAEL

PUBUC

~ ....,.
u• • , . .

'AUC....,w

' "'" r 11 -

to
. STORE bid .. a. ..... nto

GROCER'I

·G..-

..........,....
.,..,. B11lllfiroga

()rywa/f,

.

Remodeling, Room
Acfdiliot IS ·
l.oail Ca lira Ia

"'7.'

"" •. _
particu]gr
CUJ'1I!IG -purpaae,
. ....
~~lll!!f!lr
aqo I,Q II . . be-

""' pflood
John -Doore-,?
\!lui •be.,.._
·

..

Ill graupa; llama . .
nolbe-dJIIr 1ft,
Tile JqlllpoMoot ....

WWW . CAREQ . COM
lid'"" EqulpmorL 7«1-

c.

4*2412

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

..
"'!!iiCiiii;

=:.-r
':'

CLASSIFIEOS . .
FOR
'1111,...
BARGAINS !'"1. .

L------..J

,.,a•uor.

.........~. . . 1:110
on llo c1er oi!M

COli- ·p.ioo.

c,..... coo..

I COOL· ..... For tur111er lnlor·

........

.
I

.IT
•...... • C;

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Ka. or

740-t82-

21•.

o.n

SIUIIIh
•
Auc:tiot .... , 0Ht1Mtl

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·
.I

·

GARFIELD

Elootric, Plumbing,

•Decb

•r .

._.... ,

..

'•

Soffit, Dscks,

EQUIFUEm'
wllhdow 1M llbcwe
Owner:
IIIOTlOE: le '*-by c ' I ill prior to .....
740-387-G54C
.....
·lllal
on F...UW, Tile F-a
.aa.-KuniU
FIME ft Ill .
Thur3dllr, June 5, 20111 &amp;.nk llld S.VItlgs
742-2332
740-317-G531
4 4:110 p.m., I public Campanj riiii-IM
wll be,_ ot rlglittoreject-orllll
405
Purl
St., blda aub~··
For'lltm I" :caadNewo-le"' 1
1lWLERS SALES &amp; SER- • , , II&lt;'~ Ohlll. Tile The ...,..
crlbed
VICE. SPECIAL 20FT fdllho'd lltnk and ...,.,_, will be . C.U: MARCUM CO~STKUCI'JON
GOOSENECK FLATBED
_.,
•
$3989. vtEW OUR ENTIRE 8avtne- Ca i ny II .... ie :theie M", ...
•
Room
Additions
•
Garages
•
Vinyl
TRAILER INVENTORY
. . . . . lor ...... Ill no
Hprelloed
or
WWW. CARMICHAE~~ . . . . OI'ceo'F -~ Implied
...,anly
and Wood Siding • Roofing • Pole
TRAILERS:COM 7~0~- '.~' hlp tAr.
given; including dnJ
Barns • Patio's, Porches·and Decks
3825
~ a
·
implied nn ant~ o1
- - - - - - - .._
~ ltldi'Cioaot abllllr or Ill·
, . _ ct.K oul ... -

__)

-

.

()l THIIEE

MONTHS
OF INESCAPAB!£
N:fi&gt;INESS TO Tl2lJlY
1\PP!i!ECiflTE Nit£
MONTHS OF PEI\CIFUL
M!JININGS At&gt;DWL Y
fiFT'ERNOONS.

'j

· cOuld care less, and you11 find a niche.
SCORPIO jOct .. 24-Nov. 22) - Unless
you make a CO("'&amp;eientious e1lort to take
care or oblt'QatiOns ttlat are due, you'll

... , •'"'""" """ a """"" and only haw

)10Uraelf1ooblame 1or your mi&amp;ery
SAGITIAAIUS (Nov, 23-Dec. 21) - It
might be MC&amp;PtionaHy easy to ctwen
upon the
rather than on posi·
live altemafives. bU1: that will leave you
empty and loot. ,..,.,. - . . lho good,
not the be:d .
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22·Jan. 1 9) - Be

t)

UNSCR'-MBlE ABOVE LETTER S

.:._....,:l~
O~G;;!
· E;;_
T .:A::,:
N_;;SW
~E~R_ _ _J,...J..-L.!!!!..l-.I....J.....I

· SCIAM.un ANSWERS ·s , 2 , oa
•
Pilllr- Han:m- Quas1 - Kepose • EASIER
: .
W0111111 to aedit -.r, "I'm having 1I'DIIble with my Cllf
payinerrt plan_ Do you have one IIIII's EASIER?" '

ARLO &amp;JANIS

neo-'1188

ruli&amp;tic about your limitations, and you'•
aooompliRh tar i-nore than you woutd tf
yoy took on more than you could comfor'&amp;ably manage. That will onty lead to ·
~ur Uf'ldorlg.
.AQUARIUS (Jon. 20-Feb. 1 Q) - Watch
out tor aomeooe whose vtews diametrically oppoae yours, because this person
is walking around with 11 chip on h/5 or
her shoulder and ~~palling tor a gooct
fight. Don't aooommodate lhiS hOthead.
PISCES (Feb. 20--March 20) - Pac»

yoursett wteety, or ttwre • IW!Ity Chance

that roo will run out of a1eam before you
can aocomphh r;C&gt;Uf puf'PCJM8. By racing
the clOak, you could mllapM before
!HChlng ygur gaala.
·
4RIES (Motch 21 ..&lt;lprll 1g) - Ang')' - -

bei-C011beO_by _ _
lng·your oplnlone and ..-notlorw to your-

• "· WhO car-. wtwt ~ thtnu ,_ h jOU? Only 1ho!1 -uld
jOU
1&lt;1 logOOOI -

- ·but

lliWRUS ("""I 20-Moy 20) - FoO&lt;tlr ODIJnd, _ . ~ - . . cr! - - OIOollngo, tnO jOU'II
mete qudtr 5 ' I • · 'tbu'll ~a bat·
tie on )'Out
the moment you get

'"aiJ

'**

. _ or IJIII_..ong.

SOUPTONUTZ

47239 Riebel Road, Long Bottom. OH

740-985-4141

Cell: 740-416-1834
25+ ,_. ~ Frw Eflirrollln

Advertise
in this space for

$64

r month

- sT~ -

�.I

tueu,_,, June 3, 2Cl08

· Page B4 • The Daily Sentinel

I

IllS:

In 11

J

www.mydailya entinel.com

AL.LEYOOP

The Daily Sentinel • Page B5

cur

NEA Crossword Puzzle

BRIDGE ·

ACROSS

IIIMr•arytl

NIIIICY Hubbard
Patterson
41r1136 • SI1JI4
and
Rllci'Did Patterson

Phillip
Alder

-............ -Co....
100 · -

·

Anniversary
June3,2818

.1MB£ . . . lOT RJR
IIENT, 1031 ~ 01011&lt;

,__.

._.,.,.,

S)'TICUsc. &lt;lbio

I

~
Specials
16 in. Bosroo F&lt;ms
Now SS.OO
While lbey las~ over
2llOO 10 choose from.
Aowering .t Foli.,c
Baskets, Bodding .t
Vegelable Allis
4 in. folil,ge pot
Slnub!l &amp; Azaleos
OpcnM-S9-5
Oosed Sunday

2 bectoom lor' rent.
flO (7&lt;10)1182.o5158

Loved and mj rd
Cbllclrm and Grmdchildrea

99Z..s776

,.....

......
-----

HUBBARilS ·
GUENIIOUSE .

• 110 J -t I
• '8 'II J

- -.

·Gnces

•Complete

Rernodeling

Halt aloM c

'

l•

FRANK &amp; EARNEST

A ltfAI&gt;elf IN aiiCAGO ASICS ..Wf'IY ISri'T
.
IT A 6001&gt; 1/)fA TO
/
mo.tMONfY AT

WIZA,P,

A PlfOIUM1"

AWSWE,S

- - Ttlflff Mf
TOO NAI'IY

you'

YOUNC'S

QUESTloNS

Ct\ RPENTER

...

11/TflftEPTIOftiS. .

SERV ICE
BARNEY
I'M SORRY YOU AN'
ROY BROKE UP, SUI&lt;!,
BUT THAI&lt;'$

IIRIII~ Ct'htlrJ 1M Flilllin
www.r r •• , ar

If so, you qualify for a

WIGGLED!!

SEA !!

THE BORN LOSER
T'5K-T~

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

o.....

.....----.

V"WI-\~T E.L:'£ CAA '100~ ~ '\r·~ ~TO~ YOU-,
TI\E. ::,to:..'{R()U(.f.TIN&amp; GO:&gt;T
01' 1-\.u.J...TI-\ ~? _.._.

Racine, Ohio 740-247-2019

::.tc.K ~

Cell: 740-416-5047

Jon Van 11111111' •

11111111:

hul ·l loa

•

•U(S S!

a

A K 10!

111.._

·~ ···

-

s•

AIJ piiiiS

THE SONIc_ SouNDS Of
'ENSLP.VE THE MOLWSK"
WILL &amp;E &amp;LASTif\16 OUT
' OF RA~IOS

Apaibtt&amp;tta

WOIU.bWIDE !

lEut
•

Pass

nom

740-441-9010

.

_,

.

.,_.

1 Ewa.661os 30 ..... part 51 Applerivll
8 T110 f~te 31 l1oat
52 Topple~

an-

-T32 In lhe

1 51op
'"'the goa

54Taloe

vicinity

10 Ovo

34_,

a!iw, tthowing •ataelly ;four spades. (A

l

North made a prH11ipliw leap to 1hToe
heao1s. He would usually haw! a &lt;oond
with bur Marts.and nine 'losers, not one
wi!h lour ftaarts and 111osors. But these
days loumament playeos olton """"'
crtll)' bkls 111m 1hls. They hope 1o win
more on 1he ~ 1han 'they loee on
1he roundabouts.

Wes1 kltt1hat he could not go quietly, bu1
had nO!Nng ballsr'lhan a balancing double And East hoped tor the bos1 on
Wes11ed 'his lowes! oiamond. East 01011
witl1 lis king and accu~ sltlllad 10
the spade king. When Weioo ent:oU!BgOd
with lis eiijhl, Eosl continued wilh the
spade queen and ~is 1hlnl spade 10
Wesl's ace. Then West, alsO dofen&lt;ling
peofeclly, played ~$ 13th iipBdo, which
Easl rufled With his heart iaok to ellecl
an upj,on:ut. A11er South ovetTUII!HI with
his heart ~ing, West got 1he .setting triok
wilh his .hoart queon.
11 is similar when West is in two spades.
North leads 1he heart t 0. SOUih wins
with his lting and catthe&amp; 1he club king,
North dropping 1he jaok, Pllll'ing h~
low with a doublotoo. The_,.., oon1inues wilh 1he club """· a club ruff and
a heart to Soulh's ace.Then South leads
his last club 111111 North ruffs wi1h hs
spade jad&lt;, which ef1ec1a an uppernut,
promoting • spade tria&lt; 1or South.

CEI FBRITY QPHER
br Luil Canp

•
:

~ ~ ~ lA! Cf.u:llrom ~by ianv.Js jllllpll! . pas! ard presat.
Each IBIIet in . . ~ stard61of II'ICJihef
•

Tooay's r1ue: o-~ u
"IIVL

I'NfR

RLMMKDF«SI

ltiMENol(S

lUi. L'SXZ«IV ZCS. XOCXL CML: K'P:
IIHIIl' IIVL XNJLMSI'LSR

YLIH Rtl

VLZ .T. "

CSE

-+INSCZE

K'P

•

HLCICS -

PREVIOUS SOLUTION - '1lasaball is reassuring. II makes me feel as ff the
W1l!ld ~ not going 1o blow up."· Poet Shaoon Olds
-

=

s~~}'\-~t-~s·::

IILIIDitQa '"""" of tite
Ofour
1Cnlnobltd wcrds boo

By--- -

low 1C IDrm four shlq)lt words.·

w......., ...... ,,ZOGI

LUTEGL.

In arrangements or lnvOtvements where
you are tree 10 call your own Shots, you
wlll do quite· well In the year ahead .
Converaaty, When ano1her Is running the
show, tl will put ltmtiB on your talents and

SL Uf H

I

him or her any better.
CANCER (June 21 -July .22) Past
respoo&amp;iblltlie&amp; tha1 you tailed to oom-

oould plrt 1he oq.-&lt;e on you ao

· this time. The sooner you fulfill these

"'"""'· lho

q.._, you can get on wiih

(Ju&lt;y

The 5tUdcol was bCnting
•
himself for bis mistake. The·•
teaclter cOunseled him by :
saying. "Don't be tQugber ;•
on yolll'!ielf tban life -: on-:·
A Cemple1o tho· chuckle qiiOiool
V by iilling In 'rl\e missing wardfi

I

p ;A
.T U Q I
_..,.:._·
;,..:.,::..;;,.;..,--!
I j~ .I 15 I ·

own affairs.

23-Aug. 22) - 11 you ""'
uoco-rtablo al a social gatheo;ng,
keep your teelings and thoughts to yourself. Your whining wlll Dnly spoil the fun
tor everyone else and compound your

1
I"

rou ~lop from Jtap _No. 3 ~
;o--:-----'-·---,,-------r,-,-,-:;--r.--T.-...;
i\,
,

L....J...,..J,....J-.I....J.....J.

anguish .

221 _The only ~ PRINT NUMBf UO LETTERS ,N
way to satisfy your ambitions Is_to rotl up \ ::;=::'::HE::&gt;
::£=SQ=U=A::RE:::S:::;=.;;:::=;:=;=:=~*=*~=;
your &amp;leeYes and do your beSt to aooom- \
I

plftlh them. Blam;ng olheo's will only.,.;_
"""'you 1mm achieving an}llhlng worthy

LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct 231 - _ , what
intltl'vsti; your lialeners upp&amp;rm01it m

For

ANew Home?

ClASSIFIEDS. t v~

The Gallipolis~ Lodge
No. 107 will hold their annual

300 2nd Ave. GINipolia, OH
(across
1he city 1*1\) .

....

zt~

4j - -

37111ellllh

skiNs.

Phone._
· -------------------

Kipling Shoe Co.

Syhesl&amp;i

1l!l8-SJl8de response IIIOUid 1'8118 guaranltoed at tOast a ·fiw.Ciod suH.) Then

VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept.

10%-20%

45-dly
46 Filii 1111 1i

The
auction
· with ND1'1h
knoooing
.no·""o.Waot'&amp;--neg-.

own

$17.99
Olher select items

•

3 Qoip- 26 Worlo in the 41 Au ur ••
350olto
.t· S....
UIWIIUOIII - ~
inhSeine ·S T-end 2 7 -'a
~ ....
36 F1iclicat
lhlm
sur..,.,,..

GEMtNI (May 21-June 20) - Don't put
yoUlliBif in a position to need the support
at 'someone who has caused you much
di9comfon in the .past. This person hasn't
d'langed, and It i110'1 likely you'll tolerate

• City/State/Zip _____ _ __

NIKE - K·Swiss .
Flip Flops

-.1

by Well?

LEO

(Shop Locally)
Tuesday· Saturday

.

n; · :a :

44 _ . . , . . .

10025 T.-y or

-....

-

ftaao1s by Sooth 111111 1"1' spades

-

your

GAS SAVER
SALE

23

1 Foagu""d
2 c..koe

·=
·=·
-

....,
""'*•

22 ,...,._ 42

DOWN

33:-:s
,._,......
•

· 'llttis deal oontains an unusual duality.
How can lhe - . . . ~JN~~~il againsl

... BUT SOI1E't&gt;'\'1' SOON.

EllmV"M!W

________________~

Caring Pet
Cremations
. GVC

21 Hal lOll

Uve by the sword,
or boxing glove?

-

u.tl or drop ~ IIIIa couponlllong
wllh li copy ol your photo 1D to
Ohio 'IIIIey Publlahing P.O. Box 4111, G.!Npolla, OH 454131 :

I

....,._ _..,;,._ ...... -,QAT l Pou.AN

The Daily Sentinel
6unbap 11illld -6tntbttl
·-------------------------·----Subscriber's Name _ _ _ _ _ __
A~ress

+

-... .

FISH IN TH'

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

'

I&lt;OY COULDN'T ~SIST CAS'I'IN'
HIS LINE AT €\/'~IN' THAT .

Pl.ENlY OF

Senior Discount*

'

I KNOW •••

1MAT WUZ
TH' PROBLEM !!

=::..

53 -noliCe

o...-

Openinglead: • 5

._....

8rlld

21Y•24Y........for

lll'etlt
Dbl.
llbL

Pass

()We{',fijft · - ••. , . .

w... \'lqllia Call&amp; . . . .,.. .

.. .._Wi

•AK.JI0 2'

... • 7 4

Dealer: East
Vulnerable: Neid&gt;er

irlw ConiiW ia Oll&amp;o wv

l"-748-7.0.ZW

" J 6

••

Slop &amp; Ccwnpore

...,

..:.1

(f

• KQ 5

A 8 6 t

• Q '
• Q 65
• Q .•• .•

•NMI1omes

FINANCIAL

tloint •ltasaatt lttlisttr

•• . -. .,...111011

()ne • '

55 ~0 .
5&amp;Rime57 Plou.,...·a
169 71.
....
-5I ,. hiet17-........
U lllocltJ11111 31 R I • .
15~
ondodl 11 Sftocp
Slls in 211 Mo.llurllyn to
191411
4D"oillllo

4 II

6

-

......

12:1':
e
13 a
14 ::*:'!,

06-IJHIB

• J 7I

/t11STfl ~.

41aUipolts )Bailp CriiJune

.,a-fiji

0

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11

(hWJIIo.l
Oiiar--

0

-

.....

,._..,.

r.:=

I Air~

4Natlll-

6/l213Sto9/S/97

On their 50th Wedding

41 ER p1ct1n

Soccer Shoot
SU!l!iay, June 8, 2008. It will
. be held at lhe Elks Fann on
SA 588. Sign up will start at
1:30 p.m. with lhe competition
starting at 2:00. Competition is
open to all boys and gills born
qn 8131/1993 or after. There
will be four age 91'014!5 with
boys and girii4Miionl.
Tr'ophies wiH be awaraed for
firll, IICOild, and hrd placit ,i)

-=II division. This event is
free of charge, {10 oome on out
and ·bring a friend.

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

TrY the

Expound upon topics about which others

COli and BOY

gg· ..........

Classified&amp;!!

STRAWBERRIES .ot Vlrgl'e
llony _ , , East of
s,acuee on Rt. 12~ . You
con piCk.

your. conversations, and you will draw
others to you Iitie -a moth to a flame .

PSI

TOO BAll IT TAKES NINE
MONTHS OF Ell!JC,6,T10Nfll
MISERY TO TI1UL Y
API'IIECIAJE TH£ Mf\GIC
Attl FI1EEDOM OF THIIEE

CONSTRUCTION

.L--3'1,. MMHS OF

Jlv=.
. Big Sole! 3 pt. ~Tillers
• •• 5', ~· &amp; T plows IOid - ·
Jlms Fann Equipment. 740446-9777

CORNER STONE
CONSTRUCTION
RoofitYJ, Siding;

UV, INTEGRITY, KIEFER

Doors, WinOOw&amp;,

BUILT,
VALLEY
HORSE/LIVESTOCK
TRAILERS, LOAD MAX
EQUIPMENT TRAILERS,
CARGO £XPAESS &amp;
*i 0 ME STEAD E R
CA'RGOICONCESSION
llWLERS. S.W GOOSENECK
HITCHES.
CARMICHAEL
EQUIPMENTIC A R MICHAEL

PUBUC

~ ....,.
u• • , . .

'AUC....,w

' "'" r 11 -

to
. STORE bid .. a. ..... nto

GROCER'I

·G..-

..........,....
.,..,. B11lllfiroga

()rywa/f,

.

Remodeling, Room
Acfdiliot IS ·
l.oail Ca lira Ia

"'7.'

"" •. _
particu]gr
CUJ'1I!IG -purpaae,
. ....
~~lll!!f!lr
aqo I,Q II . . be-

""' pflood
John -Doore-,?
\!lui •be.,.._
·

..

Ill graupa; llama . .
nolbe-dJIIr 1ft,
Tile JqlllpoMoot ....

WWW . CAREQ . COM
lid'"" EqulpmorL 7«1-

c.

4*2412

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

..
"'!!iiCiiii;

=:.-r
':'

CLASSIFIEOS . .
FOR
'1111,...
BARGAINS !'"1. .

L------..J

,.,a•uor.

.........~. . . 1:110
on llo c1er oi!M

COli- ·p.ioo.

c,..... coo..

I COOL· ..... For tur111er lnlor·

........

.
I

.IT
•...... • C;

I . j,

Ka. or

740-t82-

21•.

o.n

SIUIIIh
•
Auc:tiot .... , 0Ht1Mtl

Oltlo, (1111,3

·
.I

·

GARFIELD

Elootric, Plumbing,

•Decb

•r .

._.... ,

..

'•

Soffit, Dscks,

EQUIFUEm'
wllhdow 1M llbcwe
Owner:
IIIOTlOE: le '*-by c ' I ill prior to .....
740-387-G54C
.....
·lllal
on F...UW, Tile F-a
.aa.-KuniU
FIME ft Ill .
Thur3dllr, June 5, 20111 &amp;.nk llld S.VItlgs
742-2332
740-317-G531
4 4:110 p.m., I public Campanj riiii-IM
wll be,_ ot rlglittoreject-orllll
405
Purl
St., blda aub~··
For'lltm I" :caadNewo-le"' 1
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TRAILER INVENTORY
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given; including dnJ
Barns • Patio's, Porches·and Decks
3825
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implied nn ant~ o1
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~ ltldi'Cioaot abllllr or Ill·
, . _ ct.K oul ... -

__)

-

.

()l THIIEE

MONTHS
OF INESCAPAB!£
N:fi&gt;INESS TO Tl2lJlY
1\PP!i!ECiflTE Nit£
MONTHS OF PEI\CIFUL
M!JININGS At&gt;DWL Y
fiFT'ERNOONS.

'j

· cOuld care less, and you11 find a niche.
SCORPIO jOct .. 24-Nov. 22) - Unless
you make a CO("'&amp;eientious e1lort to take
care or oblt'QatiOns ttlat are due, you'll

... , •'"'""" """ a """"" and only haw

)10Uraelf1ooblame 1or your mi&amp;ery
SAGITIAAIUS (Nov, 23-Dec. 21) - It
might be MC&amp;PtionaHy easy to ctwen
upon the
rather than on posi·
live altemafives. bU1: that will leave you
empty and loot. ,..,.,. - . . lho good,
not the be:d .
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22·Jan. 1 9) - Be

t)

UNSCR'-MBlE ABOVE LETTER S

.:._....,:l~
O~G;;!
· E;;_
T .:A::,:
N_;;SW
~E~R_ _ _J,...J..-L.!!!!..l-.I....J.....I

· SCIAM.un ANSWERS ·s , 2 , oa
•
Pilllr- Han:m- Quas1 - Kepose • EASIER
: .
W0111111 to aedit -.r, "I'm having 1I'DIIble with my Cllf
payinerrt plan_ Do you have one IIIII's EASIER?" '

ARLO &amp;JANIS

neo-'1188

ruli&amp;tic about your limitations, and you'•
aooompliRh tar i-nore than you woutd tf
yoy took on more than you could comfor'&amp;ably manage. That will onty lead to ·
~ur Uf'ldorlg.
.AQUARIUS (Jon. 20-Feb. 1 Q) - Watch
out tor aomeooe whose vtews diametrically oppoae yours, because this person
is walking around with 11 chip on h/5 or
her shoulder and ~~palling tor a gooct
fight. Don't aooommodate lhiS hOthead.
PISCES (Feb. 20--March 20) - Pac»

yoursett wteety, or ttwre • IW!Ity Chance

that roo will run out of a1eam before you
can aocomphh r;C&gt;Uf puf'PCJM8. By racing
the clOak, you could mllapM before
!HChlng ygur gaala.
·
4RIES (Motch 21 ..&lt;lprll 1g) - Ang')' - -

bei-C011beO_by _ _
lng·your oplnlone and ..-notlorw to your-

• "· WhO car-. wtwt ~ thtnu ,_ h jOU? Only 1ho!1 -uld
jOU
1&lt;1 logOOOI -

- ·but

lliWRUS ("""I 20-Moy 20) - FoO&lt;tlr ODIJnd, _ . ~ - . . cr! - - OIOollngo, tnO jOU'II
mete qudtr 5 ' I • · 'tbu'll ~a bat·
tie on )'Out
the moment you get

'"aiJ

'**

. _ or IJIII_..ong.

SOUPTONUTZ

47239 Riebel Road, Long Bottom. OH

740-985-4141

Cell: 740-416-1834
25+ ,_. ~ Frw Eflirrollln

Advertise
in this space for

$64

r month

- sT~ -

�'
Tuescjay, June 3, 2008

· -.mydailysentinel.~

. .... B6. The OWySadird

$harapova upset by Salina in Paris; Gmepri; Bryans lose :OSU golf
coach will
retire after
36seasons
- IIYIIa; =F

-.

ASSOCIATED l'l'lESS

PAKIS

Sb;arapova did

ly.

Maria

not go quiet-

.

jllo, ber dep~ from the
FtaJc:h Open was filled wii:b
sOund and fury: her strokeaooompaoying shrieks, her
Self-loatlllng shouts between
jloints and the spectators'
• heiuty • boos and bighpllvhed whistles that ushered
1b: No. l·seeded woman to
exit.
point from reaching
~ quarterfinals at the only
Grand Siam tournament
She's never wop, Sharapova
allowed every bit of a sjgnificimtlead slip away Monday
;iOd collapsed .to a 6-7 (6), 76_(5), 6-2 defeat against No.
13 Dinara Safina.
"'h, I was angry,H
Sharapova said. "I was
angry for maki!\;~nforoed
errors, for not
· g some
of those balls .and j ust ripplng1hem."
.Her fourth-round departure was 1he most startling
Qc:velopment on a day ·lhat
inl;luded this footnoll:: The
l~st U.S. man or woman
playing singles at RolaDd
Garros, 88th-ranked Robby
G'inepri, was eliminated 7-6
. (4j, 6-3, 6-1 by No. 24
lltmando Gonzalez .o f Chile.
• ~A fivechour 'grindfest'
weuld have favored me a little bit more,H said Glnepri.,
0:.5 at the FFench Open
before this year. "I tried to
cod tbe points roo quicldy."
. Gonzalez now faces No. I
Ro,ger Federer in 1he quarterfinals in a rematCh ·o f ·1he
2007 Australian Open final
that Federer won for' one of
his 12Gnmd Slam titles. No.
5 . David FelTer will
Gael Monfils in .a nother
qlliiiitrinal..
llounding out the . rough
sliowing for Americans in
Plfls, the top-seeded men's
doobles team of twins Bob
and Mike Bryan was tupset
by-Pablo Cuevas of Uruguay
.lind Luis Homa ·o f Peru 6-3,
S-7, 7-6 (I )'in .a .quarterfinal
·th!atended in a downpo.u ralid with .a bit of ·r ancor.
When
teams switched
sijk:s during the tlrird-set
tiebreaker, Cuevas oelebrated bis duo's 5-l lead by
leaping over the net 'S o the

me

:one

meet

me

Bryans dido 't shake his hand
wben the match finished.
The U.S. Davis Cup doubles pair was more distwbed
by the country's overall
showing .on clay.
"I guess we were holding
the flag there at the end,"
Mike Bryan said. "We'U suit
it up at WIDibledon and see
how it goes."
Sharapova figured it
wouldn't take long to get
{)Ver Monday's. setback and
start filcusing on the All
England Club, where she
won her first Grand Slam
title iii. 2004 at age 17.
With last month's retirement of top-ranked Justine
Henin, and last week's losses by Venus and Serena
Wtlliams,
Sharapova
appcamd to have a clearerlban-.usoal path lo. SUcCesS at
the clay-court major. She
was one of only two women
with a Slam title to her credit Biuoog the final 16 players, !but will have 1o wait for
another year in Paris.
"I .came very .close,"
Sharapova s'lid.
She led 5-2 in the second
set, and went .up 40-30 while
.
serving for ,t he match at 5-3. .two set points .at 6-4 in 1he
But Safina •e rased that first tiebreaker? After blow·
.chanoe with a backhand ing the second set point, she
winner, and eventually spiked her raclret precisely
broke when Sharapova the way Marat does, drawing
missed a foreharid. In the a warning from the chair
,e nsuing
. tiebreaker, umpire.
Sbanqlova took a· 5-2 lead, · "I'm not the girl to keep
but Safina .c laimed five all the emotions I have
sll:aight points.
inside,- Safina said. "I guess
'1t can go in the wrong I have to pay lots of fines
dilicction
really
fast," because that's ihe way I
~vasaid. "ltjuststart- am."
ed _gomg that way:· .
" She now faces No. 7 Elena
Until :now, Safma was beSt :Dementieva. the . 2004
known for being the kid sis- French Open finalist who
ter .o f Marat Satin; who won beat No. II Vera Zvonateva
the 2000 U.S. Open and 6-4, 1-6, 6-2 in another all2005 Australian OpeiL She Russian match Monday.
Two
other · women's
shares his broad shoulders
and short temper, but thus matches were · suspended
far had not displayed quite because of darkness. No. 4
as much talent •Of taste for Svetlana Kuznetsova, the
the big stage, never advanc- 2004 U.S. Open champion,
16 Victoria
ing beyond the quarterfinals led No.
at a major.
·
Azarenka 6-2, 2-2, while
Even
after
beating Petra Kvitova and Kaia
SharapoYa, she dido 't exact· Kanepi, two unseeded playly display bravado. Asked ers, split two sets.
whethe£ she oould win the
for Sbarapova, things
title, · Safina puffed her really tbegan to fall apart
cheeks, exhaled loudly, and when she served while trailreplied. "I mean, it's not .ing 3-2 in the third set.
easy.H
At 15-lm~e. Safma's foreSo who could have 'been hand landed near a line, .and
surprised that she w.a sted Sharapov.a missed a baek:-

Russia's
Malia
Sharappva
COLUMBUS (AP) reacts after t! Jim · Brown, wbo has
missing a
coached at Ohio State for
point to
~onger than .anyone, said
'
oompatr.iot
Mondi!S&gt; 'ibat he is stepping
Oinara
down a year from now after
Safina
bis 36th season in charge of
during their
the'JDeD ' s golf program.
f'our1:h round
Brown is the aiilningest
matcll of the active golf NCAA coach
French Open with
career rooord of
tennis
5,609-1 ,791-43. He · has
toumament
157 tournament vi~
Monday at
- topped by the; 1979
tile Roland
NCAA champiotibip team
Garms
thai featured longtime tourstadium in
ing pros John Coot and
Paris.
Joey Sindelar. .
Brown bas led Ohio State
to 17 Big Ten tides. The
Buckeyes won ~ conference championship every
season from
1976-90 .
except for finishing seoottd
in 1981 and 1988.
·
Brown is a 1966 Ohio
fium w .far behind for so State graduate who played
long was now in her control, basketball and golf for the
.and She did not let go, col- Buclreyes.
lecting 10 of the final 12
"t' ve been thinking about
points
'
including it the last few years,"
Sharapova's seventh doJible- .Brown , said. ~·u be 65
fault of the match, 43rd of years old' and' diiS' will he
the tournament.
my 42nd year.ai&gt; a coach
When it ended, Safina and now is the time.. I wantdropped to her knees tooele- ed to leave while lhe probrate. Sbarapova qukkly gram was on the upswing.
colleeted her things and left We had a good season ·and
without acknowledging the wi!F be even better next
fans who jeered her on the .year after gaining experi·way out.
ence."'
"I can't please everyone.
Among the players he
That's not in my ' J.D.' has coached at Ohio State
not in my job descrlpliion:," are
Clark
Burrouglls
she said. '
(NCAA medalist in 1985),
· "I mean, they paid the Chris Perry, Chris Smith,
ticket to watch me," she Ke.vin Hall, Gary Nicklaus,
.added, " th
.
so ey must. appre- Ted Tryba, 1Wph Guarasci,
ciate me on some level, Mark Halen, Rod Spittle
right?"
and Craigen Pappas, in
Sharapova moved up from addition to Cook . and
·
No. 2 to No. I when Henin Sindelar.
quit, but the stay might be
Brown also was 1f1e bead
brief. Ana lvanovic, Jelena · coach at Rollins ,and Kent
Jankovic and Kuznetsova all State before returning to
could lead the rankings by his alma mater in 1974.
the end of t!te · week.
Brown's
36
ye.ars
Sharapova was asked about exceeds the. tenures ·of
ihe possibility of losing her swimming coach Mili:e
spot at ihe top.
Peppe (34 years) and
Her reply? "Booboo."
Herman Wirthwein (33 ).

SAR annual awards

·presented, A3

-

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio
-,, l I'\,._, • \ ·, d • -'\,
l

·a

hand. Sharapova asked the
chair umpire to check: tbe
mark from Safina's shot,
drawing scattered noise
from the crowd, and the call
stood.
On the next point,
Sharapova botched · a sitter
and put a fOrehand into the
net - drawing cheers, gen·
erally considered a breach of
elliquette among tennis spectators. Another short ball
came at 15-30, 'and perhaps
wary 6f another miscue,
Sharapova sent it back cautiously, allowing Safma to
pound a forehand. That
prompted a scream from
Sharapova.
.
As play ·proceeded, her
yells became louder and
louder·as she berated berself,
al least once with ~Jorful
~
language.
"You SOD;letimes get a littie too negative on yourself;"
Sharapova said.
After erasing three break
points in that game,
Sharapova netted two forehands in a row, ,c eding the
break. Now it was Safina's
turn to let it out: 'She raised a
fist .and bellowed. A match
in which she was playing

to resume training, and then
ihe blacksmith changed
them over the weelrend.
It's only ·upon a close look:
fmmPageBl
that an observer can spot a
white area on Big . Brown's
§tee} sutures on the inside of left front hoof. The colt's
hl_s hoof. They've allowed gait has been unaffected.
B1g Brown to gallop around and so has ·his attitude
Belmont Park while giving
Big Brown lapped ~p the
the hoof healin&amp; ~·
, attention from pbotogra. Hoof
spectalist
lao phe(s outside his barn
McKinlay said Monday he Monday. Walking to a black
will wan until Ftiday to rubber mat for a bath, he
attach an acrylic and fiber- stopped and looked directly
•. s patch to Big B~wn's at the clicking cameras, both
lioof! the final step m the ears pricked. Then he turned
repatr process ahead of his head, as if to show off
SallJn!afs. Belmont S~s. his best side (his, left) lik:e a .
"TTii,!' IS jUS! .asligh~ slight veteran Hollywood star. ·
~k, ~cKinlay ~atd out- . Big Brown bas a history
Stde Btg Brown s bam. of foot problems dating to
"We're being extra cautious late last year, when he first
becausehe's ·heading .toward anived in Dutrow's bam at
the Triple Crown.- .
Aqueduct. He was twice
.Initially, the ~lao had sidelined for 45..ctay stretch·
called for MoK.inley to. es because of abscesses in
apply. the p~~h Monday, but his left and right front feet.
be said w.attmg a couple of
As a result, Big Brown is
extra days would allow for a lightly raced horse commore natural healing to pared to other 3-year-olds.
~ur.
.
.,
He's 5-0, l!aving mopped up ·
, As the clock ticks, 1t s the competition by a comgo.tten better and better," be bined 391en~s.
·
li8id.
·
Big Brown s quarter crack
• ~ig Bf?wn . gall~ problem is fairly common,
~y. wtth tramer Rick: with some .horses plagued
Dutrow lL and ~ of the by such an injury through~t's ?wners.loolcing on.
out their ~ careers. A
He s mo~g as good as quarter crack ts a vertical
bll ever has, Dutrow said. crack in the boof wall
Applying
the
patch between the t'oe and heel of
involves McKinlay taking the hoof, usually extending
out the sUIUieS, cleaning up into the coronary band,
the area, redrilling holes and where the hoof meets the
putting a new set ·o f "!!tures skin of the leg.
m. If ~ssary, ;he will put · Healing time can range
11l. a drain that would allow fium a few days 1o a few
any serum to escape. Then months, depending on the
he covers up the whole thing severity of the craCk.
with acrylic adhesive that
Havmg McKinlay workliels in five minutes.
ing on his horse has only
"1be adhesive that we'll increased Dutrow's confirebuild that wall with is dence. The blacksmith, oonSUUn~er than the hoof sidered one of the •best in the
if!elf, ' McKinlay said.
business,
worked
for
Big Brown will go for his Dutrow's late father, who
last training runThesday on trained in Maryland.
tbc 1 112-mile oval, where
"There's no setbacks
lie' will try to become lbe when you deal with lao," die
fii:lt Triple Crown winner in younger Dutrow said. "He
30 years.
rome in. He'11 figure it out.
tie missed three days of He'll give you a timeta1)]e,
biini"l! last week after tbe And like nine out of lQ
qUade.r crack II'4IS discov- times, it's right on me .
Dred. McKinlay inserted money."
tCieel sutures to pull the
Which is where Dutrow
crack together a week ago, expects Big Brow'! 1o be
wtUch allowed Big Brown Saturday.

"l

1\ I I l'\'t "I'\ ' '

--

·

I'~ '\I -1 • -.,,,,..,
Jo

,, ,, ,

8Y Bent SER

Township. Hunter said she
was pro11011Dced .dead at 1he
· scene and no one else was in
LONG BOTIOM -. A the home.
Meigs EMS were notified
Long Bottom woman died
in a house t-.re ~ly of the ftre around 6 a.m.
Tuesday morning, accord· Tu.esday morning with d:te
ing to dte office of the Ohio Bashan, Chester and Racine
Ftre Marshal which was V~lunteer Fire Departments
ailed to lbe scene.
responding to the two-story
After !he notification of home. Shane C311tmi1, pubimmediate. family, Meigs , lie infoJlllllljon offi.cet ror
Cnunty Coroner Douglas the office of 1he Ohio F.re
Hunter ideot:imd the victim Marshal, said l100illdirtg to
liS Mary Kay Holter, S4, his investigators, the victim
33660 Township Road Ill was found in the li~ng
'(fkllter
Road),
Long ·room IIPfll'Oximatcly 1.5-feet
Bottom
in
Che.s ter from a smoke- detflCtor ·t hat

·Plan'

had no working batteries.
Cartmill said rhere we~e
four smoke detectors in the
llo1.1se wi•th only the one
located upstairs with working batteries.
"We don 't know if that
would' ve made the difference in this case," Carttnill
was quick to point out,
adding the office was troubled by the '82nd ftre fatality in Ohio this year with 15
percent ·of those having
working smoke ~lectors.
While on scene, two Fep-.
resentaliives lirom the. office
of t!he Ohio Fire Marshall

t

•

Middleport
association ·

the.seeds

finalizes
July4

'
•

schedule
BrBRIANJ. REm
BREEOOMYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

' PqeAS

..

.·• Gel1rude Ervm, 90
.• Mary Kahyn lit6!:r. 84
· • DanAhy Nanis, 92

-

.

The youth of \the
Syracuse
Community ChurCh
recently planted a .
yootfil flower bed
aloog the eflll:m:jil to
~1:101-bealiltlly 'the
building but plant
illle· seeds of
Christian ~mity. .
Pictured are Pastor
Joseph Gwinn.
Jaoey Martin,
Courtney Katona, .
Olivia Hubbard ,
.Kamryn Smith,
falon Drummer,
l&lt;aylee Katona. The
flowers were donat. ed bv Hubbard's
Greenhouse of
Syracuse.

.

:$et 'PIF-"'

• tQiass()f 78 :mt.llion

held. See . . . A6
•• Compleles basic
tiamg. .See
A3 .

r.

.

.

.

POMEROY -The ·2008
Summer
Children's '
Reading Program "Catch
the Reading Bug"
has
already begun free :sign-ups
with ~pecial events schedilled June 9-July 2!1.
The sunimer reading program. under the direction of
the Mei,.s County District
,.
,.,
t"'
Public Ilhrary, will kid( off
-· 2~-UPA.GI!S
with a repeat perlonnance by
:. •
aowd favoote "Nancy the
Annie's Mailbox
· Thi11e Lady" at 2 p.m., June
.'
11, at the Pumeaoy library.
&lt;)le'ndars
Nancy will be 'bringing many
ClassifiedS ·
82-4 111rtlcs, sruikcs and other replilian friends to share with
Comics
children involved in tbe pro-

INDEX

Bs

Editorials
Movies
Obituaries.
Sports

Weather

.A4
As
As
8 Section
A6

•

'

..,,.,,liTH·

began their investigation by
Another piece of the puz·
speaking ito wi.IDesses and zle will arrive when the
first Fesponders
ewly autopsy results are in.
Tuesday but later lhat .after. HU!i.ter said the vic,t.im 'i
noon the office announoed · body was sent to Dayton for
IIIOlle intecviews· are to be that autopsy. As for when
cooduotod.
the investigation will be
~Investigators will be conoomplete, Cartmill said it
ducti,ng additional inter- could be as soon as a few .
views based on new infor· days, or six to 10 weeks and
mation
we
Feceived," thai a thorough investigaC:artmil.l said before ·Clarify· Ilion was imperative due to
ing the cause of t!be fire the fatal nature of thdire.
remains undetermined .at
Also on scene were
llhis time with his office deputies from ihe Meig~
unable to make a decision County Sheriff's Office and
on whether it was su~icious emergency personnel from
or lll.lCidental in nature.
. Meigs EMS.

• Foiat IBI'i wns award.

•

111\d.11h

Long Bottom woman dies in fire

SPOKIS

.... liergMrt.lphD7o

•n

\

.•'

•

Hoof

'

Roush named.
volunteer of
theyear,A6

gram,

Can.oooist Jeff NichOlas
will present "Gone with the
Wmdshield,H a "bug infested cartoouing program" at 2
p.m., June 18 at the Pomeroy
Library. Jeff's program will
be crawling with stories and
ori~inal illustrations while
viSitors to the program will
learn how 1o draw their own
caJtoon bugs.
Ventriloquist M31t Wade
p.m.,
returns
at
4
Wedoe&amp;day, June 25 at the

Pomeroy Library, bringing
!Us special P.uppets to entertain the children with tales
only they can tell.
PT Reptiles will visit at 2
p.m .. July 2 at the Pomeroy •
Library, bringing a variety
of reptiles for an up close
and personal vi sit
Dee Kimes, naturalist
witl! furked Run State park.
will present an afternoon of
buggy outdoor fun begin·
Ding at 2 p.m., July 9 at the
Racine Library.
Jim Kleefeld, magician,
will bring .his own special
brand of mil.gic to children
at · 2 p.m., July 16 at the
Pomeroy Library.
The summer reading program wraps up with a free
pool party held from 6-8
p.m., July 24 at the London
•
Pool in Syracuse.
For more infonna!ion on
signing up for the swnmer
reading program, call 9925813
or
-..,visit
www.meigs.lib.oh.us. All
programs are free of charge
and the sutllmer reading pro·
Fllepllalo
gmm is open to )'OWJg people, p~scltpol age through Next week Nancy the Turtle Lady will travel from Columbus
)'OIUig aduh, with progmms, to present her special program on her reptilian friends to
priu drawing•, story lwurs, children in the Meigs County Districl Public Library's 2008
a remling club and more.
Children's Summer Reading Program.

MIDDLEPORT -Plans
have been finalized for
Middlep6n's July 4 celebration, including a parade,
live entertainmenl and a
fireworks display.
Meeting Tuesday, the
Mid"-leJl.\lrt t(;qmm.u_oity
Association completed a
schedule .o f
tentative
events. The day ' s activities
will begin at 2 p.m., with a
historical walking tour led
by
Mayor
Michael
Gerlach.
Storyteller
Donna
Wilson will entertain in
Dave Diles Park at 3 p.m.,
followed by a gospel sing
at 3:30.
The parade lineup will
begin at 4:45 p.m. at the
Rejoicing Life Church. The
parade will begin at 5, traveling down North Second
Avenue to Mill Street,
down South Third Avenue
to
General
Hartinger
Parkway, and back up
South Second Avenue . It
will disband at the village
parking lot near Family
Dollar.
Prizes will be awarded to
entries in three categories
to be announced. Members
of Feeney-Benneu Post
128, American Legion will
be asked to serve as grand
marshals of the parade,
lead the parade, an'd conduct · a flag ceremon y
immedialely
following,
Phalin said.
The association will
invite veterans and their
families 10 ride in a ''heroes
unit.•:
The evening program will
include a karaoke contest by
K&amp;D Karaoke with three
cash prizes - $100. $75
and $50, and other live
·
music.
Phalin said details for setting off the fireworks along
the Ohio River have been
ftnaliteld a contract has
·gned
between
been
Hambu Fireworks arid the
village.
Fundraising for the dis·
play has beg un. and the
association will hold a
fundraising luncheon from
11 a.m. to I p .m. on June
20. Hot dogs and sloppy
· joes, cole slaw, potato
chips. coolties and drinks
will be served in Dave
Diles Park to help rai se
money for the fireworks
display.
Phalin
said
Beth
Gloeckner, owner of Beth 's
Place, has volunteered to
conduct a fundraising event
for the firework s display. as
well. A date will be
announced.

.,

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