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                  <text>Page D6- The Sunday Times Sentinel

Pomeroy, Middleport, Gallipolis, OH • Point PJeasanr, WV

Sunday, April 26. 2009

Ohio boy's swine flu
matches deadly
Mexican strain, A6

Job's Daugb.ter.s
to celebrate 5Qth
anniversarY; Aa

•
PriDI.od on 100'1&gt; •

· MiddlepOrt • Pomeroy, Ohio
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Rec:yded Nemprlatl:J41"
"''\\.nndail~-..\'lltiud.\1)111

_' IHIIJ

SPORTS
..• NFL Draft. See
. Page Bl •

FULLY BACKED HEAR,
10G,OOG-MILE POWER·
TRAIN WARRANTY ON

MOST GM VEHICLES'

SAFm AND SECURITY
I
OF
· 1oNSTAR FOR ONE YEAR
ON MOST

IDnu~NGSA.UJ

FOR RETAIL VALUE
PROTECTION AT
TRADE-IN TIME' .

Further details were not
Bv ·CHARLENE HOEFLICH
HOEFUCHOMYOAILYSENTINELCCM · released by the Ohjo State
Highway · Patrol pending
. POMEROY - A four- completion of the investigavehicle crash on State tion. This is the second trafRoute 143 early Sunday fic fatality in Meigs County
afternoon resulted in a dou- this year.
ble fatality, with three other
According to unofficial
occupants bc;ing transported reports a van and a car ~ad
for trel!!ment. .
stopped on the highway to
Pronounced dead at the make a left hand tum when
scene were Robert W. the SUY struck the car froni
Harrison· II, 40 of behind, went left of center
P.omeroy, who was dri,ving and ran.into the truck which
a tnick, and Stephau•e ) . then cal!ght fire trapping
English, 38, of Middleport Harrison. · ·
who was a passenger in an
suv. '
.
Pie-~ Cruh, AS

UPT09MONTHSDF ·
PAYMENTS COVERED UP
TO $500/,,NTH'

6M VEHICLES'

.
.
·

•

•

David Harrtllpholo

Two lost ttieir lives and three others were injured in this .four-vehicle accident on Route 143
early Sunday afternoon.
.
.·
·'

Commissioners
eye costs
in capital
murder case

0BJWARIFS
.PageAS ·

Bv BRIAN J. Reeo-

·:• Kenneth Diddle, 83

eReeooMvoAILYSENTINEL.coM ..

· POMEROY The
defense team for Charles S.
Williams has reque-sted
$8,500 for expert fees so
far, and those expenses are
not included ·iu a cap on
capital murder defense costs
~ounty
commissioners
approved earlier tl)is year....'
· Attomer Charles Knight,
.Williams lead defense
counsel, has filed motions
in the Common 'Pleas
Court requesting $5,000
for a defense psychologist
and at least $3,500 for a
mitigation specialist to aid ·
in Williams' defense.
Wbile the expenses have
not yet been approved by
\he c;ourt, they are probably JUSt the begmnmg of
·costs·· associated with
Williams' defense.
· Jusl after Williams was
first charged hi the murder
of Doris Jackson, commis·
· sionets approved a $25,000
cap On defense fees in CB{'i·
tal murder cases. Wh1le ·
commissioners maintain a
contract with . the Ohio
Public Defender through its
office in Athens for indigent
counsel, death pe·nalty cases
are not included. When they
·approved the cap, commissiOners said they had seen
other counties - Vinton
· County, particularly · experience financial diffi- , ·
culties in expensive capital
murder cases.
·
Mick Davenport, president of the board of commissioners, said Friday the
commissioners are beginning to make budgetary·f rovisions in anticipation o the
costs of Williams' trial. He
Plust SH Costs, AS

INSIDE
• GM to announce
brand changes,
restructuring moves.
·~ ·~e,Al

• World Bank: Nations
should speed aid to
poor. See Page A2
·• RHS Alumni to
award scholarships.
See Page A3
:• Holzer offers
balance
.
'
i
'clinic. See Page A3
·, 12~unty food
·distribution center
&lt;&gt;Pens. See Page AS
• Operation Christmas
·Child to hold ce.lebration. .
SeePageAS .
• Homemade plane · ·
:Crashes, pilot killed.
· - .See Page AS
:• Veteran Rio educator
-retires this spring.
See Page A6

WEATIIER

Pomeroy reports b~glary, · 'Think Pink' receives Komen grant ·
·thefts ' traffic accidents
· BSERGENTIIMYIYIILYSEI'ltiNELCOM cerwithSUrviVOrS.
support for breast can- will once again be c~n.
·
dUcted to addreSS SpecifiC

Delalla on Page A5

BY BETH SeRGEtiT

INDEX ·.
.a SEC11oNs ~ 12 PAGES
~nie's Mailbox

POMEROY - Pomeroy
Chief of Police Mark . E.
calendars
~ Proffitt reports that his
department is investigating
Classifieds
B3-4 the following cases, in~luda burglary, thefts and
Comics
Bs• ing
.
traffic accidents.
A
burglary
was.
recently
Editorials
A4 reported at The Pomeroy
As Flower Shop on Butternut
Obituaries
Aven~e . Pa~lman C. Brent
Section
Rose
mterv1ewed Rosemary
8
Sports
Eskew of the shop who
Weather
As ~ported she lef\ the ~midmg to go to Gal11pohs but
®a009 OhlovalleyPubllshlnaCo. upon her return nollced the
back dC?Or to the shop had
been k1cked m. , She then
checke~ the shops safe ~d
found 1t pned open w1th
4 1 11 1 1 1 t 1
• about$~ in cash missing.
1
An

. an

Ct~llllie!l

-YIH!S!!!
No wtn rlel.

-

'
www.mathenymotors.com
'

.

Bv BETH SERGENT

BSERGENTOMYDAIIYsENTlNELCOM

.

.

~~I ~~1111

Patrolman Jon Kulchar
Think Pink raises awarewas recently dispatched to
POMEROY
The ness and provides educa- .
Powell's Food Fair to inves- · Meigs County Cancer tion about breast health,
ligate money · allegedly ' Initiative 's Think Pink ·encourages women in
stolen from the purse of Program . which provides Meigs County · to utilize
Hope Synder, Pomeroy. The free mammograms and this community resource,
store's surveillance video breast health information and · assists · medically
shows Synder setting her has received $20,884, half · underserved wom~n ailes
. change. purse down on ·a of its funding for the year.
35 and over to obt~m chmstore shelf and accidentally
The Think Pink project in ·cal breast . exammauo.ns,
walking off without it . on Meigs County is for women mammography . screenmg
the tape another female is residing in Meigs County and d~agno~uc semc~s at
· seen coming down the same and is funded through · the no cost. Thmk Pmk clients
aisle, picks up the purse and Susan G. Komen For . the rece•:ve gas vouchers·. to
allegedly takes $20 out of it . . Cure Columbus Affiliate . prov1de
transportation .
Stefanie Amott, Syracuse, Think rink uses a commu- aSSIStance to screenmg
reported her purse was ~1ty-ta1lored approach to appomtments and _mobile
stolen from the . Pomeroy 1mprovmg breast health . mammography serv1ces are
McDonalds. The purse wa8 through educanon , targeted prov1d~d at each ~f
hanging on the back of a outreach, mamll)ography MCCI s . four Women _s
chair at a restaurant and screenmg ~erv•c.es and Health Day s held at vanwh n A 11 left she forgot ref~rr_als , fmanc1al and ous locations throughout
e . mo
logistical support to obtam the county. Additionally, a
Pl.... SH RepoJ11, AS
breast health services , a!Qng survivorship . workshop

needs and concerns of
breast cancer survivors .
Described as a totally
grassroots effort; the project'
is led locally by Norma
Torres, RN, BSN, MSEd,
who is a breast cancer survivor and the program mariager. Carolyn Grueser is the
prograni assistant . . For
women wishing to inquire
about the free services
offered through the Think
Pink program, call 9922161 , ext. 236.
.
This month , the Susan G.
Kamen For the Cure
Columbus
Affili.ate
announced it was granting
$1. 25 million to fund 37
grantee ·programs that will
provide thousands
of
Pl.... SH Gr•nt. A!l

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•

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---- --···____ ..
....__

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-- ·:'5.....---~----·---

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�PageA2·

,NATION • WORLD"

The Daily Sentinel

Monday, Apri127, 2009

GM to announce brand .
changes, restructuring moves

ANNIE'S MAILBOX

Sister shares
blame for affair

'

DETROIT (AP) - General Motors Corp. will announce
details of its massive restructuring plan on Monday, including the demise of its storied Pontiac brand, more factory
closures and bigger job cuts as it fights to avoid bankruptcy.protection.
.
·
The struggling automaker must make the announcement
in advance of a planned offer to its bondholders to swap
debt for company stock. GM owes $28 billion to large and ·
small 'bondholders, and under Securities and Exchange
Commission rules, it must disclose its operationa] plans
before Jllaking an exChange offer..
.·
Two people briefed on OM's plan said the company h~
decided to close more factories than the five it announCed in
Februaiy. But the locations of the doomed factories will .not
be identified Monday, said. the people, who asked not to Ill:..
identified because the plan has not yet bl:en made ~blic.
· One of the people said GM will list specific numberS of
blue-collar job cuts, and announce another round of U.S.
salaried job cuts beyond the 3,400 completed last week. .
Chief Executive Fritz Hendehon has said the compan)'
. will go further~ faster i!l "!aking its cost cuts io reduce
the number of cars and trucks tt needs to sell to break even:
One of the people briefed on the plan said GM will acc.el-

Treasury
Secretary
Timothy
Geithner,
right. smiles
before a
development
committee
meeting·at
· the World
Bank head·
quarters in
Washington,
Sunday.
AP photo

Mh.
... -.-,..

.World Bank: Nations should.speed
.· aidto.·poor
countries with more than .nomic crisis, but yielded no will pro~ide shorter-term
$55 billion for public works . new pledges of money from financing than the pledges
projects .Jeft in limbo when governments:
.
. already made by other
WASHINGTON - The the recession hit. That folFinance ministers from the nations. ·
·
World Bank on Sund&lt;1y · lows a tiipling in lending, to Group · of Seven wealthy
Outside the World Bank
urged donor nations to speed $12 billion, to support nations met first on Friday, and IMF . headquarters,
up delivery of the money healt)J., education and other followed by a gathering of dozens of demonstrators
they've already pledged safety net programs in _POOr the Gr~Jt of 20 nations, · gathered. Protesters chantand ·open their wallets wider cou.ntries. The lntematiOnal. which
· major emerging ed: "IMF, tear it down!
- to help poor countries Monetary Fund is doubling powerhouses like China, . World .Bank, tear it down!"
reeling from recessions root- the borrowing limits for 78 India and Brazil to the mix. They also held banners and
ed in rich nations.
of the jlooresl countries in The talks ended with ·the signs that read, "No Bailout. .
The economic nosedive is an effort to meet the needs World Bank and lMF flexing No . Capitalism" and "Free
!liming into a human and of · developing . · nations ·a more muscular . role in People Nljlt Trade."
development "calamity," · harmed by the downturn;
addressing and ove~eing
The .
demonstration
which already has driven
The economic crisis is the crisis. Both ZoeUick and Sunday · follewed . a. larger
more than 50 million people ·"advancing like a silent IMF managing director one Saturday in which more
into extreme .poverty this tsunami, with. ihose .who Dominique Strauss-Kahn than 100 protesters ~!lashed
year, the World Bank's poli- ·contributed least to the cri- expressed support for the . with police. ('rote$ret'S said
cy steering committee said in sis suffering most from its , emetging market economies that . by pledging&gt; more
a communique issued al the impact," said . German to have a stron!lervoiCeatthe money to the lMF. wemthy
close of its spring meeting.
development
minister twin financialtnstitutions. · ~ountries were propping up .
"There 1s widespread Heidemarie
Wieczorek- · Earlier this month in a failed system. They ·said
recognition that the world Zeul. She said it would take London, leaders from the G- the IMF hlld given bad poli, .
faces an unprecedented eco- more money to help stabi- 20 pledged to boost support' ·CY advice during .Jr.ISI eco- ·
nomic crisis, poor people Jize poor nationt "without for the IMF, the World Bank nomic crises and the poorest ·
could 'suffer the mostand that plunging them into a spiral and oiher internationallend- countries were feeling' the
we. must continue to act in of debt.~'
·
ing organizations by ·$1.1 pain of a global financial
real time'lo prevent a human
Treasury . ·• . Secretary . trillion. to combat the ~lobal meltdown they didn't create.
catastrophe," World Bank Timothy Ge1thner said muJ, . recess1on. · - the b1~gest
Anti-poverty advocates
chief Robert Zoellick said.
tilateral development banks, · chunk being $500 b1llion said some World Bank ini- ·
Poor countries have led by the World Bank, are for emergency lending by tiatives to. help poor coun- ,
watched as the recession at the forefront af intema- tk IMF. More than $300 .tries come with too many
has dried . up investment tiona) efforts to lift more ·billion has been pledged by · strings attached.
capital, sharply reduced people out of poverty. "We the U.S ., the European
exports and commodity meet at an unprecedented Union, Japan, .. Canada,
prices and slowed the flow time when a severe global . Switzerland and. Norway. .
of cash sent home by their economic slowdown threat- . To make up the shortage.
citizens working abroad. ens to reverse major the IMF agreed Saturday to
.
Finance ministers at the · progress in poverty reduc" sell bonds - }omething it'1!
meeting· said impoverished tion," Geithner said. But he never done in .its 65 years nations need a. hand up that added that. it was important to emerging economies.
doesn't burden them with that development banks · Those nations · want a
debt or add to the ranks of conduct their aid business greater voice at the IMF
those earning just a few dol- with transparency.
before thefll ·p&lt;iny up addi'
lars·a day.
.
The World Bank meeting tiona! resources. The bonds
· The World Bank has capped three days of talks in would help reach the $500 ·. · ' '
pledged to provide poor Washington about th,e eco- billion goal, but the riotes ·

Bv DEB RIECHMANN

ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

:~ep~~~!e~~~~~~I&amp;:~o~:h~~g~~~ih~i:e~
not available.
·

Both people confirmed that the plan includes the death of
Pontiac, famous for the Trans Ani sportil car and the GTO;
Efforts in the last few years to market Pontiac; as perfor~
mance-oriented brand failed to work. The company kad
said it wanted to keeP. Pontiac as a niche brand wtth one or
two models; but is buckling under tremendous government
pressure to consolidate its eight brands, several of \Vhicb
lose money.
·
The people said GM won't have much new information
on Hummer, Saturn or other brands, including Europe's
Opel. GM has indicared it w;mts to focus · on four core
brands, Chevrolet, Cadillac, GMC 3nd Buick.
,
Also to be announced Monday will. be a target number for
dealer reduction, as well as details of OM's bond exchange
offer. But exact numbers were riot available Supday night.~
The 9 a.m.; EDT news. conference will include Chier
Executive Fritz Henderson, Chief Financial Officer Ray
Young, North American PresidentTroy Clarke ~d Mru:k
LaNeve, vice president of North American sales and mar•
keting. . ·· •• .
. ··
·
· GM js liViilg 'il.n,$1,.4 biJiion 'in government loans and
faces lfgov~ent-impos,ed June l deadline to restructure
or go intobankruptcy protection.
·
.
·
The .government's resll'Ucturing demands include swap·
ping at least two thirds of OM's unsecured bond debt for
ecjuity . in tlie company. Such a move would help GM
straighten outiits debt-laden balance sheet.
Chrysl!ll''LLC, which iSiiving on $4 billion in government
loans aiid is expected ,to get $500 tn!llion mo~. faces a
Thursday deadlme to,,restructure and .ink an alhance .deal
.with Italian autoi;llaket'Fiat SpA:Tbe government also wants
Chrysl~ to exc)}ange .,much ~fits $0.9 ~illion in debt for
eqwty ln ibe comJ?IUI)I; b!lt With. the deadl.me fast approach:
ing, Otrysler and Its secured debtholders remain far apart. .

'

Monday, April 27, 2009 ·

Job's Daughters to"'"'."'""._._"' 50th anniversary

MIDDL,EPORT
Majority Members, ·Past
Honored Queens, . and
Jobies will all gather in
Middleport on May 2 to celebrate a milestone in Meigs
County Job's Daughters his- ·
By KATHY MITCHELL
tory. The Bethel will tum 50
AND MARCY SUGAR
years old.
.
It was on May 2, 1959
' Dear Annie: My sister cheated on her husband and had
that
the Ohio's Job's
an affair with a married man for several years . The mao
Daughters
gathwas separated from his wife at the time. My sister insisted ered at community
·
the
Pomeroy
the man loved her ·dearly and passionately, and I believed
-Masonic Temple to institute
·
her since she seemed so happy.
' I later discovered that the entire time, the inan was trying Pomeroy Bethel #62 of the
to get his wife back. When his wife found out ahout the , International Order of Job's
affair, the guy dumped my sis&amp;er in a heartbeat. He has Daughters.
In its 50 year )!istory,
since been ·doing everythmg in his power 10 regain his
there
. · have been some
wife's love, trust and respect. Meanwhile, this man's wife
chan~es.
For instance; in ihe
told everyo,ne in town about my sister. She called my sister's· husband, let everyone at my sister's job know about 1970 s, the Bethel moved to
the affair, and also told my sister's teenage children. My the Middleport Masonic
Temple Where it · continues
~ister came out looking like a slut while I)Jis man was able
to meet today. Another
to get his family back.
.
Though I'm sqre the guy must be sufferin~. too, why is it chan~ bas been tbe age
ihat my sister is the worst person in the affarr? My brother- requrremeot to join the
In-law has stayed with ·her, but lie sees her as less than wor- organization. In 1959, girls
.
.
Submitted photo
. thy and tells her so constantly. Her Children have lost were required to be 12 years These . Meigs
County
Job's
Daughters
are
ready
to
celebr;;~te the 50th anniversary of
of
age,
now
a
10
year
•old
respect for her; Why should she be the only one to take. the
.blame? Because she is a woman and a mother? She had the can join · ·the Order. Bethel e2. Job's Daughters lnternationl!l, on May 2. They are left to right, Sadie Fox,
affair because the man told her he loved her. Why is she the Insurance regulations and Kristen Davis, Deidra Peters and Bunni Peters, pictured he.re at the reception for tlie Grant
the modem day have neces- Master for the 12th. Masonic District.
·
.
.
bad guy? - Angry Sister ·
sitated
another
change:
· . Dear Angry: Your sister is no more at fault than the
and most of all, 'have fun. the ·luncheon and a com- · that appropriate arrange,
Other Man, but she is not without blame. A man claiming Job's Daugbters is now Local Job's Daughters have memorative . pin/charm' ments can be made.
incorporated
thereby
changhe loves you is not a reason to cheat. She willingly entered
g&lt;me on · to become: teach- Tickets should be purchased . After that District V will
into this.affair, and there are consequences when you betray ing it from the International .ers,
doctors,laboratory tech- in advance of the event.
hold a reception honoring its
Order
of
Job's
Daughters
to
, your husband and family. Stop defending her poor choices,
Following
the
luncheoQ,
Grand Bethel Officers and
Daughters nicians,.nurses, and lawyers .
and suggest she and her husband get counseling so they can . Job '·s ·
the
Bethel
will
hold
a
The
celebration
will
begin
Representatives and Orand
International.
try to repair the damage. · ·
·· .
·with
a
luncheon
at
II
am
at
Majority
Ceremony.
Those
Officers.
. Most notably;
·
Overall,
however,
tilt'
Dear Annie: My 17-year-old son was dating a nice girl.
interested
in
participating
the
Middleport
Masonic
Kristen
Davis,
Grand Bethel
polar
guiding
star
of
the
When they broke up, she became a little upset11nd started
Honored
Queen,
·a Past
TeO)ple
with
Kathy
King
must
contact
Bethel
Guardian
harassing him at school. It got out of hand and she was sus- organization has remained Thomas presiding. Tickets . Greta Davis at 304-65-1516 Honored Queen and current
the same: a safe haven for
pended.
.,
· ·
.•
of Bethel 62 will be
· My son and this girl are.in orchestra together. During her young ladies to gather; Jearn ·can be purchased at Francis· or gretadavisesq@aol.Com in member
honored.
for
$15
and
includ.e
advance
of
the
ceremony
so
.
Florist
.
leadership
skills;
mature.:
suspension, there was a concert, which she wasn't allowed
to attend . The orchestra rules state that if you miss a per,
formance, you are marked down a grade. I just found out
she still received an "A" in orchestra and has been bragging
about getting straight A's even though she was .suspended.
. I· know the orchestra teacher triea to get the principal to
Materials must be postsent include an official tran- address and telephone nomRUTLAND
change her mind and let this girl perform at the concert. I'd Applications . are · being script of all high .school her unless deceased, and the marked by May I, and sent
like to call the principal arid bring this undeserved grade to .accepted for the 2009 grades based on the 4.0 college and intended course to: Rutland High School
her attention. It isn't right she still received an A when.she Rutland High School grading system to include at of study which the applicant Alumni Scholarship, Suzy
llidn't attend the performance. -Mom
.·
· Alumni seholarships.
. · Parker, .P.O. , Box 802,
least one semester of the has chosen.
Dear Mom: Please stay out o( this. What this girl did or
The
letter
should
state
Syracuse, Ohio 45779 .. For
Applicants must be grad- senior year; letter of appli· didn't get on her rep&lt;irt card is not your business. You are uating high school seniors cation staling the name, activities, honors, and other questions call 740-992trying to punish her because she harassed your son, but the who are the child ,or grand- address and telephone num- relevant information · the 5555, or email suzyparkapplicant wishes the alumni er@peoplepc.com .. ·
~~hool already did that, whether you approve of the result t;:hild of graduates of ber of the applicant, the
11r not. It's time to back off.
,
Rutland High · Scbool. name and graduation year committee to consider. The . Reciptents will be .con• ·Dear Annie: You blew it. I was in the same .situation as Application materials in11st of the Rutland High School applicant is also to include a tacted prior to ·the banquet
:'Desperate for Help iii Massachusetts," .whose Wife won't be postmarked by May I. · graduate who is the parent head shot photograph for so they may plan to be pre,
. have sex anymore. After putting our three children through The scholarships will · be or grandparent and .their publicity purposes.
··sent for the award.
college, I got out. Life is .too shot!. I was tired of having sex awarded on May 23 at the
by myself, but I endured; Havm~ fulfilled my parental annual
Rutland High
obligations to the max, itwas high ttme I devoted the rest of Alumni banquet at the ·
my life to me ..I found a normal woman and have had the Rutland Civic Center
~ pleasure of enjoying intimacy before I die.
Application material to be .
My ex and I are still good friends; but I will never consider marrying a¥ain. Twenty-seven years is enough. - It's About Time m Louisville
·Dear ~oulsville: This worked .for you, .but diV&lt;?rce isn't ·
the solull()n for everyone, and we believe 10 mostmstances
couples should do. their best to save the marriage before
taking this final step. But we appreciate your weighing in.
GALLIPOLIS
~
Annie's Mailbox is written by Kathy Mitchell and Acco~ding to the Centers
Msrcy Sugar, lon11,time editors of the Ann Lander:s col· for Disease Control and
umn. Pkase e-mail your questions to anniesmailboxcom· Prevention (CDC), more
cast.net, or write to: Annie's Mailbox, P.O. Box 118190, . than one-third of older
Chicago, IL 60611. To find out more about Annie's A!llericlllls, age 65 and up,
Mailbox, andread features by other .Creators Syndicate suffer an unintentional fall
writers and cartoonists, visit the Creators Syndicate Web · each year.
page aJ www.crt~ators.co/il.
The CDC · also reported
that ·some 433,000 senior
citizens were hospitaiized in
2005 due to unintentional
falls and another 15,800
died from injuries related to
falls.
· The Holzer Medical
Center-Gallipolis physical · ·
.
.
Tuesday, April 28
.
POMEROY- The Oh-I&lt;;AN Coin Club will have a din- therapy department wants to
ner meeting at 7 p.m. at the Pomeroy Library. A meeting help local .residents main.tain . a . safer, - healthier
and auction will follow. Public invited. .
·
lifestyle. by offering a hal.
Wednesdqy, Aprll29
POMEROY- The Middleport Liter~ Club will meet at ante clinic from 2 to 5 p.m.
2 p.m., at the Pomeroy Library. Pam 0 Brien will review on Wednesday, April 29 .in
"Auditions" by Barbara Walters. Hostess will be Gay Perrin. Conference Rooms A and B.
The clinic is offered at no
. ·
Saturday, May 2
.
cost to those who attend. ·
MIDDLEPORT - Job's Daughters Bethel 62, 11 a.m.
Experience&lt;), licensed
50th anniversary dinner. 2 p.m. open meeting with major,
physical
therapists . from
· ity ceremony: Honored Queen Harley Fox presiding and HMC-Gallipolis
will pron:ception honoring Kristen Davis, Grand Bethel Honord vide free balance screenulgs
Queen to follow meeting.
as well as falls ri&gt;ks scores
and home safety education•
al tips. Refreshments will
also be provided. '
Monday, May 4
For information or to reg' .
NEW HAVEN, W,Va. - Mildred Fry )Viii observe her is.ter for the bplancl! clinic
95th birthday ori May 4. (:ards may be sentto her at P.O . at Holzer Medical Center. Gallipolis, ·call 740-446Box 75, New Haven, W,Va. 25265 . .
5121.
.
Holzer Met,lical Center is
located at 100 Jackson Pike
in Gallipolis. For more
Monday, April 27
informntion, visit www.holz-.
POMEROY
Veterans Service Commission, 9 a.m., er.org.
11 T Memorial Dr., Pomeroy.
POMEROY - Meigs County Library Boar(), 3:30 p.m.
at the library.
.
.
·
RACINE - Southern Local School Board, regular meet. ing, 8 p.ni., high school media room .
· ·
.
' ~· HP, 3.CYUNOER KUBOTA DIES~l
POMEROY - State Rep. Debbie Phillips, D-Athens,
win host open constituent office hours 3-5 p.m., Pomeroy
Library. Meigs County residents will have the opportunity
to share their concerns or suggestions about state wlicy
·
. ·
. with Rep. Phillips.
ONE Milt WEST OF
VISIT OUR NEWfST LOCAiiONI
Tuesday, April 28
ATHENS ON ROUrE 50/32
BUS. RT. 33 SOUTH Of LANCA.STER
POMEROY - Meigs County Emergency Planning
ATHENS, OH
LANCASTER, 0~
Committee, II :30 a.m;, Meigs Senior Center. Lunch will be.
740-593-3279/800-710-1917
740-653-2827
. available.
· "Your Frienrl/y OuiJoor AJww fquipr,Jenf anJ Tracfor Supenlore~

a

Holzer offers
balance clinic

llil••••••llli
~· ..

PageA3

·RHS Alumni to award scholarShips

·-

.

BYTHEBEND

)be paily Sentinel

.

,

':"o' -

.

Community Calendar ·

Clubs and organizations

' '

In recognition of all the caring men and women in the
nursing field, 'QI;be ~alltpoU~ :il9ail~

Q:ribune; Q:be ~otnt -'lleasant l\egi~ter
and
The
.
.. . Dally Sentinel wiil he

·

·

•

··

.

'

. APphoto

An Egyptian worker brushes an aincient Pharao~ic.sarcophagus allllahun mayor's dauqh- .

ter dated to the 22nd Dynasty (ca. 931-725 BC) 1ns1dea rock-cuttomb wh1ch has been discovered by an Egyptian archaeological mission sponsored by the Supreme Council of ,
Antiquities (SCA) southeastern part of the pyramid field of lllahun, Sunday. in Egypt's
:Fayoum region.
··

Egypt unveils ancient necropolis south of Cairo
BY

the site, and I was right," 2,800 years old, while othsald Abdel-Rahman el- ers were from the Middle
Ayedi, ~e deputy secr~tarx Kingdom, which dates back
: ILLAHUN, Egy~t :- of Egypt sSupreme Connell 2061-1786 B.C. . ·
£gyphan archaeologists on of Antiquities .who oversaw ; Some had a single buri!ll
Sunday unveiled mult\IIIies, the dig.
shaft, while others had .
brightly painted sarcophagi
Three slim wooden sar- . upper and lower chambers.
and dozens of ancient tombs cophagi believed to be.hold- A funerary cl)apel with. an
parved into a rocky hill in a in$ female mummies were offering table, painted
desert oasis south of Caim. · · latd out 'in one of the tombs . . masks, pottery, statues ~d
: · The 53 tombs - some as The innermost coffms .were protection charms known as
old as 4,000 years - were painted to resemble the amulets were also found at
discovered recently on a deceased using blue, yel- · the site, el-Ayedi sl!id.
sandy plateau overlooking low, ~stand black dyes.
Archaeologists hope to
In another tomb, workers . study the mummies' boties
farming fields in the village
IUahun., located in the slowly rer:noved the lid qf: to l.e~rn more about the
Fayoum oasis ·about 50 one mscnbed w1th h1ero" nutnuon, . health and cos. miles (80 kilometers) south- glyphic prayers to reveal a , toms of the people who ..
west of the Egyptiari caJ?itai . colorful mummy case that used to Jive in the area, el. Archaeologists gave JOUr- ei-Ayedi said belonged to a Ayedi said.
"It will help us to follow
nalists a rare tour of the . woman named Isis Her lb,
ancient burial site Sunday, the da~ghter of one of the development of funeral
which is next to the nearly lllahun s mayors nearly architecture, beliefs and
four millennia old pyramid 4,000 years ago. ·
customs
of
ancient
of Pharaoh Sesostris II.
Not much was known Egyptians," he said. "Not
"At the beginning of the about who used the ancient only through artistic motifs
excavation I said that we necropolis . El-Ayedi said . and text, but many tests are
may rewrite the history of some of the tombs were just being done in the lab."

.

pubJishing a special.section on May 8th
in print and onJine.
This is a great way for • Hospitals •
· Nursing Homes • Home Medical ·.
. suppliers~ Clinics • Doctor's Offices •
, Health Departments • School Nursing
Programs, etc. to salute our hard-working nurses.

Birthdays

HADEEL AL,SHALCHI

ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

•

Public meetings .

Special stories on
Florence Nightingale and nursing

'
To Advertise Call
your ad representatives
740-446-2342
740~992-2155.
304-675-1333
Dea.dline is May 4th .

ALLPOWER EQUIPMENT

QI:be ~aUipoH~ 1\ailp tll:ribune

tll:be ~oint 5lea!lant l\egi~ter

740-446-2342

304-675-1333
.

.

.

RUTLAND - Brittany and Junior Ellis of Comhollov.:
Road, Rutland, announce the birth of.a daughter, Paisley .
Nicole, born on April 17 at the O'Bieness Memorial
Hospital in Athens .

The Daily Sentinel

•

Birth announced

•

•

�PageA2·

,NATION • WORLD"

The Daily Sentinel

Monday, Apri127, 2009

GM to announce brand .
changes, restructuring moves

ANNIE'S MAILBOX

Sister shares
blame for affair

'

DETROIT (AP) - General Motors Corp. will announce
details of its massive restructuring plan on Monday, including the demise of its storied Pontiac brand, more factory
closures and bigger job cuts as it fights to avoid bankruptcy.protection.
.
·
The struggling automaker must make the announcement
in advance of a planned offer to its bondholders to swap
debt for company stock. GM owes $28 billion to large and ·
small 'bondholders, and under Securities and Exchange
Commission rules, it must disclose its operationa] plans
before Jllaking an exChange offer..
.·
Two people briefed on OM's plan said the company h~
decided to close more factories than the five it announCed in
Februaiy. But the locations of the doomed factories will .not
be identified Monday, said. the people, who asked not to Ill:..
identified because the plan has not yet bl:en made ~blic.
· One of the people said GM will list specific numberS of
blue-collar job cuts, and announce another round of U.S.
salaried job cuts beyond the 3,400 completed last week. .
Chief Executive Fritz Hendehon has said the compan)'
. will go further~ faster i!l "!aking its cost cuts io reduce
the number of cars and trucks tt needs to sell to break even:
One of the people briefed on the plan said GM will acc.el-

Treasury
Secretary
Timothy
Geithner,
right. smiles
before a
development
committee
meeting·at
· the World
Bank head·
quarters in
Washington,
Sunday.
AP photo

Mh.
... -.-,..

.World Bank: Nations should.speed
.· aidto.·poor
countries with more than .nomic crisis, but yielded no will pro~ide shorter-term
$55 billion for public works . new pledges of money from financing than the pledges
projects .Jeft in limbo when governments:
.
. already made by other
WASHINGTON - The the recession hit. That folFinance ministers from the nations. ·
·
World Bank on Sund&lt;1y · lows a tiipling in lending, to Group · of Seven wealthy
Outside the World Bank
urged donor nations to speed $12 billion, to support nations met first on Friday, and IMF . headquarters,
up delivery of the money healt)J., education and other followed by a gathering of dozens of demonstrators
they've already pledged safety net programs in _POOr the Gr~Jt of 20 nations, · gathered. Protesters chantand ·open their wallets wider cou.ntries. The lntematiOnal. which
· major emerging ed: "IMF, tear it down!
- to help poor countries Monetary Fund is doubling powerhouses like China, . World .Bank, tear it down!"
reeling from recessions root- the borrowing limits for 78 India and Brazil to the mix. They also held banners and
ed in rich nations.
of the jlooresl countries in The talks ended with ·the signs that read, "No Bailout. .
The economic nosedive is an effort to meet the needs World Bank and lMF flexing No . Capitalism" and "Free
!liming into a human and of · developing . · nations ·a more muscular . role in People Nljlt Trade."
development "calamity," · harmed by the downturn;
addressing and ove~eing
The .
demonstration
which already has driven
The economic crisis is the crisis. Both ZoeUick and Sunday · follewed . a. larger
more than 50 million people ·"advancing like a silent IMF managing director one Saturday in which more
into extreme .poverty this tsunami, with. ihose .who Dominique Strauss-Kahn than 100 protesters ~!lashed
year, the World Bank's poli- ·contributed least to the cri- expressed support for the . with police. ('rote$ret'S said
cy steering committee said in sis suffering most from its , emetging market economies that . by pledging&gt; more
a communique issued al the impact," said . German to have a stron!lervoiCeatthe money to the lMF. wemthy
close of its spring meeting.
development
minister twin financialtnstitutions. · ~ountries were propping up .
"There 1s widespread Heidemarie
Wieczorek- · Earlier this month in a failed system. They ·said
recognition that the world Zeul. She said it would take London, leaders from the G- the IMF hlld given bad poli, .
faces an unprecedented eco- more money to help stabi- 20 pledged to boost support' ·CY advice during .Jr.ISI eco- ·
nomic crisis, poor people Jize poor nationt "without for the IMF, the World Bank nomic crises and the poorest ·
could 'suffer the mostand that plunging them into a spiral and oiher internationallend- countries were feeling' the
we. must continue to act in of debt.~'
·
ing organizations by ·$1.1 pain of a global financial
real time'lo prevent a human
Treasury . ·• . Secretary . trillion. to combat the ~lobal meltdown they didn't create.
catastrophe," World Bank Timothy Ge1thner said muJ, . recess1on. · - the b1~gest
Anti-poverty advocates
chief Robert Zoellick said.
tilateral development banks, · chunk being $500 b1llion said some World Bank ini- ·
Poor countries have led by the World Bank, are for emergency lending by tiatives to. help poor coun- ,
watched as the recession at the forefront af intema- tk IMF. More than $300 .tries come with too many
has dried . up investment tiona) efforts to lift more ·billion has been pledged by · strings attached.
capital, sharply reduced people out of poverty. "We the U.S ., the European
exports and commodity meet at an unprecedented Union, Japan, .. Canada,
prices and slowed the flow time when a severe global . Switzerland and. Norway. .
of cash sent home by their economic slowdown threat- . To make up the shortage.
citizens working abroad. ens to reverse major the IMF agreed Saturday to
.
Finance ministers at the · progress in poverty reduc" sell bonds - }omething it'1!
meeting· said impoverished tion," Geithner said. But he never done in .its 65 years nations need a. hand up that added that. it was important to emerging economies.
doesn't burden them with that development banks · Those nations · want a
debt or add to the ranks of conduct their aid business greater voice at the IMF
those earning just a few dol- with transparency.
before thefll ·p&lt;iny up addi'
lars·a day.
.
The World Bank meeting tiona! resources. The bonds
· The World Bank has capped three days of talks in would help reach the $500 ·. · ' '
pledged to provide poor Washington about th,e eco- billion goal, but the riotes ·

Bv DEB RIECHMANN

ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

:~ep~~~!e~~~~~~I&amp;:~o~:h~~g~~~ih~i:e~
not available.
·

Both people confirmed that the plan includes the death of
Pontiac, famous for the Trans Ani sportil car and the GTO;
Efforts in the last few years to market Pontiac; as perfor~
mance-oriented brand failed to work. The company kad
said it wanted to keeP. Pontiac as a niche brand wtth one or
two models; but is buckling under tremendous government
pressure to consolidate its eight brands, several of \Vhicb
lose money.
·
The people said GM won't have much new information
on Hummer, Saturn or other brands, including Europe's
Opel. GM has indicared it w;mts to focus · on four core
brands, Chevrolet, Cadillac, GMC 3nd Buick.
,
Also to be announced Monday will. be a target number for
dealer reduction, as well as details of OM's bond exchange
offer. But exact numbers were riot available Supday night.~
The 9 a.m.; EDT news. conference will include Chier
Executive Fritz Henderson, Chief Financial Officer Ray
Young, North American PresidentTroy Clarke ~d Mru:k
LaNeve, vice president of North American sales and mar•
keting. . ·· •• .
. ··
·
· GM js liViilg 'il.n,$1,.4 biJiion 'in government loans and
faces lfgov~ent-impos,ed June l deadline to restructure
or go intobankruptcy protection.
·
.
·
The .government's resll'Ucturing demands include swap·
ping at least two thirds of OM's unsecured bond debt for
ecjuity . in tlie company. Such a move would help GM
straighten outiits debt-laden balance sheet.
Chrysl!ll''LLC, which iSiiving on $4 billion in government
loans aiid is expected ,to get $500 tn!llion mo~. faces a
Thursday deadlme to,,restructure and .ink an alhance .deal
.with Italian autoi;llaket'Fiat SpA:Tbe government also wants
Chrysl~ to exc)}ange .,much ~fits $0.9 ~illion in debt for
eqwty ln ibe comJ?IUI)I; b!lt With. the deadl.me fast approach:
ing, Otrysler and Its secured debtholders remain far apart. .

'

Monday, April 27, 2009 ·

Job's Daughters to"'"'."'""._._"' 50th anniversary

MIDDL,EPORT
Majority Members, ·Past
Honored Queens, . and
Jobies will all gather in
Middleport on May 2 to celebrate a milestone in Meigs
County Job's Daughters his- ·
By KATHY MITCHELL
tory. The Bethel will tum 50
AND MARCY SUGAR
years old.
.
It was on May 2, 1959
' Dear Annie: My sister cheated on her husband and had
that
the Ohio's Job's
an affair with a married man for several years . The mao
Daughters
gathwas separated from his wife at the time. My sister insisted ered at community
·
the
Pomeroy
the man loved her ·dearly and passionately, and I believed
-Masonic Temple to institute
·
her since she seemed so happy.
' I later discovered that the entire time, the inan was trying Pomeroy Bethel #62 of the
to get his wife back. When his wife found out ahout the , International Order of Job's
affair, the guy dumped my sis&amp;er in a heartbeat. He has Daughters.
In its 50 year )!istory,
since been ·doing everythmg in his power 10 regain his
there
. · have been some
wife's love, trust and respect. Meanwhile, this man's wife
chan~es.
For instance; in ihe
told everyo,ne in town about my sister. She called my sister's· husband, let everyone at my sister's job know about 1970 s, the Bethel moved to
the affair, and also told my sister's teenage children. My the Middleport Masonic
Temple Where it · continues
~ister came out looking like a slut while I)Jis man was able
to meet today. Another
to get his family back.
.
Though I'm sqre the guy must be sufferin~. too, why is it chan~ bas been tbe age
ihat my sister is the worst person in the affarr? My brother- requrremeot to join the
In-law has stayed with ·her, but lie sees her as less than wor- organization. In 1959, girls
.
.
Submitted photo
. thy and tells her so constantly. Her Children have lost were required to be 12 years These . Meigs
County
Job's
Daughters
are
ready
to
celebr;;~te the 50th anniversary of
of
age,
now
a
10
year
•old
respect for her; Why should she be the only one to take. the
.blame? Because she is a woman and a mother? She had the can join · ·the Order. Bethel e2. Job's Daughters lnternationl!l, on May 2. They are left to right, Sadie Fox,
affair because the man told her he loved her. Why is she the Insurance regulations and Kristen Davis, Deidra Peters and Bunni Peters, pictured he.re at the reception for tlie Grant
the modem day have neces- Master for the 12th. Masonic District.
·
.
.
bad guy? - Angry Sister ·
sitated
another
change:
· . Dear Angry: Your sister is no more at fault than the
and most of all, 'have fun. the ·luncheon and a com- · that appropriate arrange,
Other Man, but she is not without blame. A man claiming Job's Daugbters is now Local Job's Daughters have memorative . pin/charm' ments can be made.
incorporated
thereby
changhe loves you is not a reason to cheat. She willingly entered
g&lt;me on · to become: teach- Tickets should be purchased . After that District V will
into this.affair, and there are consequences when you betray ing it from the International .ers,
doctors,laboratory tech- in advance of the event.
hold a reception honoring its
Order
of
Job's
Daughters
to
, your husband and family. Stop defending her poor choices,
Following
the
luncheoQ,
Grand Bethel Officers and
Daughters nicians,.nurses, and lawyers .
and suggest she and her husband get counseling so they can . Job '·s ·
the
Bethel
will
hold
a
The
celebration
will
begin
Representatives and Orand
International.
try to repair the damage. · ·
·· .
·with
a
luncheon
at
II
am
at
Majority
Ceremony.
Those
Officers.
. Most notably;
·
Overall,
however,
tilt'
Dear Annie: My 17-year-old son was dating a nice girl.
interested
in
participating
the
Middleport
Masonic
Kristen
Davis,
Grand Bethel
polar
guiding
star
of
the
When they broke up, she became a little upset11nd started
Honored
Queen,
·a Past
TeO)ple
with
Kathy
King
must
contact
Bethel
Guardian
harassing him at school. It got out of hand and she was sus- organization has remained Thomas presiding. Tickets . Greta Davis at 304-65-1516 Honored Queen and current
the same: a safe haven for
pended.
.,
· ·
.•
of Bethel 62 will be
· My son and this girl are.in orchestra together. During her young ladies to gather; Jearn ·can be purchased at Francis· or gretadavisesq@aol.Com in member
honored.
for
$15
and
includ.e
advance
of
the
ceremony
so
.
Florist
.
leadership
skills;
mature.:
suspension, there was a concert, which she wasn't allowed
to attend . The orchestra rules state that if you miss a per,
formance, you are marked down a grade. I just found out
she still received an "A" in orchestra and has been bragging
about getting straight A's even though she was .suspended.
. I· know the orchestra teacher triea to get the principal to
Materials must be postsent include an official tran- address and telephone nomRUTLAND
change her mind and let this girl perform at the concert. I'd Applications . are · being script of all high .school her unless deceased, and the marked by May I, and sent
like to call the principal arid bring this undeserved grade to .accepted for the 2009 grades based on the 4.0 college and intended course to: Rutland High School
her attention. It isn't right she still received an A when.she Rutland High School grading system to include at of study which the applicant Alumni Scholarship, Suzy
llidn't attend the performance. -Mom
.·
· Alumni seholarships.
. · Parker, .P.O. , Box 802,
least one semester of the has chosen.
Dear Mom: Please stay out o( this. What this girl did or
The
letter
should
state
Syracuse, Ohio 45779 .. For
Applicants must be grad- senior year; letter of appli· didn't get on her rep&lt;irt card is not your business. You are uating high school seniors cation staling the name, activities, honors, and other questions call 740-992trying to punish her because she harassed your son, but the who are the child ,or grand- address and telephone num- relevant information · the 5555, or email suzyparkapplicant wishes the alumni er@peoplepc.com .. ·
~~hool already did that, whether you approve of the result t;:hild of graduates of ber of the applicant, the
11r not. It's time to back off.
,
Rutland High · Scbool. name and graduation year committee to consider. The . Reciptents will be .con• ·Dear Annie: You blew it. I was in the same .situation as Application materials in11st of the Rutland High School applicant is also to include a tacted prior to ·the banquet
:'Desperate for Help iii Massachusetts," .whose Wife won't be postmarked by May I. · graduate who is the parent head shot photograph for so they may plan to be pre,
. have sex anymore. After putting our three children through The scholarships will · be or grandparent and .their publicity purposes.
··sent for the award.
college, I got out. Life is .too shot!. I was tired of having sex awarded on May 23 at the
by myself, but I endured; Havm~ fulfilled my parental annual
Rutland High
obligations to the max, itwas high ttme I devoted the rest of Alumni banquet at the ·
my life to me ..I found a normal woman and have had the Rutland Civic Center
~ pleasure of enjoying intimacy before I die.
Application material to be .
My ex and I are still good friends; but I will never consider marrying a¥ain. Twenty-seven years is enough. - It's About Time m Louisville
·Dear ~oulsville: This worked .for you, .but diV&lt;?rce isn't ·
the solull()n for everyone, and we believe 10 mostmstances
couples should do. their best to save the marriage before
taking this final step. But we appreciate your weighing in.
GALLIPOLIS
~
Annie's Mailbox is written by Kathy Mitchell and Acco~ding to the Centers
Msrcy Sugar, lon11,time editors of the Ann Lander:s col· for Disease Control and
umn. Pkase e-mail your questions to anniesmailboxcom· Prevention (CDC), more
cast.net, or write to: Annie's Mailbox, P.O. Box 118190, . than one-third of older
Chicago, IL 60611. To find out more about Annie's A!llericlllls, age 65 and up,
Mailbox, andread features by other .Creators Syndicate suffer an unintentional fall
writers and cartoonists, visit the Creators Syndicate Web · each year.
page aJ www.crt~ators.co/il.
The CDC · also reported
that ·some 433,000 senior
citizens were hospitaiized in
2005 due to unintentional
falls and another 15,800
died from injuries related to
falls.
· The Holzer Medical
Center-Gallipolis physical · ·
.
.
Tuesday, April 28
.
POMEROY- The Oh-I&lt;;AN Coin Club will have a din- therapy department wants to
ner meeting at 7 p.m. at the Pomeroy Library. A meeting help local .residents main.tain . a . safer, - healthier
and auction will follow. Public invited. .
·
lifestyle. by offering a hal.
Wednesdqy, Aprll29
POMEROY- The Middleport Liter~ Club will meet at ante clinic from 2 to 5 p.m.
2 p.m., at the Pomeroy Library. Pam 0 Brien will review on Wednesday, April 29 .in
"Auditions" by Barbara Walters. Hostess will be Gay Perrin. Conference Rooms A and B.
The clinic is offered at no
. ·
Saturday, May 2
.
cost to those who attend. ·
MIDDLEPORT - Job's Daughters Bethel 62, 11 a.m.
Experience&lt;), licensed
50th anniversary dinner. 2 p.m. open meeting with major,
physical
therapists . from
· ity ceremony: Honored Queen Harley Fox presiding and HMC-Gallipolis
will pron:ception honoring Kristen Davis, Grand Bethel Honord vide free balance screenulgs
Queen to follow meeting.
as well as falls ri&gt;ks scores
and home safety education•
al tips. Refreshments will
also be provided. '
Monday, May 4
For information or to reg' .
NEW HAVEN, W,Va. - Mildred Fry )Viii observe her is.ter for the bplancl! clinic
95th birthday ori May 4. (:ards may be sentto her at P.O . at Holzer Medical Center. Gallipolis, ·call 740-446Box 75, New Haven, W,Va. 25265 . .
5121.
.
Holzer Met,lical Center is
located at 100 Jackson Pike
in Gallipolis. For more
Monday, April 27
informntion, visit www.holz-.
POMEROY
Veterans Service Commission, 9 a.m., er.org.
11 T Memorial Dr., Pomeroy.
POMEROY - Meigs County Library Boar(), 3:30 p.m.
at the library.
.
.
·
RACINE - Southern Local School Board, regular meet. ing, 8 p.ni., high school media room .
· ·
.
' ~· HP, 3.CYUNOER KUBOTA DIES~l
POMEROY - State Rep. Debbie Phillips, D-Athens,
win host open constituent office hours 3-5 p.m., Pomeroy
Library. Meigs County residents will have the opportunity
to share their concerns or suggestions about state wlicy
·
. ·
. with Rep. Phillips.
ONE Milt WEST OF
VISIT OUR NEWfST LOCAiiONI
Tuesday, April 28
ATHENS ON ROUrE 50/32
BUS. RT. 33 SOUTH Of LANCA.STER
POMEROY - Meigs County Emergency Planning
ATHENS, OH
LANCASTER, 0~
Committee, II :30 a.m;, Meigs Senior Center. Lunch will be.
740-593-3279/800-710-1917
740-653-2827
. available.
· "Your Frienrl/y OuiJoor AJww fquipr,Jenf anJ Tracfor Supenlore~

a

Holzer offers
balance clinic

llil••••••llli
~· ..

PageA3

·RHS Alumni to award scholarShips

·-

.

BYTHEBEND

)be paily Sentinel

.

,

':"o' -

.

Community Calendar ·

Clubs and organizations

' '

In recognition of all the caring men and women in the
nursing field, 'QI;be ~alltpoU~ :il9ail~

Q:ribune; Q:be ~otnt -'lleasant l\egi~ter
and
The
.
.. . Dally Sentinel wiil he

·

·

•

··

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'

. APphoto

An Egyptian worker brushes an aincient Pharao~ic.sarcophagus allllahun mayor's dauqh- .

ter dated to the 22nd Dynasty (ca. 931-725 BC) 1ns1dea rock-cuttomb wh1ch has been discovered by an Egyptian archaeological mission sponsored by the Supreme Council of ,
Antiquities (SCA) southeastern part of the pyramid field of lllahun, Sunday. in Egypt's
:Fayoum region.
··

Egypt unveils ancient necropolis south of Cairo
BY

the site, and I was right," 2,800 years old, while othsald Abdel-Rahman el- ers were from the Middle
Ayedi, ~e deputy secr~tarx Kingdom, which dates back
: ILLAHUN, Egy~t :- of Egypt sSupreme Connell 2061-1786 B.C. . ·
£gyphan archaeologists on of Antiquities .who oversaw ; Some had a single buri!ll
Sunday unveiled mult\IIIies, the dig.
shaft, while others had .
brightly painted sarcophagi
Three slim wooden sar- . upper and lower chambers.
and dozens of ancient tombs cophagi believed to be.hold- A funerary cl)apel with. an
parved into a rocky hill in a in$ female mummies were offering table, painted
desert oasis south of Caim. · · latd out 'in one of the tombs . . masks, pottery, statues ~d
: · The 53 tombs - some as The innermost coffms .were protection charms known as
old as 4,000 years - were painted to resemble the amulets were also found at
discovered recently on a deceased using blue, yel- · the site, el-Ayedi sl!id.
sandy plateau overlooking low, ~stand black dyes.
Archaeologists hope to
In another tomb, workers . study the mummies' boties
farming fields in the village
IUahun., located in the slowly rer:noved the lid qf: to l.e~rn more about the
Fayoum oasis ·about 50 one mscnbed w1th h1ero" nutnuon, . health and cos. miles (80 kilometers) south- glyphic prayers to reveal a , toms of the people who ..
west of the Egyptiari caJ?itai . colorful mummy case that used to Jive in the area, el. Archaeologists gave JOUr- ei-Ayedi said belonged to a Ayedi said.
"It will help us to follow
nalists a rare tour of the . woman named Isis Her lb,
ancient burial site Sunday, the da~ghter of one of the development of funeral
which is next to the nearly lllahun s mayors nearly architecture, beliefs and
four millennia old pyramid 4,000 years ago. ·
customs
of
ancient
of Pharaoh Sesostris II.
Not much was known Egyptians," he said. "Not
"At the beginning of the about who used the ancient only through artistic motifs
excavation I said that we necropolis . El-Ayedi said . and text, but many tests are
may rewrite the history of some of the tombs were just being done in the lab."

.

pubJishing a special.section on May 8th
in print and onJine.
This is a great way for • Hospitals •
· Nursing Homes • Home Medical ·.
. suppliers~ Clinics • Doctor's Offices •
, Health Departments • School Nursing
Programs, etc. to salute our hard-working nurses.

Birthdays

HADEEL AL,SHALCHI

ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

•

Public meetings .

Special stories on
Florence Nightingale and nursing

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To Advertise Call
your ad representatives
740-446-2342
740~992-2155.
304-675-1333
Dea.dline is May 4th .

ALLPOWER EQUIPMENT

QI:be ~aUipoH~ 1\ailp tll:ribune

tll:be ~oint 5lea!lant l\egi~ter

740-446-2342

304-675-1333
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RUTLAND - Brittany and Junior Ellis of Comhollov.:
Road, Rutland, announce the birth of.a daughter, Paisley .
Nicole, born on April 17 at the O'Bieness Memorial
Hospital in Athens .

The Daily Sentinel

•

Birth announced

•

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�.

OPINION

The Daily Sentinel

The Daily Sentinel
111 Court Street ·Pomeroy, Ohio

(740) 992-2156 • FAX (740) 992-2157
www.mydallysentinel.co·m

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
Dan Goodrich

Publisher
Charlene Hoeflich .

General Manager-News Editor

Congress shall make no law respecting an
· establishment of religion, or prohibiting the
free exercise there'?{; or abridging the freedom
of speech,, or of the press; or the right of the
people peaceably to assemble, and to petition
the Government for a·redress ofgrievances.
- The Firat Amendment to the U.S. Constitution

TODAY IN HISTORY
Today is Monday, April27 , the !17th day of 2009. There
are 248 days left in the year.
Today 's Highlight in History:
Five hundred years ago, on April27, 1509, Pope Julius II
placed the Republic of Venice under an interdict following
ns refusal to give up lands claimed by the Papal States.
(The pope lifted the sanction the following year.)
On thts date:
· In 152.1, Portut:uese exP.Iorer Ferdinand Magellan .was
killed by natives m the Phtlippines. ·
·
.
In 1570, Pope Pius .V excommunicated Queen Elizabeth
I.

·. In i805, during the First Barbary War, an U.S.-led force
of Marines and mercenaries captured the city of Dema, on
the shores of Tripoli, Libya.
. In 1822; the 18th president of the United States, Ulysses
S. Grant, was.born in Point Pleasant, Ohio.
. In i865, the steamer Sultana exploded on !he Mississippi
River near Memphis, Tenn., killing more than 1,400 people, mostly freed Union prisoners of war.
In 1932. American poet Hart Crane, 32, drowned after
jumping from a steamer into the Gulf of Mexico while en
.route to New York:
'
In 1965, broadcast journalist Edward R. Murrow died in
Pawling, N,Y., two days after turning 57.
In !967, Expo '67 was officially opened in Montreal by
Canadian Prime Minister Lester B. Pearson.
In 1973 , acting FBI Director L. Patrick Gray resigned
after it was revealed that he had handed over bureau files
on the Watergate burglary to the Nixon White House.
. In 1978, convicted Watergate defendant John D.
Ehrlich man was released from an Arizona prison after serving 18 months. Fifty-one construction worke!'li plunged to
. their deaths when a scaffold inside a cooling tower at the
Pleasants Power Station site in West Virginia fell 168 feet
to the ground.
.
·
'
.
.
Ten years ago: A week after the Columbine High School
massacre, ·President Bill Clinton called for new gun control
measures, saying, "People's lives are at stake here." Jazz
trumpeter AI Hirt died in New Orleans·at 76. ·
· Five years .ago: Iraqi police moved into the streets of the
besieged city of Fallujah following hours of pounding by
U.S. warplanes and artillery on Sunni insurgents. A rup'
tured pipeline began spilling 123,774 gallons of diesel fuel
into Sutsun Bay, east of San Francisco. Republican Sen.
Arlen Specter of Pennsylvania beat back a tough primary
threat, barely defeating conservative Congressman Pat
Toomey.
.
One year ago: Afghan'President Hamid Karzai escaped
. an auempt on 1\is life during a ceremony in Kabul mark.ing Afghanistan's victory over .Soviet occupation in the
· 1980s:· three other people were killed in .the shooting.
Ashley Force; 25, became the first woman to win a
national Funny· Car race. She beat her father, drag-racing
icon John Force, in the final round of the 28th annual
Summit Racing Equipment Southern Nationals in
Commerce, Ga.
Thought for Today: "Everyone is a prisoner of his own
experiences. No one can eliminate prejudices - just rec- ·
ognize them." - Edward R. Murrow, American broadcast
jou~alist (1908-1965).

LETTERS TO THE
EDITOR
· Letters to the editor are· welcome. They should be less
thim 300 words. All/etters are subject to editing, must be
signed. and include address and telephone number.. No
unsigned letrers will be published. Letters should be in
good taste, addressing ·issues, not persooolities. Letters of
thanks to organizations and indi~iduals will not be accepted for publication.

The Daily Sentinel
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Obituaries

Past time to let go ifAfghanistan

I

•

The Daily Sentinel • P~tge As

12-county food distribution center opens

McARTHUR - A second Claypool Hollow Road in
To help clients reach
With its regional divisions
Lutheran Social Services McArthur, the recently- those goals, Outreach of Lutheran Social Services
(LSS) distribution center opened Vinton County Ministries' staff and volun- of Southern Ohio and
·, POMEROY - Kenneth William Diddle, 83, of Syracuse has been established in Distribution Center will teers provide case mana$e- Lutheran Social Services of
died Saturday, April25, at his home.
Vinton County as another help county residents meet ment services while provtd- Northern Ohio. Lutheran
,. Born on July 22, 1925, he was the son of the late resource in the battle the•r basic needs while ing necessities, including Social Services of Central
Herschel and Belle Bohram Diddle.
against poverty.
working to sustain self-suf- clothing, household items, Ohio serves thousands of
1
The new distribution cen- ficiency.
bedding, appliances and fur- people each day by focusing
He is survived by two sisters, sisters, Carol (Paul)
"LSS
will
reach
many
niture
and school supplies. on the core societal issues
ter
will
allow
Outreach
Osborne of·Lancaster, and Mary Cundiff of Syracuse, and
a brother, David Diddle of Syracuse. and several nieces, Ministries to help an addi- low-income .families who Case management services of hunger. housing, healing
nephews and cousins.
tional I 2 Ohio counties: currently do not have access · assist each person served and hope.
J:le was preceded .in death by a brother, Floyd Diddle, IIJld Fairfield, Pike, · Ross, to servtces that can help ·with developing a plan to
LSS
provides
food
II. stster, Betty Martin. · ·
Scioto, Lawrence, Gallia, them, and we ·will strive to gain self-sufficiency.
pantries, homeless shelters,
The distribution center is senior living, . affordable
. :.Graveside services will be held at I p.m. Thesday at the Meigs, Athens, Jackson, help our clients set and
V.inton,
Hocking and attain certain goals," said . ·open .Monday through housing communities and
Greenwood Cemetery. There will be no visitation.
"
.
Pielcaway.
Mary Woodward, director Friday, 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. other programs and services
The building was made of Outreacb Ministries . Families may sign up for that uplift families and
possible through Southeast "Simply giving a client ·services by visiting the strengthen communities. ·
Testament, another non- some items will only take office or 5Cheduling an LSS is affiliated with the
"
profit organization .in the care of their shorJ-term · appointment. Volunteers are Evangelical .
Lutheran
..•
area that collects 'items for needs. Our mission is to alSo neeiled in the distribu- Church in America, recogfamilies in need. The orga- work With clients to not lion center. To schedule an nized by the Lutheran
nization built 'the facility only meet those immediate appointment or volunteer,. Church --' Missouri Synod
'-.
arid is sharing the space. needs;· but tQ provide ser- contact Mary Woodward at and a charter member of
' CHESTER - The Chester-Shade Historical Association with Outreach.Ministries. . viees that will help tltem set 740-732•6700 or mwood- Lutheran Sociai Services in
, Located. at
31860 and attain cert;J.in goals."
ward®lssco.6rg.
America.
i~ sponsoring a tea party and maypole wrapping on Saturday,
May 2, from I to 3 p.m. at the Chester Courthouse.
.
• l'Jach child will also make a craft. There is a $3 charge for
each child and an adult must accompany the ,children.
Seating space is limited so reservations need to be made by
burdel!ed from African streets, but it changes hqw
We~nesday, April 29. Children can "dt'ess up" or wear
.
.
.
.
refu_gees
· and Bosnian ·war they feel about themselves,"
tai.tsal clothing. Reservations can be made by calling Kaye
JACKSON
Mary report¢d that last year a victims, caused her to take said Mary. . "It tells them
Fick at 985-4115 pr by calling the Chester Courthouse at
total of 16,175 gift-filled up Graham's ' invitation. they are special!"
Damron,
Operation
?85-9822 and giving the namo and age of each child .
Christmas Child national · shoeboxes · were con- That year she collected
Damron's mission with
spokesperson, will be com- tributed in Southeast Ohio some 1,200 shoe· box gifts Operation Christmas Child
ing to the Celebration and distributed to children · .and hand"delivered them on has taken her from the devMeeting of the Southeast around the w.orld.
Thanksgiving D,ay to the astated streets of Sarajevo
Ohio Area Team to share
To celebrate the success Samaritan's Purse head- . to the filthy living condi,
tions in a Kosovo refugee
!· Monday...Sunny . . Highs · Wednesday
night... he~ story bof lobyled.and dededi- of last year and plan for an quarters in Boone,N.C.
even
bigger
cbllection
of
Impacted
by
her
enthusicamp,
and the stage of the
in the upper 80s. Southwest Mostly cloudy with a 30 · cation tot e c t reo serv
boxes
this
year,
Operation
asm
and
initiative,
Graham
Grand
Ole Opry to th.e
winds 10 to.15mph.
. percent chance of showers. through . .
Operation
Christmas Child is .hosting invited Damron to travel on White House Oval Office. · ·
• Monday night ... Mostly .Lows in the lower 50s.
Christmas Child.
·
her frrst shoe box distribuIn addition ·to National
,1 · h
·
Th
T h.
d
M
Damron
will
be
joining
1 theSoutheastOhioArea this celebration meeting.
cear1nteevemng ... en
urs ay ... osty
1n speaking at the meeting rion trip. to · Europe. Since Spokesperson, Mary served ·
becoming partly cloudy. cloudy with a 40 percent Team · at Faith Baptist Damron will tell her story 1994, Damron and her as the Regional Director' iii
Lows in the upper 50s. . chance of showers. Highs in Church, 703 Pattonville of · how · she became neighbors have not stop_P.Cd West Virginia for eiglit _
~outh winds 10 to 15 mph.
the lower 70s.
Thursday nlght...Cioudy Rd., Jackson, on Monday, inv~lved in . Operation colfecting shoe box· gtfts , years until 2008 .' She con• Tuesday...Partly sunny
4 at 1 p.m. She has Chnstmas Chtld m 1994 adding 860;000 from all tinues to serve as a ministry
.J_t.th
a chance of showers wt'th a 50 percent chance-of · · May
w
~layed a key role in bring- after
hearing Franklin over West Virginia to the 62 advocate and represents the
;ind thunderstorms, Not as showers. Lows in the mid mg ho~ to millions of chil- Graham, president of million that have been project as a ,National
~arrn with highs in the 50s.
dren hving in some of the Samaritan's Purse, urge delivered in more than 130 Spokesperson.
upper 70s. Southwest winds
Friday...Cioudy with a most desperate places people to participate in the countries.
For more informatio·n,
3 to 10 mph with gusts up to chance of showers. Highs in around the world.
proJect by packing shoe box
"Giving a shoe box does- contact Operation Christmas
::ZO mph. Chance of rain 50 the lower 70s. Chance of
Tiffany Pistole, media gifts for qeedy children n'.t take the children off of Child volunteer Tiffany
percent.
·
rain 50 percent.
coordinator for . project worldwide.
the garbage dumps. out of Pistole
(740.858.0973)
,: Tuesday nlght...Showers
Friday nlght...Cioudy work in .Southeast Ohio
She said her heart already the otphanages, or off of the tiffany_pistole@yahoo.com.
and .thundc:rstorrns likely. with a chance of showers.
Lows in the mid 50s. West Lows in the · lower 50s.
winds 5 to 10 mph. Chance Chance of rain 40 percent.
of rain 70 percent.
Saturday .. ;Most I y
Wednesday ... Mosily cloudy .
in
the Bv ·ANDAEW
. year that overturned Bies' and an onset of mental dis• Supreme Court.
cloudy with a 50 percent moming ...Then becoming WEj.Sif-HUBGINS
death sentence. A ruling is ability before age 18.
'The state has had their
chance of showers. ,Highs partly sunny. Highs· in the AssociATEO PRESS WRITER
i:xpected by summer.
At the time, the ruling . bite
the. apple," said
around 70.
upper 60s.
At least 85 death row was one of the biggest shifts · Randall Porter, an assistant
COLUMBUS
The 'inmates, including four in the court's·death penalty state public defender.... How
state is fighting to reinstate ·. from Ohio, have successful- positions . in years. It many times are we going io
the death sentence of acon- "Jy challenged their death reversed its pos1tiori from .make a guy that's mentally
victed killer, arguing .he sentences under the. 2002 'lg89, when the high coUrt retarded prove he's mentalmust prove again that he is decision. ·
.
ruled there was ilo national . ly retarded?"
·
...·
mentally disabled under
Unlike . Bies, those four consensus 'thai executing
The · 6th U.S. Circuit
returning to the same airport U.S, Supreme Court stan- .used the standards laid out . the mentally disabled was Court of Appeals in
LOUISVILLE (AP) by the high court. Bies unconstitutionaL
Cincinnati ordered · a new
The Ohio Highway Patrol when the plane went down dards.
Ohio
says.the
merital
.
s
tate
(BEYE'
-ess)
bases
his
arguThe
court
doesn't
sentencing hearing for Bies,
says a pilot flying a single- at about 10:53 a.m. ·
of
Michael
Bies
.has
never
ment
on
earlier
rulings
by
explain
why
.
it
takes
·the
which has not been held. ·
engine homemade Sonex
Taulbee says McGrath
Bies was convicted of
airplane died when he. was alone when the plane received a proper hearing state coUrts that upheld both cases it does. Cordray says
because
state
court
findings
his
conviction
and
his
death
a
decision
in
the
B
ies
case
killing
Aaron Raines in an
crashed in a wooded field crashed in Nimishillen
came
six
years
before
the
sentenee
while
acknow)edg•
could
have
as
much
to
do
abandoned
building. Bie~
while attempting to land in Townshlp, about .five miles
Supreme
Court
in
2002
ing
his
low
IQ
of
69.
with
clarifying
·
the
.
rela·
and
his
accomplice,
Darryl
east · of Canton. She says
nortl;teast Ohio.
''Bies's personality elisor- tionship between the feder- Gumm, decided they wantPatrol spokeswoman Sgt. the aircraft's cockpit and barred the execution of the
der and mild to borderline al and state courts when it ed to have sex with a child
Karla Taulbee says 87 -year- right side were heavily mentally disabled. .
"You wouldn't . bother mental retardation merit comes to .criminal appeals and lured the boy ·to the
·
old Robert. McGrath. of damaged.
arguing
over whether some- some weight in mitigation.~· as it does with the issue of building by offering him
The Federal Aviation
Louisville took off f rom
Yoder Airport in Stark · Administration is investi" body got one foot in bounds the Ohio Supreme Court how mental disability is $10 to. help them remove
scrap metal.
County Saturday morning, gating the cause of the acci- if the rule at the time was said in its 1996 decision decided.
they had to ha:ve tWo, but upholding the sentence.
When Dies was· put on
When the boy refused to
.
flew to Salem and was dent. .
now that the rule's been . Bies argues the state trial in 1992, his disability submit to the men, Gumm
changed that one matters, would· be committing dou- was just one o'f several fac- and Bies beat him repeatedyou might well nave differ- ble jeopardy by holding a tors that could have pre- ly with a wooden board,
from
Page
At
ent
things to say about that hearing on his mental dis- vented . a deatli sentence, metal pipe and block of
"
issue," said Ohio Attorney ability since state courts Cordray said. Now .mental concrete.
Lifeflight and three EMS addition to the State General Richard Cordray.
already determined his disabihty is a definitive
Bies eventually confessed
vehicles transported the Highway Patrol were sev- . Bies, 36; killed a 10-year-· mental state.
issue by itself so the state to police. Gumni, 43, also
ij!jured to area hospitals. eral Meigs EMS squads, old boy in Cinciimati in
The U.S. Supreme Court needs a chance to fully received a death sentence.
Pomeroy
Fire 1992.
J'heir names and other the
defined mental disability as argue the point, he said.
The sentence was commutdetails of the accident have Department, Dr. Douglas . Tbe Supreme Court on significantly sub-average · Bies' attorneys say the ed in 2007 to 48 years to.life
not be~n released by the Huntet, · coroner, Larry .Monday will hear Ohio's intellectual functioning, sig- · state . court . findings are after a trial and appeals
~tate Highway Patrol pend- Marshall, assistant.coroner,
challenge ·to a federal .nificant limitations .in two enough lo meet the stan- court upheld his mental dising completion of the inves- and Matthew Donahue appeals court decision last or more day-to-day skills da'rds laid out by the U.S. ability claim.
·
from the Mei~s County
~igation.
. ·
~· On the accident scene in prosecutor's offtce .. .

Kenneth William Diddle

Saw an unforg~ttably
ging ourselves intq__Central want to," eliminating the
stark photo of Taliban fightAsia. I called up retired need for massive land bases
ers in Afghanistan's Wardak
Maj . Gen. Paul Vallely, one such as Bagram Air Base in
province, the same province
of the few top military lead- Afghanistan, by now a
ers who talks on the record, small city of 20,000
Joint Chiefs Chairman
Adm. Mike Mullen visited
to ask for his strategy rec- American personnel who
Diana
last week: Eight robed, turohtmendation
for continuously need to be
West
baned fighters, a sandy
Afghanistan.
,supplied and secured at
"Basically, let it go," he ,enormous exJ!ense.
.
ridge, .~ c_loudy sky. ~II that
was mtsstrig was the mcomsaid.
"There.'s no permanent
Let Afghanistan go ing American drone strjke .
force," the· general said.
to tum the men into dust.
fact ; bona-fide jihad to · music to my ears, particu- 'That's the beauty of it." Wo
Question: Should the
.
larly given the source is no watch, we wait and · when
United States call in that . advance Sharia (lslamtc Hate-America-First. profes- U.S. interests are threatstrike? How great a security law). Anybody remember sur or Moveon-dot-org-nik, en~, "we basically use- o~
threat to the United States Sisyphus? Well. trying to but a lifelong patriotic con- strike forces to take them
transform Afghanistan into
do these eight barbarians an anti-jihad, anti-Sharia servative warrior. "There's out, target by target." This
pose? How many dollars, player - let alone function- nothing to win there," he would work whether .the
how much blood ts it worth al nation _ is like trying to explained, engaging in an threat came from Al Qaeda,
to our nation' to pulverize roll Sisyphus· rock up the all-too-exotic display of Pakistani mikes or anything
common sense, "What do else.
them into that lunar-like hill .
He continued: '"This idea
landscape?
TI;tis· is not. to suggest .that you get for it? What's the
I recently read a military there is no war or enemies return? Well, the return's all that we're going to go in
e-mail ·from Afghanistan to fight, which is what both negative for the United and. bring democracy · to·
these tribal cultures isn't
that marveled over a similar the Left and the Paleo-Ri$ht States."
The
general
continued:
goi)lg
to work. we have a
scene: "As.far as BDA (bat- will say; there most certamtle damage assessment) ly are. But sinking all possi- . "This doesn 'I mean giving problem with terrorist coun:
goes, check this one out. 2 ble men, materiel and up battle. What it means is tries, like 'Iran; it's a lot
GBU 36's (bomblets) bureaucracy
into you transition to a more cheaper to go in and hit
dropped the other day on Afg~anistan, as the Obama realistic, affordable strate!ly them and get back out." .
In other words, don't give
estimated 6 guys!!!! That is people and most conserva- that keeps them (the jihadtst
up ·the battle; just give up
half a million dollars on 6 . tives favor, to try to bring a enemy) from sprellding."
Such a strategy, Vallely the nation-building. "It's up
guys!!!!" The e-mailer corrupt' Islamic culture into
explained,
relies on "the to somebody else to build
guessed that all the sniper workmg modernity while
fighting · maximum use of uncon- nations," the general said:
ammunition the jihadtsts simultaneously
have used in the whole war Taliban and wading deep ventional forces," such as "Not us."
He went on: "That' old
into treacherous ·Pakistani Navy SEALS anti other
hasn't cost close to that.
special forces, who can be niyth that '(Colin} Powell
The point is, the United wars is no w~y to vi_ctory States is getting a lot of · at least not to U.S. victory. · deployed as needed from bad - if you break it you
bang for a lot of buck but On the contrary, it is the what are known in military . own it - that's a myth. You
not much else. Don't get me best way to bleed and fur- parlance as "lily pads" -- break it, you decide whether.
wrong: If killin~ small ther de~de U.S. military outposts or jumping-off you own it, You don't have
bands of Taliban ts in the capabilities. Indeed, if I points in friendly countries to go in and own it."
· ,
best interest of the United were a jihad . chieftain, I (Israel, ·
Northern
And especially not when
India, it is Islamic land that
Stales, I'm for it. But I do couldn't imagine a better Kurdistan,
not believe it is - and cer- strategy than to entrap tens Philippine's, Italy, Djibouti doesn"t belong in the West.
tainly not as paJ1 of the of thousands of America's ... ) and from U.S. aircraft
(Diaoo West is the author
grand strategy conceived very be~t young men in an carrier strike groups. Such of "The Death of th~
first by the Bush adminis- · o~n-ended war of mortal · strike groups generally Grown-up: How America's
tration and now expanded hide-and-seek in the North include eight to 10 ·vessels Arrested Development
by the Obama administra- West Frontier.
"with more fire power," the Bringing Down Western
tion to tum Afghanistan into
I decided to ask ·someone general noted, "than most · Civilization," and blogs dl
a· state capable of warding with real ·military experi- nations." These lily pads dianawest.net. She can bt
off what is daintily known ence how we could fend off become · "bases we can . contacted
via
as "extremism," but is, in . jihad without further dig- launch from any . time we dianawest@verizon.net) . ':

Local Briefs

Chlldren's inaypole
wrapping and tea party

Operation Chrisbnas Chll~ to ltold celebration

u

Natioruilleader to speak at district rally .

Local Weather

Is

Ohio: Condemned killer must_prove disability again'

if#~~ · .

of

QU~!~1

GRO\NLLL

Ohio Patrol: Homemade
plane crashes, pilot killed

G~lLLL

qAAPJ'l~Pl
.
.
'

&lt;

'

0 -

'

..
!

Analysis: Obama walks thin line on i~terrogations
general should make such
Democrats·expect a: more one hand, Ob'ama cannot
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITE~
decisions. ·
sub(jued and time-consum- spurn his liberal backers
Oit Tuesday, Obama said ing inquiry to be conducted too often, and he already
WASHINGTON
he wanted to look forward, by the Senate Intelligence · has disappointed them oil
Barack Obama, facing per- not back, but he! would pre- Committee, chaired by issues such as sending .
haps the trickiest political fer an independent commis- Dianne Feinstein, D-Calif. . more
troops
to
Issue of his young presiden- sion to a complete congres- She says the effort . will Afghanistan .
cy, is trying· to appease his sional investigation ifit full- · .take months, which might · But the president also
liberal base.. without losing .blown inquiry is · pursued. allow the issue to cool cannot afford to let
control of a potentially On Thursday, the president down a bit.
Republican strategists pur'
volatile inquicy into George · told congressionaf leaders
It's red hot for now, how- tray the CIA interrogations
W. Bush administration's he had no interest in such a ever. Liberal groups, blogs matter as a case of
use of harsh interrogation r.anel, which some call a and Web sites are demand- Democratic overreaching,
tactics against terrorism 'truth commission." · ·
ing full-bore inquiries and perhaps romparable to the
suspects.
House Speaker Nancy possible prosecutions . of GOP's strategic overreach
One step to the left or Pelosi, D-Calif., continues the lawyers and officials in
impeaching
thenright could land him in to call for such a commis- who justified the tactics. President Bill Clinton.
political trouble.
sion ·With subpoena powers. Those tactics il)cluded 11
Matt Bennett, vice presiIf Obama seems inclined But lawmakers agree that days of sleep deprivation dent of the moderate.
to stifle an investigation·and the idea is probably dead, at for some detainees and · Democratic group Third
possible prosecutiQn of least for .now.
·
repeated waterboarding, an Way, said the. potentiallY.
Bush admmistration offiThat leaves hearings in ordeal that simulates unconstitutional actions ot
cials who approved rough the hands of House and drowning.
the Bush administration
tnterrogations by· the CIA, Senate committees, which
Recently released memos officials re~uire looking
he may infuriate liberal . Democr&amp;ts control. The from the Justice Department into. But he s wary of a
activists who were crucial House
Judiciary "provide shockinl! confir- potentially partisan food
to his election: But if Committee, chaired by Rep. mation
of htgh-level fil!ht if congressional comDemocratic
lawmakers John Conyers of Michigan, involvement in the sadistic mtttees alone conduct the
appear too zealous in pursu- has an especially large num- interrogation methods the investigations.
· tng departed GOP govern- ber of sharply partisan Bush administration autho"If !his were to proceed,"
ment. offi~;ials, they rni~t Democrats
and rized the CIA to use on Bennett said. "the best
be portrayed as vmdicllve · Republicans, who could detainees," the American model
is
the
9/11
and
backward-loo.kin~, produce televised fireworks Civil Liberties Union says Commission, with unquesundermining
Obama s and unpredictable results.
on its Web site. "It is inde- tionably responsible. leadullage as a forward-looking
Terry Holt is among the · fensible to avoid investigat- ers, like Lee Hamilton ." .
figure of hope and progress. Republican strategists who ing and prosecuting those Hamilton,
a
former
While Obama.struggles to think Ob3J0a and his allies responsible
for
these Democratic lawmaker from
calibrate
the
matter; will suffer j)ecause the see- heinous crimes."
Indiana, co-chaired the
Republicans sense a possi- nario is apt to look more
Liberal talk show host Ed highly regarded commisble gap in his armor and an like a witch hunt than a Schultz said this week on sion that investigated the
uncharacteristic shakiness sober search for justice. ·
MSNBC that many liberal 2001 terrorist attacks.
10 his message.
"It would be a total circus Democrats "want to see
But Obama threw cold
In the past few days, the and be complete chaos and prosecution. Does the r,resi- water on the independent
White House signaled that it expose them to terrible dent just ignore them?'
commission idea Thursday.
wpu~d nqt support th~ pros- risk," Holt said. "Obama's
After 2,000 viewers That leaves Congress, and
ecutton of Bush admimstra- political strength is based teued their opmtons. the nation, with an unclear
tion lawyers who had justi- on the notion that he is the Schultz said, "Ninety-four path on how to pursue a
fied . the interrogation tac- future, moving forward . I percent want to see Bush combustible question .
(Charles Babington covtics, which Obama has felt Obama 's first instinct officials prosecuted."
likened to torture. Later, was the correct one: to let
The White House is ers the White House for Tire
Obama said the attorney this stuff go."
walking a careful line. On Associated Press) .
BY CHARLES BABINGTON

Crash

&lt;

•

Costs from Page At

•

. ·•

lt

said it is difficult to determine what the trial will cost
the county, but said comhussioners have begun to
l:stablish line items for various expenses in the case. ·.
.• Davenport said he ·was
'now lookin_g at customary
!;:osts assocu11ed with such
11 trial, in an effort . to

0

determine what might be
needed in ·terms of general
fund approp~iations for
defense costs.
"It is difficult .to tell in
these cases what those
expenses will run. but we
are finding out what we can
do and take it as it comes,"
Davenport said.

Grant from Page AI

•

women in its 30-county ser.vice area with critical breast
health
programming
throughout the next .:year.
· "Unfortunately,Ohto ranks
,an ahirming fourth in the
nation in breast cancer mortality," said Katie Carter,
executive director of Komen
Columbus. "That makes it
t.ven more imperative for us
to increase our pro~ram
rt:ach and funding . This ts the
first year that all 88 counties
1hroughout Ohio are serviced
by one of the four Komen
affiliates in Ohio. We are on
the right track, and we have a
iot of exciting .live-saving
wotk ahead of us."

•

The~

are 37

pro~

which have been awUded
grant dollars _by Komen
Columbus for the 2009-10
funding year, including Think
. Pink. Komen Columbus· bas
raised nearly $13 million
since.it began in 1993 wit1'175
.~nt of that mone:y staying
m 1ts 30-county servtce area.
Also, more than 40,000
people are expected to participate in the 2009 Komen
Columbus Race for the
Cure held on Saturday, May
16 in downtown Columbus.
For more information and
to
register,
visit
www.komenco/umbus .org
or call314-297-8155 . .

the purse, she later went
back inside to get it and it
has been stolen. The Vera
Bradley purse contained
several · . personal items,
including a checkbook,
debit caid, keys and cash.
After noticing a vehicle
parked alongside the road
on Cole Street, Sgt. Ronnie
Spaun approached the vehicle to find Frances D.
Fisher, 39 and .Daniel S.
Fisher, 42, both of
Pomeroy inside the mick.
Spaun said he smelled a
"strong odor" of marijuana.
Spaun asked the Fishers to
get out of the vehicle but he
reported ·· Dani!ll later
jumped into the truck and
removed
something,
alle~edly sw~llowing . a
ma.fiJUan&amp; JOint . Metgs
EMS was called to check
out Daniel who refused
treatment. Daniel was
charged with drug abuse,
obstructing official business and possession of a
controlled substance· and
to
the
was
taken
Police
Middleport
Department. Frances was
cited for drug abuse and
obstructing official busi·

Reports fro~ Page At

nesses at the Pomeroy
Police Department and
later posted bond.
A vehicle driven by Tracy
..L. Haid, 41. Cottageville,
W.Va., allegedly was traveling west on West Main
Street, went off the ri$ht
side of the roadway, swtp·
ing a garage then striking a
pole. The ve~icle then
allegedly crossed over into
· the oncoming lane striking a
vehicle driven by Bobby
Fitch, Long Bottom. Haid's
vehicle then spun around in
the road before it came to a
rest in the parking lot of 263
West Main Street at Legar
Monument ..
H.a:id was cited for opera!ing a vehicle while under
the influence of drugs or
alcohol, failure to comply
with the order or signal of a
police officer· and assault.
The report says Haid
allegedly spit in Patrolmi!Jl
Rose's face, was verbally
abusive and bit Depmy
Adani Smith of the Meigs
County Sheriff's Office.
Also cited in ·.the case
where Haid 's passengers,
Kayla
Haid,
20,
Cottageville, W.Va. Lia

Deane, 19. Ripley, W.Va.
who were both cited for
consuming alcobol under
the age of 21. Both vehicles
were lowed from the scene .
No injuries were reported.
~Iizabeth
J. Morgan,
Pomeroy, was cited ·for
improper backing and leaving the scene when a vehicle
she was driving allegedly
strucl&lt;: a vehicle owned by
Lenora R. Games, Pomeroy.
The accident occurred at
162 Mulberry Avenue . No
injuries were reported.
Matthew T. Gilmore,
Middleport, was cited for
improper backing when a
vehiCle he was driving
allegedly backed into a
parked vehicle owned by
.Suzanne -\&lt;· Adkins along
East Mam Street near
Street. No
Sycamore
injuries were reJ!OI'ed.
Marvin N. Eddy, Ill,
Racine , was cited for
improper backing· when a
vehicfe he was driving
allegedly backed out of a
driveway on Wright Street,
went off the left side of the
road and struck a stairWay,
tree, flower pots and flo~r
· bed owned by Anthony

Rowe of 317 Wright Street.
Eddy also allegedly struck a
basketball pole, causing it to
hit · a vehicle owned by
Teresa A. Estes. Racine;
There was property damage
and damage done to Estes
vehicle. No injuries were
reported.
Paula
.K.
Morlan,
Pomeroy, was cited for fail·
ure to control when a vehi;
cle she was driving allegedly hit a telephone pole at
235 Mulberry Avenue, causing ~age to het vehicle
which was later towed .
Morlan was also transported
by Meigs EMS to Pleasant
Valley Hospital with neck
and chest pain. ·

�.

OPINION

The Daily Sentinel

The Daily Sentinel
111 Court Street ·Pomeroy, Ohio

(740) 992-2156 • FAX (740) 992-2157
www.mydallysentinel.co·m

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
Dan Goodrich

Publisher
Charlene Hoeflich .

General Manager-News Editor

Congress shall make no law respecting an
· establishment of religion, or prohibiting the
free exercise there'?{; or abridging the freedom
of speech,, or of the press; or the right of the
people peaceably to assemble, and to petition
the Government for a·redress ofgrievances.
- The Firat Amendment to the U.S. Constitution

TODAY IN HISTORY
Today is Monday, April27 , the !17th day of 2009. There
are 248 days left in the year.
Today 's Highlight in History:
Five hundred years ago, on April27, 1509, Pope Julius II
placed the Republic of Venice under an interdict following
ns refusal to give up lands claimed by the Papal States.
(The pope lifted the sanction the following year.)
On thts date:
· In 152.1, Portut:uese exP.Iorer Ferdinand Magellan .was
killed by natives m the Phtlippines. ·
·
.
In 1570, Pope Pius .V excommunicated Queen Elizabeth
I.

·. In i805, during the First Barbary War, an U.S.-led force
of Marines and mercenaries captured the city of Dema, on
the shores of Tripoli, Libya.
. In 1822; the 18th president of the United States, Ulysses
S. Grant, was.born in Point Pleasant, Ohio.
. In i865, the steamer Sultana exploded on !he Mississippi
River near Memphis, Tenn., killing more than 1,400 people, mostly freed Union prisoners of war.
In 1932. American poet Hart Crane, 32, drowned after
jumping from a steamer into the Gulf of Mexico while en
.route to New York:
'
In 1965, broadcast journalist Edward R. Murrow died in
Pawling, N,Y., two days after turning 57.
In !967, Expo '67 was officially opened in Montreal by
Canadian Prime Minister Lester B. Pearson.
In 1973 , acting FBI Director L. Patrick Gray resigned
after it was revealed that he had handed over bureau files
on the Watergate burglary to the Nixon White House.
. In 1978, convicted Watergate defendant John D.
Ehrlich man was released from an Arizona prison after serving 18 months. Fifty-one construction worke!'li plunged to
. their deaths when a scaffold inside a cooling tower at the
Pleasants Power Station site in West Virginia fell 168 feet
to the ground.
.
·
'
.
.
Ten years ago: A week after the Columbine High School
massacre, ·President Bill Clinton called for new gun control
measures, saying, "People's lives are at stake here." Jazz
trumpeter AI Hirt died in New Orleans·at 76. ·
· Five years .ago: Iraqi police moved into the streets of the
besieged city of Fallujah following hours of pounding by
U.S. warplanes and artillery on Sunni insurgents. A rup'
tured pipeline began spilling 123,774 gallons of diesel fuel
into Sutsun Bay, east of San Francisco. Republican Sen.
Arlen Specter of Pennsylvania beat back a tough primary
threat, barely defeating conservative Congressman Pat
Toomey.
.
One year ago: Afghan'President Hamid Karzai escaped
. an auempt on 1\is life during a ceremony in Kabul mark.ing Afghanistan's victory over .Soviet occupation in the
· 1980s:· three other people were killed in .the shooting.
Ashley Force; 25, became the first woman to win a
national Funny· Car race. She beat her father, drag-racing
icon John Force, in the final round of the 28th annual
Summit Racing Equipment Southern Nationals in
Commerce, Ga.
Thought for Today: "Everyone is a prisoner of his own
experiences. No one can eliminate prejudices - just rec- ·
ognize them." - Edward R. Murrow, American broadcast
jou~alist (1908-1965).

LETTERS TO THE
EDITOR
· Letters to the editor are· welcome. They should be less
thim 300 words. All/etters are subject to editing, must be
signed. and include address and telephone number.. No
unsigned letrers will be published. Letters should be in
good taste, addressing ·issues, not persooolities. Letters of
thanks to organizations and indi~iduals will not be accepted for publication.

The Daily Sentinel
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Obituaries

Past time to let go ifAfghanistan

I

•

The Daily Sentinel • P~tge As

12-county food distribution center opens

McARTHUR - A second Claypool Hollow Road in
To help clients reach
With its regional divisions
Lutheran Social Services McArthur, the recently- those goals, Outreach of Lutheran Social Services
(LSS) distribution center opened Vinton County Ministries' staff and volun- of Southern Ohio and
·, POMEROY - Kenneth William Diddle, 83, of Syracuse has been established in Distribution Center will teers provide case mana$e- Lutheran Social Services of
died Saturday, April25, at his home.
Vinton County as another help county residents meet ment services while provtd- Northern Ohio. Lutheran
,. Born on July 22, 1925, he was the son of the late resource in the battle the•r basic needs while ing necessities, including Social Services of Central
Herschel and Belle Bohram Diddle.
against poverty.
working to sustain self-suf- clothing, household items, Ohio serves thousands of
1
The new distribution cen- ficiency.
bedding, appliances and fur- people each day by focusing
He is survived by two sisters, sisters, Carol (Paul)
"LSS
will
reach
many
niture
and school supplies. on the core societal issues
ter
will
allow
Outreach
Osborne of·Lancaster, and Mary Cundiff of Syracuse, and
a brother, David Diddle of Syracuse. and several nieces, Ministries to help an addi- low-income .families who Case management services of hunger. housing, healing
nephews and cousins.
tional I 2 Ohio counties: currently do not have access · assist each person served and hope.
J:le was preceded .in death by a brother, Floyd Diddle, IIJld Fairfield, Pike, · Ross, to servtces that can help ·with developing a plan to
LSS
provides
food
II. stster, Betty Martin. · ·
Scioto, Lawrence, Gallia, them, and we ·will strive to gain self-sufficiency.
pantries, homeless shelters,
The distribution center is senior living, . affordable
. :.Graveside services will be held at I p.m. Thesday at the Meigs, Athens, Jackson, help our clients set and
V.inton,
Hocking and attain certain goals," said . ·open .Monday through housing communities and
Greenwood Cemetery. There will be no visitation.
"
.
Pielcaway.
Mary Woodward, director Friday, 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. other programs and services
The building was made of Outreacb Ministries . Families may sign up for that uplift families and
possible through Southeast "Simply giving a client ·services by visiting the strengthen communities. ·
Testament, another non- some items will only take office or 5Cheduling an LSS is affiliated with the
"
profit organization .in the care of their shorJ-term · appointment. Volunteers are Evangelical .
Lutheran
..•
area that collects 'items for needs. Our mission is to alSo neeiled in the distribu- Church in America, recogfamilies in need. The orga- work With clients to not lion center. To schedule an nized by the Lutheran
nization built 'the facility only meet those immediate appointment or volunteer,. Church --' Missouri Synod
'-.
arid is sharing the space. needs;· but tQ provide ser- contact Mary Woodward at and a charter member of
' CHESTER - The Chester-Shade Historical Association with Outreach.Ministries. . viees that will help tltem set 740-732•6700 or mwood- Lutheran Sociai Services in
, Located. at
31860 and attain cert;J.in goals."
ward®lssco.6rg.
America.
i~ sponsoring a tea party and maypole wrapping on Saturday,
May 2, from I to 3 p.m. at the Chester Courthouse.
.
• l'Jach child will also make a craft. There is a $3 charge for
each child and an adult must accompany the ,children.
Seating space is limited so reservations need to be made by
burdel!ed from African streets, but it changes hqw
We~nesday, April 29. Children can "dt'ess up" or wear
.
.
.
.
refu_gees
· and Bosnian ·war they feel about themselves,"
tai.tsal clothing. Reservations can be made by calling Kaye
JACKSON
Mary report¢d that last year a victims, caused her to take said Mary. . "It tells them
Fick at 985-4115 pr by calling the Chester Courthouse at
total of 16,175 gift-filled up Graham's ' invitation. they are special!"
Damron,
Operation
?85-9822 and giving the namo and age of each child .
Christmas Child national · shoeboxes · were con- That year she collected
Damron's mission with
spokesperson, will be com- tributed in Southeast Ohio some 1,200 shoe· box gifts Operation Christmas Child
ing to the Celebration and distributed to children · .and hand"delivered them on has taken her from the devMeeting of the Southeast around the w.orld.
Thanksgiving D,ay to the astated streets of Sarajevo
Ohio Area Team to share
To celebrate the success Samaritan's Purse head- . to the filthy living condi,
tions in a Kosovo refugee
!· Monday...Sunny . . Highs · Wednesday
night... he~ story bof lobyled.and dededi- of last year and plan for an quarters in Boone,N.C.
even
bigger
cbllection
of
Impacted
by
her
enthusicamp,
and the stage of the
in the upper 80s. Southwest Mostly cloudy with a 30 · cation tot e c t reo serv
boxes
this
year,
Operation
asm
and
initiative,
Graham
Grand
Ole Opry to th.e
winds 10 to.15mph.
. percent chance of showers. through . .
Operation
Christmas Child is .hosting invited Damron to travel on White House Oval Office. · ·
• Monday night ... Mostly .Lows in the lower 50s.
Christmas Child.
·
her frrst shoe box distribuIn addition ·to National
,1 · h
·
Th
T h.
d
M
Damron
will
be
joining
1 theSoutheastOhioArea this celebration meeting.
cear1nteevemng ... en
urs ay ... osty
1n speaking at the meeting rion trip. to · Europe. Since Spokesperson, Mary served ·
becoming partly cloudy. cloudy with a 40 percent Team · at Faith Baptist Damron will tell her story 1994, Damron and her as the Regional Director' iii
Lows in the upper 50s. . chance of showers. Highs in Church, 703 Pattonville of · how · she became neighbors have not stop_P.Cd West Virginia for eiglit _
~outh winds 10 to 15 mph.
the lower 70s.
Thursday nlght...Cioudy Rd., Jackson, on Monday, inv~lved in . Operation colfecting shoe box· gtfts , years until 2008 .' She con• Tuesday...Partly sunny
4 at 1 p.m. She has Chnstmas Chtld m 1994 adding 860;000 from all tinues to serve as a ministry
.J_t.th
a chance of showers wt'th a 50 percent chance-of · · May
w
~layed a key role in bring- after
hearing Franklin over West Virginia to the 62 advocate and represents the
;ind thunderstorms, Not as showers. Lows in the mid mg ho~ to millions of chil- Graham, president of million that have been project as a ,National
~arrn with highs in the 50s.
dren hving in some of the Samaritan's Purse, urge delivered in more than 130 Spokesperson.
upper 70s. Southwest winds
Friday...Cioudy with a most desperate places people to participate in the countries.
For more informatio·n,
3 to 10 mph with gusts up to chance of showers. Highs in around the world.
proJect by packing shoe box
"Giving a shoe box does- contact Operation Christmas
::ZO mph. Chance of rain 50 the lower 70s. Chance of
Tiffany Pistole, media gifts for qeedy children n'.t take the children off of Child volunteer Tiffany
percent.
·
rain 50 percent.
coordinator for . project worldwide.
the garbage dumps. out of Pistole
(740.858.0973)
,: Tuesday nlght...Showers
Friday nlght...Cioudy work in .Southeast Ohio
She said her heart already the otphanages, or off of the tiffany_pistole@yahoo.com.
and .thundc:rstorrns likely. with a chance of showers.
Lows in the mid 50s. West Lows in the · lower 50s.
winds 5 to 10 mph. Chance Chance of rain 40 percent.
of rain 70 percent.
Saturday .. ;Most I y
Wednesday ... Mosily cloudy .
in
the Bv ·ANDAEW
. year that overturned Bies' and an onset of mental dis• Supreme Court.
cloudy with a 50 percent moming ...Then becoming WEj.Sif-HUBGINS
death sentence. A ruling is ability before age 18.
'The state has had their
chance of showers. ,Highs partly sunny. Highs· in the AssociATEO PRESS WRITER
i:xpected by summer.
At the time, the ruling . bite
the. apple," said
around 70.
upper 60s.
At least 85 death row was one of the biggest shifts · Randall Porter, an assistant
COLUMBUS
The 'inmates, including four in the court's·death penalty state public defender.... How
state is fighting to reinstate ·. from Ohio, have successful- positions . in years. It many times are we going io
the death sentence of acon- "Jy challenged their death reversed its pos1tiori from .make a guy that's mentally
victed killer, arguing .he sentences under the. 2002 'lg89, when the high coUrt retarded prove he's mentalmust prove again that he is decision. ·
.
ruled there was ilo national . ly retarded?"
·
...·
mentally disabled under
Unlike . Bies, those four consensus 'thai executing
The · 6th U.S. Circuit
returning to the same airport U.S, Supreme Court stan- .used the standards laid out . the mentally disabled was Court of Appeals in
LOUISVILLE (AP) by the high court. Bies unconstitutionaL
Cincinnati ordered · a new
The Ohio Highway Patrol when the plane went down dards.
Ohio
says.the
merital
.
s
tate
(BEYE'
-ess)
bases
his
arguThe
court
doesn't
sentencing hearing for Bies,
says a pilot flying a single- at about 10:53 a.m. ·
of
Michael
Bies
.has
never
ment
on
earlier
rulings
by
explain
why
.
it
takes
·the
which has not been held. ·
engine homemade Sonex
Taulbee says McGrath
Bies was convicted of
airplane died when he. was alone when the plane received a proper hearing state coUrts that upheld both cases it does. Cordray says
because
state
court
findings
his
conviction
and
his
death
a
decision
in
the
B
ies
case
killing
Aaron Raines in an
crashed in a wooded field crashed in Nimishillen
came
six
years
before
the
sentenee
while
acknow)edg•
could
have
as
much
to
do
abandoned
building. Bie~
while attempting to land in Townshlp, about .five miles
Supreme
Court
in
2002
ing
his
low
IQ
of
69.
with
clarifying
·
the
.
rela·
and
his
accomplice,
Darryl
east · of Canton. She says
nortl;teast Ohio.
''Bies's personality elisor- tionship between the feder- Gumm, decided they wantPatrol spokeswoman Sgt. the aircraft's cockpit and barred the execution of the
der and mild to borderline al and state courts when it ed to have sex with a child
Karla Taulbee says 87 -year- right side were heavily mentally disabled. .
"You wouldn't . bother mental retardation merit comes to .criminal appeals and lured the boy ·to the
·
old Robert. McGrath. of damaged.
arguing
over whether some- some weight in mitigation.~· as it does with the issue of building by offering him
The Federal Aviation
Louisville took off f rom
Yoder Airport in Stark · Administration is investi" body got one foot in bounds the Ohio Supreme Court how mental disability is $10 to. help them remove
scrap metal.
County Saturday morning, gating the cause of the acci- if the rule at the time was said in its 1996 decision decided.
they had to ha:ve tWo, but upholding the sentence.
When Dies was· put on
When the boy refused to
.
flew to Salem and was dent. .
now that the rule's been . Bies argues the state trial in 1992, his disability submit to the men, Gumm
changed that one matters, would· be committing dou- was just one o'f several fac- and Bies beat him repeatedyou might well nave differ- ble jeopardy by holding a tors that could have pre- ly with a wooden board,
from
Page
At
ent
things to say about that hearing on his mental dis- vented . a deatli sentence, metal pipe and block of
"
issue," said Ohio Attorney ability since state courts Cordray said. Now .mental concrete.
Lifeflight and three EMS addition to the State General Richard Cordray.
already determined his disabihty is a definitive
Bies eventually confessed
vehicles transported the Highway Patrol were sev- . Bies, 36; killed a 10-year-· mental state.
issue by itself so the state to police. Gumni, 43, also
ij!jured to area hospitals. eral Meigs EMS squads, old boy in Cinciimati in
The U.S. Supreme Court needs a chance to fully received a death sentence.
Pomeroy
Fire 1992.
J'heir names and other the
defined mental disability as argue the point, he said.
The sentence was commutdetails of the accident have Department, Dr. Douglas . Tbe Supreme Court on significantly sub-average · Bies' attorneys say the ed in 2007 to 48 years to.life
not be~n released by the Huntet, · coroner, Larry .Monday will hear Ohio's intellectual functioning, sig- · state . court . findings are after a trial and appeals
~tate Highway Patrol pend- Marshall, assistant.coroner,
challenge ·to a federal .nificant limitations .in two enough lo meet the stan- court upheld his mental dising completion of the inves- and Matthew Donahue appeals court decision last or more day-to-day skills da'rds laid out by the U.S. ability claim.
·
from the Mei~s County
~igation.
. ·
~· On the accident scene in prosecutor's offtce .. .

Kenneth William Diddle

Saw an unforg~ttably
ging ourselves intq__Central want to," eliminating the
stark photo of Taliban fightAsia. I called up retired need for massive land bases
ers in Afghanistan's Wardak
Maj . Gen. Paul Vallely, one such as Bagram Air Base in
province, the same province
of the few top military lead- Afghanistan, by now a
ers who talks on the record, small city of 20,000
Joint Chiefs Chairman
Adm. Mike Mullen visited
to ask for his strategy rec- American personnel who
Diana
last week: Eight robed, turohtmendation
for continuously need to be
West
baned fighters, a sandy
Afghanistan.
,supplied and secured at
"Basically, let it go," he ,enormous exJ!ense.
.
ridge, .~ c_loudy sky. ~II that
was mtsstrig was the mcomsaid.
"There.'s no permanent
Let Afghanistan go ing American drone strjke .
force," the· general said.
to tum the men into dust.
fact ; bona-fide jihad to · music to my ears, particu- 'That's the beauty of it." Wo
Question: Should the
.
larly given the source is no watch, we wait and · when
United States call in that . advance Sharia (lslamtc Hate-America-First. profes- U.S. interests are threatstrike? How great a security law). Anybody remember sur or Moveon-dot-org-nik, en~, "we basically use- o~
threat to the United States Sisyphus? Well. trying to but a lifelong patriotic con- strike forces to take them
transform Afghanistan into
do these eight barbarians an anti-jihad, anti-Sharia servative warrior. "There's out, target by target." This
pose? How many dollars, player - let alone function- nothing to win there," he would work whether .the
how much blood ts it worth al nation _ is like trying to explained, engaging in an threat came from Al Qaeda,
to our nation' to pulverize roll Sisyphus· rock up the all-too-exotic display of Pakistani mikes or anything
common sense, "What do else.
them into that lunar-like hill .
He continued: '"This idea
landscape?
TI;tis· is not. to suggest .that you get for it? What's the
I recently read a military there is no war or enemies return? Well, the return's all that we're going to go in
e-mail ·from Afghanistan to fight, which is what both negative for the United and. bring democracy · to·
these tribal cultures isn't
that marveled over a similar the Left and the Paleo-Ri$ht States."
The
general
continued:
goi)lg
to work. we have a
scene: "As.far as BDA (bat- will say; there most certamtle damage assessment) ly are. But sinking all possi- . "This doesn 'I mean giving problem with terrorist coun:
goes, check this one out. 2 ble men, materiel and up battle. What it means is tries, like 'Iran; it's a lot
GBU 36's (bomblets) bureaucracy
into you transition to a more cheaper to go in and hit
dropped the other day on Afg~anistan, as the Obama realistic, affordable strate!ly them and get back out." .
In other words, don't give
estimated 6 guys!!!! That is people and most conserva- that keeps them (the jihadtst
up ·the battle; just give up
half a million dollars on 6 . tives favor, to try to bring a enemy) from sprellding."
Such a strategy, Vallely the nation-building. "It's up
guys!!!!" The e-mailer corrupt' Islamic culture into
explained,
relies on "the to somebody else to build
guessed that all the sniper workmg modernity while
fighting · maximum use of uncon- nations," the general said:
ammunition the jihadtsts simultaneously
have used in the whole war Taliban and wading deep ventional forces," such as "Not us."
He went on: "That' old
into treacherous ·Pakistani Navy SEALS anti other
hasn't cost close to that.
special forces, who can be niyth that '(Colin} Powell
The point is, the United wars is no w~y to vi_ctory States is getting a lot of · at least not to U.S. victory. · deployed as needed from bad - if you break it you
bang for a lot of buck but On the contrary, it is the what are known in military . own it - that's a myth. You
not much else. Don't get me best way to bleed and fur- parlance as "lily pads" -- break it, you decide whether.
wrong: If killin~ small ther de~de U.S. military outposts or jumping-off you own it, You don't have
bands of Taliban ts in the capabilities. Indeed, if I points in friendly countries to go in and own it."
· ,
best interest of the United were a jihad . chieftain, I (Israel, ·
Northern
And especially not when
India, it is Islamic land that
Stales, I'm for it. But I do couldn't imagine a better Kurdistan,
not believe it is - and cer- strategy than to entrap tens Philippine's, Italy, Djibouti doesn"t belong in the West.
tainly not as paJ1 of the of thousands of America's ... ) and from U.S. aircraft
(Diaoo West is the author
grand strategy conceived very be~t young men in an carrier strike groups. Such of "The Death of th~
first by the Bush adminis- · o~n-ended war of mortal · strike groups generally Grown-up: How America's
tration and now expanded hide-and-seek in the North include eight to 10 ·vessels Arrested Development
by the Obama administra- West Frontier.
"with more fire power," the Bringing Down Western
tion to tum Afghanistan into
I decided to ask ·someone general noted, "than most · Civilization," and blogs dl
a· state capable of warding with real ·military experi- nations." These lily pads dianawest.net. She can bt
off what is daintily known ence how we could fend off become · "bases we can . contacted
via
as "extremism," but is, in . jihad without further dig- launch from any . time we dianawest@verizon.net) . ':

Local Briefs

Chlldren's inaypole
wrapping and tea party

Operation Chrisbnas Chll~ to ltold celebration

u

Natioruilleader to speak at district rally .

Local Weather

Is

Ohio: Condemned killer must_prove disability again'

if#~~ · .

of

QU~!~1

GRO\NLLL

Ohio Patrol: Homemade
plane crashes, pilot killed

G~lLLL

qAAPJ'l~Pl
.
.
'

&lt;

'

0 -

'

..
!

Analysis: Obama walks thin line on i~terrogations
general should make such
Democrats·expect a: more one hand, Ob'ama cannot
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITE~
decisions. ·
sub(jued and time-consum- spurn his liberal backers
Oit Tuesday, Obama said ing inquiry to be conducted too often, and he already
WASHINGTON
he wanted to look forward, by the Senate Intelligence · has disappointed them oil
Barack Obama, facing per- not back, but he! would pre- Committee, chaired by issues such as sending .
haps the trickiest political fer an independent commis- Dianne Feinstein, D-Calif. . more
troops
to
Issue of his young presiden- sion to a complete congres- She says the effort . will Afghanistan .
cy, is trying· to appease his sional investigation ifit full- · .take months, which might · But the president also
liberal base.. without losing .blown inquiry is · pursued. allow the issue to cool cannot afford to let
control of a potentially On Thursday, the president down a bit.
Republican strategists pur'
volatile inquicy into George · told congressionaf leaders
It's red hot for now, how- tray the CIA interrogations
W. Bush administration's he had no interest in such a ever. Liberal groups, blogs matter as a case of
use of harsh interrogation r.anel, which some call a and Web sites are demand- Democratic overreaching,
tactics against terrorism 'truth commission." · ·
ing full-bore inquiries and perhaps romparable to the
suspects.
House Speaker Nancy possible prosecutions . of GOP's strategic overreach
One step to the left or Pelosi, D-Calif., continues the lawyers and officials in
impeaching
thenright could land him in to call for such a commis- who justified the tactics. President Bill Clinton.
political trouble.
sion ·With subpoena powers. Those tactics il)cluded 11
Matt Bennett, vice presiIf Obama seems inclined But lawmakers agree that days of sleep deprivation dent of the moderate.
to stifle an investigation·and the idea is probably dead, at for some detainees and · Democratic group Third
possible prosecutiQn of least for .now.
·
repeated waterboarding, an Way, said the. potentiallY.
Bush admmistration offiThat leaves hearings in ordeal that simulates unconstitutional actions ot
cials who approved rough the hands of House and drowning.
the Bush administration
tnterrogations by· the CIA, Senate committees, which
Recently released memos officials re~uire looking
he may infuriate liberal . Democr&amp;ts control. The from the Justice Department into. But he s wary of a
activists who were crucial House
Judiciary "provide shockinl! confir- potentially partisan food
to his election: But if Committee, chaired by Rep. mation
of htgh-level fil!ht if congressional comDemocratic
lawmakers John Conyers of Michigan, involvement in the sadistic mtttees alone conduct the
appear too zealous in pursu- has an especially large num- interrogation methods the investigations.
· tng departed GOP govern- ber of sharply partisan Bush administration autho"If !his were to proceed,"
ment. offi~;ials, they rni~t Democrats
and rized the CIA to use on Bennett said. "the best
be portrayed as vmdicllve · Republicans, who could detainees," the American model
is
the
9/11
and
backward-loo.kin~, produce televised fireworks Civil Liberties Union says Commission, with unquesundermining
Obama s and unpredictable results.
on its Web site. "It is inde- tionably responsible. leadullage as a forward-looking
Terry Holt is among the · fensible to avoid investigat- ers, like Lee Hamilton ." .
figure of hope and progress. Republican strategists who ing and prosecuting those Hamilton,
a
former
While Obama.struggles to think Ob3J0a and his allies responsible
for
these Democratic lawmaker from
calibrate
the
matter; will suffer j)ecause the see- heinous crimes."
Indiana, co-chaired the
Republicans sense a possi- nario is apt to look more
Liberal talk show host Ed highly regarded commisble gap in his armor and an like a witch hunt than a Schultz said this week on sion that investigated the
uncharacteristic shakiness sober search for justice. ·
MSNBC that many liberal 2001 terrorist attacks.
10 his message.
"It would be a total circus Democrats "want to see
But Obama threw cold
In the past few days, the and be complete chaos and prosecution. Does the r,resi- water on the independent
White House signaled that it expose them to terrible dent just ignore them?'
commission idea Thursday.
wpu~d nqt support th~ pros- risk," Holt said. "Obama's
After 2,000 viewers That leaves Congress, and
ecutton of Bush admimstra- political strength is based teued their opmtons. the nation, with an unclear
tion lawyers who had justi- on the notion that he is the Schultz said, "Ninety-four path on how to pursue a
fied . the interrogation tac- future, moving forward . I percent want to see Bush combustible question .
(Charles Babington covtics, which Obama has felt Obama 's first instinct officials prosecuted."
likened to torture. Later, was the correct one: to let
The White House is ers the White House for Tire
Obama said the attorney this stuff go."
walking a careful line. On Associated Press) .
BY CHARLES BABINGTON

Crash

&lt;

•

Costs from Page At

•

. ·•

lt

said it is difficult to determine what the trial will cost
the county, but said comhussioners have begun to
l:stablish line items for various expenses in the case. ·.
.• Davenport said he ·was
'now lookin_g at customary
!;:osts assocu11ed with such
11 trial, in an effort . to

0

determine what might be
needed in ·terms of general
fund approp~iations for
defense costs.
"It is difficult .to tell in
these cases what those
expenses will run. but we
are finding out what we can
do and take it as it comes,"
Davenport said.

Grant from Page AI

•

women in its 30-county ser.vice area with critical breast
health
programming
throughout the next .:year.
· "Unfortunately,Ohto ranks
,an ahirming fourth in the
nation in breast cancer mortality," said Katie Carter,
executive director of Komen
Columbus. "That makes it
t.ven more imperative for us
to increase our pro~ram
rt:ach and funding . This ts the
first year that all 88 counties
1hroughout Ohio are serviced
by one of the four Komen
affiliates in Ohio. We are on
the right track, and we have a
iot of exciting .live-saving
wotk ahead of us."

•

The~

are 37

pro~

which have been awUded
grant dollars _by Komen
Columbus for the 2009-10
funding year, including Think
. Pink. Komen Columbus· bas
raised nearly $13 million
since.it began in 1993 wit1'175
.~nt of that mone:y staying
m 1ts 30-county servtce area.
Also, more than 40,000
people are expected to participate in the 2009 Komen
Columbus Race for the
Cure held on Saturday, May
16 in downtown Columbus.
For more information and
to
register,
visit
www.komenco/umbus .org
or call314-297-8155 . .

the purse, she later went
back inside to get it and it
has been stolen. The Vera
Bradley purse contained
several · . personal items,
including a checkbook,
debit caid, keys and cash.
After noticing a vehicle
parked alongside the road
on Cole Street, Sgt. Ronnie
Spaun approached the vehicle to find Frances D.
Fisher, 39 and .Daniel S.
Fisher, 42, both of
Pomeroy inside the mick.
Spaun said he smelled a
"strong odor" of marijuana.
Spaun asked the Fishers to
get out of the vehicle but he
reported ·· Dani!ll later
jumped into the truck and
removed
something,
alle~edly sw~llowing . a
ma.fiJUan&amp; JOint . Metgs
EMS was called to check
out Daniel who refused
treatment. Daniel was
charged with drug abuse,
obstructing official business and possession of a
controlled substance· and
to
the
was
taken
Police
Middleport
Department. Frances was
cited for drug abuse and
obstructing official busi·

Reports fro~ Page At

nesses at the Pomeroy
Police Department and
later posted bond.
A vehicle driven by Tracy
..L. Haid, 41. Cottageville,
W.Va., allegedly was traveling west on West Main
Street, went off the ri$ht
side of the roadway, swtp·
ing a garage then striking a
pole. The ve~icle then
allegedly crossed over into
· the oncoming lane striking a
vehicle driven by Bobby
Fitch, Long Bottom. Haid's
vehicle then spun around in
the road before it came to a
rest in the parking lot of 263
West Main Street at Legar
Monument ..
H.a:id was cited for opera!ing a vehicle while under
the influence of drugs or
alcohol, failure to comply
with the order or signal of a
police officer· and assault.
The report says Haid
allegedly spit in Patrolmi!Jl
Rose's face, was verbally
abusive and bit Depmy
Adani Smith of the Meigs
County Sheriff's Office.
Also cited in ·.the case
where Haid 's passengers,
Kayla
Haid,
20,
Cottageville, W.Va. Lia

Deane, 19. Ripley, W.Va.
who were both cited for
consuming alcobol under
the age of 21. Both vehicles
were lowed from the scene .
No injuries were reported.
~Iizabeth
J. Morgan,
Pomeroy, was cited ·for
improper backing and leaving the scene when a vehicle
she was driving allegedly
strucl&lt;: a vehicle owned by
Lenora R. Games, Pomeroy.
The accident occurred at
162 Mulberry Avenue . No
injuries were reported.
Matthew T. Gilmore,
Middleport, was cited for
improper backing when a
vehiCle he was driving
allegedly backed into a
parked vehicle owned by
.Suzanne -\&lt;· Adkins along
East Mam Street near
Street. No
Sycamore
injuries were reJ!OI'ed.
Marvin N. Eddy, Ill,
Racine , was cited for
improper backing· when a
vehicfe he was driving
allegedly backed out of a
driveway on Wright Street,
went off the left side of the
road and struck a stairWay,
tree, flower pots and flo~r
· bed owned by Anthony

Rowe of 317 Wright Street.
Eddy also allegedly struck a
basketball pole, causing it to
hit · a vehicle owned by
Teresa A. Estes. Racine;
There was property damage
and damage done to Estes
vehicle. No injuries were
reported.
Paula
.K.
Morlan,
Pomeroy, was cited for fail·
ure to control when a vehi;
cle she was driving allegedly hit a telephone pole at
235 Mulberry Avenue, causing ~age to het vehicle
which was later towed .
Morlan was also transported
by Meigs EMS to Pleasant
Valley Hospital with neck
and chest pain. ·

�•

PageA6

OHIO .

The Daily Sentinel

Monday,

27,2009

Bl

The Daily Sentinel

Inside
NfLdnft, Page Bl

Nedpnlcbts,B6
•

Ohio boy's swine .flu matches.
deadly Mexican strain
Bv

COLUMBUS (AP) -An
Students who lived io
end-of-year college block · nearby houses threw
party spiraled out of control from windows to f
the
as pohce fired pellets and flames. Video shows stuused pepper spray to break dents huddled on a roof,
up hundreds of rioting stu- escaping into a second-story
dents who sparked a string window as a line of about
of street fires at Kent State 25 police, their faces
University.
masked by plastic shields,
Video .posted on the . fonns near the flames.
Internet shows students
Choruses of boos were
hurling furnitUre and street captured on video as fire;
signs into the flames on fighters doused the fires,
Saturday night as a SWAT and students cheered as oth-.
team in riot gear converged ers quickly ran back into the
on the crowd. Kent police street to spark more.
· said the party grew violent
Officers tried to chase stuafter one reveler was arrest- dents 11way from the street
ed and students began pelt. and shot them with paint
ins officers with .bottles, balls and pepper spray,
bncks and rocks:
Wolford said. Many stuIt was the first violent dents ignored orders to
clash between Kent State leave, hiding behind houses
students and police in years. and peeking out to see what
In I970, four Kent State siu- was happening, he said.
dents were killed by Ohio · "When police fi!St .started
National Guard troops dur- making their little charge
ing a campus protest of the down College Avenue, they
invasion of Cambodia,
yelled, 'Get in your houses
· ."They were humin~ pret- · or we'll arrest you,'"
ty much everything,' said Wolford said. "When one
police dispatcher Rosemarie student stayed on his lawn,
Mosher. "They were throw- two officers sprinted at him
ing stop signs on the fires, and just kind of grabbed him
they were throwing chairs, forcefully and arrested him."
couches, tree branches.
On Sunday morning,
Basically anything they splotches of paint · stained
could get their hands on/'
nearby houses, and shards
At least 64 students were of glass littered the grass
arrested, and several officers and pavement. ·
suffered minor injuries,
''The cops were being
Mosher said. Students gath-. nice, and two minutes later
ered on front porches at we were shot by rubber bulabout 8:30 p.m. and began lets for no reason,'' junior
spilling into the streets on Jamie Farrell told the unithe unusually warm evening. versity's student newspaper.
When officers ordered the
The riot was mostly over
crowd to disperse, students by 10 p.m., when more than
built piles of couches, suit- two dozen police and fire
cases and other debris and vehicles surrounded the area.
lit them on fire. There were
Kent State spokesman
at least four fires blazing in Tom Neumann satd the stuthe middle of the street, dents' behavior 'is inexcus.
Mosher said.
able and the university is
The · students led the awaiting more ififonnation
police down .the road start- from police.
mg fires, said Ben Wolford,
"Obviously, thin~s got alit-. .
an editor at the campus tie bit out of hand,' Neumann
newspaper who witnessed . said. The university has not
the riot. ,
received any reports of
''They were going .into . injured students, he said. ·
. their ho'uses and bringing
Wolford said most stuout office chairs," he said. dents believe the violence
."Someone sa,i4 they threw a · probably co.uld have been
flat-screen TV'on the fire." ·avoided. ·.

MEGHAN BARR

ASSOCIATED PRESS WAITER

COLUMBUS
The
....
:··, .
swine flu virus that 'ickened a 9-year-old Ohio boy
is the same strain a:; the on~
that has killed up to 86 people in Mexico, an emer~ency official said Sunday.
Laboratory rests by the
.-. ~
Ohio Department of Health
1\lld the Centers for Di,ease
Control and Prevention con-~· ·,.
fllOled the case matches the
·p···
deadly strain , said Lorain
County
Emergency
Management
Agency
spol\esman Clifton Barnes.
Health
department
· spokesman Robert Jennings
said the boy has a mild case
of the disease and is recovering at his home in Elyria,
in northern Ohio's Lorain
County. The child's name
was not released.
The third-grader visited
several Mexican cities while
· ~
~~
on vacation with his family Ohio Governor Ted f'trickland, left, answers questions as Ohio Department of Health
j&gt;efore ending the trip in Director Dr: Alvin Jackson looks on during a news conference about a confirmed case of
Mexico City, Barnes said.
swine flu in Ohio at the Ohio Department of Health in Columbus on Sunday.
"He went to a fair, he
went to a farm, he went 'to Tuesday through Thursday sympto'ms, including a sore
Symptoms of the swine
VISit
family
around last week add bejlan receiv- throat and body aches, flu virus closely resemble
Mexico," Bames'said.
ing treatment on Friday, Jennings said. His family those of the seasonal flu and
The boy, who returned . said Dr. Alvin Jac!&lt;son, the members are being tested include fever, weakness,
from Mexico within the past director of the Ohio for the disease, but they cur, coughing and Jack of
two weeks, started feeling Department of Health.
rently are in good health, appetite.
·
sick on Wednesday, Barries · Jackson and Gov. Ted Jennings said. He did not
Federal health officials
said. He was treated for flu Strickland spoke at a news know if tbe child or his fam- said Sunday that 20 cases of
symptoms at a city health conference
Sunday, ily had direct contact with swine flu have been report:
clinic, where an astute nurse announcing that shipments p1gs while they were in ed so far across the U.S. in
New York, Ohio, Kansas,
practitioner began asking of the antiviral drugs Mexico.
questions and realized he Relenza and Tamiflu would
City health officials have Texas and California.
might have swine flu, arrive from the federal gov- sent out an advisory to par- Patients have ranged in age
Barnes said.
ernment\
Strategic ents at Ely Elementary, and from 9 to over 50. At least
The child is a student at Ely National Stockpile as early parents can call a phone t~o were hospitalized. All
Elementary School, accord- as Tuesday. The drugs are bank with any questions recovered or are recovering.
ing to a statement posted being sent in case the out- regarding the illness.
In Mexico, health offi. A message left Sunday cials say a strain of swine
Sunda~ on the Elyria City . break spreads; Jackson said.
Health District's Web site.
The child in Elyira dis- with the school was. not flu has sickened more. than
: He attended school from played typical seasonal flu immediately returned.
1,000 poople.
.

Veteran Rio educator,retires this spring
STAFF REPORT
MOSNEWSOMYOAILYSENTINEL.COM

: RIO GRANDE - After
~7
years of teaching,
Charles Withee will retire
this spring.
The Rio Grande resident
.)lnd Pomeroy native taught
for 46 years . for the
University
of
Rio
Grande/Rio
Grande
Community College and.
one year at the former
Rutland High School.
- Withee has always loved
teaching, and his love of
education started when he
was ,a student.
· "I had some really great
teachers when I was in
school," Withee said.
Pomeroy · High School
teachers Forrest Ward. and
)\sa · Hoskins in particular
had a ·big impact on him.
After hi$h school , Withee
enrolled m Rio Grande,
where he was particularly
impressed by Professor
.Francis Burdell. ·
: "I thought Rio Grande
was wonderful," Withee
!'aid. He enjoyed his teachers and the other students,
feli very comfortable on
campus.
. After graduating in 1961
with a degree in math/sci:
· ence education, he taught
for . one year at Rutland
High School before taking a
teaching position at Rio
Grande.
He enjoyed teaching on
campus right from the
beginning, and that love of
teaching just continued to
grow over the years. He has
always relished the opportunity to work with the students, get to know them and
have an impact on their
lives by assisting them with
their educations.
· "Nothing in society really
l;ompares with what a col'
lege educatim\ does for a
boy or a girl," Withee said.
"There is nothing else that
~an have that type of impact
on their lives."
: Rio Graride ProvostJVice
President for Academic
Affairs Dr. Barbara Hatfield .
said that Withee is an outstanding professor who
cares about his students and
inspires them.
·
· "When I first came to Rio
Grande , it was to teach
mathematics. Mr. Withee is
one of the reasons that 1
took the job. From my first
association with him, I saw

and

•

t}ects

-'Colilllless former studenfs ·last 46 years, and Rio
and colleagues, but he has Grande students, faculty
not been · able to keep up and staff have been even
•.,with.. SPill~ of !hem as he · ·prouder ro have him on
would have liked to.
campus.
·
Now · that he is retiring,
Withee plans td~et in touch
with these · · fnends, and
recpnneet witll them, He
also plans on " being
involved in the Rio Grande
Alumni .Association, artd '
This mothers day, a heartfelt
hopes to encourage other ·
alumni to;be involved in ihc; ..
coll.ege~ . attend campu~
event~ • and su11port Rio
Charlet Withee
Grande·in different ways,.
could b~ the best gift you could
a person who reaily cares . The Wlthees have already
ever give y()ur m()ther.
about the students that he established a scholarship
fund,
the
Withee
encounters. He not only
Don't miss this opportunity to say it.
taught math but he also pro- Scholarship, in honor of
vided guidance and inspira- their parents. Mary's mothTo be published
tion to his students," er, Hazel Booth Duffy,
~raduated
from
Rio
Grande
Hatfield ~aid. "Rarely do I
Sunday, May lOth
walk through the Kidd Math m 1925. The scholarship
1x3 Greeting $10
and Science Center without helps area students attend
seeing Mr. Withee counsel- Rio Grande each year,
ing or working math prob- which makes Charles and
lems a student. His presence Mary Withee very proud. .
When he retires., Withee
will be missed in the math
department at Rio Grande." also plans to spend time ·
Withee and his · wife, with his two scins and two ·
. Mary, live in the village of grdndsons' who all live in
Rio Grande and have the area, and with his father,
(Your Mother's
enjoyed living and working Charles M. Withee, 90, who
Name)
in a college community. lives in Pomeroy.
"My dad is a big inspiraThey both were able to walk
to work . at times , because tion to anyone who will lisLove, Adam, Evan
while Charles Withee ten to him," Withee said. He
worked for the university, added that his father always
and .Cameron
Mary Withee worked for stressed to him how imporRio . Grande Elementary tant it was that he receive an
Rodgers
education , and that message
School.
One thing he loves about has made a big impact on
. teaching at Rio Grande is the his life .
Withee has stressed that
. students. and how hard they
work at their educations. importance with his own
Many of the Rio Grande stu- students, and helped them in
dents are pulling themselves countless ways. · He also
up by the bootstraps and taught the children of many
earning their .educations .so of his former students, and
that they can improve their he has been able to see how
liv.es , Withee said . ·
a Rio Grande education has
"TheX are rich in other helped their families.
senses,' he added .
Charles Withee has been
Deadline for lhls Spec lot Mothe1~1 EloyTrttllllols
Over the years, Withee. proud to be part of that Rio
. Wednesday, Mov 6, 2009
Flit oullhe form below ond drop off tho poym1111tlo
has become friends ·with Grande education for the
The DOlly Sentlnei"Molher's Day''
111 Court St., Pomeroy, OH 45769 .
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Monday,April27,2009
'·

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,._h.,._.,.Gdlo_ ·

LeBron lifts Cavs past Pistons an~ into 2nd round

AUBURN HILLS, Mich.· route to its first NBA finals
•mbln .
'(AP) LeBron James appe~nce and was elimi~ vo. l'«fellllltoc:l&lt;Olg, &amp;p.m ·
earned a break.
.
.
n~ted by the event.ual ~ham=~.~~p~:'"'
.boJamndses hadand .3.6 polO~, 13 plOD Bostond Cell ws. m. the
Polnt~atRa;a-.&amp;:;JOp.m. re u .
eJght .asSISts to second roun last year.
Rlvor vo~ooy '"· Fairland, 5 pm.
lead the Clev~land Cavaliers . :tne Cavs will face. th~
~~..:;:m.
to a ~-7~ · vrctmy over ~ . 'lf~J!l~Cf of~ Atlanta-Miatnt
• 8oflbo!ll .
Detrot~ Pts.tons on Sunday, sj!ries, which !he lfeat lead
=~~~11:!;l',o~l;,m,;,.
'Swee~mg the Eastern 271 ~ea&lt;hllg rnto Monday
Mo9va. -1Jo.Vorll, &amp;p.m.
Con erence
first-round mght s garue at ~~me. Th~
. Plliri-81Falowolug8&lt;Uh,5p.m. series.
.
best-of-seven senes could
~ Valoy va. Fairland, 5 p.m.
The 'g&amp;"seeded Cavs· end as late as Sun·day M•y
Watwne w. South Gdla, 5 p.m.
'
..,
SouthOm va.l.lllor, s p.m.
migltt be o for more than a 3. · .
.
.
,.,.. ..... _ · •
week,waiting for'Atlanta or. Detroit. was in the confer=~.\~~':~ ll1villllblal Miamj to advance.
· en~ finals the !)asuix years,
,...,.
1 ·
Delfoit, . meanwhile, · will the lonJest such streak in the
GalllaAcademyva. . _, ol;30p.m: ~ .have its longes~ offseason NBA smce the.' LoS Angeles
DIMI'IR
since · 2001; and 11bout · $20 Lakers' · run two · decades
• ...,..,
,
million ip salary-cap .space age;~: The Pistons, the onl.Y
5
E.utornAcademy
atWahama,
p.m. ·5 p.m.
. •
. to . rebuild a. once-,proud Eastern Conference·team tn
Gallla
va. Falllancl,
!ltlgow. Aieundor,5p.m.
team.
·
· the .PIJ!yoffs for an eighth
_ , Pleuantot Roane County. &amp;'p.m.
Jatnes made 1tis first four straJaht year, had advanced
f11vor Valley vo.lronton Sl. Joe, 5 p.m.
· Iud'mg a wm
· d- m
· eac
"h of th e previous seven
Waharna
••· e..~ern, s p.m. ·
sbots ...,- mc
Boulhorn ·~ Soulh..=Jr· 5 p.m. ·
mill dunk. He hel~ut the postseasons.
Eoole~.-d:~· 6 p.m.
..
Pistons away for g . with a James worked up a sweat
GaJua
va.FOirllncl.5p.m.
16-6 run midway through 2 hours ~fore tipoff, shootva.~:!.~.T·.
the third 9uarter.
' mg 3"po.•i!ters fr.oom .everv
wa'i.':."!i:£a':,;;;~:;;,~p.m.
Mo Wtlliams scored a angle, drivmg agamstlmaglSoulhe&lt;n "\=:.:u=:..p.m. .
career · playoff•high 24 for na:JY defenders for. du1,1ks
Eoolern va. Soulh Gallla 4:30p.m.
the Cavs.
an ; pull ups . and leam.ng
GanlaAcademy ·aiJod&lt;lon,4:30p.m.
Detroit's:
Antonio · agamst the a1r to practice
~ntPitlllntaiUndoaVMannlnvlttal McDyess had 26 points, low-post moves.
·. ==~~~rlb,rg lnvllalonll tying a career playoff high.
When James joined his
· (1101'• Only)4:30 p.m
·
James has ·led the Cavs teammates for pregame
. Gallla Acadtnly
· Tonnlo
intl}.
the playoffs
the past warmu~s.. Cleveland fans
a1 Jadelon. 4:30p.m.
,
• •
...our years, wmrung at 1east :seeme
to · outnumber
Wtdottclly Ag11 II
one series el)Ch time.
Detroit ~upport~rs and he
'
B-1
Cleveland lost to the waved h1s arms m the air to
&amp;ultm at Parkertllurg SoU111, Marlena
COllege. 7 p.m.
Pistons in the second round encourage them to be even
Galia Academy II Jadelon, 5 p.m.
of the 2006 playoffs, .got louder.
~Valley vt. SoU1I1 Poln~ 5 p.m.
"It's· great to . be in
past them the next year in
'
8oftbOU
Gf]lla ~ · a1 JJctceon, 5 p.m.
.
the
conference
finals
en
Cleveland.
,:• Cavs radio
Al\'erValloy VI. SOUtn Poln~ 5 p.in.
. . . . . . . 27 .

.= ':'.'::;,

-.v • .

·'

MolgiHa

Wenama al Alllont, 5 p.m.
Southern 11 Polnl Plf...nl, 5 p.m.

Bruce hits two
nomers to back
Owings frrst win
•..~INCINNATI (AP) - Jay
t;lruce · homered twice and
drove in four runs, Micah
Owillgs earned his first win in
nearly a year with · seven
strong innings and the
Cincinnati Reds · beat the
Atlllltta Braves 8-2 on SlUiday..
Joey Votto had two doubles
and three RBis to help the
RePs salvage the finale of the
three.game series after losing
the first two.
:Owings (1-2), acquired in
!hi: trade that sent Adam Duim
10 Arizona, also had two hits .
while .earning hfs tirstwi.n in
15 appearances, including II
star!$, since a 9-3 . win at
Atlanta fur Arizona May 25. ·.
The right-hander, who was 0-9
withan8.53 ERA in that span,
limited the Braves to six hits ·
lind one nm with three walks
and six strikeouts Slioday. ·· ·
· Former Reds catcher David
Ross broke up Owings'
shutout bid with a Solo horne
run with one out in the sev. enth.
The .R,eds, w~Jo sccired
three more runs Sunday for
Owings than they tolllled in
his fi!St two . starts, avoided
their fust three.game skid of
the season and cost the
Braves their first four'gatne
winning streak.
·
: Atlanta . starter Kenshin
. Kawakami held the. Reds hitless and limited !hem to just
two baserunners until Joey
Votto lined adouble down the
right•field lin!: with one out in
the fourth inning. An out later,
Bruce ·hit an opposite-field
home run to left,
. • Bruce has gotten at least
one hit in all six starts since
missing three consecutive
starts with a bruised right

hand.

·
·

AP PhotO

Cleveland Cavaliers foiWard LeBron James (23), shoota .as
Detroit Pistons guard Richard Hamilton (32) defends in the
first quarter of a firsl·round NBA playoff basketball game
Sunday in Auburn Hills,, Mich.
·

Bengals weigh OT Andre Smith, then draft him
, CINCINNATI (AP) - passing elboW in the first
Two days before \he draft, three games of the regular
the Cmcinnati Bengals. season.
called offensive tackle . The elbow · injury forced
Andre Smitll and told him to him to miss a dozen games,
get ready for a · ~urprise visit but healep without surgery. ,
to his home in Binningham, Heading into the draft; .the
Ala., one that would involve Bengals knew there was
getting on a scale.
oni,Y one way to go with
When tl!e junior tackle the1r top pick. It had to be an
weighed in 111 337 · pounds, offensive linemim.
only slightly higher than his
But, which one?
playing we1ght, the Bengals
Smith was considered one
were sold. The huge Uneman of the best, able to push peowith some big questions pie l!f'Ound with his · .long
about maturity . would be arms and 6-foot-4, 330.their first-round draft pick. . pound frame. The questions ·
Cincinnati took Smith started when he was suswith the sixtll overall pick pe'nded for the Sugar Bowl,
on Saturday, bringing in a·lot reportedly
for
having
of gilih to 'help protect quar- improper dealings with an
terback Carson Palmer. The agent, which he denied ..
junior from Alabama ·gave
At the NFL combine, ·
teams some second thoughts teams asked him about the
when he left tQe scouting suspension . . Smi.th · then
combine unannounced in raised a whole new set of
February. ·
· questions by leaving .the
1\vo months. of visits, combine unexpectedly with.
.
.
. .
AP photo
including that surprise one .out giving-notice or ex plana- · .Cincinnati Bangals NFL Draft first-round p1ck And.re Sm1th, nght, from Alabama, h~&gt;lds his
on Thursday from offensive tion to the league, His Jersey ~Ith head coach M11rv1n Lewis, left, dunng a news c~&gt;nference at Paul Brown
line coach Paul Alexa,rider, weight . fluctuations also Stadium, Sunday.
·
.
convinced the Bengals to made some scouts leery.
make Sniith the first offen- · The Bengals liked his n't.expecting it, It went real~
Smith's main job will be linebacker Keith Rivers,
sive tackle , they've · talc;en · blocking ability and singled ly welL A lot of people say I protecting Palmer, whom he who was the· Bengals' top
with a. top pick since Levi h!m out as their potential top tend .to blow .up in the off- met in another une~pected pick last year.
Jones in 2002. '
· . p1ck - Alexander texted season. I was 337 (pounds) encounter. When he got on
The
Bengals
liked
"We~ve ·really liked him him almost daily besides . when
coach Alexander his flight for a predraft Maualuga so much that they
a.nd wanted .just to make attending his workouts. Still, weighed me," .
. .workout in Cincinnati, considered taking him in the
sure,'' coach Marvin Lewis they wanted make sure they
Tltat was. only seven Smith saw Palmer sitting firsl round if they traded
said, '!This is a big pick for weren't making a bi~ mis- pounds over his playing across the aisle,
down from the sixth spot
us, .and we wanted to make take by taking him wtth the weight. It was enough to
"l told him, 'Put in a t~ood They ~ol some insights
clinch the·deal,
·
word for me;'" Smith sa1d.
a.bout htm from Rivers, who
sure this is the right person sixth overall pick.
for us."
·
So, ~wis told his offenSmith could move into a Smith's weight was worth will be his teammate again.
· His big proportions fit sive line coach to make an starting role quickly, ass.um- more than a good word.
· "It'll be a great feeling,''
· · unannounced
visit. ing he doesn t have a long With
that
problem MJ!ualuga said. "We talked
their biggest need.
Palmer got batiered last Alexander called Smith on contract .negotiation . The addressed,.the Bengals went and he'd play around saying, year because the line could- Thursday morning and said . Bengills lost right tackle for · another
Southern 'I'm trying to get one ofyou
n't protect him. He broke his he was. o,n his way to Stacy
Andrews
to California linebacker in the (Southern Cal) linebackers
nose in the preseason and Alabama to . check his Philadelphia in free agency, second round, looking to to come and play with us,'
needed · surgery, . then weight.
and left tackle Levi' Jones improve their anemic pass whether. it's Brian Cushing
sprained his ankle and tore a "I was really caught off- . has been limited by a series rusb. Rey Maualuga will be or Clay Matthews or myself.
hgament and tendon in his . guard,'.' Smith said, "I was- . of injuries the last few years. reunited with former USC lt .actually happened ."

Prep Track and Field Roundup

.

The Reds broke the game
9peD with a six-run fifth. Votto
hit a three.run double just out
~f the reach ·of lunging first
llaseman · Casey Kotchman.
~'liDdon Phillips followed ·
with run-scoring single and
~ruce capped the inning with
His second homer of the game
!WI fifth of the season. It was
his third . multihomer game
and ftrst this.season,
· Bruce's homer lrnocked
Kawakami (1-3) out having
given up eight hits and eight
runs with a walk and a strikeSTAFF REPORTS
out. The 33~yeat'Oid rOokie
MOSSPORTSeMYD\ICISeNTHL.COM
gght-hander from Japan has
lpst his last three starts after
MARIETIA - The Blue
s!arting his big league career
with a win owr Washington Angels were unstoppable
Saturdi\Y as they all but
on Aprilll.
the
Marietta
Owings held Atlanta to IWO swept
hils and five baserunners Invitational, taking top
through the first five innings. spots in more than a handful

a

Blue ·Angels
fly high at ·
Marietta

---r-: _L_

'

broadcilsterJoe Tail said.
James gave them plenty to
cheer about early, especially
on a spectacular dunk, and
ignited more "M·V"P!''
chants by a slam that put the
Cavs ahead 86-69.
In the final minutes of the
game, "Let's Co Cavs!"
chants could easily be heard
a~ frustr~ted fans of the
p io •
ted
IS n. ex• ·
Rasheed · . ":allace was
scon;less, rruss.mg all seven
of h1s shots, m what was
probably his last game with
the Piston.s unless they make
a .stunnjng move and re-sign
h1m as a free . agent.
Wallace's . and Allen
Iverson's contracts will
· the Pistons' books
·come off
this summer, making them
potentially a major player' in
the offseason.
Iverson was acquired from
the Denver . Nuggets for
Chauncey Billups early in
the season·. and the short.
.
f ,.
tenn •!Dpact WI!,S aw u1 •• or
the P•stons, tran~formmg
them frQill a po~s..ble ~on·tender
to a defimuve dlsaster
~
. .
~n the1r final garne, reserve
Wtii .Bynum scored a career
playoff-high 22 and Rodney
Stuckey had 14 points.
Delonte West scored I 2
for the Cavs.

first, placing a 51.30 finish. time of 5100, and the other
of events.
For the distance events, in the 4x200 meier relay with
The standouts for Gallia
Adkins
and a time of I:50.
·
.
Ac!l,demy' ranged team- Lauren
wide. ·
McKenna Warner took first
The Blue Angel 4x800
Starting wjth the I00 and second place finishes meter relay squad of Watner,
meter dash, sprinters Alexis with times of 5:36 and 5:42, Baker, Barnes. and P. Adkins
·
took first in theirevent,clockGeiger and Kara Jackson repsectively.
took first and second place
ln the 3200 meter run, ing in at 10: 13.40.
On the field Gallia
finishes, clocking in times Peyton Adkins and Genna
of 12.90 and 13.10, respec- Baker showed their Blue Academy also excelled.
Angel speed and stamina.
Taking fi~t place in the
tively.
.
The 200 meter sprinters Adkins took first in the event discus throw was Allie
also performed well with with a time of 12:04, Baker Troester who reached a disJackson and Tonia Logan ·finished fourth behind her lance of 117'00, Troester's
placing for the Blue Angels. teammate with a 13:23.70run. fellow Angel Natalie Close
Logan swept the event with
Samantha Burnes took took third in the event with
a first place finish of 26.60 fi..St in the 800 meter tun, _ a throw of 85'06.
and teammate Logan took setting a new school record . The throwers were also .
third with a time of 28.40. . for Gallia Academy with a successful iii the shot put
with Troester taking first in
Following that, teammate time of 2:21.70.
Galli a's relay teams were the event with a throw of
Brea Close took a success35'02.5, and teammate
ful first place spot in the no slouche~either.
The
team
of
Close,
Logan,
Close taking second place
I00 meter hurdles with a
time of 16.90, Close contin- Jackson and Geiger took two with a distance of 34' 10.
'l'roester took her athletiued her success into the 300 first place finishes- one in
meter hurdles, again. taking the 4xl00 meter relay with a cism into the high jump

where she finished in second place with a height of
4' 10.
Geiger was unstoppable
in the long jump event, taking first place with a dis·
tance of 17'01.50.
Gallia Academy's team
effort brought them the first
place finish with a point
total of 1785.
The Blue Devils weren't
too shabby at the meet
either.
With a fourth place finish
overall, the boys of Gallia
Academy placed in many
events and. made a strong
presence at the invitational.
For the I00 meter dash,
Devils Austin Wilson and
Corey Straight took top
spots. Wilson finished flfSI
in the event with a time of
PIIIIM SM Roundup. Bl

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PageA6

OHIO .

The Daily Sentinel

Monday,

27,2009

Bl

The Daily Sentinel

Inside
NfLdnft, Page Bl

Nedpnlcbts,B6
•

Ohio boy's swine .flu matches.
deadly Mexican strain
Bv

COLUMBUS (AP) -An
Students who lived io
end-of-year college block · nearby houses threw
party spiraled out of control from windows to f
the
as pohce fired pellets and flames. Video shows stuused pepper spray to break dents huddled on a roof,
up hundreds of rioting stu- escaping into a second-story
dents who sparked a string window as a line of about
of street fires at Kent State 25 police, their faces
University.
masked by plastic shields,
Video .posted on the . fonns near the flames.
Internet shows students
Choruses of boos were
hurling furnitUre and street captured on video as fire;
signs into the flames on fighters doused the fires,
Saturday night as a SWAT and students cheered as oth-.
team in riot gear converged ers quickly ran back into the
on the crowd. Kent police street to spark more.
· said the party grew violent
Officers tried to chase stuafter one reveler was arrest- dents 11way from the street
ed and students began pelt. and shot them with paint
ins officers with .bottles, balls and pepper spray,
bncks and rocks:
Wolford said. Many stuIt was the first violent dents ignored orders to
clash between Kent State leave, hiding behind houses
students and police in years. and peeking out to see what
In I970, four Kent State siu- was happening, he said.
dents were killed by Ohio · "When police fi!St .started
National Guard troops dur- making their little charge
ing a campus protest of the down College Avenue, they
invasion of Cambodia,
yelled, 'Get in your houses
· ."They were humin~ pret- · or we'll arrest you,'"
ty much everything,' said Wolford said. "When one
police dispatcher Rosemarie student stayed on his lawn,
Mosher. "They were throw- two officers sprinted at him
ing stop signs on the fires, and just kind of grabbed him
they were throwing chairs, forcefully and arrested him."
couches, tree branches.
On Sunday morning,
Basically anything they splotches of paint · stained
could get their hands on/'
nearby houses, and shards
At least 64 students were of glass littered the grass
arrested, and several officers and pavement. ·
suffered minor injuries,
''The cops were being
Mosher said. Students gath-. nice, and two minutes later
ered on front porches at we were shot by rubber bulabout 8:30 p.m. and began lets for no reason,'' junior
spilling into the streets on Jamie Farrell told the unithe unusually warm evening. versity's student newspaper.
When officers ordered the
The riot was mostly over
crowd to disperse, students by 10 p.m., when more than
built piles of couches, suit- two dozen police and fire
cases and other debris and vehicles surrounded the area.
lit them on fire. There were
Kent State spokesman
at least four fires blazing in Tom Neumann satd the stuthe middle of the street, dents' behavior 'is inexcus.
Mosher said.
able and the university is
The · students led the awaiting more ififonnation
police down .the road start- from police.
mg fires, said Ben Wolford,
"Obviously, thin~s got alit-. .
an editor at the campus tie bit out of hand,' Neumann
newspaper who witnessed . said. The university has not
the riot. ,
received any reports of
''They were going .into . injured students, he said. ·
. their ho'uses and bringing
Wolford said most stuout office chairs," he said. dents believe the violence
."Someone sa,i4 they threw a · probably co.uld have been
flat-screen TV'on the fire." ·avoided. ·.

MEGHAN BARR

ASSOCIATED PRESS WAITER

COLUMBUS
The
....
:··, .
swine flu virus that 'ickened a 9-year-old Ohio boy
is the same strain a:; the on~
that has killed up to 86 people in Mexico, an emer~ency official said Sunday.
Laboratory rests by the
.-. ~
Ohio Department of Health
1\lld the Centers for Di,ease
Control and Prevention con-~· ·,.
fllOled the case matches the
·p···
deadly strain , said Lorain
County
Emergency
Management
Agency
spol\esman Clifton Barnes.
Health
department
· spokesman Robert Jennings
said the boy has a mild case
of the disease and is recovering at his home in Elyria,
in northern Ohio's Lorain
County. The child's name
was not released.
The third-grader visited
several Mexican cities while
· ~
~~
on vacation with his family Ohio Governor Ted f'trickland, left, answers questions as Ohio Department of Health
j&gt;efore ending the trip in Director Dr: Alvin Jackson looks on during a news conference about a confirmed case of
Mexico City, Barnes said.
swine flu in Ohio at the Ohio Department of Health in Columbus on Sunday.
"He went to a fair, he
went to a farm, he went 'to Tuesday through Thursday sympto'ms, including a sore
Symptoms of the swine
VISit
family
around last week add bejlan receiv- throat and body aches, flu virus closely resemble
Mexico," Bames'said.
ing treatment on Friday, Jennings said. His family those of the seasonal flu and
The boy, who returned . said Dr. Alvin Jac!&lt;son, the members are being tested include fever, weakness,
from Mexico within the past director of the Ohio for the disease, but they cur, coughing and Jack of
two weeks, started feeling Department of Health.
rently are in good health, appetite.
·
sick on Wednesday, Barries · Jackson and Gov. Ted Jennings said. He did not
Federal health officials
said. He was treated for flu Strickland spoke at a news know if tbe child or his fam- said Sunday that 20 cases of
symptoms at a city health conference
Sunday, ily had direct contact with swine flu have been report:
clinic, where an astute nurse announcing that shipments p1gs while they were in ed so far across the U.S. in
New York, Ohio, Kansas,
practitioner began asking of the antiviral drugs Mexico.
questions and realized he Relenza and Tamiflu would
City health officials have Texas and California.
might have swine flu, arrive from the federal gov- sent out an advisory to par- Patients have ranged in age
Barnes said.
ernment\
Strategic ents at Ely Elementary, and from 9 to over 50. At least
The child is a student at Ely National Stockpile as early parents can call a phone t~o were hospitalized. All
Elementary School, accord- as Tuesday. The drugs are bank with any questions recovered or are recovering.
ing to a statement posted being sent in case the out- regarding the illness.
In Mexico, health offi. A message left Sunday cials say a strain of swine
Sunda~ on the Elyria City . break spreads; Jackson said.
Health District's Web site.
The child in Elyira dis- with the school was. not flu has sickened more. than
: He attended school from played typical seasonal flu immediately returned.
1,000 poople.
.

Veteran Rio educator,retires this spring
STAFF REPORT
MOSNEWSOMYOAILYSENTINEL.COM

: RIO GRANDE - After
~7
years of teaching,
Charles Withee will retire
this spring.
The Rio Grande resident
.)lnd Pomeroy native taught
for 46 years . for the
University
of
Rio
Grande/Rio
Grande
Community College and.
one year at the former
Rutland High School.
- Withee has always loved
teaching, and his love of
education started when he
was ,a student.
· "I had some really great
teachers when I was in
school," Withee said.
Pomeroy · High School
teachers Forrest Ward. and
)\sa · Hoskins in particular
had a ·big impact on him.
After hi$h school , Withee
enrolled m Rio Grande,
where he was particularly
impressed by Professor
.Francis Burdell. ·
: "I thought Rio Grande
was wonderful," Withee
!'aid. He enjoyed his teachers and the other students,
feli very comfortable on
campus.
. After graduating in 1961
with a degree in math/sci:
· ence education, he taught
for . one year at Rutland
High School before taking a
teaching position at Rio
Grande.
He enjoyed teaching on
campus right from the
beginning, and that love of
teaching just continued to
grow over the years. He has
always relished the opportunity to work with the students, get to know them and
have an impact on their
lives by assisting them with
their educations.
· "Nothing in society really
l;ompares with what a col'
lege educatim\ does for a
boy or a girl," Withee said.
"There is nothing else that
~an have that type of impact
on their lives."
: Rio Graride ProvostJVice
President for Academic
Affairs Dr. Barbara Hatfield .
said that Withee is an outstanding professor who
cares about his students and
inspires them.
·
· "When I first came to Rio
Grande , it was to teach
mathematics. Mr. Withee is
one of the reasons that 1
took the job. From my first
association with him, I saw

and

•

t}ects

-'Colilllless former studenfs ·last 46 years, and Rio
and colleagues, but he has Grande students, faculty
not been · able to keep up and staff have been even
•.,with.. SPill~ of !hem as he · ·prouder ro have him on
would have liked to.
campus.
·
Now · that he is retiring,
Withee plans td~et in touch
with these · · fnends, and
recpnneet witll them, He
also plans on " being
involved in the Rio Grande
Alumni .Association, artd '
This mothers day, a heartfelt
hopes to encourage other ·
alumni to;be involved in ihc; ..
coll.ege~ . attend campu~
event~ • and su11port Rio
Charlet Withee
Grande·in different ways,.
could b~ the best gift you could
a person who reaily cares . The Wlthees have already
ever give y()ur m()ther.
about the students that he established a scholarship
fund,
the
Withee
encounters. He not only
Don't miss this opportunity to say it.
taught math but he also pro- Scholarship, in honor of
vided guidance and inspira- their parents. Mary's mothTo be published
tion to his students," er, Hazel Booth Duffy,
~raduated
from
Rio
Grande
Hatfield ~aid. "Rarely do I
Sunday, May lOth
walk through the Kidd Math m 1925. The scholarship
1x3 Greeting $10
and Science Center without helps area students attend
seeing Mr. Withee counsel- Rio Grande each year,
ing or working math prob- which makes Charles and
lems a student. His presence Mary Withee very proud. .
When he retires., Withee
will be missed in the math
department at Rio Grande." also plans to spend time ·
Withee and his · wife, with his two scins and two ·
. Mary, live in the village of grdndsons' who all live in
Rio Grande and have the area, and with his father,
(Your Mother's
enjoyed living and working Charles M. Withee, 90, who
Name)
in a college community. lives in Pomeroy.
"My dad is a big inspiraThey both were able to walk
to work . at times , because tion to anyone who will lisLove, Adam, Evan
while Charles Withee ten to him," Withee said. He
worked for the university, added that his father always
and .Cameron
Mary Withee worked for stressed to him how imporRio . Grande Elementary tant it was that he receive an
Rodgers
education , and that message
School.
One thing he loves about has made a big impact on
. teaching at Rio Grande is the his life .
Withee has stressed that
. students. and how hard they
work at their educations. importance with his own
Many of the Rio Grande stu- students, and helped them in
dents are pulling themselves countless ways. · He also
up by the bootstraps and taught the children of many
earning their .educations .so of his former students, and
that they can improve their he has been able to see how
liv.es , Withee said . ·
a Rio Grande education has
"TheX are rich in other helped their families.
senses,' he added .
Charles Withee has been
Deadline for lhls Spec lot Mothe1~1 EloyTrttllllols
Over the years, Withee. proud to be part of that Rio
. Wednesday, Mov 6, 2009
Flit oullhe form below ond drop off tho poym1111tlo
has become friends ·with Grande education for the
The DOlly Sentlnei"Molher's Day''
111 Court St., Pomeroy, OH 45769 .
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Monday,April27,2009
'·

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,._h.,._.,.Gdlo_ ·

LeBron lifts Cavs past Pistons an~ into 2nd round

AUBURN HILLS, Mich.· route to its first NBA finals
•mbln .
'(AP) LeBron James appe~nce and was elimi~ vo. l'«fellllltoc:l&lt;Olg, &amp;p.m ·
earned a break.
.
.
n~ted by the event.ual ~ham=~.~~p~:'"'
.boJamndses hadand .3.6 polO~, 13 plOD Bostond Cell ws. m. the
Polnt~atRa;a-.&amp;:;JOp.m. re u .
eJght .asSISts to second roun last year.
Rlvor vo~ooy '"· Fairland, 5 pm.
lead the Clev~land Cavaliers . :tne Cavs will face. th~
~~..:;:m.
to a ~-7~ · vrctmy over ~ . 'lf~J!l~Cf of~ Atlanta-Miatnt
• 8oflbo!ll .
Detrot~ Pts.tons on Sunday, sj!ries, which !he lfeat lead
=~~~11:!;l',o~l;,m,;,.
'Swee~mg the Eastern 271 ~ea&lt;hllg rnto Monday
Mo9va. -1Jo.Vorll, &amp;p.m.
Con erence
first-round mght s garue at ~~me. Th~
. Plliri-81Falowolug8&lt;Uh,5p.m. series.
.
best-of-seven senes could
~ Valoy va. Fairland, 5 p.m.
The 'g&amp;"seeded Cavs· end as late as Sun·day M•y
Watwne w. South Gdla, 5 p.m.
'
..,
SouthOm va.l.lllor, s p.m.
migltt be o for more than a 3. · .
.
.
,.,.. ..... _ · •
week,waiting for'Atlanta or. Detroit. was in the confer=~.\~~':~ ll1villllblal Miamj to advance.
· en~ finals the !)asuix years,
,...,.
1 ·
Delfoit, . meanwhile, · will the lonJest such streak in the
GalllaAcademyva. . _, ol;30p.m: ~ .have its longes~ offseason NBA smce the.' LoS Angeles
DIMI'IR
since · 2001; and 11bout · $20 Lakers' · run two · decades
• ...,..,
,
million ip salary-cap .space age;~: The Pistons, the onl.Y
5
E.utornAcademy
atWahama,
p.m. ·5 p.m.
. •
. to . rebuild a. once-,proud Eastern Conference·team tn
Gallla
va. Falllancl,
!ltlgow. Aieundor,5p.m.
team.
·
· the .PIJ!yoffs for an eighth
_ , Pleuantot Roane County. &amp;'p.m.
Jatnes made 1tis first four straJaht year, had advanced
f11vor Valley vo.lronton Sl. Joe, 5 p.m.
· Iud'mg a wm
· d- m
· eac
"h of th e previous seven
Waharna
••· e..~ern, s p.m. ·
sbots ...,- mc
Boulhorn ·~ Soulh..=Jr· 5 p.m. ·
mill dunk. He hel~ut the postseasons.
Eoole~.-d:~· 6 p.m.
..
Pistons away for g . with a James worked up a sweat
GaJua
va.FOirllncl.5p.m.
16-6 run midway through 2 hours ~fore tipoff, shootva.~:!.~.T·.
the third 9uarter.
' mg 3"po.•i!ters fr.oom .everv
wa'i.':."!i:£a':,;;;~:;;,~p.m.
Mo Wtlliams scored a angle, drivmg agamstlmaglSoulhe&lt;n "\=:.:u=:..p.m. .
career · playoff•high 24 for na:JY defenders for. du1,1ks
Eoolern va. Soulh Gallla 4:30p.m.
the Cavs.
an ; pull ups . and leam.ng
GanlaAcademy ·aiJod&lt;lon,4:30p.m.
Detroit's:
Antonio · agamst the a1r to practice
~ntPitlllntaiUndoaVMannlnvlttal McDyess had 26 points, low-post moves.
·. ==~~~rlb,rg lnvllalonll tying a career playoff high.
When James joined his
· (1101'• Only)4:30 p.m
·
James has ·led the Cavs teammates for pregame
. Gallla Acadtnly
· Tonnlo
intl}.
the playoffs
the past warmu~s.. Cleveland fans
a1 Jadelon. 4:30p.m.
,
• •
...our years, wmrung at 1east :seeme
to · outnumber
Wtdottclly Ag11 II
one series el)Ch time.
Detroit ~upport~rs and he
'
B-1
Cleveland lost to the waved h1s arms m the air to
&amp;ultm at Parkertllurg SoU111, Marlena
COllege. 7 p.m.
Pistons in the second round encourage them to be even
Galia Academy II Jadelon, 5 p.m.
of the 2006 playoffs, .got louder.
~Valley vt. SoU1I1 Poln~ 5 p.m.
"It's· great to . be in
past them the next year in
'
8oftbOU
Gf]lla ~ · a1 JJctceon, 5 p.m.
.
the
conference
finals
en
Cleveland.
,:• Cavs radio
Al\'erValloy VI. SOUtn Poln~ 5 p.in.
. . . . . . . 27 .

.= ':'.'::;,

-.v • .

·'

MolgiHa

Wenama al Alllont, 5 p.m.
Southern 11 Polnl Plf...nl, 5 p.m.

Bruce hits two
nomers to back
Owings frrst win
•..~INCINNATI (AP) - Jay
t;lruce · homered twice and
drove in four runs, Micah
Owillgs earned his first win in
nearly a year with · seven
strong innings and the
Cincinnati Reds · beat the
Atlllltta Braves 8-2 on SlUiday..
Joey Votto had two doubles
and three RBis to help the
RePs salvage the finale of the
three.game series after losing
the first two.
:Owings (1-2), acquired in
!hi: trade that sent Adam Duim
10 Arizona, also had two hits .
while .earning hfs tirstwi.n in
15 appearances, including II
star!$, since a 9-3 . win at
Atlanta fur Arizona May 25. ·.
The right-hander, who was 0-9
withan8.53 ERA in that span,
limited the Braves to six hits ·
lind one nm with three walks
and six strikeouts Slioday. ·· ·
· Former Reds catcher David
Ross broke up Owings'
shutout bid with a Solo horne
run with one out in the sev. enth.
The .R,eds, w~Jo sccired
three more runs Sunday for
Owings than they tolllled in
his fi!St two . starts, avoided
their fust three.game skid of
the season and cost the
Braves their first four'gatne
winning streak.
·
: Atlanta . starter Kenshin
. Kawakami held the. Reds hitless and limited !hem to just
two baserunners until Joey
Votto lined adouble down the
right•field lin!: with one out in
the fourth inning. An out later,
Bruce ·hit an opposite-field
home run to left,
. • Bruce has gotten at least
one hit in all six starts since
missing three consecutive
starts with a bruised right

hand.

·
·

AP PhotO

Cleveland Cavaliers foiWard LeBron James (23), shoota .as
Detroit Pistons guard Richard Hamilton (32) defends in the
first quarter of a firsl·round NBA playoff basketball game
Sunday in Auburn Hills,, Mich.
·

Bengals weigh OT Andre Smith, then draft him
, CINCINNATI (AP) - passing elboW in the first
Two days before \he draft, three games of the regular
the Cmcinnati Bengals. season.
called offensive tackle . The elbow · injury forced
Andre Smitll and told him to him to miss a dozen games,
get ready for a · ~urprise visit but healep without surgery. ,
to his home in Binningham, Heading into the draft; .the
Ala., one that would involve Bengals knew there was
getting on a scale.
oni,Y one way to go with
When tl!e junior tackle the1r top pick. It had to be an
weighed in 111 337 · pounds, offensive linemim.
only slightly higher than his
But, which one?
playing we1ght, the Bengals
Smith was considered one
were sold. The huge Uneman of the best, able to push peowith some big questions pie l!f'Ound with his · .long
about maturity . would be arms and 6-foot-4, 330.their first-round draft pick. . pound frame. The questions ·
Cincinnati took Smith started when he was suswith the sixtll overall pick pe'nded for the Sugar Bowl,
on Saturday, bringing in a·lot reportedly
for
having
of gilih to 'help protect quar- improper dealings with an
terback Carson Palmer. The agent, which he denied ..
junior from Alabama ·gave
At the NFL combine, ·
teams some second thoughts teams asked him about the
when he left tQe scouting suspension . . Smi.th · then
combine unannounced in raised a whole new set of
February. ·
· questions by leaving .the
1\vo months. of visits, combine unexpectedly with.
.
.
. .
AP photo
including that surprise one .out giving-notice or ex plana- · .Cincinnati Bangals NFL Draft first-round p1ck And.re Sm1th, nght, from Alabama, h~&gt;lds his
on Thursday from offensive tion to the league, His Jersey ~Ith head coach M11rv1n Lewis, left, dunng a news c~&gt;nference at Paul Brown
line coach Paul Alexa,rider, weight . fluctuations also Stadium, Sunday.
·
.
convinced the Bengals to made some scouts leery.
make Sniith the first offen- · The Bengals liked his n't.expecting it, It went real~
Smith's main job will be linebacker Keith Rivers,
sive tackle , they've · talc;en · blocking ability and singled ly welL A lot of people say I protecting Palmer, whom he who was the· Bengals' top
with a. top pick since Levi h!m out as their potential top tend .to blow .up in the off- met in another une~pected pick last year.
Jones in 2002. '
· . p1ck - Alexander texted season. I was 337 (pounds) encounter. When he got on
The
Bengals
liked
"We~ve ·really liked him him almost daily besides . when
coach Alexander his flight for a predraft Maualuga so much that they
a.nd wanted .just to make attending his workouts. Still, weighed me," .
. .workout in Cincinnati, considered taking him in the
sure,'' coach Marvin Lewis they wanted make sure they
Tltat was. only seven Smith saw Palmer sitting firsl round if they traded
said, '!This is a big pick for weren't making a bi~ mis- pounds over his playing across the aisle,
down from the sixth spot
us, .and we wanted to make take by taking him wtth the weight. It was enough to
"l told him, 'Put in a t~ood They ~ol some insights
clinch the·deal,
·
word for me;'" Smith sa1d.
a.bout htm from Rivers, who
sure this is the right person sixth overall pick.
for us."
·
So, ~wis told his offenSmith could move into a Smith's weight was worth will be his teammate again.
· His big proportions fit sive line coach to make an starting role quickly, ass.um- more than a good word.
· "It'll be a great feeling,''
· · unannounced
visit. ing he doesn t have a long With
that
problem MJ!ualuga said. "We talked
their biggest need.
Palmer got batiered last Alexander called Smith on contract .negotiation . The addressed,.the Bengals went and he'd play around saying, year because the line could- Thursday morning and said . Bengills lost right tackle for · another
Southern 'I'm trying to get one ofyou
n't protect him. He broke his he was. o,n his way to Stacy
Andrews
to California linebacker in the (Southern Cal) linebackers
nose in the preseason and Alabama to . check his Philadelphia in free agency, second round, looking to to come and play with us,'
needed · surgery, . then weight.
and left tackle Levi' Jones improve their anemic pass whether. it's Brian Cushing
sprained his ankle and tore a "I was really caught off- . has been limited by a series rusb. Rey Maualuga will be or Clay Matthews or myself.
hgament and tendon in his . guard,'.' Smith said, "I was- . of injuries the last few years. reunited with former USC lt .actually happened ."

Prep Track and Field Roundup

.

The Reds broke the game
9peD with a six-run fifth. Votto
hit a three.run double just out
~f the reach ·of lunging first
llaseman · Casey Kotchman.
~'liDdon Phillips followed ·
with run-scoring single and
~ruce capped the inning with
His second homer of the game
!WI fifth of the season. It was
his third . multihomer game
and ftrst this.season,
· Bruce's homer lrnocked
Kawakami (1-3) out having
given up eight hits and eight
runs with a walk and a strikeSTAFF REPORTS
out. The 33~yeat'Oid rOokie
MOSSPORTSeMYD\ICISeNTHL.COM
gght-hander from Japan has
lpst his last three starts after
MARIETIA - The Blue
s!arting his big league career
with a win owr Washington Angels were unstoppable
Saturdi\Y as they all but
on Aprilll.
the
Marietta
Owings held Atlanta to IWO swept
hils and five baserunners Invitational, taking top
through the first five innings. spots in more than a handful

a

Blue ·Angels
fly high at ·
Marietta

---r-: _L_

'

broadcilsterJoe Tail said.
James gave them plenty to
cheer about early, especially
on a spectacular dunk, and
ignited more "M·V"P!''
chants by a slam that put the
Cavs ahead 86-69.
In the final minutes of the
game, "Let's Co Cavs!"
chants could easily be heard
a~ frustr~ted fans of the
p io •
ted
IS n. ex• ·
Rasheed · . ":allace was
scon;less, rruss.mg all seven
of h1s shots, m what was
probably his last game with
the Piston.s unless they make
a .stunnjng move and re-sign
h1m as a free . agent.
Wallace's . and Allen
Iverson's contracts will
· the Pistons' books
·come off
this summer, making them
potentially a major player' in
the offseason.
Iverson was acquired from
the Denver . Nuggets for
Chauncey Billups early in
the season·. and the short.
.
f ,.
tenn •!Dpact WI!,S aw u1 •• or
the P•stons, tran~formmg
them frQill a po~s..ble ~on·tender
to a defimuve dlsaster
~
. .
~n the1r final garne, reserve
Wtii .Bynum scored a career
playoff-high 22 and Rodney
Stuckey had 14 points.
Delonte West scored I 2
for the Cavs.

first, placing a 51.30 finish. time of 5100, and the other
of events.
For the distance events, in the 4x200 meier relay with
The standouts for Gallia
Adkins
and a time of I:50.
·
.
Ac!l,demy' ranged team- Lauren
wide. ·
McKenna Warner took first
The Blue Angel 4x800
Starting wjth the I00 and second place finishes meter relay squad of Watner,
meter dash, sprinters Alexis with times of 5:36 and 5:42, Baker, Barnes. and P. Adkins
·
took first in theirevent,clockGeiger and Kara Jackson repsectively.
took first and second place
ln the 3200 meter run, ing in at 10: 13.40.
On the field Gallia
finishes, clocking in times Peyton Adkins and Genna
of 12.90 and 13.10, respec- Baker showed their Blue Academy also excelled.
Angel speed and stamina.
Taking fi~t place in the
tively.
.
The 200 meter sprinters Adkins took first in the event discus throw was Allie
also performed well with with a time of 12:04, Baker Troester who reached a disJackson and Tonia Logan ·finished fourth behind her lance of 117'00, Troester's
placing for the Blue Angels. teammate with a 13:23.70run. fellow Angel Natalie Close
Logan swept the event with
Samantha Burnes took took third in the event with
a first place finish of 26.60 fi..St in the 800 meter tun, _ a throw of 85'06.
and teammate Logan took setting a new school record . The throwers were also .
third with a time of 28.40. . for Gallia Academy with a successful iii the shot put
with Troester taking first in
Following that, teammate time of 2:21.70.
Galli a's relay teams were the event with a throw of
Brea Close took a success35'02.5, and teammate
ful first place spot in the no slouche~either.
The
team
of
Close,
Logan,
Close taking second place
I00 meter hurdles with a
time of 16.90, Close contin- Jackson and Geiger took two with a distance of 34' 10.
'l'roester took her athletiued her success into the 300 first place finishes- one in
meter hurdles, again. taking the 4xl00 meter relay with a cism into the high jump

where she finished in second place with a height of
4' 10.
Geiger was unstoppable
in the long jump event, taking first place with a dis·
tance of 17'01.50.
Gallia Academy's team
effort brought them the first
place finish with a point
total of 1785.
The Blue Devils weren't
too shabby at the meet
either.
With a fourth place finish
overall, the boys of Gallia
Academy placed in many
events and. made a strong
presence at the invitational.
For the I00 meter dash,
Devils Austin Wilson and
Corey Straight took top
spots. Wilson finished flfSI
in the event with a time of
PIIIIM SM Roundup. Bl

�Page B2 •

The Daily Sentinel

www.mydailysentinel.com

Monday, April 27, 2009

Monday, April 27, 2009

www.mydallysentlnel.com

~rtbune. ~

Mangini, Kokinis help Browns draft smart taleni
BEREA. Ohio (AP) - n01happen.
mations.Manginidescribedthe
Whether they" re • any better
And the Browns still have sometimes intense session as a
remain&gt; to be seen. The twoqlllllterbat'ks: BrndyQuinn "full-day job interview."
Cle,eland Browns definitely and Derek Anderson, who will . "We're n01 giving them a
got brighter in the NFL draft. begin their competition for the tour of the facility and letting
In their fm.t foray together at starting job in June.
them watch the highlight
picking college talent, gener.~
Mangini said he doesn't video," he said.
manager George Kokinis and exp!X-1 to have a starter named
Mack wa~ given a series of
mach Eric Mangini factored in by the time training camp questions to answer.
brdins along with brawn while opens in July.
"A 101 of other teams will fly
..electing well-rounded players
Mack, a California kid with you out and just kind of meet
for the first phase of their Ohio roots, wasn't the only and greet and see your personrebuilding project with the Browns' draft selection with ality," Mack said. "Here, they
Browns.
impressive academic creden- explained plays to me, dislnii;)Beginning with California tials.
ed me with aliother interview
center - and gradua1e - Alex
Wide receiver Brian Robiskie and then had me come back
Mack with the No. 21 overaU was a finalist for the Draddy, a and see how much I rernempick. the Browns added players two-time Academic All- bered. They wanted to see if I
who didn't just run, tackle and American and glllduated in llie was actually a sman guy."
block during their stellar col- top 2 pe~ceQt of Ohio Srare's · So how did he do?
lege careers. These guys hit business school dass. Mohamed
"He did well," Mangini said.
opponents, and the books.
Massaquoi,anotherwi(lereceiv-. "He did really well."
Dumb jocks need no1 apply. er, already has a psychol~JSY.
Mack's father, Steve, played
In Cleveland. a slow time in the ' degree from Geclrgja• .Hawwi basketball at Baldwin Walface
40-yarddashcanbecompensat- linebacker David Veikune College. a long. TO .run from
ed by a 4.0 grade' point average. earned academic honors. .
the Browns' facility. Mack Sl!id
· The Browns might not be
CornerbaCk Don Carey wenr his dad predi~ he would be
ready to unseat the Super Bowl to Norfolk Stare but only after drafted by Cleveland.
·.
champion Pittsburgh Steelers turning down a scholarship
"He wa~ like, 'You're going
just yet, but they could proba- offer from Yale, where he was to be a Brown,"' Mack said.
bly take them in a crossword accepted but couldn't afford "Hewasjustguessing.Heeither
puzzle challenge.
the tuition. He's foui credits got lucky or he's pretty smart."
"I'm not saying I'm a shy of a degree in building conLike father, like son, who but the 6-foot, 228-pouilder
genius."· said Mack. who struction technology:
earned his degree from was overshadowed by . teamrecendy received the Draddy
For Mangini to get the Berkeley in legal studies. · · mates Brian Cushing, Rey
Tl?,\'hy, given to college foot- Browns turned around, he · Asked what he Can do with it,
balls top scholar ~ete. ·:1 needs players who can grasp Mack quipped. "play football." M.aualuga and Clay Mattllews.
think I work.hard. l think that s . his system quickly. The learnAfter passing on USC's
"They definitely have the
reflected mtile school work." .· ing curve needs to be minimal. hyped trio of linebackers in the spodight, but they made me a
Mack said the Browns put first two rounds; the Browns better player and upped my
After bein~ the . league's
buste~"t teru:n m the drdfi on him through a unique interview used their fourth-round . pick game," Maiava said.
Saturday ~~~three trndes, the durin/:e~:rcent pre-9ntft visit to (No. ·104 overall) on a lesser
With the fust of three sixthBrowns dtdn t make a move their · quarters.
known Trojans linebacker:.·· round picks, the I;lrowns
while a~ding two defens!ve
While
meeting
with Kaluka Maiava.
nabbed Carey, who was SO
backs, a linebacker and runmng Cleveland line coach George
The · · nephew . · of excited about receiving a letter
back on Sunday.
.
Warhop and others, Mack was actor/wrestler Dwayne "The from Kokinis before the draft
The expected trnde of Wide tested on his ability to remem- Rock" Johnson, Maiava that he framed it.
rece1ver Brayton Edwands dtd ber play calls and blocking for- recorded 66 tackles last season,
Cleveland cloSed the ftrst

West Virginia QB
Roundup
drafted by Dolphins fromPageBl
DAVIE, Fla. (AP) - The for 4,480 yards at West
Miami Dolphins now haYe a ·Virginia, where he had a 34quarterback to run their 8 record as a starter and
wildcay offense:
West became the first quarterback
Virginia's Pat White.
to start four bowl victories.
And Miami won't limit
He directed· a S(lread
White to one part of the offense.similar to the wtldcat
playbook.
and is well aware that the
The most .Prolific running Dolphins made a big splash
quarterback m major-college last year with their version of
history, White was a surprise the single wing.
·
pick by the Dolphins in the
"I definilely watched the
second round of the NFL Dolphins," be said. "It kind
draft Saturday.
. of reminded . me of West
General manager Jeff Virginia a little bit - get the .
Ireland said White will like- defense going one way and
ly . anchor the wildcat and shoot somebody out the ·
could eventually compete other way. It keeP.s ·the
for the starting quarterback defense on their toes. '
.
job. That means he'll chalLast Jear the Dolphins
lenge Chad Henne for the average 6.4 yards per ~lay
role of heir apparent to Chad in the wildcat with e1ght
Pennington.
touchdowns in 91 plays,
''I don't think you can including scores covering
have too many good players 62,53 and 51 yards. .
at that position," Ireland . Miami might also , find
said. "Pat White has an room for White in the receiv•
unusual set of skills that can ing · corps, · where . depth is
help us.. We're creative thin. He worked out as a
enough as a coaching staff wideout for NFL teams leadthat he'll be able to enhance ing up to the draft.
our offense in a multitude of
While White is optimistic
ways."
he can find a role in pros,
White could be an ideal Davis figures .he can make a
triggerman for the wildcat, a big difference as a rookie.
variation of the single wing
"My expectations will be
that
rejuvenated
the to be the defensive player of
Dolphins'offense last season the year in the National
to help them reach the play- Football League ,'' he s.aid.
offs for the first time m The Dolphins expect
seven years.
Davis and Smith to upgrade
"I guess I fit fairly well in a secondary that ranked 25th
the wildcat," Whtte said. in the league against the pass
"Hopefully that will be my last year and lost starting
~uickest way on the field. cornerback Andre Goodman
. I m excited and happy to be in free agency.
Davis worked out for the
a part of it."
Ireland denied the selec- Dolphins and said he
tion of White meant runnirfg recetved favorable feedback
back Ronnie Brown is on the from the team's' football
tniding block. Brown took czar, Bill Pan:ells.
the snaps in the wildcat last
"(He said) I lit the style of
year.
.
their defense with physical
..We're not looking to play and being aggressive,"
trade Ronnie Brown," Davis said. "I consider
Ireland said. "Pat is goin~ to myself a complete comer.
be the element of surpnse. My strength is coming up to
You can put him at receiver tackle and being physical in
at use Ronnie in the wildcat run SupPOrt."
still. There are a lot of things · Davts would have bee!)
you can do when you have drafted higher if not for congreat athletes."
cems about his attitude and
The Dolphins devoted work ethic. Illinois coach
their other first-day picks to Ron Zook briefly demoted
the . secondary, choosing Davis to second string last
Illinois cornerback Vontae year but touts' him as an
Davis with the 25th selection excellent NFL prospect.
in the first round. then
"People have their opinadding Utah defensive back ions."
Davis
said.
Sean Smith with their sec- . ''Everybody who knows
ond second-round chpice.
Vontae knows I'm a great
The Dolphins made both person and a .great player.
picks mindful of the potent Bill Parcells speaks louder
passing attacks they'll face than words. For him to draft
this year in the AFC East. me, he knows the type of
Tom .Brady is expected to person I am."
return for New England,
Ireland said Zook reas. ButTalo signed Pro Bowl sured the Dolphins about
receiver Tem:ll Owens and Davis' attitude.
the Jets uSed their top draft
"He's a competitive kid."
pic~ to select Southern Cal Ireland said. "He's a gym
quarterback Mark Sanchez. rat. He's a good kid. I don't
White could help the think we have to worry
Dolphins keep up with high- about any integrity probscoring opponents. He ran lems."

'

•

11.90,
followed
by
Straight's third place finish
of 12.00.
Wilson also added points for
GaUia Academy in his fourth
place finish in the 200 meter
dash, clockfug in at 24.60. .
The relay teams were successul as well, taking top
spots in three of the relays.
The squad of Austin
Wtlson, Ethan Moore, Tyier
Campbell aitd .Corey Straight
took a sec&lt;ll1!i pll!Ce fmish in
the 4x 100 me~ ielay with a
time of 46.00, ·and a third
place finisp ·in ieh 4x200
meter relay with a time of
1:37.40 ..
The 4x400 meter relay
squad of Moore, Straight,
Paolo Astuquipan, and
Michael Hackel took fourth
in the event, clocking in at
3:51.60.
. •.
.
Setl\: Amos, . the final
Gallia Aca~emy · finisher,
took foutth in the .800. meter
run. racing in. at 2:03.00.
Both the Blue An~ls and
Devils hope to continue on
their success ·and recordbreaking speeds, Thesday at
Jackson slatting at 4:30 p.m.

RAIDERS MAKE GOOD
SHOWING AT ERNIE CHAmN

ASHLAND, Ky. - This
Saturday the Ernie Chattin
Memorial Invitational ·was
hqsted
in
Ashland,
Kentucky, and it was not
without the taste of Ohio.
· . Representing
Gallia
County. the River Valley
track and field team showed
up across state lines ready
to compete with strength
an.d speed. Ready and rearing to go, both the Raiders
and Lady Raiders · had top
finishes in events, taking
fifth place overall -out of the .
18 total schools present.
There were many .standout
individuals for the Raider
. program at the meet, staning
with Kayla Smith, the Lady .
· Raider hurdler. Smith competed in the I00 meter hurdle,
finishing in the second place
spot with a time of 16.74.
Smith's fellow hurdler,

.

Sentinel -

~ter

Browns gene~
manager

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draft. of the Kokinis-Mangini
regime by taking San Jose
State
cornerback
Coye
FI1Ulcies and Oemson running
back James Davis. Francies
was dismissed ftom Oregon
State in 1J1J7 after ali arrest for
possession of a loaded firearm.
Those charges were dropped.
Davis went to the same
Atlanta high' sc.hool as Browns
running back Jamal Lewis.
· Mangini understands his first
draft as Cleveland's coach Will
be slapped with a grade in the

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

•

days ahead. But it will be somt
time before the group can ~
truly judged.
.
"You can't really evaluate it
for two or three years down thli
road," he said.
'
· However, this groups seem$ ·
to be off to a nice start.
When asked · what he knew
about aeveland's .secondary,
Carey wasn't sure but plartned
to find out.
''Before tonight is over with,
I will have my homework
done ~" he said.

Kody Johnson also· faced a dream-team finished first in
second place finish. Johnson the event, clocking in at
raced past the 16 other com- 4:33.76 . .
petitors to clinch runner-up
The ladies success was
m the II 0 meter hurdle event transfered to the boys • relay
with a time of 16.09.
squad who finishetl fourth in
With a team effort, the the event, witll a time of
.girls of the 4xl00 meter · 3:50.94.TheRaiderscompetrelay squad took secontl ing in the 4x400 relay were
place. The Lady Raiders Holliday, Caner, Johnson,
clocking in with a time of and Parker Hollingsworth.
55.54 were Stephanie Isaac,
Off the track, Katie Roberts
JaiNai Fields, Aubrie Rice, made a great showing for
and Kayla Smith.
River Valley. Roberts threw
The boys 4x100 meter with force and strength to a
relay team were successful m fust place finish in the discus.
their endeavours as well, Roberts' distanCe was 88.{)3;
placing third with a time of over a foot farther than the
46,79.The River Valley relay closest competitor.
squad was made up of David
Roberts also made a sueHolliday, Cody Carter, .cessful · throw in the shot
Jobnson, arid Zach Baird.
put, taking . fourth in ·the
Baird also went on to take event with a throw of 28-00.
third in the 400 meter dash,
Fellow thrower, Zak Dee!
finishing with a time of 53.53. also made a good showing for
· River's Johnson proved River Valley, taking foorth in
his diversity and agility, the discus with a distance of
placing in another event- 121-10. Deel !hen went on to
the 300 meter hurdle- fin- a first place finish in the shot
ishing with a time of 43.28. pill wtth a throw of 47.{)2,
Sprintin~ han:! . for the over two feet fanher than the
Lady Ratders, Amanda second place finisher.
."
Hager took a fourth place · All the individual. efforts
finish in the 200 meter dash · made up the teams' fifth place
with a time of 28:45.
.
finishes- a good showing
Hager then joined her fel- . out of the 18 teams fresent.
low Lady Raiders Jessica
River Valley wil be comHager, Kayla Smith, and peting at the Wheelersburg
Kelsey Sands, to compete.in Invitational on Monday,
the 4x400 meter relay. The startirig at 4.:30 p.rit.

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The Daily Sentinel

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Monday, April 27, 2009

Monday, April 27, 2009

www.mydallysentlnel.com

~rtbune. ~

Mangini, Kokinis help Browns draft smart taleni
BEREA. Ohio (AP) - n01happen.
mations.Manginidescribedthe
Whether they" re • any better
And the Browns still have sometimes intense session as a
remain&gt; to be seen. The twoqlllllterbat'ks: BrndyQuinn "full-day job interview."
Cle,eland Browns definitely and Derek Anderson, who will . "We're n01 giving them a
got brighter in the NFL draft. begin their competition for the tour of the facility and letting
In their fm.t foray together at starting job in June.
them watch the highlight
picking college talent, gener.~
Mangini said he doesn't video," he said.
manager George Kokinis and exp!X-1 to have a starter named
Mack wa~ given a series of
mach Eric Mangini factored in by the time training camp questions to answer.
brdins along with brawn while opens in July.
"A 101 of other teams will fly
..electing well-rounded players
Mack, a California kid with you out and just kind of meet
for the first phase of their Ohio roots, wasn't the only and greet and see your personrebuilding project with the Browns' draft selection with ality," Mack said. "Here, they
Browns.
impressive academic creden- explained plays to me, dislnii;)Beginning with California tials.
ed me with aliother interview
center - and gradua1e - Alex
Wide receiver Brian Robiskie and then had me come back
Mack with the No. 21 overaU was a finalist for the Draddy, a and see how much I rernempick. the Browns added players two-time Academic All- bered. They wanted to see if I
who didn't just run, tackle and American and glllduated in llie was actually a sman guy."
block during their stellar col- top 2 pe~ceQt of Ohio Srare's · So how did he do?
lege careers. These guys hit business school dass. Mohamed
"He did well," Mangini said.
opponents, and the books.
Massaquoi,anotherwi(lereceiv-. "He did really well."
Dumb jocks need no1 apply. er, already has a psychol~JSY.
Mack's father, Steve, played
In Cleveland. a slow time in the ' degree from Geclrgja• .Hawwi basketball at Baldwin Walface
40-yarddashcanbecompensat- linebacker David Veikune College. a long. TO .run from
ed by a 4.0 grade' point average. earned academic honors. .
the Browns' facility. Mack Sl!id
· The Browns might not be
CornerbaCk Don Carey wenr his dad predi~ he would be
ready to unseat the Super Bowl to Norfolk Stare but only after drafted by Cleveland.
·.
champion Pittsburgh Steelers turning down a scholarship
"He wa~ like, 'You're going
just yet, but they could proba- offer from Yale, where he was to be a Brown,"' Mack said.
bly take them in a crossword accepted but couldn't afford "Hewasjustguessing.Heeither
puzzle challenge.
the tuition. He's foui credits got lucky or he's pretty smart."
"I'm not saying I'm a shy of a degree in building conLike father, like son, who but the 6-foot, 228-pouilder
genius."· said Mack. who struction technology:
earned his degree from was overshadowed by . teamrecendy received the Draddy
For Mangini to get the Berkeley in legal studies. · · mates Brian Cushing, Rey
Tl?,\'hy, given to college foot- Browns turned around, he · Asked what he Can do with it,
balls top scholar ~ete. ·:1 needs players who can grasp Mack quipped. "play football." M.aualuga and Clay Mattllews.
think I work.hard. l think that s . his system quickly. The learnAfter passing on USC's
"They definitely have the
reflected mtile school work." .· ing curve needs to be minimal. hyped trio of linebackers in the spodight, but they made me a
Mack said the Browns put first two rounds; the Browns better player and upped my
After bein~ the . league's
buste~"t teru:n m the drdfi on him through a unique interview used their fourth-round . pick game," Maiava said.
Saturday ~~~three trndes, the durin/:e~:rcent pre-9ntft visit to (No. ·104 overall) on a lesser
With the fust of three sixthBrowns dtdn t make a move their · quarters.
known Trojans linebacker:.·· round picks, the I;lrowns
while a~ding two defens!ve
While
meeting
with Kaluka Maiava.
nabbed Carey, who was SO
backs, a linebacker and runmng Cleveland line coach George
The · · nephew . · of excited about receiving a letter
back on Sunday.
.
Warhop and others, Mack was actor/wrestler Dwayne "The from Kokinis before the draft
The expected trnde of Wide tested on his ability to remem- Rock" Johnson, Maiava that he framed it.
rece1ver Brayton Edwands dtd ber play calls and blocking for- recorded 66 tackles last season,
Cleveland cloSed the ftrst

West Virginia QB
Roundup
drafted by Dolphins fromPageBl
DAVIE, Fla. (AP) - The for 4,480 yards at West
Miami Dolphins now haYe a ·Virginia, where he had a 34quarterback to run their 8 record as a starter and
wildcay offense:
West became the first quarterback
Virginia's Pat White.
to start four bowl victories.
And Miami won't limit
He directed· a S(lread
White to one part of the offense.similar to the wtldcat
playbook.
and is well aware that the
The most .Prolific running Dolphins made a big splash
quarterback m major-college last year with their version of
history, White was a surprise the single wing.
·
pick by the Dolphins in the
"I definilely watched the
second round of the NFL Dolphins," be said. "It kind
draft Saturday.
. of reminded . me of West
General manager Jeff Virginia a little bit - get the .
Ireland said White will like- defense going one way and
ly . anchor the wildcat and shoot somebody out the ·
could eventually compete other way. It keeP.s ·the
for the starting quarterback defense on their toes. '
.
job. That means he'll chalLast Jear the Dolphins
lenge Chad Henne for the average 6.4 yards per ~lay
role of heir apparent to Chad in the wildcat with e1ght
Pennington.
touchdowns in 91 plays,
''I don't think you can including scores covering
have too many good players 62,53 and 51 yards. .
at that position," Ireland . Miami might also , find
said. "Pat White has an room for White in the receiv•
unusual set of skills that can ing · corps, · where . depth is
help us.. We're creative thin. He worked out as a
enough as a coaching staff wideout for NFL teams leadthat he'll be able to enhance ing up to the draft.
our offense in a multitude of
While White is optimistic
ways."
he can find a role in pros,
White could be an ideal Davis figures .he can make a
triggerman for the wildcat, a big difference as a rookie.
variation of the single wing
"My expectations will be
that
rejuvenated
the to be the defensive player of
Dolphins'offense last season the year in the National
to help them reach the play- Football League ,'' he s.aid.
offs for the first time m The Dolphins expect
seven years.
Davis and Smith to upgrade
"I guess I fit fairly well in a secondary that ranked 25th
the wildcat," Whtte said. in the league against the pass
"Hopefully that will be my last year and lost starting
~uickest way on the field. cornerback Andre Goodman
. I m excited and happy to be in free agency.
Davis worked out for the
a part of it."
Ireland denied the selec- Dolphins and said he
tion of White meant runnirfg recetved favorable feedback
back Ronnie Brown is on the from the team's' football
tniding block. Brown took czar, Bill Pan:ells.
the snaps in the wildcat last
"(He said) I lit the style of
year.
.
their defense with physical
..We're not looking to play and being aggressive,"
trade Ronnie Brown," Davis said. "I consider
Ireland said. "Pat is goin~ to myself a complete comer.
be the element of surpnse. My strength is coming up to
You can put him at receiver tackle and being physical in
at use Ronnie in the wildcat run SupPOrt."
still. There are a lot of things · Davts would have bee!)
you can do when you have drafted higher if not for congreat athletes."
cems about his attitude and
The Dolphins devoted work ethic. Illinois coach
their other first-day picks to Ron Zook briefly demoted
the . secondary, choosing Davis to second string last
Illinois cornerback Vontae year but touts' him as an
Davis with the 25th selection excellent NFL prospect.
in the first round. then
"People have their opinadding Utah defensive back ions."
Davis
said.
Sean Smith with their sec- . ''Everybody who knows
ond second-round chpice.
Vontae knows I'm a great
The Dolphins made both person and a .great player.
picks mindful of the potent Bill Parcells speaks louder
passing attacks they'll face than words. For him to draft
this year in the AFC East. me, he knows the type of
Tom .Brady is expected to person I am."
return for New England,
Ireland said Zook reas. ButTalo signed Pro Bowl sured the Dolphins about
receiver Tem:ll Owens and Davis' attitude.
the Jets uSed their top draft
"He's a competitive kid."
pic~ to select Southern Cal Ireland said. "He's a gym
quarterback Mark Sanchez. rat. He's a good kid. I don't
White could help the think we have to worry
Dolphins keep up with high- about any integrity probscoring opponents. He ran lems."

'

•

11.90,
followed
by
Straight's third place finish
of 12.00.
Wilson also added points for
GaUia Academy in his fourth
place finish in the 200 meter
dash, clockfug in at 24.60. .
The relay teams were successul as well, taking top
spots in three of the relays.
The squad of Austin
Wtlson, Ethan Moore, Tyier
Campbell aitd .Corey Straight
took a sec&lt;ll1!i pll!Ce fmish in
the 4x 100 me~ ielay with a
time of 46.00, ·and a third
place finisp ·in ieh 4x200
meter relay with a time of
1:37.40 ..
The 4x400 meter relay
squad of Moore, Straight,
Paolo Astuquipan, and
Michael Hackel took fourth
in the event, clocking in at
3:51.60.
. •.
.
Setl\: Amos, . the final
Gallia Aca~emy · finisher,
took foutth in the .800. meter
run. racing in. at 2:03.00.
Both the Blue An~ls and
Devils hope to continue on
their success ·and recordbreaking speeds, Thesday at
Jackson slatting at 4:30 p.m.

RAIDERS MAKE GOOD
SHOWING AT ERNIE CHAmN

ASHLAND, Ky. - This
Saturday the Ernie Chattin
Memorial Invitational ·was
hqsted
in
Ashland,
Kentucky, and it was not
without the taste of Ohio.
· . Representing
Gallia
County. the River Valley
track and field team showed
up across state lines ready
to compete with strength
an.d speed. Ready and rearing to go, both the Raiders
and Lady Raiders · had top
finishes in events, taking
fifth place overall -out of the .
18 total schools present.
There were many .standout
individuals for the Raider
. program at the meet, staning
with Kayla Smith, the Lady .
· Raider hurdler. Smith competed in the I00 meter hurdle,
finishing in the second place
spot with a time of 16.74.
Smith's fellow hurdler,

.

Sentinel -

~ter

Browns gene~
manager

.

.

In One Week With Us
tOO!classified~=oytrilxm~oom REACH OVER 285,000 PROSPECTS
PJ.US YOUR
NOW ONLINE
To Place
'ar:rtbune
Sentinel

...

caY;~:; (7!~1 10446-2342 (7~~1ro992;~!~6

. Websltes:
www.mytlallytribune.com
www.mydallysentinel.com
www. mydallyreg~er.com

:Jt)en-t'
» ~te·r

~

draft. of the Kokinis-Mangini
regime by taking San Jose
State
cornerback
Coye
FI1Ulcies and Oemson running
back James Davis. Francies
was dismissed ftom Oregon
State in 1J1J7 after ali arrest for
possession of a loaded firearm.
Those charges were dropped.
Davis went to the same
Atlanta high' sc.hool as Browns
running back Jamal Lewis.
· Mangini understands his first
draft as Cleveland's coach Will
be slapped with a grade in the

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

•

days ahead. But it will be somt
time before the group can ~
truly judged.
.
"You can't really evaluate it
for two or three years down thli
road," he said.
'
· However, this groups seem$ ·
to be off to a nice start.
When asked · what he knew
about aeveland's .secondary,
Carey wasn't sure but plartned
to find out.
''Before tonight is over with,
I will have my homework
done ~" he said.

Kody Johnson also· faced a dream-team finished first in
second place finish. Johnson the event, clocking in at
raced past the 16 other com- 4:33.76 . .
petitors to clinch runner-up
The ladies success was
m the II 0 meter hurdle event transfered to the boys • relay
with a time of 16.09.
squad who finishetl fourth in
With a team effort, the the event, witll a time of
.girls of the 4xl00 meter · 3:50.94.TheRaiderscompetrelay squad took secontl ing in the 4x400 relay were
place. The Lady Raiders Holliday, Caner, Johnson,
clocking in with a time of and Parker Hollingsworth.
55.54 were Stephanie Isaac,
Off the track, Katie Roberts
JaiNai Fields, Aubrie Rice, made a great showing for
and Kayla Smith.
River Valley. Roberts threw
The boys 4x100 meter with force and strength to a
relay team were successful m fust place finish in the discus.
their endeavours as well, Roberts' distanCe was 88.{)3;
placing third with a time of over a foot farther than the
46,79.The River Valley relay closest competitor.
squad was made up of David
Roberts also made a sueHolliday, Cody Carter, .cessful · throw in the shot
Jobnson, arid Zach Baird.
put, taking . fourth in ·the
Baird also went on to take event with a throw of 28-00.
third in the 400 meter dash,
Fellow thrower, Zak Dee!
finishing with a time of 53.53. also made a good showing for
· River's Johnson proved River Valley, taking foorth in
his diversity and agility, the discus with a distance of
placing in another event- 121-10. Deel !hen went on to
the 300 meter hurdle- fin- a first place finish in the shot
ishing with a time of 43.28. pill wtth a throw of 47.{)2,
Sprintin~ han:! . for the over two feet fanher than the
Lady Ratders, Amanda second place finisher.
."
Hager took a fourth place · All the individual. efforts
finish in the 200 meter dash · made up the teams' fifth place
with a time of 28:45.
.
finishes- a good showing
Hager then joined her fel- . out of the 18 teams fresent.
low Lady Raiders Jessica
River Valley wil be comHager, Kayla Smith, and peting at the Wheelersburg
Kelsey Sands, to compete.in Invitational on Monday,
the 4x400 meter relay. The startirig at 4.:30 p.rit.

I .

HO.W TO WRUl .O

I

llun

· Or Fu To

••00 a.m.

hper

o-••vm s.z: Noo·n

2

, auetn... Deya Prior To _
Publk:aUon
8unclay Dleplav• 1t00

n.u,.,.ay r.;.r sUnctav-

17H234

$1.00forloroe

• Ali •de mUll be prepaid'

AD

,.,
nctlf. .. not

SucctNfutAd•
Should Include Thue ItaTo Help Get RMponH,.

JUST SAY

CHARGE III

Now you can helve borders and orophlcs
~
-Gddedtoyourclasslfledads
.{,;~
~ .
·.. Borders$3.00/perad
I!
Graphics 50. for small

Dl•play Ads

All

.

(304) '67,·1333 •

Ou.t~l.,.
••OO a.m..

lJ

fHIIl,. E.OE. . .
OVIf lhe phOnt,

wtll

~

KIT &amp; CARLYLE
Ohio Valley
Publllhlng reaerves

car· detached garage· and
2 out bulld~gs. .Would

tlte ~ght to ld~,
reJect or cancel any
ld at any Hme.
Errori

Muol

llepllrtld

on the

make a wpndertul famlty

· hoi'ne or bed &amp; breakfast.
· Private and Plctur8sque .
SPECTACULAR VIEW ·
$209,000.00 , please call
740·992-3678

Land (AAnaee)
Rio Grande • 1.8 Acres
on paved road. 1- 1/2
mile !rom U.S.
35.
County
Mobile
hOme
$12,500.

}Je-f4J .

·. A Do-lt-yourself classified ads
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·Ap·-1

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Townhoutes

. Save time and money. Go to www.mydallysentlnel.com
..and click on Classifieds and follow the user-friendly steps
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Upload photos and graphics
Print and Online options
7 great packages to choose from

~.OQ oil rour lot

TNcb .
Need to sell, priced r•
ducod, 04 Slverado · 4X4
tru&lt;:k, like new, 92,000
~~--~;;;;;;;~~ ~~~--=~;;;;;; mi. 510,500 OBO. Call
Angus
Bulls,exceUent AUCTION·
Modulat 740--441-8299
or
blootllln.. ,
Pnced HOUS8 &amp;I 12:00 Noon on 740-44I·S472
Rea&amp;onably.
May 9, 2009. Buckeye
mm.slaterunangus.com

(740)266-.5395
418·0633

.

HUts Career Center, Rio

or Grande,

Ohkl.

(740)

=24!!'!5-!!!5334=!!!:!!!!!!:!!!!!!!!!!!!!!:!!!

:::::::::::::::::::===
r1, r 11
,1l)[lt)

,T

II•'

--·--

the area.

we

Honoyou- Hllll
Apli'llllentl
26~ Colonial Dr!Ve 1113
BldWal, Ohio 45E 14
740446·3344
Offfce Hours M, W1 F
9AM • SPM

CLASSIFIED INDEX

MONDAY TEI~EVISION GUIDE

•

gency maintenance,
quiet country location
close to rrlajor medical
facilities. pharmadei.
Qrocery stof1!. .. jusl

minutes away from

. WWW;mydailysentinel.com

I

IUIJ mon1h ol r.nt.
Currently rentlng 1 &amp; 2
BR units Spaclousi(Oor
plans, ranch &amp; town·
home Myle II&lt;Jing, playground &amp; basketball .
court, on-911&amp; laundry
lacllity, 24 hr emer·

other major shopping In

Furnltunt

The Daily· Sentinel

1;

Clip thla AD and take h
with you when you vlsH

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. ..

·--.-Page 84 • The Daily Sentinel

Help Wanted

Card of Thonks

The Daily Sentinel • Page B5

~LLEYOOP

western

Cal

379-2879

TRUCKING
Dump truck

No

.service

School DISirlct. 740-423-9728 or ·toll lr8e
379-2254
or 866-338-3201

We do driveways
We Haul
Umestone- Gravel
Dirt- A&amp;-Lime

5 room house at 44 Otive
St

Has

stovetrefrldge.

$425/rent plus deposll,
No ts. 446-3945

f&gt;()()(J

:

-

.!,

•• ,

Aooounlin&amp;l finandal ~74:()..:98=5·=44:2:2~
Accountant:

Full-time

po&lt;Rion with busy ac·
counting office In Galllpolis 10r Immediate Of11pi0y·
ment Accounting degree
and experience requlrea.
Must have good organlzador~aJ

s~ills

r

tlon to cletail. Please

MHP $400.00 a
·mon. + dep. ret. needed
Pride

G~tllipolis,

740-=~384

OH

E.._·-~--

u.........,

304-675-45ti7.

I

7

3br.2ba. wlflrepiace must ror a Teacher for Emomove 304·675-2897.
tlon811y
Disturbed
at

• Ford &amp; Motorcrafl
Parts • Engines,

Athens-Meigs

Edu-

"'*

,....,==,-.:---:-=='"""' venllon
Meigs High School. InterSpe&lt;;ialist cei1JH·

FIND AJOB
JN THE
CLASS.IFIEDS

'--------1

Sltion

has

Board

proved beneiHs.

ap·

Dead-

o. Coslanzo, Superinlen·

Puhllr Notleesln
N~::.';'':O:::
Rl~&amp;ht to

1-aailiiiiilii.iiiiiiiii
ADMINISTRAnYE SER· ·given to It to eer;ure the Special Elictlon to
VICES.
payment of .the eald. beheldlnU..Pomeroy
Bidders muot .Comply note and conveying · VIllage, Ohio, at the
with tho prevailing the preml- ...,l'lbecl ragular piiCI(e) of vot·
wage rates on Public therein have been lifo. lng therein, on the 5th
lmprovementoln Melgo ken and the oame hu day ol Moy, 2009, the
County and tho Yllloge become
quutlon ol an ordl·
ol Syracuae, OhiO aa abaoluto. Tho Com· nancs providing for the
detonnlned by tho Ohio plaint further proya that authority . of Pomeroy
Bureau of Employment lha
Defandant(a) VIllage to aggregate the
Servlcea, Wage and named above be r• retail notural gaa toeda
Hour Dlvlolon, (814) qulred to anawor and locoted In tho VIllage of
1144-2239 and IIIUII 1110 lot up tholr lntereal In Pomeroy, and lor that
comply with Fedllral oald real oolite or be purpoM, enter ·Into
Prevailing Wage Ratea. forever barred lrom aa· 11rvlcs agroementa to
The VIIIIQI.OI Syracuu ul'llng lha aame, lor lacllllete for thou
ro11rvea the right to foreclosure of aald loada the sale and purwaive any lrregula~tloa mortgage, tho marshal; chase ol natural gea,
and to rejiCt any or all lng of any llano, and aueh aggregotlon to
bldo.
tho ule of Mid reel U· occur automotlcelly 0 •
Eric D. Cunningham, tate, and IUI'Ihor that cept where any penon
Mayor VIllage of Syra• the procoeda of aold aliCia 10 opt out?
cuoe
lilt ·be applied to pay· Tho polio for the olec(4) 20, 27, (5) 4
menl of Plolntlll'a claim tlonwlllblopen 116:30
In the proper order of a.m. •nd remain open
Ita prlol'lty and for auch until 7:30 p.m. on e1ec-

Dump 'Ii'ud&lt; Senice
We lloul Gravel;

Residential

~. Lbnestone,

•FmEsdm-

. CoaiEk....
Call Witt or.Saiuly

(740) 991-5009 .

Nf~~N:R.

CusrOm Home Building
Siecl Frame Buildings

740-99"2-3220

l,'M

/

Building. Remodeling

or740·591-J726

NOT
.

General ropair

(CeDI

'""'Jwnklif'l'~b.an

WO/l~l~l&gt;

ABOtJT
Ttt /&gt;fiT -~ ~~

IT'S TOO 116

luM~r

TO FAIL!

NIWJ

·ldid
~!I·

~~

.-:::::::=-.,

-

•

~~
••

r

H&amp;H
·Guttering ·

dent, Athens-Meigs Edu·
cetional 5eNice Center,
Seamless Gutters
320-112 E. Main Sf., Aoollng, Siding, Gutters
Pomeroy, Oh 45769.
Insured &amp; Banded
Equal Opportunity ~m- :::7:4:0·:65:3:·96=57=:::
ployerll'rovk!er.

· YEAH_,r .·
I !3\JES~ !!

~"\!n:; ~:~.,::;; !l':,:':"n~= ~~~

resume and references
MRIDD
fo: John · p,. Costanzo, Bachelors Degree In acSupenntendent. ,
counting or bualness pre'
Athens-Meigs
eduoa· terred. Prior exp&lt;inenoe
tlonal Servlco . Center, ·with MR/00 Buolness
320-1/l! E. . Main St., Manager lunctlOnS prePomeroy, Oh 45t69. ferrea. Please submit reEqual opponunlty Em• sU(Ile, three letters ol ref·
:p!loye~rtProv~·~ide:'·i~~ erence and selary roqulrements to the Super·
intendenl, via e-mail 0

to furnllll with lie proother ond fur1her relief «on day.
roseliedurllinCsudden·
poaat, a Bid Guaranty
11 Ia juat ond equl· By order of the Board
Groundskeoper needed 6nkmell.oom. Application
and Contract Bond In IN THE COURT OF tabla. The Defendlnt(o) ol Ellcllona of Meige
In Rio Grailda, OH
. cleodllne TueSday May 5,
accordance wtth Sec- COMMOll
PLEAS named upon 1 ,. ,.. County, Ohio
l'ravloua exp. raq. Must 2009. The l:laUia· County
lion 153.54 of lila Ohio MEIGS COUNTY, OHIO qulred to ana- on or John N. Ihie
brl1 B and possess HS Board ol MAIDD is an
Rev!asd Code. Bid s• VANDERBILT MORT· before tho . twenty· Chair
Dlpioma/GED. Pay
equal ·· opportunity emcurlty furnlahld In GAGE AND FINANCE, eighth day following Rita D. Smith
$7.80/hr. CaD
'-pl..;oy!"er;.:!!'"'~~-. Bond form, shall bo Ia· INC.
·tholaat dolo of publics· Director
Kelly SeNicos
,.
sued by a Surety Com- Plolntlfl
lion, On dey of Juns 1, Dated Apl'll1, 2009
1100-295-947° or
lnfoCislon
304·529-2141
pany. or Corporation va. .
2009, or a iudgmoQI (4) 20, 27·
Work lor 8 top.
llcenaeclln the Stele of TALMADGE D. LEWIS, may be rendsred 11
Ohio to provide aold MQA
prayed lor herein.
- - - - - - - !!!!~!!!!~i!!!!!!!!!!!!!! employer, commmed 10
eumy.
T. LEWIS, It al
Robert It Hogan Allor·
Public Notice
food Somc;u
offerin9 employment .
Each Propoul must Defendants
ney lor Plaintiff Javltch, _..:....::.:..:...:....:..:....::.:..:._ ""'""""'"'~;;;;,~.._ opportunities In our araal
contain the full name ol Caae No. 08CV186
Block 6 Rathbone, LLP Holies of Election on
EM'n up to $25.0001yr+
602 Main St, Sullo 500 Propoalllon
the party or partlaa Judge: Crow
Wanted: server for the
att.r 1lz monthal
IUbmlttlng the pro- Legal Nollce
Clnclnnati,OH 45202
R.C. 3501.11 (G)
GaUipoWs Holiday l~n.
poaol and all parsons Wonda Lee Morris, (513)
9600 ·
Nollcs lo hereby glvon Come and be a par1 o1 a
lntere- . lhareln. whose laol known acf. (513) 744-9602 Facslm- that In pur:auance of gl'8llt team. No experi- Employees are needed
to l'f'OVide customer
Elch b l - mull oub- dreoo Ia 50475 Bigley Ill
.
.
Onll..nce of the. VI~ ence necessary, smiles
sel'lflce
over the phone
mllevl- of Ita ex· Ridge Rood, Long
(4) 20, 'D, (5) 4
loge Council of the Yfl. mandalory. Pick .up appat'lences on projecta Bottom, OH 45743, will
loge of Pomeroy, Ohio, plication ar the front
1 Hiring FUD lime
ol llmllar llza ond leko notice thai on the
pasud on the 8th dly desk. No phone colo
Po~t~ns (2-11 pm)
complexity. Tha owner 2nd of March, 2008
Public Notice
of February, 2008, there p~.
l Hiring Part Time
lntend1 and requires Plaintiff flied lie
. will be eubmlttld to o
PosHions
(8:00.1 :3tlpm &amp;
that thla projocl be Amended Colnplolnt In Notice 01 Lien Sale
·vote of the people ol !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
5:30 · 1t:OOpmJ
completed no later than CaM Number oacv t as The pai'Oonol propsrty llld Pomeror VIllage ot Holp Wanlocl General ·
1 OFF on Sunday
In the Melga County and contentaofthefol· the Spactill Election to
•
July 15, 2009.
1 Weekly Bonus
All contractors and Common Piela Court, lowing otoroge unlto be held In the Pomeroy
l Onsite Doctor
tubcontrectora
In- alleging that Defen. will be auctlonf&lt;l for VIllage, Ohio, .t the $ e.n Exlnl _ , $
1 Fun &amp; Professional
voiYed wHh the proJoct dant(o) have or claim to Mle to lltlafy the lien rogulor ploce(al ol vot· Independent Contractors
· Wor1dng Environment
will, to the extent prac- heve on lntereot In the of Ho.-1 Storage.
lng lhareln, on the 5th
(must bri at least 18)
1 Complete Benefits
tlcoble. uu OhiO prod- real utete commonly The u11 wllllje hold ot dly of May, 2009, the
needed to deliver the
ucta,
materlala, known 11 50475 Bigley the Hartwell Storage I• question of an ord~ Ohio Valley .Pftone Book .
Package
..,..,..., and labor In Ridge Rood, Long Bot· clllty, 34055 Laurel nonce providing lor a · In Gallipolis. weloton &amp;
the lmpiMiortlltlon ,of tom, OH 45743, and Wood Rd., Potnei'Oy, 114 percent levy on Insurrounding amaS.
~~ project. Addf110n- aloo known u Porcll. OhiO on May I, 200111 come to provide lor
, •eoe 1100
elty, conbactoo compl~ Number lli-01484.007 10:00 o.m.
current ..,.lcea ••
once wHh the equal of the Audlllir'l Unit ..a
provided In the Pollee ~=::::-~=~~
emplOyment opportu. Rocorda of . Melga Ron Can
Department and Street ;;
nlty requlo:ementa of County, Ohio.
P.O. Box 324
Department, olfectlve
OhiO Admlnlotretln Sold parcel to more Pomeror. Ohio 45768 June 1, 2009, be
Code Cllepter 123, the parllcul.,ly
(4) 20, 'D
palled?
GonmOI"'a Executive In Exhlb!l "A" llllched
The po!la for tho olocOrder of 1172, and to Plalntlfl'o mortgage
tlon will bl 0pon 111:30
~·a Exeeutlve ·.ftltd .In Volume 231,
Public Notice
a.m. and remain Open
Order 84-41 all.oll bl , . Page 115, on the Mlln:h
until 7:30 p.m. on etec- ~~:""':'~--~
quked.
20, 2006
In the Notice of Election on lion dlly
Need 7 ladies to sell
DOMESTIC ST&amp;L USE Racotdoo 'a Offlco pf l'nlpoaltion .
By order of the Boltrd AW111 cal\740-446-3358
REOUIREMEN1S AS lle!go County. Ohio. • R.C. 3501.1t(GJ
of Elections of Melgo,
SPECIFIED IN SEC. The Complltlnt tu.- Notice II - y given County, Ohio.
~-----.,.
· TION 113.081 OF THE lllegeo-byraonof that In pu...,_ of JoltnN.Ihll
Cssa _ , pos;REVISED CODE APPLY default of !Itt Defen- Ordinance of the Vl~ Chllr
lion avail. 1n Gallia. PreTO THIS . PROJECT. ...,l(o),
!age Council of the Vl~ Rita D. Smith
1er at least Assoc:iates
COPIES OF SEC110N Tolmeclge D. Lswlo, !age of Pometoy, Ol'llo, Dillc!Ot
Dog""' good pay llexible
153.001 OF THE RE· alicia T. Llwla, In the pasud on the !1111 day Doted April, 2009
hiS. 740-853-2261
VISED CODE CAN BE payment of 1 fJf1!fl11• of Febnlory, 2009 there (4) 20, 27
OBTAINED FROM ANY oory -occordlng to will be eubmlttocl to e
AVON! All Areas! To Buy
OF THE OFFICES OF
tho coudllloo• vots ol the -pie of
or Sell Shirley Spears'
THE DEPARTMENT OF . ofo mortg1ge deed - Pometoy Vlltagut

c.mF\JL WI~ it\'( ~biUfo\ .'

itU~ 1

Cell: 740-4111-5047
email:

~

· - -......

\

CUTTING EDGE
LAWN ·CARE

part timearoLPN's7A-7P
Available&amp;
shltts
7P-7A. All Interested applicants

an

,..----'·"
@~f.t~L:iNG:-"1

at

eo.,-

34

·VInyl Siding .
• ReploCimlnt
. Wlndowa
·Roofing
• Garsgeo
• Pole Bulldlnga
··Room Addtuona

SHRIMP .
(740) 742-2!63
..,..,..,.,,_,....,,.
$10 perlb Cash only

Ownw:

Jam~~· tCeasee 11

_
.. "' """ no-lrump 10 -~
thai exacl message - at in this dell!. ·
And note th8t lllls _ . . . ~a· fordng. '
Wllh no o1am lnt8nlll, Boull! must rebid ·
lour rllhe agreed major.
After West , _ lhe ttoaJ1 king, hOw
should South plan 1he play in four
opades?
.
.
WSoull! wino 1he fir.r !rid&lt; and inmaf·
a1e1y plays a tniT!&gt;, he will 1o1e lour
. tricks: one spade, two heetts ond
dub. He eliminate one rl 111ose

43 T_,
44 J&gt;et nome
45 Spob up
47 Regretted

48 ftMr than

one

51 - de
France
53 Pootlc

adverb

lr..-1--1-

CELEBRO'YCIPHER
by Lull Campo•

Cllebtly CiiM ~· n111H:i Jlirll QUCQDclnlll'f !MIOI.I&amp; ~ pu and P"llllllll• ·
'
.
Ed lflbr In till Clfll* .Ins IQr nht. '
.

!PREVIOUS SOI.UTION:' I'm a very religious person... IdEiflnltetyfeeU do
•have God In my oornlf.' • Chuck Norna
..

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Shipments arrive every

~;:;;7;4;2-~2~33~2~.;~~;.;;;;;;~
. SOMETIMES
TME SIRD DUNKS
THE DOIJ6WNOT..

IIIIOro of tit. ·
.f011r ICIOIIIblod word1 btloW to '!""' lour ~mple word1.

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.
. A V.~ L D

201 - WI.....

20-May

.

C A B H. E 0•

:·

I·

thty prerce~ )'OI.If l!'ltintlonl to ~ ~~

B E vAl L .
1

S)
.

2!1-Sapt 22) - Watoh out
for someone capturing your lnttreat and
drawing you Into an exciting but lnfeul•
Ott ~ · Both' you -"d thl• pei"'In
will come out big losert.

·MilE W.IIIROII, DWIII ·

1

UNSCRAMBLE .
ANSWER
i

47239 Riebel Road, .J.ang Bottom, OH

,.

740-985-4141
Cell: 740-416-1834
offilio.ted with Mike.Marcum Roofing &amp; Rem1odeliq
25+ years IJqllrNOCI
Fn1 E&amp;limslos

SOMETIMES ICAN T
FIND ANYTHING RIGHT
AI!IXJT THE WOfiLD.

[,

I

I OBERT

~~--.

2~·Nov.

22r -

EVER'ITHING. YOU EVER
...-.......... FEEL THAT
WAY,r:JJW?
r:JJW?
r:JJWi'

Remodeling

19 Years Experience ,

M0-192-1111

SAGmARIUS (Nov. 23·0.0. 211 -

·tram-- bul-..

rwplaMcn of your-~lon. -.i·
CAPRICORN~~·.

740-992-6971
Insured

Free

Estimate~t

Stanley TreeTrimming
&amp; Removal

Replacement
Windows and

Vinyl Siding
Specialists, LTD
(740) 741-2563

and Quality
Work
Rates

~en you're nol j)rtsenr. Evtn · If It
servea 1"118 or nat bestlnter&amp;ste, It might

I;:.;~:.~~~.:~~A~•vailable!
Call .Gary Stanley @
740-591-8044

serve you~.

I'IOt

AQUARIUS CJan. 20-Feb. 19} .,...... The
demands made on ~u could entt up
becoming quite neavy it et-SOClates think
!t IS OK to heap eome of ttlek responSIbillliel on you . let It be known up front
where vou draw the une.

I
I
'·

PISCES (F;'eb . 20-Mtrch 20) -

Room Additions, Remodeling, Metal &amp;
Sblngle Roofs, Noll&gt; Homes, Sklkig, Decks,
Bathroom RemodeUng.
Licensed
.
. &amp; Insured

304-675- t-429

l

~

.

1&lt;1n&lt;1 y
o1 nat&lt;y
-..,
mlgM
-""II
I-you
jCUrMit
1n1o bolla ling 110 .. oo. F~­
nl.s or ~· who tre gtvi~ ttllngs
tWI)' Is unlikely.

ARIES (March 21-J\pfll19)- one caus·
tic rema.rk rna~ be an It tllkts to tum your
hoUsehold Into a combtl zone.
Remember, you wqn't be ttle only one

RIZZWELLS
' 'tli-JAT$ WI\.
~LEM?

who haa ready-to-use
weapons on hand.

-=-- -·

rhetorical ,

1\\0'?E \..\TTl.£ ~ SOUP TO NUTZ
?Uti&lt;E~CAH

'-Nt&gt;.Pt&gt; \..t

f He&lt;i ~~ Ul'f\1. ~) /"-'leU &lt;I ~~a· llt.G Cit

~A&lt;m~

""\
8 - Bo.lCi?I III!.T'II:al\1!
H1Ce BuUU&lt;\AAHH~P

ClttWC r:eLLll1 t.JHaTS'
~ .-...e?~ll? •

1\.W-11 .

.

t.\\4~1--\D

PSI CONSTRUCTION

"'"~

18)- Don,

posiODn wtwr'8 another
thinks It's OK to·make • dtclalon for you

David Lewis

Stop &amp; Compare

Guard .

There ts a a~u ct"lance that If you hang
out with the wrong pefWOn, you mlghtoalch ~ fn&gt;m oil ~- Nal -..rlly

:GARFIElD

• Complete ·

· THATDO."
.ARLIJ &amp;JANIS

and friendship.

..__ _ _ _ _;.j ~-----------...,;""",__ _ _,.,..,.___. ' put -vouraalf In a

·•New Homes
• Garages

mpara:

. IQIInlt being drawn Into a debate ~r
an emotional .lilue that neftt-..r you nor
another party c;an do anythlr:tQ about,
even If you wanted to. 1r1 a wute of time

"'J

BISSEll

Quench;- Omit - Inept- Zodiac- tHAT DO
My fric(ld always iricd to mab more rnoney. ltold
·bin\, "To mAterialist, money matters are the only things

In--

SCORPIO (Oct.

fOil

·: SCRAM,LETS ANSWERS 4124M

Nvo tho! you del everythlrlg
with your hlgtleat ttandlt'dl 'at an tltMa.
Even one tittle eup-up will cauN protr
lcems .trom c:ompetltort who ·a,.. obaerY·
l1g you clole\y.

IT'S LIKE I GET ALL
OOW~ IN THE ()(,)MPS
00 I ONkY SEE THE
B~ STUFf', 00 THEN
I JJST START HATIN' ON

(;omplete lflo dw,klo quoled
· by tiDing In lht mialng wctd&gt;
you davelop from slop No. 3 balow.

lEITERS IN SQUA ES

1/tRGO (Aug.

LI.BRA ·(Sept. 23-0&lt;1.23) -1fa

I

•

f9 PRINT N~MBERED

flh and aett-cenr.~: Don't be overwhelmed_by y~r wanta1
lEO (July 23-Aug. 22) odopt a

and BOY ·

N

A famous first lady
once said, "l.ife is meant
Wbe Hved, curiosity must
. : be kept alive. One must
.
never tum ones···· on····."

. .1'1 ·1·11 IO

propen•ltY tor cr..tlng unneo.nary •
pf'tJI;)Ierrie With things or joba that hiiV8

For: • Room Additions • Patios
·: • Porches • Decks • Garages • Horse Barns •
&amp; Wood SiUing • Roofing • Chain ·Link
Wood Fencing &amp; General Home Mainterian&lt;e

~

I

I I 16

I•

Don,

• Siding • VInyl
Windows • Melal
and Sldnglt Roofs
• Decks • Additions
•Electrical
• Plumbing
• Pole Barns

I'Ou..ul....;;_·_ __,

· ORatrrenao

been running Smoothly. Oon't atm yo1.1r
weapons M your big toe.

•

3 Jury ·
aunt
na1ibet
26 4 Polalul
c0111ng
5 IlL Devlo
27 Opano
of "Tho Fly"'
the windoW
6 IIa ldJeiTv 28 Quldc
ldn
·
lunch

Tba -simplest ·answer Is 10 use a

GE~INI (May'.21-June 20)- Unless you
carefully think ttlrough yoUT •very flnan·
clal -moVe, there't a good chance you'll
be carele" at lh~ wrong moment with
something that COUld be wry cody. ·
CANCER (Juno 21 .JulY 22) ,.- ThaN
Nme h'fenctt who ~ u•UIH)' tupportlve
· 'of Y9Uf undertaking• could back away If

Pmt is: requirtd in adv1111cc

at (740) 992-6472. EOE

Ita-·

•d-"

adions.
Last week, I -led thai a i respor-.. rl two r»lrump lhowo alinil
raise In partnor"s ·out: 11).12 points and a1 -'tour ~- What
does responder do with an even
s1lonjlOr hand and lour or more cards In
parmer'smajor"?

sensitive pereon:

lion, please contact. Lucy

...,,,bed

42 Olyoro

Wa ara -..g atlhe eflec1 r1 an opponent"s takeout - " " reopo01doo's

TAURUS (Apnl

Page Street, . Middleport,

FOR YOU!!

25 Tljulno

24 _ ,

~Shako--!

7 Drama Prize 30 "The6 Wallllled, .
Side"
37
had
II I rocket 31 E11111
three
9 Oohed
32 BUll - ·
38Yotlll•-kala
39 Jclin,
10 Flowery
33 Recipe ami.
u ....,.
monlhe
35 Diving bird

ro:--)

meaning to, you could coma off 11 a bit
h&amp;.rsh It you're not carefUl. Be oogn1zan1
ot treatlnQ 111 In a tactfUl and diplomatic
manner, elprldally wl'len dtallng wtth ·a

Oh. For furthef Inform&amp;·

liAS
SOMETHING

C!l Fidel
4ll Alii
41 "lltt~

In the v.ear ahead, _Htk out,groupe .or
amllatlons where you can mab conn.c·
tiona that could be helpfUl to yo~r work or
cateer. You'll dfiCOver that thOH
avenues ean taka'.you far1 tt:-*11 to all
the nf!W ~'- you'll mHt .

Construction

333

744

things up
21 Dilutes

vlouol old .

Righty doubles;
responder is strong

J&amp;L

should pick up

application

Pus

Tu..cfay. April D, 20011·
By llornl .. 0101

• Docks

oopting applicationS for

olann
(2 well.)

Hpa\1ner Or&gt;ens one crl a minor and ·VOU
hove abig fl1 for !hot sull and no major·
suH lfngth, Ul8 !WO no-trump ovtt a
double to show 11)-plus ,._rt points.

/

·

CentQr Is currently , ao-

29 Ellulry
30 Complolet

game b!&gt;nus.

r:::;;;:;;:=1

(740) 517·6883

ogelnot

1 Runillddr.

38 Eal'lhUngo
39 Amigo

Tcxi.Jy'J clue: NflqUBl8 W
· !hen retum a dhlmon&lt;IIO nla jad&lt;, taking
1he flnessa. When the nr... wins, ohe
ol clummys heart .1osen1 1s plll:hict on ·• ~ R F I P U U 8 C G R C M P T R C C a·Z S M H
the diamond king. Atlasl ! Is- to lead ·
oORS GRIITS CU UPVZSRPK ITUIXT ZB
alrump.
,
It the diamond fl.,... lo8ts, lheugh, CGTK .NUPA GRPY RSY STJTP MZJT
declarer goes oowrltwo Instead rrl down
one: a small price to pay to try 10 get a. Ll." · UPTX GTPHGZHTP

iAAI ~'1' t:ia~- tto\

Paul Rowe

Rkk Johnsoa·Owner

24 Furry
owl27 ~

dhenoe r1 SUCCOS8. SOUth nt&lt;lltlmrntdl·
alely play a lisinond lo dummy"s ooe,

Jon Van Meter &amp;

Service
Gallipolis, OH 4!1631
Insured, Free
Est";~:~Exp.

23 Elnw-

Eut
Pus
..........

DOWN .

.

Declarer could lead a chb at trick two,
eslablishlng a club winner on ..tieh tc&gt;
discard one ol h~ hearts. That play,
though, is too - ; "'" deleilderl gel
111ose four tricks. Thoro Ia only one

Owners:

-

arg.

58 .LoW.
13 A load to
5!1 Pwfwctopot
cany
f 9 Sctow

heart losers.

Racine, Ohio .740·247·2019·.

..-

22 HIOder'o

Jay

57 , _ ,

one

WV036725

·-"·-•
ence. This position hes Holp Wantwd • Goneral
M_,
Board. approved benefits.
Deadline for aJll)llcation
Polllloll Aftll•
Oveollrook : RehabiiRetiQn

Empl~ ~ond•

'Willi..._

Decks

Cpmmerclal &amp;
Resldenllal
Free Esllmales
'Lawn Maintenance
•Landsc:aplng
• Power Washing
Seth Carleton
(740) 517-5432
Jeff Stethem

~Th~e~A~th;.en.;;s~-Me'!""oig•s-Ed-u· Jo~nson's Tree
celional Service Center
Ms an available position
for a MuHiple Disabilities
Teacher at Meigs High
School. lnlervenllon Spaclalist oertillcatlon 18 re·
qulred. Selary baeod on
oer1ff~allon and expari·

PURTY, AIN'T

· THEY, SNUFFY !.!

Electrical &amp;
Plllmblng
• Roollng &amp; Guttera
• VInyl Siding &amp;
Pointing
• Patio and Porch

Racine, Ohio

T-

Opening lead: • K

·. Remodallng

for All Makes of Vehicles

line for application is May
740.949-! 956 ,
6 at 12:00 noon. Send ~.::::::::;;;;;:=:

Letter of Interest, resume

\'our Rlgh~ to Know, Dell\lered

Pomeroy,9Jllo
Commerdl!J•

H~oom Addition• i

Transfer Cases &amp;
Transmissions
, Aftennarket•
Replacement Sheet
Metal &amp; Component:;~

cetlon Is required. Salary
baeod on certification
and experience. Thts. po-

and references to John

,
Public Notice

/

&lt;'\LJ I I .H V'IL)I I V r

"""""'~"""""-=~ catlon~l Service 'Center
19911 Aedmond 16;72 has an available poslllon

The

Trucking

••

NewGaraget

~~,..~.;,:;'·
~.....,. J
Now Selling:

Sal•

1•

co.

~u Paw

.

• 10 8 5 3

Wut Nonlt
Dbl 3NT

South

CONSTRUcnON

LlmhodTime ·

;;;;;;=;;;;;;;;;.;.~;;;;;; or mail to CLA: ·1t11, PO
Famity Box 4$,

BANKS

S&amp;L

scon~farfree

;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;,;·· gallipolisaccountant@
~~
gmall.com

18 In ...,
20 Sajol( and

Dealer: Solltb
Vulnerable: Both

llarftiol CMtwr Md hrllllte

Comellovelt

send resume arid references to

in

7:00am-8:00pm

We appreciate your

l• .r our check
englneNghtont

entty with strong atten·

trailer

Hourw .

building

-come?

11

• KJ I
• 71

and tt'le

ability lo work indapend·

2br.

ORAI'ID ~lNG
Chester Tire
Center &amp;
Totol Auto
Tronsml•eiOn
Ropolr

L &amp; L The Barn
44087 Wlpple Rd•.
Pomeroy,OH
(5 Points)
New &amp; Used Tires. ·
We buy used tires,
computer wheel
: alignments. We also
do Duel's. light
mechanic work,
~mplete se~ice oil.
changes. small engine
repair.
We service and
winterize boats and .
RV's.
(740) 992-5344
Mon-Fri
8:00am· 4:30pm
.Sat. 8:00am- 12 ·

-·

54Urno55FMn

• I 72
• QI I 2

•Au

40-367..0536

Gim-Hype. Call 10
Pre,.Qualifled.

No

micks,

house in South· . be

&lt;.

·-·
15a..o.or

16 S . . VIP 56 l.otHijht

• G3

• 10 I 7 5
• A 9 8

52 KMplram
olnldng

olk

• KJI41

FrwEitlmotes

3 bedroom 2 full baths up to $8000 to buy a new
$650 month $400 de- home. Don1 miss your
poslf, . water
incl~. shaf'e of the stimulus ball

3BR

I

14-

-

Eut

• K Q J 10

740:-94&amp;-2217

~~

8020 ST RT 554 BldweH. Govemment will pay you

money.

Weal
• .A

Additions

R.LHOLLON

M-'17-tl

.. 15 4 J
+ A3
6 K QJ

Bultan Road
Aa&lt;~ne. 0H 45n1

-lltlo

6 College maj.
dlpoalta
I
46
Bo lo\·aalclc
49 CioN
11
sou..
12 Nlflaloou'l
,,_

• Q 10 I 7 5

Rt;10fitlg, Siding,
Soffit, DecKs,
DOors, Wmdows, ·
Elsctrlc, Plumbing,
Drywall,
Remodeling, Room

HouMa for Renl

out

,......

CORNER STONE
CONSTRUCTION

41 SkYrocQI
43

Phillip
Alder

2520 Valley Drive
Poinl Pleasant. WV 25550
(304) 675-4341! Or fax: 304-675-6975, or
apply on-line at -.pyalllf.oq
AA/EOE

645·2214

,=
= 44::::0ACROSS

C/O HUIIIIIn ReSources

ANew Home?
TrY the
Classifieds!!

NEA Crouword, Puzzle

BRIDGE

Send resumes to:
Pleasanl V.lley Hospibil

for

..

www.mydailyaentlnel.com

CASE MANAGER

'

p.m.
Elch b l - Ia required

Monday, April 27, 2009

Help Wonted

Pleasant . Valley Hospital is amently
accepting resumes lor a lull-time Case
Manager. Graduate of an aca~~ed
school of nursing required. BSN preferred.
Prefer a minimum of three yeaiS
experience in an acute care setting. WV
license.

would like ro express their
heartfelt thanks to e~eryone who
sent cards, flowers or food and
everyone that kept us in your
thoughts and prayers.
And a special thanks to
Darst Group Home for their
special love and care thar was
given to our Mother during her
stay there.

prop~u11

Monday, Aprll27, 2009

e

The Family of
Opal Ohlinger

Se.:;'ed
wiH
be recelvacl'at the of·
flee of the Clark· Treeaurer, 2581 • Third St.,
. Syracuse; Ohio 45779
until 3:00 p.m. locol
Ume on May 7, 2009, for
fumlahlng all labor, m•
terlala and equipment
necuaory to complete
the project known aa
Syracuse Street lm·
provomenta, and will
be publicly opened and
read aloud ot 7 PM, May
7, 2009, et lhe regular
vllloge council meot·
Ing. .
Contract documenta,
bid ahoeta, plana and
apocH!cotlona can be
obtained ot aald oHics
Monday through Friday
from 8:30 a.m. to 4:30

•

www.mydallysentlnel.com

-----·

'EM Ul&gt;
...-..
h

•.

"ff)Jit_w~~.y.
~

'.

\(

.

G"'ooe To NoT'-'•

1

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

B&gt; .
N•T&lt;

~-~~~
If
lt.t' .. '
~ .

~

..

' ....'flk

r

a

.

A'"•Me aLL B"Gs art MEAN
W;lL81Te l'•~ Face ·_,

aMd

..

.·

..------

&lt;·"

•~

lilt·

~

I -~

'

'!J!~~~- fl'r;;r~e~

,

;,

'

.

;---.......

I
---~1

....-

l:l(-oM n.s. ki -'

j •

•

�.

•

. ..

·--.-Page 84 • The Daily Sentinel

Help Wanted

Card of Thonks

The Daily Sentinel • Page B5

~LLEYOOP

western

Cal

379-2879

TRUCKING
Dump truck

No

.service

School DISirlct. 740-423-9728 or ·toll lr8e
379-2254
or 866-338-3201

We do driveways
We Haul
Umestone- Gravel
Dirt- A&amp;-Lime

5 room house at 44 Otive
St

Has

stovetrefrldge.

$425/rent plus deposll,
No ts. 446-3945

f&gt;()()(J

:

-

.!,

•• ,

Aooounlin&amp;l finandal ~74:()..:98=5·=44:2:2~
Accountant:

Full-time

po&lt;Rion with busy ac·
counting office In Galllpolis 10r Immediate Of11pi0y·
ment Accounting degree
and experience requlrea.
Must have good organlzador~aJ

s~ills

r

tlon to cletail. Please

MHP $400.00 a
·mon. + dep. ret. needed
Pride

G~tllipolis,

740-=~384

OH

E.._·-~--

u.........,

304-675-45ti7.

I

7

3br.2ba. wlflrepiace must ror a Teacher for Emomove 304·675-2897.
tlon811y
Disturbed
at

• Ford &amp; Motorcrafl
Parts • Engines,

Athens-Meigs

Edu-

"'*

,....,==,-.:---:-=='"""' venllon
Meigs High School. InterSpe&lt;;ialist cei1JH·

FIND AJOB
JN THE
CLASS.IFIEDS

'--------1

Sltion

has

Board

proved beneiHs.

ap·

Dead-

o. Coslanzo, Superinlen·

Puhllr Notleesln
N~::.';'':O:::
Rl~&amp;ht to

1-aailiiiiilii.iiiiiiiii
ADMINISTRAnYE SER· ·given to It to eer;ure the Special Elictlon to
VICES.
payment of .the eald. beheldlnU..Pomeroy
Bidders muot .Comply note and conveying · VIllage, Ohio, at the
with tho prevailing the preml- ...,l'lbecl ragular piiCI(e) of vot·
wage rates on Public therein have been lifo. lng therein, on the 5th
lmprovementoln Melgo ken and the oame hu day ol Moy, 2009, the
County and tho Yllloge become
quutlon ol an ordl·
ol Syracuae, OhiO aa abaoluto. Tho Com· nancs providing for the
detonnlned by tho Ohio plaint further proya that authority . of Pomeroy
Bureau of Employment lha
Defandant(a) VIllage to aggregate the
Servlcea, Wage and named above be r• retail notural gaa toeda
Hour Dlvlolon, (814) qulred to anawor and locoted In tho VIllage of
1144-2239 and IIIUII 1110 lot up tholr lntereal In Pomeroy, and lor that
comply with Fedllral oald real oolite or be purpoM, enter ·Into
Prevailing Wage Ratea. forever barred lrom aa· 11rvlcs agroementa to
The VIIIIQI.OI Syracuu ul'llng lha aame, lor lacllllete for thou
ro11rvea the right to foreclosure of aald loada the sale and purwaive any lrregula~tloa mortgage, tho marshal; chase ol natural gea,
and to rejiCt any or all lng of any llano, and aueh aggregotlon to
bldo.
tho ule of Mid reel U· occur automotlcelly 0 •
Eric D. Cunningham, tate, and IUI'Ihor that cept where any penon
Mayor VIllage of Syra• the procoeda of aold aliCia 10 opt out?
cuoe
lilt ·be applied to pay· Tho polio for the olec(4) 20, 27, (5) 4
menl of Plolntlll'a claim tlonwlllblopen 116:30
In the proper order of a.m. •nd remain open
Ita prlol'lty and for auch until 7:30 p.m. on e1ec-

Dump 'Ii'ud&lt; Senice
We lloul Gravel;

Residential

~. Lbnestone,

•FmEsdm-

. CoaiEk....
Call Witt or.Saiuly

(740) 991-5009 .

Nf~~N:R.

CusrOm Home Building
Siecl Frame Buildings

740-99"2-3220

l,'M

/

Building. Remodeling

or740·591-J726

NOT
.

General ropair

(CeDI

'""'Jwnklif'l'~b.an

WO/l~l~l&gt;

ABOtJT
Ttt /&gt;fiT -~ ~~

IT'S TOO 116

luM~r

TO FAIL!

NIWJ

·ldid
~!I·

~~

.-:::::::=-.,

-

•

~~
••

r

H&amp;H
·Guttering ·

dent, Athens-Meigs Edu·
cetional 5eNice Center,
Seamless Gutters
320-112 E. Main Sf., Aoollng, Siding, Gutters
Pomeroy, Oh 45769.
Insured &amp; Banded
Equal Opportunity ~m- :::7:4:0·:65:3:·96=57=:::
ployerll'rovk!er.

· YEAH_,r .·
I !3\JES~ !!

~"\!n:; ~:~.,::;; !l':,:':"n~= ~~~

resume and references
MRIDD
fo: John · p,. Costanzo, Bachelors Degree In acSupenntendent. ,
counting or bualness pre'
Athens-Meigs
eduoa· terred. Prior exp&lt;inenoe
tlonal Servlco . Center, ·with MR/00 Buolness
320-1/l! E. . Main St., Manager lunctlOnS prePomeroy, Oh 45t69. ferrea. Please submit reEqual opponunlty Em• sU(Ile, three letters ol ref·
:p!loye~rtProv~·~ide:'·i~~ erence and selary roqulrements to the Super·
intendenl, via e-mail 0

to furnllll with lie proother ond fur1her relief «on day.
roseliedurllinCsudden·
poaat, a Bid Guaranty
11 Ia juat ond equl· By order of the Board
Groundskeoper needed 6nkmell.oom. Application
and Contract Bond In IN THE COURT OF tabla. The Defendlnt(o) ol Ellcllona of Meige
In Rio Grailda, OH
. cleodllne TueSday May 5,
accordance wtth Sec- COMMOll
PLEAS named upon 1 ,. ,.. County, Ohio
l'ravloua exp. raq. Must 2009. The l:laUia· County
lion 153.54 of lila Ohio MEIGS COUNTY, OHIO qulred to ana- on or John N. Ihie
brl1 B and possess HS Board ol MAIDD is an
Rev!asd Code. Bid s• VANDERBILT MORT· before tho . twenty· Chair
Dlpioma/GED. Pay
equal ·· opportunity emcurlty furnlahld In GAGE AND FINANCE, eighth day following Rita D. Smith
$7.80/hr. CaD
'-pl..;oy!"er;.:!!'"'~~-. Bond form, shall bo Ia· INC.
·tholaat dolo of publics· Director
Kelly SeNicos
,.
sued by a Surety Com- Plolntlfl
lion, On dey of Juns 1, Dated Apl'll1, 2009
1100-295-947° or
lnfoCislon
304·529-2141
pany. or Corporation va. .
2009, or a iudgmoQI (4) 20, 27·
Work lor 8 top.
llcenaeclln the Stele of TALMADGE D. LEWIS, may be rendsred 11
Ohio to provide aold MQA
prayed lor herein.
- - - - - - - !!!!~!!!!~i!!!!!!!!!!!!!! employer, commmed 10
eumy.
T. LEWIS, It al
Robert It Hogan Allor·
Public Notice
food Somc;u
offerin9 employment .
Each Propoul must Defendants
ney lor Plaintiff Javltch, _..:....::.:..:...:....:..:....::.:..:._ ""'""""'"'~;;;;,~.._ opportunities In our araal
contain the full name ol Caae No. 08CV186
Block 6 Rathbone, LLP Holies of Election on
EM'n up to $25.0001yr+
602 Main St, Sullo 500 Propoalllon
the party or partlaa Judge: Crow
Wanted: server for the
att.r 1lz monthal
IUbmlttlng the pro- Legal Nollce
Clnclnnati,OH 45202
R.C. 3501.11 (G)
GaUipoWs Holiday l~n.
poaol and all parsons Wonda Lee Morris, (513)
9600 ·
Nollcs lo hereby glvon Come and be a par1 o1 a
lntere- . lhareln. whose laol known acf. (513) 744-9602 Facslm- that In pur:auance of gl'8llt team. No experi- Employees are needed
to l'f'OVide customer
Elch b l - mull oub- dreoo Ia 50475 Bigley Ill
.
.
Onll..nce of the. VI~ ence necessary, smiles
sel'lflce
over the phone
mllevl- of Ita ex· Ridge Rood, Long
(4) 20, 'D, (5) 4
loge Council of the Yfl. mandalory. Pick .up appat'lences on projecta Bottom, OH 45743, will
loge of Pomeroy, Ohio, plication ar the front
1 Hiring FUD lime
ol llmllar llza ond leko notice thai on the
pasud on the 8th dly desk. No phone colo
Po~t~ns (2-11 pm)
complexity. Tha owner 2nd of March, 2008
Public Notice
of February, 2008, there p~.
l Hiring Part Time
lntend1 and requires Plaintiff flied lie
. will be eubmlttld to o
PosHions
(8:00.1 :3tlpm &amp;
that thla projocl be Amended Colnplolnt In Notice 01 Lien Sale
·vote of the people ol !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
5:30 · 1t:OOpmJ
completed no later than CaM Number oacv t as The pai'Oonol propsrty llld Pomeror VIllage ot Holp Wanlocl General ·
1 OFF on Sunday
In the Melga County and contentaofthefol· the Spactill Election to
•
July 15, 2009.
1 Weekly Bonus
All contractors and Common Piela Court, lowing otoroge unlto be held In the Pomeroy
l Onsite Doctor
tubcontrectora
In- alleging that Defen. will be auctlonf&lt;l for VIllage, Ohio, .t the $ e.n Exlnl _ , $
1 Fun &amp; Professional
voiYed wHh the proJoct dant(o) have or claim to Mle to lltlafy the lien rogulor ploce(al ol vot· Independent Contractors
· Wor1dng Environment
will, to the extent prac- heve on lntereot In the of Ho.-1 Storage.
lng lhareln, on the 5th
(must bri at least 18)
1 Complete Benefits
tlcoble. uu OhiO prod- real utete commonly The u11 wllllje hold ot dly of May, 2009, the
needed to deliver the
ucta,
materlala, known 11 50475 Bigley the Hartwell Storage I• question of an ord~ Ohio Valley .Pftone Book .
Package
..,..,..., and labor In Ridge Rood, Long Bot· clllty, 34055 Laurel nonce providing lor a · In Gallipolis. weloton &amp;
the lmpiMiortlltlon ,of tom, OH 45743, and Wood Rd., Potnei'Oy, 114 percent levy on Insurrounding amaS.
~~ project. Addf110n- aloo known u Porcll. OhiO on May I, 200111 come to provide lor
, •eoe 1100
elty, conbactoo compl~ Number lli-01484.007 10:00 o.m.
current ..,.lcea ••
once wHh the equal of the Audlllir'l Unit ..a
provided In the Pollee ~=::::-~=~~
emplOyment opportu. Rocorda of . Melga Ron Can
Department and Street ;;
nlty requlo:ementa of County, Ohio.
P.O. Box 324
Department, olfectlve
OhiO Admlnlotretln Sold parcel to more Pomeror. Ohio 45768 June 1, 2009, be
Code Cllepter 123, the parllcul.,ly
(4) 20, 'D
palled?
GonmOI"'a Executive In Exhlb!l "A" llllched
The po!la for tho olocOrder of 1172, and to Plalntlfl'o mortgage
tlon will bl 0pon 111:30
~·a Exeeutlve ·.ftltd .In Volume 231,
Public Notice
a.m. and remain Open
Order 84-41 all.oll bl , . Page 115, on the Mlln:h
until 7:30 p.m. on etec- ~~:""':'~--~
quked.
20, 2006
In the Notice of Election on lion dlly
Need 7 ladies to sell
DOMESTIC ST&amp;L USE Racotdoo 'a Offlco pf l'nlpoaltion .
By order of the Boltrd AW111 cal\740-446-3358
REOUIREMEN1S AS lle!go County. Ohio. • R.C. 3501.1t(GJ
of Elections of Melgo,
SPECIFIED IN SEC. The Complltlnt tu.- Notice II - y given County, Ohio.
~-----.,.
· TION 113.081 OF THE lllegeo-byraonof that In pu...,_ of JoltnN.Ihll
Cssa _ , pos;REVISED CODE APPLY default of !Itt Defen- Ordinance of the Vl~ Chllr
lion avail. 1n Gallia. PreTO THIS . PROJECT. ...,l(o),
!age Council of the Vl~ Rita D. Smith
1er at least Assoc:iates
COPIES OF SEC110N Tolmeclge D. Lswlo, !age of Pometoy, Ol'llo, Dillc!Ot
Dog""' good pay llexible
153.001 OF THE RE· alicia T. Llwla, In the pasud on the !1111 day Doted April, 2009
hiS. 740-853-2261
VISED CODE CAN BE payment of 1 fJf1!fl11• of Febnlory, 2009 there (4) 20, 27
OBTAINED FROM ANY oory -occordlng to will be eubmlttocl to e
AVON! All Areas! To Buy
OF THE OFFICES OF
tho coudllloo• vots ol the -pie of
or Sell Shirley Spears'
THE DEPARTMENT OF . ofo mortg1ge deed - Pometoy Vlltagut

c.mF\JL WI~ it\'( ~biUfo\ .'

itU~ 1

Cell: 740-4111-5047
email:

~

· - -......

\

CUTTING EDGE
LAWN ·CARE

part timearoLPN's7A-7P
Available&amp;
shltts
7P-7A. All Interested applicants

an

,..----'·"
@~f.t~L:iNG:-"1

at

eo.,-

34

·VInyl Siding .
• ReploCimlnt
. Wlndowa
·Roofing
• Garsgeo
• Pole Bulldlnga
··Room Addtuona

SHRIMP .
(740) 742-2!63
..,..,..,.,,_,....,,.
$10 perlb Cash only

Ownw:

Jam~~· tCeasee 11

_
.. "' """ no-lrump 10 -~
thai exacl message - at in this dell!. ·
And note th8t lllls _ . . . ~a· fordng. '
Wllh no o1am lnt8nlll, Boull! must rebid ·
lour rllhe agreed major.
After West , _ lhe ttoaJ1 king, hOw
should South plan 1he play in four
opades?
.
.
WSoull! wino 1he fir.r !rid&lt; and inmaf·
a1e1y plays a tniT!&gt;, he will 1o1e lour
. tricks: one spade, two heetts ond
dub. He eliminate one rl 111ose

43 T_,
44 J&gt;et nome
45 Spob up
47 Regretted

48 ftMr than

one

51 - de
France
53 Pootlc

adverb

lr..-1--1-

CELEBRO'YCIPHER
by Lull Campo•

Cllebtly CiiM ~· n111H:i Jlirll QUCQDclnlll'f !MIOI.I&amp; ~ pu and P"llllllll• ·
'
.
Ed lflbr In till Clfll* .Ins IQr nht. '
.

!PREVIOUS SOI.UTION:' I'm a very religious person... IdEiflnltetyfeeU do
•have God In my oornlf.' • Chuck Norna
..

r::::· s~~~-4"Et/is•
:::
·l4hi..,

.AStro··
Graph

.•

cu.y L

Shipments arrive every

~;:;;7;4;2-~2~33~2~.;~~;.;;;;;;~
. SOMETIMES
TME SIRD DUNKS
THE DOIJ6WNOT..

IIIIOro of tit. ·
.f011r ICIOIIIblod word1 btloW to '!""' lour ~mple word1.

. 'lbur . .u..,,

F . .
.
. A V.~ L D

201 - WI.....

20-May

.

C A B H. E 0•

:·

I·

thty prerce~ )'OI.If l!'ltintlonl to ~ ~~

B E vAl L .
1

S)
.

2!1-Sapt 22) - Watoh out
for someone capturing your lnttreat and
drawing you Into an exciting but lnfeul•
Ott ~ · Both' you -"d thl• pei"'In
will come out big losert.

·MilE W.IIIROII, DWIII ·

1

UNSCRAMBLE .
ANSWER
i

47239 Riebel Road, .J.ang Bottom, OH

,.

740-985-4141
Cell: 740-416-1834
offilio.ted with Mike.Marcum Roofing &amp; Rem1odeliq
25+ years IJqllrNOCI
Fn1 E&amp;limslos

SOMETIMES ICAN T
FIND ANYTHING RIGHT
AI!IXJT THE WOfiLD.

[,

I

I OBERT

~~--.

2~·Nov.

22r -

EVER'ITHING. YOU EVER
...-.......... FEEL THAT
WAY,r:JJW?
r:JJW?
r:JJWi'

Remodeling

19 Years Experience ,

M0-192-1111

SAGmARIUS (Nov. 23·0.0. 211 -

·tram-- bul-..

rwplaMcn of your-~lon. -.i·
CAPRICORN~~·.

740-992-6971
Insured

Free

Estimate~t

Stanley TreeTrimming
&amp; Removal

Replacement
Windows and

Vinyl Siding
Specialists, LTD
(740) 741-2563

and Quality
Work
Rates

~en you're nol j)rtsenr. Evtn · If It
servea 1"118 or nat bestlnter&amp;ste, It might

I;:.;~:.~~~.:~~A~•vailable!
Call .Gary Stanley @
740-591-8044

serve you~.

I'IOt

AQUARIUS CJan. 20-Feb. 19} .,...... The
demands made on ~u could entt up
becoming quite neavy it et-SOClates think
!t IS OK to heap eome of ttlek responSIbillliel on you . let It be known up front
where vou draw the une.

I
I
'·

PISCES (F;'eb . 20-Mtrch 20) -

Room Additions, Remodeling, Metal &amp;
Sblngle Roofs, Noll&gt; Homes, Sklkig, Decks,
Bathroom RemodeUng.
Licensed
.
. &amp; Insured

304-675- t-429

l

~

.

1&lt;1n&lt;1 y
o1 nat&lt;y
-..,
mlgM
-""II
I-you
jCUrMit
1n1o bolla ling 110 .. oo. F~­
nl.s or ~· who tre gtvi~ ttllngs
tWI)' Is unlikely.

ARIES (March 21-J\pfll19)- one caus·
tic rema.rk rna~ be an It tllkts to tum your
hoUsehold Into a combtl zone.
Remember, you wqn't be ttle only one

RIZZWELLS
' 'tli-JAT$ WI\.
~LEM?

who haa ready-to-use
weapons on hand.

-=-- -·

rhetorical ,

1\\0'?E \..\TTl.£ ~ SOUP TO NUTZ
?Uti&lt;E~CAH

'-Nt&gt;.Pt&gt; \..t

f He&lt;i ~~ Ul'f\1. ~) /"-'leU &lt;I ~~a· llt.G Cit

~A&lt;m~

""\
8 - Bo.lCi?I III!.T'II:al\1!
H1Ce BuUU&lt;\AAHH~P

ClttWC r:eLLll1 t.JHaTS'
~ .-...e?~ll? •

1\.W-11 .

.

t.\\4~1--\D

PSI CONSTRUCTION

"'"~

18)- Don,

posiODn wtwr'8 another
thinks It's OK to·make • dtclalon for you

David Lewis

Stop &amp; Compare

Guard .

There ts a a~u ct"lance that If you hang
out with the wrong pefWOn, you mlghtoalch ~ fn&gt;m oil ~- Nal -..rlly

:GARFIElD

• Complete ·

· THATDO."
.ARLIJ &amp;JANIS

and friendship.

..__ _ _ _ _;.j ~-----------...,;""",__ _ _,.,..,.___. ' put -vouraalf In a

·•New Homes
• Garages

mpara:

. IQIInlt being drawn Into a debate ~r
an emotional .lilue that neftt-..r you nor
another party c;an do anythlr:tQ about,
even If you wanted to. 1r1 a wute of time

"'J

BISSEll

Quench;- Omit - Inept- Zodiac- tHAT DO
My fric(ld always iricd to mab more rnoney. ltold
·bin\, "To mAterialist, money matters are the only things

In--

SCORPIO (Oct.

fOil

·: SCRAM,LETS ANSWERS 4124M

Nvo tho! you del everythlrlg
with your hlgtleat ttandlt'dl 'at an tltMa.
Even one tittle eup-up will cauN protr
lcems .trom c:ompetltort who ·a,.. obaerY·
l1g you clole\y.

IT'S LIKE I GET ALL
OOW~ IN THE ()(,)MPS
00 I ONkY SEE THE
B~ STUFf', 00 THEN
I JJST START HATIN' ON

(;omplete lflo dw,klo quoled
· by tiDing In lht mialng wctd&gt;
you davelop from slop No. 3 balow.

lEITERS IN SQUA ES

1/tRGO (Aug.

LI.BRA ·(Sept. 23-0&lt;1.23) -1fa

I

•

f9 PRINT N~MBERED

flh and aett-cenr.~: Don't be overwhelmed_by y~r wanta1
lEO (July 23-Aug. 22) odopt a

and BOY ·

N

A famous first lady
once said, "l.ife is meant
Wbe Hved, curiosity must
. : be kept alive. One must
.
never tum ones···· on····."

. .1'1 ·1·11 IO

propen•ltY tor cr..tlng unneo.nary •
pf'tJI;)Ierrie With things or joba that hiiV8

For: • Room Additions • Patios
·: • Porches • Decks • Garages • Horse Barns •
&amp; Wood SiUing • Roofing • Chain ·Link
Wood Fencing &amp; General Home Mainterian&lt;e

~

I

I I 16

I•

Don,

• Siding • VInyl
Windows • Melal
and Sldnglt Roofs
• Decks • Additions
•Electrical
• Plumbing
• Pole Barns

I'Ou..ul....;;_·_ __,

· ORatrrenao

been running Smoothly. Oon't atm yo1.1r
weapons M your big toe.

•

3 Jury ·
aunt
na1ibet
26 4 Polalul
c0111ng
5 IlL Devlo
27 Opano
of "Tho Fly"'
the windoW
6 IIa ldJeiTv 28 Quldc
ldn
·
lunch

Tba -simplest ·answer Is 10 use a

GE~INI (May'.21-June 20)- Unless you
carefully think ttlrough yoUT •very flnan·
clal -moVe, there't a good chance you'll
be carele" at lh~ wrong moment with
something that COUld be wry cody. ·
CANCER (Juno 21 .JulY 22) ,.- ThaN
Nme h'fenctt who ~ u•UIH)' tupportlve
· 'of Y9Uf undertaking• could back away If

Pmt is: requirtd in adv1111cc

at (740) 992-6472. EOE

Ita-·

•d-"

adions.
Last week, I -led thai a i respor-.. rl two r»lrump lhowo alinil
raise In partnor"s ·out: 11).12 points and a1 -'tour ~- What
does responder do with an even
s1lonjlOr hand and lour or more cards In
parmer'smajor"?

sensitive pereon:

lion, please contact. Lucy

...,,,bed

42 Olyoro

Wa ara -..g atlhe eflec1 r1 an opponent"s takeout - " " reopo01doo's

TAURUS (Apnl

Page Street, . Middleport,

FOR YOU!!

25 Tljulno

24 _ ,

~Shako--!

7 Drama Prize 30 "The6 Wallllled, .
Side"
37
had
II I rocket 31 E11111
three
9 Oohed
32 BUll - ·
38Yotlll•-kala
39 Jclin,
10 Flowery
33 Recipe ami.
u ....,.
monlhe
35 Diving bird

ro:--)

meaning to, you could coma off 11 a bit
h&amp;.rsh It you're not carefUl. Be oogn1zan1
ot treatlnQ 111 In a tactfUl and diplomatic
manner, elprldally wl'len dtallng wtth ·a

Oh. For furthef Inform&amp;·

liAS
SOMETHING

C!l Fidel
4ll Alii
41 "lltt~

In the v.ear ahead, _Htk out,groupe .or
amllatlons where you can mab conn.c·
tiona that could be helpfUl to yo~r work or
cateer. You'll dfiCOver that thOH
avenues ean taka'.you far1 tt:-*11 to all
the nf!W ~'- you'll mHt .

Construction

333

744

things up
21 Dilutes

vlouol old .

Righty doubles;
responder is strong

J&amp;L

should pick up

application

Pus

Tu..cfay. April D, 20011·
By llornl .. 0101

• Docks

oopting applicationS for

olann
(2 well.)

Hpa\1ner Or&gt;ens one crl a minor and ·VOU
hove abig fl1 for !hot sull and no major·
suH lfngth, Ul8 !WO no-trump ovtt a
double to show 11)-plus ,._rt points.

/

·

CentQr Is currently , ao-

29 Ellulry
30 Complolet

game b!&gt;nus.

r:::;;;:;;:=1

(740) 517·6883

ogelnot

1 Runillddr.

38 Eal'lhUngo
39 Amigo

Tcxi.Jy'J clue: NflqUBl8 W
· !hen retum a dhlmon&lt;IIO nla jad&lt;, taking
1he flnessa. When the nr... wins, ohe
ol clummys heart .1osen1 1s plll:hict on ·• ~ R F I P U U 8 C G R C M P T R C C a·Z S M H
the diamond king. Atlasl ! Is- to lead ·
oORS GRIITS CU UPVZSRPK ITUIXT ZB
alrump.
,
It the diamond fl.,... lo8ts, lheugh, CGTK .NUPA GRPY RSY STJTP MZJT
declarer goes oowrltwo Instead rrl down
one: a small price to pay to try 10 get a. Ll." · UPTX GTPHGZHTP

iAAI ~'1' t:ia~- tto\

Paul Rowe

Rkk Johnsoa·Owner

24 Furry
owl27 ~

dhenoe r1 SUCCOS8. SOUth nt&lt;lltlmrntdl·
alely play a lisinond lo dummy"s ooe,

Jon Van Meter &amp;

Service
Gallipolis, OH 4!1631
Insured, Free
Est";~:~Exp.

23 Elnw-

Eut
Pus
..........

DOWN .

.

Declarer could lead a chb at trick two,
eslablishlng a club winner on ..tieh tc&gt;
discard one ol h~ hearts. That play,
though, is too - ; "'" deleilderl gel
111ose four tricks. Thoro Ia only one

Owners:

-

arg.

58 .LoW.
13 A load to
5!1 Pwfwctopot
cany
f 9 Sctow

heart losers.

Racine, Ohio .740·247·2019·.

..-

22 HIOder'o

Jay

57 , _ ,

one

WV036725

·-"·-•
ence. This position hes Holp Wantwd • Goneral
M_,
Board. approved benefits.
Deadline for aJll)llcation
Polllloll Aftll•
Oveollrook : RehabiiRetiQn

Empl~ ~ond•

'Willi..._

Decks

Cpmmerclal &amp;
Resldenllal
Free Esllmales
'Lawn Maintenance
•Landsc:aplng
• Power Washing
Seth Carleton
(740) 517-5432
Jeff Stethem

~Th~e~A~th;.en.;;s~-Me'!""oig•s-Ed-u· Jo~nson's Tree
celional Service Center
Ms an available position
for a MuHiple Disabilities
Teacher at Meigs High
School. lnlervenllon Spaclalist oertillcatlon 18 re·
qulred. Selary baeod on
oer1ff~allon and expari·

PURTY, AIN'T

· THEY, SNUFFY !.!

Electrical &amp;
Plllmblng
• Roollng &amp; Guttera
• VInyl Siding &amp;
Pointing
• Patio and Porch

Racine, Ohio

T-

Opening lead: • K

·. Remodallng

for All Makes of Vehicles

line for application is May
740.949-! 956 ,
6 at 12:00 noon. Send ~.::::::::;;;;;:=:

Letter of Interest, resume

\'our Rlgh~ to Know, Dell\lered

Pomeroy,9Jllo
Commerdl!J•

H~oom Addition• i

Transfer Cases &amp;
Transmissions
, Aftennarket•
Replacement Sheet
Metal &amp; Component:;~

cetlon Is required. Salary
baeod on certification
and experience. Thts. po-

and references to John

,
Public Notice

/

&lt;'\LJ I I .H V'IL)I I V r

"""""'~"""""-=~ catlon~l Service 'Center
19911 Aedmond 16;72 has an available poslllon

The

Trucking

••

NewGaraget

~~,..~.;,:;'·
~.....,. J
Now Selling:

Sal•

1•

co.

~u Paw

.

• 10 8 5 3

Wut Nonlt
Dbl 3NT

South

CONSTRUcnON

LlmhodTime ·

;;;;;;=;;;;;;;;;.;.~;;;;;; or mail to CLA: ·1t11, PO
Famity Box 4$,

BANKS

S&amp;L

scon~farfree

;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;,;·· gallipolisaccountant@
~~
gmall.com

18 In ...,
20 Sajol( and

Dealer: Solltb
Vulnerable: Both

llarftiol CMtwr Md hrllllte

Comellovelt

send resume arid references to

in

7:00am-8:00pm

We appreciate your

l• .r our check
englneNghtont

entty with strong atten·

trailer

Hourw .

building

-come?

11

• KJ I
• 71

and tt'le

ability lo work indapend·

2br.

ORAI'ID ~lNG
Chester Tire
Center &amp;
Totol Auto
Tronsml•eiOn
Ropolr

L &amp; L The Barn
44087 Wlpple Rd•.
Pomeroy,OH
(5 Points)
New &amp; Used Tires. ·
We buy used tires,
computer wheel
: alignments. We also
do Duel's. light
mechanic work,
~mplete se~ice oil.
changes. small engine
repair.
We service and
winterize boats and .
RV's.
(740) 992-5344
Mon-Fri
8:00am· 4:30pm
.Sat. 8:00am- 12 ·

-·

54Urno55FMn

• I 72
• QI I 2

•Au

40-367..0536

Gim-Hype. Call 10
Pre,.Qualifled.

No

micks,

house in South· . be

&lt;.

·-·
15a..o.or

16 S . . VIP 56 l.otHijht

• G3

• 10 I 7 5
• A 9 8

52 KMplram
olnldng

olk

• KJI41

FrwEitlmotes

3 bedroom 2 full baths up to $8000 to buy a new
$650 month $400 de- home. Don1 miss your
poslf, . water
incl~. shaf'e of the stimulus ball

3BR

I

14-

-

Eut

• K Q J 10

740:-94&amp;-2217

~~

8020 ST RT 554 BldweH. Govemment will pay you

money.

Weal
• .A

Additions

R.LHOLLON

M-'17-tl

.. 15 4 J
+ A3
6 K QJ

Bultan Road
Aa&lt;~ne. 0H 45n1

-lltlo

6 College maj.
dlpoalta
I
46
Bo lo\·aalclc
49 CioN
11
sou..
12 Nlflaloou'l
,,_

• Q 10 I 7 5

Rt;10fitlg, Siding,
Soffit, DecKs,
DOors, Wmdows, ·
Elsctrlc, Plumbing,
Drywall,
Remodeling, Room

HouMa for Renl

out

,......

CORNER STONE
CONSTRUCTION

41 SkYrocQI
43

Phillip
Alder

2520 Valley Drive
Poinl Pleasant. WV 25550
(304) 675-4341! Or fax: 304-675-6975, or
apply on-line at -.pyalllf.oq
AA/EOE

645·2214

,=
= 44::::0ACROSS

C/O HUIIIIIn ReSources

ANew Home?
TrY the
Classifieds!!

NEA Crouword, Puzzle

BRIDGE

Send resumes to:
Pleasanl V.lley Hospibil

for

..

www.mydailyaentlnel.com

CASE MANAGER

'

p.m.
Elch b l - Ia required

Monday, April 27, 2009

Help Wonted

Pleasant . Valley Hospital is amently
accepting resumes lor a lull-time Case
Manager. Graduate of an aca~~ed
school of nursing required. BSN preferred.
Prefer a minimum of three yeaiS
experience in an acute care setting. WV
license.

would like ro express their
heartfelt thanks to e~eryone who
sent cards, flowers or food and
everyone that kept us in your
thoughts and prayers.
And a special thanks to
Darst Group Home for their
special love and care thar was
given to our Mother during her
stay there.

prop~u11

Monday, Aprll27, 2009

e

The Family of
Opal Ohlinger

Se.:;'ed
wiH
be recelvacl'at the of·
flee of the Clark· Treeaurer, 2581 • Third St.,
. Syracuse; Ohio 45779
until 3:00 p.m. locol
Ume on May 7, 2009, for
fumlahlng all labor, m•
terlala and equipment
necuaory to complete
the project known aa
Syracuse Street lm·
provomenta, and will
be publicly opened and
read aloud ot 7 PM, May
7, 2009, et lhe regular
vllloge council meot·
Ing. .
Contract documenta,
bid ahoeta, plana and
apocH!cotlona can be
obtained ot aald oHics
Monday through Friday
from 8:30 a.m. to 4:30

•

www.mydallysentlnel.com

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The Daily Sentinel /

.

•

I

Monday, Apti127, 20~

www.mydailysentinel.com

·· US responding .
as if swine flu will
be pandemic, A2

Indians hold on to beat Twins~ 4-2. ··
'

...

. .

photo

!'lASCAR drivers Mark Martin, lett. Scott Riggs (36). Kevin Harvick (29), Jamie McMurray
(26), Kasey Kahne (9), A.J. Allmendinger (44) and Jeff Gordon (24) crash in turn four dur·
lng the Aaron's 499 NASCA A Sprint Cup Series auto ~ace at Talladega Superspeedway.

•
•
•

Keselowski steals Talladega

win on wild final .lap

·. TALLADEGA. Ala . (AP) life-threatening.
just don't kriow when,"' said
-;- Brad Keselowski.won his · ,Dr:
Bobby
Lewis, Newman, the third-place
!lrst Sprint Cup Series race Talladega's onsite physician , finisher, who also recalled
:&gt;unday after a dramatic said two ~ople in the crowd Matt Kenseth's fiery tumble
final lap at Talladega were airhfted from the track in the Nationwide Series
l;uperspeedway when Carl to avoid the heavy traffic. race on Saturday.
Edw,ards' airborne car sailed · One woman had a possible "We saw that two times
Into the fence near the finish broken jaw, Lewis said, and .this weekend, so mayb.e we
line.
another' had an undisclosed need to look ' at things ·that
· Eight fans were injured medical issue.
keep the car down on the
from debris that flew into
Edwards, who climbed ground."
!he crowd; and Edwards from his crumpled race car
Earnhardt Jr: , a five-time
warned that restrictor-plate and ran on foot across the Talladega winner and sevenfacing is eventually going to finish line. railed against the time winner of restrictorkill someone.
,
racing style at Talladega and plate races, finished second
Keselowsk~. racing in just Daytona, the two tracks but echoed concerns about .
his fifth career Cup race, .where horsepower-sapping the racing style. Drivers
hooked onto the rear of restrictor plates are used.
dread it.because so much is
Edwards' bumper on the last
"We'll race like this until out of their control, but
lap to push him past Ryan we l&gt;:ill somebody," said · Earnhardt said it's loved by
Newman
and
Dale Edwards, "then (NASCAR) fans because of the elemeill
Earnhardt Jr. Once clear of will change it." .
of danger.
them . . Keselowski peeked
Restrictor plates are used
"For years. we've had
around Edwards to make a to combat the high speeds at wrecks like this every time
move for the lead.
NASCAR's two fastest we've come to Talladega.
Edwards tried to block the tracks, and the plates typi- Ever since the plate got here.
move by da11ing low, but cally keep the field bunched And for years it was cele. Keselow·ski was too close to tightly together. One wrong brated," he said. "The media
his bumper and the contact move by a driver can cause a celebrated it, the networks ·
sent Edwards sailing up the massive accident.
celebrated it, calling it 'The
track. His spinning car shot
In addition to Edwards' Big One' just trying to
over Newman's hood and frightening fli~ht into the attract attention ·and bring
· into the safety fence on the fence, Sundays race was people 's · ·attention to the
frontstretch.
also marred by a 13-car race.
The fence swelled toward crash on the seveiuh lap and
"So there's a responsibili- the race fans but held, and another IO,car accrdent with ty with the media and the
Edwards' car landed back on nine to go.
networks and the sanctionthe track: Officials said none
"Talladega is short for ing body itself to come to
of the injuries to 'fans was 'We're going to crash, we their senses a little bit."

'

CLEVELAND (AP) - . won or lost."
Wednesday and: made his
Aaron Laffey and Tony Sipp
It was the shortest outing major Leag~ debut that
used to talk · about pitc~ing of the year for Perkins, who . night with a scoreless
for the Cle'leland Indtans allowed four runs in five inning.
when they were roommates , innings. Perkins had lasted
Kerry Wood pitched the
at Triple-A Columbus this eight innings in each of his ninth for his fourth save in
year. The scenario was first three starts, never four chances.
Laffey would start and Sipp allowing more · than two
The slumping Indians
would close out a victory.
runs.
entered the day batting .220
Sunday didn't play ou,t "He had a little bit of a and had 18 runs in six games
exactly ho'-':. they planned, rough time e~rly,'.' '!lanager since scoring 22 at Yankee
but tt was sttll very saltsfy- Ron Gardenhire satd. "He Stadium on April . I 8.
ing.
. ·
.
had the one bad inning: He Manager Eric Wedge ripped
Laffey pttched Jnto the got us through five and I his hitters' approach followseventh inning and Sipp thought our 'bullpen did a ing Saturday's 7~ 1 loss, and
came up with two big strike- very good job."
wasn't much happier on
outs. helping Cleveland beat . Laffey
left
after Sunday.
the Minnesota Twins 4-2 Minnesota loaded the bases
"Garko had the big hit for
and avoid a three-game with one out in the seventh. us, but we still have to do
sweep.
Jensen Lewis surrendered better than what we saw
"It was great to have that pinch-hitter Denard Span's today," Wedge said. "We
moment and be able to tell two-run single and walked scored four runs, but we had
him 'Welcome to. the; . big Brendan Harris before man- the opportunity to do a lot
leagues,"' Laffey said.
_ ager Eric Wedge brought in more than that."
·
Laffey (2-0) alloweii two 1pp . to face lefty sluggers
Mark
DeRosa
was
runs and five hils in 6 1-3 Justin Morneau and Jason thrown out by Twins catchinnings. Laffey, who began Kubel.
.
er Jose Morales trying t&lt;i
the year .at Columbus, has
Morneau entered the day steal second in the sixth
been the Indians' most con- hitting .364 -over his last 10. inning . With All-Star :
sistent starter. He has a games at Progressive Field, catcher Joe Mauer on the
2.41 ERA in three starts and Kuhel homered twice , disabled list, it was the first
since being · recalled on Saturday night. But Sipp, ·time this season a Twins
April 15.
making just his second catcher has thrown out a
The Indians were held to career appearance, struck runner trying to steal . Not
one run in each of the first out both to sreserve. counting pickoffs by pitch~
two games of the series, but Cleveland's 4-21ea •
ers, opposing baserunners
Ryan Garko's two-run single
'That was . definitely a opened the season 19-for- .
off Glen Perkins (1-2) in the pressure situation,'; Sipp 19 against Twins catchers.
third gave them a 4-0 lead. said~ "I just walited t&lt;i throw
The Twins were trying to .
"I lik~; being in those strikes, because that's one sweep the Indians in
spots ;' ~ Garko said. "Those thing I know how to do.''
9eveland for t11e first time
are
where
are · Sipp was recalled on stnce 1991.

•
SPORTS

I

•Local Roundup•
SeePage 81
'

BY BRIAN

OBITUARIES

=========
. E

•,

INSID

• lnnovallve 42"• 50" heeyY:duly dock

. c;utti!laayslem.lor cleaner cut
• 19 HP• • 24 HP• Cub Cadet•
protessional~irade enaines by kohler:.

. • Red Cross blood drive
. ¢1eduled In community.
. See Page A2
·. • Modem WoOdmen
.
. making a difference.
See Page A3
. • First turkey.
SeePIIgeAJ
• Meigs' jobless
rate up in March.
SeePage AS
• • Law You Can Use:
· Who is authorized 10
· work in the Un~ed
.States? See Page A6

and Briiil' &amp; StraUon•

• lndustry-leadinJ12" tumin1 radius
• Fully welded steel frame and Cast-iron
front axle

• ,J... and 5·year limited warrar)Jy*.'*

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• 42"• 54" hea.y·duty mowina ded&lt;s
• 20 HP• --23 HP• Kohler. Command.
V-lWin OHVen1ines
• Heavy-duty cast-iran ti'Dnst'ni$sion
• l- and 5-year llrniled warraraty•u
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• Exclusive E-VaC"r enpsement tor smooth

ol&gt;'tratlon of dee:k and ·attac.hments
• 3- and s-year limited warranty•.-. .

ALLPOWER EQUIPMENT
FAMI.LY OWNED SINCE 1996

\l ai•liill'l pur;:;t&gt;•uo O' 1~~ or_ "'or•MI()!I ' ' ~· 1C~ """"' ~ u""' yoo ~ l':"tdl1 C.-d. /J. ~M10!IO!"I ~" ~1 1 1~1 !11/1125 -.. :11 bt ~Jdld I~ tn. ~61~ h'.lr~e• 'Or llfiiO,&gt;•n tinll"'cfld 1.,., ., thin im.'0499!~099 milK~'""" (In P!orno cutd"1Uf 1;,.dutin
rt~'!•r't dl,_I ' Jtl '~"~;ad I 1 "::.H"'"·-&lt;1 ~P' ·~ .:.t. d•r Ll•;n '!- 'TJUn:t ._ •21 •'!): mini..,.-um.._f,_t, PII\'~11,\S .:.I"IICto..nl Olld wht1 dtte lnd t9&gt;acnunt bur1u OO.t/1~\ ~ .. •.J o-.oi\ ~~1:1. :lt..rwi•. ~ron'l(ll'l't•\' be fifll'linatiG 1. !OnW~Ce d'latJb usu!ltd
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clear
.

.

Pleasant Valley Hospital in,
Point Pleasant, W.Va., and
Lavender to Holzer Medical
Center, Gallipolis, Co1111i~
Soulsby, drivmg the fourtll
vehicle. was not injured and
refused treatment.
Funeral arrangements for
Hamson and English are
being handled by Anderson
. McDaniel Funeral_Home.

., Council
discusses g~ :
aggregation :
opportunity
BY SETH SERGENT

REED

SSERGENTOMYilAILYSENTINEL.COM

POMEROY - At last
POMEROY
The
meetinjl of Pomeroy
night's
director of tbe DNA !abo·
Village
Counctl, a represenratory at the Ohio Bureau
tative
of
Volunteer Energy
of Criminal Identification
Services of Columbus, a
and Investigation has been
for-profit
company tha~,
subpoeaned to appear in a
buys
natural
gas and sells it .
hearing next' week in . the
through
municipalities;
·
death-penalty murder case
answered questions about
a_g_airist
Charles
S.
the gas aggregation issue on
Williams.
·
the May 5 bllllot.
.
· Lynn Bolin of the BCI
Firstly,
aggregation
is the
laboratory in London will
process
in
which
energy
is
appear m Meigs County
sold to consumers who have
Common Pleas . Court on
joined
together as a group tq
May 4, A subpoena .was
buy
a
product - in this
issued for Bolin's appearcase,
ifs
natural gas ~f the
ance on .!I motion. filed by
voters
.
approve
the tssue.
Prosecuting . ,. Attorney
The issue on the May 5 bal- .
Colleen Williams.
lot, if passed, · allows . The -lieannj(on ·pendi'nit
Pomeroy to be certified to
motions in the case
act a.s the head of a bargain-possibly include testimony
ing unit I buying· group for
relating to a blood sample to
residents wl:)o wish to parbe tested for DNA evidence
ticipate
in the program. The
from the alleged murderer.
village
will
then attempt to
The defense team has also
purchase natural gas at a
filed motions for a.defense
reduced rate in comparison
psychologist and mitigation
to
the rates of other utility
expert.
companies.
This would
Testing of the blood samaffect customers, including
ple for DNA evidence has
commercial customers, not
been the. subject of motimis
already
on a gas utility comand discussions in l!earings
pany's
plan.
By bargaining
in the Williiuns case since
with a larger group, it's
Prosecutor Williams filed a
thought ijle price for the
notice of- intent to use the
utility would be lower than
blood sample evidence on
A rill6.
. ·
what the individual would
he offered directly.
~at notice, filed · under
Last night, the spokesper·
Criminal Rule 12(E),
son for Volunteer Energy
included an attached laboraServices said the biggest
tory report relating to a
paper bag conltiining black
· ·
.
·
·
·
·
Betti 8efvenllphoto misconception about the
Polo boots belonging· to Debris clearnip from last week's demolition':of the PQmeroy Mason Bridge's center span pro~ram is that residents
Charles S: Williams.
has finally been completed and river trilfic is flowing wilh!!ul delay in the Big Bend. don t have a choice, when
A · subject line •on the Yesterday,
in fact, they do have a
a spokesperson with the Ohio Oepartm~nt !!!Transportation said the remain- choice
.either to patticipate ·
report names Williams, his Ing pl_e rs and
pieces of the !!ld bridge will come d!!wn in two ·weeks. More details wm
,..... _ ....,..... AI fQIIow in The Daily Sentinel.
·
PIHse-CoundLAS

s

•

gout

Public defender to assume •·
defense in Rizer murder case

POMEROY - The Ohio
Public ·Defender's Office
will tepresent Paula Rizer,
accused in the April 3 murDetella on Plge A&amp;
der of her husband.
An initial pre-trial hearing
was held in the ' case
Monday in Meigs County
Common Pleas Court. .
Rizer
had
retained
a SECnoNS - 1a PAGES
Pomeroy
. Attorney
:Annie's Mailbox
Christopher Tenaglia just
A3
after she was charged with
~endars
A3
her husband's .. murder.
."''enoglia has continued to
Classifieds
83~4
represent Rizer, but has not
been appoihted . counsel in
Comics
85
the case.
However, at · Monday's
Jhljtorials
A4
hearing, after a telephone
.
call
to the Ohio Public
Obituaries
A.5
Defender 's district office in
Athens , Tenoglia was per8 Section
~ports
milled to withdraw as
Rizer's
counsel in favor of
Weather
A6
representation-by the OPD's
office. The county re~ains a
contract with the state
S.gentlpholo agency to provide represenYesterday evening provided perfect weather for a stroll along the Pomeroy river front with tation of indigent defenApril feeling more like June. Here, tl)ls trio makes their Wfrl along the parking lot with the ·dants . Death penalty murder
cases are exempt from the
• young lady on the left sh,I)Wing some spring in her step.

. INDEX

. 8880 UNITED LANE
ONE MILE WEST bF ATHENS ON RT. 50/32
C740J 593-3279
STORE HOURS: MONDAY-FRIDAY 9:00-6:00
SATURDAY 9:00-5:00

and released were Devon
accident ·as was Stephanie Soulsb¥•.18;ofPomeroy. who
English, 38, of Middleport, was drivmg a vehicle owned
who was in the SUV with by Tyler Brother~ • . 16, of
Brandi Hill of Pomeroy. Hill Pomeroy, who was in the car
remains iit serious condition along with Dillon Lavender.
at St. Mary's Hospital in 12, address not given.
· Huntington, W.Va. where she
All three were transpo11ed
was transported by Lifeflight by Meigs EMS - Soulsby
from the accident. scene.
to O'Bleness Hospital in
Others transported, treated Athens,
Brothers
to

BREEOOMY~ILYSENTlNEL.COM

• 44"- 60" heiWY"'duty trlple·bllde r'fi(Miil'l&amp; •
decks

1830 OLD LOGAN RD SE
RT.33 JUST SOUTH OF LANCASTER .
LANCASTER, OH 43130 o (7401 653-2827
STORE HOURS: MONDAY-FRIDAY 9:00-6:00
SATURDAY 9:00-5:00

Hilrrisori ·was killed in the

Bv BRIAN J. REED

••••••••••••••••• •••••

STAR~NG AT' $5 , 199tt
o.,.................

iJivestigation until a determination can be made as to
the driver of the SUV which
reportedly struck two vehicles waiting to make left. hand turns, then went left of
center into the path of a
. truck · driven by Robert
Harrison, 40, of Pomeroy.
The _truck burst into flames
oti imp~t, it wa§ reported.

BREE~OMYDAILYSENTlNEL.COM

..... .. ............... "...... .. .

0

BY CHARLENE HOEFUCH
HOEFLICHOMYOAILYSENTINEL.COM

DNA expert
to testify in
Williams
hearing

Cleveland
Indians' Trevor
Crowe. lett,
catches a ball
hit by
Minnesota
Twins' Justin
Morneau in the
first intling in a
baseball game,
Sunday, in ·
Cleveland.

\\"~'· m~d .tih.., (·utiln·J.(o l ll

.

Charges pending·in.fatal accident
POMEROY - Charges
are still pending in the fow:vehicle accident which result· edina double fatality Sumjay
afternoon on State Route 143 .
The State Highway Patrol
reported Monday that the
accident will remain under

Page AS
•.Stephanie English, 38
. • .Robert Harrison 11 •. 40
• Joanne MiHer, 72
• Wendell Price, 78
• Mary E: Searles, 91

•••• ~ ••••••

~·

PrintedoniOO%
Recycled Newsprint ~..,

lli· SU\, . \PH.II .:.!H . :!oo&lt;J

,jo(( ,'.;IS•\oi.:)N . :\' o . :!oft

APpholo

STAR~NOAT'

•

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio

s_

~..;;.~...,.

Ohio city hands ·
out tickets for free
Leno show, A6 ··

contract, but cases without a
death penalty are included . .
Rizer also agreed to waiveJ:
her rightto a speedy trial until
June 1. so Attorney Herman
Carson can take over her
defense when he joins lhtl
public defender's otf1ce in
May. Under state. law, the
state has 90 days from the
·date of Rizer's arrest to bJ:ing
her case to trial. · .
·
A final pre-trial hearing Hi
the case has been set for
May II . Rizer's trial was
originally set for May 19,
but Tenoglia said the trial ·
will now likely take place
sometime in July or August.
Rizer is accused of mur,
dering her husband, Kenny
Rizer, Sr., by multiple gunshot wounds to the chest.
Rizer was pronounced dead
at the scene. the couple's
home on Lovett Road in
Portland.
No facts surrounding the
case, such as motive or cir·
cumstances leading up to
the shooting, have been
.made public . Prosecuting
. Attorney
Colleen
S:
Williams represented the
state at yesterday's hearing,

.,

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      <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
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        <element elementId="50">
          <name>Title</name>
          <description>A name given to the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="13235">
              <text>April 27, 2009</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </elementSet>
  </elementSetContainer>
  <tagContainer>
    <tag tagId="1330">
      <name>diddle</name>
    </tag>
  </tagContainer>
</item>
