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                  <text>Page 86 • The Daily Sentinel
fMi i IRIERgl

fOIM 'iM*Wt" $p£CW

Monday, June 9, 2008

www.mydailysentinelcom

jjMR!§MRf

fW\R

FOR ffE 'M8D RESEfM MQitARY EXI:HANGif M MRHA@ !IL CN®H 00 44109

.free giveaway of last

New
law
' God We TIUSI''

Soon to be eliminated Presidential Dollar Coins edge engraved with "In God We Trust"
Free to aU·those who order highly sought after
Vault Tubes for just $32
'

Lee donates to PVH
r ehabilitation, A 6

Students visit
Washington, D.C., A3

•

'

•

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio ,

By SHAWN OYLER
UNIVERSAL MEDIA SY NDICATE

(UMS) . - Starting at precisely 7:46 a.m.
today, some of the last Presidential Coirui
minted with "In GOd V{e Trust• engraved on
the edge by the U.S. Government are being
banded out Cree to the public.
Readers are getting all six of the existing
coins Cree with each complete set of six edge
engraved vault tubes they claim.
·
So, who's to thank for this massive giveaway etrort? Well, it's not the government. It's
the privately held World Reserve .Monetary
Exchange.
.
The U.S. Government barely· got started
minting these PresidentW coins with "In
God We Trust" on the edge when federal law·
aigned by the President required immediate
preparation to remove "In God We Truat•
from the edge.
·
The first six Presidents that were minted
in limited quantity are now out of production
and there will never be any more.
·
These were the fJrSt circulating United
States coins with edge markiilgs since the
legendary St. Gaudens Doubll! Eagle and
with the new law, they are likely to be
wortb even more than the three doU.rs Tbe
Otnc/111 Red Bot)k: ~ Guide t9 Ullilld St.t11
Coias already says each coin is w:orlb.
And we'll even give you the direct Hotline
to call so you can be among the first to get
yours free right now.
'
Almost immediately after this bill became
law, coins wltb "In God We Truat• began
being snatched up by those in tbe knbw. Now
these golden Presidential Dollars are harder
to fmd than ever.
"It's a miracle we even have theae coins;
: said Robert Castaldo, Executive Director of
: the•World Reserve Monetary Exchange, "it
took the full power and resources or this privately held organization to secure tbls hoard,
and now we're handing them over to aU who
cover the cost or the valuable Cljatal-clear
: Vault Tubes."
: People everywhere will be trying to get
: their hands on the last or these magnificent
: stacks of coins that Btill. have "In God We
Trust"
the edge. But only those who get
in before the 2~y deadline are being hand. ed one .of the remaining brand new never.. circulated Presldential Dollar ~ free with
; every single '32 sealed vault tube.
: The World Reserve is coping with the
· explosion of caDs• .So, don't give up calling
if you don't get tbrougb the fJrSt time. Keep

on

trying.

1'7

.

:; o (I"\ IS • \ ol. :;-. \o . :!:.!H

_• Griffey hils No. 6®· ·
. SeePageBl

-

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\\\\1\. l!l)d"il)~"nlincl.cnm

male wearing a red baseball
cap, dark: shirt, blue jeans
and a blue bandana over his
face entered the hoitse and
confronted the men.
1be man then struck a 24- ·
year-old male in the head
with a gun before shooting
Roush. "The assault victim
refused medical treatment
· while at the scene, but went
to the hospital Sunday
morning to be checked out.
Starcher said the suspect
fled the scene in a white
Dodj:e Shadow or Dodge .
.Spint and may have iJ!len

traveling to Obio toward the members of the West
Virginia Slate Medical
Columbus area.
The crime appears to Examiner's office, who
have been drug-related, transported Roush's body td
Charleston for an autopsy.
Starcher said.
Troopers are continuing
Officials with the Meigs
County Sberiff's Department their investigation of the.
and the Columbus office of alleged homicide. Wootton
the Federal Bureau of is the lead investigator and
Investigation are assisting in is being assisted by
the manhunt, he added
Starcher, Cpl. C.K. Zerkle
Members of the West and Cpl. K.M. Gilley.
Anyone with information
Vuginia State Police crime
scene team were on the about the case is asked to
scene for severid . hours call the Mason County
Sunday to .collect eVidence. Detachment .at (304) 675Also on. the scene were 0850.

Monday
0BITUARIFS ··
•
mo-.-.-,Jng

: PageAS
. • Michael E. Pauley, 58
• Christopher Roush, 29

Bv BRIAN J.

REED

BREEOOMYDAILYSENTINEI..COM

POMEROY - A coal
barge that sank in the Ohio
River near Middleport last
week was expected to be
removed from the river late
· • N'-N:A.. pol: Debt
.Monday. according to th~
luti ..,._. hnttu tnn.
U.S. Coast Guard.
r-· -:::;-,1..,....,
. "nulpment necessary t&lt;f
see.Pale KJ· '
s~ge the barge and .
• Was Mom an
remove the coal it carried
parent?
arrived
at the site of the
inadequate
sinking on Sunday evening,
See Pale A3
and crews arrived yesterday
· • Bradford Bible
morning to begin work,
school set for next
according to Lt. Herbert
week. See A3
Lumpp, the Coast Guard's
press spokesman.
• Extension Selvioe
· Commercial river traffic
offers food pt9SeMltion was restored Friday evening
A3
-earlier than was expected
Clwtene~
tipS. See when the barge was
• Fanners: Plant
removed from the river's A Union Avenue, Pomeroy, house and two vehicles parted nearby were heav!IY damage~ when a tree. fetl on the property eany Sunday moming. The house is .owned by John Bl~e .. Wendy Smith who res~s there sa1d the tree carne
seeds for your wori&lt;ers'
navigational
channel, through the roof into the kitchen and bedroom area . naiTo~ly mtsstng the bed where her children slept.
·
-...- See A3 · according to Lumpp.
letiremem.
• _.
· Authorities had halted traf. • Ollioer deaJed of
fie on a three- IDile stretch of
mt.1t1er charges is
the Ohio River after the

INSIDE

• GOING,
GONE: You are looking at the
the edge engraved •1n God We Trust" Golden Presidential dollar coins ever minted
because the new federal law prohibits them from ever being minted again. But now all those who beat the 48 hour deadline and claim ttle -set-of
six Presidential Vault Tubes will get the first six Presi~ential Dollar coins and the silver vault box free .
separate heavy vault boxes. Only those lucky
enough to get in on this 110111" can be among the
first to be automatically taken care of with aD
of the new Presidential Program DoUars to
ever be minted over the ten years," explained
Castaldd. .
1be Presldentlal I)ollars are already .hard
to ftnd beca&amp;•aelocal banks dm't btwe them aD
and colkictors are snatching them up. Banks
will not bonor requests for the free coins.
And banks will never have these crystalclear sealed vault tubes of the nevercirculated coins that sbow off the rarely
seen edge~markings. Claims for these free
coins which are In never-circulated condition are oDly being honored by the World
Reserve for the. next two days and oDly for
those who beat the deadline for the sealed

aeo DeW!'oo

ad, ..... into two
'

,

ct•·

.

be~

I

I

:.!OOH

Barge _
removal.

0

~

Police.
Around
I 0:30p.m.
Saturday,
Trooper

CLIFI'ON, W,Va. ·Troopers are continuin'g.
their search for an unknown
A . D .
male who entered a Clifton
Wootton
was dishome. and shot and killed a
man over the weekend.
patched to
OJtistOpber Ray Roush, 29,
390 Ann
St. for a
of Clifton; was jlronounced
deaf at the scerie after be was
man who
had been
shot ·'?r an .. unknown man.
fatally
ru;cording to Sgt. E.B.
Stan:her, COIIIil13lldei of the . shot and another man who
Mason County Detachment had beeo ·assaulted. Stilreher
of the West V"&amp;rginia State said it appeared that a white

.00.

: ..... tpeet.,;r ('*

10.

SPORTS

. "We reaDy jumped through hoops to
· set up special Hotlinee in three Regional
Distribution Zones in an effort to maintain
.: order across the country. We feared the flood
:.of caUs could bring us to our knees but we are
:now equipped to handle evayoue who is try: ing to get through to get the last or our vault
. tubes; said Calitaldo.
: All this is happening becauae the World
: Reserve has ri!vealOO it will releaae the last or vault tubes.
• Jll8t look at tbat stack or coins. When
: its secretly located hoard or$20 million worth
· of never-circulated Presidential Coins in Americans get their hands on those, they
: sealed vault tubes in an etrort to prevent them are really going to dQ a double take;
: from ever being introduced into aimCastaldo said.
So find your . zone on the
: merce. It's the best way to preaene
.: their collector value as nevermap below and make yoor
. circulated cOins. .
claim foro tbele special
historic "'n God We
"This is what everyone
Trust"
·
:wants but so few will actu-·
difil
arDollars
Pr "&amp;uUal
· ally bave. So many will be
· Jeft out in the cold or witb
beiJre they're gone
ordinary circulated coins
futei'l!!'- •
·
if they can even fmd them
in their bank change.
That's why we are so widely advertising our plans
to give away some or the
soon to be eliminated never. circulated Presidential Coinll
• witb "In God We Trust~ on the
• edge free; said Castaldo.
Those who do beat the order deadline will get one of the last Pt Hetd I@
Dollar Coins tb8t ·still have •1n God We
. Trust" an the edge free 10 tbey can bendlr
: it, sbow it off and still keep the valuable vault
: tube sealed and pet CectJy iutlct.
Tbe u.s. Governmeat Ia required to mint
eacb President with a 11i1J81e Pr 11 4 lei
$1 Coin, with a dillisem PI u..t ...-ring about every ninety daya. Tblt'a wiQr
: ewryone is still trying to~ the ... rl.ta' : Presidential dolllr coinl - tlud; pd.;J. .
: bas belin abut olf.
- Altbougb Federal law J«jiihet "'n God We
Tru.t• to be IWWiied fNm tbe eclee d tbe
coin, there will-still be • &lt;1oklen PI L 'hi
. Dollar minted lOr~ UA PI 1ri¥
"To booor each PI 1 d k" tllfJ'e wiD .iiiO
be lilrty Raled vault tubef_ID .... eiCb COli. tainjng tftM! Dellt!l'-drcuWed PI · rlprful
Coina. That's 480 ooinL But dh the forty
free coinl eva1boq Ia • Uiag, it be-

: circulated coinl

ll I SIJ \) .. ll ""\1.

a_.

a..,..

cdedbacktoduty.

r'za•-•• ... AS

• JACKPOT: These two massive vault boxes contain tlroe sealed vault tubes for ~ ,J:Qmp~
collection of forty Presidential Dollars, 480 coins.in all. Values fluct1.1ate, bu:t just thirik if you bad
saved 2 silver vault boxes 1ike th~ ones shown above of uncirculated Eisenhower llollars from 1974.
They would now have an astonishing increase in value of 500% according to tile 62nd edition Qf
The Official Red Book. It's a real steal at just '32 each for these crystal·clear sealed vault tubes that
show off 1he rarely seen edge markings and protect tile coin's never-circulated value.·
·

Pomeroy
to tighten
spending
•
rems

WFATIIER

BY TtM HUBER

"that raised a flag for ammonium perfluoroocus," plant manager Bill tanoate
. commonly ·
Hopkins said. DuPont has referred to as C8 -to make
since found I g. more the nonstick product Teflon
instances of elnployees with at Washington Works.
carcinoid tumors across the
C8 releases from the plant
country, including five more resulted in a class-action
at Washington Works. The lawsuit that claimed the
cancer cases date back to chemical contaminated si.x
the 1980s and include cur- Ohio Valley water districts.
rent and retired employees. Scientists
researching
Was~gton Works, how- whether C8 poses a health
ever, 1s. the only DuPont risk are conducting I 0 studplant w1th enough cases to ies to follow up on health
warrant further study, screening of residents
Symons Said.
, .
involved in the lawsuit.
1be plant bas a sign!ficant
Hopkins said there's no
public
health
h&amp;story.
PI .,_Dc.."'wtoAS
DuPont uses the cheDllcal

Youth hold.benefit car wash

DeiiiiiS on ..... M

department.

Council asked that Clerk
Treasurer Kathy Hysell
notify vendorS Auto Zone,
Parts Phis, Dett willer
.. · a :!il!cnoNS - 1Z PAGI!s
Lumber, King's Haniware
Annie's Mailbox
A3 and the Gravely Tractor
'
Sales Store in writing that
Calendars
A3 any purchases made on'
credit by street department
Classifieds
83-4 personnel had to have a new
Q»mics ·
Bs and valid purchase order
. issued by HyseU.
f:ditori;lls
A4 Council made the decision to cut down on s~nd­
Movies ·
· As ing not because the &amp;tems
charged were in question
Obituaries ·
A5 but because the money was
B Section running out to pay for them.
Sports
The $10,000 transfer is to
A6
.
cover payroll and benefit
Weather
payments. Currently the
street department account
bas a balance of $800.
After the recent downpour which overloaded

INDEX ·

•
...

DuPont plans detailed cancer study atW.Va. plant

work suggests there are
AP BUSINESS WAITER
more cases than would be
expected at the plant, he
CHARLESTON , W.Va. said.
-· DuPont is planning a
But that's merely a sug:
.detailed study looking at gestion, because Symons
why workers. at a West says linle is known about
V"u-ginia plant appear to be what causes · carcinoid
getting a rare fonn of cancer tumors which · tend to
·at a IJigher rate than nOrmal. appear 'in the gastrointesti· The study DuPont hopes nal tract and sometimes the
to start thi s summer is lungs. "We' re facing~ situdesigned to help detennine atmn where we have linuted
whether anythmg at the infonnation."
Washington Works plant . DuPont frrst beg~ lookBY BETH SERGENT
near Parkersburg is causing mg mto the sJtuahon m
IISEAGEJITOMYDAILYSENTINELCOM
carcinoid tumors, company 2006 after two workers at
epidemiologist
Morel the plant were diagnosed
POMEROY
- After Symons said Monday. Early with carcinoid tumors.
transfening. $10,000 from
the general to the s1reet fund
last night, Pomeroy Vi.Uage
Council decided to tighten
the reins of spending in the

Seel'lllfAS
• Rural action kicking
olf tJ'ansil!on .at retreat
See ·PageA6

i

•

-

PI

n,_PI•I _,.AS

With the hot
June sun beating
down upon th9m,
youth from

Freedom Center
Ministries were
wishing cars for
charity Monday
aftemoon . The
young people
were secretive
about the benefit,
but the proceeds
from the car
wash will make
someone happy.
One thing is for
sure : When tem- ·
peratures reach
the mid-90's, a
wet job like
washing cars can
actually be
enjoyable .
-

J. A

dlpiiCIIG

�The Daily Sentinel

ACROSS mE NATION
. AP IMPACT

.

Page~
·Tursday, June 10.• ...,a
.

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.

fil&gt;. E&lt;:ONOia:S WRITER ·

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-High--.

ANNIE'S MAILBOX

Public meetinr:;
Thesday, June 10
POMEROY
-Meigs
County Board of Elections,
8:30a.m.
,
SYRACUSE - · Syracuse
Village Council; special
meeting, discuss mainten~oe purchase, 6.:45 p .m.,
v1Hage hall
·
Friday, June 13
ATHENS -Area 14
Workforce
Investment
Board meets ;lt 9 a.m., OU

7:30 p.m., refreshments
served.
POMEROY
- Meigs .
Couoty
Chamber
of
Commerce, business-minded
luncheon,
noon,
· Pomeroy Libr~, tliscussion on new UIJ!versity of
Rio Grande Meigs Center,
liJUrs of center available
after luncheon, Bun's Party:
Bam catering.
SYRACUSE - Syracuse
pool ·oommittee, 7 p.m. at
village hall. ·

Inn.

· Thursday, June l2

7 p.m., Southern High
School
PORTI.AND- Sonshine
Circle of the Bethany
United Methodist Church
annual picnic 6 p.m. at rhe
McKelvey Campground,
take.covered dish or dessert,
lawn chair, 'host to furnish
ham, table ware, drinks.
SYRACUSE
Wildwood Garden Club will
have a progressive garden
tour, 6:30 p,m. beginning at
the Syracuse Community
Center and proceeding •to
the Bentley, Roush, Ash,
Chapman.
Koker
and
Hamm
homes
where
refreshments will be served.

CHESTER
- Shade
River Lodge monthly stated
meeting,
7:30
p.m.
Refreshments.
. TUPPERS PLAINS Saturday, lUBe 14
Reguilll'
meeting · i&gt;f
POMEROY - Christian
•
Tuppers Plains VFW, 7 p.m. Moton:ycle Association '·s
u-day, June 10
HARRISONVILLE
Dinner at{i:3G p.m.
. Delivered Chapter, regular
RACINE
.
Ohio
River
·meeting, 5 p.m., Common
Harrisonville #225 OES ,
meeting to elect officers, Producers, regular meeting, GrOunds Coffee House.

Clubs and
organizations

Saturday, June 14
LETART-Hymnsing, 7
· Maranatha
p.m.,
Cornerstone Church. Mike
and Kelly Bowling will
sing. For more information
call 882-3004.

Youth events
Saturday, June 14
CHESTER · Annual
kids fisbing derby sponsored by the Meigs County
Fish and Game Association .
begins at 8 a.m. for those
15 years and younger, must
be accompanied by an adult,
one rod and ·reel per child.
Free food and drinks.
Prizes ..Local merchants join
Fish imd Game Association
in sponsoring the event.

-'

'

Submllllld phaiD

Thirty-seven Meigs Middle School students, accompanied by 10 chaperones, recently visited Washington, D.C. They
toured the ;U.S. Capitol Building, Holocaust Museum, Smithsonian, Mt. Vemon, Uncoln and Jefferson Memorials, Korean
and World War II Memorials, National Archives; Vietnam Wall, ·Marine Corps Memorial, and Arlington National Cemetery.

Bradford Bible school.s et for next week
J

BY Jill DRIN!WID

SUperintendeut
Of ' the
SbeiJalldoab Natiolllll . Park,
WASHINGTON
,says he's been hearing such
Leaders of th.e National comments . for montbs from
Park Service will gather his fonner colleagues. 'This
next month at a private is being dOne almost excluresort in the Utah moun- sively to try to bolsmr the
. tains for a summit meeting ·legacy of the department and
that some career officials ·tbe political leaders and the
say feels more like a $1 .. Bush administration, in their
million exercise in political last year," said Wade, head
promotion.
.
of ltJe Coalition of Naliolllll
The !llltiolllll meeting, set P.ad: Service Retiree&amp;.
for July 16-17 at Snowbird,
lbe agencla, be Said, is to
Utah, will bring together point out "all of tile great
. more than 400 park superin- things .that they've done for
tendents and other top Park parb and coaservation,
Service officials to bear when most f of us believe
from Interior Secretlly Dirk they' ve doae far more bann
~mp!home, Park' Sentice . ~gOOd.".
.
.
Director Mary Bonw;. Utah
l'bl!l.cridcisrn isn' t unaniRepubtican . Gov. . Jon mouS. ;se:f~ ,_ superin- ·
Huntsman and othe01. . . · · ~s bonuM:tcdpid theY.
Some of .t hose attending v~ew 1he meetulg• ;as .an
the conferenee qu~~ ~tO :g tl ·~~
valu~ of a mee~ . With Wttb ·peen. compare notes
political leaders who won't ~mationships.
bearoundinjustafew'$bort
"l ,~ it's productive,:·
months, when tile ~sh !illid ~ Steele, superadministration ends. They in.teodent · . at .. Acadia
also say the timing ~s bad, N!!liOpal P~ in Maine.
coming in the rnondJ wnen "You · get ~ ·oo.t only, 'the
many parks are having their
t() bear 'from
busiest period of the year.
·key leada'sbip, bUr die
~d they say the. ~st . - i~ ~een people.
estimated at •$1 million or
informally, is
more fm- travel, room and very~ ·
~·
meals. - is an unnecessary
Pllk Service ~man
bunlen for their budgets, . David Barna said, 'It' s re8lly
.allY.ady taxed by a backlog. almost ridiculous that we
of unfunded matntenance.
don't do this more often." He
None of the current park noted that it's been 20 years
officials who were critical since the last su((h gathering
of the mooting would allow and said, "We're planning
dleir Dallli:S to be used, say- two days. of meaningful
mg they feared retribution.
work. This is not politics."
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

with food following the Morris and Brenda Bolin
memorial
service
for were the · hostesses. Morris
Pauline Kennedy Sunday. had some readings op posiPlans were discussed for tive thinking and read a
h06tiog a· melil . for the story about ''The Cracked
Kyova meeting to be held in Water Pot.'' Bolin read
"Instructions fOT Life."
September, 2009.
Attending the meeting
It was reported that the
mentoring program is going were Sherry Smith, Jan
well and that Caitlin Hendricks, Bonnie Rife,
Williamson will be teaching Becky Amberge,r, Carolyn
how to inake cookies on Nicholson, Diane Milliron,
July 30. The visitor list was Christi Will, Gerry Lightfoot,
circulated and ·i t was noted Madeline Painter, Phyllis
that no melils for shutins are Baker, Caitlin Williamson,
needed now. The sunshine Sherry Shamblin, Charlotte ·
gift report was given and Hanning, Nancy Morris,
selection made of who is to Brenda Bolin, Eva Milliron,
be remembered. Christi Will . Diana Maxwell, Bethany
Amberger, S.uzie Will, Paula
gave the card rePQrt. ·
and
Cheri
· Refreshments of finger Pickens,
foods were .enjoyed. Nancy Williamson.

f811l1ers: Plant seeds for your workers' retirement
:·By f•RMErM CRUIIP,'

:spring is here, aad that
means mariy farmers are
sewing seeds and putting
tlleir land to work. lf
yt)u 're a farmer or grower
who hires others to work
your land, there •s
something you . should
]$ow : you're growing
more than just your crops.
}j.Y paying Social Secunty
taxes on wages you pay
)'llur workers, you ' re
~antin'g the seeds for their.
rctitement funds.
:Most farm workers are
o(lvered by Social Security.
~you employ farm workers
you must keep a record for
each one, collect and pay .
SJx;ial Security taxes, and
PfOVide a pay statement and
prepare a W-2 form.
;A common misconcepttJn many farniers and
growers have is that farm
workers are considered to
he independent contractors
ajld are therefore respbnsible for their own taxes.
· 11owever, under the law, if
tley are working under a

oo

f.QDD'pllJ:.:

507 .MuftMir) I:Jeiglls • ._.;
· PomerOy, Otf. . •
(740) 992--3218

foil Free 1-877-583-2433

. '

t .

iiiiiii:..--~~~..:....1

•

SO,CIAL SECURITY
MANAGER IN ATHENS

•

Bv KATHY Ym:ttEu.
AND MARcY SUGAR

the place and destroy flowers and gardens. Several of
us have dogs, and they drive .
Dear Annie: My mother the animals crazy.
is scheduled to vis1t me in a
I've asked them nicely to
few months. Mom always· · fmd somewhere else to play
feels the need to rearrange and they ignore me. Their
my closets and cabinets and · parents are nowhere in sight.
scrub my floors. After her In fact, we don't know who
last visit, she told my ex- · the parents are. Also, bicyhusband that my house is , cles and several other items
"disgusting." Sbe regularly have been disappearing latepoints out my flaws, such as ly. We can't even buy lawn .
· weight ·g ain and blotchy furniture for fear it, too, will
skin, and says my children · disappear. What can .I do
are rude and irresponsible.
besides call the police every
.I have told Mom that I time they step foot in our
appreciate her help and yard?- Garden SOIIkes in
advice, but such comments Pennsylvllllia
hurt me. I am aware of my
Dear Garden: If you
weaknesses - after all, I have a neighbomood watch,
am 41, with a full-time job homeowners associatiort or
and three children, so my other community organizabouse is. not spotless and tion, · report the problem.
I've gained a little weight.. Also consider putting up a
But my children are very fence around your yard or a
well behaved and have great lock on an existing gate, so
manners. And I particularly it is less accessible. And by
don't like her having dis- all means, let the teens know
cussions about me with my you will call the police each
abusive ex-husband.
and every time. It may be
Before I see my mother, I the ouly way to deter these
am confident and secure, adolescent vandals.
but after, 1 feel defeated and
Dear Annie: You gave
unsure about my parenting "Still In the Closet" the wonit
skills. My parents were advice ,ever. If he were havdivorced when I was an. ing a heterosexual affair, you
infant, and my father raised would say, "Get counseling."
me.
is now happily How about telling him to
.. to .!! wonderful man, stand up be a good man and
have suggested to her honor his ' commitments.
that she limit her obsessive Deny your infatuation with
behavior to her own life. this passing fling and trust
Am I too sensitive? Should real love -the love of a wife
I get a hotel room for Mom and family, which, may I say,
when she visits, since my he is extremely fortunate to
house is too ftlthy for her? have, given his tendencies.
Is she just too overllearing Being gay is not his "real
and controlling?
self." It is his selfishness takThe one good thing that ing over and it is not atb::accomes from Mom's behav- live. His kids need someone
ior is that I am learning how they can respect. - Family
not to treat my adult chil- FrieDdly in Pennsylvania
dren. - . Learning a Lesson
Dear Family Friendly:
in Mianesota .
We're not sug~esting the
Dear Learning: This man abandon his responsiisn't about your flaws . It's hilities. We simply believe
about .your mother's fear · he should be honest. And
that she was an inadequate although the truth may
parent because ~our father cause. some pain to his faroraised you. She s trying to ily, ip the long run, they will ·
cover her insecurities by have more respect for him if
being demanding and over- be stops living a lie..
ly critical in those areas
Annie's Mailbox is writwhere she worries she ten. by KJJtlly MitclaeU and
should have done a better MllTCy Sugar, longtime etlijoh. Of course, this doesn't ton of the A1111 ·fmulen
excuse her domineering · column. PletJse e-mail your
behavior. Ignore as much of questions to annieslflllilher criticism as you can, box@comcasl.fUII, or write
suggest she ~et counseling, to: Annie's Mailbox, P.O.
and if you'd prefer she S,tay Box 118190, Chicago, IL
in a hotel, that works, too.
60611. To find out more
Dear Annie: Many of the about Annie's Mailbox,
neighborhood · teenagers and retUl features by other
come to our street to play. Creators Syndicate writers
They believe every smgle 'aNJ cartoonists, visit t~
yard is their playground. Creators Syndii:ate Web
They throw trash all over page at www.creaton.com. ·

•

OJ'.PonunitY

••

.)

POMEROY- Plans for · .attended by about 50
vacation Bible school to be women. Theme was "Hearts .
lll!ld at the Bradford Church Quiited Together with
of Christ June 16-19 were Love." Several homemade
ill,scussed at the reqent quilts
were
displayed
. meeting of Lydia Council. · around the room and
~ Theme for the VBS is upstairs l!Jld several mem"Power Lab - Discovering hers spoke of the quilts they
· Jesus Miraculous Power." brought. Readings and
Classes will be .held from 9 poems were given bymemtu II :30 a.m. each day. for hers .a nd ·gifts ~ere presentDlore information on the· ed in several categories.
lt)ble school call 992-5844.
Men of the church did the
• During the meeting it was cleanup after the banquet
Nporied that 367 jars of and at 6 p.m. on June 22, the
pi:anut butter had been col-. women will have an apprel«:cted to be &amp;ent to Haiti. ciation dinner for the men.
'lite drive ·exceeded the 300
The new mission starting
jar goal.
this month will be to assist
:A report was given on the the Meals on Wheel prol.&gt;dies Day banquet held in gram of the Senior Citizens
t.,_e activity building and Center. The group assistid

· · But Bill W.ide, the retired

Was Moman
inadequate parent?

Church ·events

Students visit Washington, D.C.

National meeting of
park officials draws frre

TUesda~Juneto,2oo8

.

I

SttnusGIIIIIIC

BY mE BEND

Community Calendar

-AOL poll: Debt hurts your body, too
BY JEAri.IE AvERSA

The Daily Sentinel

Page.A:J

farm owner's direction and trouble getting mail, you · Crew Leaders. Or you can
control, · they cannot be can give him or her a W-2 · call Social Security's tollconsidered
independent when the job ends, instead free number at 1-800-772contractors. They are of waiting until January 31 1213 (TTY 1-800-325employees and their wages of the next year. For more 0778) and ask for a copy or
get
IRS copies of the pamphlet.
must be reported to Social information,
Security. Some farmers Publication 51, Circular. A This is a bilingual pamhire "crew leaders" to (Agricu!tllfal Employer's phlet that includes both
.
manage their farm workers Tax Guide). You can order English and Spanish. .
forms
and
publications
So
remember,
when
you
IRS
and to handle their entire
wage-reporting responsi- by calling 1-800-Tax-Form sow the seeds of your crop,
you're growing more than
bilities. In these cases, the · (1-800-829-3676). .
If
you
need
more
inforwhat you ' ll reap at harvest
crew leader is often con.
mation
about
agricultural
time. You're planting the
,sidered the "empioyer" of
the .farm worker and has work and Social Security, seeds for retirement funds
the responsibility for sub- you can visit Social that your employees will
Security
online
at benefit from in the future.
mitting wage reports.
www.socialsecurity
.gov
For more information .
Whether a farmer or
and read the electronic about Social Securiry, visit
crew leader submits wage
pamphlet, A Guide for our
website
at
reports, we always stress ·
Farmers, · Growers, and www.socialsecurity.gov.
the importance of recording the correct name,
Social Security number
and earnings for each
employee. ·We tell all
employers to make sure
that they use the namt! and
number exactly as it is
shown on the worker's
Social Security card.
Of course,' fllnn workers
· are often seasonal employees and may also be
migrants. If a farm worker
moves frequently and has

Extension Service offers
food preservation tips
POMEROY - With the
rising cost of food many are
feeling a pinch on the family budget and are turning to
growing their own to provide fresh from the garden
produce this summer.
Some are even em.bracing
canning and freezing as
they look to the winter
months. The challenge is to
know what to can and what
to freeze and the proper w~y
to do it. Such information is
availalile from the Meigs
CountY Extension Office on
Mulberry
Heights
in
Pomeroy.
For those who ant a more

comprehensive introduction
to home food preservation, a
class is being offered on
. Tuesday, June 17, at 5:30
p.m. at the Ohio State
University
Extension.
Washington County office.
at 2802 Davis Ave. Marietta.
There participants
learn the basics of high acid
and. regular pressure canning
process; how to properly
freeze fresh fruits and vegetahies; and how to get informalion on what's best in the !atest preservation information.
Kathryn Dodrill. a Family &amp;
Cons.umer Sciences expert,
will present the program.

will

Save money with our multi-poticy discount!
Wilen you insure your car and home m
mobile borne with us. lhrough Auto-Owners

Insurance Company, W. 'llsave yoo mooey
with their multi-policy discount!
Mature policyholders can earn even greater
savings. Conla4;1 oor agency today !
. .. • 2 •

•

'

Reed &amp; Baur Insurance Agency
220 East Main Streel .
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769

740-992-3600

•

�The Daily Sentinel

ACROSS mE NATION
. AP IMPACT

.

Page~
·Tursday, June 10.• ...,a
.

''

.

.

.

fil&gt;. E&lt;:ONOia:S WRITER ·

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-High--.

ANNIE'S MAILBOX

Public meetinr:;
Thesday, June 10
POMEROY
-Meigs
County Board of Elections,
8:30a.m.
,
SYRACUSE - · Syracuse
Village Council; special
meeting, discuss mainten~oe purchase, 6.:45 p .m.,
v1Hage hall
·
Friday, June 13
ATHENS -Area 14
Workforce
Investment
Board meets ;lt 9 a.m., OU

7:30 p.m., refreshments
served.
POMEROY
- Meigs .
Couoty
Chamber
of
Commerce, business-minded
luncheon,
noon,
· Pomeroy Libr~, tliscussion on new UIJ!versity of
Rio Grande Meigs Center,
liJUrs of center available
after luncheon, Bun's Party:
Bam catering.
SYRACUSE - Syracuse
pool ·oommittee, 7 p.m. at
village hall. ·

Inn.

· Thursday, June l2

7 p.m., Southern High
School
PORTI.AND- Sonshine
Circle of the Bethany
United Methodist Church
annual picnic 6 p.m. at rhe
McKelvey Campground,
take.covered dish or dessert,
lawn chair, 'host to furnish
ham, table ware, drinks.
SYRACUSE
Wildwood Garden Club will
have a progressive garden
tour, 6:30 p,m. beginning at
the Syracuse Community
Center and proceeding •to
the Bentley, Roush, Ash,
Chapman.
Koker
and
Hamm
homes
where
refreshments will be served.

CHESTER
- Shade
River Lodge monthly stated
meeting,
7:30
p.m.
Refreshments.
. TUPPERS PLAINS Saturday, lUBe 14
Reguilll'
meeting · i&gt;f
POMEROY - Christian
•
Tuppers Plains VFW, 7 p.m. Moton:ycle Association '·s
u-day, June 10
HARRISONVILLE
Dinner at{i:3G p.m.
. Delivered Chapter, regular
RACINE
.
Ohio
River
·meeting, 5 p.m., Common
Harrisonville #225 OES ,
meeting to elect officers, Producers, regular meeting, GrOunds Coffee House.

Clubs and
organizations

Saturday, June 14
LETART-Hymnsing, 7
· Maranatha
p.m.,
Cornerstone Church. Mike
and Kelly Bowling will
sing. For more information
call 882-3004.

Youth events
Saturday, June 14
CHESTER · Annual
kids fisbing derby sponsored by the Meigs County
Fish and Game Association .
begins at 8 a.m. for those
15 years and younger, must
be accompanied by an adult,
one rod and ·reel per child.
Free food and drinks.
Prizes ..Local merchants join
Fish imd Game Association
in sponsoring the event.

-'

'

Submllllld phaiD

Thirty-seven Meigs Middle School students, accompanied by 10 chaperones, recently visited Washington, D.C. They
toured the ;U.S. Capitol Building, Holocaust Museum, Smithsonian, Mt. Vemon, Uncoln and Jefferson Memorials, Korean
and World War II Memorials, National Archives; Vietnam Wall, ·Marine Corps Memorial, and Arlington National Cemetery.

Bradford Bible school.s et for next week
J

BY Jill DRIN!WID

SUperintendeut
Of ' the
SbeiJalldoab Natiolllll . Park,
WASHINGTON
,says he's been hearing such
Leaders of th.e National comments . for montbs from
Park Service will gather his fonner colleagues. 'This
next month at a private is being dOne almost excluresort in the Utah moun- sively to try to bolsmr the
. tains for a summit meeting ·legacy of the department and
that some career officials ·tbe political leaders and the
say feels more like a $1 .. Bush administration, in their
million exercise in political last year," said Wade, head
promotion.
.
of ltJe Coalition of Naliolllll
The !llltiolllll meeting, set P.ad: Service Retiree&amp;.
for July 16-17 at Snowbird,
lbe agencla, be Said, is to
Utah, will bring together point out "all of tile great
. more than 400 park superin- things .that they've done for
tendents and other top Park parb and coaservation,
Service officials to bear when most f of us believe
from Interior Secretlly Dirk they' ve doae far more bann
~mp!home, Park' Sentice . ~gOOd.".
.
.
Director Mary Bonw;. Utah
l'bl!l.cridcisrn isn' t unaniRepubtican . Gov. . Jon mouS. ;se:f~ ,_ superin- ·
Huntsman and othe01. . . · · ~s bonuM:tcdpid theY.
Some of .t hose attending v~ew 1he meetulg• ;as .an
the conferenee qu~~ ~tO :g tl ·~~
valu~ of a mee~ . With Wttb ·peen. compare notes
political leaders who won't ~mationships.
bearoundinjustafew'$bort
"l ,~ it's productive,:·
months, when tile ~sh !illid ~ Steele, superadministration ends. They in.teodent · . at .. Acadia
also say the timing ~s bad, N!!liOpal P~ in Maine.
coming in the rnondJ wnen "You · get ~ ·oo.t only, 'the
many parks are having their
t() bear 'from
busiest period of the year.
·key leada'sbip, bUr die
~d they say the. ~st . - i~ ~een people.
estimated at •$1 million or
informally, is
more fm- travel, room and very~ ·
~·
meals. - is an unnecessary
Pllk Service ~man
bunlen for their budgets, . David Barna said, 'It' s re8lly
.allY.ady taxed by a backlog. almost ridiculous that we
of unfunded matntenance.
don't do this more often." He
None of the current park noted that it's been 20 years
officials who were critical since the last su((h gathering
of the mooting would allow and said, "We're planning
dleir Dallli:S to be used, say- two days. of meaningful
mg they feared retribution.
work. This is not politics."
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

with food following the Morris and Brenda Bolin
memorial
service
for were the · hostesses. Morris
Pauline Kennedy Sunday. had some readings op posiPlans were discussed for tive thinking and read a
h06tiog a· melil . for the story about ''The Cracked
Kyova meeting to be held in Water Pot.'' Bolin read
"Instructions fOT Life."
September, 2009.
Attending the meeting
It was reported that the
mentoring program is going were Sherry Smith, Jan
well and that Caitlin Hendricks, Bonnie Rife,
Williamson will be teaching Becky Amberge,r, Carolyn
how to inake cookies on Nicholson, Diane Milliron,
July 30. The visitor list was Christi Will, Gerry Lightfoot,
circulated and ·i t was noted Madeline Painter, Phyllis
that no melils for shutins are Baker, Caitlin Williamson,
needed now. The sunshine Sherry Shamblin, Charlotte ·
gift report was given and Hanning, Nancy Morris,
selection made of who is to Brenda Bolin, Eva Milliron,
be remembered. Christi Will . Diana Maxwell, Bethany
Amberger, S.uzie Will, Paula
gave the card rePQrt. ·
and
Cheri
· Refreshments of finger Pickens,
foods were .enjoyed. Nancy Williamson.

f811l1ers: Plant seeds for your workers' retirement
:·By f•RMErM CRUIIP,'

:spring is here, aad that
means mariy farmers are
sewing seeds and putting
tlleir land to work. lf
yt)u 're a farmer or grower
who hires others to work
your land, there •s
something you . should
]$ow : you're growing
more than just your crops.
}j.Y paying Social Secunty
taxes on wages you pay
)'llur workers, you ' re
~antin'g the seeds for their.
rctitement funds.
:Most farm workers are
o(lvered by Social Security.
~you employ farm workers
you must keep a record for
each one, collect and pay .
SJx;ial Security taxes, and
PfOVide a pay statement and
prepare a W-2 form.
;A common misconcepttJn many farniers and
growers have is that farm
workers are considered to
he independent contractors
ajld are therefore respbnsible for their own taxes.
· 11owever, under the law, if
tley are working under a

oo

f.QDD'pllJ:.:

507 .MuftMir) I:Jeiglls • ._.;
· PomerOy, Otf. . •
(740) 992--3218

foil Free 1-877-583-2433

. '

t .

iiiiiii:..--~~~..:....1

•

SO,CIAL SECURITY
MANAGER IN ATHENS

•

Bv KATHY Ym:ttEu.
AND MARcY SUGAR

the place and destroy flowers and gardens. Several of
us have dogs, and they drive .
Dear Annie: My mother the animals crazy.
is scheduled to vis1t me in a
I've asked them nicely to
few months. Mom always· · fmd somewhere else to play
feels the need to rearrange and they ignore me. Their
my closets and cabinets and · parents are nowhere in sight.
scrub my floors. After her In fact, we don't know who
last visit, she told my ex- · the parents are. Also, bicyhusband that my house is , cles and several other items
"disgusting." Sbe regularly have been disappearing latepoints out my flaws, such as ly. We can't even buy lawn .
· weight ·g ain and blotchy furniture for fear it, too, will
skin, and says my children · disappear. What can .I do
are rude and irresponsible.
besides call the police every
.I have told Mom that I time they step foot in our
appreciate her help and yard?- Garden SOIIkes in
advice, but such comments Pennsylvllllia
hurt me. I am aware of my
Dear Garden: If you
weaknesses - after all, I have a neighbomood watch,
am 41, with a full-time job homeowners associatiort or
and three children, so my other community organizabouse is. not spotless and tion, · report the problem.
I've gained a little weight.. Also consider putting up a
But my children are very fence around your yard or a
well behaved and have great lock on an existing gate, so
manners. And I particularly it is less accessible. And by
don't like her having dis- all means, let the teens know
cussions about me with my you will call the police each
abusive ex-husband.
and every time. It may be
Before I see my mother, I the ouly way to deter these
am confident and secure, adolescent vandals.
but after, 1 feel defeated and
Dear Annie: You gave
unsure about my parenting "Still In the Closet" the wonit
skills. My parents were advice ,ever. If he were havdivorced when I was an. ing a heterosexual affair, you
infant, and my father raised would say, "Get counseling."
me.
is now happily How about telling him to
.. to .!! wonderful man, stand up be a good man and
have suggested to her honor his ' commitments.
that she limit her obsessive Deny your infatuation with
behavior to her own life. this passing fling and trust
Am I too sensitive? Should real love -the love of a wife
I get a hotel room for Mom and family, which, may I say,
when she visits, since my he is extremely fortunate to
house is too ftlthy for her? have, given his tendencies.
Is she just too overllearing Being gay is not his "real
and controlling?
self." It is his selfishness takThe one good thing that ing over and it is not atb::accomes from Mom's behav- live. His kids need someone
ior is that I am learning how they can respect. - Family
not to treat my adult chil- FrieDdly in Pennsylvania
dren. - . Learning a Lesson
Dear Family Friendly:
in Mianesota .
We're not sug~esting the
Dear Learning: This man abandon his responsiisn't about your flaws . It's hilities. We simply believe
about .your mother's fear · he should be honest. And
that she was an inadequate although the truth may
parent because ~our father cause. some pain to his faroraised you. She s trying to ily, ip the long run, they will ·
cover her insecurities by have more respect for him if
being demanding and over- be stops living a lie..
ly critical in those areas
Annie's Mailbox is writwhere she worries she ten. by KJJtlly MitclaeU and
should have done a better MllTCy Sugar, longtime etlijoh. Of course, this doesn't ton of the A1111 ·fmulen
excuse her domineering · column. PletJse e-mail your
behavior. Ignore as much of questions to annieslflllilher criticism as you can, box@comcasl.fUII, or write
suggest she ~et counseling, to: Annie's Mailbox, P.O.
and if you'd prefer she S,tay Box 118190, Chicago, IL
in a hotel, that works, too.
60611. To find out more
Dear Annie: Many of the about Annie's Mailbox,
neighborhood · teenagers and retUl features by other
come to our street to play. Creators Syndicate writers
They believe every smgle 'aNJ cartoonists, visit t~
yard is their playground. Creators Syndii:ate Web
They throw trash all over page at www.creaton.com. ·

•

OJ'.PonunitY

••

.)

POMEROY- Plans for · .attended by about 50
vacation Bible school to be women. Theme was "Hearts .
lll!ld at the Bradford Church Quiited Together with
of Christ June 16-19 were Love." Several homemade
ill,scussed at the reqent quilts
were
displayed
. meeting of Lydia Council. · around the room and
~ Theme for the VBS is upstairs l!Jld several mem"Power Lab - Discovering hers spoke of the quilts they
· Jesus Miraculous Power." brought. Readings and
Classes will be .held from 9 poems were given bymemtu II :30 a.m. each day. for hers .a nd ·gifts ~ere presentDlore information on the· ed in several categories.
lt)ble school call 992-5844.
Men of the church did the
• During the meeting it was cleanup after the banquet
Nporied that 367 jars of and at 6 p.m. on June 22, the
pi:anut butter had been col-. women will have an apprel«:cted to be &amp;ent to Haiti. ciation dinner for the men.
'lite drive ·exceeded the 300
The new mission starting
jar goal.
this month will be to assist
:A report was given on the the Meals on Wheel prol.&gt;dies Day banquet held in gram of the Senior Citizens
t.,_e activity building and Center. The group assistid

· · But Bill W.ide, the retired

Was Moman
inadequate parent?

Church ·events

Students visit Washington, D.C.

National meeting of
park officials draws frre

TUesda~Juneto,2oo8

.

I

SttnusGIIIIIIC

BY mE BEND

Community Calendar

-AOL poll: Debt hurts your body, too
BY JEAri.IE AvERSA

The Daily Sentinel

Page.A:J

farm owner's direction and trouble getting mail, you · Crew Leaders. Or you can
control, · they cannot be can give him or her a W-2 · call Social Security's tollconsidered
independent when the job ends, instead free number at 1-800-772contractors. They are of waiting until January 31 1213 (TTY 1-800-325employees and their wages of the next year. For more 0778) and ask for a copy or
get
IRS copies of the pamphlet.
must be reported to Social information,
Security. Some farmers Publication 51, Circular. A This is a bilingual pamhire "crew leaders" to (Agricu!tllfal Employer's phlet that includes both
.
manage their farm workers Tax Guide). You can order English and Spanish. .
forms
and
publications
So
remember,
when
you
IRS
and to handle their entire
wage-reporting responsi- by calling 1-800-Tax-Form sow the seeds of your crop,
you're growing more than
bilities. In these cases, the · (1-800-829-3676). .
If
you
need
more
inforwhat you ' ll reap at harvest
crew leader is often con.
mation
about
agricultural
time. You're planting the
,sidered the "empioyer" of
the .farm worker and has work and Social Security, seeds for retirement funds
the responsibility for sub- you can visit Social that your employees will
Security
online
at benefit from in the future.
mitting wage reports.
www.socialsecurity
.gov
For more information .
Whether a farmer or
and read the electronic about Social Securiry, visit
crew leader submits wage
pamphlet, A Guide for our
website
at
reports, we always stress ·
Farmers, · Growers, and www.socialsecurity.gov.
the importance of recording the correct name,
Social Security number
and earnings for each
employee. ·We tell all
employers to make sure
that they use the namt! and
number exactly as it is
shown on the worker's
Social Security card.
Of course,' fllnn workers
· are often seasonal employees and may also be
migrants. If a farm worker
moves frequently and has

Extension Service offers
food preservation tips
POMEROY - With the
rising cost of food many are
feeling a pinch on the family budget and are turning to
growing their own to provide fresh from the garden
produce this summer.
Some are even em.bracing
canning and freezing as
they look to the winter
months. The challenge is to
know what to can and what
to freeze and the proper w~y
to do it. Such information is
availalile from the Meigs
CountY Extension Office on
Mulberry
Heights
in
Pomeroy.
For those who ant a more

comprehensive introduction
to home food preservation, a
class is being offered on
. Tuesday, June 17, at 5:30
p.m. at the Ohio State
University
Extension.
Washington County office.
at 2802 Davis Ave. Marietta.
There participants
learn the basics of high acid
and. regular pressure canning
process; how to properly
freeze fresh fruits and vegetahies; and how to get informalion on what's best in the !atest preservation information.
Kathryn Dodrill. a Family &amp;
Cons.umer Sciences expert,
will present the program.

will

Save money with our multi-poticy discount!
Wilen you insure your car and home m
mobile borne with us. lhrough Auto-Owners

Insurance Company, W. 'llsave yoo mooey
with their multi-policy discount!
Mature policyholders can earn even greater
savings. Conla4;1 oor agency today !
. .. • 2 •

•

'

Reed &amp; Baur Insurance Agency
220 East Main Streel .
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769

740-992-3600

•

�•

.
The Daily Sentinel

0 PINI0 N

~M

: 'l'belday, June to, zooS

TUesday, .June to, 2oolt

) ~~~~~--~~~~~_:___ ____!!~~~,'

~

111 Couit... • •• ~. Ohio
(740) ta-2158 • FAX (740) ~157
_....,, .,

, .... 110'11

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.

Dan Goodw1cf\
Publisher

Charlene Ito aRich
General Mariager..News Ecitor

Cntft'U 11uill ""''" u l4uv mJI«&lt;i"t •n .
atcMicfunent of nligimt, or pro•iiitiag tlu
~ cmc:iM tltneDf; or ~ging tlujicdrm
tf IJIUdt, or of tile prw; or die right oftlu
~ pN«fJW, "' ~• ...... "'pditioa

die Gcwenammtfor a rd.os of~·

-n. ANI Amendll•tt 101M U.S. Con1t11u11an

TODAY IN HISTORY

n:J'

is Tuesday, June 10, tbe 162nd day of 2008. 1bere
ll'e
days left in tbe year.
..
Today's Highlight in History: On June 10, 193S,
Alcoholics Anonvmn.n• was. founded in Akron, Ohio.
On this date: In~~1865, the Riclwd Wagner opera "Tristan
und Isolde" J)I'CDlierM in Munich. Germany.
In 1907, 11 men in five cars set out from the French
apbassy in Beijing
a rare to Paris. (Prince Scipione
Borgbese of llaly was the first to arrive in the frencll capital two months later.)
In 1940, llaly declared war on~ ·and Britain; .
Omada declared war on Italy.
In 1942.' the Gestapo messacred 173 male :r.:ar:sfof
Li~, C~~lowlllria, in ~00 ·for the
g 0 8
N8Z1 offi.cill.
In 1964, the Senate voted to limit further debate on a ·
proposed Civil rights bill, shutting off a filibuster by
Southern states.
·
·
In 1967, the Middle EilstWarendedas Israel and Syria
agreed to observe a United Nalions-mediated cease-fue.
In tm, James Earl Ray, the convicted assassin of civil
ridlts leaib Martin Lotber King Jr., esca~ from Brushy
Mountain State Prison in Tennessee with srx others; he was

on

•

~

recaptured June 1,3.

,

·

. .

In 1978, AlfirtiJild woo 1be Belmont Stakes and With 1t,
horse racing's Triple Ctown.
. In 1982, rhe play "Thi:ch Song Trilogy," by Harvey
FJCI'Siein, openecfoo 'Broadway.
.
·
In 1985, socialite Clans von Bulow was acquitted by a
jury in Providence., R.l, at his retrial on charges be' d tried
to murder his heiress wife, Martha "Sunny~ von Bulow.
One year ago: President Bush was enthusiastically weiC:OJDed to Albao}a The crews of Atlantis and tbc inlemalional ~ station ~ted each othec after the ~ &amp;huttie a1nved at the Olbiting outpost. AI the French Open,
Roger Federer lost to Rafael 'Nadal. 6-3, 4-(i, 6-3: 6-4.
Suzann Pettersen sbot a 5-under 67 for a one-shot victory
over 1Carrie Webb ll ·the LPGA Ch•mpi.onship. "Sprin&amp;
Awakening" was oamed best musical at the Tony Awards;
"The Coast of Utopia," best · play. HBO aiRd tbe final
episode of "The Sopranos."
. .
Today's Birthdays: Britain's Prince Philip is . 87.
Columnist Nat Hentoff is 83. Actor-director Lionel Jeffries
is 82. Author Maurice Sendak is 80. Actress Aleundra
Stewatt is fiJ . .Singer Shirley Alston Reeves (Tbe Sbirel.les)
is 67. Media commentator Jeff Greenfteld is 65. Rock
musician Kim Deal is 47. Singer Mui Priest is 47. Actress
Gina Gershon is 46. Actress Jeanne Tripplclloln is 45. Rook
musician Jimmy Chamberlin is 44. Actress Kate Aannery
is 44. Model-actress J'llizabeth Hurley· is '43. ~ lbe
D.O;C. is 40. Rbytbm-and-'blues singer JoJo is 37. ythmand·blues singer Faith Evans is 35. Rhythm-and-blues
singer Lemisha.Gtinstead (702) is 30. Actor DJ Qualls is
30. Actor Shane West is 30. Olympic gold medal figure
skater Tara Lipinski is 26.
·
Thought for Today: "All the historical books which contain no lies are extremely tedious." - Anatole France,
French writer (11!44o1924).
·

LETTERS TO THE
EDITOR
u~rs to 1M editor are welcome. Tltey ,lwuld be Jess
thtur 300 words. All le~rs a~ subject to .editing, nuut be

signed. and inclruJe culd~ss and telephone ,lllllllber. No
IUtSigned le~rs will be pllhlished. u~rs should be in
good taste, ~ssing issues, not personalities. utter:s of
dtt:JnJcs to organiztltjons and 'individuals will not be ocupred for publication.

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·No computers or (The Sopranos'
for Cuba~ political prisoners
American advocates of
more "constructive" rel.ationships with Communist
Cuba have been heartened
by Raul Castro's permitting
Cubans to actually huy for the frrst time, if they
can afford them - cell
phones, DVD players and
computers. Another indication that Raul is more flexible than. his hanlline, ail-.
ing brother are ·"The
Sopranos" reruns on Cuban
television. You know what
happened ID anyone who
crossed Tony.
George W. Bush was dead
right to emphasize that this
cos:netic potic;y is "a worthless piece of paper" wirh
regard to changing Big
Brother Fidel's fundameitt.al
le
until, our ~
the regime stops its
abu~e of political dissidents
and releases all political
prisoners."
Bush mordantly noted

very soon after Raul sue' ceeded his brother that
Cuba si~ in March, the
internatiooal Covenant on
Civd llld Political Rights,
which ~ "civil
and political freedom."
Forei&amp;n Minister.. Felipe
Perez .lloque &amp;Olemnly
assured tbe world (out of
the bearing of Cuba's at
least 230 political prisoners
in Raul's ~s):
"This SJping formalizes
and reaffirms the rights pro- - by each IIJ1'eDll'l"
~ ~-oo t) . . ., ..
'T$ :allJ .... , I rl&amp;t

-d:oi~J~mv­

&lt;M••"
Tilec.uol
uee
.
.
.
Wfi .~~s: ua.
• , Sililll 6e 0 ' i Jill• Ullllllillt &lt;IOOUoh die. pd8l
I&amp;~

'IDI'· tdniJjon aad thlt
rudion' s ic:c:eas to the
lllla'Dd, I doubt that 111111Y

c.Nns mow lbat oae of
Raul's "priiooen of conscience" - as tbey are

regard to my · ideas. I am
here by my own uncompromising free will ... and
will serve this unjust sentence until God in the highest puts an end to it."
Net
International
human
llentoff
rights organizations and the
United Nations · bad insistently .asked Fidel Castro to
release Bisoet. As noted by
· 'bed b
the Washington Bureau of
Y McClatchy
Newspapers
accurately de&amp;en
Amoescy International wbo will not have·access ID when Bisoet was awarded
ceO phones .QF' DVD, had the Presidential Medal of
received in November Freedom, hu!Flanist Fidel
America's
Presidential Castro had ~viously
Mala!. of f'medom.
called him :·a little crazy
Dr. Oscar Elias Bisoet is man."
serving a 25-year sentence
-Elsa Morejon, Biscet's
in · a series of maximum- lieCOild wife- in the same
'ty ·
r. the · MoClat.oby news report ·~~nsw!tmg
said that her husband knew
hE1FIWI riptts. 111 2003, he somehow that he'd woo the
was put 11110 a puniahment Medal of FreedOm and tnld
cell because he and six · her "he would dedicate 'the
other political ·soners had medal ID the ¥ictims of
been ~fu: protesting communism in the world,
the crushingly auel trr.al- and to Cubans who want a
ment the guards , were fR:e Cuba."
.
.
inl)ict.irlg on other prisoners
In 1997, before bemg
of conscience.
supposedly s:lenced, as
Bi&amp;cet. ~is black, is a . F~l thought, in the gulag.
disc~ple of Dr. Martin 81soet founded the Lawton
Luther King Jr. Often in FoUi:dation for Human
solitary confmemeut for his RiJ!!ts (named for his
refusal to abandon his prin- · octghborbood in Havana).
ciples, he is being denied And he has n.ow tnld h1s
medical treatment - in stepson, MoreJon, to have
Raul Castro's Cuba- for Dr. Angel Gani.do, head of
his hypertension, gum dis- the Miami chap~ of the
ease and osteoanbritis. His Lawton Foundatcon, to
stepson,
Yan
V.aldes keep the medal - "until
Morejon, before acoepting Cuba 1s free."
.
his lather's Pleaidential
Another doctor m one of
U1W offnwdu•, wme ill Raul CastrO Is priiODs is
dle Boftoll Globe of Jorge Luis Garcia Paneque.
Bila:c's ~ *fl'a'- He w~ put away for J8
iJI&amp;, lllw~J!~ ~ IORIID years rn 2003, Amnesty
«J IIOUids aad !DOll d Ilia Intemational verifted on
tedla.
March 17, "for visiting prisHe :hu not lost his qiriL ooers aod their families as
ln one of the .statemeots he part of his work with the
has· smugsled out of . Cuban
Human Rights
prison, Bii()Ct wriles: "In Commission, and maintainapite of the djff"tcult situa- ing ties ID the international
uon, 1 am not frl&amp;l!telicd . humanitarian ~On,
nor will I go back a step in Doctors Without
.K

:cur"

-------------",...------__;~------------ -

se;;!;

- · ___ ,: 0 -

;

_ ASsopi"TED l'l'lESS -ITER

A new scholarly analysis
Truman with a minus .SO ing vision to compete witft
confirms that Sen. John
score and lost the popular Obama's soaring, KennedyMcCain bas tQ perfonn mirvote by II points to bWight esque
declaratiolf,'
acles to win tbe 2001! elecD. Eisenhower.
"America, this ·is our
lion. So (ar, be is far short of
lbe .Abramowitz barome- moment ... our time to offer
do' that.
·
ter is a short-ali variatiop a new directioo to the OOE1EI"
rnoCgat'n's speech in
. . . . .,
on American University · try we love."
M
Louisiana Tuesday night
Kuilltal
professor Allan Lichtman's . Even though McCain has
feU embarrassingly short
· famed "13 Keys to the differed from Bush on Iraq
of matching Sen. Barack
Presidency," which adds War strategy, detainee polObama' eloquence, vision .
such factors as wars, candi- icy, energy and climate.
d d li
d
date charisma, scandal and change, McCain does baclf;
an . .e very - d.emon- ,. Crystal Ball Web site, the incumbent~'s per- Bush policies on taxes •.
stra~g
the. · _1stance Abramowitz declared that
MI;Cain has ID g5' ~ have. a "it
."""" likdy that fonnance in o -year elec- foreign policy, health care
chance of wmnmg
_. m ""-~eepuai'S...,:-can' """"' 15
.
lions ID the eoonomy and and (the enviro~ment
...,.
uu
a-•J
incumbency.
·
exce~;~ted)
free-market
November.
of ~ 8 dealing with tbe dreaded
When Lichtman pilb- solutions to America '11
Ill ~ ~nee
a .,..; 'triple wh•mmv' in 2008: an
bl
scen.un m his -ormance
&lt;
llshed the latest edition of pro ems. •
-::-r~,. .
r - · · · unpopular prt:sldent, a weak his book early this year. be
McCain has nothing to
M~ will have ID ~y oo economy and a second-term
·
Obama s self-ilesttuctioo- election"
flatly predicted that "the match Obama's proDilse to
w_hich could bappe~ in
Ab~witz has tracked Democratic candidate will "in.vest in our crumbling
HiU
~ tbe White House in infrastructure"
and in
f Se
vtew . o . n.,
. ary ihe effect .of those vari- 20011 .no matter ..... _ cboire bu.man capital - earl v ,
Rodham Clinto~ s ev1dent , abies on the last 15 presi'""
"
effort ~ force .him to name dential elections and found of a nominee."
childhood education, public;,
her as his nmmog ~
that they 1Hll:urately preDemocrats ilave advan- schools, college educatioq,
. She_ refused ID ~eld tbe dieted tbe popular-vote tages Lichtman couldn't and scientific research.
.
hmelrght to h~ on outcome in 14 and came anticipate, · such as a
To the contrary. McCaiD
Tuesday, when.he cliD&lt;:hed close in the ISth.
charismatic nominee, now plans to curtail "'wasteful.
the Democratic nom.maThe formula. adds the giving them eight of the spending" and freeze all
~on •..and now ~be is incumbent president's net 13 . "keys'' ·plenty ·government programs at
tmplrcltl:L threatenmg to
al
·
( ·
al enough to win.
current levels until he sorts
·
approv
ratmg
approv
Ht'ston
·cal
models
are
out
whii:b work. "Public
tu~
e
~mo~rat1c nunus disapproval), the
National Co~:~venuon mto a second-quarter election- invented to be broken, of investznentK is not in hi5.
donnybrook unless be year GDP growth ate mul- i:ourse. But they give an vocabulary. ·
· ~~s !0 ~~ her oniD a tiplied bv five (emphasiz- indication of the odds
Obama's vision may well·
"unity tiCket.
.
ing the i'm.po~ of the McCain bas ID overcome.
~sent a throwbaclt t6
II)Jy •ctually decide economy) and then (factorAs his and Qbama's l~ libecalism, but ·~
oohi&amp;ownthatbe~her ing in time-for~a-change s~hes Tuesday night country's attitUde tow ..
to ~~ canyllJ8 ~ sentiment) subtracts 25 showed, · MoCiiil is not . r:,~t often ':rcles .
. _ ..._...
coosumenc~ -:- white ~ints if the in-party is fin- ovA:;g0
ID "small
.WOfbn. Hjlpi 0 U::I kft rsbiJ!i a ~ ~rm.
,.,
~"'"1
._... ...-and C»ffolies. - but co
Bush's net approval oow live, 'Cloquent. visiOnary · Darinj Bp&amp;h's clai"""'!.
.,. tpt ber Wider threat will stands at minus 40. TJiC • uplift, MoCain offered a "small govanniellt" years.,
make him look weak, bard- first-quarter growth rate negative, wealdy delivered median inoome has faUen:,
ly commander in chief was 0.6 perrent, and Bush is alternative that was even the ranks of tbe uninliill1l4,
material in 1 dangerous finishing his eildlth year half-borrowedfromObama. have sweUed, debt ~ world.
meanuig that t6is ·year·~ A sigo behind rdcCain ~ mounted, aod prices have.
And yet, · McCain
e1ec:tora1. barometer Clllmlt- ~AJeadef We Can Believe soiRd.
.
:
bank on Democnlic disar· 1y stapck at minus 62. ,
·In," a ~\t't from Obama'.s slo- " Voters, cleady
w~
ray. Despite polls showing
If .such a number .holds, . am. . Cb~ge . We Can . change.. MoCatn b~s t.
hUn doinl surpris~y, ~ell .it ·'"woUld predict a 'deci- · Believe ln.
• ..
-.1oq way ID go to conrrnce
against Obama, I;li.stnncal siv~ .d efeat · · fur ibe·. · McCain, has a great set •tbein. that his kind is
tllow be's in per- ~ublic:an Pfl:lidential. ' of substantive ~u~nts, .. than Obama's... even ~gil...
ilous terriby.
c:aadidate. " Abramowitz . notably that Obama s idea -on tbe ments - 1t may,
Professor
Alan wrote. ,"'liae only 'd.c:etion of change ~lies 011 across- Wdl be. .·
· . .
·. .;
Abramowitz of Emory sin9e World War. ll·with a tbe:'board b~g governmc~t. -- ~t the. rate ~gs are,
University has developed an score in this . flll!e was whtch . agam .a nd ~:un gomg, ~story will re~t:
"electoral barometer" based 1980 ~ when
Jimmy · falls short of meettng ilself wtth a De.m ocrauc.
on just three variables for Carte~ suffemd the worst America's needs.
victory in 2008 and liheraf
predicting · e1ectiqn out- defeat for an incumbent
He did his best to claim domination of the govern,
CQIIIC'i, lDf it suggests that •president ·since Herbert tbe word "reform" as an ment until .voters change.
McCain is all but certainly Hoover in 1932;"
alternative to Obama's their minds again.
•,
set to lose this year.
. The
second · worst "change" and ID refute
(Morton Kondracke i-f,
In an article last week on occurred in 1952, when Oba:na's c~e that be rep- ·executjve · editor of Roll:
University of Vtrginia pro- Democrat Adlai Stevenson resents "Bush s third term." C4ll, the newseafH!r of
fessor
Larry Sabato's tried · tn succeed Harty S.
But he offered oo overrid- CApitol Hill.)
··

The Daily Sentinel :t:l
Reader Services

Deaths

.

-McCain needs· (vision' .to beat
historic C?dds favoring Obam~ in '08

Daily Sentinel

The Daily Sentinel• Page As

www.mydaUysen~com

·.:

·'

Also in one of Raul's
cells is Ivan Hernandez
Carrillo, sentenced in 2003
to 25 years for such subversive activities as having
in his home an independent
library where Cuban~ .
could ger books ba,nned in~
. Cuba's. state library sys~:
tem. (There are other inde• ·
pendent librarians wbo stiiJ:
remain caged). I have a
copy, from the University
of Telias School of
Information, of the CubanCc;Jwt Ofder requiring thci.
burning of the contents of,
Carrillo's library.
Among the titles: a .biog• ·.
raphy, "Martin Luther King: ·
Contra todas las eA:clusiones" by Vrncent Roussel
(Bilbao: Desclee de Brower,
1995,
ISBN•I3:9788433011091).
Bisoet knows the book
well It. was destroyed by
the Castro dictatorship as
''based on ideas that oould;
be used to promote social '
disorder and civil disobedi• •
ence." And Cuban customs :
officials seized a copy of.,
.the
King
biography.
"against the general interest
of our nation."
Does ~nyone supeose
that Raul Castro willl:ber,
ate this biography of Qr, .
Martin Luther Kin¥., oi :
Biscet him~ Or will tho'
America
Library .
Association fmally put Oli
its Internet list of banned;
books this volume ooce·ozi.
. the shelves of~ independent librarian in Cuba?
'lbey've often been asked
ID do that.

(Nat He810jf is a nation'

ally rmowned authority ora
the First Amendmoct and.
the BiU of RighJs alld azttltor.

of many books, including.
u!Jte War on the .Bill of'
R1ghJs and the Gathering
Resistance" (Seven Stories ·
P~ss, 2004).

.

.

:: POINT PLEASANT, W.Va.- Michael Edward Pauley,
G~VES'!O!"· Texas 31,. of Poirit Pleasant, died Saturday evening June 7 As rught sl:d mto day and
·• • at his home.
'
' back . in.to night,. and reef
·: At Michael's ~uest !heR will be no services. Crow- fish rubbled at their skin and
-~sell Funeral Home, Point Pleasant, is in charge of , tbe {Julf of MeA:ioo roiled
'lllllllgemt!Us.
~ them,~- five sur. An oplioe gueSt registry is availabte at: www.crowhus- VIVOlS_of the sinking ?f the
·selUb.com
Cyuthia · Woods sailboat
•
'
kept talking.
g_, a - - L
SJeye ·Conway, a retiJ'ed
.,
. . LIII;..Uplr - J RUIIIDH
Coast Guard commander

·',

a .........

:tetyo:ffi~~ld~~}

. -:.POMEROY -dlnstopber-Ray RQ6sh. 29, of Pomeroy
on June 7, 2008. Funeral 3l131lgemecits will be
:MDOUnced by Anderson-McDaniel Funeral Home in

tbe
stories he's famous
for, careful tD avoid "ones
that involve utlel' calamity."
' Then, he told reporters
Monday, he detailed the ·
protoool for Coast Guard
rescues, giving the four
Teus A&amp;M students floating alongside him in the
Gulf a timeline for the belp
they were certain would
eventually come.
ThQ&amp;e stories, tilat steadfast belief that tbey would
be rescued and the jolres tbe
five sailors tnssed .around as
they bobbed more than 20
miles offiihore kept their
spirits and hopes up during
26 hours at ·sea.
The chatter sustained the ·
five when they ftoated away
from their 38-foot sailboat,
which capsized after losing
its ked j!lst before midnight
Friday. It gave them
strength as they held onto
one aoother by locking anus
aod lashing belts.
· It fed their hope .that
~ger Sione,.53, the hoat'w
other safety officer, had
·somehow survived after
pushing two of the stodents
to safety.
No one panicked. No one
gave up.
Instead, they kept watch
for search crews and kicked
their feet through the water,
trying to steer themselves
toward an oil rig about 5
miles away.
"lbe key to survival is to
stay together, don't ~c and
a fiecce will to live,' Conway
said. "All of the guys are
here together ~se they
did a great job."
'
1he Cynthia Woods was
competing in the ~gata 4e·
Amigos, a raoe from
Galveston to Veracruz,
Mexico, that began aroood
2 p.m. Friday.
But around 1l :45 p.m.
Friday, Stnne began shouting thal the boat was taking
on water. Steven Guy, 20,
sleeping
below
deck,
grabbed fQF' a life vest but
missed when tbc boat began
to roll over. The life jacket
inflated inside the rapidly
inundated craft, making It
impossible to put on, so
Guy escaped without it.
Stone shoved Guy, then

•

.

.

IA»Caa
Briefs
..

•.

•

..

River sweep set
· REEDSVILLE -The fiolt:ed Run River Sweep will
p.m., Satwday. June 21. Meet at
·~ f&amp;st shelter house at the parlc There will be n:ee T-shirts
·liid a complete chicken dinner, drinks.
·
~ place from 9 a.m. - l

.

_....!__ _~-------------~ '

.

Grocer Kroger Co., Wendy's
: burger chain pull tomatoes
: CINCINNATI (AP) wilb the same "genetic fin. .The nation's largest tradi- gerprint" have been identitional grocery chain has fied. At least 23 peopl&amp;: have ·
ouUed all ' tomato vaiieties been hospitalized, and no
from its stores as fedel:al deaths have been reported.
Olher chains, including
beallh officials work. to
rrace tbe soulce of a multi- McDonald's Corp., have
·llillfe salmoneUa food poi" stopped serving suspect
·iOning outbreak.
tomato varieties as a ~­
·• KroJer Co. on Sunday lion. O'liara Towns!~. Pa.~ved mw red plum, red
based Giant Eagle, whicb.bas
Roma and red round toma- 223 supermaztets in western
loes from stnres in 31 states, Pennsylvania, West VIrginia.
Wd spoteswoman Meghan Ohio and Maryland, ~ it .
Glynn. . Last
week, .. also removed the tomatoes
Cincinnati-based Kroger from store shelves during the
pulled the tomatoes from · weekend.
Stares in Texas and New
Glynn said Monday that
totex.ico.
Kroger's action includes
Wendy's
lntematiorlal salsa. salad bars and other
toe. bas also stopped s.erv- products ·!bat use the susing many tomatoes as a pre- pect tomatoes.
caution, said spokesman
Kroger still offers other
Denny Lynch. The nation's tomato varieties, including
1hini largest burger chain, grape, cbetty, and vinebased
in
suburban attached and homegrown
Columbus; halted 11se of to11lllloes. ·
· sliced tnmatoes nationwide
Lynch said Wendy's is
of Monday morning. responding ID the advice of
&lt;dpe tom-roes continue to the U.S. Food and Drug
t,.~ned .in :sat.ds because Adminislration,
which
·
ll'e not ooanected to warned consumers in New
1he ouUJreak, be said.
· Mex.ioo and Texas as early
:• Federal authorities are as June 3 about the outbreak
.uying to pinpoint the source · and expanded its warning
:of tbe tomatoes responsible during the weekend. ·
for illnesses in at least 16. "We bave heard of no
stlle.s . The Center&amp; for issues or ooncans with our
Disease.
Control
and supply; however, it is proPrevention has said that dent ID exercise eA:treme
since mid-AJx.il. 145 people . cautioli and to follow the
·infected wtth salmonella advisory, so we are," be said.

as .

·Barge
from Page Al
.
&amp;arge hit an ice .p ier down
river from the PomeroyMason Bridge and sank.
Boats bepn traveling the
river· agam around 6 p.m.
friday, Lwgpp said.
.. 1be accident occurred at
li:3S a.m. Friday~ as the
iBotor vessel Darin Adrian
was bringing se~ barges
loaded with coal dow.n the
A ~nd barg6 that
. stnJdl: the pier was damaged
.but did oot sink, and two
odiers broke loose and wen:

nver:.

captured by other towboats

in the area.
The piers are located both
upriver and downriver from
the bridge and are designed
io break1. up ice before it
damages/the bridge.
Lumpp said the Coast
Guard's Hu~~gton, W.Va.
office bas !ffib.a~ a ~e
. casualt_y mvesttgauon to
deternune the cause of the
barge's sinking. He said
there .is no time frame to
co~lete the inv,estiga~n.
which will eum!DC the 9rrcums~~es

surround~g

·

, Agency science panel has
said C8 is a "likely" car•
.
.crnogen. .
.
lnmPageAl
DuPont IS followmg a standard approach recommended
•'
R ooiD believe lbe cancer by the Cmtm for Disease
. liCulltioo at Washington Con~ and PreventJon for
WedS is related' to C8 or studying the cancer .sJtuatJon
at the plant, Symons said.
Jlray octier cbemical.
by tbe end of the
"Hopefully
;~, baPont maintains the
I'
II
have
a fairly subyear,
i&amp;.fiot hazardous to
h=an health. A U.S. slantial report oo what we've
Earifuamental Protection determined occupationally."

: DuPont
• *''

\-'
••

,.,..,._
Texas A&amp;M student Steve Guy, right, and instructor Steve Conway talk about their ordeal
at sea Monday at' Sealy Hospital in Galveston, Texas. Along with three other students they
spent nearty 26 hours f1oating in the GuH Gf Mexico after their sailboat overtumed late
Friday night. They were rescued by the U.S. Coast Guard early Sunday momfng.
Travis Wright through the vest firmly tied 1D the others. did the rescue crew learn
opening and into safety. They kicked :heir feet and there were only five people
They both popped up near . paddled 'toward the oil rig.
in the group.
Conway. who had been on
"We knew we woizld get
Divers pulled Stone's
waleh duty and was picked up," Guy said. "We body from lhe sunken vesalready in the water wear- knew we'd get somewhere." sel Su11day afternoon.
ing a ¥est.
. Conway admits their opti"He' s my hero. He saved
In less lhan a minute, t.be mism sagged - when reef me," Guy said. "I wouldn 't
Cynthia Woods had flipped fish such as bass and snap- be here without him:•·
over 311d begun to sink.
· per began to knock' up
Coasl 01.1ard.otl1cials said
Conway, Guy, .Wright against them in the water, . t.be keel of the overturned
and the two other students, nibbling slightly on their vessel had been ripped off,
Joe Savana and Ross James clolhes and exposed skin.
indicating the sailboat
By the second night, some mi ght have hil SO!Jlething in
Busby, clustered together
in the water: They tied of lhe students began to the water. What tore it was
themSelves together wit,h a experience the ftrst stages still u~r · inve~tigation ,
belt, keeping Guy - who of hypgthermia, despite the they said.
did not have a life vest ~ 84-degree water ~ about
Conway and the four sto- ""
in ·t he middle.
the temperature of a swim- dents, who suffered minor
At that point, they stiU ming pool. Others drifted in sunburn and dehydration,
hoped that Stone . W()Uld and .out of sleep. at times were taken to the University
somehow make it out of the unsure of what · was dream of Texas Medical Branch at
sinlting ship.
and what was reality, Guy Galveston, bu: authorities ·
· Within 15 minules; t.be recalled.
didn't know when they
five sailors had drifted far
The group kept trying to would be released .
from the sailboat aild into signal for help, once using
Guy, Wright and Savana
dark waters. It would be · whistles to try to catch the attend Texas A&amp;M at
more ·than 26 hours before attention of a passing boat. Galveston . Busby is a stutheir rescue.
. .
Olher times, they waved a dent al Texas · A&amp;M in
As they ~ . ~y pair of Wright's shorts.
College Station. Conway is
di:eamf Of tbe first llhlhg
Conway also periodically director of computer inforthey would dobackuniboi'e. flashed a small safety light mation services at Texas
Couway envisioned see- attached to his vest.
A&amp;M-Galveston and assising his wife ·Of 33 y~s.
Fina)ly, around 2 a .m. tant coach of the schoors.
Mary,, their four daugbt.ers Sunday, a helicopter crew Offshore Sailing Team.
aru1 his unborn grandChild. from Air Station Houston
Guy and Conway savored
Glly thought about his par· SJl?ned the tiny glimmer of time Monday with the famients and brother.
ltght.
ly they had thou~ht of as
Savana dreamed about
The five men were 23 :hey fought to surv1ve at sea.
goingtoeatattherestauraot miles south of Freeport "You can': face lhings
Golden Corral. Aod · Wri~l about 60 miles soulhwest of like lhi &gt; and not apJ.'reciate
savored thoughts of a thick Galveston - after !ififting what you have,' said
Whataburger- a Tens fast about five miles northwest Conway. his wife at his side.
food staple.
of their capsized boat.
Conway's first thought
The five men rotated the
Only after Chief Petty after being hoisted to safety
four l.ife vests, always keep- Officer Albert Shannon, the aboard the helicopter? "Now
ing the sailor wilhout the rescue swimmer, dived in I will see my grandchild." ,

.a..EVELAND (AP) -A
member of Congress on
Monday protested the return
to duty of an Army officer
who was cleared in
December 2005 in. the
killings of two Iraqi civilians.
U.S.
Rep.
Steven
LaTourette, R:.Obio, said
I st
Lieutenant
Erick
Anderson
was .falsely

accused by the Army of
ordering the murders of two
Iraqis. He wrote a letter to
Secretary of Defense Robert
Gales to ask lhat Anderson's
return-tO-duty · order be
reconsidered.
"11 is unconscionable thai
after all Anderson has been
lhrough - .at the hands of
the Army no less ~ tbat !J::e

Anny thinks he should give
it another go as if all is fine
and all is forgiven. This
young man lost almost two
years of his l.ife defending
himself against scurrilous
and false murder charges,''
LaTourette wrote in his letter to Gates.
Anderson,
from
Twinsburg in northeas:

Ohio and now living in
Iowa; separated from the
Army in 2006 and went
from active duty to inactive
reserve.
Neal Puckett, Ander~on 's
lawyer in Washington, D.C ..
said Monday :hat Anderson
has no comment. He
declined Jo say where
Anderson lives in Iowa.
.

.

to Farmers Blink at a rate of
4.1;25 percent.
Council then approved the
Mayor's Report for May
fromPageAt
which had a total of$17,474
received in fees from ftnes
sewer drains, council sug-. and forfeitures. Included
~ viiJJige wodrers rc;gu- within that to\lll was lhe
lady cbec:t Jllld clear drains
tn" avoid the. problem that income from parking meters,
had .several neighbothoods tickets, pennits. According
.k~linf. wr'th an overflow of lbor'.;.·
to Meter
Sandra
..,____
the
. re Maid
were 133
tickw_. ast week.
· Hy~ell iofo:med ·council etS issued, $663 received
tbe $100,000 loan which it from ticket fees. $340 fi:om ·
app~oved to pay for en~- parking P._efDlits, $1,939.54
ileering fees associated With received from meters for a
a mandatory sewer upgrade total .of $2,942.54.
bad been made, with she and
Council President Shawn
Vtllage Administrator Johri Arnon presided over the
Anderson recently iigniog meeting in place of Mayor
~papers. The loan is to, be John Musser who was
paid in monthly installments absent.

.!:'·- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - . , . - - -

. .

Officer cleared of murder charges is called back to duty

the mctde.nt,. and wiJI
include interviews with
crew members.

Pomeroy

". ..

..
• .

sea

·fied

.f!omaoy.

•

Child shoots self with grandmother's gun at SC store

W'rlliamson, of Salley, was
not immediate! y charged
~SSOCIATED PRESS WAITER
with a 'Crime.
Williamson, a South
COWMBIA, S.C. - A
magistrate, was
Carolina
4-year-old girl shot herself
in tbe chest Monday after distraught after the shootsnatching ber grand moth- ing, her mother-in-law said.
er's handgun from the
"The grandmother is just
woman's purse while riding beating herself up," said
in a shopping cart at a Sam's lnease Williamson, 68. "She
Cl ub store, au thon·u·es saJ' d . is just so upset. Everyone is
A
witness,
Lueen upset.".
Homewood, said · stnre
Officials said the shootworkers gmbbed first-aid ing, which was captured on
materials off store she!Ye.s store surveillance cameras.
to help the grandmocher as appeared to be accidental.
she cradled the wounded Lewis said police would not
child near the stoR:'s phar· release the video.
macy, The (Co!UIIlbia) State
The stgre was .c losed
newspaper reported on its· while police .investigated
Web site. .
.
the shooting. · tt reopened
'1be girl was nlShed ~ a . Monday afternoon.
, hospital in critical condition
and was l'COOWcrin&amp; M~y
aftt;moot!
:after '*Fl'• sUI
poltce
~
doepartment
spokesman Brick . Lewis. ·
Hospital officials would not
release ber condition after
the operation.
Lewis said the grandmother Donna Hutto Williamson,
h~s a permit to carry a concealed weapon and the purse
conlaining the small-caliber
handgun was in the can near
the child. The 47-year-old
BY KATRINA

A. GOGGIHS

"Everyone at Sam's Club schools and daycare faci liis deeply saddened by · ties, among other places. ·
today 's tragedy," Tara
The Sam 's Club store
Stewart, state spokeswoman does not have ·a sign profor Wal-Mart and Sam 's hibiting guns inside.
Club, said in a sta:ement.
h"
...
"Our thoughts and prayers
·(iRAN
D=
.:~
:.::.
are with the little girl and
59J·8822 t , ....
.•
•
.,.,~., ..tt.. •rliol!rartd.r.oll" ~ "' ""'~ ""(''
her family."
Concealed weapons permit holders in South WIIAS' •11:.Jl•
Carolina are not allowed to
carry weapons into buildings that .prohibit it, or into
government
buildin gs,
~

~.'

INTO THE WOODS
June27 &amp;28
7:00pm

June 29th
3:00pm

Mu•lc a. Lyricl by
Stephen Sancldt:elm

Book by James Llpine
Box Olllce: 42112nd .....
Gllll
, OH (7-40) 446-.\Rts

�•

.
The Daily Sentinel

0 PINI0 N

~M

: 'l'belday, June to, zooS

TUesday, .June to, 2oolt

) ~~~~~--~~~~~_:___ ____!!~~~,'

~

111 Couit... • •• ~. Ohio
(740) ta-2158 • FAX (740) ~157
_....,, .,

, .... 110'11

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.

Dan Goodw1cf\
Publisher

Charlene Ito aRich
General Mariager..News Ecitor

Cntft'U 11uill ""''" u l4uv mJI«&lt;i"t •n .
atcMicfunent of nligimt, or pro•iiitiag tlu
~ cmc:iM tltneDf; or ~ging tlujicdrm
tf IJIUdt, or of tile prw; or die right oftlu
~ pN«fJW, "' ~• ...... "'pditioa

die Gcwenammtfor a rd.os of~·

-n. ANI Amendll•tt 101M U.S. Con1t11u11an

TODAY IN HISTORY

n:J'

is Tuesday, June 10, tbe 162nd day of 2008. 1bere
ll'e
days left in tbe year.
..
Today's Highlight in History: On June 10, 193S,
Alcoholics Anonvmn.n• was. founded in Akron, Ohio.
On this date: In~~1865, the Riclwd Wagner opera "Tristan
und Isolde" J)I'CDlierM in Munich. Germany.
In 1907, 11 men in five cars set out from the French
apbassy in Beijing
a rare to Paris. (Prince Scipione
Borgbese of llaly was the first to arrive in the frencll capital two months later.)
In 1940, llaly declared war on~ ·and Britain; .
Omada declared war on Italy.
In 1942.' the Gestapo messacred 173 male :r.:ar:sfof
Li~, C~~lowlllria, in ~00 ·for the
g 0 8
N8Z1 offi.cill.
In 1964, the Senate voted to limit further debate on a ·
proposed Civil rights bill, shutting off a filibuster by
Southern states.
·
·
In 1967, the Middle EilstWarendedas Israel and Syria
agreed to observe a United Nalions-mediated cease-fue.
In tm, James Earl Ray, the convicted assassin of civil
ridlts leaib Martin Lotber King Jr., esca~ from Brushy
Mountain State Prison in Tennessee with srx others; he was

on

•

~

recaptured June 1,3.

,

·

. .

In 1978, AlfirtiJild woo 1be Belmont Stakes and With 1t,
horse racing's Triple Ctown.
. In 1982, rhe play "Thi:ch Song Trilogy," by Harvey
FJCI'Siein, openecfoo 'Broadway.
.
·
In 1985, socialite Clans von Bulow was acquitted by a
jury in Providence., R.l, at his retrial on charges be' d tried
to murder his heiress wife, Martha "Sunny~ von Bulow.
One year ago: President Bush was enthusiastically weiC:OJDed to Albao}a The crews of Atlantis and tbc inlemalional ~ station ~ted each othec after the ~ &amp;huttie a1nved at the Olbiting outpost. AI the French Open,
Roger Federer lost to Rafael 'Nadal. 6-3, 4-(i, 6-3: 6-4.
Suzann Pettersen sbot a 5-under 67 for a one-shot victory
over 1Carrie Webb ll ·the LPGA Ch•mpi.onship. "Sprin&amp;
Awakening" was oamed best musical at the Tony Awards;
"The Coast of Utopia," best · play. HBO aiRd tbe final
episode of "The Sopranos."
. .
Today's Birthdays: Britain's Prince Philip is . 87.
Columnist Nat Hentoff is 83. Actor-director Lionel Jeffries
is 82. Author Maurice Sendak is 80. Actress Aleundra
Stewatt is fiJ . .Singer Shirley Alston Reeves (Tbe Sbirel.les)
is 67. Media commentator Jeff Greenfteld is 65. Rock
musician Kim Deal is 47. Singer Mui Priest is 47. Actress
Gina Gershon is 46. Actress Jeanne Tripplclloln is 45. Rook
musician Jimmy Chamberlin is 44. Actress Kate Aannery
is 44. Model-actress J'llizabeth Hurley· is '43. ~ lbe
D.O;C. is 40. Rbytbm-and-'blues singer JoJo is 37. ythmand·blues singer Faith Evans is 35. Rhythm-and-blues
singer Lemisha.Gtinstead (702) is 30. Actor DJ Qualls is
30. Actor Shane West is 30. Olympic gold medal figure
skater Tara Lipinski is 26.
·
Thought for Today: "All the historical books which contain no lies are extremely tedious." - Anatole France,
French writer (11!44o1924).
·

LETTERS TO THE
EDITOR
u~rs to 1M editor are welcome. Tltey ,lwuld be Jess
thtur 300 words. All le~rs a~ subject to .editing, nuut be

signed. and inclruJe culd~ss and telephone ,lllllllber. No
IUtSigned le~rs will be pllhlished. u~rs should be in
good taste, ~ssing issues, not personalities. utter:s of
dtt:JnJcs to organiztltjons and 'individuals will not be ocupred for publication.

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·No computers or (The Sopranos'
for Cuba~ political prisoners
American advocates of
more "constructive" rel.ationships with Communist
Cuba have been heartened
by Raul Castro's permitting
Cubans to actually huy for the frrst time, if they
can afford them - cell
phones, DVD players and
computers. Another indication that Raul is more flexible than. his hanlline, ail-.
ing brother are ·"The
Sopranos" reruns on Cuban
television. You know what
happened ID anyone who
crossed Tony.
George W. Bush was dead
right to emphasize that this
cos:netic potic;y is "a worthless piece of paper" wirh
regard to changing Big
Brother Fidel's fundameitt.al
le
until, our ~
the regime stops its
abu~e of political dissidents
and releases all political
prisoners."
Bush mordantly noted

very soon after Raul sue' ceeded his brother that
Cuba si~ in March, the
internatiooal Covenant on
Civd llld Political Rights,
which ~ "civil
and political freedom."
Forei&amp;n Minister.. Felipe
Perez .lloque &amp;Olemnly
assured tbe world (out of
the bearing of Cuba's at
least 230 political prisoners
in Raul's ~s):
"This SJping formalizes
and reaffirms the rights pro- - by each IIJ1'eDll'l"
~ ~-oo t) . . ., ..
'T$ :allJ .... , I rl&amp;t

-d:oi~J~mv­

&lt;M••"
Tilec.uol
uee
.
.
.
Wfi .~~s: ua.
• , Sililll 6e 0 ' i Jill• Ullllllillt &lt;IOOUoh die. pd8l
I&amp;~

'IDI'· tdniJjon aad thlt
rudion' s ic:c:eas to the
lllla'Dd, I doubt that 111111Y

c.Nns mow lbat oae of
Raul's "priiooen of conscience" - as tbey are

regard to my · ideas. I am
here by my own uncompromising free will ... and
will serve this unjust sentence until God in the highest puts an end to it."
Net
International
human
llentoff
rights organizations and the
United Nations · bad insistently .asked Fidel Castro to
release Bisoet. As noted by
· 'bed b
the Washington Bureau of
Y McClatchy
Newspapers
accurately de&amp;en
Amoescy International wbo will not have·access ID when Bisoet was awarded
ceO phones .QF' DVD, had the Presidential Medal of
received in November Freedom, hu!Flanist Fidel
America's
Presidential Castro had ~viously
Mala!. of f'medom.
called him :·a little crazy
Dr. Oscar Elias Bisoet is man."
serving a 25-year sentence
-Elsa Morejon, Biscet's
in · a series of maximum- lieCOild wife- in the same
'ty ·
r. the · MoClat.oby news report ·~~nsw!tmg
said that her husband knew
hE1FIWI riptts. 111 2003, he somehow that he'd woo the
was put 11110 a puniahment Medal of FreedOm and tnld
cell because he and six · her "he would dedicate 'the
other political ·soners had medal ID the ¥ictims of
been ~fu: protesting communism in the world,
the crushingly auel trr.al- and to Cubans who want a
ment the guards , were fR:e Cuba."
.
.
inl)ict.irlg on other prisoners
In 1997, before bemg
of conscience.
supposedly s:lenced, as
Bi&amp;cet. ~is black, is a . F~l thought, in the gulag.
disc~ple of Dr. Martin 81soet founded the Lawton
Luther King Jr. Often in FoUi:dation for Human
solitary confmemeut for his RiJ!!ts (named for his
refusal to abandon his prin- · octghborbood in Havana).
ciples, he is being denied And he has n.ow tnld h1s
medical treatment - in stepson, MoreJon, to have
Raul Castro's Cuba- for Dr. Angel Gani.do, head of
his hypertension, gum dis- the Miami chap~ of the
ease and osteoanbritis. His Lawton Foundatcon, to
stepson,
Yan
V.aldes keep the medal - "until
Morejon, before acoepting Cuba 1s free."
.
his lather's Pleaidential
Another doctor m one of
U1W offnwdu•, wme ill Raul CastrO Is priiODs is
dle Boftoll Globe of Jorge Luis Garcia Paneque.
Bila:c's ~ *fl'a'- He w~ put away for J8
iJI&amp;, lllw~J!~ ~ IORIID years rn 2003, Amnesty
«J IIOUids aad !DOll d Ilia Intemational verifted on
tedla.
March 17, "for visiting prisHe :hu not lost his qiriL ooers aod their families as
ln one of the .statemeots he part of his work with the
has· smugsled out of . Cuban
Human Rights
prison, Bii()Ct wriles: "In Commission, and maintainapite of the djff"tcult situa- ing ties ID the international
uon, 1 am not frl&amp;l!telicd . humanitarian ~On,
nor will I go back a step in Doctors Without
.K

:cur"

-------------",...------__;~------------ -

se;;!;

- · ___ ,: 0 -

;

_ ASsopi"TED l'l'lESS -ITER

A new scholarly analysis
Truman with a minus .SO ing vision to compete witft
confirms that Sen. John
score and lost the popular Obama's soaring, KennedyMcCain bas tQ perfonn mirvote by II points to bWight esque
declaratiolf,'
acles to win tbe 2001! elecD. Eisenhower.
"America, this ·is our
lion. So (ar, be is far short of
lbe .Abramowitz barome- moment ... our time to offer
do' that.
·
ter is a short-ali variatiop a new directioo to the OOE1EI"
rnoCgat'n's speech in
. . . . .,
on American University · try we love."
M
Louisiana Tuesday night
Kuilltal
professor Allan Lichtman's . Even though McCain has
feU embarrassingly short
· famed "13 Keys to the differed from Bush on Iraq
of matching Sen. Barack
Presidency," which adds War strategy, detainee polObama' eloquence, vision .
such factors as wars, candi- icy, energy and climate.
d d li
d
date charisma, scandal and change, McCain does baclf;
an . .e very - d.emon- ,. Crystal Ball Web site, the incumbent~'s per- Bush policies on taxes •.
stra~g
the. · _1stance Abramowitz declared that
MI;Cain has ID g5' ~ have. a "it
."""" likdy that fonnance in o -year elec- foreign policy, health care
chance of wmnmg
_. m ""-~eepuai'S...,:-can' """"' 15
.
lions ID the eoonomy and and (the enviro~ment
...,.
uu
a-•J
incumbency.
·
exce~;~ted)
free-market
November.
of ~ 8 dealing with tbe dreaded
When Lichtman pilb- solutions to America '11
Ill ~ ~nee
a .,..; 'triple wh•mmv' in 2008: an
bl
scen.un m his -ormance
&lt;
llshed the latest edition of pro ems. •
-::-r~,. .
r - · · · unpopular prt:sldent, a weak his book early this year. be
McCain has nothing to
M~ will have ID ~y oo economy and a second-term
·
Obama s self-ilesttuctioo- election"
flatly predicted that "the match Obama's proDilse to
w_hich could bappe~ in
Ab~witz has tracked Democratic candidate will "in.vest in our crumbling
HiU
~ tbe White House in infrastructure"
and in
f Se
vtew . o . n.,
. ary ihe effect .of those vari- 20011 .no matter ..... _ cboire bu.man capital - earl v ,
Rodham Clinto~ s ev1dent , abies on the last 15 presi'""
"
effort ~ force .him to name dential elections and found of a nominee."
childhood education, public;,
her as his nmmog ~
that they 1Hll:urately preDemocrats ilave advan- schools, college educatioq,
. She_ refused ID ~eld tbe dieted tbe popular-vote tages Lichtman couldn't and scientific research.
.
hmelrght to h~ on outcome in 14 and came anticipate, · such as a
To the contrary. McCaiD
Tuesday, when.he cliD&lt;:hed close in the ISth.
charismatic nominee, now plans to curtail "'wasteful.
the Democratic nom.maThe formula. adds the giving them eight of the spending" and freeze all
~on •..and now ~be is incumbent president's net 13 . "keys'' ·plenty ·government programs at
tmplrcltl:L threatenmg to
al
·
( ·
al enough to win.
current levels until he sorts
·
approv
ratmg
approv
Ht'ston
·cal
models
are
out
whii:b work. "Public
tu~
e
~mo~rat1c nunus disapproval), the
National Co~:~venuon mto a second-quarter election- invented to be broken, of investznentK is not in hi5.
donnybrook unless be year GDP growth ate mul- i:ourse. But they give an vocabulary. ·
· ~~s !0 ~~ her oniD a tiplied bv five (emphasiz- indication of the odds
Obama's vision may well·
"unity tiCket.
.
ing the i'm.po~ of the McCain bas ID overcome.
~sent a throwbaclt t6
II)Jy •ctually decide economy) and then (factorAs his and Qbama's l~ libecalism, but ·~
oohi&amp;ownthatbe~her ing in time-for~a-change s~hes Tuesday night country's attitUde tow ..
to ~~ canyllJ8 ~ sentiment) subtracts 25 showed, · MoCiiil is not . r:,~t often ':rcles .
. _ ..._...
coosumenc~ -:- white ~ints if the in-party is fin- ovA:;g0
ID "small
.WOfbn. Hjlpi 0 U::I kft rsbiJ!i a ~ ~rm.
,.,
~"'"1
._... ...-and C»ffolies. - but co
Bush's net approval oow live, 'Cloquent. visiOnary · Darinj Bp&amp;h's clai"""'!.
.,. tpt ber Wider threat will stands at minus 40. TJiC • uplift, MoCain offered a "small govanniellt" years.,
make him look weak, bard- first-quarter growth rate negative, wealdy delivered median inoome has faUen:,
ly commander in chief was 0.6 perrent, and Bush is alternative that was even the ranks of tbe uninliill1l4,
material in 1 dangerous finishing his eildlth year half-borrowedfromObama. have sweUed, debt ~ world.
meanuig that t6is ·year·~ A sigo behind rdcCain ~ mounted, aod prices have.
And yet, · McCain
e1ec:tora1. barometer Clllmlt- ~AJeadef We Can Believe soiRd.
.
:
bank on Democnlic disar· 1y stapck at minus 62. ,
·In," a ~\t't from Obama'.s slo- " Voters, cleady
w~
ray. Despite polls showing
If .such a number .holds, . am. . Cb~ge . We Can . change.. MoCatn b~s t.
hUn doinl surpris~y, ~ell .it ·'"woUld predict a 'deci- · Believe ln.
• ..
-.1oq way ID go to conrrnce
against Obama, I;li.stnncal siv~ .d efeat · · fur ibe·. · McCain, has a great set •tbein. that his kind is
tllow be's in per- ~ublic:an Pfl:lidential. ' of substantive ~u~nts, .. than Obama's... even ~gil...
ilous terriby.
c:aadidate. " Abramowitz . notably that Obama s idea -on tbe ments - 1t may,
Professor
Alan wrote. ,"'liae only 'd.c:etion of change ~lies 011 across- Wdl be. .·
· . .
·. .;
Abramowitz of Emory sin9e World War. ll·with a tbe:'board b~g governmc~t. -- ~t the. rate ~gs are,
University has developed an score in this . flll!e was whtch . agam .a nd ~:un gomg, ~story will re~t:
"electoral barometer" based 1980 ~ when
Jimmy · falls short of meettng ilself wtth a De.m ocrauc.
on just three variables for Carte~ suffemd the worst America's needs.
victory in 2008 and liheraf
predicting · e1ectiqn out- defeat for an incumbent
He did his best to claim domination of the govern,
CQIIIC'i, lDf it suggests that •president ·since Herbert tbe word "reform" as an ment until .voters change.
McCain is all but certainly Hoover in 1932;"
alternative to Obama's their minds again.
•,
set to lose this year.
. The
second · worst "change" and ID refute
(Morton Kondracke i-f,
In an article last week on occurred in 1952, when Oba:na's c~e that be rep- ·executjve · editor of Roll:
University of Vtrginia pro- Democrat Adlai Stevenson resents "Bush s third term." C4ll, the newseafH!r of
fessor
Larry Sabato's tried · tn succeed Harty S.
But he offered oo overrid- CApitol Hill.)
··

The Daily Sentinel :t:l
Reader Services

Deaths

.

-McCain needs· (vision' .to beat
historic C?dds favoring Obam~ in '08

Daily Sentinel

The Daily Sentinel• Page As

www.mydaUysen~com

·.:

·'

Also in one of Raul's
cells is Ivan Hernandez
Carrillo, sentenced in 2003
to 25 years for such subversive activities as having
in his home an independent
library where Cuban~ .
could ger books ba,nned in~
. Cuba's. state library sys~:
tem. (There are other inde• ·
pendent librarians wbo stiiJ:
remain caged). I have a
copy, from the University
of Telias School of
Information, of the CubanCc;Jwt Ofder requiring thci.
burning of the contents of,
Carrillo's library.
Among the titles: a .biog• ·.
raphy, "Martin Luther King: ·
Contra todas las eA:clusiones" by Vrncent Roussel
(Bilbao: Desclee de Brower,
1995,
ISBN•I3:9788433011091).
Bisoet knows the book
well It. was destroyed by
the Castro dictatorship as
''based on ideas that oould;
be used to promote social '
disorder and civil disobedi• •
ence." And Cuban customs :
officials seized a copy of.,
.the
King
biography.
"against the general interest
of our nation."
Does ~nyone supeose
that Raul Castro willl:ber,
ate this biography of Qr, .
Martin Luther Kin¥., oi :
Biscet him~ Or will tho'
America
Library .
Association fmally put Oli
its Internet list of banned;
books this volume ooce·ozi.
. the shelves of~ independent librarian in Cuba?
'lbey've often been asked
ID do that.

(Nat He810jf is a nation'

ally rmowned authority ora
the First Amendmoct and.
the BiU of RighJs alld azttltor.

of many books, including.
u!Jte War on the .Bill of'
R1ghJs and the Gathering
Resistance" (Seven Stories ·
P~ss, 2004).

.

.

:: POINT PLEASANT, W.Va.- Michael Edward Pauley,
G~VES'!O!"· Texas 31,. of Poirit Pleasant, died Saturday evening June 7 As rught sl:d mto day and
·• • at his home.
'
' back . in.to night,. and reef
·: At Michael's ~uest !heR will be no services. Crow- fish rubbled at their skin and
-~sell Funeral Home, Point Pleasant, is in charge of , tbe {Julf of MeA:ioo roiled
'lllllllgemt!Us.
~ them,~- five sur. An oplioe gueSt registry is availabte at: www.crowhus- VIVOlS_of the sinking ?f the
·selUb.com
Cyuthia · Woods sailboat
•
'
kept talking.
g_, a - - L
SJeye ·Conway, a retiJ'ed
.,
. . LIII;..Uplr - J RUIIIDH
Coast Guard commander

·',

a .........

:tetyo:ffi~~ld~~}

. -:.POMEROY -dlnstopber-Ray RQ6sh. 29, of Pomeroy
on June 7, 2008. Funeral 3l131lgemecits will be
:MDOUnced by Anderson-McDaniel Funeral Home in

tbe
stories he's famous
for, careful tD avoid "ones
that involve utlel' calamity."
' Then, he told reporters
Monday, he detailed the ·
protoool for Coast Guard
rescues, giving the four
Teus A&amp;M students floating alongside him in the
Gulf a timeline for the belp
they were certain would
eventually come.
ThQ&amp;e stories, tilat steadfast belief that tbey would
be rescued and the jolres tbe
five sailors tnssed .around as
they bobbed more than 20
miles offiihore kept their
spirits and hopes up during
26 hours at ·sea.
The chatter sustained the ·
five when they ftoated away
from their 38-foot sailboat,
which capsized after losing
its ked j!lst before midnight
Friday. It gave them
strength as they held onto
one aoother by locking anus
aod lashing belts.
· It fed their hope .that
~ger Sione,.53, the hoat'w
other safety officer, had
·somehow survived after
pushing two of the stodents
to safety.
No one panicked. No one
gave up.
Instead, they kept watch
for search crews and kicked
their feet through the water,
trying to steer themselves
toward an oil rig about 5
miles away.
"lbe key to survival is to
stay together, don't ~c and
a fiecce will to live,' Conway
said. "All of the guys are
here together ~se they
did a great job."
'
1he Cynthia Woods was
competing in the ~gata 4e·
Amigos, a raoe from
Galveston to Veracruz,
Mexico, that began aroood
2 p.m. Friday.
But around 1l :45 p.m.
Friday, Stnne began shouting thal the boat was taking
on water. Steven Guy, 20,
sleeping
below
deck,
grabbed fQF' a life vest but
missed when tbc boat began
to roll over. The life jacket
inflated inside the rapidly
inundated craft, making It
impossible to put on, so
Guy escaped without it.
Stone shoved Guy, then

•

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IA»Caa
Briefs
..

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River sweep set
· REEDSVILLE -The fiolt:ed Run River Sweep will
p.m., Satwday. June 21. Meet at
·~ f&amp;st shelter house at the parlc There will be n:ee T-shirts
·liid a complete chicken dinner, drinks.
·
~ place from 9 a.m. - l

.

_....!__ _~-------------~ '

.

Grocer Kroger Co., Wendy's
: burger chain pull tomatoes
: CINCINNATI (AP) wilb the same "genetic fin. .The nation's largest tradi- gerprint" have been identitional grocery chain has fied. At least 23 peopl&amp;: have ·
ouUed all ' tomato vaiieties been hospitalized, and no
from its stores as fedel:al deaths have been reported.
Olher chains, including
beallh officials work. to
rrace tbe soulce of a multi- McDonald's Corp., have
·llillfe salmoneUa food poi" stopped serving suspect
·iOning outbreak.
tomato varieties as a ~­
·• KroJer Co. on Sunday lion. O'liara Towns!~. Pa.~ved mw red plum, red
based Giant Eagle, whicb.bas
Roma and red round toma- 223 supermaztets in western
loes from stnres in 31 states, Pennsylvania, West VIrginia.
Wd spoteswoman Meghan Ohio and Maryland, ~ it .
Glynn. . Last
week, .. also removed the tomatoes
Cincinnati-based Kroger from store shelves during the
pulled the tomatoes from · weekend.
Stares in Texas and New
Glynn said Monday that
totex.ico.
Kroger's action includes
Wendy's
lntematiorlal salsa. salad bars and other
toe. bas also stopped s.erv- products ·!bat use the susing many tomatoes as a pre- pect tomatoes.
caution, said spokesman
Kroger still offers other
Denny Lynch. The nation's tomato varieties, including
1hini largest burger chain, grape, cbetty, and vinebased
in
suburban attached and homegrown
Columbus; halted 11se of to11lllloes. ·
· sliced tnmatoes nationwide
Lynch said Wendy's is
of Monday morning. responding ID the advice of
&lt;dpe tom-roes continue to the U.S. Food and Drug
t,.~ned .in :sat.ds because Adminislration,
which
·
ll'e not ooanected to warned consumers in New
1he ouUJreak, be said.
· Mex.ioo and Texas as early
:• Federal authorities are as June 3 about the outbreak
.uying to pinpoint the source · and expanded its warning
:of tbe tomatoes responsible during the weekend. ·
for illnesses in at least 16. "We bave heard of no
stlle.s . The Center&amp; for issues or ooncans with our
Disease.
Control
and supply; however, it is proPrevention has said that dent ID exercise eA:treme
since mid-AJx.il. 145 people . cautioli and to follow the
·infected wtth salmonella advisory, so we are," be said.

as .

·Barge
from Page Al
.
&amp;arge hit an ice .p ier down
river from the PomeroyMason Bridge and sank.
Boats bepn traveling the
river· agam around 6 p.m.
friday, Lwgpp said.
.. 1be accident occurred at
li:3S a.m. Friday~ as the
iBotor vessel Darin Adrian
was bringing se~ barges
loaded with coal dow.n the
A ~nd barg6 that
. stnJdl: the pier was damaged
.but did oot sink, and two
odiers broke loose and wen:

nver:.

captured by other towboats

in the area.
The piers are located both
upriver and downriver from
the bridge and are designed
io break1. up ice before it
damages/the bridge.
Lumpp said the Coast
Guard's Hu~~gton, W.Va.
office bas !ffib.a~ a ~e
. casualt_y mvesttgauon to
deternune the cause of the
barge's sinking. He said
there .is no time frame to
co~lete the inv,estiga~n.
which will eum!DC the 9rrcums~~es

surround~g

·

, Agency science panel has
said C8 is a "likely" car•
.
.crnogen. .
.
lnmPageAl
DuPont IS followmg a standard approach recommended
•'
R ooiD believe lbe cancer by the Cmtm for Disease
. liCulltioo at Washington Con~ and PreventJon for
WedS is related' to C8 or studying the cancer .sJtuatJon
at the plant, Symons said.
Jlray octier cbemical.
by tbe end of the
"Hopefully
;~, baPont maintains the
I'
II
have
a fairly subyear,
i&amp;.fiot hazardous to
h=an health. A U.S. slantial report oo what we've
Earifuamental Protection determined occupationally."

: DuPont
• *''

\-'
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,.,..,._
Texas A&amp;M student Steve Guy, right, and instructor Steve Conway talk about their ordeal
at sea Monday at' Sealy Hospital in Galveston, Texas. Along with three other students they
spent nearty 26 hours f1oating in the GuH Gf Mexico after their sailboat overtumed late
Friday night. They were rescued by the U.S. Coast Guard early Sunday momfng.
Travis Wright through the vest firmly tied 1D the others. did the rescue crew learn
opening and into safety. They kicked :heir feet and there were only five people
They both popped up near . paddled 'toward the oil rig.
in the group.
Conway. who had been on
"We knew we woizld get
Divers pulled Stone's
waleh duty and was picked up," Guy said. "We body from lhe sunken vesalready in the water wear- knew we'd get somewhere." sel Su11day afternoon.
ing a ¥est.
. Conway admits their opti"He' s my hero. He saved
In less lhan a minute, t.be mism sagged - when reef me," Guy said. "I wouldn 't
Cynthia Woods had flipped fish such as bass and snap- be here without him:•·
over 311d begun to sink.
· per began to knock' up
Coasl 01.1ard.otl1cials said
Conway, Guy, .Wright against them in the water, . t.be keel of the overturned
and the two other students, nibbling slightly on their vessel had been ripped off,
Joe Savana and Ross James clolhes and exposed skin.
indicating the sailboat
By the second night, some mi ght have hil SO!Jlething in
Busby, clustered together
in the water: They tied of lhe students began to the water. What tore it was
themSelves together wit,h a experience the ftrst stages still u~r · inve~tigation ,
belt, keeping Guy - who of hypgthermia, despite the they said.
did not have a life vest ~ 84-degree water ~ about
Conway and the four sto- ""
in ·t he middle.
the temperature of a swim- dents, who suffered minor
At that point, they stiU ming pool. Others drifted in sunburn and dehydration,
hoped that Stone . W()Uld and .out of sleep. at times were taken to the University
somehow make it out of the unsure of what · was dream of Texas Medical Branch at
sinlting ship.
and what was reality, Guy Galveston, bu: authorities ·
· Within 15 minules; t.be recalled.
didn't know when they
five sailors had drifted far
The group kept trying to would be released .
from the sailboat aild into signal for help, once using
Guy, Wright and Savana
dark waters. It would be · whistles to try to catch the attend Texas A&amp;M at
more ·than 26 hours before attention of a passing boat. Galveston . Busby is a stutheir rescue.
. .
Olher times, they waved a dent al Texas · A&amp;M in
As they ~ . ~y pair of Wright's shorts.
College Station. Conway is
di:eamf Of tbe first llhlhg
Conway also periodically director of computer inforthey would dobackuniboi'e. flashed a small safety light mation services at Texas
Couway envisioned see- attached to his vest.
A&amp;M-Galveston and assising his wife ·Of 33 y~s.
Fina)ly, around 2 a .m. tant coach of the schoors.
Mary,, their four daugbt.ers Sunday, a helicopter crew Offshore Sailing Team.
aru1 his unborn grandChild. from Air Station Houston
Guy and Conway savored
Glly thought about his par· SJl?ned the tiny glimmer of time Monday with the famients and brother.
ltght.
ly they had thou~ht of as
Savana dreamed about
The five men were 23 :hey fought to surv1ve at sea.
goingtoeatattherestauraot miles south of Freeport "You can': face lhings
Golden Corral. Aod · Wri~l about 60 miles soulhwest of like lhi &gt; and not apJ.'reciate
savored thoughts of a thick Galveston - after !ififting what you have,' said
Whataburger- a Tens fast about five miles northwest Conway. his wife at his side.
food staple.
of their capsized boat.
Conway's first thought
The five men rotated the
Only after Chief Petty after being hoisted to safety
four l.ife vests, always keep- Officer Albert Shannon, the aboard the helicopter? "Now
ing the sailor wilhout the rescue swimmer, dived in I will see my grandchild." ,

.a..EVELAND (AP) -A
member of Congress on
Monday protested the return
to duty of an Army officer
who was cleared in
December 2005 in. the
killings of two Iraqi civilians.
U.S.
Rep.
Steven
LaTourette, R:.Obio, said
I st
Lieutenant
Erick
Anderson
was .falsely

accused by the Army of
ordering the murders of two
Iraqis. He wrote a letter to
Secretary of Defense Robert
Gales to ask lhat Anderson's
return-tO-duty · order be
reconsidered.
"11 is unconscionable thai
after all Anderson has been
lhrough - .at the hands of
the Army no less ~ tbat !J::e

Anny thinks he should give
it another go as if all is fine
and all is forgiven. This
young man lost almost two
years of his l.ife defending
himself against scurrilous
and false murder charges,''
LaTourette wrote in his letter to Gates.
Anderson,
from
Twinsburg in northeas:

Ohio and now living in
Iowa; separated from the
Army in 2006 and went
from active duty to inactive
reserve.
Neal Puckett, Ander~on 's
lawyer in Washington, D.C ..
said Monday :hat Anderson
has no comment. He
declined Jo say where
Anderson lives in Iowa.
.

.

to Farmers Blink at a rate of
4.1;25 percent.
Council then approved the
Mayor's Report for May
fromPageAt
which had a total of$17,474
received in fees from ftnes
sewer drains, council sug-. and forfeitures. Included
~ viiJJige wodrers rc;gu- within that to\lll was lhe
lady cbec:t Jllld clear drains
tn" avoid the. problem that income from parking meters,
had .several neighbothoods tickets, pennits. According
.k~linf. wr'th an overflow of lbor'.;.·
to Meter
Sandra
..,____
the
. re Maid
were 133
tickw_. ast week.
· Hy~ell iofo:med ·council etS issued, $663 received
tbe $100,000 loan which it from ticket fees. $340 fi:om ·
app~oved to pay for en~- parking P._efDlits, $1,939.54
ileering fees associated With received from meters for a
a mandatory sewer upgrade total .of $2,942.54.
bad been made, with she and
Council President Shawn
Vtllage Administrator Johri Arnon presided over the
Anderson recently iigniog meeting in place of Mayor
~papers. The loan is to, be John Musser who was
paid in monthly installments absent.

.!:'·- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - . , . - - -

. .

Officer cleared of murder charges is called back to duty

the mctde.nt,. and wiJI
include interviews with
crew members.

Pomeroy

". ..

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sea

·fied

.f!omaoy.

•

Child shoots self with grandmother's gun at SC store

W'rlliamson, of Salley, was
not immediate! y charged
~SSOCIATED PRESS WAITER
with a 'Crime.
Williamson, a South
COWMBIA, S.C. - A
magistrate, was
Carolina
4-year-old girl shot herself
in tbe chest Monday after distraught after the shootsnatching ber grand moth- ing, her mother-in-law said.
er's handgun from the
"The grandmother is just
woman's purse while riding beating herself up," said
in a shopping cart at a Sam's lnease Williamson, 68. "She
Cl ub store, au thon·u·es saJ' d . is just so upset. Everyone is
A
witness,
Lueen upset.".
Homewood, said · stnre
Officials said the shootworkers gmbbed first-aid ing, which was captured on
materials off store she!Ye.s store surveillance cameras.
to help the grandmocher as appeared to be accidental.
she cradled the wounded Lewis said police would not
child near the stoR:'s phar· release the video.
macy, The (Co!UIIlbia) State
The stgre was .c losed
newspaper reported on its· while police .investigated
Web site. .
.
the shooting. · tt reopened
'1be girl was nlShed ~ a . Monday afternoon.
, hospital in critical condition
and was l'COOWcrin&amp; M~y
aftt;moot!
:after '*Fl'• sUI
poltce
~
doepartment
spokesman Brick . Lewis. ·
Hospital officials would not
release ber condition after
the operation.
Lewis said the grandmother Donna Hutto Williamson,
h~s a permit to carry a concealed weapon and the purse
conlaining the small-caliber
handgun was in the can near
the child. The 47-year-old
BY KATRINA

A. GOGGIHS

"Everyone at Sam's Club schools and daycare faci liis deeply saddened by · ties, among other places. ·
today 's tragedy," Tara
The Sam 's Club store
Stewart, state spokeswoman does not have ·a sign profor Wal-Mart and Sam 's hibiting guns inside.
Club, said in a sta:ement.
h"
...
"Our thoughts and prayers
·(iRAN
D=
.:~
:.::.
are with the little girl and
59J·8822 t , ....
.•
•
.,.,~., ..tt.. •rliol!rartd.r.oll" ~ "' ""'~ ""(''
her family."
Concealed weapons permit holders in South WIIAS' •11:.Jl•
Carolina are not allowed to
carry weapons into buildings that .prohibit it, or into
government
buildin gs,
~

~.'

INTO THE WOODS
June27 &amp;28
7:00pm

June 29th
3:00pm

Mu•lc a. Lyricl by
Stephen Sancldt:elm

Book by James Llpine
Box Olllce: 42112nd .....
Gllll
, OH (7-40) 446-.\Rts

�•

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Page A~

REGIONAL
Rural action kicking Lee donates to PVH rehabilitatio~

The Daily Sentinel

Tuesda~Juneto,2oo;

otT transition at retreat
TRIMBLE
An
upcoming ~t will lcick
off community involvement in a major .redesign of
R11T3l Action's programs
which is involved in
~sin~ coooems of the
Appalachtan counties in
Southeastcm Ohio.
The ocgairi.zation invites
community members to
begin brainstorming and
planning for lhe next decade
of Rur.al Aaioo' s wOtt at
tbe free Retreat on Rural
Renewal. which will be held
Jtme 16, from 9 a.m. to 5
p.m. at Trimble High
School in Glouster. Lunch
will he provided.
"''bis re1rea1 is a oommunity convetsatioo about the
future of Appahu:hian Oltio
and RIIGil Adion'.s role in
that future." said Mary
Steinmans Rural Action '!i
Interim &amp;ecutive Director..
At the retreat, community
members wil.l worlc in ·
groups to develop preliminary action plans abOut
issues that concern· them.
"We know there are plenty
of people in this region who ·
care about youth education,
community revitalization,
energy conservation · and
other
issues,"
said
Steiomaus. ·'This re1rea1 is
an oppoltUnity for likeminded people to come
together and think about

what we can do about tbese
issues in our ODilllllllllities."
Rural Actioo will not be
altering its core mi~sion,
which is to promote economic, social, and environmental
justice
in
Appalachian Ohio. Rather,
the . Retreat on Rwal
Renewal is an opportuuity
for oommunity mem1w:ni 10
examine and to wed on
new projects under that
fuuoewott.
Rural Action's programs
originally grew out of .a
similar community effort in
the early 1990s, when die

·BY AllY J;. E.t.Qf

·

Miller.

'

Several local businesses
donating giftS for the alumni reunion.
Alumni attending were
Mary Welsh Woodyard

I

Thesday•••A chance of
showers and thunderstotms
in the morning ...Then showers and thunderstorins likely
in the afternoon. Some thunderstorms may produce
~usty winds and small hail
m the afternoon. Highs i.Q
the mid 80s. Southwest
winds 10 to 15 mph. Chance
of min 60 percent.
TUesday ni&amp;hL-Mostly
cloudy with a slililit chance
of showers and thunderstorms in the evening...lbeo
partly cloudy after midnight.
Lows in the lower 60s.' West
winds 5 10 10 mph in the
evening... Becoming light
and variable. Chance of rain
20 percent.

•!While

Local Stocks
. , . (NYSE)- 42.11
AllaD (M'ID"Q) - 11.211
Aihlwld Inc. (NYSE) -15.32
81gLoei(NY8E)-:11.11
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8G , . . _ (lhiE)-47.74
.Cenlury Aluminum (MA8DAO)

-72.74

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Ctlaillplan (111•80.aj Cllaaolng ........ (MAIOAQ)1.21
Cllr H.:ldk. (NAIDAQ)41.211
carne 1J11Y1eJ- MAO
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Aopl Dulalo .... - ...... .
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.,.. L&amp;etay 111 oeoo In Point
Pluunt at (304) 174-0174.

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Wedaesday ..• Mostly
sunn~~bs in the upper 80s.
East .
around 5 niph ..
Weclaesllay mpt Partly
cloudy. Lows in the mid 60s.
East wind~ around 5 mph.
1bunday and Thursday .
nlpt .. Partly cloudy. Higbs
in the upper 80s.· Lows in
the mid 60s.
Friday
through
Saturday-.Mostly cloudy
with a chance of showers
and thunderstomJB. Higl;l.s in
the mid 80s. Lows in the
upper 60s. Chance of rain
40 peroent
.
. Saturday Dl&amp;ht throueb
MoDCbiy...Parify cloudy.
Lows . in ·the lower 60s.
Highs in the mid 80s.

••••• I

II'C.

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The Daily Sentinel

6

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U.S.Opm . . . ,...,., . . . M

'Difllllay, Juoe 10, 20111

aonu.al

Local Weather

I

·

POINT
PLEASANT, .
W.Va. -· Roger Lee, an
accomplished author and
native West VtTginian,
recently returned to Mason
Coonty after· .living many
years m the Cawy lslaods. .
Prior to his return, Lee bad
suffeml a suvke· and was
having diffioulty rommunicating and forming Senteoces. Nearly a year ago, he
became a speech therapy
patiart at lbe Pleasant Valley
Hospital Ou1patient Therapy
Department where be has
o~anization's
found~g . made great strides.
.
director, Carol Kuhre, facil-. · ..Me. Lee made a sizeable
itated a planning process donation to the hospital
involving bun~s of wbiclt we appmciate very
Appalachim Ohio resi- much,~ commented ·Tom
dents. The concepts our- Schauer, Chief Financw
tumd b_y lhose people ~vc!- , Officer.
oped toto R11Tal Actlon s . "I looked arouud and saw
cwreot projects in sustain- that these people were help.able forestry and ~~­ ing othecs," explained Lee.
ture, watershed re~on, "I wanted to allow these
arts and cultural bentage fine bealtbcare professionand CJth« areas.
als to do their jobs by pro1be Retreat on Rural viding some additional
Renewal is free but regislr.l- equipment"
.
lion is ·limited to 100 peaWtth Lee's donation, the
pie. Community members not-for-profit
healthcare
may register at w'Ww.rural- facility pwcllased a liner for
renewal.blogspot.com or by their aquatic therapy pool
calling Sara Peach at 7~ and a new computer, monitor
767-4918. The Rur.al Action and SC3llllel' for the Speech
meeting will also 'l'ber.tl)y office In appreciatake place that day, during a tion, the ~ staff held a
short business lunch.
moatt lwlcboon with Lee as
the guest of honor.
"Mr. Lee was very
·
·
1easa u.u-, H ital
thoughtful in his donation," Roger lee, a speeCh therapy patient, has made a donation toP
nt ........, · ospl
commented Schauer.
· a new aquatic therapy pool liner and a comput~r monitor. Shown
with lee, oet lttir,
1933; Thor Carsey 1934;
"Mr.
Lee has become from 1he left, Scott Wood, physical therapy asSistant, Debra Long, dn'eCtor of
Ma~garet Whaley Kostival
.
1937; Lennie Jewell 1939; active in our Stroke Support services, Paul Hanis, 'lead physical therapist and Jason King, physical therapist. For
Group,
which
meets
tbe
.
mation
about
the
Pleasant
Valley
flehabilitation
services
or
the
stroke
support
group
·~
Bob and Frances Alkire
.
.
:::'
1942;
Manianna fourth lliesday of · every (304) 675-8639.
mon1h.
He
is
an
inspiration
·
.,.
Throckmorton
Whitlock
ro
others.," said Debra Long,
'"Years
ago,
my
wife
was
Lee
is
now
more
active
"The
care
provided
by
tbil
1945;
~n
Wyatt
staff
Ash,Lena Alkire Hewitt, Director of Rehabilitation . diagnosed with cancer and I . 1b.an ever. He recently moved rehabmtation
"'-~-spe
.
nt
four
years
nllfSmg·
and
to
the
country
and
remains
Pleasant
Valley
Hospital
Is
Garnet Henderson Swisher .x;J • ....,s.
caring for her until . she involved in many communi- unparalleled. Maybe my
1946; Delores Wood 'King
Long also added that Lee
ty nr&lt;&gt;jeqs and programs.
donation to their deparl1947;
Esther
Ross has improved his verbal passed away," shared Lee.
a doUar will still ment can assist them ih
McKinley 1948; Melvin skills and now stays on task. "That experience :made me
thin g, I w.anted to helpt'ng so'meone · else. ~
«
Morris, Rosella Dorgan . She said he is mottvated and think about life, where I was buy some
Birchfield 1950; Gertrude fooused on impiuving Ills ~oing, and what was truly help those who have helped know they have made a dif;
tmpottanl"·
me," Lee said with a laugh. ference in my life."
McMurray Monroe, Flora qualitY of life. ·
Douglas Osborne 1951;
Paul Cotterill 1952; Pauline
Birchfield Parker, Russell
Mason 1953; Albert Reeves
1954; Hallie Ross 1955;
Larry · Clark,
Irene
Rodehaver
Haning,
Dorothy Anderson From
1956; Rachael Burbridge
Lefebre, Garey Dorgan,
Phyllis Ross Dean, Allen
McMurray
1957; Dan
Arnold 1958; Vtrgil Reeves
1959; Harold Graham, Joy
Wiseman Clark 1960.
Officers elected for 20082009
were
Donna
Burbridge Wilson, president; Harold Graham, vice
president; Joy. Wiseman
Clark, secretary; and Larry

Clark. treasurer.

.....~:r

PVH COMMUNITY
~110NS DIRECTOR

Harrisonville-Scipio alumni meet
HARRISONVD..LE The Harrisonville-Scipio
Alumni Association held its
78th annual banquet May
24 with 66 alumni and
guests attending.
President Donna Wilson
welcomed dre group, and
Dan Arnold gave the invocation. Harold and Janet
Graham and family prepared
the
food.
Entenainment was led by
President
Wilson
and
included reflections of the
past and accomplishments
of the graduate~.
Cheerleaders and bus drivers Were recognized, and
flowers were presented to
Thor Carsey, 1lbe oldest male
attending, and Mary Welsh
Woodyard, the oldest female
present Others recognized
and given a flower were
Esther Ross McKinley, class
of 1948, and Dan Arnold,
class of 1958.
Scholarships were awarded to Cassady Willford,
Samantha Hively and Allen

J._n-"de

~rough
up Willis in 8-2
'

Gi3nts' Michael Strahan retires after 15 seasons

·TGM
win OVer Tigers . __BYAS_SOC_IA_:re_o-'
P-RE_s_s _ _
CA.OIUIII

EAST RUTHERFORD,
NJ. - Michael Straltall had
what he wanted - a Super
. DETROIT
Ryan Bowl championship to add
Gmo and Kelly Shoppaoh 10 a resii.Die featuring seven
both homered in the first Pro Bowls and two sack
two
uimngs
against records. Now it was time to
Dontrelle Willis, helping leave football and leave the
tbe Oeveland Indians build New Yoti( Giants after 15
In ·eigbt-111D lead in an 8-2 years
in the NFL.
,.ictory over the Detroit
Four months after a stunl'i,gers on Monday night. · ning Super Bowl victory
The Indians kept Cliff over the previously unbeatLee oti the mound after a en New England Patriots,
S7-minute rain delay in the the 36-year-old Strahan
fifth inning and he tva~ informed Giants co-owner
the AL's first H)-game win- John Mara he was done. He
-ner. Lee (10-1) allowed two will be walking away from a
runs, six hits and two walks $4 million contract for the
. while striki.ng·out five over 2008 season.
five innings.
"I 10ld him he's been a
Willis (0-1) gave up eight ~t Giant," Mara said
earned runs - matching a
onday. "He thanked me
career high. - three hits for everything the organiz.aand five walks in l l-3
innings.
He made his second start
since g!ling on the disabled
list wi.th a hyperellteoded .
right knee. In Willis' last
start,_ he dido 't give up a
run. but walked five in four
innings.
Wtllis was regarded as
:secondary player in a
blockbuster trade last winter that added Miguel ·
Cabrera from the Aorida
Marlins; but Detroit was
confident enough in the
pitcher to give him a $29
million, three-year deal.
· So far, not so good. .
· He is struggling with his
i:ontrol - walking 21 ~t­
Iers in U 1-3 innings just as he did in his last two
seasons with the Marlins.
Only 27 of his 64 pitches
lwere
strikes ' against

lion has done for him. I said,
' I think you've done more
for us than we can ever do
for you."'
Strahan never told his
coaches or his teammates of
his decision. They learned
of it from reporters at praclice.
,
· "I'm just finding out about
it; let me got organized,"
coach Tom Coughlin said
after a teani wodmut.
Strahan, who has long
said he wants a job in television, plans to bold a news
· conference Tuesday at
Giants Stadium.
Tony Agnone, Strahan's
agent, said the Giants
offered Strahan more money
in an effort to get him to
play another year.
· "Money was never the
issue for him," Agnone told
,..__,- 511

·-..a

.•

.

AP . . . .

J

In this Jan. 30 file photo, New Yo111 Giants defensive end Michael Strahan reacts while
answering a question during a media availability session in Chandler, Ariz. Seven-time Pro
Bowl defensive end Michael Strahan is retiring after a 15-year career, capped by a SUper
Bowl title with the New Yo111 Giants In February.
·

~ mulQbQ~ ~~­

three-run and two-run shots
-

and Brandon Phil!.ips

MIAMI- Ken Griffey Jr. added a solo horner in sup-

hit his 600th home run on port of Edinsoo Volquez (9Monday night. completing ~ ), :OV~ ~ve up three runs
his loog ascent and 6eoom- m su.mnmgs.
ing lbe sixth player in histoGriffey ended the game 1ry to ~h that milestone.
for-4 with a strikeout and an
The Cincinnati outfielder intentional walk. He euted
homered off Aorida lefty in the middle of the eighth.
Mark Hendrickson in the
Hairston left the game in
ftrst inning of the Reds' 9-4 the middle of tloe first after
victory against the Marlins. suffering a fractllT~ left
Griffey joined Barry Bonds, thumb when stealing sec·Hank Aaron, Babe Ruth, ond.
Willie Mays and Sammy
Hendrickson
(7 -4)
Sosa.
.
allowed six 111DS '
five
The 38-year-old homered earned - 3nd five hits in 2
with Jerry Hairston on third 1•3 innings. Mike Jacobs
and
one out. The left-banded homered for the Marlins.
Qsv~od
swinger
launched a 3-1 pitch
Still, the game will be
'~'"fliili'fiitoieiM: Rookie of
413
feet
into
the
right-field
remembered · for Griffey's
ihe Year and 11Ulllef-up for
seats, ·
historic homer.
the Nl.'s Cy Young won 22
Griffey
received
a
standThe
slugger
hasn ' t
games during the previous
ing
ovation
from
the
crowd
·golden
enjoyed
many
two seasons combined in .
of 16,003 and responded by moments since the Reds got
Florida .after wi.nnilig 22 in
corning out of the Reds him from Seattle in 2000.
2005.
dugout and waving his hel- This will rank. as one of his
Willis ,g ot off to a good
met ki the fans.
· best with Cincinnati and,
~tart,
getting Franklin
The ,game was the last one possibly, one of his last,
fJutiern:z to pop out before
of an eight-game road trip given that he's in the final
unraveling.
for the Reds, who will return year of his contract.
: He walked the next two ·
home Tuesday night to play
It was a long time coming.
batters. then Garko brought
Griffey, one of baseball's
the St. Louis Cardinals.
Jhem home with a 375-foot
sluggers
Controversy ensued in the most prolific
shot that sailed over the
stands following the home before injuries began to take
in left.
run. Justin Kimball, a 25- their toll, started the season
: Willis walked the leadoff
year-old from Miami, said with 593 home runs.
bitter the next inning. then
It tonk 216 at-bats to make
he caught the home run ball,
Sooppach followed with a
put it in a wool ·c ap and then history - · his previous
hGilll!:r. He later walked
had the cap ripped from his homer came. May 31 .
consecutive batters to load
hands. Kimball said someGriffey hit No. 597 on
the bases ·10 end his ·night
one ran dfi with the ball.
April 23 at Great American
with only one out in the
Police said they had found Ball Pari!:, then went 90 atsecond.
the fan with the baseball and bats - the second-longest
Fans booed manager Jim
would look at video tape to drought of his career Leyland when by. left to
see if Kimball's claims before connecting again in
dugout 10 take out Willis,
could be supported.
San Diego on May 22.
who was booed as he ran
However, the Aorida
He went ·another 29 at ..
off the field.
Marlins announced Major bats, and even got a day off
. Dcm!y' Bautista entered .
Baseball
had during the week to work on
League
1tie :game· and put dlrec
authenticated the home run his swing, before hitting No . .
,non: nm11 oa 'Willis' line by
.
AP piiOlo . ball for a middle.aged male 599. Griffey went 17 at-bats
bitting .a batteJ: .and givmg . Cincinnati Reds' Ken Griffey Jr., waves to the crowd after he hit his 600th home nm dur- fan who would only give his between that homer and No.
a smglc and a sacrifiql ing the first inning •Of a baseball game against the Aorida Marlins Monday at Dolphin ftrst name as Joe.
PI ne - C:.IHer. B2
Paul Bako had his ftrst
Stadium in Miami.
Tar: pulled to 8-2
'
in the Ourth ·q n Edgar
Rente!U's
single
and
'-- Placido Polanco's double.
Both :telins were held
. scoreleu after the (ain
LAX in Paul Pierce's infa- Portland
against
BY TOM WmtEU
!!clay. . .
.
ASSOCIATED PRESS
Philadelphia in 1977, ~d
moos wheelchair.
Detroit bad a chance . to
Thou,gh down 0 -2. and Miami agaiqst Dallas m
icOte in the eighth, but
LOS
ANGELES
facing history along with the 2005 have overcome an 0-2
Cabrera was robbed of a Frequent fll:, the Los league's toughest ' defense, deficit to win it all. The
bOmer as Gutierrez leaped Angeles .
er·s . were the I.akers felt good about Lakers have some work to
iJl .stride to sui! ·t be ·ihot ' allOwed an unlimited num- their comeback - they do if they intend to be the
over die wall in left.center. ber of carry-on items for whacked a 24-point deficit fourth.
.
: Cleveland split the four- dleir trip home.
to two over the fmal 7:55 Thtough two games, they
game aeries after losing the
It remains to .be seen if any and are confident they can have been outhustled, outlast two 'games and pulled of them contatned momen- swin~ the series at the muscled, outeverythinged
~veD in the season' series tum.
.
. Staples Center in Game on by a Celtics team now 'two
lfter six games.
After losmg two gan~es m Tuesday night. .
wins from a 17th NBA
·
·
Boston, the !..akers returned
They are 8-0 in the post- championship . Following
to California on Monday in a season there and unbeaten in Sunday's loss, Los Angeles
bole as deep as Topanga 14 home games since March coach Phil Jackson was
CoNTACT
Canyon. Over '9 6 mmutes, 28.
asked if the team can ~
they have looked nothing
"All they did is prot~t the momentum from thetr
like the •teain which pulv.ec- their home court,
saJd failed, frantic fourth-quarter
Lakers
guard
Sasha
Vujacic,
comeback into Game 3. ·
ized
Denver,
pushed
aside
40 448 3008
I!. -1-7
1
Utah and swatted away San wi)Q madf two 3-poinlets in
"No, no," said Jackson,
._,.- oporiiOmydo~tlnetoom
Antonio with ease on the the fourth quarter of who has
delivering
•• ..
""'
I
.
.
the
"'
'
way to WU1Jl1ng
..estern Sunday 's 108- 102 loss and one-liners like . Rodney
iMo ..., d lllph, Sporta Wrtl&amp;r Conference title.
had a potential go-ahead 3 Dangerfield dunng the
lr"'! ~- .- 33
Wtth the e~tception of an lllocked by Pierce with 14 series. "It' s 2,500 mi.le~
•• ~·•"'ldlll••*'..t.oom
eight-minute stretch at the seconds left. "All they djd , away. It's too far to carry n. '
The
purple-and -~old ,
, Sporta Wrtl&amp;r
end of Game 2, Kobe Bryant was protect their home
and his crew have looked court, so it's going to be a though, have ~o a ~er33
(7,40) ue 2342,
AP piiOio
different story in L.A."
ent club while playmg
' , oo
.com
sickly in the ftnals.
However, there 's no truth
lt had better be.
before super fan Ja~k Los Angeles Lakers' Kobe Bryant walks from the bench durUrrJ CIUIIII,, Jllllorta Wrller
ing their 108-102 lOss to the Boston Celties in Game 2 of
to the runwr they were taken
Only three teams: Boston
...... {f.a) ue 2342, e.~ . 33
1 a• a. 112
the
NBA basketball finals In Boston on Sunday.
from their charter plane at against Los Angeles ln 1969,
lcnlm•rnrd~M),..gl 1 .com

wan

d'!

~

Lakers looking .to bounce back

US

been

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Page A~

REGIONAL
Rural action kicking Lee donates to PVH rehabilitatio~

The Daily Sentinel

Tuesda~Juneto,2oo;

otT transition at retreat
TRIMBLE
An
upcoming ~t will lcick
off community involvement in a major .redesign of
R11T3l Action's programs
which is involved in
~sin~ coooems of the
Appalachtan counties in
Southeastcm Ohio.
The ocgairi.zation invites
community members to
begin brainstorming and
planning for lhe next decade
of Rur.al Aaioo' s wOtt at
tbe free Retreat on Rural
Renewal. which will be held
Jtme 16, from 9 a.m. to 5
p.m. at Trimble High
School in Glouster. Lunch
will he provided.
"''bis re1rea1 is a oommunity convetsatioo about the
future of Appahu:hian Oltio
and RIIGil Adion'.s role in
that future." said Mary
Steinmans Rural Action '!i
Interim &amp;ecutive Director..
At the retreat, community
members wil.l worlc in ·
groups to develop preliminary action plans abOut
issues that concern· them.
"We know there are plenty
of people in this region who ·
care about youth education,
community revitalization,
energy conservation · and
other
issues,"
said
Steiomaus. ·'This re1rea1 is
an oppoltUnity for likeminded people to come
together and think about

what we can do about tbese
issues in our ODilllllllllities."
Rural Actioo will not be
altering its core mi~sion,
which is to promote economic, social, and environmental
justice
in
Appalachian Ohio. Rather,
the . Retreat on Rwal
Renewal is an opportuuity
for oommunity mem1w:ni 10
examine and to wed on
new projects under that
fuuoewott.
Rural Action's programs
originally grew out of .a
similar community effort in
the early 1990s, when die

·BY AllY J;. E.t.Qf

·

Miller.

'

Several local businesses
donating giftS for the alumni reunion.
Alumni attending were
Mary Welsh Woodyard

I

Thesday•••A chance of
showers and thunderstotms
in the morning ...Then showers and thunderstorins likely
in the afternoon. Some thunderstorms may produce
~usty winds and small hail
m the afternoon. Highs i.Q
the mid 80s. Southwest
winds 10 to 15 mph. Chance
of min 60 percent.
TUesday ni&amp;hL-Mostly
cloudy with a slililit chance
of showers and thunderstorms in the evening...lbeo
partly cloudy after midnight.
Lows in the lower 60s.' West
winds 5 10 10 mph in the
evening... Becoming light
and variable. Chance of rain
20 percent.

•!While

Local Stocks
. , . (NYSE)- 42.11
AllaD (M'ID"Q) - 11.211
Aihlwld Inc. (NYSE) -15.32
81gLoei(NY8E)-:11.11
lkitl . , _ (M•IDAQ) - 301.17
8G , . . _ (lhiE)-47.74
.Cenlury Aluminum (MA8DAO)

-72.74

4•

Ctlaillplan (111•80.aj Cllaaolng ........ (MAIOAQ)1.21
Cllr H.:ldk. (NAIDAQ)41.211
carne 1J11Y1eJ- MAO
Dl.f'olll~

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DAQ)-25

e.nc Coop•.(HAS-

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II8T .(IIIYSE) - 27.GI
"-'!pIll (MAIOAQ) - 23.31
I'IIPIICC (MQE)-85.37
, ........ (IIIAoiD"Q) - 11.50
Ao ck II (IIIYIE)- 53.10
Aocky . , _ (NASOAQ)-

5_.

Aopl Dulalo .... - ...... .
. . . . I+ IS • (NAIIDo\Q)12.74
n1 X t CNY8E) -11.57

-~ '~:"'-127AI7

wn••. -•--.
WOnhlo.... (NYIE)-11.M
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tt.no. ET CIUifiG

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....

"

w:=~.:.l1

fill• '" .t•lu••
.
In QallpaU. at (740) 441
1
.,.. L&amp;etay 111 oeoo In Point
Pluunt at (304) 174-0174.

p:c-111'

r ....

•.~

Drflon(MtiE) ...,

=••'*CNtiE)
IT.It
NuofiA So.dlleln (H\'SE)-

ner:e

a'

Wedaesday ..• Mostly
sunn~~bs in the upper 80s.
East .
around 5 niph ..
Weclaesllay mpt Partly
cloudy. Lows in the mid 60s.
East wind~ around 5 mph.
1bunday and Thursday .
nlpt .. Partly cloudy. Higbs
in the upper 80s.· Lows in
the mid 60s.
Friday
through
Saturday-.Mostly cloudy
with a chance of showers
and thunderstomJB. Higl;l.s in
the mid 80s. Lows in the
upper 60s. Chance of rain
40 peroent
.
. Saturday Dl&amp;ht throueb
MoDCbiy...Parify cloudy.
Lows . in ·the lower 60s.
Highs in the mid 80s.

••••• I

II'C.

' .

.w.s

15

1

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The Daily Sentinel

6

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'Difllllay, Juoe 10, 20111

aonu.al

Local Weather

I

·

POINT
PLEASANT, .
W.Va. -· Roger Lee, an
accomplished author and
native West VtTginian,
recently returned to Mason
Coonty after· .living many
years m the Cawy lslaods. .
Prior to his return, Lee bad
suffeml a suvke· and was
having diffioulty rommunicating and forming Senteoces. Nearly a year ago, he
became a speech therapy
patiart at lbe Pleasant Valley
Hospital Ou1patient Therapy
Department where be has
o~anization's
found~g . made great strides.
.
director, Carol Kuhre, facil-. · ..Me. Lee made a sizeable
itated a planning process donation to the hospital
involving bun~s of wbiclt we appmciate very
Appalachim Ohio resi- much,~ commented ·Tom
dents. The concepts our- Schauer, Chief Financw
tumd b_y lhose people ~vc!- , Officer.
oped toto R11Tal Actlon s . "I looked arouud and saw
cwreot projects in sustain- that these people were help.able forestry and ~~­ ing othecs," explained Lee.
ture, watershed re~on, "I wanted to allow these
arts and cultural bentage fine bealtbcare professionand CJth« areas.
als to do their jobs by pro1be Retreat on Rural viding some additional
Renewal is free but regislr.l- equipment"
.
lion is ·limited to 100 peaWtth Lee's donation, the
pie. Community members not-for-profit
healthcare
may register at w'Ww.rural- facility pwcllased a liner for
renewal.blogspot.com or by their aquatic therapy pool
calling Sara Peach at 7~ and a new computer, monitor
767-4918. The Rur.al Action and SC3llllel' for the Speech
meeting will also 'l'ber.tl)y office In appreciatake place that day, during a tion, the ~ staff held a
short business lunch.
moatt lwlcboon with Lee as
the guest of honor.
"Mr. Lee was very
·
·
1easa u.u-, H ital
thoughtful in his donation," Roger lee, a speeCh therapy patient, has made a donation toP
nt ........, · ospl
commented Schauer.
· a new aquatic therapy pool liner and a comput~r monitor. Shown
with lee, oet lttir,
1933; Thor Carsey 1934;
"Mr.
Lee has become from 1he left, Scott Wood, physical therapy asSistant, Debra Long, dn'eCtor of
Ma~garet Whaley Kostival
.
1937; Lennie Jewell 1939; active in our Stroke Support services, Paul Hanis, 'lead physical therapist and Jason King, physical therapist. For
Group,
which
meets
tbe
.
mation
about
the
Pleasant
Valley
flehabilitation
services
or
the
stroke
support
group
·~
Bob and Frances Alkire
.
.
:::'
1942;
Manianna fourth lliesday of · every (304) 675-8639.
mon1h.
He
is
an
inspiration
·
.,.
Throckmorton
Whitlock
ro
others.," said Debra Long,
'"Years
ago,
my
wife
was
Lee
is
now
more
active
"The
care
provided
by
tbil
1945;
~n
Wyatt
staff
Ash,Lena Alkire Hewitt, Director of Rehabilitation . diagnosed with cancer and I . 1b.an ever. He recently moved rehabmtation
"'-~-spe
.
nt
four
years
nllfSmg·
and
to
the
country
and
remains
Pleasant
Valley
Hospital
Is
Garnet Henderson Swisher .x;J • ....,s.
caring for her until . she involved in many communi- unparalleled. Maybe my
1946; Delores Wood 'King
Long also added that Lee
ty nr&lt;&gt;jeqs and programs.
donation to their deparl1947;
Esther
Ross has improved his verbal passed away," shared Lee.
a doUar will still ment can assist them ih
McKinley 1948; Melvin skills and now stays on task. "That experience :made me
thin g, I w.anted to helpt'ng so'meone · else. ~
«
Morris, Rosella Dorgan . She said he is mottvated and think about life, where I was buy some
Birchfield 1950; Gertrude fooused on impiuving Ills ~oing, and what was truly help those who have helped know they have made a dif;
tmpottanl"·
me," Lee said with a laugh. ference in my life."
McMurray Monroe, Flora qualitY of life. ·
Douglas Osborne 1951;
Paul Cotterill 1952; Pauline
Birchfield Parker, Russell
Mason 1953; Albert Reeves
1954; Hallie Ross 1955;
Larry · Clark,
Irene
Rodehaver
Haning,
Dorothy Anderson From
1956; Rachael Burbridge
Lefebre, Garey Dorgan,
Phyllis Ross Dean, Allen
McMurray
1957; Dan
Arnold 1958; Vtrgil Reeves
1959; Harold Graham, Joy
Wiseman Clark 1960.
Officers elected for 20082009
were
Donna
Burbridge Wilson, president; Harold Graham, vice
president; Joy. Wiseman
Clark, secretary; and Larry

Clark. treasurer.

.....~:r

PVH COMMUNITY
~110NS DIRECTOR

Harrisonville-Scipio alumni meet
HARRISONVD..LE The Harrisonville-Scipio
Alumni Association held its
78th annual banquet May
24 with 66 alumni and
guests attending.
President Donna Wilson
welcomed dre group, and
Dan Arnold gave the invocation. Harold and Janet
Graham and family prepared
the
food.
Entenainment was led by
President
Wilson
and
included reflections of the
past and accomplishments
of the graduate~.
Cheerleaders and bus drivers Were recognized, and
flowers were presented to
Thor Carsey, 1lbe oldest male
attending, and Mary Welsh
Woodyard, the oldest female
present Others recognized
and given a flower were
Esther Ross McKinley, class
of 1948, and Dan Arnold,
class of 1958.
Scholarships were awarded to Cassady Willford,
Samantha Hively and Allen

J._n-"de

~rough
up Willis in 8-2
'

Gi3nts' Michael Strahan retires after 15 seasons

·TGM
win OVer Tigers . __BYAS_SOC_IA_:re_o-'
P-RE_s_s _ _
CA.OIUIII

EAST RUTHERFORD,
NJ. - Michael Straltall had
what he wanted - a Super
. DETROIT
Ryan Bowl championship to add
Gmo and Kelly Shoppaoh 10 a resii.Die featuring seven
both homered in the first Pro Bowls and two sack
two
uimngs
against records. Now it was time to
Dontrelle Willis, helping leave football and leave the
tbe Oeveland Indians build New Yoti( Giants after 15
In ·eigbt-111D lead in an 8-2 years
in the NFL.
,.ictory over the Detroit
Four months after a stunl'i,gers on Monday night. · ning Super Bowl victory
The Indians kept Cliff over the previously unbeatLee oti the mound after a en New England Patriots,
S7-minute rain delay in the the 36-year-old Strahan
fifth inning and he tva~ informed Giants co-owner
the AL's first H)-game win- John Mara he was done. He
-ner. Lee (10-1) allowed two will be walking away from a
runs, six hits and two walks $4 million contract for the
. while striki.ng·out five over 2008 season.
five innings.
"I 10ld him he's been a
Willis (0-1) gave up eight ~t Giant," Mara said
earned runs - matching a
onday. "He thanked me
career high. - three hits for everything the organiz.aand five walks in l l-3
innings.
He made his second start
since g!ling on the disabled
list wi.th a hyperellteoded .
right knee. In Willis' last
start,_ he dido 't give up a
run. but walked five in four
innings.
Wtllis was regarded as
:secondary player in a
blockbuster trade last winter that added Miguel ·
Cabrera from the Aorida
Marlins; but Detroit was
confident enough in the
pitcher to give him a $29
million, three-year deal.
· So far, not so good. .
· He is struggling with his
i:ontrol - walking 21 ~t­
Iers in U 1-3 innings just as he did in his last two
seasons with the Marlins.
Only 27 of his 64 pitches
lwere
strikes ' against

lion has done for him. I said,
' I think you've done more
for us than we can ever do
for you."'
Strahan never told his
coaches or his teammates of
his decision. They learned
of it from reporters at praclice.
,
· "I'm just finding out about
it; let me got organized,"
coach Tom Coughlin said
after a teani wodmut.
Strahan, who has long
said he wants a job in television, plans to bold a news
· conference Tuesday at
Giants Stadium.
Tony Agnone, Strahan's
agent, said the Giants
offered Strahan more money
in an effort to get him to
play another year.
· "Money was never the
issue for him," Agnone told
,..__,- 511

·-..a

.•

.

AP . . . .

J

In this Jan. 30 file photo, New Yo111 Giants defensive end Michael Strahan reacts while
answering a question during a media availability session in Chandler, Ariz. Seven-time Pro
Bowl defensive end Michael Strahan is retiring after a 15-year career, capped by a SUper
Bowl title with the New Yo111 Giants In February.
·

~ mulQbQ~ ~~­

three-run and two-run shots
-

and Brandon Phil!.ips

MIAMI- Ken Griffey Jr. added a solo horner in sup-

hit his 600th home run on port of Edinsoo Volquez (9Monday night. completing ~ ), :OV~ ~ve up three runs
his loog ascent and 6eoom- m su.mnmgs.
ing lbe sixth player in histoGriffey ended the game 1ry to ~h that milestone.
for-4 with a strikeout and an
The Cincinnati outfielder intentional walk. He euted
homered off Aorida lefty in the middle of the eighth.
Mark Hendrickson in the
Hairston left the game in
ftrst inning of the Reds' 9-4 the middle of tloe first after
victory against the Marlins. suffering a fractllT~ left
Griffey joined Barry Bonds, thumb when stealing sec·Hank Aaron, Babe Ruth, ond.
Willie Mays and Sammy
Hendrickson
(7 -4)
Sosa.
.
allowed six 111DS '
five
The 38-year-old homered earned - 3nd five hits in 2
with Jerry Hairston on third 1•3 innings. Mike Jacobs
and
one out. The left-banded homered for the Marlins.
Qsv~od
swinger
launched a 3-1 pitch
Still, the game will be
'~'"fliili'fiitoieiM: Rookie of
413
feet
into
the
right-field
remembered · for Griffey's
ihe Year and 11Ulllef-up for
seats, ·
historic homer.
the Nl.'s Cy Young won 22
Griffey
received
a
standThe
slugger
hasn ' t
games during the previous
ing
ovation
from
the
crowd
·golden
enjoyed
many
two seasons combined in .
of 16,003 and responded by moments since the Reds got
Florida .after wi.nnilig 22 in
corning out of the Reds him from Seattle in 2000.
2005.
dugout and waving his hel- This will rank. as one of his
Willis ,g ot off to a good
met ki the fans.
· best with Cincinnati and,
~tart,
getting Franklin
The ,game was the last one possibly, one of his last,
fJutiern:z to pop out before
of an eight-game road trip given that he's in the final
unraveling.
for the Reds, who will return year of his contract.
: He walked the next two ·
home Tuesday night to play
It was a long time coming.
batters. then Garko brought
Griffey, one of baseball's
the St. Louis Cardinals.
Jhem home with a 375-foot
sluggers
Controversy ensued in the most prolific
shot that sailed over the
stands following the home before injuries began to take
in left.
run. Justin Kimball, a 25- their toll, started the season
: Willis walked the leadoff
year-old from Miami, said with 593 home runs.
bitter the next inning. then
It tonk 216 at-bats to make
he caught the home run ball,
Sooppach followed with a
put it in a wool ·c ap and then history - · his previous
hGilll!:r. He later walked
had the cap ripped from his homer came. May 31 .
consecutive batters to load
hands. Kimball said someGriffey hit No. 597 on
the bases ·10 end his ·night
one ran dfi with the ball.
April 23 at Great American
with only one out in the
Police said they had found Ball Pari!:, then went 90 atsecond.
the fan with the baseball and bats - the second-longest
Fans booed manager Jim
would look at video tape to drought of his career Leyland when by. left to
see if Kimball's claims before connecting again in
dugout 10 take out Willis,
could be supported.
San Diego on May 22.
who was booed as he ran
However, the Aorida
He went ·another 29 at ..
off the field.
Marlins announced Major bats, and even got a day off
. Dcm!y' Bautista entered .
Baseball
had during the week to work on
League
1tie :game· and put dlrec
authenticated the home run his swing, before hitting No . .
,non: nm11 oa 'Willis' line by
.
AP piiOlo . ball for a middle.aged male 599. Griffey went 17 at-bats
bitting .a batteJ: .and givmg . Cincinnati Reds' Ken Griffey Jr., waves to the crowd after he hit his 600th home nm dur- fan who would only give his between that homer and No.
a smglc and a sacrifiql ing the first inning •Of a baseball game against the Aorida Marlins Monday at Dolphin ftrst name as Joe.
PI ne - C:.IHer. B2
Paul Bako had his ftrst
Stadium in Miami.
Tar: pulled to 8-2
'
in the Ourth ·q n Edgar
Rente!U's
single
and
'-- Placido Polanco's double.
Both :telins were held
. scoreleu after the (ain
LAX in Paul Pierce's infa- Portland
against
BY TOM WmtEU
!!clay. . .
.
ASSOCIATED PRESS
Philadelphia in 1977, ~d
moos wheelchair.
Detroit bad a chance . to
Thou,gh down 0 -2. and Miami agaiqst Dallas m
icOte in the eighth, but
LOS
ANGELES
facing history along with the 2005 have overcome an 0-2
Cabrera was robbed of a Frequent fll:, the Los league's toughest ' defense, deficit to win it all. The
bOmer as Gutierrez leaped Angeles .
er·s . were the I.akers felt good about Lakers have some work to
iJl .stride to sui! ·t be ·ihot ' allOwed an unlimited num- their comeback - they do if they intend to be the
over die wall in left.center. ber of carry-on items for whacked a 24-point deficit fourth.
.
: Cleveland split the four- dleir trip home.
to two over the fmal 7:55 Thtough two games, they
game aeries after losing the
It remains to .be seen if any and are confident they can have been outhustled, outlast two 'games and pulled of them contatned momen- swin~ the series at the muscled, outeverythinged
~veD in the season' series tum.
.
. Staples Center in Game on by a Celtics team now 'two
lfter six games.
After losmg two gan~es m Tuesday night. .
wins from a 17th NBA
·
·
Boston, the !..akers returned
They are 8-0 in the post- championship . Following
to California on Monday in a season there and unbeaten in Sunday's loss, Los Angeles
bole as deep as Topanga 14 home games since March coach Phil Jackson was
CoNTACT
Canyon. Over '9 6 mmutes, 28.
asked if the team can ~
they have looked nothing
"All they did is prot~t the momentum from thetr
like the •teain which pulv.ec- their home court,
saJd failed, frantic fourth-quarter
Lakers
guard
Sasha
Vujacic,
comeback into Game 3. ·
ized
Denver,
pushed
aside
40 448 3008
I!. -1-7
1
Utah and swatted away San wi)Q madf two 3-poinlets in
"No, no," said Jackson,
._,.- oporiiOmydo~tlnetoom
Antonio with ease on the the fourth quarter of who has
delivering
•• ..
""'
I
.
.
the
"'
'
way to WU1Jl1ng
..estern Sunday 's 108- 102 loss and one-liners like . Rodney
iMo ..., d lllph, Sporta Wrtl&amp;r Conference title.
had a potential go-ahead 3 Dangerfield dunng the
lr"'! ~- .- 33
Wtth the e~tception of an lllocked by Pierce with 14 series. "It' s 2,500 mi.le~
•• ~·•"'ldlll••*'..t.oom
eight-minute stretch at the seconds left. "All they djd , away. It's too far to carry n. '
The
purple-and -~old ,
, Sporta Wrtl&amp;r
end of Game 2, Kobe Bryant was protect their home
and his crew have looked court, so it's going to be a though, have ~o a ~er33
(7,40) ue 2342,
AP piiOio
different story in L.A."
ent club while playmg
' , oo
.com
sickly in the ftnals.
However, there 's no truth
lt had better be.
before super fan Ja~k Los Angeles Lakers' Kobe Bryant walks from the bench durUrrJ CIUIIII,, Jllllorta Wrller
ing their 108-102 lOss to the Boston Celties in Game 2 of
to the runwr they were taken
Only three teams: Boston
...... {f.a) ue 2342, e.~ . 33
1 a• a. 112
the
NBA basketball finals In Boston on Sunday.
from their charter plane at against Los Angeles ln 1969,
lcnlm•rnrd~M),..gl 1 .com

wan

d'!

~

Lakers looking .to bounce back

US

been

�Page B2 • The Daily SeruineJ.

. www.mydallysentlnel.com

n..tay, .Jane ao, 2008

www.mydailysentinel.com

..,.),
L ~ers

Rio holds sofll•all dinic

Qtrlbune - Sentinel -

"The dumioil of tbfte
_games - ooc oowt. ....
have alw.ays bcea IDugb ~
maintain," uid Jacbon;
tied with Auerbach widi
nine NBA lilies.
had
teams that. have bocll 011 1111;
road and WOII three pmes
in a row, but I ·c an't ever
remem!Jerwinn;nolbmelbe
~
ctbor.way lllUUDd
.as a lllJme
coac:b in tbe finals...
.
Jackson. 9-1 in die fin..Js;
,..,....,.. ,............ ~ .,,., - blOw best.
. · · is ritftt. S'1111le lbe 2-J:-2 fur; .
a no-~bow in Boston, has
Somewbcre, Red may be mat began, oo borne an
been arot.Uid long eoougb to wishing be hadn't opcood · bas won die middle dime
remember tl!e days when hi
· __ ....
·
·
lbe NBA finals wcre in a 2~
s cigar-avonJ~g .._..
_games.
. ·
2-1-1-1 format, lhar. is, tbe
Since its inception in
TheLakers~•:ar,abkof
team with llhe best mcon1 1985, tbe 2-3-2 lfurmalllllli •doing 41, bill dJey D oocd
hosts Games 1 and 2 and beell a liOre spot amDIIJl Bryant it o gm beiJig bim~
lli.ts the road for Games 3 playm and 'SOIDC IJ'l'lfbes, self and !Jlllke ·some mots:
and4 before the series goes ~cooteDII tbe setUphmts He's2!klf-49mtwopne&amp; ·
...... d • -· •
the top-seeded team, which 1bey need ~ Gasol hi
.,...... an •O•u• ,or Games 5, earned tbe ri:ght to host assort himself Jiool ,~ 114
6 ~de 7. our house, your Games I and 2 based on finish, .andlhey'Hocod~
bouse, our bouse marcluaps barruag tbe beUec re;gular- louted bendl to do ~
over llhose final dJree games season moonL
·
'than it has done ·so I&amp;
drove up tbe drama aDd
(!Jsread or bosliog the all Boston's reserves have out~
built suspense 10 a m:soon- important and pivotal Game · classed d!e Lakers• hacb¥K:
do, c reatin,g some of lbe 5, tbe No. I team, in Ibis
It wooldll't. hurt, cidw, if
most memorable final~ case tbe Celtics, mu!lt play Los Angeles ~«~call~
' games and serieS in hiWO!y. · lhree str.aigb.t gameli lo Suo(lay l.ligbt s loss, die
B11t that a1J came 10 an cod unless lhey -sweep - on !he Celtics . went ~ tbe ~
ill 1985, following a dJat mad in front of a r.aucous throw liBe 38 llJDCS to~
between a then-rookie oom- auwd.. .[me tbe last one 10 for lhe Laka's. DilDY of
missioner 3lld pro halikrf- . ~ a team_ can be '!n
~ batt.ed il l lhe
ball's -cigar-waving patri- brinlr.ofl.osillgtbe-.enes.
cia1s lbrougbolll tbe game
arch.
·
"From afar. what I've Bcyaot was called ~'-: 4
.More lhan two decades never liked about lbe 2-3-2 tecllmcal for atmplaininz
ago, when dte Critics and is.you fight all year •to have and
Danny
Ca~
~..akers were hogging bas~ · Game 7 at bome and Game seemed to .be close to J81VIIIi
ketball's biggest liti4ge aad 5 .a1 home," Critics coach him a ·secood ~oe.
:
treating it ·as lheir own. DocRivmsaid. "Gamc5is
J~n poilltM outlbal:
annual best-of•se\l'en post- t.aken away from yoo. We're Celll!Cs eserve Lemi Powe
seaSOll plafgroiiDCi.; Red had line •
~ ~ iD (it rnymes with . ~W);
Auerbach, Boston's q- -..,fit:itdnen · &amp; .l\llqf whose name be IDlspnh
endaly ooaCb .lDI &amp;"'fin~ tbi:mbne'-. • ..__"'
oouo~ fo!Wwing lhe
spirit, 51~. ~ David..
~ dQ••u• game, sbot liKlll: IDle throw~
Stem lhat_tbe ~lot ,tbel-3--:lu• t••~ (13}1hanhiseolirefeam. ·
the flllllls be ~~~~-ill IV. at. _....,. _., Yat
41\aC~ ridiel!)oot," hi!--· ~t2-3-2~
o. N ' lll!lllilis.9"J'*'~ said. "Unbelievable."
.
S1m1 renvmi~CQ~Il. idL . tbe djllind!ic:s crl plzj I!
He oould have been t.a~t:
- ~Al~•gb be's DOt~ dRc--a~iaole.,..., ingabollthistcam.
.
todenyit,Rcdsaidtomebe
~ in :M. lbal: dtis is too
much play, lr.avel., play,
from
81
~Javel, play, tra!Jd, :said lbe
CIOIRDlish, whose tenure
began 23 years ago with
Nicholson and Hollywood's ~ vs. Bini Act L "In
glitzy crowd.. Like !be subsequent years, be said it
Celtics, dle LaUrs will uy was tenib1e lhal we went to
to feed off 1he ~of tbel-3-2, bu.tayoungCOOJbeing hack in familiar Sill'- . mtssionrr
·
- ·-·-A"
roundiogs.
was mobv.....,..
uy
The perpetlllllly sun- tbe falba' or us all
•
Father doesn't always
g ----~ ~,,.....__,"~n, _,~,._ w

r.

The DUly Sentinel• Page 83

-CLASSIFIED

fl

"''ve

fl

4 •

'

~

~

,,_ .

The Universily of Rio Grande womens softball leMl ~· 'visited . ·

· ·,

EJI!rnentarv School and held an all-around sof!ball/bl191!ba!l $~(ips clirtie lor tile pllySical

educ:alior! students in grades five lhrougll eight. The Redworilen sl)owed ~ students~
e'r batting stance and technique, ~ well as proper llelding ,Skills and how fD butiil.

5ol.!theastem Elementary School staff and students would like fO !hank ltle softball team
for tlleir help.
·
·
·

In One Week With Us
E=JIII!I
.
slassilied@rnydailylribime.com REACH OVER 285,000 PROSPECTS
PLUS YOUR AD NOW ONLINE

·tltrtbune
_ _.;...._ _ _ _ _ _ _Or~Fi-•

'

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·G ..:II:
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a.~ev

'

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All D' 5 '.,.: 1.2 ...._. Z

~mment power. on~
Griftiey g~\'e tt lilillll
dtouldrt. He s never ~
mudi liime -lhinkling ~

..,.·e·

_yoU...

,

.

Netherlands impress~
_
·vein 3-0 win'over Ital_:v'.1
BERN, Switzerland
The Netherlands banded
Italy its warst loss in a

European Championship, a
3-0 rout Monday that left the

I-

'l

I

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

1r

Victor . Piturca.
France'
shQwed little flair on attack.
France was intent on oootrollio~ Lhe match early,
spreadmg lite hall arouild
the midfield with· ease. But
willhout Heury, who bas uOt
trained in four days with a
thigh injury, France got
nowhere.
Vieira pulled out of trainFnnc:e 0, Romania 0
ing
last month with a slight
ZURICH, Switzerland conservative left thigh tear, but was on
Romania's
.Raymond
approach against World Cup coach
.D omenech's roster. Monday,
fmalist France worked.
.(
..
. !

Strahan

Agnooe -added lhal get·
ling dle ring
probably
the one thing that convinced
Strahan to feltve a game in
whi~ be might be the best
·end at playing both llhe t'uo
and the pass.
"He really felt he bas a
cbalice to repeat this year,"
Apoae saiil: "So it was
toil.&amp;h to walt away."
'
stabao's redrement was
tint ' reported
by

was

Fou,ports.cooi..

"lt was impor1ant that my

tammates kilew Which way

I was going before they gOt
on tbe field to start the wOrt
10 ddcnd our title," Strahan
klld tbe Web site. "'t's time.

.J'Dl done." •

.straha!t coosidmd relile-

ment before the start of last

.eason, missing almost aU

~f training c_ai!IP while com-

mg to a dectliiOD.
He ,returned days before

' tbe season, anchoring a
defemive line that wasinstrut:nental in hounding
New England quarterback

·-

lh.. -

.

II

.

S

homer li~ would have ~

~orttlielf.

rl

_

~y was ~ Y'1""! .

~ O~~o White ~ ~
Etic Kiill,g oo lb!: linl pildl

N«':%

LP'bi«d'pllii"'~

It'- ·

' .

1989. ~be~"!f

beKin' ...

~aw

g.....me.
. Homer N~.

at

·Seatde's
·

3f! was oue of

his most ·sausfyi.ng: It came
ooe batter after his fadler,

~~i~~~~Jfai[~ar: .'~~-= "7:':::-..':l:::~ .on
gl~fa~~;1l
~~~r,
Sept. 14, 1990, 3IJ

Tom Btady' in New York's
17-14 Super Bowl victory. ·
''I knew it was going to
(eventually) happen," quarterback Eli Manning said.
"He had a lrelllCodoiiS
career. If that is the ~;ast; be

around."

. . . .liD . .

nojodior_.,

ro .wait and talk _about N&amp;.
600 when be got tt.
u til tben. hi pcl'!iOIIl1

f~'iis lit*...t d.c duf. too . · '&lt;;·.,;~
numul.calt,Y
· · ..,;dt
The ........jj , · · ·

The uDderowmed
Cannavaro sitting on the
IIIIR
bench next to his crutches, wilbotn eapf$1 PatriGk · Jlis game is so; weD· playcu.
. . . dial,be. .W!~ than
.
rour ,ars ·IIJ} JC' ..,
Marco
Materazzi
and Vreita .and leadin. g !;pOrer ~
· Andrea Barzagli
were
picked apan by the Oranje
penetrate a stiff Romania .:()ildlday. By dt;eo: bis.baf::k- , mrke it&amp;ocfOO..
,
attack:
defense
devised
by
ooaob
..,aRl
cap
aod
ligtil.-up
1lmile
A
year
lttq'.
11e
was
¥
The win p11t Netherlands
in charge of the toughest
first-round group. The
Dutch bave the only win
Group C after France tied
Romaoia 0-0' earlier in the
day.
It was the first win for the
Dutch over the Italians in 30
years.

1'be Associated Press.
"Really [ thought .he was
going to retire before last
seaso~ I' m happy he stayed

Day.Pit.r'l'e

statit.1ics. He Pld'a:ml

player m lbe m&amp;JOI'S-:- itill
only 19 - oo April tO.

H:munmn Hank. . . ihe
Babe, be bas ~u beat. aadova'.i•lidiii'@.U.
French,. ~by lbe hooJb nm.
. lion ilbout die _ .•• bat

World Cup champions in
danger of elimination in the
ftrst round.
Ruud vao Nisteliooy and
Wesley Sneijder scored in
the f!J'St half, and slatldout
defender Giovanni vao
Bronckhorst added the third
goal on a counterattack in
tbe 79th minute.
Italy's once-proud defense
looked old and slow. Van
Nistelrooy tore through the
A.zzurri defense at will. With
injured
captain
Fabio

fromPageBl

his

r

AJtbougb

Austria and Switzerland.

. BY TtE AssociiJ'fD PtPtiED

=· :v.......'

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600.
''
~ · , ,: ·: , , .. , ·. !
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It basil t lw•IC t·.• _.
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·
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run ~ 00 .....
Urilley ...
•·ill
.Unlike Roods ·_. Sou, .llis fin:t t%r 1t:t-:lhe
r...:«-· "--- . X-A _._ 1.&amp; Reds...-.. b(
die
~"":'~ llilli stil,-_.;u ....,.. . ...
fO .. n!*:ll "'MJO
quesiJOIIS about~ he f 1 4 Tften ~- . 1 .
came by all pf his IM••cfi !'1 Of , . ...,. ,.... f .
legitimately, His uamc lia_i
!!~=*": ij
oever come up in Nsebtlf's , t. . : ;· 1 Iii! I ii b
~
Netherlands' Wesley Sneijder; rigl11. scores the 2nd goal past tta~Ys goatkeepe( ~ianluigi . sleroi.ds scandal Ulllik , 1o0aqn,,
Sosa.
be·s
·
n
ewer
.
_
liim
,
.
off
A
•
.
.
Buffon and AntoniO DiNatale, left, duri~ the group C rnatpll ~ .the Ne\llt!~ and
a..;!1!i"j..~
Italy In Bem, Switzerland, Monday at the Euro 2008 EIII'Opean .soober CtlaRi!iion5lltps it:~ · cau~IJ!usiogacbiOtrdbaL ,

.

DisplayM•

~IIMtMt ,9f.isoM~ lheoovcrofdle2008nwtia
alop .lt Nil's ~~ gwde.
.
. : . ._ Pee.:Rose • ,_,._ Wlille be dosed moo~

::..IIUUJ1C

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Park, 3lld f.eatJJrod him an

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l\egl,ter

Sentinel

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

·om:

m.;

Websj!eS:
www.myda.ilytribune.com
www,mydaiiysentillel.com
www.mydailyregister.com

picked a great season

tO go

out on.~
Fellow PrO Bowl defensive end Osi Umenyiora
was ·IOid of tbe retirement as
he ·,walked to the locker

room' after ,practice.
"I t:aJ.ked· to Mike last
week andQ: told me he was
still unsure,'! Umenyiora
said ~He wati re8Uy, .really
lhlo~ng about it, I!Ut I dido 1t think be •WI$ soing to do

it~':
s

was me- (Jiaora'
leader in the locb:r room.
He r.rught the young defensive ends how to play the
position. He also spent as
much time working out as
the youngest free agent try·
in§ to win a roster spot. .
'It's a very, very sad
for
me . personally,'
ume::~~ora said. "I loved
bim ' a brother. You put
in 1S strong years in the
.NFL, man that ,is wmethiog
in dlis day and age is impossible IO do."
Last season, Strahan was
outstanding. · He started 15
of 16 games, had 46 tackles
and nine sacks.

dar,

w~ ~ ~ ofhueball_
in tbe ~·
..
· IIi'S staWibei ~ng
GriCfey bit 3.$ hamel's in

Wlpr~ falher:md~
son maRlOilt m ~ lllaJOI'I.

Even now, Griffey ·&amp;ayto
~ paoe. too. ~ Gmfey 200S. winning' die oome- diose two ,seaso,ns be -s~
was traded W his hometown hafk. ~ -~ He -~- playmg Wlth his
~
~before the 2000 iC/1- • ~ ·il'lflidt 21 homt&amp; 18 Seattle were the best tm1ai
r;oo, he was sigoif~y ~ ' ·
,. · ,
.,
of hi~ .camer. And be bas
ahead of. Aaron's record:
l..aR ;....., be~ in Sllggestoddlafbewouldlike
home run pare.
144 pme~~
6is --most to finish bis career baCt
It seemed like a \Wre bet iinoe 2000 -. alii hit lj) there.
that when . liis oioe.year:, llottas, fe&amp;~ · him 1Jei/CII
$116.~ million oontract w.as , my of, No. fiOO. 'J'be ~
AP Sports Wliter lOt! KDy
wrapJtmg U.Jt thi.s year, ~'d eudld ·a OOiJitltdown boanl in CU,Cinnati 100n.tribuli!d til
be the next home
king. at Giat. American Ball this stoty.
' ·
·

fatbc:r.

"I' am very happy for
hi in," said receiver Amani
Toomer, who played 12 seasons with Strahari. "I think
. he is going to find a~ay on
1 his feet . I just wish him the
""'•'t!'
A 'Second-round pick in
the 1993 draft, Strahan is
the Giants ' career sacks
leader with 141 112. Hall of
Famer Lawrence Taylor had
the previous mark of 132
lf2, although that total does
not include .the 9 112 the
linebacker had as a rookie
in 198 I, the year tJefore
sacks became an official
statistic.
Strahan set the single-season mark af 22 1/2 sacks in
200 I , getting the last one in
the teasoo fmale when Brett
Favre mysteriously· feU ~
in the game, and No. 97 got
credit for the sack. Favre
retired shonly after the .
GilllllS' Super Bowl win.
Justin .Tuck is the leading
candidate to move iniD
Strahan's staniog spot .
"The guy bas had a great
career, 15 years, a first bal·
lot Hall of Farner," he said.
Umenyiora felt Sirahao
was playing so well be
would return llhis season.
"He retired at the top of
.
I#
his ame," he said. "A lot &lt;if
us ~'t get the chance to do Cincinnati Reds' l&lt;en Griffey Jr., hits his {i()()th home r.un during the first inning of e ~
ball garne against the Aorida M811ins ·Mond~Y at ootphin Stadiurn in Miami.
·
~·· .
.

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:

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.

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IOCIALIEOUIITT_,
No Fee lll"- We Winl
1,fl88:582-3345

FIND AJOB OR ANEW

:CAREER IN THE CLASSIFIEDs:

....

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.........

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,. . . . . ..... 1 I

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**NOTICE**

We-.. . - I S poaple

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Help- at c...t Homo
Gro&lt;4&gt; H!Jmo. 7-10-982·5023

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Good
to the

Last
Word
That's the word from
subscribers who read
our neWSpaper daily
for captivating news
stories, dining and
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much more!

I

�Page B2 • The Daily SeruineJ.

. www.mydallysentlnel.com

n..tay, .Jane ao, 2008

www.mydailysentinel.com

..,.),
L ~ers

Rio holds sofll•all dinic

Qtrlbune - Sentinel -

"The dumioil of tbfte
_games - ooc oowt. ....
have alw.ays bcea IDugb ~
maintain," uid Jacbon;
tied with Auerbach widi
nine NBA lilies.
had
teams that. have bocll 011 1111;
road and WOII three pmes
in a row, but I ·c an't ever
remem!Jerwinn;nolbmelbe
~
ctbor.way lllUUDd
.as a lllJme
coac:b in tbe finals...
.
Jackson. 9-1 in die fin..Js;
,..,....,.. ,............ ~ .,,., - blOw best.
. · · is ritftt. S'1111le lbe 2-J:-2 fur; .
a no-~bow in Boston, has
Somewbcre, Red may be mat began, oo borne an
been arot.Uid long eoougb to wishing be hadn't opcood · bas won die middle dime
remember tl!e days when hi
· __ ....
·
·
lbe NBA finals wcre in a 2~
s cigar-avonJ~g .._..
_games.
. ·
2-1-1-1 format, lhar. is, tbe
Since its inception in
TheLakers~•:ar,abkof
team with llhe best mcon1 1985, tbe 2-3-2 lfurmalllllli •doing 41, bill dJey D oocd
hosts Games 1 and 2 and beell a liOre spot amDIIJl Bryant it o gm beiJig bim~
lli.ts the road for Games 3 playm and 'SOIDC IJ'l'lfbes, self and !Jlllke ·some mots:
and4 before the series goes ~cooteDII tbe setUphmts He's2!klf-49mtwopne&amp; ·
...... d • -· •
the top-seeded team, which 1bey need ~ Gasol hi
.,...... an •O•u• ,or Games 5, earned tbe ri:ght to host assort himself Jiool ,~ 114
6 ~de 7. our house, your Games I and 2 based on finish, .andlhey'Hocod~
bouse, our bouse marcluaps barruag tbe beUec re;gular- louted bendl to do ~
over llhose final dJree games season moonL
·
'than it has done ·so I&amp;
drove up tbe drama aDd
(!Jsread or bosliog the all Boston's reserves have out~
built suspense 10 a m:soon- important and pivotal Game · classed d!e Lakers• hacb¥K:
do, c reatin,g some of lbe 5, tbe No. I team, in Ibis
It wooldll't. hurt, cidw, if
most memorable final~ case tbe Celtics, mu!lt play Los Angeles ~«~call~
' games and serieS in hiWO!y. · lhree str.aigb.t gameli lo Suo(lay l.ligbt s loss, die
B11t that a1J came 10 an cod unless lhey -sweep - on !he Celtics . went ~ tbe ~
ill 1985, following a dJat mad in front of a r.aucous throw liBe 38 llJDCS to~
between a then-rookie oom- auwd.. .[me tbe last one 10 for lhe Laka's. DilDY of
missioner 3lld pro halikrf- . ~ a team_ can be '!n
~ batt.ed il l lhe
ball's -cigar-waving patri- brinlr.ofl.osillgtbe-.enes.
cia1s lbrougbolll tbe game
arch.
·
"From afar. what I've Bcyaot was called ~'-: 4
.More lhan two decades never liked about lbe 2-3-2 tecllmcal for atmplaininz
ago, when dte Critics and is.you fight all year •to have and
Danny
Ca~
~..akers were hogging bas~ · Game 7 at bome and Game seemed to .be close to J81VIIIi
ketball's biggest liti4ge aad 5 .a1 home," Critics coach him a ·secood ~oe.
:
treating it ·as lheir own. DocRivmsaid. "Gamc5is
J~n poilltM outlbal:
annual best-of•se\l'en post- t.aken away from yoo. We're Celll!Cs eserve Lemi Powe
seaSOll plafgroiiDCi.; Red had line •
~ ~ iD (it rnymes with . ~W);
Auerbach, Boston's q- -..,fit:itdnen · &amp; .l\llqf whose name be IDlspnh
endaly ooaCb .lDI &amp;"'fin~ tbi:mbne'-. • ..__"'
oouo~ fo!Wwing lhe
spirit, 51~. ~ David..
~ dQ••u• game, sbot liKlll: IDle throw~
Stem lhat_tbe ~lot ,tbel-3--:lu• t••~ (13}1hanhiseolirefeam. ·
the flllllls be ~~~~-ill IV. at. _....,. _., Yat
41\aC~ ridiel!)oot," hi!--· ~t2-3-2~
o. N ' lll!lllilis.9"J'*'~ said. "Unbelievable."
.
S1m1 renvmi~CQ~Il. idL . tbe djllind!ic:s crl plzj I!
He oould have been t.a~t:
- ~Al~•gb be's DOt~ dRc--a~iaole.,..., ingabollthistcam.
.
todenyit,Rcdsaidtomebe
~ in :M. lbal: dtis is too
much play, lr.avel., play,
from
81
~Javel, play, tra!Jd, :said lbe
CIOIRDlish, whose tenure
began 23 years ago with
Nicholson and Hollywood's ~ vs. Bini Act L "In
glitzy crowd.. Like !be subsequent years, be said it
Celtics, dle LaUrs will uy was tenib1e lhal we went to
to feed off 1he ~of tbel-3-2, bu.tayoungCOOJbeing hack in familiar Sill'- . mtssionrr
·
- ·-·-A"
roundiogs.
was mobv.....,..
uy
The perpetlllllly sun- tbe falba' or us all
•
Father doesn't always
g ----~ ~,,.....__,"~n, _,~,._ w

r.

The DUly Sentinel• Page 83

-CLASSIFIED

fl

"''ve

fl

4 •

'

~

~

,,_ .

The Universily of Rio Grande womens softball leMl ~· 'visited . ·

· ·,

EJI!rnentarv School and held an all-around sof!ball/bl191!ba!l $~(ips clirtie lor tile pllySical

educ:alior! students in grades five lhrougll eight. The Redworilen sl)owed ~ students~
e'r batting stance and technique, ~ well as proper llelding ,Skills and how fD butiil.

5ol.!theastem Elementary School staff and students would like fO !hank ltle softball team
for tlleir help.
·
·
·

In One Week With Us
E=JIII!I
.
slassilied@rnydailylribime.com REACH OVER 285,000 PROSPECTS
PLUS YOUR AD NOW ONLINE

·tltrtbune
_ _.;...._ _ _ _ _ _ _Or~Fi-•

'

"

. ,-'

~

·G ..:II:
•
a.~ev

'

..

.: ,,,.,

...'

'"

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'

All D' 5 '.,.: 1.2 ...._. Z

~mment power. on~
Griftiey g~\'e tt lilillll
dtouldrt. He s never ~
mudi liime -lhinkling ~

..,.·e·

_yoU...

,

.

Netherlands impress~
_
·vein 3-0 win'over Ital_:v'.1
BERN, Switzerland
The Netherlands banded
Italy its warst loss in a

European Championship, a
3-0 rout Monday that left the

I-

'l

I

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

1r

Victor . Piturca.
France'
shQwed little flair on attack.
France was intent on oootrollio~ Lhe match early,
spreadmg lite hall arouild
the midfield with· ease. But
willhout Heury, who bas uOt
trained in four days with a
thigh injury, France got
nowhere.
Vieira pulled out of trainFnnc:e 0, Romania 0
ing
last month with a slight
ZURICH, Switzerland conservative left thigh tear, but was on
Romania's
.Raymond
approach against World Cup coach
.D omenech's roster. Monday,
fmalist France worked.
.(
..
. !

Strahan

Agnooe -added lhal get·
ling dle ring
probably
the one thing that convinced
Strahan to feltve a game in
whi~ be might be the best
·end at playing both llhe t'uo
and the pass.
"He really felt he bas a
cbalice to repeat this year,"
Apoae saiil: "So it was
toil.&amp;h to walt away."
'
stabao's redrement was
tint ' reported
by

was

Fou,ports.cooi..

"lt was impor1ant that my

tammates kilew Which way

I was going before they gOt
on tbe field to start the wOrt
10 ddcnd our title," Strahan
klld tbe Web site. "'t's time.

.J'Dl done." •

.straha!t coosidmd relile-

ment before the start of last

.eason, missing almost aU

~f training c_ai!IP while com-

mg to a dectliiOD.
He ,returned days before

' tbe season, anchoring a
defemive line that wasinstrut:nental in hounding
New England quarterback

·-

lh.. -

.

II

.

S

homer li~ would have ~

~orttlielf.

rl

_

~y was ~ Y'1""! .

~ O~~o White ~ ~
Etic Kiill,g oo lb!: linl pildl

N«':%

LP'bi«d'pllii"'~

It'- ·

' .

1989. ~be~"!f

beKin' ...

~aw

g.....me.
. Homer N~.

at

·Seatde's
·

3f! was oue of

his most ·sausfyi.ng: It came
ooe batter after his fadler,

~~i~~~~Jfai[~ar: .'~~-= "7:':::-..':l:::~ .on
gl~fa~~;1l
~~~r,
Sept. 14, 1990, 3IJ

Tom Btady' in New York's
17-14 Super Bowl victory. ·
''I knew it was going to
(eventually) happen," quarterback Eli Manning said.
"He had a lrelllCodoiiS
career. If that is the ~;ast; be

around."

. . . .liD . .

nojodior_.,

ro .wait and talk _about N&amp;.
600 when be got tt.
u til tben. hi pcl'!iOIIl1

f~'iis lit*...t d.c duf. too . · '&lt;;·.,;~
numul.calt,Y
· · ..,;dt
The ........jj , · · ·

The uDderowmed
Cannavaro sitting on the
IIIIR
bench next to his crutches, wilbotn eapf$1 PatriGk · Jlis game is so; weD· playcu.
. . . dial,be. .W!~ than
.
rour ,ars ·IIJ} JC' ..,
Marco
Materazzi
and Vreita .and leadin. g !;pOrer ~
· Andrea Barzagli
were
picked apan by the Oranje
penetrate a stiff Romania .:()ildlday. By dt;eo: bis.baf::k- , mrke it&amp;ocfOO..
,
attack:
defense
devised
by
ooaob
..,aRl
cap
aod
ligtil.-up
1lmile
A
year
lttq'.
11e
was
¥
The win p11t Netherlands
in charge of the toughest
first-round group. The
Dutch bave the only win
Group C after France tied
Romaoia 0-0' earlier in the
day.
It was the first win for the
Dutch over the Italians in 30
years.

1'be Associated Press.
"Really [ thought .he was
going to retire before last
seaso~ I' m happy he stayed

Day.Pit.r'l'e

statit.1ics. He Pld'a:ml

player m lbe m&amp;JOI'S-:- itill
only 19 - oo April tO.

H:munmn Hank. . . ihe
Babe, be bas ~u beat. aadova'.i•lidiii'@.U.
French,. ~by lbe hooJb nm.
. lion ilbout die _ .•• bat

World Cup champions in
danger of elimination in the
ftrst round.
Ruud vao Nisteliooy and
Wesley Sneijder scored in
the f!J'St half, and slatldout
defender Giovanni vao
Bronckhorst added the third
goal on a counterattack in
tbe 79th minute.
Italy's once-proud defense
looked old and slow. Van
Nistelrooy tore through the
A.zzurri defense at will. With
injured
captain
Fabio

fromPageBl

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Austria and Switzerland.

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legitimately, His uamc lia_i
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Netherlands' Wesley Sneijder; rigl11. scores the 2nd goal past tta~Ys goatkeepe( ~ianluigi . sleroi.ds scandal Ulllik , 1o0aqn,,
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Sentinel

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

·om:

m.;

Websj!eS:
www.myda.ilytribune.com
www,mydaiiysentillel.com
www.mydailyregister.com

picked a great season

tO go

out on.~
Fellow PrO Bowl defensive end Osi Umenyiora
was ·IOid of tbe retirement as
he ·,walked to the locker

room' after ,practice.
"I t:aJ.ked· to Mike last
week andQ: told me he was
still unsure,'! Umenyiora
said ~He wati re8Uy, .really
lhlo~ng about it, I!Ut I dido 1t think be •WI$ soing to do

it~':
s

was me- (Jiaora'
leader in the locb:r room.
He r.rught the young defensive ends how to play the
position. He also spent as
much time working out as
the youngest free agent try·
in§ to win a roster spot. .
'It's a very, very sad
for
me . personally,'
ume::~~ora said. "I loved
bim ' a brother. You put
in 1S strong years in the
.NFL, man that ,is wmethiog
in dlis day and age is impossible IO do."
Last season, Strahan was
outstanding. · He started 15
of 16 games, had 46 tackles
and nine sacks.

dar,

w~ ~ ~ ofhueball_
in tbe ~·
..
· IIi'S staWibei ~ng
GriCfey bit 3.$ hamel's in

Wlpr~ falher:md~
son maRlOilt m ~ lllaJOI'I.

Even now, Griffey ·&amp;ayto
~ paoe. too. ~ Gmfey 200S. winning' die oome- diose two ,seaso,ns be -s~
was traded W his hometown hafk. ~ -~ He -~- playmg Wlth his
~
~before the 2000 iC/1- • ~ ·il'lflidt 21 homt&amp; 18 Seattle were the best tm1ai
r;oo, he was sigoif~y ~ ' ·
,. · ,
.,
of hi~ .camer. And be bas
ahead of. Aaron's record:
l..aR ;....., be~ in Sllggestoddlafbewouldlike
home run pare.
144 pme~~
6is --most to finish bis career baCt
It seemed like a \Wre bet iinoe 2000 -. alii hit lj) there.
that when . liis oioe.year:, llottas, fe&amp;~ · him 1Jei/CII
$116.~ million oontract w.as , my of, No. fiOO. 'J'be ~
AP Sports Wliter lOt! KDy
wrapJtmg U.Jt thi.s year, ~'d eudld ·a OOiJitltdown boanl in CU,Cinnati 100n.tribuli!d til
be the next home
king. at Giat. American Ball this stoty.
' ·
·

fatbc:r.

"I' am very happy for
hi in," said receiver Amani
Toomer, who played 12 seasons with Strahari. "I think
. he is going to find a~ay on
1 his feet . I just wish him the
""'•'t!'
A 'Second-round pick in
the 1993 draft, Strahan is
the Giants ' career sacks
leader with 141 112. Hall of
Famer Lawrence Taylor had
the previous mark of 132
lf2, although that total does
not include .the 9 112 the
linebacker had as a rookie
in 198 I, the year tJefore
sacks became an official
statistic.
Strahan set the single-season mark af 22 1/2 sacks in
200 I , getting the last one in
the teasoo fmale when Brett
Favre mysteriously· feU ~
in the game, and No. 97 got
credit for the sack. Favre
retired shonly after the .
GilllllS' Super Bowl win.
Justin .Tuck is the leading
candidate to move iniD
Strahan's staniog spot .
"The guy bas had a great
career, 15 years, a first bal·
lot Hall of Farner," he said.
Umenyiora felt Sirahao
was playing so well be
would return llhis season.
"He retired at the top of
.
I#
his ame," he said. "A lot &lt;if
us ~'t get the chance to do Cincinnati Reds' l&lt;en Griffey Jr., hits his {i()()th home r.un during the first inning of e ~
ball garne against the Aorida M811ins ·Mond~Y at ootphin Stadiurn in Miami.
·
~·· .
.

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............. _...........- .............. 1110
I ....- ....................." - -......liD

FeDEIW..
POSTAL JOBS
$17.811-$28.21,.., , _ hi'·
ing. For
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Financial

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278-0003 10 taam W
mongoge broker or
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• LBIG than pe11ee1 credit
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• · Payment could be the
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Locators.
Mor1gage

Office of Consume
-BEfORE jOU mli

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tees or lnaurance. Cal the
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IOCIALIEOUIITT_,
No Fee lll"- We Winl
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FIND AJOB OR ANEW

:CAREER IN THE CLASSIFIEDs:

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**NOTICE**

We-.. . - I S poaple

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Good
to the

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The Dilly Senlinel • Page B5

REA Crossword Puzzle

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Texas Holdem
Tournament

' (740) 448-2342

The Daily Sentinel
(740) 992-2155

Friday, June 13
7pm

l)oint l)w-.nt ~..-er
(304}67fH~

S&amp;O~In

I1Dil0"' d&gt;oose from_

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Last Buy-In at 7:30·pm

7a.7U-JW•I
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NO EXcEPTIONS!

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You muS1.analyzelhetlidding and play of

.....,,......,•0••.1
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IU\a..&amp;tll:t.

this deal.
The auction went as ~ can see. With
whal cals do you disaQTBO?
.
Against lour hearts, West led 1t1e clUb
five.'Easl won with his king and shifted to
the diamond 10. West won with his ace
and switched 1o the spade seven.
Declarer 1001&lt; Em jaclc with his ace
and, under no pressure, cashed his two
lop hearts, mal&lt;ing an overtriol&lt; when lhe
jaclc and queen lolL SQuth's cltb queen
"""' on a high diamond. Whal would
you ha'" done dilferently?
First, the auction. Aher South .opened
one heart, west might have overcalled

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two no-trump, 1he Unusual No-Trump
showing at least 5-5 in the minors. EM
Mth suc!h a poor hand, pass is preferable {FiiiO club! would go down two.)

Slilnk1T....

After North 1s automalic one-spade
response; East might have risked a two-

Trimmil.
aflemcMII

club overcall to direct lhe leed.
SQuth .should have rebid two hearts, He
hadltle play&lt;lg strength for thrne hearts,
but not the high-oard power, OtillOciBIIy
with 1hat uncerlaio clUb hold&lt;lg. North ehould hove rebid three spades
(aithough four spades can be dofaated)
or tour hearts. Many would !Teat four diamonds as a ~d (cue-bid) showmy intmes1 in B heart slam . Even If It is
natural, live diamonds will be to~ to
make appasite, say, H-3-3 distribUiion.
Now to the _nae_WeBI did well not to
ieed his singleton, but a1 triclc lf1ree he
should have returned a diamond, giving
his partner a ruff and .stopping the over1Ticlc.

"'l'ooinplMtd Qulily

Wed&lt;

..,. omt•cRiics

..........

Rae II-. Ohio 7~-2019

"EJPri"""""

....(:.II:AAt~N..

.......... Av.oloblel
-Call o.y Slonlcy •
74591-8044

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CELEBRITY CIPHER
by tuis Campos
Cellbty Qplllf Cffl*JJ~&amp; lr. Cf!ll1ed lrcrn ~l!olS lrf lamous pil)pla, piSI IRf ,._...
, W lifter r1 the ~ stands 1D aoother

Tflday's clio: Dequals C

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• HNIWHO NHIWR
PREVIOUS.SOLUTION- "The Lool iaught me Ia love everybody, but the lilt
ones I learned lo love ""re lhe spons-rs · - Alvin Dark

,

=~~\\-&amp;t.!fs·:
ltltooi.,CIAYI.I'OIIM
ol tho
aocaiblotl 'IIIIJdo be-

· QRoc1w.. ltllora

w

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J. d ), .lunll11, 2008
. , llomlooiOoot

-·-

Se I
·G unan
Rocllirlg, Siding, Gutters
I

- 7o4CHi53-91l57

'

,

ISN T IT Ei«EAT, MARCIE?
•HO SCHOOLWI* 1n WORR!f
. AJOI1f••MOT~1H6 TO DO !

JJIU.

CALL 'r'OO A.6AIN

SEI'lEMBE«, fAA~ IE __

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Senior Discount.*
'

when you pay for a 6 or 12
month subscription on your
ho~e delivered subscription!
•

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DYING,COW.aJT

Didli, ,,

,

, .• ....,
~

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Coulbuction

•A

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•aoq,ou• 1Batlp .s;niJune

I'MGONNAI£WAII.

Iff. ..rroo'liiLLY,
""' ·

WAAT ·I 'M9

IS LDSING

........

1ha.t yoU do not makP •)udgment calls
based on your intuitive perceptions.
because this mechanism may be mal- .
functioning and inllccurate rignt now. let
intel&amp;9ctu~l calcLMtions prevail.
LEO (July 23-,Aug. 22) - Should a misunderstanding wtth a good frtend occur,
· 1ry to rectffy It • quickly as possible. left
to "fester, it could become overbklwn and
1ar moJe dflftCUtt to resolve.
VIRGO (Aug. 29-Sept 22) - Don1
waste your valuable time wailing on
another to 'fulfill a promise. H It is same1hing you can do without him or her,
attend to the matter yourself and gat It
out o1 the way.
LIBRA (Sept 23·0ct. 231 - h mi~hl be
smarWr to wait untU another day to
attempt a task that you find distasteful. H

·-~~~-~'ld~~BOY~!--,
r
r-~------., r=--------, r---------,
I'M SCA.I1ED OF
TOO
MAN, IF 1EVEII DIE,
SCORPIO

PSI CONSTRUCTION

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need to d.o ... ·
Fill out the coupon below
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·. I!EALLY.
[DN1

CURNER STONE
CONSTRUCTION

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WHY DO

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I OPEN UP

TO YOU?

G

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•••
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:ol!lliolt -.llliiilirs P" 9 II 1 . . P4 -lloir ..... , trz I lie; OH 411831 •
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~~-~---·------~·~~----------·

CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jon. 19) -

Don~

make sucoess so Important that anything
goes. 11 won't do you any gooq 1o receive
an ~A" for effort, but an "F" for undiplomatic tactic&amp;.

,

tT----T""---r----""""n

IS

a... NNa-1

,

might not\tuny capitalize on present
ClppC)I'tOOitiea. It may be owing to a W!Ok of
knowedge or simply indtffarence on vour

pan.

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c.1: MARCU)l CONSTRUCDON

ARIES (March 21-Apnl t 9) - Whon otn811 find out, anct they will, ~'II be hurt

• Room Additions • Garages • Vmyl
and Wood Siding • Roofing • Pole
Barns • Panio's, Porc,bcs and Deets

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47239 'Riebol Ro.l, Long Boaom, OH ·

740-985-4141

0:11: 740-416-1834
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(Jon: 2D·Feb. 19) -

PISCES (Fob. 20-Marctl 2C) - Keep lrl
mind that whM goes around comes
around. So don~ lcnowlngly takll """""'
1ag1 of lOI"''MttM who iln'1 u -"'•rp aa
you aN; you'll .,cf'up hul'ting thillndivk).

JGrt?

·------------------------------•: Subscriber's Name -------,...,.--- ••
•

When you make an enemy, i1 hurts you
mo"' Jhan " helps anything, so find o
way to make amends.

•Gir

FwP

•

ARLO&amp;JANIS

might otter to help bail vou out of a selfcreided nrnbem , Don't be too proud to
admH ~-;.. wrong.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23-Dec. 21) Someone you olfeOOed, whether you
meant to or not, is disappcrinted in you.

AQU...RlUS

a

I

~ In the long run It you delll»fatety
withhold tntormatlon another needl

-you
... ·-"' him"' ...._
llllJRUS(~~2C)-Witl1tut
thinking lo • "'""ulo lor taiiii!W whorl ~
to tcylrlg to .,.,..... gaol. 8e '
ol&gt;joctlw both 1r1 anolytll and operation .

..

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SOUP10NUTZ

••

,.
·--

·- -· .- ··--

•

6/911)11

Cnmdl-11nw-lloaty. MmD - YOU'R£ NOT
Gramps 11w1ys 1014 wllllt it's Dt!l • you 1ft tblllill1dt,.
bldt; il's who you tiat YOU'RE NOT.

"""'"'the

Allhough --~ lnlndlloot&lt; good, you .

...._.,.a
, Gas•.
.._r.,._
ul

cr=tmar -6enti•d ·

.

SCMMlBIS ANSWERS

your heart is not in It, chanOeS are you'll
screw it up &amp;nd ml!llke matters worse.
(Oct. 24-Nov 221 - t1 you
11!S0tve never 10
same mis-

•Dic:b

•P.oll·&amp; rs a

The Daily -~ntinel

I

UNSCRAMIU LETTE~ TO
G£1 ANSWER

•

take again , someone who likes you

·• n:c

,l)of• lllea-.nt.3Begt.ur

UWYES
1
1
1 1 1 ·1 1

CANCER (June 21-July 221- Toke care

I

so, you

low k&gt; """" faur .,.,. _ .

'nlu wUI develop more ttlan one OKciting
new relationstJip in the year ahead, but
be careful not to neglect any of 'fOUT
long-held friendships. The more 1riends
you ha\f8 the better. but the longtime
ones are the best.
GEMINI (May 2, ·June 20) - EYen it it is
av.rkward and Challenging 10 be candid
and frank , it is best that you are.
Sometimes llone8ty hurts. but getting
things out in the ~ and ,putting them
on the tabte may !be esaential .

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The Dilly Senlinel • Page B5

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Texas Holdem
Tournament

' (740) 448-2342

The Daily Sentinel
(740) 992-2155

Friday, June 13
7pm

l)oint l)w-.nt ~..-er
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this deal.
The auction went as ~ can see. With
whal cals do you disaQTBO?
.
Against lour hearts, West led 1t1e clUb
five.'Easl won with his king and shifted to
the diamond 10. West won with his ace
and switched 1o the spade seven.
Declarer 1001&lt; Em jaclc with his ace
and, under no pressure, cashed his two
lop hearts, mal&lt;ing an overtriol&lt; when lhe
jaclc and queen lolL SQuth's cltb queen
"""' on a high diamond. Whal would
you ha'" done dilferently?
First, the auction. Aher South .opened
one heart, west might have overcalled

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two no-trump, 1he Unusual No-Trump
showing at least 5-5 in the minors. EM
Mth suc!h a poor hand, pass is preferable {FiiiO club! would go down two.)

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After North 1s automalic one-spade
response; East might have risked a two-

Trimmil.
aflemcMII

club overcall to direct lhe leed.
SQuth .should have rebid two hearts, He
hadltle play&lt;lg strength for thrne hearts,
but not the high-oard power, OtillOciBIIy
with 1hat uncerlaio clUb hold&lt;lg. North ehould hove rebid three spades
(aithough four spades can be dofaated)
or tour hearts. Many would !Teat four diamonds as a ~d (cue-bid) showmy intmes1 in B heart slam . Even If It is
natural, live diamonds will be to~ to
make appasite, say, H-3-3 distribUiion.
Now to the _nae_WeBI did well not to
ieed his singleton, but a1 triclc lf1ree he
should have returned a diamond, giving
his partner a ruff and .stopping the over1Ticlc.

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Wed&lt;

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Rae II-. Ohio 7~-2019

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74591-8044

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CELEBRITY CIPHER
by tuis Campos
Cellbty Qplllf Cffl*JJ~&amp; lr. Cf!ll1ed lrcrn ~l!olS lrf lamous pil)pla, piSI IRf ,._...
, W lifter r1 the ~ stands 1D aoother

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• HNIWHO NHIWR
PREVIOUS.SOLUTION- "The Lool iaught me Ia love everybody, but the lilt
ones I learned lo love ""re lhe spons-rs · - Alvin Dark

,

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ltltooi.,CIAYI.I'OIIM
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J. d ), .lunll11, 2008
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·G unan
Rocllirlg, Siding, Gutters
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ISN T IT Ei«EAT, MARCIE?
•HO SCHOOLWI* 1n WORR!f
. AJOI1f••MOT~1H6 TO DO !

JJIU.

CALL 'r'OO A.6AIN

SEI'lEMBE«, fAA~ IE __

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Senior Discount.*
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when you pay for a 6 or 12
month subscription on your
ho~e delivered subscription!
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DYING,COW.aJT

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Coulbuction

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I'MGONNAI£WAII.

Iff. ..rroo'liiLLY,
""' ·

WAAT ·I 'M9

IS LDSING

........

1ha.t yoU do not makP •)udgment calls
based on your intuitive perceptions.
because this mechanism may be mal- .
functioning and inllccurate rignt now. let
intel&amp;9ctu~l calcLMtions prevail.
LEO (July 23-,Aug. 22) - Should a misunderstanding wtth a good frtend occur,
· 1ry to rectffy It • quickly as possible. left
to "fester, it could become overbklwn and
1ar moJe dflftCUtt to resolve.
VIRGO (Aug. 29-Sept 22) - Don1
waste your valuable time wailing on
another to 'fulfill a promise. H It is same1hing you can do without him or her,
attend to the matter yourself and gat It
out o1 the way.
LIBRA (Sept 23·0ct. 231 - h mi~hl be
smarWr to wait untU another day to
attempt a task that you find distasteful. H

·-~~~-~'ld~~BOY~!--,
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I'M SCA.I1ED OF
TOO
MAN, IF 1EVEII DIE,
SCORPIO

PSI CONSTRUCTION

Here's all you
need to d.o ... ·
Fill out the coupon below
and drop off or mail it with a
copy of your photo ID~

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·. I!EALLY.
[DN1

CURNER STONE
CONSTRUCTION

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WHY DO

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I OPEN UP

TO YOU?

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CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jon. 19) -

Don~

make sucoess so Important that anything
goes. 11 won't do you any gooq 1o receive
an ~A" for effort, but an "F" for undiplomatic tactic&amp;.

,

tT----T""---r----""""n

IS

a... NNa-1

,

might not\tuny capitalize on present
ClppC)I'tOOitiea. It may be owing to a W!Ok of
knowedge or simply indtffarence on vour

pan.

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:

c.1: MARCU)l CONSTRUCDON

ARIES (March 21-Apnl t 9) - Whon otn811 find out, anct they will, ~'II be hurt

• Room Additions • Garages • Vmyl
and Wood Siding • Roofing • Pole
Barns • Panio's, Porc,bcs and Deets

-·

47239 'Riebol Ro.l, Long Boaom, OH ·

740-985-4141

0:11: 740-416-1834
ZS+,...Of . •F-F

(Jon: 2D·Feb. 19) -

PISCES (Fob. 20-Marctl 2C) - Keep lrl
mind that whM goes around comes
around. So don~ lcnowlngly takll """""'
1ag1 of lOI"''MttM who iln'1 u -"'•rp aa
you aN; you'll .,cf'up hul'ting thillndivk).

JGrt?

·------------------------------•: Subscriber's Name -------,...,.--- ••
•

When you make an enemy, i1 hurts you
mo"' Jhan " helps anything, so find o
way to make amends.

•Gir

FwP

•

ARLO&amp;JANIS

might otter to help bail vou out of a selfcreided nrnbem , Don't be too proud to
admH ~-;.. wrong.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23-Dec. 21) Someone you olfeOOed, whether you
meant to or not, is disappcrinted in you.

AQU...RlUS

a

I

~ In the long run It you delll»fatety
withhold tntormatlon another needl

-you
... ·-"' him"' ...._
llllJRUS(~~2C)-Witl1tut
thinking lo • "'""ulo lor taiiii!W whorl ~
to tcylrlg to .,.,..... gaol. 8e '
ol&gt;joctlw both 1r1 anolytll and operation .

..

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SOUP10NUTZ

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6/911)11

Cnmdl-11nw-lloaty. MmD - YOU'R£ NOT
Gramps 11w1ys 1014 wllllt it's Dt!l • you 1ft tblllill1dt,.
bldt; il's who you tiat YOU'RE NOT.

"""'"'the

Allhough --~ lnlndlloot&lt; good, you .

...._.,.a
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ul

cr=tmar -6enti•d ·

.

SCMMlBIS ANSWERS

your heart is not in It, chanOeS are you'll
screw it up &amp;nd ml!llke matters worse.
(Oct. 24-Nov 221 - t1 you
11!S0tve never 10
same mis-

•Dic:b

•P.oll·&amp; rs a

The Daily -~ntinel

I

UNSCRAMIU LETTE~ TO
G£1 ANSWER

•

take again , someone who likes you

·• n:c

,l)of• lllea-.nt.3Begt.ur

UWYES
1
1
1 1 1 ·1 1

CANCER (June 21-July 221- Toke care

I

so, you

low k&gt; """" faur .,.,. _ .

'nlu wUI develop more ttlan one OKciting
new relationstJip in the year ahead, but
be careful not to neglect any of 'fOUT
long-held friendships. The more 1riends
you ha\f8 the better. but the longtime
ones are the best.
GEMINI (May 2, ·June 20) - EYen it it is
av.rkward and Challenging 10 be candid
and frank , it is best that you are.
Sometimes llone8ty hurts. but getting
things out in the ~ and ,putting them
on the tabte may !be esaential .

•

�,1;

p • B6. The DailySentirel

.......
.•*'•
.............-.,.June 10, sooa.
...

www.mydailysentinel.eom

-~~ ·

~

·Relay for Life

"'

rookies get taste of history at hall of fam~
liT JaE M IICIA
ASSOCIATED PRESs

where you hopefully want to president of player and
end up. I think it defipitely employee development.
About half of the teams
. inspires us all,"
For a
From the days of Jim have already visited the ball.

CANTON moment. .Miami Dolphins
taclde Jake Long looked like
any &lt;Miler visitor at the Pro
Football Hall of Fame.
He handed his cell phone
to a teammate, stood next to
the bronze bust of fellow

~:U and~~~ f~~
on~"......,~

rh:"':!!
of the NFL's rookies are
,pi~thetbe~'an!t

touring the Hall of Fame this

•

summer as part of a program
aimed at giving the league's
· youngest players a sense of
history and responsibility.
"You see the great players
that have come before you
and everything that they've
done for us to be here,"
. Long said Monday. "It
Shows you more respect for
the game. This is a spot

Thorpe and leather helmets The Jndiaoapolis Colts and
to Adrian Peterson and Washington Redskins will
wired helmets, 25 Dolphins he the last to visit when they
rookies got a look of the play in the Hall of ' Fame
league's history and some Game in Canton in early
lessons in teamwork and . August.
'
·
struggling through adversity.
The NFL will review the
The program was inspired program later and decide
by former Dallas Cowboys whetber to continue it next
wide receiver Michael Irvin, year as part of the league's
who
told
league rookie orientation, Haynes
Commissioner
Roger said.
Goodell last August during
Hall of Fame .Spokesman
his induction in Canton that Ioe Holrigan nolfld that the
he wished someone had Cleveland Browns have
taken him 1hrougb the Hall been bringing rookies down
of Fame when he was a lnten;tate 77 to the ball for
rookie.
years.
Goodell took it to heart.
Holrigan
·led
· the
"These guys playing today Dolphins' tour al~g with
have no idea what it was like · former Miami wide receiver
in the '40s, '50s, '60s, '70s. Nat Moore, who paused at a
even the '80s," said Mike display honoring the team's
Haynes, tbe league's vice 17-0 season in 1972.

.

"The key to that team was
they weze a team first and
foremost," Moore told the
Dolphins rookies, who must
help turn around a team that
went 1-15 last year.
Upon entering ·the Hall of
Fame room containing the
busts of NFL greats, the
rookies learned thal, of
20,000 to play in the league,
only 214 players have made
it to the hall. .
·
While quarterback Chad
Henne stood nextto the bust
ofDanMarinofor .aphoto,a
group of players gathered
around a video screen to
watch film of Walter Payton
breaking . tackles, drawing
the occasional"ooh."
The tour got more serious
as Horrigan told the story of
how Marion Motley and Bill
Willis broke the color barrier
in 1946 - a·year before
Jackie Robinson did in baseball.
·

"A lot of people have sufferedanddonealotofthings
to get you the opportwlity
that you have today," Moore
said.
He. warned players not to
take their positions for
granted.
.
"At one point, Michael
Vick was going to be the
poster child of the NFL.
What did be do? Something
dumb to take himself out of
the game," said Moore,
referring to Vick's 23-month
prison
sentence
for
bankrolling a dogfighting
ring.
The quarterback expected
to lead the Atlanta Faloqns
out of the Vick era. Matt
Ryan, toured the hall earlier
in the day.
.
"I'm exci~ to he a part of
the change that Atlanta is
going through right now," he
said. "It's not just me. It's
going to take a lot of work

from a I~ of.dift'ereot ~
and contnbulions from' a
.
of different people."
:
, Ryan, w~ ~- ~ ,
are no F~cons m ihe Hall ut;
Fame, sa1d he looked up ~
Brett Favre when he wil
~wing U)? and made
VIew the JCfSCY the fODIJiti:
Green Bay quartelback woiC
when be set the reconJ fc:t
touchdown passes.
~l
"It puts things into pee!
spective," Ryan said of II'
visit. "It rnak:es you reali:C
that you've got a gtqf
opportunity in frOnt of Y~
The players -got sOme~
to be fans as ·well. ~~ .
·Long, the Lapeer, M1c"!'
·native who made sure~!j
snap a photo of a blue ~
W lions jersey. ·
;•
· ~Seeing Barry ~ '
here is what 1 really liiC
because I grew up a 'bit
Lions fan and a huge Blll1t.
fan," Long said.

sponsor,Aa

sure-'

Middleport • Pomeroy, Obio
,1,1
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BYBruN.lAEED

MIDDLEPORT
Middleport's freight depot
committee
· resigned
Monday evening. in reaction to village cOuncil's discussion last month about
restrictions on the use of the
buiJding.
Myron Duffield read a
·statement to council at
Monday evening's regular

meeting, addressing allegations by ~ben of council
and Mayor Michael Gerlach
that the public was being
denied proper aooess to the
facility. The cJepot sits in
Dave Diles Part. and contains • sm.till meeting room,
kitcheiJette and I'CS1fOOIIlS.
Duffield, his wife, June,
Roscoe and Mary Wise and
George and Cinda Harris
secured donations and a
grant
through
.the

Middleport
workers

'l

!!

struggling

With summer

maintenance
BY BRIAN J. REED
. BRI!EDOMYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

...

~

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.

INSIDE
.
. .. •
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a.1t1 SlogenlfpiiUIO

.

Mem~ d

REACH 3 COUNTIES

the Meigs County Cllamber of Comme1oe stand in the entrance to the University of Rio Grande's Bemard V.
Fultz Certb!r foi Higher Education whk;h is set to begin classes on Aug. 25.
·
.

Chamber receives tour of new Rio center
BY 8Ent SEll 0Et1T

Place Your Paid Classified Ad In Wednesday's
Galpolis DaDy Tribune, Point Pleasant Register or
DailySentine~ And It WI Run For FREE In
The Tri~ounty Marketplace!

MIDDLEPORT
Middleport village employees are overwhelmed with
grass mowing, but help may ·
be on the way.
Village
Administrator ·
Famon Roberts told village
council Monday evening
that he is conducting a wage
survey, comparing the
· wages of village street and
public works department
employees with those of
other towns in the area. He
said the village might be
able to affmd a sellllODlll.
worter to assist with the
overwhelming task of cutling the grass on villa~
properties, includibg m
parks and cemeteries.
. He said the village workers
are cwrently behind in cutting 1be grass, but said that is
partly due to cross-training of
village employees. The village is also concerned with
cutting high grass on abandoned private properties,
including residential properties that are now in the hands
of banks and finance companies. He suggesred that council ooosider oontracting with

computei lab, there will not be comIn addition, a security system is in
puter monitors attached to the desks place complete with 16 cameras pro.
·
.
hut rather mobile laptops will be used . viding 16 different views of both the
ROCKSPIUN'QS- .Yesterday after- to create more space. The entire build- interior and exterior of the building,
110011 flleJillws ·of the Meigs ~ty
ing is ~ss and students using~ including the parting lot which will
II a• ._ Wwtnrs.. AS
Olamher ~f (:QJIIIDI'JI'CC rece)ved a . own, personal laptops can hook mtp hold sever.U hundred cars. The securi- ·
gUided ,toUr·of !;be UnivCISity of .Rio lbe.lntemet while taking a break in ilie ty system is motion activated and
Grande_s ~rd ·V.. ful:tz Center f?i' .student lounge ~ the ~t;elltrance records video onto DVD's for a period
Higher Ednc~Qoo which IS set to be~n or anywhere else m the building.
of two weeks at a time .
classes oo Aug. 25.
.
Another .example '?~ flexibl~ space
The building also includes a mobile
Chamber member_s ~ere taken QD ~ are sound-proof partibons which can science lab and distance learning
tour of the .new b~ldmg by Luanne turn ?ne· large classroom . I banquet classroom. Each classroom will hold
, · .,
Bowman, vtce prestdent for acadelll' area mto three separate classrooms, around 25 students maximum It also
ic affairs. Who said ~e building is 95 ~ With pull down ~OS for pro- houses both a larg~ and small .confer.
'
.
pen:eot ~lete w1th 80 ~rcent of ~ons from Power .Pomt presenta- ence room. for oot only meetings but
BY BETH SERGENT
the fllrmSbing~ already on s1~.
tu;m~,etc. ~h ~ 1s also co~lete · for students with special needs.
BSERClEWTOMYDAILYSENTlNELOOM
~wmao pomted out mob~ty ~ ~th _ green envll'O~ntally friendly
Bowman said the sewer connectioo is
Oexihly were key to the functionality hghting that senses mobon and turn on
SYRACUSE The •
-o f the classrooms. For example, mthe and off accordingly.
MISII . . 0
I •r. AS
underage curfew for young
people under the age of 18
in Syracuse is currently in
effect from the 'hours of II
p.m. to 6 a.m .. seven days a
week. (The Daily 'S€nrinel
regrets the curfew times
were incorrectly re[iomd in
.
'
POMEllOY
Mondays
edition.)
: . ' o • .....
. a · .·
Adlievnnents of students
Young people under 18
anlll!d:in the-Adult Basic
must be off the streets and
aad Literacy Education
off village property doring
(ABLE) program in .~
the curfew time unless
·County wrp: RJCO&amp;IIimd m
accompanied
by
.a
parent/guardian.
Violators
cei'enlooies Ill ' ~~~ High
Schooi.Mooday . I.
of this existing village ordiThose lribo ha\'e-CPlJ' I • : d
nance will be subject to
~for1br:irperal
citations
in
Syracuse
equivalr:ocy
diplomas
Mayor's Court.
tho!ie wbo are still
1be London Pool currentClassifiedS
83-4 (GID).IDI
wortioa· toward !hat goaL
ly is open from I p.m. - 6
their families and friends .
p.m., seven days a week but
Comics
were guelibi for the reoogni· those hours will change
&amp;litorials
tioo pogtan at a dinner hostfrom iloon - 5 p.m. tomored ' by the Middleportrow. The decision was
Pomeroy Rotary Ouh.
.
made because · several
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Dr. Jobn Costanzo. ~
swimmers were showing up
UIHU,Ii1H121 ~ ·•
tor of 'the Athens-Meigs
at noon and were often
waiting in the parking lot to
8 Section &amp;!lntiooal Service Center,
Sports
extended the welcome wilh
get in when the pool opened
Weather
Carol Brewer, ABlE coorat I p.m. and were then
dinator for Meigs County,
leaving at 5 p.m.·
speaking about the program
Pool M.atiager Heather
and its successes.
Smith has also 8llllOUDOI:d
O&amp;lccwlt ·...,.. c
Recognizing the students Meigs GED gradUates aDending lhe annusllacognilion dinner were pres anted plaques . nigbt swims will begin on
and, presenting them with They were from the left, seated, Jamie Pa111ow, Oebol'a Bsmhart, and Maliss• Combs, and JWlC 18 and will be held
standing, Usa A. JOMS and K81ft"181h Tolliver;
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played at Bethpage Black, i.t &lt;:arts .and play nine bOles fij·
cost $31 during ·the week a total of$56.
'""
and $39 on the weekend.
And while it can send :.8
Those would seem to be strong me5sage to hold
exceptions. no ma:tter if it major on a public oourse.lf
hosts a U.S . Open. Golf also can be miSleading. -;;.
seems to be gettin~ more
Torrey Pines typically
expensive, which JS why chewed up in .tbe snmiDfll:
PGA of American chief because of dry conditions'
executive Joe Steranka For tbe U.S. ()pen, it wail
found plen!Y. of skeptics closed to the public on M~ .
when he smiJ two months 21 , about . three weelllll
ago the median cost of nine before the touinament.
:;holes is $12.
~'One of the perceptio$
"I gave incorrect data," about golf that we're tryillj
Steranka said. "It was $14 ." to correct is that we have the.
The research two years best players :playing the bella .
ago came from "PGA course on the best ~
Performance .
Trak," · tions in the world on tele~ .
designed to capture rounds sion, which is a great ~
played and revenue per keting benetit to our ~··
round of golf. It measured Steranka said. "But tt al!IO
all public facilities - daily sets high expectations." :::·
fee, semiprivate, municipal,
Ev~ so, lakin$ one of~
military and university.
premier events m such lb
Steranka said the percep- elite sport to a public venll!!:
tion of .overpriced golf can only be attractive.
~ ~:
stems from places like
"If you or f or even a
Whistling
Straits
and beginner can hit one shot , .
Kiawah · Island, not courses round like Tiger .Woods Ott
like
Hyde
Park
in Lorena Ochoa. the moli
Jacksonville, Fla., a Donald connection you have ,jti
Ross course that costs $20 terms ·of the venues diCJ
to walk I 8 boles, or Hesston play," Steranka said. "Ev4t1
Golf Park in Kansas, where -If that only happens·oni:le •
a family of four witb two twice in a round."
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fee courses. I was influenced access courses is that everyby my own background. The day players can walk the
only golf I played on private same turf and face ·rhe same
courses :was Monday morn- shots of Woods and
ing, which was caddie day. Mickelson. even if the
Otherwise, it was pubhc greens aren't as .quick and
golf."
the rough isn't as thick.
Bethpage was the first taxPieces of history are
payer-owned course owned deposited on public courses
to host the U.S. Open in when the U.S. Open comes
2002, when Tiger Woods · to ,town.
won by three shots over Phil
Remember the spot behind
Mickelson, .t wo stars who the 17th green ;tt Pebble
grew up playing public golf. Beach where Tom Watson
Torrey Pines is the first city- chipped in for birdie in
owned golf course .to host 1982? Or the eighth hole at
the U.S, Open. The USGA Pinehurst No. 2, where Jobo
recently ·announced that Daly got so frustrated with
Chambers Bay, a public the crowned greens he swatcourse outside Seanle, will ted a moving ball and took a
host the 2015 U.S. ()pen, . 13?
an,d others are lining up for a
Those two courses don't
cbance ·to host the national seem like "public golf''
·championship.
because they are high-priced
Cog Hill, the public course resorts that can cost more
outside Chicago that for than $400 to play, hlthough
years hosted the Western J~Dyone can play them.
.
~. is being refurbished
The charm of tbe next two
With hopes of :Janding a U.S. U.S. Open. is -that these ilre
Open. tJSGA officials also true municipal courses,
are looking at Eril\ Hills in Tellected,as much in the cosL
Wl&amp;OOD&amp;~ ;t public 001111se San Diego residents pay :$42
that was banded the U.S . . tO play the South Course
Amateur in 2011 as a trial dunng the week (out-ofrun.
tow.ners are charged $145).
The allure of public- When the U.S. Open was

'\ ••

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USG~ looking at public courses as hosts for U.S. Ope~....
SAN DIEGO (AP)- This and the starter assigned
would never happen at :a anomer twosome to ·join
~l• club · like Shinnecock diem, a young couple that
· or Merion.
only recently started playHenrik Stenson wanted to ing. Her name was Pamela
see ·the golf .course hosting Anderson, no relation to the
the U.S.. Open, so he "Baywatdi" babe..
"Let's just say it was .an
arranged to play T&lt;mrey
Pines last December. Ooe .o f interesting round," Stenson
the top 20 players in the said.
:wQikl, whose _ victories Odds of that happening
.inClude a World Golf will go up the more the
Championship, . Stenson USGA · takes its premier
· ordinarily would have called ch&lt;lmpionshlp to places
the head pro to set up .a time, .everyone can play.
and the pro migllt have
Five of the next eight U.S.
arranged to bave one of the . ~ns, startin~ this week
club's best players jo~ him. w1th Torrey Pines, will be
But this isn't a country held at courses that require
club.
only money, not memberSo the Swede went online ship, whether ·the are pricey
and booked a tee time. He resorts like Pebble Beach ,o r
paid his fee in the pro shop. govemment~wned tracks
He went to the practice 1ike BethJ)Ilge Black ·o n
. ·
range to warm up and hit Long Island.
yellow-painted llolf balls
USGA executive director
with a black stnpe around David Fay bc,llieves the~
them that didn't seem to go re11lects how the majority of
very far. It took him a few :golf is played in this country.
shots to realize there was
"Since I joined the USGA
nothing wrong with his in 1975, l've seen the profile
sw~.
·
·
of American golf ,c~e,"
· "They were limited-flight fay said. "Most of American
balls," Stenson said.
golfisplayedonfeecourses,
Stenson hacil brought a .and most of our individual
friend with him from Oubai, (USGA) members play on

China declares quake
lake crisis over, A2 ..

Syracuse curfew ·
addressed,
.London Pool
hours changed

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Joint Jltuant lrgiJttr .The Daily Sentinel
'304-675-1333

nw.~dailyi~iter.oom
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740-992-2155

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