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Tuescjay, June 3, 2008

· -.mydailysentinel.~

. .... B6. The OWySadird

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

-.

ASSOCIATED l'l'lESS

PAKIS

Sb;arapova did

ly.

Maria

not go quiet-

.

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

me

:one

meet

me

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

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

SAR annual awards

·presented, A3

-

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

·a

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

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

"l

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

--

·

I'~ '\I -1 • -.,,,,..,
Jo

,, ,, ,

8Y Bent SER

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

·Plan'

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

t

•

Middleport
association ·

the.seeds

finalizes
July4

'
•

schedule
BrBRIANJ. REm
BREEOOMYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

' PqeAS

..

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

-

.

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

.

:$et 'PIF-"'

• tQiass()f 78 :mt.llion

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

r.

.

.

.

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

INDEX

Bs

Editorials
Movies
Obituaries.
Sports

Weather

.A4
As
As
8 Section
A6

•

'

..,,.,,liTH·

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

• Foiat IBI'i wns award.

•

111\d.11h

Long Bottom woman dies in fire

SPOKIS

.... liergMrt.lphD7o

•n

\

.•'

•

Hoof

'

Roush named.
volunteer of
theyear,A6

gram,

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

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

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

.,

�NATION •

.The Daily Sentinel

/

WoRLD

lVednesda~June4,2008

GM.to close 4 plan~, focus
BYT. . K:

PageA2

ER

on sanall cars.

WILMINGTON, Del. General Motors OJqJ. officially \lllew up its &lt;Jid business model·Thes4ay, closing
fror pickup truck and spo!il
utility vehicle factories,
anoonllci!\g a oew small car ·
ttlat oould get 45 miles .per
~on and shedding 8,35'0
·
Jobs in dJe process.
N0w the world's largest
alltolllak.er by sales needs to
fi,gure ()Ut ·bow il can sell
enough cars to make money
•
AP . . - in a shrinking U.S. market
Oernoaatic presidential candidate,
Baradk Obama, 0- liJid stay .ahead of.the bill
.
.collectors.
1111., waves to supporters before ~ing at a primary night
The automak;er said it
. fllll~ Tuesday ·in St.· Pa111l, Mirnn. Obama sealed the would idle piclruJl and suv
Democratic presidential nomirlalion Tuesday, a historic factories in Janesville, Wis.;
~ toward his once-imp!lilbable goal of 'becoming 1he OShawa, Ontario; Moorine,
Ohio; and Toluca, MeJcioo,
nation's first black presitilent.

Obama seals nomination: .:on ~~tev:fc~:!~,~~;
by $4 per gallon gasoline.

Runway

· after World War B bomb nneartlk'd ~~v.kle~~!~"rs generilAMsTERDAM. Netherlao4s (AP) - Amsterdam's
Schiphol Airport has closed one of its five runways
after a World War U bomb was unearthed during exca•
vations nearby.
Amiy explosives .e xperts say the 500-pound (226-kilogram) British bomb must remain still for 54 ·hours
because it was moved during its discovery by workers
building a road.
Bert. van Denham from the local municipality says the
bomb is expected to be removed on Thursday.
Schiphol spokeswoman Kathelijne Vermenlel! said
Tuesday that flights are being dlverted to other runways at
the airpOrt and no delays are expected.

•

ror

ly were too high
Detroit
autemalcers 10 tum a profit
on small U.S.-built cars. But
Wagoner said GM has lowered costs enough with new
labor oontracts and other
measures 10 tum a profit.
"The direct answer is we
need to," Wagoner told
JqJOrters. "We believe we
can build a car there profitably."
ln addition to costs, GM

Community Calendar

Church e.vents

Improvement Corporation.
lOesday, June 10
HARRISONVILLE
Harrisonville #225 OES,
meeting to elect officers,
7:30 p .m ., refreshments
served.
·
Thursday, June 12
CHESTER
-Shade
River Lodge monthly stated
meeting, . 7:30
p.m.
Refreshments.

Other events
Friday, June 6
MASON, W.Va. - OHKan Coin Club exhibition,
City National Bank.

.....

'

General Motors wor1ters l:le8d •iAto woric luescilay moming in MIJnlirle. GemeRii ·M*lrs
Corp., will cease operations .a t its sport lltility vehic.les assembly plant on Stroop ftoad &lt;in
Moraine, ti;\e company told woriters in an ir:rtemal announcement loday.

be reviewed and potentially or ~ncea plans &lt;to build
sold or revamped due to five US. assembly plants,
bigh fuel prices.
· he 'S3id. ln 2007, foreign
News 0f the j0b cuts was auto companies employed
devastating to communities 113,000 people in the U.S~ a
that bouse the factories, but number McAlioden projects
bonny worlcmi likely will will rise t0 152,000 by 21H I.
move to other plants to
The Oshawa ltruek plant,
replace 1'9JJOO who wil.l . which builds the Chevrolet
·leave ilhe company this year Silverado and GMC Sierra
. ·under early retirement and pickups; likely will be shutbuyout offers.
teFed next year. The
However, the misery isn't Moraine plant near Dayton
uver. Wagoner said GM is will stop making Chevy
wwting on . consolidating TrailBlazer and other mill~
engine, transmission and size SUVs in 2010 "ur
other parts operations to go sooner if demand dictates,fl
with the assembly plant
W~~goner said.
&lt;Juts.
.
1be actions add •to .a string
of plant closures by the Big
Three in the 1ast several
years. GM, fiord Motor Co.
and Chrysler lLC have
ann~ ·the shutdown of
35 plants siiloe 2005, .according 'to Sean McAlinden,
chief econontist with the
Center for Automotive
Research· in Ann Arbor.
·-~-­
Along with 35 additional
• to...,..,~•w.birnlill
closures at GM and Ford's
·~SIIIt"""·--l- .
chief suppliers, Delphi Corp.
~
'
and
Automotive · (w~~~&gt;6XAI nwl~
/UIII'!I,_
Components Holdings LLC,
11an
Up-or..t
L
I' ._.
be said the total hourly .and
salaried jobs eliminated
comes to 149,000;
In that same period. foreign antomakers have . built

·--·- -.
....

,

'

.et EweJYODe bow Your Dad Is Somecme
.....__~

.Th•nk You Tribute...

Very SpecleJ Wltb
A Father"• Day
.

To Be Pabll""ed In The :Sunday Time• Sentluel
Oa Suada:y, June 15th!

Submlnlcl phala

The following were· recently honored for their community service by the Ewing Chapter of the .Sons of the American
'Revolution (from left) Don Poole, Nick Lunsford, Matt Matheny, Rick Olexa, Mary Powell, Patrick Carey, Beverly
Schumacher. Also pictured (far right) Jim Smith, chapter president.

SAR annual awa1~s presented
: CHESTER - The Ewing
C hapter of the Sons of the
'American Revolution ser:
vicing Meigs, Gatlia and
Athens Counties, · recently
handed out its annual
awards for everything from
:heroism to citizenship.
: The ceremony was held at
:the Chester Courthouse and
·included the following SAR
:awards and winners:
Although it has been a
few years since the Heroism
Medal was awarded, this
ye ar it went to Ohio State
Trooper Nick Lunsford with
t he (Jallia-Meigs Post in

recognition of his service in
assisting a fellow officer
that was near drowning
while attempting to chase a
suspect into the Ohio River
last year. Another officer
perished in tbat pursuit in
Gallia County. He was nominated .for the award by Lt.
Richard Grau of the GalliaMeigs Patrol Post.
The
. Eagle
Scout
Certificate went to Scouts
Patrick Carey and Matt
Matheny.
The
Flag
Certificate went to Don
Poole of the Tuppers PlainsChester Water District for

the organization's well-lit went to Rick Olexa of the
and displayed American Athens Police Department.
. Ewing Chapter President
fla¥. The Bronze Good
Ciuzenship Medal went . to James M. Sntith said the
Mary Powell for her work at · awards are important to recthe Chester Courthouse and ognize community service
Chester-Shade Historical throughout the three counties the chapter calls home.
AssociatiOn.
.
The SAR Medal of · In addition to Sntith, other
Appreciation went to Beverly · officers of the Ewing 0Japter
Schumacher for her service include Alan Goldsbmy,lirst
·to the chapter and for g~ vice president, Dale Colburn,
five new members. An addi-. second vice ·president, Bill
tional Flag Cenificate went 10 Beegle, secretary/treasurer,
Holter,
historian,
the Athens City Fire Roy
Department for its well dis- Schumacher (the Daughters
played American Flag. The of the American Revolution),
Law Enforcemenr Medal genealogist ·

:Ohio attorney general realigns staff to avoid conflicts
: . BY JULIE CARR SMYTH
'AP STATEHOUSE CORRESPONDENT

Happy
Father's Day1

Happy
father's Day
{Your Father's

:· COLUMBUS
.Attorney General Nancy
Rogers, appointed last week
to replace the state's previous attorney general who
resigned in a sexual harass- ·
ment scandal, said Tuesday
:she has reassigned her pre:decessor's top lieutenant
· :.an d made other personnel
._,hanges to avoid possible
.
:conflicts of interest.
. : · Rogers said Tom Winters,
:who served as fiTSt assistant
:attorney general under former Anomey General Marc
·Dann, has been replaced in
:her adntinistration because
·he worke'd for the same law
firm that employ s h,er hus:band .. Chief Counsel Sheryl

Creed Maxfield will take'
over the job, but Winters
will stay on as chief deputy.
Rogers, appointed by Gov.
Ted Strickland, had faced
questions over how she'd
handle the office's dealings
with two law frrms with ties
to her family and with Ohio
State University, where she
· is on leave as dean of the
college's law school.
ln other moves, Rogers
said she won't give new state
legal work to a law firm
where her daughter works
unless the Ohio Ethics
Commission assures her that
it presents no real or perceived conflict of interest.
Rogers said she also will
recuse herself from issues
involving Ohio State and
the Iaw firms where her

husband and daughter work. Winters' work and said
Dann resigned in May 1\Jesday that be will·,CODtinafter a sexual harassment ue tiS chief lawyer for legal
scandal and the admission and law enforcement matthat he had an extratnarital ters. Winters also will refrain
affair with a subordinate.
from dealing with any matWinters' role in the wake ters related to her husband's
of Dann 's resignation was a law firm, she said.
With Strickland and Dann
matter of interest because
of the scandal and his one- at ·the helm, Democrats
time role as a lobbyist for a scored a near takeover ·of
company owned by Tom state government from
Noe, a Toledo-area rare Republicans in 2006 on
coin dealer convicted of promi!iCS they would clean
theft and other crimes in a up the ·"culture of corrupstate investment scandal.
tion." They defined that to
Strickland last week include the Noe scandal,
picked Rogers to be attor- which .touched many in the
ney general because. of her Republican administration
reputation and character, of former Gov. Bob Taft,
which he said would help and the Jack Abramolf lobrestore confidence in the byist scandal in Washington
that saw former GOP U.S.
office.
Rogers
has
praised Rc;p. Bob Ney imprisoned.

In-laws have no
contact with widow
•

BY KATHY MITCHELL
AND MARCY SUGAR

Dear Annie: 1 was married for 30 years before my
husband passed away five
years ago of colon cancer.
During · his 18 months of
treatment, he was hospitalized four times for surg eries and infections, and
each was followed by
weeks of recuperation at
home . I communicated
almost daily with hi s parents, who lived in our
town, and I assumed t)ley
conveyed the information
to his .brother, who al so
lived here, and to a si ster in
another state.
My in-laws did not provide any assistance with my
husband's care, but I was
fortunate to have good
friends who helped out.
After his death, communication with my . husband 's
fantily became almost
nonexistent. Without my
calls, letters, cards and
flowers, I'm convinced
there would be no relationship at all.
Within the past three
years, my in-laws have
moved away, which means
there is even less communication, and my brother-inlaw has made it clear to me
and my children that he has
issues with us and no interest in maintaining contact.
My sister-in-law sends a
Christmas card, hut that's
about it, even though I have
tried to see her several
times when I have been in
her town, and have called
her often.
My attempts to remain
part of this family (for the
sake of my .children) constantly hit brick walls. Not
only are we still. ,grieving
over the loss of my . husband, but it is additionally
hunful that we no longer
have a relationship with his
family. We ntiss them very
much. What can I do? Widow in Florida
Dear Widow: How terribly sad tha\ in their grief,
your in-laws are willing to
lose touch . with you and
your children. You cannot
force them to he more interested, but we hope· you wiil
.not drop all contact. You
don' t need to put yourself
through hoops, but P.lease
continue to send appropriate
cards with pictures of the
children and make the occasional phone call. We hope
they will someday realize
what they have lost and
come around, and it will
help if you have kept a candle burning.
Dear Annie: My neighbor is a sweet old lady, but I
can't get her to stop feeding

1.~

-+:WATCH
Open a Marltet-Watch now and get a 3 .2 5% .
Interest Rate (3.30% A.P.Y.) for the first 180 d ays
{6 months). After 180 days, current rates app ly.

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•• All Ads Must Be Pre-Paid ••

Marcy Sugar. longtime editors of the Ann Landers
column. Please e-mail your
questions to anniesmailbox@comcast.net, or "'rit•·
to: Annie's Mailbox , P.O.
Box J/8190. Chicago, 11.
60611. To find out ilwr•·
about Annie 's Mailbox.
and read feature s by other
Creators Syndicate wrilers
and cartoonists, visit tht·
Creators Syndicate Web
page at www.creators.com.

EARN CD RATES WiTHOlJT rHE CD

FMhw·•~------------------------------------------

CltyiSblta!Zlp

Annie's Mailbox is writ-

ren by Kathy Mitchell and

Love·

Circle One: A.1X3 Guetlug .•.$12.00

Your .H IIme(a) -

kecf

J

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(Your Name)

my dog through the fence
despite my tel ling he r
repeated! y that the dog has
. allergies and th e ve t has him
on a strict di et.
I e ven gave her a bag of
vet-pre scribed dog trea ts
that he can have once a
day. but she gave hi m the
whole week's wort h in the
first 24 hours an d the n
went back to feeding him
table scraps.
My neig hbor is very
sneaky and stubborn . The
dog. of course. adore s her. I
can·!
him inside all
day. Can get a court orde r
for thi s son of thing'? - ·
Victim of Guerrilla War
Dear Victim: Yo u would
need to speak to a lawyer w
see if a coutt order is worth
pursuing. Meanwhile. tell
your mule- headed neighbor
one more time that the dog
has allergies and the snacks
she insists on feeding him
could do terrible harm .
inform her that if th e anima l
becomes sick, you will be
sending her the veterinary
bill and possi bly suing her
for damages. Yo u also
might consider putting up a
tall, solid fence th at sh!!
can •t stick her fin gers ·
through.
·
Dear Annie: This is fo r
" Need a Good Laugh,"
whose husband is sensitive ·
to noise and won't let her
watch TV.
This condition is called
hyperacusis. That man
needs to see an otolaryn. gologist (ear, n ose and
throat doctor) for a checkup and officiaf diagnosis. I
am not saying he shouldn't be willin g to compromi se with headphones.
etc., but hi s wife should
know there could be a
genuine medical problem .
He can get info rmation
through www.hyperacu sis.org a nd www.hyperacusis. net. - N.N • .
Dear N.N.: Thank you for
these online resources. The
fir st is sponsored by the.
Oregon
Tinnitu s
&amp;
Hyperacu sis
Trea tment
Clinic, and the second is the
Hyperacusis Network. P.O.
Box 8007. Green Bay. Wis.
54308.

3.30% A.P.Y."

Name)

Love

2008

ANNIE'S MAILBOX

organizations

will have to make sure it bas
a competitive car that consumers will buy. ·
· "I can assure you that is
getting a tremendous amount
of attention," he said.
The new cat likely would
be priced higher .than the
Cobalt, which runs in the
mid-teens depending on
how it's equipped. lt would
hit showrooms in the second half of 2010 and be
powered by a 1-liter to 1.4liter four-cylinder gllliOline
engine to be built at a factory in Flint. GM said that
with a manual transmission
it would get nine miles per
gallon more than the CDireDt
Cobalt, which gets up to 36
· mpg on the highway.
Wagoner also announced
that · the .board of directors
has approved production of
the ·Chevrolet Volt plug-in
electric car, which GM
plans to bring to showrooms
by the end 'o f 2010.
Fully charged, .t he Volt
could drive about 40 .miles
without using any gasoline,
and a small conventional
engine would recharge the
vehicle, extending its range
and allowing it ·w ~et .the
equivalent of 150 miles per
gallon.
Wagoner also said the
iconic Hummer 'btand will

Obama spoke in the same velricles on U.S. highways,
ball where McCain will saying it W\)uld either be
NEDR" Plctw:R
sold or get a remake.
AsSOCIATED PRESS WAITERS
aceept ·the ·Re publican nomThe move outs about
ination at his party' s coo- 2,900J.obsin0sbawa,Cibout
ST. PAUL, Minn. vention in September.
Cheered by a roaring Campaign officials, citing 2,800 in Janesville, about
crowd, Sen. Barack Obama .tlle local fire marshal, put 2,400 in .M0raine and about
of illinois laid claim to me the .orowd at 17 ,OOO instde 250 in Toluca, said (JM
Democratic
presidenllia:l the eXcel Energy Center, spokesman Tom Wilkinson.
GM said the ·truck plant
nontination Tuesday night, 1plus another 15,000 outside.
McCain
addressed
a
cuts,
which wiU reduce
taking a historic step
toward his once-improbable smaller crowd by design, an capacity to produce pickups
goal of becoming me estimated 600 in his audi- and large SUVs by about 35
nation's first black presi- ence and another 600 out- pcr-cent, will save the company $1 billion per year, and
dent. Hillary Rodbam side. .
One cam(&gt;aign began as when combined with earlier
Clinton maneuvered for :the
another
was ending.·
measures, bY 2011 will save
vice presidential spot on his
Clinton
won
·
South
$[5 billion over 2005 costs.
fall ticket without ooncedDakota 011 the final night .0 f
GM's moves, which come
. ing her own defeat.
"America, this is our .the primary season; Obarna after a r;eries of restructuring measures since 2005 ,
moment," the 46-year-old toolc Montana.
are the result ·of :a 'huge shift
The
former
first
lady
senator and one-time compraised
her
rival
warmly
in
in
U.S. CODSllffier prefermunity org~r said in his
first appearance as l!be an arux:arance before sup- ences for small cars and
Democratic nominee-in- porters in New YOI'k in which crossovers .during the past
waiting. "This is our ti.me. she neither acknowledged 1V.:?w~:GM don't ilhink
Our time to tum the page on Obarna's victory nor offered
· of any ·"
this
iJ; a ..,Jkc or tempm;aJy
the policies of the past."
a concesston
. .,u.
-'-'"',fl
.......!.:., Executi·ve ..~ck
Instead, she said she was "'w' '\...illKll.
ou
Obarna' s victory set up a
committed
to
a
united
party,
Wagoner
said.
"We
believe
five-month campaign with
.that___,.
it is,
Republican Sen. John and said she would S""'nd
:r, by and large, perMcCain of Arizona, a race the next few days determin- rna.......·
.
. The .autamaker . now will
between a first-tern~ Senate injl ·~w to move forw.a m
opponent of the IraQ War With the best interests of our I 'have &lt;to parlay tts str0qg
and a 71-_year-old (ormer country and our party guidl- OW'.I'IeaS ~ and the lower
· . NOI1h American costs ~!0 a
Vietnam ,pnsoner of war and ing my way.fl
Only 31 delegates wen: at tmlit !by ·selling cars m.ilhe
staunch supP.&lt;Jner of the curstalc.e m the tw0 states on ilhe Sl.j,,OOO ~ $~,000 nnge,
rent U.'S. military mission.
night's
ballot, the final few balfdtepwe ohts •h~rfAnd both men seemed
among
the thousands that itSUVsandpiWJp
· .
eager to begin.
McCain spoke first, in once drew ·Ohama Clinton 1 "'lbe new cars, they tend
New Orleans, and he and six other De'mocmti.c to.~ dt~ .~ly,"
accused his younger rival of ·candidates into the cam- aid Pete ~tmgs, sem.o r
. voting "to deny funds to the paign to replace Bush .and :analyst w1th MeliiPhiS,
Morgan
soldiers who have done a ·become the nati0o's 44th. Tenn."'Dased
· ~an &amp; Co. "1bey tend
brilliant and brave job" in president.
Obarna sealed his nomi- ·. to make money, .just not as
Iraq." Americans, he added,
nation,
accoFding to The ·. mndh .money tJ?iiDPared te
should be concerned about
. the j udgJDent of a presiden- Associated Press tally; •the mce margms on the
tial candidate who has not based on .primary elections, SUV 11 ~d large 1ruoks."
Hastmgs 1s confident GM
traveled to Iraq yet "says state Democratic .caucuses
he's ready to talk, in person and support from party can .pay . bills and make
and without conditions, "superdelegates." It takes money With tis new N~
with tyrants from Havana to 2,118 delegatest0 clincb the American cars, but that Will
nomination at the conven' be hliFd unless the U.S.
Pyongyang."
McCain agreed with tion in Denver this summer, economy recovers.
"I don't think they can get
Obama that the presidential and Obarna bad 2,151 by
to profitability quickly if the
race would focus on change. the AP count.
Obama, a frrst!term sena- economy stays where it is,"
"But the choice is between
the right change and the tor who was virtually Jlte said. ·
wrong change, between unknown . on the natiOnal · 'GM lost $3.3 billion in
going forward and going stage four years ago, cJe..1'rat- tbe first ..qlllll'ter and !burned
ed Clinton, the former first dtrough $3.4 billion in cash
backward," he said.
Obama responded quick- lady an&lt;) one-time campaign from January through
ly, pausing in his own front-runner, in a 17 -month March. Its May sales were
for
•the down 28 percent compared
speech ·long enough to marathon
with last May.
. praise Clinton for "her Democratic nomination.
His victory had been
The pace of the cash buni
strength, her courage and
her commitment to the widely assumed for weeks: may force GM back to the
causes that brought us here But Clinton's declaration of capital market~ for more
interest in becoming his borrowing, Hastings said,
tonight."
.As for his general election ticketmate was wholly although the company has
said it bas sufficient cash to
rival, he said, "It's not unellpeC(ed.
She
expressed
it
in
·
a
·
.conwithstand a downturn.
change when John McCain
"lbey've got a lot of liq' decided to stand with ference call with ber state' s
delegatio.n uidity now," Hastings said.
(Jeor~e Bush 95 percent of congressional
the tune, as he did in the after Rep. Nydia ,WeJazquet, ' "lbey are burning through
Senate last year. lt' s not predicted Oli ' .:a would .it faster than they thought
change when he offers four have great difficulty win- they ·would earlier in the
supPort of · "yeaf."
more years of Bush eco- ning the
GM ended the quarter
nomic policies that have Hispanics and other. 111oting
failed to create well-paying blocs unless the fonner :first with $23.9 billion in cash
and $7 billion in credit
jobs .... And it's not change lady was on the ticket.
· when he promises to contin- · '"I am open .to itff if it facilities .
ue a policy in Iraq that asks would help the party's · Just·before the co111PaDy's
everything of our brave prospects in November, annual ·shareholders' meetyoung men and women in Clinton replied, ac.cording ing in Wilntington, Del.,
uniform and nothing of to panicipants who spoke Wagoner also announced
on condition of anonyntity the automak.er will build a
Iraqi politicians."
ln a symbolic move, because the call was .private. new generdtion small car
------------------------ ·----------starting in ll,l.id-2010 at a
.
· factory in Lordstown, Ohio, .
'
at Amsterdam airport dosed that now makes the
BY TOll RAUII AND

Wednesday, June 4,

•

Trustees, regular meeting, games, prizes, all area chil6:30 p.m., home of dren invited.
Manning Roush.
Wednesday, June 4
SHADE
- Bedford
POMEROY
- Meigs
Clubs and
Township
Trustees
will meet
County Board of Health,
regular meeting, 5 p.m., at 7 p.m, at the town ball.
RUTLAND - Rutland
.conference room Meigs
Village
Council, regular
Thllnilllly, ,JIIIle 5.
County Health Departnient.
meeting,
7
p.m.,
civic
center.
TUPPERS PLAINS PAGEVILLE - Scipio
VFW
Ladies AuYiliary. 7
Township Trustees, 6 :30
p
.m.
p.m., Pageville Town Hall.
Fridlly, June 6
.
Saturday, Julie 7 ·
POMEROY PERI
. SYRACUSE Sutton
Sanday, June 8
Township Trustees will
RUTLAND - Rutland ·Chapter 74, Meigs County,
meet 7 p.m. Syracuse Free Will Baptist Church, I p.m. at the Mulberry
:Village hall.
Celebrating Children Day Community Center. Paul
with Sunday School, 10 Reed and John Musser to
Tuesday, June 10
ROCK SPRINGS . am., followed by sermon talk on the workings and
Sali sbury
Township for youths, then cookout, plans of the Community

.sen.

~~m.=:.~lfm: ~~

The Daily Sentinel

Public meetin~

R' NJlOWRi I Eft

'This is our moment'

PageA3

·

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•

Au1nm carr

OHIO VAL-LEY BANK.

: · Completes
· basic training
: MIDDLEPORT - -Austin
"P. Carr, son of Ron and
:Teresa Carr of Middleport,
son of Caitlin Carr. recentl y
-~raduated from basic train.mg at Fon Jackson, S.C.
... He completed hi s AIT in
·intelligence anal yst at Fon
.Huachuca,
Ariz.,
in
:November, 2007 and is now
.stationed in South Korea.

·I

1-800-468-6682
www.ovbc.com

-

•A $10JIXI.DO ~ iJIIII ..... • rwquirwclla OC*1 the ~ OfW ..,.... to l'lt!W
~ onlt' Fund&amp; ftum __.. Ohio v.ll8v 8P. ·~ do ~ ~ lor h 180 Oily
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........ ......,.::! l h . . . . . fnOI'ItfV tNI~ fdl tMiow $10.000 00 Min~ ~~
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�NATION •

.The Daily Sentinel

/

WoRLD

lVednesda~June4,2008

GM.to close 4 plan~, focus
BYT. . K:

PageA2

ER

on sanall cars.

WILMINGTON, Del. General Motors OJqJ. officially \lllew up its &lt;Jid business model·Thes4ay, closing
fror pickup truck and spo!il
utility vehicle factories,
anoonllci!\g a oew small car ·
ttlat oould get 45 miles .per
~on and shedding 8,35'0
·
Jobs in dJe process.
N0w the world's largest
alltolllak.er by sales needs to
fi,gure ()Ut ·bow il can sell
enough cars to make money
•
AP . . - in a shrinking U.S. market
Oernoaatic presidential candidate,
Baradk Obama, 0- liJid stay .ahead of.the bill
.
.collectors.
1111., waves to supporters before ~ing at a primary night
The automak;er said it
. fllll~ Tuesday ·in St.· Pa111l, Mirnn. Obama sealed the would idle piclruJl and suv
Democratic presidential nomirlalion Tuesday, a historic factories in Janesville, Wis.;
~ toward his once-imp!lilbable goal of 'becoming 1he OShawa, Ontario; Moorine,
Ohio; and Toluca, MeJcioo,
nation's first black presitilent.

Obama seals nomination: .:on ~~tev:fc~:!~,~~;
by $4 per gallon gasoline.

Runway

· after World War B bomb nneartlk'd ~~v.kle~~!~"rs generilAMsTERDAM. Netherlao4s (AP) - Amsterdam's
Schiphol Airport has closed one of its five runways
after a World War U bomb was unearthed during exca•
vations nearby.
Amiy explosives .e xperts say the 500-pound (226-kilogram) British bomb must remain still for 54 ·hours
because it was moved during its discovery by workers
building a road.
Bert. van Denham from the local municipality says the
bomb is expected to be removed on Thursday.
Schiphol spokeswoman Kathelijne Vermenlel! said
Tuesday that flights are being dlverted to other runways at
the airpOrt and no delays are expected.

•

ror

ly were too high
Detroit
autemalcers 10 tum a profit
on small U.S.-built cars. But
Wagoner said GM has lowered costs enough with new
labor oontracts and other
measures 10 tum a profit.
"The direct answer is we
need to," Wagoner told
JqJOrters. "We believe we
can build a car there profitably."
ln addition to costs, GM

Community Calendar

Church e.vents

Improvement Corporation.
lOesday, June 10
HARRISONVILLE
Harrisonville #225 OES,
meeting to elect officers,
7:30 p .m ., refreshments
served.
·
Thursday, June 12
CHESTER
-Shade
River Lodge monthly stated
meeting, . 7:30
p.m.
Refreshments.

Other events
Friday, June 6
MASON, W.Va. - OHKan Coin Club exhibition,
City National Bank.

.....

'

General Motors wor1ters l:le8d •iAto woric luescilay moming in MIJnlirle. GemeRii ·M*lrs
Corp., will cease operations .a t its sport lltility vehic.les assembly plant on Stroop ftoad &lt;in
Moraine, ti;\e company told woriters in an ir:rtemal announcement loday.

be reviewed and potentially or ~ncea plans &lt;to build
sold or revamped due to five US. assembly plants,
bigh fuel prices.
· he 'S3id. ln 2007, foreign
News 0f the j0b cuts was auto companies employed
devastating to communities 113,000 people in the U.S~ a
that bouse the factories, but number McAlioden projects
bonny worlcmi likely will will rise t0 152,000 by 21H I.
move to other plants to
The Oshawa ltruek plant,
replace 1'9JJOO who wil.l . which builds the Chevrolet
·leave ilhe company this year Silverado and GMC Sierra
. ·under early retirement and pickups; likely will be shutbuyout offers.
teFed next year. The
However, the misery isn't Moraine plant near Dayton
uver. Wagoner said GM is will stop making Chevy
wwting on . consolidating TrailBlazer and other mill~
engine, transmission and size SUVs in 2010 "ur
other parts operations to go sooner if demand dictates,fl
with the assembly plant
W~~goner said.
&lt;Juts.
.
1be actions add •to .a string
of plant closures by the Big
Three in the 1ast several
years. GM, fiord Motor Co.
and Chrysler lLC have
ann~ ·the shutdown of
35 plants siiloe 2005, .according 'to Sean McAlinden,
chief econontist with the
Center for Automotive
Research· in Ann Arbor.
·-~-­
Along with 35 additional
• to...,..,~•w.birnlill
closures at GM and Ford's
·~SIIIt"""·--l- .
chief suppliers, Delphi Corp.
~
'
and
Automotive · (w~~~&gt;6XAI nwl~
/UIII'!I,_
Components Holdings LLC,
11an
Up-or..t
L
I' ._.
be said the total hourly .and
salaried jobs eliminated
comes to 149,000;
In that same period. foreign antomakers have . built

·--·- -.
....

,

'

.et EweJYODe bow Your Dad Is Somecme
.....__~

.Th•nk You Tribute...

Very SpecleJ Wltb
A Father"• Day
.

To Be Pabll""ed In The :Sunday Time• Sentluel
Oa Suada:y, June 15th!

Submlnlcl phala

The following were· recently honored for their community service by the Ewing Chapter of the .Sons of the American
'Revolution (from left) Don Poole, Nick Lunsford, Matt Matheny, Rick Olexa, Mary Powell, Patrick Carey, Beverly
Schumacher. Also pictured (far right) Jim Smith, chapter president.

SAR annual awa1~s presented
: CHESTER - The Ewing
C hapter of the Sons of the
'American Revolution ser:
vicing Meigs, Gatlia and
Athens Counties, · recently
handed out its annual
awards for everything from
:heroism to citizenship.
: The ceremony was held at
:the Chester Courthouse and
·included the following SAR
:awards and winners:
Although it has been a
few years since the Heroism
Medal was awarded, this
ye ar it went to Ohio State
Trooper Nick Lunsford with
t he (Jallia-Meigs Post in

recognition of his service in
assisting a fellow officer
that was near drowning
while attempting to chase a
suspect into the Ohio River
last year. Another officer
perished in tbat pursuit in
Gallia County. He was nominated .for the award by Lt.
Richard Grau of the GalliaMeigs Patrol Post.
The
. Eagle
Scout
Certificate went to Scouts
Patrick Carey and Matt
Matheny.
The
Flag
Certificate went to Don
Poole of the Tuppers PlainsChester Water District for

the organization's well-lit went to Rick Olexa of the
and displayed American Athens Police Department.
. Ewing Chapter President
fla¥. The Bronze Good
Ciuzenship Medal went . to James M. Sntith said the
Mary Powell for her work at · awards are important to recthe Chester Courthouse and ognize community service
Chester-Shade Historical throughout the three counties the chapter calls home.
AssociatiOn.
.
The SAR Medal of · In addition to Sntith, other
Appreciation went to Beverly · officers of the Ewing 0Japter
Schumacher for her service include Alan Goldsbmy,lirst
·to the chapter and for g~ vice president, Dale Colburn,
five new members. An addi-. second vice ·president, Bill
tional Flag Cenificate went 10 Beegle, secretary/treasurer,
Holter,
historian,
the Athens City Fire Roy
Department for its well dis- Schumacher (the Daughters
played American Flag. The of the American Revolution),
Law Enforcemenr Medal genealogist ·

:Ohio attorney general realigns staff to avoid conflicts
: . BY JULIE CARR SMYTH
'AP STATEHOUSE CORRESPONDENT

Happy
Father's Day1

Happy
father's Day
{Your Father's

:· COLUMBUS
.Attorney General Nancy
Rogers, appointed last week
to replace the state's previous attorney general who
resigned in a sexual harass- ·
ment scandal, said Tuesday
:she has reassigned her pre:decessor's top lieutenant
· :.an d made other personnel
._,hanges to avoid possible
.
:conflicts of interest.
. : · Rogers said Tom Winters,
:who served as fiTSt assistant
:attorney general under former Anomey General Marc
·Dann, has been replaced in
:her adntinistration because
·he worke'd for the same law
firm that employ s h,er hus:band .. Chief Counsel Sheryl

Creed Maxfield will take'
over the job, but Winters
will stay on as chief deputy.
Rogers, appointed by Gov.
Ted Strickland, had faced
questions over how she'd
handle the office's dealings
with two law frrms with ties
to her family and with Ohio
State University, where she
· is on leave as dean of the
college's law school.
ln other moves, Rogers
said she won't give new state
legal work to a law firm
where her daughter works
unless the Ohio Ethics
Commission assures her that
it presents no real or perceived conflict of interest.
Rogers said she also will
recuse herself from issues
involving Ohio State and
the Iaw firms where her

husband and daughter work. Winters' work and said
Dann resigned in May 1\Jesday that be will·,CODtinafter a sexual harassment ue tiS chief lawyer for legal
scandal and the admission and law enforcement matthat he had an extratnarital ters. Winters also will refrain
affair with a subordinate.
from dealing with any matWinters' role in the wake ters related to her husband's
of Dann 's resignation was a law firm, she said.
With Strickland and Dann
matter of interest because
of the scandal and his one- at ·the helm, Democrats
time role as a lobbyist for a scored a near takeover ·of
company owned by Tom state government from
Noe, a Toledo-area rare Republicans in 2006 on
coin dealer convicted of promi!iCS they would clean
theft and other crimes in a up the ·"culture of corrupstate investment scandal.
tion." They defined that to
Strickland last week include the Noe scandal,
picked Rogers to be attor- which .touched many in the
ney general because. of her Republican administration
reputation and character, of former Gov. Bob Taft,
which he said would help and the Jack Abramolf lobrestore confidence in the byist scandal in Washington
that saw former GOP U.S.
office.
Rogers
has
praised Rc;p. Bob Ney imprisoned.

In-laws have no
contact with widow
•

BY KATHY MITCHELL
AND MARCY SUGAR

Dear Annie: 1 was married for 30 years before my
husband passed away five
years ago of colon cancer.
During · his 18 months of
treatment, he was hospitalized four times for surg eries and infections, and
each was followed by
weeks of recuperation at
home . I communicated
almost daily with hi s parents, who lived in our
town, and I assumed t)ley
conveyed the information
to his .brother, who al so
lived here, and to a si ster in
another state.
My in-laws did not provide any assistance with my
husband's care, but I was
fortunate to have good
friends who helped out.
After his death, communication with my . husband 's
fantily became almost
nonexistent. Without my
calls, letters, cards and
flowers, I'm convinced
there would be no relationship at all.
Within the past three
years, my in-laws have
moved away, which means
there is even less communication, and my brother-inlaw has made it clear to me
and my children that he has
issues with us and no interest in maintaining contact.
My sister-in-law sends a
Christmas card, hut that's
about it, even though I have
tried to see her several
times when I have been in
her town, and have called
her often.
My attempts to remain
part of this family (for the
sake of my .children) constantly hit brick walls. Not
only are we still. ,grieving
over the loss of my . husband, but it is additionally
hunful that we no longer
have a relationship with his
family. We ntiss them very
much. What can I do? Widow in Florida
Dear Widow: How terribly sad tha\ in their grief,
your in-laws are willing to
lose touch . with you and
your children. You cannot
force them to he more interested, but we hope· you wiil
.not drop all contact. You
don' t need to put yourself
through hoops, but P.lease
continue to send appropriate
cards with pictures of the
children and make the occasional phone call. We hope
they will someday realize
what they have lost and
come around, and it will
help if you have kept a candle burning.
Dear Annie: My neighbor is a sweet old lady, but I
can't get her to stop feeding

1.~

-+:WATCH
Open a Marltet-Watch now and get a 3 .2 5% .
Interest Rate (3.30% A.P.Y.) for the first 180 d ays
{6 months). After 180 days, current rates app ly.

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•

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•• All Ads Must Be Pre-Paid ••

Marcy Sugar. longtime editors of the Ann Landers
column. Please e-mail your
questions to anniesmailbox@comcast.net, or "'rit•·
to: Annie's Mailbox , P.O.
Box J/8190. Chicago, 11.
60611. To find out ilwr•·
about Annie 's Mailbox.
and read feature s by other
Creators Syndicate wrilers
and cartoonists, visit tht·
Creators Syndicate Web
page at www.creators.com.

EARN CD RATES WiTHOlJT rHE CD

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CltyiSblta!Zlp

Annie's Mailbox is writ-

ren by Kathy Mitchell and

Love·

Circle One: A.1X3 Guetlug .•.$12.00

Your .H IIme(a) -

kecf

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my dog through the fence
despite my tel ling he r
repeated! y that the dog has
. allergies and th e ve t has him
on a strict di et.
I e ven gave her a bag of
vet-pre scribed dog trea ts
that he can have once a
day. but she gave hi m the
whole week's wort h in the
first 24 hours an d the n
went back to feeding him
table scraps.
My neig hbor is very
sneaky and stubborn . The
dog. of course. adore s her. I
can·!
him inside all
day. Can get a court orde r
for thi s son of thing'? - ·
Victim of Guerrilla War
Dear Victim: Yo u would
need to speak to a lawyer w
see if a coutt order is worth
pursuing. Meanwhile. tell
your mule- headed neighbor
one more time that the dog
has allergies and the snacks
she insists on feeding him
could do terrible harm .
inform her that if th e anima l
becomes sick, you will be
sending her the veterinary
bill and possi bly suing her
for damages. Yo u also
might consider putting up a
tall, solid fence th at sh!!
can •t stick her fin gers ·
through.
·
Dear Annie: This is fo r
" Need a Good Laugh,"
whose husband is sensitive ·
to noise and won't let her
watch TV.
This condition is called
hyperacusis. That man
needs to see an otolaryn. gologist (ear, n ose and
throat doctor) for a checkup and officiaf diagnosis. I
am not saying he shouldn't be willin g to compromi se with headphones.
etc., but hi s wife should
know there could be a
genuine medical problem .
He can get info rmation
through www.hyperacu sis.org a nd www.hyperacusis. net. - N.N • .
Dear N.N.: Thank you for
these online resources. The
fir st is sponsored by the.
Oregon
Tinnitu s
&amp;
Hyperacu sis
Trea tment
Clinic, and the second is the
Hyperacusis Network. P.O.
Box 8007. Green Bay. Wis.
54308.

3.30% A.P.Y."

Name)

Love

2008

ANNIE'S MAILBOX

organizations

will have to make sure it bas
a competitive car that consumers will buy. ·
· "I can assure you that is
getting a tremendous amount
of attention," he said.
The new cat likely would
be priced higher .than the
Cobalt, which runs in the
mid-teens depending on
how it's equipped. lt would
hit showrooms in the second half of 2010 and be
powered by a 1-liter to 1.4liter four-cylinder gllliOline
engine to be built at a factory in Flint. GM said that
with a manual transmission
it would get nine miles per
gallon more than the CDireDt
Cobalt, which gets up to 36
· mpg on the highway.
Wagoner also announced
that · the .board of directors
has approved production of
the ·Chevrolet Volt plug-in
electric car, which GM
plans to bring to showrooms
by the end 'o f 2010.
Fully charged, .t he Volt
could drive about 40 .miles
without using any gasoline,
and a small conventional
engine would recharge the
vehicle, extending its range
and allowing it ·w ~et .the
equivalent of 150 miles per
gallon.
Wagoner also said the
iconic Hummer 'btand will

Obama spoke in the same velricles on U.S. highways,
ball where McCain will saying it W\)uld either be
NEDR" Plctw:R
sold or get a remake.
AsSOCIATED PRESS WAITERS
aceept ·the ·Re publican nomThe move outs about
ination at his party' s coo- 2,900J.obsin0sbawa,Cibout
ST. PAUL, Minn. vention in September.
Cheered by a roaring Campaign officials, citing 2,800 in Janesville, about
crowd, Sen. Barack Obama .tlle local fire marshal, put 2,400 in .M0raine and about
of illinois laid claim to me the .orowd at 17 ,OOO instde 250 in Toluca, said (JM
Democratic
presidenllia:l the eXcel Energy Center, spokesman Tom Wilkinson.
GM said the ·truck plant
nontination Tuesday night, 1plus another 15,000 outside.
McCain
addressed
a
cuts,
which wiU reduce
taking a historic step
toward his once-improbable smaller crowd by design, an capacity to produce pickups
goal of becoming me estimated 600 in his audi- and large SUVs by about 35
nation's first black presi- ence and another 600 out- pcr-cent, will save the company $1 billion per year, and
dent. Hillary Rodbam side. .
One cam(&gt;aign began as when combined with earlier
Clinton maneuvered for :the
another
was ending.·
measures, bY 2011 will save
vice presidential spot on his
Clinton
won
·
South
$[5 billion over 2005 costs.
fall ticket without ooncedDakota 011 the final night .0 f
GM's moves, which come
. ing her own defeat.
"America, this is our .the primary season; Obarna after a r;eries of restructuring measures since 2005 ,
moment," the 46-year-old toolc Montana.
are the result ·of :a 'huge shift
The
former
first
lady
senator and one-time compraised
her
rival
warmly
in
in
U.S. CODSllffier prefermunity org~r said in his
first appearance as l!be an arux:arance before sup- ences for small cars and
Democratic nominee-in- porters in New YOI'k in which crossovers .during the past
waiting. "This is our ti.me. she neither acknowledged 1V.:?w~:GM don't ilhink
Our time to tum the page on Obarna's victory nor offered
· of any ·"
this
iJ; a ..,Jkc or tempm;aJy
the policies of the past."
a concesston
. .,u.
-'-'"',fl
.......!.:., Executi·ve ..~ck
Instead, she said she was "'w' '\...illKll.
ou
Obarna' s victory set up a
committed
to
a
united
party,
Wagoner
said.
"We
believe
five-month campaign with
.that___,.
it is,
Republican Sen. John and said she would S""'nd
:r, by and large, perMcCain of Arizona, a race the next few days determin- rna.......·
.
. The .autamaker . now will
between a first-tern~ Senate injl ·~w to move forw.a m
opponent of the IraQ War With the best interests of our I 'have &lt;to parlay tts str0qg
and a 71-_year-old (ormer country and our party guidl- OW'.I'IeaS ~ and the lower
· . NOI1h American costs ~!0 a
Vietnam ,pnsoner of war and ing my way.fl
Only 31 delegates wen: at tmlit !by ·selling cars m.ilhe
staunch supP.&lt;Jner of the curstalc.e m the tw0 states on ilhe Sl.j,,OOO ~ $~,000 nnge,
rent U.'S. military mission.
night's
ballot, the final few balfdtepwe ohts •h~rfAnd both men seemed
among
the thousands that itSUVsandpiWJp
· .
eager to begin.
McCain spoke first, in once drew ·Ohama Clinton 1 "'lbe new cars, they tend
New Orleans, and he and six other De'mocmti.c to.~ dt~ .~ly,"
accused his younger rival of ·candidates into the cam- aid Pete ~tmgs, sem.o r
. voting "to deny funds to the paign to replace Bush .and :analyst w1th MeliiPhiS,
Morgan
soldiers who have done a ·become the nati0o's 44th. Tenn."'Dased
· ~an &amp; Co. "1bey tend
brilliant and brave job" in president.
Obarna sealed his nomi- ·. to make money, .just not as
Iraq." Americans, he added,
nation,
accoFding to The ·. mndh .money tJ?iiDPared te
should be concerned about
. the j udgJDent of a presiden- Associated Press tally; •the mce margms on the
tial candidate who has not based on .primary elections, SUV 11 ~d large 1ruoks."
Hastmgs 1s confident GM
traveled to Iraq yet "says state Democratic .caucuses
he's ready to talk, in person and support from party can .pay . bills and make
and without conditions, "superdelegates." It takes money With tis new N~
with tyrants from Havana to 2,118 delegatest0 clincb the American cars, but that Will
nomination at the conven' be hliFd unless the U.S.
Pyongyang."
McCain agreed with tion in Denver this summer, economy recovers.
"I don't think they can get
Obama that the presidential and Obarna bad 2,151 by
to profitability quickly if the
race would focus on change. the AP count.
Obama, a frrst!term sena- economy stays where it is,"
"But the choice is between
the right change and the tor who was virtually Jlte said. ·
wrong change, between unknown . on the natiOnal · 'GM lost $3.3 billion in
going forward and going stage four years ago, cJe..1'rat- tbe first ..qlllll'ter and !burned
ed Clinton, the former first dtrough $3.4 billion in cash
backward," he said.
Obama responded quick- lady an&lt;) one-time campaign from January through
ly, pausing in his own front-runner, in a 17 -month March. Its May sales were
for
•the down 28 percent compared
speech ·long enough to marathon
with last May.
. praise Clinton for "her Democratic nomination.
His victory had been
The pace of the cash buni
strength, her courage and
her commitment to the widely assumed for weeks: may force GM back to the
causes that brought us here But Clinton's declaration of capital market~ for more
interest in becoming his borrowing, Hastings said,
tonight."
.As for his general election ticketmate was wholly although the company has
said it bas sufficient cash to
rival, he said, "It's not unellpeC(ed.
She
expressed
it
in
·
a
·
.conwithstand a downturn.
change when John McCain
"lbey've got a lot of liq' decided to stand with ference call with ber state' s
delegatio.n uidity now," Hastings said.
(Jeor~e Bush 95 percent of congressional
the tune, as he did in the after Rep. Nydia ,WeJazquet, ' "lbey are burning through
Senate last year. lt' s not predicted Oli ' .:a would .it faster than they thought
change when he offers four have great difficulty win- they ·would earlier in the
supPort of · "yeaf."
more years of Bush eco- ning the
GM ended the quarter
nomic policies that have Hispanics and other. 111oting
failed to create well-paying blocs unless the fonner :first with $23.9 billion in cash
and $7 billion in credit
jobs .... And it's not change lady was on the ticket.
· when he promises to contin- · '"I am open .to itff if it facilities .
ue a policy in Iraq that asks would help the party's · Just·before the co111PaDy's
everything of our brave prospects in November, annual ·shareholders' meetyoung men and women in Clinton replied, ac.cording ing in Wilntington, Del.,
uniform and nothing of to panicipants who spoke Wagoner also announced
on condition of anonyntity the automak.er will build a
Iraqi politicians."
ln a symbolic move, because the call was .private. new generdtion small car
------------------------ ·----------starting in ll,l.id-2010 at a
.
· factory in Lordstown, Ohio, .
'
at Amsterdam airport dosed that now makes the
BY TOll RAUII AND

Wednesday, June 4,

•

Trustees, regular meeting, games, prizes, all area chil6:30 p.m., home of dren invited.
Manning Roush.
Wednesday, June 4
SHADE
- Bedford
POMEROY
- Meigs
Clubs and
Township
Trustees
will meet
County Board of Health,
regular meeting, 5 p.m., at 7 p.m, at the town ball.
RUTLAND - Rutland
.conference room Meigs
Village
Council, regular
Thllnilllly, ,JIIIle 5.
County Health Departnient.
meeting,
7
p.m.,
civic
center.
TUPPERS PLAINS PAGEVILLE - Scipio
VFW
Ladies AuYiliary. 7
Township Trustees, 6 :30
p
.m.
p.m., Pageville Town Hall.
Fridlly, June 6
.
Saturday, Julie 7 ·
POMEROY PERI
. SYRACUSE Sutton
Sanday, June 8
Township Trustees will
RUTLAND - Rutland ·Chapter 74, Meigs County,
meet 7 p.m. Syracuse Free Will Baptist Church, I p.m. at the Mulberry
:Village hall.
Celebrating Children Day Community Center. Paul
with Sunday School, 10 Reed and John Musser to
Tuesday, June 10
ROCK SPRINGS . am., followed by sermon talk on the workings and
Sali sbury
Township for youths, then cookout, plans of the Community

.sen.

~~m.=:.~lfm: ~~

The Daily Sentinel

Public meetin~

R' NJlOWRi I Eft

'This is our moment'

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... He completed hi s AIT in
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Ariz.,
in
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•

Page.t\4.

OPINION

The Daily Sentinel

The Daily Sentinel
111 Court Sb lilt • Ponwoy, Ohio

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Charlene Hoeflich
General Manager-News Editor

Congrus sh~Jll malet no law respecting an
utablishrrunt of rtligion, or prohi~iting tht
··.fru txtrdst thertOj; or abridging tht .fretdom
·· of spuch, or of tht prus; or tht right of tht
ptoplt peaceably to ll$Stmblt, and to petition
tht Go~rruntfor a redress ofgritvaru:u.
- 1lie First Amendment to the U.S. Constitution

TODAY IN HISTORY
Today is Wednesday, June 4, the !56th day of 2008.
.There are 210 days left in the year.
Today's highlight in histocy: On June 4, 1942, the Pacific
.Battle of Midway began during World War II; three days
later, American naval forces claimed a decisive victol)'
over the Japanese.
On this date: In 1783, the Montgolfier brothers f;rst publicly demonstrated their hot-air balloon, which did not
carcy any passengers, over Annonay, France.
.
_ In 1784, opera singer Elizabeth Thible became the frrst
.~oman to fly aboard a Montgolfier hot-air balloon, over
Lyon, France.
~ In 1878, the Ottoman Empire turned over control of
Cyprus to the British.
In 1892, the Sierra Club was incorporated in San Francisco.
. In 1896, HeDI)' Ford made a successful pre-dawn test run
of his horseless carriage. called a "quadricycle," through
the· streets of Detroit.
.. In 1939, the German ocean liner St. Louis, carrying more
than 900 Jewish refugees from Germany, was turned away
from the Florida coast by U.S. officials.
In. 1940, the Allied milital)' evacuation from Dunkirk,
France, ended.
. In 1954, French Premier Joseph Laniel and Vietnamese
Premier Buu Loc signed treaties in Paris according "complete independence" to Vietnam.
. In 1979, Joe Clark of the Progressive Conservatives
became the 161h prime minister of Canada.
- In 1989, Chinese army troops stormed Beijing to crush a
pro-democracy movement, killing hundreds, possibly thousands, of people.
.
One year ago: President Bush left on an eight-day
European irip that included a Group of Eight summit in
Germany. Military judges dismissed charges against a
Guant.anamo detainee accused of chauffeuring Osama bin
Laden and another who allegedly killed a U.S. soldier in
Afghanistan. Insurgents linked to ai-Qaida issued a video ·
in which they claimed to have killed all three U.S. soldiers
captured in an ambush on May 12. (The body of Pfc.
Joseph Anzack Jr. has been recovered; Spc. Alex Jimenez
and Pvt. Byron Fouty remain missing.) A federal indict.ment accused Lousiana Democratic Congressman William
Jefferson of receiving more than $500,000 in bribes
(Jefferson has maintained his innocence).
. Tixlay's Birthdays: Actor Bruce Dern is 72. Musician
Roger Ball is 64. Actress-singer Michelle Phillips is 64. Jazz
musician Ant!K)ny Braxton is 63. Actor Keith David is 52.
Actress Julie Gholson is 50. Actor Eddie Velez is 50. Singermusician El DeBargeis 47.Actress Julie White is 47. Tennis
player Andrea Jaeger is 43. Actor Scott Wolf is 40.
Comedian Horatio Sanz is 39. Actor Noah Wyle is 37. Rock
musician Stefan Lessard (The Dave Matthews Band) is 34.
ActressAngelinaJolie is 33. Rock musicianZac Farro is 18.
· Thought for Today: "H America forgets where she came
from, if the people lose sight of what brought them along,
if she listens to the deniers and mockers, then will begin the
rot and dissolution." - Carl Sandburg, American writer
(1878-1967).
.

~·

VVednesda~June4,~08

The temperature's getting
hot, and so is the energypolicy debate. Gas prices
are reaching new heights as
anyone with a car knows.
What are we go,ing to do
~bout ~t? Apparently, nothmg senous.
Republican presidential
candidate John McCain has
taken out ads . on the
National Review Online site
pushing his silly gas-tax
holiday. A gas-tax · holiday
may
be
·
· a fun,
· ... cheap
b · •market-·
mg g~mnuc.., ut 11 s not a
solution.
In fact, McCain, like. the

Democrat be will run
against, opposes a real solution: Drilling here.
Unf&lt;munately, it'.s largely
those on-the .outside looking
in wbo are most passionately advocating that we
our
domestic
review
resources. Drilling alone
won't do it, but it's a practical start.
Thus far, the debate about
CIC()CSSiog tho~ ~sources
closest-to home has focused
on Alaska's Arctic National
W'tldlife. Reserve ( ANWR).
Congress ·. ridiculously
re~s to green-light the
project. I .say "ridiculous"
because concerns about ·
preservillg the vaSt s~aths
of nature and the canbou
there ue not serious:
ConRress would be giving a
go-aiac.l to oil exploa:alion
on 2,000 -or 0,{11 petoent
- ofANWR'11 19 'millioo
acre11, which can supply ~ 5
pereeat,of America's oil per
year for''i2 years, according
to tbe U.S. . Energy
Department. •
·
"Drill here" .has become a

Kathryn

Lopez

mantra on conservative talk
radio. As former House
Speaker Newt Gingrich puts
·it: "Drill
Here. Drill Now.
.
Pay Less." Gingn'ch is collecting signatures on a petition that reads, "We, therefore. the undersigned citizens of the United States,
petition the U.S. Congress
to act immediately to lower
psoline prices by authorizmg the exploration of
proven energy reserves to
reduce our dependence on
foreign ellCQly sources from
unstable countries."
Meanwhile, we hear and will likely continue to
hear - · sad high-gas-price
stories such as that of
Nevada's Clark County
School District: With a 62
percent budget expenditure
mcrease due largely to the
price of gas, the ·school district has cut its b11s route and
stops to Feducc: · costs.
According ·
ro
the
Department
. of
Transportation, Americans
are (predictably) driving
less.
It'snowonderthatGallup
reports that a majority of
Americans support "drilling
in u.s. coastif and wilderness areas now off limits."
Unlike Congress, Where
Democratic California Rep.

· Maxine Waters wants to States going to Saudi
"socialize" the oil indusll)', Arabia with his hands out.
Americans don't 'blame oil America is an enrrepreneurcompanies for the high ial nation with resources.
prices. According to Gallup, We should not be acting
"The number of Americans like helpless victims. We
who blame oil companies should not be punishing
for the high price of gaso- energy users and embracing
' line has decreased from 34 regulation over ingenuity
percent to 20 percent."
and incentives.
. But
don't'
expect
McCain,
Liebem1an,
Congress . to pull out its Warner and everyone else
power tools any time soon. should take a deep breath
Right now, the momentum and listen
to · Bjorn
is with · America's Climate Lomborg, author of "Cool
The
Skeptical
Security Act of 2007, a hill It:
sponsored by Independent Environmentalist's Guide to
Sen. Joe Lieberman of Global Warming" (Knopf,
Connecticut and Republican 2007), who says the JegislaSen. John Warner of lion before Congress "looks
·Virginia. According to the set to be a massive subsidyHeritage Foundation, the fest that would achieve very
bill "would likely be - by .little for the environment, at
far - the most expensive great cost" He warns:
environmental underlllking "Wishful thinking is not
in history." As Heritage sound public policy."
describes it, the WarnerLomborg
says
that
Lieberman Bill "extracts instead of frenzied regulatrillions of dollars from the . tions and expenditures, "We
millions of Ainerican ener- need the technological solugy consumers and delivers · tions that will allow our
this wealth to permanently societies to transi·tion costidentified classes of recipi- effectively to low-carbon
ents; such as tribal groups energy by mid-centucy.
and preferred technology McCain could recognize
. sectors, while largely cir- that this is a century-long
.cumventing the normal con- problem which. needs cengressional appropriations tucy-long, smart solutions."
In other words - cool it.
·process."
The legislation is a per- Drop the gimmicks. Stop
ilous road :with high costs getting freaked out by AI
- costs Americans tell Gore. Let's be smart and
pollsters they don't want to think creatively rather than
pay. But Congress is poised a,s a conventional pack of
to go its own way, skipping frenzied followers.
over simpler, more promis(Kathryn Lopez is rhe ediing steps that cost less, such tor of National Review
as ,unleashing America's Online (www.nationalrereserves, Instead, we go on view. com). She can be conwith ·the absurd scene of the racied at klopez@ nationa/p~esident of the · United
revie1v.com.).

•

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General Manager

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Chal1ene · - ·· Ext. 12

13Weeka
26 Weeks

E-:

52 Weeks

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13 Weei&lt;s
26 Weeks
52 Weeks

BY ANNE GEARAN
AP DIPLOMATIC WRITER

RACINE - Dorothy Leota Wood Noms, 92, of Racine,
passed away Saturday, May 31, 2008 at the Darst Adult
.
Group Home, Pomeroy.
Born September 19, 1915, in Apple Grove, she was the
daughter of the late Alta and .Lena Riggs Wood.
She was preceded in death by her husband, of 70 years,
Fern Norris; in 2000 by a daughter, Carolyn Massie; in
2004 by a grandson, Matthew Reed.
Surv;vors include her children: Gloria Alto, Lake Worth,
Fla., Doreen (Lynn) Skow, North Brarich, Minn. , Shirley
(Larry) Kline, UJ?per Arlingt&lt;!n, Norman (Linda) Norris,
Hillard, Joe Masste, New Lewisburg. She also leaves eight
grandchildren, seven great grandchildren and three greatgreat grandchildren.
Dorothy will be greatly missed by Emma Bird, Golda
Radcliff, Mary Miller and Tami Fowler, her special friends.
The family wishes to thank Brenda Darst and her staff of
"Angels" for the special care that was given to our Mother,
al:;o Becky Buckley, and aid of Hospice. God Bless those
friends and family members who took time to visit Mother
when she needed a friend, you are Special, she loved you all.
A "!neral services will be held at I p.m., Friday, June 6,
2008 m the Letart Falls Cemetecy Chapel. Officiating will
be Rev. Don Walker. Arrangements are being handled by
the Cremeens Funeral Home, Racine. A luncheon jl\lill follpw the. service at Dorothy's house. Expressions o( sympathy may be sent to the family by visiting www.cremeensfuneralhomes.com.
In lieu of flowers, please send any donations, in memory
of Dorothy, to Darst Adult Group Home, 33164 Childrens
Home Road, Pomeroy, 45769.

Deaths
Mary Kathryn Holter
LONO BOTTOM- Mary Kathl)'n (Davis) Holter, 84 of
Long Bottom, passed away at her residence on Tuesday,
June 03, 2008.
Services are scheduled for I I a.m., Saturday, June 7 at
the Anderson McDaniel Funeral Home in Pomeroy.
Visitation will be held from 4-8 p.m. on Friday, A full obitUlll)' will appear in tomorrow's newspaper

Cierlrucle Alberta Erwin
GALLIPOLIS -Gertrude Alberta Mees Erwin, 90, of
Gallipolis, pas'sed away on Tuesday, June 3, 2008 at ~e
Cabell Huntington Hospital Emergency Room,
Huntington, W.Va. Arrangements will be announced later
by the Willis Funeral Home.
·

Band concert
MIDDLEPORT - Big B~nd Community Band, under
direction of Toney Dingess, will perform at 7 p.m. on
Friday in Dave Diles Park.
·
The concefl is sponsored by the Riverbend Arts Council
·
and admission is free.

WASHINGTON - The
United States and Israel said
Tuesday the rest of the
world isn't doing enough to
stop Iran from getting the
bomb and accused Iran of
continuing a covert drive
for nuclear
weapons,
although U.S. intelli$ence
has said Tehran qUJt its
active warhead program
years.ago.
Secretary
of
State
Condoleezza Rice and
Israel's embattled leader,
Prime
Minister
Ehud
Olmert, both used speeches ·
to a pro-Israel lobbying
group to complain _that
European and other nauons
are undermining the hard
line against !rail's nuclear
program by pursuing business relationships with
Tehran.
·
"Our partners in Europe
and beyond need to exploit
Iran's ·vulnerabilities more
vigorously and . impose
greater costs on the regime
- economically, fmancially, politically and diplomatically," Rice said.
Olmert went further, saying in a speech to the
American Israel Public
Affairs Committee that
other countries should
penalize Iran by barring
business travelers, blocking
financial transactions and
imposing sanctions on
Iran's import of refined
gasoline and on countries
that perform that task for
oil-rich but facilities-poor

Iran.
"Each and evecy country
must understand that the
long-term cost of a nuclear
Iran greatly outweighs the
short -term benefits of
doing business with Iran,"
Olniert said.
Neither Olmert nor Rice
mentioned O)mert's legal
and political woes. A corruption investigation threatens to bring down Olmert's
government and perhaps

military control, Rice asked.
"Well, ladies and gentlemen, it's just hard to imagine that there are innocent
answers to these questions."
Later,
she
directly
accused Iran of pursuing
weapons on the sly. She said
there is no point in engaging
the regime until it changes
its behavior.
"We would be willing to
nieet with them, but not
while they continue to inch
closer to a nuclear weapon
under the cover of talk.!'
Rice said.
The Bush administration
- long claimed Iran was hiding a bomb program, a view
shared by Israel and presumably the rationale for
any military attack either
.
AP photo country
might
launch
Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice addresses the against Iran .
American Israel Public Affairs Committee (AI PAC) meeting
Rice "s words were strik"
Tuesday in Washington.
·
ing because U.S. officials
have backed off pointed
with it U.S. hopes for a Council has passed three . accusations since the publiframework Mideast peace tounds of mtld sanctions cation in December of a
deal this year.
aimed at getting Iran to give declassified intelligence
Rice said the M ideas! up · the most troublesome report that concluded Iran
peace effort begun by aspects of its nuclear pro- once had an active warhead
President Bush must 'carry gram. The United States and program but had shelved it
over to his successor, a note some others also have sepa- in 2003 .
of caution amid the dire .rate sanctions that go fur- .
The report said U.S. anapolitical crisis in IsraeL !her. The United Stales has lysts could not say whether
Rice said there is still a almost no dealings with Iran Iran still held weapon;
chance to frame a deal and has little direct econom- ambitions, and said the proc
gram might be restarted
between Israel and ti;Je ic leverage there .
Palestinians. this year,
Rice indirectly criticized . without U.S. knowledge.
Obama and Democratic
although she said the goal is Democratic
presidential
admittedly ambitious.
candidate Barack Obama rival· Hillary Rodham
"The goal itself, though, for his willingness to talk to Clinton are to address the
will endure beyond the cur- Iran, the rising Mideast AIPAC convention on
rent U.S. leadership," Rice power that Israeli leaders Wednesday, and presumeil
said. "I believe that the consider their greatest Republican nominee John
administration's approach enemy. Iran 's hardline pres- McCain spoke Monday.
to this 'problem will and ident regularly says Israel McCain had a get-tough
must endure."
must be wiped off the map. message on Iran, while
On Iran, Rice appeared On Tuesday he told a Obama is expected to tell
emboldened by a recent European audience that the group that he would talk
skeptical rep&lt;irt from the Israel is "doomed to go."
· LO Iranian leaders without
U.N. nuclear watchdog, A
Rice scoffed at Iran's preconditions set by the
U.N. report Monday sug- claim that its nuclear pro- Bush administratioo.
gested that Tehran was gram is intended only to
The "furious debate"
stonewalling investigators produce electricity. Why about how to confront the
·and possibly withholding then would Iran keep Iranian threat ·"should not be
information crucial to the inspectors away from some about whether we talk to
U.N. nuclear monitor's sites, reject a generous ofrer Iran," Rice said. "Diplomacy
probe of allegations it did of civilian nuclear help is not a synonym for talkfrom Russia or maintain ing," but must be combineil
nuclear anns research.
U.N.
Security part of its program under' with pressure tactics.
The

Factory orders post surprising increase in April
Bv MAimN CRUTStNGER

led by a big jump in by economic stimulus paydemand for petroleum ments being made to 130
products, reflecting higher million households .
WASHINGTON
prices . Demand for food
The Federal Reserve
Orders for manufactured
in
September
and beverages also was up started
goods posted a surprisingly
·
aggressively cutting intersharply.
While some economists est rates in an efrort to keep
POMEROY- A sheriff's sale scheduled for 10 a.m. on strong increase in April as
demand
rose
in
a
number
of
·
have
worried that the coun- the housing slump and .a
June 27 in Common Pleas Court case, Home National Bank
areas
including
heavy
try could be in danger of severe credit crunch from
against Diamond, and others, has been c~celed.
machinery, iron and steel.
falling into a recession, the triggering a recession. In a
The
Commerce
govemment reported last speech
Tuesday.
Fed
Department
reponed
week tha:t the gross domes- Chairman Ben Bernanke
Tuesday that orders were up
tic product stayed in posi- signaled that the central
. ,_ ----I .I percent in April followtive territory in the first bank is likely to remain on
AMJJASONOJFMA
. ing a 1.5 percent increase in
three months of thi s year, hold for now, watching
March. Those gains fol- SOUACE: Depanmentoleo."""''" AP growing at an annual rate of both the risks of weaker
lowed big declines in
0.9
percent,
slightly growth and higher inflation
'
A search warrant affidavit Januacy and Februlll)' ·that
BY JOE MILICIA
stronger than the initial esti- from soanng energy pnces.
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER
Michelle Girard, an ana- mate. Many economists
filed to obtain 'a judge's raised concerns about how
·'For now, policy seems
approval to search Billi 's much pain manufacturing lyst at RBS Greenwich now believe that the GDP well-positioned to promote
CLEVELAND An computer and disks was industnes would feel from Capital, said that one of will remain in positive terri- moderate growth and price
ludiana teenager accused of unsealed Tuesday.
the severe economic slow- the hopeful signs in the lory durin·g the current stability
time,:·
over
plotting with an Ohio man
According to the · docu- down hining housing and orders report was . that April-June quarter, helped Bernanke said.
to carry out Columbine- ments, the Indiana teenag- the financial sector.
inventories of unsold
style attacks wrote that 'he er told · authorities his vioOrders in . the battered goods were unchanged in
. ,;~:.H-i,f'
- GRA "" Dwanted to get "instant lent thoughts. began when · auto industry and come April. indicating that man~' . :! ...
~·
,\
&lt;1recognition" for shooting a his girlfriend broke up mercia! aircraft sector did ufacturers are keeping
-~·~--~·~
..
~
: ,':.
0
record number of people in with him .
fall sharply in April. but their inventory backlogs
&lt;
'.
'
,
~
\,.IJ
'
' .. ),
f'r,
an attack at his school ,
areas
showed under controL A smaller
He chatted online with other
~ ,::.-- · ~··' ~·
according to documents Billi about obtaining "party strength catching analysts stockpile of goods should
unstialed Tuesday.
IHFUR'tll'ti ii.WJ~ nJ.TRt
favors," a code name for by surprise. They had been redu~e the need for pro· A black spiral notebook guris and bombs, the docu- forecasting that overall ducuon cutbacks that
Ariel - Ann Dater
authorities obtained from ments say. He told authori- orders would edge down would make the current
Endow"'ent Fund
1 slowdown worse.
the 16-yeru;-old's locker at ties he did not have access slightly in April.
for the Performing Arts Centre
For April, deman~ for
The bener-than-expected
Penn High Scbool in to any weapons and thought
Mishawaka, Ind., oontained he went too far with hi s reading on orders for manu- durable goods . ttems Mrs. ~ Dater "''ill match all
Ma~· 1 2018 th~~
handwritten entries · in online postings.
factured goods followed expected to last at least jcontributions.
Ma~· l. 2009. Yoo can makt a gift t
which the teen expressed
An entry in the teen's news Monday that a key three years - fell by 0.6 Tbt ArYl-Ann Dater Endow~:
his hatred for most uf the notebook dated April 21 , a gauge of manufacturing percent, shghtly larger than Fund that will last a lifetime limt
Ulkn~· ing " 'l)'!i :
people at the schooL
Monday.
reads : rose to a reading of 49.6 in the 0.5 percent drop re~m­
• Cash • Cred~ Card • Appr«iioted
"I wanna break the cur- "Throughout the weekend May, up from '48.6 in April. ed last week m a prelinuSecurities • Pkdlft • Beque$1s • Life
rent shooting record. 1 me and a friend of mine are
While the Institute for nary report. The weakness
lm11nmce • Se.t SMie
wanna get instant recogni- planning something cata- Supply Management's man- was led by a 24.4 percent
Bol Office: 428 2nd """·
tion. The only thing that strophic. l am not sure if he ufacturing index remained drop . m d~mand for comGallipolis, OH (740) 446-ARTS
stops me is the fact of being is for real or not about it He at levels indicating a contin- mereta! atrcraft, a sector
put in jail forever, or having says he has been plam\ing ued cm\traction in manufac- that is extreme!¥ volatile
to kill myself, or getting for sometime now. We · turing, the upward move- from monlh to month, and a
SOUNDS OF
killed by an officer. I could picked · September lith, ment was seen as a possible 4.2 percent d~line m motor
SPRllVG!
kill anyone without feeling because its already· iconic." ' sign that manUfacturing was vehicles, an mdusll)' that is
..
D
o
you
I1~C1r
th(~ ·.\ prinl( p e c'fU! rx ?--..
SOC!)'
because society
bemg battered by soaring
Messages seeking com- beginning to stabilize.
··Do
you
h e CJr the ·
sucks!!!" read an entry ment were left after busiOn Wall Street, stocks fell gasoline prices and the
laughter of the
dated April 18, one day ness hours Tuesday at the sharply for a second straight weak economy.
children pla,·i"R ? ··
General
Motors
office of the teen's lawyer, day on fresh worries about
before he was arrested
The teenager has been James Nafe of South Bend, what the credit crisis is iilmounced Tuesday that it
There are so many moments in life
and
with
the doing to the health of the was closiqg four truck and
charged with a juvenile Ind. ,
that shouldn ' t be missed .
count of conspiracy to Cuyahoga County Public nation 's banks . The Dow SUV plants in the United ·
Do you find yourself or someone
commit murder and a Defender's offiCe, which is ·Jones industrial average States, Canada and Mexico
you know missing out
declined 100.97 points to as surging fuel prices acceldenial plea has been representing Billi.
on the sounds of life?
Billi, 33, of Lakewood, close at 12,402.85.
erate the shift to smaller
entered on his behalf. The
For a complete hearing evaluation.
Manufacturing is being vehicles.
case has been continued for was arrested April 24 and
please call for an appointment .
The weakness in autos
the teen' s psychological has pleaded not guilty· to buffeted by a prolonged
testing until June II , when two counts of conspiracy to slump in housing, which has . and airplane orders was offW.r- can ltdp J'OII lliellr!
a hearing will be held to commit murder, 38 counts cut into demand for build- set by strength in a number
594- f"'~ _, _, _, ....
determine whether he ' II of pandering sex!JaliY ori- ing supplies, and soaring of other areas. Orders for
1-S(Ht- .:lS 1 - 9Htl(•
ented matter involving a energy prices, which have iron and steel were up by
,stay in juvenile custody.
49\11 R k biMond A..._-e ••
Authorities
said
he minor and one count of pos- h1J!1 auto sales. However, 5.5 percent. Orders for minth..-.......... 4~1'81
these adverse factors are ing and oil field equipment
eKchanged e-mails with Lee . sessing criminal tools.
A computer was removed being offset by continued jumped 48 .6 percent and
Billi of suburban Cleveland
in April, discussing simulta- from Billi 's home along strong demand for U.S. orders for electrical equipneous mass murders at the with computer disks, papers, exports, which are more ment and appliances surged
teen's high school and at books and three partial competitive in overseas 28.1 percent.
another location that police bo~es of handgun ammuni- markets because of the · Orders . for nondurable
weaker dollar.
goods rose by 2.8 percent,
tion, authorities said.
haven't identified.
AP ECONOMICS WRITER

No sale

Indiana teen wrote of
desire to kill classmates

-

----

-

I

s.ac.lbooo,__ln-.oo

~

The Daily Sentinel • Page As

'A~

The Daily Sentinel
Cctieclkwl Polley

www.mydailysentinel.com

US, Israel: World not doing enough to counter Iran

Local Briefs

Leners to the editor are welcome. They should be ~ss
than 300 words. All leners are subject to editing, ~ 'be
signed, and include address and telephone nwrrb.!r. No
unsigned ~ners will be published. Leners should be in
good taste, addressing issU£s, not personalities. Leners of
!hanks to organizations and individuals willtWt be oocept!d for publication.
' ·

.

Obituaries

Oil crisis solved by resources, not gimmicks

LETTERS TO THE
EDITOR

Reader Services

Wednesday, June 4, 2008

'107.10
'21~ .21

'

'

._,

-~-···-····---····-- · -·-

Workaholic? I'm no longer the Type·
lf Type A personalities are
wotkaholics, my wife romplains that I'm a Type Z. "If
you moved any slower, I'd
have you reupholste~."
was how she put it this
Jim
morning. It wasn't always
Mullen
that way. I used to be one of
those guys who worked two
w.. and~
·
.
'
J"""
'
.
go . I;IVlll&amp;
mad if there wasn 'tiiOIDCthin$ to do every tiagle the culprit the evil eye.
wakiua moment I M?Uld Then I'd tum to ilbe guy
come
frOm n ••w . behind me and teD him in
~ ciled
wbeo I left. · ~ detail bow much betIf ttma-* petf!e ~ · .tea: dtiiDp would be if l ran
days rD-.~ I wpuJd dle-piale.
·
!ry 10 do rt m tine. 1bC
A .ttaffic j11111? J would
Eiff;el Tower? Done. 1be iDv.ent swear words. I would
VtltlCIII?
· Doae. dream of One day ownillg a
S;.di~ Plllaoe? Done.
bad a beads-.up
Bye. Next!
· lliel4 display ·and
If ..e went to a bill pme,
oo it lib a
l was one o_f those jab lllbo
. jet, preferably thoie aar-to!§Cits up m the llCYenth air - .·ssiloes. I'd acquire the
toning and beack .fUr ..die ' iarpc. usually tbc r.;ar
eaiti 10 ......, c:eo belt 1be ·dimctly in frool of me, lock
IDftic.
ie liee far in and blul bim to

game is to get out of the ing to yollf next one." She
house for a few hours and is so caught up in making it
forget your cares. Why was perfect that she's forgonen
I in such a rush back, to why she's having a wedwhatever it was that was ding in the frrst pl'!ce making me crazy that day? .because she loves the .guy.
The whole idea of a vaca- Nobody .is coming to her
tion is not to run around wedding bebuse it will be
like a crazy person, buuo perfect They are. coming
reiax and ~e a break from because they · are her
the normal routine. You friends, they could care
don't even have to get on a less what flavor the punch
plane to do that. Go to a .will be.
movie. Bake a cake. There
I've decided I'm a recovare enough people out ering workaholic. l tell Sue
there trying to make you that if I ever do even one lit- ·
crazy, you shouldn't do it tie job, I may ha~e a
to yourself. Waiting in line relapse. That's why .1 can't
doesn't bother me at all mow the lawn, why I can't
any more. I'm never in a weed. the garden, why I
rush. I'll be there wbeo I can't clean the . bathroom.
get there.
Let's go to a movie. The
A close friend is getting trouble is, this new me isn't
married this summer and making Sue as happy as it is
she's making herself crazy making me. But she wasn't
with all the details, she's happy when I was working
called us 50 times - will two jobs and stumbling .
then be enough booze? home at 4 a.m., either.
Areithe hors d' oeuvres cor- Especially when she found
rect? Does the dress tit out I got off work at II p.m.
riglit? Should we write our
(Jim Mullen is the aUllwr
own vows? What about the of "It Tl1Us a Village Idiot:
bridesmaids? 1be list goes Complicating the Simple
on forever. Finally I said, U/i! " and "Baby's First
"Monica, if this wedding Tanoo. ·• You can reach him
·isn' t pl!rfect, I'm not com- at jim_mullen@myway.com.)

1-*

m.

=

·fiJbter

·W·

~

would mate me IIIIi~.
tWitda. Willt IR 1bey ~ · After alifetinie of this, oo
up there? Wbal OOUid j)OIII- ooe would travel, go to a
hly take so loog? I Woald bill pme, BO grocery shopICIII out t i w lis l oou,1d 1111' , . . « eveo ride iD .a C8f
MJe whir wasboldill&amp; eway- ·Wdb me.
·
thiJig up, I would ..... oo
I bad forgotten that the
my ~ to IIy and give

wbole idea of a baseball

•

..

1

•

�.

•

Page.t\4.

OPINION

The Daily Sentinel

The Daily Sentinel
111 Court Sb lilt • Ponwoy, Ohio

.

(740) 992·2156 • FAX (740) 992-2157 .
-.mydallyl1 illli81.com

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
Dan Goodrich
Publisher

Charlene Hoeflich
General Manager-News Editor

Congrus sh~Jll malet no law respecting an
utablishrrunt of rtligion, or prohi~iting tht
··.fru txtrdst thertOj; or abridging tht .fretdom
·· of spuch, or of tht prus; or tht right of tht
ptoplt peaceably to ll$Stmblt, and to petition
tht Go~rruntfor a redress ofgritvaru:u.
- 1lie First Amendment to the U.S. Constitution

TODAY IN HISTORY
Today is Wednesday, June 4, the !56th day of 2008.
.There are 210 days left in the year.
Today's highlight in histocy: On June 4, 1942, the Pacific
.Battle of Midway began during World War II; three days
later, American naval forces claimed a decisive victol)'
over the Japanese.
On this date: In 1783, the Montgolfier brothers f;rst publicly demonstrated their hot-air balloon, which did not
carcy any passengers, over Annonay, France.
.
_ In 1784, opera singer Elizabeth Thible became the frrst
.~oman to fly aboard a Montgolfier hot-air balloon, over
Lyon, France.
~ In 1878, the Ottoman Empire turned over control of
Cyprus to the British.
In 1892, the Sierra Club was incorporated in San Francisco.
. In 1896, HeDI)' Ford made a successful pre-dawn test run
of his horseless carriage. called a "quadricycle," through
the· streets of Detroit.
.. In 1939, the German ocean liner St. Louis, carrying more
than 900 Jewish refugees from Germany, was turned away
from the Florida coast by U.S. officials.
In. 1940, the Allied milital)' evacuation from Dunkirk,
France, ended.
. In 1954, French Premier Joseph Laniel and Vietnamese
Premier Buu Loc signed treaties in Paris according "complete independence" to Vietnam.
. In 1979, Joe Clark of the Progressive Conservatives
became the 161h prime minister of Canada.
- In 1989, Chinese army troops stormed Beijing to crush a
pro-democracy movement, killing hundreds, possibly thousands, of people.
.
One year ago: President Bush left on an eight-day
European irip that included a Group of Eight summit in
Germany. Military judges dismissed charges against a
Guant.anamo detainee accused of chauffeuring Osama bin
Laden and another who allegedly killed a U.S. soldier in
Afghanistan. Insurgents linked to ai-Qaida issued a video ·
in which they claimed to have killed all three U.S. soldiers
captured in an ambush on May 12. (The body of Pfc.
Joseph Anzack Jr. has been recovered; Spc. Alex Jimenez
and Pvt. Byron Fouty remain missing.) A federal indict.ment accused Lousiana Democratic Congressman William
Jefferson of receiving more than $500,000 in bribes
(Jefferson has maintained his innocence).
. Tixlay's Birthdays: Actor Bruce Dern is 72. Musician
Roger Ball is 64. Actress-singer Michelle Phillips is 64. Jazz
musician Ant!K)ny Braxton is 63. Actor Keith David is 52.
Actress Julie Gholson is 50. Actor Eddie Velez is 50. Singermusician El DeBargeis 47.Actress Julie White is 47. Tennis
player Andrea Jaeger is 43. Actor Scott Wolf is 40.
Comedian Horatio Sanz is 39. Actor Noah Wyle is 37. Rock
musician Stefan Lessard (The Dave Matthews Band) is 34.
ActressAngelinaJolie is 33. Rock musicianZac Farro is 18.
· Thought for Today: "H America forgets where she came
from, if the people lose sight of what brought them along,
if she listens to the deniers and mockers, then will begin the
rot and dissolution." - Carl Sandburg, American writer
(1878-1967).
.

~·

VVednesda~June4,~08

The temperature's getting
hot, and so is the energypolicy debate. Gas prices
are reaching new heights as
anyone with a car knows.
What are we go,ing to do
~bout ~t? Apparently, nothmg senous.
Republican presidential
candidate John McCain has
taken out ads . on the
National Review Online site
pushing his silly gas-tax
holiday. A gas-tax · holiday
may
be
·
· a fun,
· ... cheap
b · •market-·
mg g~mnuc.., ut 11 s not a
solution.
In fact, McCain, like. the

Democrat be will run
against, opposes a real solution: Drilling here.
Unf&lt;munately, it'.s largely
those on-the .outside looking
in wbo are most passionately advocating that we
our
domestic
review
resources. Drilling alone
won't do it, but it's a practical start.
Thus far, the debate about
CIC()CSSiog tho~ ~sources
closest-to home has focused
on Alaska's Arctic National
W'tldlife. Reserve ( ANWR).
Congress ·. ridiculously
re~s to green-light the
project. I .say "ridiculous"
because concerns about ·
preservillg the vaSt s~aths
of nature and the canbou
there ue not serious:
ConRress would be giving a
go-aiac.l to oil exploa:alion
on 2,000 -or 0,{11 petoent
- ofANWR'11 19 'millioo
acre11, which can supply ~ 5
pereeat,of America's oil per
year for''i2 years, according
to tbe U.S. . Energy
Department. •
·
"Drill here" .has become a

Kathryn

Lopez

mantra on conservative talk
radio. As former House
Speaker Newt Gingrich puts
·it: "Drill
Here. Drill Now.
.
Pay Less." Gingn'ch is collecting signatures on a petition that reads, "We, therefore. the undersigned citizens of the United States,
petition the U.S. Congress
to act immediately to lower
psoline prices by authorizmg the exploration of
proven energy reserves to
reduce our dependence on
foreign ellCQly sources from
unstable countries."
Meanwhile, we hear and will likely continue to
hear - · sad high-gas-price
stories such as that of
Nevada's Clark County
School District: With a 62
percent budget expenditure
mcrease due largely to the
price of gas, the ·school district has cut its b11s route and
stops to Feducc: · costs.
According ·
ro
the
Department
. of
Transportation, Americans
are (predictably) driving
less.
It'snowonderthatGallup
reports that a majority of
Americans support "drilling
in u.s. coastif and wilderness areas now off limits."
Unlike Congress, Where
Democratic California Rep.

· Maxine Waters wants to States going to Saudi
"socialize" the oil indusll)', Arabia with his hands out.
Americans don't 'blame oil America is an enrrepreneurcompanies for the high ial nation with resources.
prices. According to Gallup, We should not be acting
"The number of Americans like helpless victims. We
who blame oil companies should not be punishing
for the high price of gaso- energy users and embracing
' line has decreased from 34 regulation over ingenuity
percent to 20 percent."
and incentives.
. But
don't'
expect
McCain,
Liebem1an,
Congress . to pull out its Warner and everyone else
power tools any time soon. should take a deep breath
Right now, the momentum and listen
to · Bjorn
is with · America's Climate Lomborg, author of "Cool
The
Skeptical
Security Act of 2007, a hill It:
sponsored by Independent Environmentalist's Guide to
Sen. Joe Lieberman of Global Warming" (Knopf,
Connecticut and Republican 2007), who says the JegislaSen. John Warner of lion before Congress "looks
·Virginia. According to the set to be a massive subsidyHeritage Foundation, the fest that would achieve very
bill "would likely be - by .little for the environment, at
far - the most expensive great cost" He warns:
environmental underlllking "Wishful thinking is not
in history." As Heritage sound public policy."
describes it, the WarnerLomborg
says
that
Lieberman Bill "extracts instead of frenzied regulatrillions of dollars from the . tions and expenditures, "We
millions of Ainerican ener- need the technological solugy consumers and delivers · tions that will allow our
this wealth to permanently societies to transi·tion costidentified classes of recipi- effectively to low-carbon
ents; such as tribal groups energy by mid-centucy.
and preferred technology McCain could recognize
. sectors, while largely cir- that this is a century-long
.cumventing the normal con- problem which. needs cengressional appropriations tucy-long, smart solutions."
In other words - cool it.
·process."
The legislation is a per- Drop the gimmicks. Stop
ilous road :with high costs getting freaked out by AI
- costs Americans tell Gore. Let's be smart and
pollsters they don't want to think creatively rather than
pay. But Congress is poised a,s a conventional pack of
to go its own way, skipping frenzied followers.
over simpler, more promis(Kathryn Lopez is rhe ediing steps that cost less, such tor of National Review
as ,unleashing America's Online (www.nationalrereserves, Instead, we go on view. com). She can be conwith ·the absurd scene of the racied at klopez@ nationa/p~esident of the · United
revie1v.com.).

•

Our main IXll ..,m In all 11ories ito 10
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wMnt home canter MMce is avait-

General Manager

-·

Chal1ene · - ·· Ext. 12

13Weeka
26 Weeks

E-:

52 Weeks

-

newaOmydaM)wrliretcom

www.mydait)~llii lef.com

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13 Weei&lt;s
26 Weeks
52 Weeks

BY ANNE GEARAN
AP DIPLOMATIC WRITER

RACINE - Dorothy Leota Wood Noms, 92, of Racine,
passed away Saturday, May 31, 2008 at the Darst Adult
.
Group Home, Pomeroy.
Born September 19, 1915, in Apple Grove, she was the
daughter of the late Alta and .Lena Riggs Wood.
She was preceded in death by her husband, of 70 years,
Fern Norris; in 2000 by a daughter, Carolyn Massie; in
2004 by a grandson, Matthew Reed.
Surv;vors include her children: Gloria Alto, Lake Worth,
Fla., Doreen (Lynn) Skow, North Brarich, Minn. , Shirley
(Larry) Kline, UJ?per Arlingt&lt;!n, Norman (Linda) Norris,
Hillard, Joe Masste, New Lewisburg. She also leaves eight
grandchildren, seven great grandchildren and three greatgreat grandchildren.
Dorothy will be greatly missed by Emma Bird, Golda
Radcliff, Mary Miller and Tami Fowler, her special friends.
The family wishes to thank Brenda Darst and her staff of
"Angels" for the special care that was given to our Mother,
al:;o Becky Buckley, and aid of Hospice. God Bless those
friends and family members who took time to visit Mother
when she needed a friend, you are Special, she loved you all.
A "!neral services will be held at I p.m., Friday, June 6,
2008 m the Letart Falls Cemetecy Chapel. Officiating will
be Rev. Don Walker. Arrangements are being handled by
the Cremeens Funeral Home, Racine. A luncheon jl\lill follpw the. service at Dorothy's house. Expressions o( sympathy may be sent to the family by visiting www.cremeensfuneralhomes.com.
In lieu of flowers, please send any donations, in memory
of Dorothy, to Darst Adult Group Home, 33164 Childrens
Home Road, Pomeroy, 45769.

Deaths
Mary Kathryn Holter
LONO BOTTOM- Mary Kathl)'n (Davis) Holter, 84 of
Long Bottom, passed away at her residence on Tuesday,
June 03, 2008.
Services are scheduled for I I a.m., Saturday, June 7 at
the Anderson McDaniel Funeral Home in Pomeroy.
Visitation will be held from 4-8 p.m. on Friday, A full obitUlll)' will appear in tomorrow's newspaper

Cierlrucle Alberta Erwin
GALLIPOLIS -Gertrude Alberta Mees Erwin, 90, of
Gallipolis, pas'sed away on Tuesday, June 3, 2008 at ~e
Cabell Huntington Hospital Emergency Room,
Huntington, W.Va. Arrangements will be announced later
by the Willis Funeral Home.
·

Band concert
MIDDLEPORT - Big B~nd Community Band, under
direction of Toney Dingess, will perform at 7 p.m. on
Friday in Dave Diles Park.
·
The concefl is sponsored by the Riverbend Arts Council
·
and admission is free.

WASHINGTON - The
United States and Israel said
Tuesday the rest of the
world isn't doing enough to
stop Iran from getting the
bomb and accused Iran of
continuing a covert drive
for nuclear
weapons,
although U.S. intelli$ence
has said Tehran qUJt its
active warhead program
years.ago.
Secretary
of
State
Condoleezza Rice and
Israel's embattled leader,
Prime
Minister
Ehud
Olmert, both used speeches ·
to a pro-Israel lobbying
group to complain _that
European and other nauons
are undermining the hard
line against !rail's nuclear
program by pursuing business relationships with
Tehran.
·
"Our partners in Europe
and beyond need to exploit
Iran's ·vulnerabilities more
vigorously and . impose
greater costs on the regime
- economically, fmancially, politically and diplomatically," Rice said.
Olmert went further, saying in a speech to the
American Israel Public
Affairs Committee that
other countries should
penalize Iran by barring
business travelers, blocking
financial transactions and
imposing sanctions on
Iran's import of refined
gasoline and on countries
that perform that task for
oil-rich but facilities-poor

Iran.
"Each and evecy country
must understand that the
long-term cost of a nuclear
Iran greatly outweighs the
short -term benefits of
doing business with Iran,"
Olniert said.
Neither Olmert nor Rice
mentioned O)mert's legal
and political woes. A corruption investigation threatens to bring down Olmert's
government and perhaps

military control, Rice asked.
"Well, ladies and gentlemen, it's just hard to imagine that there are innocent
answers to these questions."
Later,
she
directly
accused Iran of pursuing
weapons on the sly. She said
there is no point in engaging
the regime until it changes
its behavior.
"We would be willing to
nieet with them, but not
while they continue to inch
closer to a nuclear weapon
under the cover of talk.!'
Rice said.
The Bush administration
- long claimed Iran was hiding a bomb program, a view
shared by Israel and presumably the rationale for
any military attack either
.
AP photo country
might
launch
Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice addresses the against Iran .
American Israel Public Affairs Committee (AI PAC) meeting
Rice "s words were strik"
Tuesday in Washington.
·
ing because U.S. officials
have backed off pointed
with it U.S. hopes for a Council has passed three . accusations since the publiframework Mideast peace tounds of mtld sanctions cation in December of a
deal this year.
aimed at getting Iran to give declassified intelligence
Rice said the M ideas! up · the most troublesome report that concluded Iran
peace effort begun by aspects of its nuclear pro- once had an active warhead
President Bush must 'carry gram. The United States and program but had shelved it
over to his successor, a note some others also have sepa- in 2003 .
of caution amid the dire .rate sanctions that go fur- .
The report said U.S. anapolitical crisis in IsraeL !her. The United Stales has lysts could not say whether
Rice said there is still a almost no dealings with Iran Iran still held weapon;
chance to frame a deal and has little direct econom- ambitions, and said the proc
gram might be restarted
between Israel and ti;Je ic leverage there .
Palestinians. this year,
Rice indirectly criticized . without U.S. knowledge.
Obama and Democratic
although she said the goal is Democratic
presidential
admittedly ambitious.
candidate Barack Obama rival· Hillary Rodham
"The goal itself, though, for his willingness to talk to Clinton are to address the
will endure beyond the cur- Iran, the rising Mideast AIPAC convention on
rent U.S. leadership," Rice power that Israeli leaders Wednesday, and presumeil
said. "I believe that the consider their greatest Republican nominee John
administration's approach enemy. Iran 's hardline pres- McCain spoke Monday.
to this 'problem will and ident regularly says Israel McCain had a get-tough
must endure."
must be wiped off the map. message on Iran, while
On Iran, Rice appeared On Tuesday he told a Obama is expected to tell
emboldened by a recent European audience that the group that he would talk
skeptical rep&lt;irt from the Israel is "doomed to go."
· LO Iranian leaders without
U.N. nuclear watchdog, A
Rice scoffed at Iran's preconditions set by the
U.N. report Monday sug- claim that its nuclear pro- Bush administratioo.
gested that Tehran was gram is intended only to
The "furious debate"
stonewalling investigators produce electricity. Why about how to confront the
·and possibly withholding then would Iran keep Iranian threat ·"should not be
information crucial to the inspectors away from some about whether we talk to
U.N. nuclear monitor's sites, reject a generous ofrer Iran," Rice said. "Diplomacy
probe of allegations it did of civilian nuclear help is not a synonym for talkfrom Russia or maintain ing," but must be combineil
nuclear anns research.
U.N.
Security part of its program under' with pressure tactics.
The

Factory orders post surprising increase in April
Bv MAimN CRUTStNGER

led by a big jump in by economic stimulus paydemand for petroleum ments being made to 130
products, reflecting higher million households .
WASHINGTON
prices . Demand for food
The Federal Reserve
Orders for manufactured
in
September
and beverages also was up started
goods posted a surprisingly
·
aggressively cutting intersharply.
While some economists est rates in an efrort to keep
POMEROY- A sheriff's sale scheduled for 10 a.m. on strong increase in April as
demand
rose
in
a
number
of
·
have
worried that the coun- the housing slump and .a
June 27 in Common Pleas Court case, Home National Bank
areas
including
heavy
try could be in danger of severe credit crunch from
against Diamond, and others, has been c~celed.
machinery, iron and steel.
falling into a recession, the triggering a recession. In a
The
Commerce
govemment reported last speech
Tuesday.
Fed
Department
reponed
week tha:t the gross domes- Chairman Ben Bernanke
Tuesday that orders were up
tic product stayed in posi- signaled that the central
. ,_ ----I .I percent in April followtive territory in the first bank is likely to remain on
AMJJASONOJFMA
. ing a 1.5 percent increase in
three months of thi s year, hold for now, watching
March. Those gains fol- SOUACE: Depanmentoleo."""''" AP growing at an annual rate of both the risks of weaker
lowed big declines in
0.9
percent,
slightly growth and higher inflation
'
A search warrant affidavit Januacy and Februlll)' ·that
BY JOE MILICIA
stronger than the initial esti- from soanng energy pnces.
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER
Michelle Girard, an ana- mate. Many economists
filed to obtain 'a judge's raised concerns about how
·'For now, policy seems
approval to search Billi 's much pain manufacturing lyst at RBS Greenwich now believe that the GDP well-positioned to promote
CLEVELAND An computer and disks was industnes would feel from Capital, said that one of will remain in positive terri- moderate growth and price
ludiana teenager accused of unsealed Tuesday.
the severe economic slow- the hopeful signs in the lory durin·g the current stability
time,:·
over
plotting with an Ohio man
According to the · docu- down hining housing and orders report was . that April-June quarter, helped Bernanke said.
to carry out Columbine- ments, the Indiana teenag- the financial sector.
inventories of unsold
style attacks wrote that 'he er told · authorities his vioOrders in . the battered goods were unchanged in
. ,;~:.H-i,f'
- GRA "" Dwanted to get "instant lent thoughts. began when · auto industry and come April. indicating that man~' . :! ...
~·
,\
&lt;1recognition" for shooting a his girlfriend broke up mercia! aircraft sector did ufacturers are keeping
-~·~--~·~
..
~
: ,':.
0
record number of people in with him .
fall sharply in April. but their inventory backlogs
&lt;
'.
'
,
~
\,.IJ
'
' .. ),
f'r,
an attack at his school ,
areas
showed under controL A smaller
He chatted online with other
~ ,::.-- · ~··' ~·
according to documents Billi about obtaining "party strength catching analysts stockpile of goods should
unstialed Tuesday.
IHFUR'tll'ti ii.WJ~ nJ.TRt
favors," a code name for by surprise. They had been redu~e the need for pro· A black spiral notebook guris and bombs, the docu- forecasting that overall ducuon cutbacks that
Ariel - Ann Dater
authorities obtained from ments say. He told authori- orders would edge down would make the current
Endow"'ent Fund
1 slowdown worse.
the 16-yeru;-old's locker at ties he did not have access slightly in April.
for the Performing Arts Centre
For April, deman~ for
The bener-than-expected
Penn High Scbool in to any weapons and thought
Mishawaka, Ind., oontained he went too far with hi s reading on orders for manu- durable goods . ttems Mrs. ~ Dater "''ill match all
Ma~· 1 2018 th~~
handwritten entries · in online postings.
factured goods followed expected to last at least jcontributions.
Ma~· l. 2009. Yoo can makt a gift t
which the teen expressed
An entry in the teen's news Monday that a key three years - fell by 0.6 Tbt ArYl-Ann Dater Endow~:
his hatred for most uf the notebook dated April 21 , a gauge of manufacturing percent, shghtly larger than Fund that will last a lifetime limt
Ulkn~· ing " 'l)'!i :
people at the schooL
Monday.
reads : rose to a reading of 49.6 in the 0.5 percent drop re~m­
• Cash • Cred~ Card • Appr«iioted
"I wanna break the cur- "Throughout the weekend May, up from '48.6 in April. ed last week m a prelinuSecurities • Pkdlft • Beque$1s • Life
rent shooting record. 1 me and a friend of mine are
While the Institute for nary report. The weakness
lm11nmce • Se.t SMie
wanna get instant recogni- planning something cata- Supply Management's man- was led by a 24.4 percent
Bol Office: 428 2nd """·
tion. The only thing that strophic. l am not sure if he ufacturing index remained drop . m d~mand for comGallipolis, OH (740) 446-ARTS
stops me is the fact of being is for real or not about it He at levels indicating a contin- mereta! atrcraft, a sector
put in jail forever, or having says he has been plam\ing ued cm\traction in manufac- that is extreme!¥ volatile
to kill myself, or getting for sometime now. We · turing, the upward move- from monlh to month, and a
SOUNDS OF
killed by an officer. I could picked · September lith, ment was seen as a possible 4.2 percent d~line m motor
SPRllVG!
kill anyone without feeling because its already· iconic." ' sign that manUfacturing was vehicles, an mdusll)' that is
..
D
o
you
I1~C1r
th(~ ·.\ prinl( p e c'fU! rx ?--..
SOC!)'
because society
bemg battered by soaring
Messages seeking com- beginning to stabilize.
··Do
you
h e CJr the ·
sucks!!!" read an entry ment were left after busiOn Wall Street, stocks fell gasoline prices and the
laughter of the
dated April 18, one day ness hours Tuesday at the sharply for a second straight weak economy.
children pla,·i"R ? ··
General
Motors
office of the teen's lawyer, day on fresh worries about
before he was arrested
The teenager has been James Nafe of South Bend, what the credit crisis is iilmounced Tuesday that it
There are so many moments in life
and
with
the doing to the health of the was closiqg four truck and
charged with a juvenile Ind. ,
that shouldn ' t be missed .
count of conspiracy to Cuyahoga County Public nation 's banks . The Dow SUV plants in the United ·
Do you find yourself or someone
commit murder and a Defender's offiCe, which is ·Jones industrial average States, Canada and Mexico
you know missing out
declined 100.97 points to as surging fuel prices acceldenial plea has been representing Billi.
on the sounds of life?
Billi, 33, of Lakewood, close at 12,402.85.
erate the shift to smaller
entered on his behalf. The
For a complete hearing evaluation.
Manufacturing is being vehicles.
case has been continued for was arrested April 24 and
please call for an appointment .
The weakness in autos
the teen' s psychological has pleaded not guilty· to buffeted by a prolonged
testing until June II , when two counts of conspiracy to slump in housing, which has . and airplane orders was offW.r- can ltdp J'OII lliellr!
a hearing will be held to commit murder, 38 counts cut into demand for build- set by strength in a number
594- f"'~ _, _, _, ....
determine whether he ' II of pandering sex!JaliY ori- ing supplies, and soaring of other areas. Orders for
1-S(Ht- .:lS 1 - 9Htl(•
ented matter involving a energy prices, which have iron and steel were up by
,stay in juvenile custody.
49\11 R k biMond A..._-e ••
Authorities
said
he minor and one count of pos- h1J!1 auto sales. However, 5.5 percent. Orders for minth..-.......... 4~1'81
these adverse factors are ing and oil field equipment
eKchanged e-mails with Lee . sessing criminal tools.
A computer was removed being offset by continued jumped 48 .6 percent and
Billi of suburban Cleveland
in April, discussing simulta- from Billi 's home along strong demand for U.S. orders for electrical equipneous mass murders at the with computer disks, papers, exports, which are more ment and appliances surged
teen's high school and at books and three partial competitive in overseas 28.1 percent.
another location that police bo~es of handgun ammuni- markets because of the · Orders . for nondurable
weaker dollar.
goods rose by 2.8 percent,
tion, authorities said.
haven't identified.
AP ECONOMICS WRITER

No sale

Indiana teen wrote of
desire to kill classmates

-

----

-

I

s.ac.lbooo,__ln-.oo

~

The Daily Sentinel • Page As

'A~

The Daily Sentinel
Cctieclkwl Polley

www.mydailysentinel.com

US, Israel: World not doing enough to counter Iran

Local Briefs

Leners to the editor are welcome. They should be ~ss
than 300 words. All leners are subject to editing, ~ 'be
signed, and include address and telephone nwrrb.!r. No
unsigned ~ners will be published. Leners should be in
good taste, addressing issU£s, not personalities. Leners of
!hanks to organizations and individuals willtWt be oocept!d for publication.
' ·

.

Obituaries

Oil crisis solved by resources, not gimmicks

LETTERS TO THE
EDITOR

Reader Services

Wednesday, June 4, 2008

'107.10
'21~ .21

'

'

._,

-~-···-····---····-- · -·-

Workaholic? I'm no longer the Type·
lf Type A personalities are
wotkaholics, my wife romplains that I'm a Type Z. "If
you moved any slower, I'd
have you reupholste~."
was how she put it this
Jim
morning. It wasn't always
Mullen
that way. I used to be one of
those guys who worked two
w.. and~
·
.
'
J"""
'
.
go . I;IVlll&amp;
mad if there wasn 'tiiOIDCthin$ to do every tiagle the culprit the evil eye.
wakiua moment I M?Uld Then I'd tum to ilbe guy
come
frOm n ••w . behind me and teD him in
~ ciled
wbeo I left. · ~ detail bow much betIf ttma-* petf!e ~ · .tea: dtiiDp would be if l ran
days rD-.~ I wpuJd dle-piale.
·
!ry 10 do rt m tine. 1bC
A .ttaffic j11111? J would
Eiff;el Tower? Done. 1be iDv.ent swear words. I would
VtltlCIII?
· Doae. dream of One day ownillg a
S;.di~ Plllaoe? Done.
bad a beads-.up
Bye. Next!
· lliel4 display ·and
If ..e went to a bill pme,
oo it lib a
l was one o_f those jab lllbo
. jet, preferably thoie aar-to!§Cits up m the llCYenth air - .·ssiloes. I'd acquire the
toning and beack .fUr ..die ' iarpc. usually tbc r.;ar
eaiti 10 ......, c:eo belt 1be ·dimctly in frool of me, lock
IDftic.
ie liee far in and blul bim to

game is to get out of the ing to yollf next one." She
house for a few hours and is so caught up in making it
forget your cares. Why was perfect that she's forgonen
I in such a rush back, to why she's having a wedwhatever it was that was ding in the frrst pl'!ce making me crazy that day? .because she loves the .guy.
The whole idea of a vaca- Nobody .is coming to her
tion is not to run around wedding bebuse it will be
like a crazy person, buuo perfect They are. coming
reiax and ~e a break from because they · are her
the normal routine. You friends, they could care
don't even have to get on a less what flavor the punch
plane to do that. Go to a .will be.
movie. Bake a cake. There
I've decided I'm a recovare enough people out ering workaholic. l tell Sue
there trying to make you that if I ever do even one lit- ·
crazy, you shouldn't do it tie job, I may ha~e a
to yourself. Waiting in line relapse. That's why .1 can't
doesn't bother me at all mow the lawn, why I can't
any more. I'm never in a weed. the garden, why I
rush. I'll be there wbeo I can't clean the . bathroom.
get there.
Let's go to a movie. The
A close friend is getting trouble is, this new me isn't
married this summer and making Sue as happy as it is
she's making herself crazy making me. But she wasn't
with all the details, she's happy when I was working
called us 50 times - will two jobs and stumbling .
then be enough booze? home at 4 a.m., either.
Areithe hors d' oeuvres cor- Especially when she found
rect? Does the dress tit out I got off work at II p.m.
riglit? Should we write our
(Jim Mullen is the aUllwr
own vows? What about the of "It Tl1Us a Village Idiot:
bridesmaids? 1be list goes Complicating the Simple
on forever. Finally I said, U/i! " and "Baby's First
"Monica, if this wedding Tanoo. ·• You can reach him
·isn' t pl!rfect, I'm not com- at jim_mullen@myway.com.)

1-*

m.

=

·fiJbter

·W·

~

would mate me IIIIi~.
tWitda. Willt IR 1bey ~ · After alifetinie of this, oo
up there? Wbal OOUid j)OIII- ooe would travel, go to a
hly take so loog? I Woald bill pme, BO grocery shopICIII out t i w lis l oou,1d 1111' , . . « eveo ride iD .a C8f
MJe whir wasboldill&amp; eway- ·Wdb me.
·
thiJig up, I would ..... oo
I bad forgotten that the
my ~ to IIy and give

wbole idea of a baseball

•

..

1

•

�The Daily Sentinel

Foreman wins award
NEW HAVEN, W.Va.The
United
States
Achievement Academy has
announced that . Hannah
Elizabeth Foreman has been
named a Who's Who in
Foreign Language award
winner.
This award is a presti·
gious honor very few stu·
dents can ever hope to
attain. ln fact, the academy
.;.ecogniz.es fewer than I 0
percent of all American
high school students.
Foreman, who attends
Waharna High School, will
appear in the United States
Achievement Academy 's
official yearbook, which is
published nationally . .
The academy selects
USAA winners based on the
Standards of Selection · set
forth by the academy. The
criteria for selection are a
student's academic performance, interest and aptitude, leadership qualities,
responsibility, enthusiasm,
motivation to learn and
improve, citizenship, attitude and cooperative spirit
and dependability.
. Foreman was nominated
tiy her Spanish ll teacher.
Caitlin Park. · ·
Hannah is the d3ughter of
David and Beth Foreman of
· New Haven. She is the
granddaughter of Earl Dean

·PageA6

REGIONAL

Inside

Wednesday, June 4, 2008

r-~------------------------------------------~----~.~----, JeanRou~was
reoentiY named
"Volunteer of the
Yea,. by her peers in

,Pistons lift fo1ip Saunders, ~ B2
~ .... Bucs, Page 86

the .Pleasant Valley
Hospital Auxiliary.
. Roush has setV8d
the organization for
49 years. Shown
with Rou~ are, front
row, at right, Angela
Cleland, assistant
administrator of the

Wednesday, June 4, 2008

LocAL 8cmiDULE. POUEROY - A - ol-lng higl1
ICihool ll'•l'ltt~ aponlng ~ invoMng
1MrM 1mm . . . . .nd O.lla oo&amp;.lt\tiel.

. .T-ondFjj'

Pleasant Valley
Nursing and
Rehabilitation
Center. Back row,

11Moion . llboys~vW!finall,9a.m .
~ng .1 p.m .

......... 7

-~~~~~'DMolon II girls
long jtJII1I tinall, 9 a.m.
Di\lioion II OHSM Championships,

.

~:30p.m.

and Ramona Knight of New
Haven and Joe and Evelyn
Foreman of Portland, Ohio.
Hannah is a member of
the Fairview Bible Church
youth group, the White
Falcon · Marching Band and
~phala
School
Wahama High
Choir. She also has been a
member of the West
Virginia Junior High School
All-State Choir and is a I 0group, was . instrumental in American Red Cross for 45
POINT
PLEASANT, could be built."
year piano student of
estab1ishing
the {irst hospi- years of service. She began
Roush
and
her
husband
of
-Recently
surW.Va.
Sharon
Hawley
of
tal
Gift
Shop,
served as the with the organization as a
rounded by cards and gifts 60 years, ihe late Dale
Middleport, Ohio.
She serves as president of from family and friends. Rou sh, dedicated many Uniform Chairman, worked young girl rolling bandages
her sophomore class and is Jean Roush, talked about ,hours to making sure the in the. blood bank, helped to be used for servicemen
a member of the National being at the dedication of not-for-profit healthcare initiate the first cancer during WWII.
In addition to the Pleasant
Honor Society. She also has Pleasant Valley Hospital in facility became a reality. screenings at PVH with
been invited to attend the September, 1959 and now, They were named to the John Grubb, MD and Young Valley Hospital Auxiliary
Hoby Leadership Academy after 49 years of service, she hospital's Board of Trustees I. Choi, MD, welcomed new and the American Red
residents to the community Cross, Jean has given time
.
has been named "Volunteer for their efforts.
this summer.
the "Welcome to the Point Pleasant Junior
through
"We personally pledged
of the Year" by her peers in
the Pleasant Valley Hospital money for the project. I can Wagon" program and assist- Woman's Club, the Point
remember scrimping and ed in the planning of the Pleasant Woman's Club, the
Auxiliary.
Order of Eastern Star, the
" I eat, sleep and dream saving. but paying our annual Charity Balls.
Pleasant
River
early,"
At 80 years of age, Jean Point
Pleasant Valley Hospital," commitment
Davis,
Susan
Wright Jean laughed. "From the explained Jean.
have
physically Museum (Dale and she
may
Dingess, Dennis Donahue, very beginning, my husNever one to remain idle, slowed down a bit but her were charter members) and
Ronnie Eblin,
Valerie
Jean
immediately joined the enthusiasm · · for voluo- the St. Peter Lutheran
Preas!
Edinger,
Sally band and I believed in a newly-formed
Auxiliary teerism has. not been damp- Church, where she and
Carleton Ervin, Terri Fife, community hospital. We
went
door
to
door
trying
to
frrst sec- . ened. She was honored at a Dale have been members
where
she
was
the
Joe Games, James Haning,
retary of the volunteer special function by the since 1955.
raise
money
so
the
facility
Dave Harris, Jennifer Wise
Harrison, Kelly Hawk, Tim
Hood, Randy Houdashelt
and
Teresa
VanMeter
Houdashell, Joni Murray
Jeffers, Lisa Jett, Tana
Burbridge Kennedy, Mike
Lavendar, Patricia Anne
Fitch Marshall, ·Christi
Hess Mash, Paula K.Joes
McCloud, Lori
Wyne
McDaniel, Judy Holliday
Nelson, Tony Richards,
We are ,entering the
Kenny Roush and Lisa
Food
.,..,""·'
summer storm
If you have advance warning of a storm, tum lhe
. Prater Roush, Megan Miller
Roush, Paul j{upe, Sheila
season.
It is
":·
,
controls on your
to the coldest~·
Sargent
Sheets,
Kay
iniportant to tie
Food will stay frozen'
· n 38 and 48 houti 1n a
Vujaklija Sutphin, Kim
aware of
fully-bided freezer if you keep the door cloaed. if.
Krautter-Thompson, Don
approaching seve~e
Tillis, Pat Vaughan, Scott
the freezer is half full, the food generally will keep
Warner, Mike Wayland,
weather that could
for 24 hours. A freezer full of meat gef181ally stays
David Williamson. and Nita
bring
with
il
frozen longer than a freezer fuU of baked goodS.
Rusche! Yost.

SPORTS BRIEFS

.2nd annual Southern
~'Hustlin' Tornado" ·
Basketbaii·Camp

Roush na1ned volunteer of the year

RACINE Southern
High School will be hosting
its second annual Southern
"Hustlin'
Tornado"
Basketball
Camp
on
Monday, June 16 through
Thursday, June 19 from 9
a.m. to I noon for boys and
girls
entering
second
through sixth grades. The
camp will be conducted by
SHS head basketball coach
Jeff CaldwelL
Camp insttuctors will be
members of the coaching
staff along with ClllTCnt and
former varsity basketball
players
at . Southern.
Fundamentals· will be
stressed with awards being
given for compet,itions in 3on-3, horse and free throws.
· · Cost of the camp is $35 or
. $60 for two campers from
the. same family. All ,
campers will receive TShirts. Registration will be
from 8:30 to 9:00 a.m. on
the first day of the camp.
· : Checks should be written
to the Southern Athletic
Boosters, and ·brought with
the campers name, grade,
Home and emergency
phone numbers, t-shirt size,
and .p arent's signature. If
campers brought home a
camp form from school,
they should fill out the
camp form with the
required information. If
~c~ have questions
they should call Coach
CAldwell at 949-3129.
·

Class of '78 reunion held
ROCK SPRINGS - The
Meigs High School Class of
1978 recently held its 30th
Class Reunion at the
Riverside Golf Course in
Mason, W.Va. with a total of
84 classmates and guests
attending.
A snack buffet was provided, along with door
prizes and favors. J\ special
DVI) of all past rellnions
was presented to each classmate. Entertainment was
provided by DJ, Richard
Payne of Bidwell and classmates participated in a game
oftrivta from the 1970s.
. Classmates
attending
were:Joyce Bing Ash, Paula
Ashley, Becky Ball, Larry
Ball and Rita Bailey Ball,
Roy
Bareswilt,
Rory
Bartrum, Ron Casci, Paige
Smith Cleek, Terri Robson
Cochran, Rhonda Hudson
Cullums, Beverly Bishop
Davis, Peggy Girolami
Davis, Velvet Swisher

Summer Stonn Season ·
Be Prepared .to Take Cover, Watch for
Power Outages, Pet Safety

ref=

Local Weather
Wednesday ••• Showers
and thunderstorms likely.
Some thunderstorms may
produce gusty winds and
small hail. Highs in the mid
80s. Southwest .winds 5 to
10 mph. Chance of rain 70
percent.
Wednesday
night•••
Mostly cloudy. Showers and
thunderstorms likely in the
evening...Then a chance of
showers and thunderstorms
after midnight. Some thul\4erstorms may produce
~usty winds and small hail
m the evening. Lows in the
upper 60s. South winds 5 ·to
I 0 mph. Chance of rain 60
percent.
Thursday-Mostly sunny.
1;[01 with highs _around 90.
' Southwest winds 5 to I 0
mph with gusts up to 20

cloudy. Lows in the upper
60s. Southwest winds 5 to
I 0 mph. Early.
Fnday and
Friday
night...Partly cloudy. Highs
in the lower 90s. Lows in
the upper 60s.
Saturday
through
Sunday••• Mostly
cloudy
with a ·chance of showers
and thunderstorms. Hi~hs in
the upper 80s. Lows 10 the
mjd 60s. Chance of rain 30
percent.
Sunday night ...Mostly
cloudy. Lows in tl;le upper
60s.
Monday... Partly sunny
-with a chance · of showers
and thunderstorlns. Highs in
the lower 90s. Chance of
rain 30 percent.
Monday night and
Tuesday... Mostly cloudy.
Lows in the mid 60s. Highs
'\!hursc1ay nigbt. ..Partly in the upper 80s.

(NASDAQ)-12.30
A8lllend Inc. (NYSE) - 54.44
Big Lola (NYSEI- 31.28
- e - {NASDAQ)- a.ov
........ - (N\'SE)- 50.10
Century Aluminum (NASDAQ) ,

Wa....., (NYSE)- 57.77
Wancly'a (NYSE) - 27Al3
•••aBanco (NYSEI- 21AO
WOI1hinglon (NYSE) - 11.32

-·tor. . . .

· Daly .toe~&lt; ;eporta _.. ... 4
p .m. ET cloaing quateo ol...,.
3, 211111, proMeel by EdwM'II- floiMICial
-72.40
advl-. ....., ..... In Gillllj: llllla
0..;1ft "' (NASDAQ)- SAM
• (7401 4414441 and tMier
Cllaminy...,... (NASDAQ)llan•o In Polnl P1111W'1t.
5.34
City ...............I[IIG{NASDAO)- 41..12 (-) 574-G174. Me- SIPC.
C Rt w (NYSE) - SI.S3
DuPont (NYSE) - 4U4
US a.nk (NYSE)- 32.14
a - (NYSE)- 2U7
a. .... Eleclric (N'i'SE)- 30.46
HMteroDavk*n (N'tSE)-

aut

Ill' MMar......,
..
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l(;oger (NYSE)- 27.33
I.JmlloiCI
(NYSE)- lt.12
Naof... SouthMn (NYSE)15.511
Ohio
Corp. (NASOAQ)-25.10
88T (NYSE)- 211.17
flilulplll (NASDAQ)- 23.72
...,., (NBE)- 61.05
Pi Miliei (NASDAQ) - 11.35
(NYSE)- 55.16
- , . .._(NASDAQ)- U1
Royll Dutcll Slid -12A2
. . . . lk&gt;kl'ng (NASDAQ) -15

••Mil

v...,.....,

When severe weather approaches, lake shelter
and follow these tips:
• Move to the lowest level
• Stay away from windows and glass
• Protect your head and face
• If possible, get under a sturdy !able or other
structure

Wlen thunderstorms threaten, find shelter and
consider this:
• Stay away from windows and glass
• Avoid contact with anything that conducts
electricity

Remember the "30-30 Rule":
If the time between the first flash of lightning and

the resulting thunder is 30 seoo;1ds or leu, the
lightning is close enough to ~-you . After the last
flash of lightning wait 30 minutes beli:h-e leaving

· yOur shelter.

Local Stocks
.a (NYSE)-42.211

lightning, hail,
5trong winds and
possibly tomadou.
During the past 30 years, lightning has killed an
average of 66 people per year.

If you experience a power outage
Tre~t all fd1n wiM •

Tab Care of Your Pets, Too
Be sure your pet is prepared for whatever weather
comes your way.
Consider having a
miaochip implanted in
your pet as a
permanent means of

identification.
Also, think about

llore than half of llflhtnlltf JeaJii.l occur
lifter a Jhunc1en101m ,..·s:o.-:
fM I I Jd.
____

"live" pcw1r llnet

Ne* touch a fallen utility wire, no matter ha.v

.2008 Meigs Flag

.,.._.an Emergency Kit
To best prepare to face a power outage, we
suggest You assemble an ernergeACY kit. Items
you ma,y wish to include are:
• Fll!lshlights and fresh batteries
• Bal.teryi)OWered radios or telev.isions
• Cam.tlaa and matches or lightens
• Dlinkingloookiog water ·
• Portable heatBr (oil or gas)
• Camping equipment such as sleeping bags.
cafl1' stoves, la1llems
• Canned goods and manual can opener
• Manufacturers' instructions for opening
power-operated doors

de\'eloping a "Pet
Disaster Kit" in a sturdy,
plastic container with a tight-fitlir'lg lid lhat ia ready
to take at a momerit's notice. lriclude:

Dogs
•
•

Food
Pooper acooper 8ndtor small plastic bags
• · Crate or portable kerinel
·
'
• Dog colar with 10 tags and leash
• Dog's favorite play toy

harmless it lookS. It can be difficl..tlt to distinguish·
between a poWer line and a cable or telephone
line. All fallen lines should be considered energized Cats
and dangerous. And don't touch anything in
• Food
contact with the line, such as trees, fences or
• Extra litter box, soooper and a week's .
puddles of water, because they can conduct
IUPPIY'of litter
electricity. Keep children and pets away from this
• Crate or por"...,table,..... kennel
potential hazard. Call us at the number on your
• Cat collar with 10 tags and leash
electric bill to report any fallen lines Of equipment.
• Cat's favorite play toy

.)wwl

bMoion II OHSM~ nok

left to right, Michael
Ueving, Chainnan ol.
the Pleasant VaiJev
Hospital Board , ~
Trustee, Alvin A.
laWson, President
and Chief Executive
Oflioer of PVH and
· Charles Fulks,
President of tha
PVH Auxiliary.

t

Football Registration
. Registration is now open
for the 2008 flag football

•

season, the lea~e is open to
boys and girls 10 grades 1-6
beginning with the 2008-09
school.year. The registration
fee is $40 per player, and
$25 for each additional sibling.
The games will lx; played
starting in September on the
Meigs High School practice
field, the final date for registtation is July !st. The
payment must . also be
reeeived by July lst.A
workout/combine will . be
. held ·Oil July 26th at 9 am at
f&gt;{eigs lligh School. All
check must be made out to
Meigs
Flag
Football
League, P.O. Box 7 51 ,
Poll'ieroy, Ohio 45769.
· To regililer on-line go to
www.meigsffl.com,
for
more infomiation go to tbe
website or call 7 4Q-541-

1222.

Eagle hoops camp
t-shirts DOW in
:. CHESTER - Camp . tshirts from the recent 2008
Eastem~gle basketball
i:amp arc now in and available to
picked up Baum
~~~r during business

CoNrACrUs

.f'eiC -1-740-446-2342 eld. 33 .
HW-.3008.

~~- aportsemydoHv-&gt;tinol.com

("&amp;!at!
~ ... ldolpt~ SpoiU Wrtt.r

.....33

t-&gt;~

-ldolpllemydollyoontinel.com
{1-«!)~..... 33
~Oft¥1011y!r1bun0.oom

.._, Crwft, 8ports Writer

o.vki ,....,tiC~!IIM, Ohio

{740) 448 2342, -

33

lcrumO~IIyregnr.com

'

Lakers-Celtics:
A rivalry thai's .been on break
.

WALTHAM, MASS. (AP) Those familiar "Beat L.A.!" chants,
once the sweetest sound of springtime in Bosto14 were replaced by a
most unrecognizable chorus in the
dead of winter last year.
"MVP!" cries f~ a Los Angeles
Laker in the Boston GII!Jien.
Oops, · make that the TD
Banknorth Garden.
Plenty bas changed in the two
decades since the last NBA finals
series between the Lakers and
Celtics, and not only the arenas
where it's contested.
The rivalry that ntade the NBA
must-see TV - the finals were still
shown 9n tape delay when Magic
Johnson was a rookie- was largely ignored in recent years. to the
point that some Boston backers
couldn't even bother to show up
when the Lakers were in town in
January 2007, making it easier for
all those Los Angeles fans to come
cheer Kobe Bryant,
That's not the way it was in the

day s of Johnson same, the philosophy of basketball
and Larry Bird, isn 't the same. The towns are still
when you could- the same. A lot of the same type of
n't think of one people. Bean town is still Beantown,
without the other that 's for sure. But they've won a
- those players baseball World Series now, so
or their teams.
they're not so bedraggled."
"We
talked
Back in the mid- 1980s, when they
about it every met for the championship three
day," John son times in a four-year span, Los
said
Tuesday. Angeles and Boston had the most
"Actually. Larry important rivalry in pro sports. It
.probably will feel the same way. lasted through three cities, starting
During the regular season, that's all with the Celtics' sweep of the
we watched. Where are the Celtics' Minneapolis Lakers in 1959, and
Did they win last night?''
more than 25 years.
With the Lakers and Celtics meet- . Now it's been almost that long
ing again Thursday in the NBA since t)leir last meeting, in 1987,
fmals, the ' NBA got Johnson and also Boston's most recent finals
Bird together on a conference call to appearance. So while veterans such
talk about the way things were then. as Paul Pierce and Bryant can talk of
But it's so long ago, it has no rele- Kevin McHale's hard foul tak.edown
vance today.
of Kurt Rambis in 1984, or
"It doesn 't mean anything now, Johnson's baby sky hook to pull out
· and there's nothing that's sintilar a victory in Boston in 1987, the
now," Lakers coach Phil Jackson younger players in this series havesaid. 'The coaching staffs aren 't the no memories of . anything special

between the teams.
"Last time i1 was a rivalry. I was
born . It was in '86 (actually '87). so
it's been a long time," Celtics second-year point guard Rajon Rondo
said. "I know a little bit about the
history, but not too much."
The Celtics haven 't always been
relevant since, managing only four
playoff appearances from 19962007. The Lakers went on to have
meaningful rivalries with San
Antonio, Sacramento and most
recently, Phoenix. Even Miami felt
like a rival after acquiring Shaquille
0' Neal from Los Angeles, since that
game got the marquee Christmas
Day national TV slot three years
running.
Meanwhile, Celtics-Lakers has
been mostly out of sight, out of
mind.
ESPN showed a game between the
teams two years ago, but ABC hasn't bothered since it landed the

Plellse see Rlv.lry, B:l

Philadelphi
a Phillies'
Pat
Burrell,
center, is
greeted at
the plate
by Geoff
Jenkins,
left. and
Chase
Utley after
hitting a
two-run,

tie-breaking homer
in the

sixth
inning of a
baseball
game with

the
Cincinnati
Reds on
Tuesday in
Philadelphi

a. The
Phillies

won 3-2.
AP photo

BurreD's blast Hfts Phillies past Reds, 3-2
PHILADELPHIA (AP) Ken Griffey Jr. didn't get
anything to hit his only time
up. Pat Burrell didn't miss
the tasty, hanging slider ·he
saw.
Burrell hit a tiebreaking
two-run horner, Adam Eaton
pitched 6 2-3 impressive
mnings and the Philadelphia
Phillies beat the Cincinnati
Reds 3-2 Tuesday night.
"We're on a good roll
now," Burrell said after the
NL East leaders won for the
eighth time in nine games.
"We want to keep it going."
Griffey walked as a pinchhitter .in the eighth inning to
remain one 'shy of 600 home

runs. Griffey wasn 't in the
Reds' lineup for the second
straight game because of
general soreness. He's been
bothered by a sore left knee,
though he could return
Wednesday..
Edwin Encarnacion hit a
solo homer and tripled for
two of Cincinnati's five hits.
Rookie sensation Jay Bruce
had a checked-swing, infield
single in three at-bats.
Junior represented · the
tying run when he came up
with one out, but walked on
four pitches and pitcher
Bronson Arroyo ran for him.
A sellout crowd gave
Griffey a standing ovation

Prep Scerebaard
OHSAA. SI'ATE
SoFI'BALL PAIRINGS
Pairing&amp; .t or the etate high school &amp;oftbaH toumament at Firestone Stadium in

Akron :

Jlrywl w • rs, Spom Writer

-=al

Bl

The Daily Sentinel

Ql\'50"'

· Nonh canton Hoover (27·2) vs. Grove
Clly (28·3), Friday, 3 p.m.; Elyria (24· 1)
vs. Mason (24-8) . Friday 5:30p.m.

Lakewood St. Edward (23-&amp;-1 ) vs.
West Chester Lako~ West (26-1) .

Finals Saturr:IBy, 1 p.m.

DtVIIIQNU
Clyde (24·2) vs . Canlield t21·4·1 ).
Friday 10 a.m.: Dover (19-11) vs. Colma
(23-3), Friday 12:30 p.m.
Cha~ip: Saturday, 3 p.m.
DMIIQNW
Wolilngtorl (22-4) vs. W. Uberty-Salem
(31~1~. Thursday 3 p.m.; Bloomdale
Elmwood (28-1) vs. Hebroo Lakewood
(30-2). Thuroday 5:30p.m.
Chomplonahlp: Saturday, 12:00 p.m.

Annu~l

.
PITTSBURGH (AP)
_The Stanley Cup was out of
its crate, getting one last
p&lt;ilish.
The Detroit Red Wings
had rallied; taken the lead
and were only 35 seconds ·
from hoisting that shiny
prize. That's when a player
no one expected to be on the
ice struck for the Pittsburgh
Penguins. ·
·
Three overtime-s later.
with 23-year-old MarcAndre Fleury stopping
everything the Red Wings
shot at him, a goal shortly
before I a.m. Tuesday sent
the series back to Pittsburgh
- and maybe put a shred of
doubt into the minds of
those in Hockeytown . .
"Here we go again," Red
Wings forward Kris Draper
said Tues&lt;4ly after returmng
to Pittsburgh. "We would
have loved to have been
able to wrap things up, but
that wasn't tlie case. We ' ve
got another crack at it.
"We're still up 3-2 in the
series and we .have another
opportunity
to
close
Ptttsburgh out.''
After their .4-3 win prevented the Red Wings from
winning a fourth NHL
championship in I I sea,
sons, the Penguins hope to
get the 'Igloo rocking
Wednesday night for Game

er Ryan Freel to a strained
right hamstring in the sixth.
Freel · crumbled to the
ground after taking several
steps out of the batter's box
following a grounder to.
shortstop. Freel quickly
hopped up and hobbled off
the field on his own. He ' II
fly , io
Cincinnati on
Wednesday fnr further evaluation.
''He said he heard something pop." Reds manager
Dusty Baker said. "That was 6.
just bold luck."
Detroit was 34.3 seconds
Eaton (2-3) allowed one away from finishing off the
run and three hits; outpitch- Penguins on Monday night

Pieue see Reds. Bl

PINM see G - 6, Bfi

PVH Hospice Tribute
'

DtVISION u
Semifinals Thursday, to a.m. and 1
p .m.
CuyahOga Falls Walsh Jesoh (26-3) " ·
Kenton R&lt;lge (20-6).
Canal Winchester (21 -12) vs . Chardon

Notre Dame-Cathedral Latin (22·5).
Finals Saturday. 10a.m.

Championship: Saturday, 5:30p.m.

and booed when reliever
Tom Gordon didn't throw a
strike. ·
"We didn 't want him to hjt
one," Phillies manager
Charlie Manuel said. "The
tension was there. The
excitement was there. You
. could tel I. You could feel it.
It's good for the game. We
definitel y didn't want him to
tie the game up."
Griffey hit No. 599 at.
home Saturday against
Atlanta. The only players to
reach 600 are Bilrry Bonds,
Hank Aaron , Babe Ruth ,
Willie. Mays and Sammy
Sosa.
The Reds lost center field-

Penguins,
Red Wings
prepare for
Game6

DIYtStoN lit
SemiflfJBIS Friday.· 10 a.m. and 1 p.m.
Hamiltori
'Badin
(25·6)
v&amp;.
Wheelersburg (28·1).
Canton Central Catholic (28·3)
Coldwater (27-4) .

Butterfly Release &amp; Celebration

'

'

Members of the Pleuut Valley Home Health &amp;
Hospice team would like to express our sincere
aratitude to . .follQwing corporatesponsors who
made this
'
p,ossible ...

Finals S.turday, 4 p.m.

Dt1JISION IV
SemifinalS Friday, 4 p .m. and 7 p .m .

Patrick Henry

(25~2 )

vs. Fort Loramie

~25 ~ 3)

vs. Gates MWis

(2().11 )

Benin Hiland

Gilmour Academy (24-4).
Fin.l/s Saturday, 7 p.m.

llftUp'" IV

t;onvoy CIM1VIow (211-1) va. Danvlll&amp;
~). Thuroday 10 a.m.: N: Lewisbuf'l
· Triad (1i-9) vs. · Warren JFK (20·•),
Thurwday 12:30 p.m.
Champjonollip: Saturday, 10 a.m.

OHSAA. STATE
BASEBALL PAIRINQI
PalrlogS lor ihO 11810 h~ achool bue·
baH toumement at Cooper Stadium In
Columbus:

DIVISION I
~Thursday. 4 p.m. .1nd 7 p.m.
Cincinnati Archbishop Moelier (25-6)
va. CMiveland St. Ignatius {27-5).

OHSAASTATE
TRACK &amp; FIELD
Divisional stan times tor the state high
school track and tiek:t championships
this ~ .al J8SS8 Ow&amp;ns Stadium
in Columbus:

Fl'kllv eemmn~1a
DMaion Ill - 9:30a.m.
Division 11 - 1:30 p.m .
Division I - •:ao p.m .

loluruy ftnolo
iliYision 111 - ·9:30 a.m.
Division II -1 p:m .
Oiviston I - 4:30p.m .

.

·

_... •.- lpiCIGI ~•"

..

,_,,..coli.

--~(W· .
(J04) 61J·1400

�The Daily Sentinel

Foreman wins award
NEW HAVEN, W.Va.The
United
States
Achievement Academy has
announced that . Hannah
Elizabeth Foreman has been
named a Who's Who in
Foreign Language award
winner.
This award is a presti·
gious honor very few stu·
dents can ever hope to
attain. ln fact, the academy
.;.ecogniz.es fewer than I 0
percent of all American
high school students.
Foreman, who attends
Waharna High School, will
appear in the United States
Achievement Academy 's
official yearbook, which is
published nationally . .
The academy selects
USAA winners based on the
Standards of Selection · set
forth by the academy. The
criteria for selection are a
student's academic performance, interest and aptitude, leadership qualities,
responsibility, enthusiasm,
motivation to learn and
improve, citizenship, attitude and cooperative spirit
and dependability.
. Foreman was nominated
tiy her Spanish ll teacher.
Caitlin Park. · ·
Hannah is the d3ughter of
David and Beth Foreman of
· New Haven. She is the
granddaughter of Earl Dean

·PageA6

REGIONAL

Inside

Wednesday, June 4, 2008

r-~------------------------------------------~----~.~----, JeanRou~was
reoentiY named
"Volunteer of the
Yea,. by her peers in

,Pistons lift fo1ip Saunders, ~ B2
~ .... Bucs, Page 86

the .Pleasant Valley
Hospital Auxiliary.
. Roush has setV8d
the organization for
49 years. Shown
with Rou~ are, front
row, at right, Angela
Cleland, assistant
administrator of the

Wednesday, June 4, 2008

LocAL 8cmiDULE. POUEROY - A - ol-lng higl1
ICihool ll'•l'ltt~ aponlng ~ invoMng
1MrM 1mm . . . . .nd O.lla oo&amp;.lt\tiel.

. .T-ondFjj'

Pleasant Valley
Nursing and
Rehabilitation
Center. Back row,

11Moion . llboys~vW!finall,9a.m .
~ng .1 p.m .

......... 7

-~~~~~'DMolon II girls
long jtJII1I tinall, 9 a.m.
Di\lioion II OHSM Championships,

.

~:30p.m.

and Ramona Knight of New
Haven and Joe and Evelyn
Foreman of Portland, Ohio.
Hannah is a member of
the Fairview Bible Church
youth group, the White
Falcon · Marching Band and
~phala
School
Wahama High
Choir. She also has been a
member of the West
Virginia Junior High School
All-State Choir and is a I 0group, was . instrumental in American Red Cross for 45
POINT
PLEASANT, could be built."
year piano student of
estab1ishing
the {irst hospi- years of service. She began
Roush
and
her
husband
of
-Recently
surW.Va.
Sharon
Hawley
of
tal
Gift
Shop,
served as the with the organization as a
rounded by cards and gifts 60 years, ihe late Dale
Middleport, Ohio.
She serves as president of from family and friends. Rou sh, dedicated many Uniform Chairman, worked young girl rolling bandages
her sophomore class and is Jean Roush, talked about ,hours to making sure the in the. blood bank, helped to be used for servicemen
a member of the National being at the dedication of not-for-profit healthcare initiate the first cancer during WWII.
In addition to the Pleasant
Honor Society. She also has Pleasant Valley Hospital in facility became a reality. screenings at PVH with
been invited to attend the September, 1959 and now, They were named to the John Grubb, MD and Young Valley Hospital Auxiliary
Hoby Leadership Academy after 49 years of service, she hospital's Board of Trustees I. Choi, MD, welcomed new and the American Red
residents to the community Cross, Jean has given time
.
has been named "Volunteer for their efforts.
this summer.
the "Welcome to the Point Pleasant Junior
through
"We personally pledged
of the Year" by her peers in
the Pleasant Valley Hospital money for the project. I can Wagon" program and assist- Woman's Club, the Point
remember scrimping and ed in the planning of the Pleasant Woman's Club, the
Auxiliary.
Order of Eastern Star, the
" I eat, sleep and dream saving. but paying our annual Charity Balls.
Pleasant
River
early,"
At 80 years of age, Jean Point
Pleasant Valley Hospital," commitment
Davis,
Susan
Wright Jean laughed. "From the explained Jean.
have
physically Museum (Dale and she
may
Dingess, Dennis Donahue, very beginning, my husNever one to remain idle, slowed down a bit but her were charter members) and
Ronnie Eblin,
Valerie
Jean
immediately joined the enthusiasm · · for voluo- the St. Peter Lutheran
Preas!
Edinger,
Sally band and I believed in a newly-formed
Auxiliary teerism has. not been damp- Church, where she and
Carleton Ervin, Terri Fife, community hospital. We
went
door
to
door
trying
to
frrst sec- . ened. She was honored at a Dale have been members
where
she
was
the
Joe Games, James Haning,
retary of the volunteer special function by the since 1955.
raise
money
so
the
facility
Dave Harris, Jennifer Wise
Harrison, Kelly Hawk, Tim
Hood, Randy Houdashelt
and
Teresa
VanMeter
Houdashell, Joni Murray
Jeffers, Lisa Jett, Tana
Burbridge Kennedy, Mike
Lavendar, Patricia Anne
Fitch Marshall, ·Christi
Hess Mash, Paula K.Joes
McCloud, Lori
Wyne
McDaniel, Judy Holliday
Nelson, Tony Richards,
We are ,entering the
Kenny Roush and Lisa
Food
.,..,""·'
summer storm
If you have advance warning of a storm, tum lhe
. Prater Roush, Megan Miller
Roush, Paul j{upe, Sheila
season.
It is
":·
,
controls on your
to the coldest~·
Sargent
Sheets,
Kay
iniportant to tie
Food will stay frozen'
· n 38 and 48 houti 1n a
Vujaklija Sutphin, Kim
aware of
fully-bided freezer if you keep the door cloaed. if.
Krautter-Thompson, Don
approaching seve~e
Tillis, Pat Vaughan, Scott
the freezer is half full, the food generally will keep
Warner, Mike Wayland,
weather that could
for 24 hours. A freezer full of meat gef181ally stays
David Williamson. and Nita
bring
with
il
frozen longer than a freezer fuU of baked goodS.
Rusche! Yost.

SPORTS BRIEFS

.2nd annual Southern
~'Hustlin' Tornado" ·
Basketbaii·Camp

Roush na1ned volunteer of the year

RACINE Southern
High School will be hosting
its second annual Southern
"Hustlin'
Tornado"
Basketball
Camp
on
Monday, June 16 through
Thursday, June 19 from 9
a.m. to I noon for boys and
girls
entering
second
through sixth grades. The
camp will be conducted by
SHS head basketball coach
Jeff CaldwelL
Camp insttuctors will be
members of the coaching
staff along with ClllTCnt and
former varsity basketball
players
at . Southern.
Fundamentals· will be
stressed with awards being
given for compet,itions in 3on-3, horse and free throws.
· · Cost of the camp is $35 or
. $60 for two campers from
the. same family. All ,
campers will receive TShirts. Registration will be
from 8:30 to 9:00 a.m. on
the first day of the camp.
· : Checks should be written
to the Southern Athletic
Boosters, and ·brought with
the campers name, grade,
Home and emergency
phone numbers, t-shirt size,
and .p arent's signature. If
campers brought home a
camp form from school,
they should fill out the
camp form with the
required information. If
~c~ have questions
they should call Coach
CAldwell at 949-3129.
·

Class of '78 reunion held
ROCK SPRINGS - The
Meigs High School Class of
1978 recently held its 30th
Class Reunion at the
Riverside Golf Course in
Mason, W.Va. with a total of
84 classmates and guests
attending.
A snack buffet was provided, along with door
prizes and favors. J\ special
DVI) of all past rellnions
was presented to each classmate. Entertainment was
provided by DJ, Richard
Payne of Bidwell and classmates participated in a game
oftrivta from the 1970s.
. Classmates
attending
were:Joyce Bing Ash, Paula
Ashley, Becky Ball, Larry
Ball and Rita Bailey Ball,
Roy
Bareswilt,
Rory
Bartrum, Ron Casci, Paige
Smith Cleek, Terri Robson
Cochran, Rhonda Hudson
Cullums, Beverly Bishop
Davis, Peggy Girolami
Davis, Velvet Swisher

Summer Stonn Season ·
Be Prepared .to Take Cover, Watch for
Power Outages, Pet Safety

ref=

Local Weather
Wednesday ••• Showers
and thunderstorms likely.
Some thunderstorms may
produce gusty winds and
small hail. Highs in the mid
80s. Southwest .winds 5 to
10 mph. Chance of rain 70
percent.
Wednesday
night•••
Mostly cloudy. Showers and
thunderstorms likely in the
evening...Then a chance of
showers and thunderstorms
after midnight. Some thul\4erstorms may produce
~usty winds and small hail
m the evening. Lows in the
upper 60s. South winds 5 ·to
I 0 mph. Chance of rain 60
percent.
Thursday-Mostly sunny.
1;[01 with highs _around 90.
' Southwest winds 5 to I 0
mph with gusts up to 20

cloudy. Lows in the upper
60s. Southwest winds 5 to
I 0 mph. Early.
Fnday and
Friday
night...Partly cloudy. Highs
in the lower 90s. Lows in
the upper 60s.
Saturday
through
Sunday••• Mostly
cloudy
with a ·chance of showers
and thunderstorms. Hi~hs in
the upper 80s. Lows 10 the
mjd 60s. Chance of rain 30
percent.
Sunday night ...Mostly
cloudy. Lows in tl;le upper
60s.
Monday... Partly sunny
-with a chance · of showers
and thunderstorlns. Highs in
the lower 90s. Chance of
rain 30 percent.
Monday night and
Tuesday... Mostly cloudy.
Lows in the mid 60s. Highs
'\!hursc1ay nigbt. ..Partly in the upper 80s.

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Century Aluminum (NASDAQ) ,

Wa....., (NYSE)- 57.77
Wancly'a (NYSE) - 27Al3
•••aBanco (NYSEI- 21AO
WOI1hinglon (NYSE) - 11.32

-·tor. . . .

· Daly .toe~&lt; ;eporta _.. ... 4
p .m. ET cloaing quateo ol...,.
3, 211111, proMeel by EdwM'II- floiMICial
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• (7401 4414441 and tMier
Cllaminy...,... (NASDAQ)llan•o In Polnl P1111W'1t.
5.34
City ...............I[IIG{NASDAO)- 41..12 (-) 574-G174. Me- SIPC.
C Rt w (NYSE) - SI.S3
DuPont (NYSE) - 4U4
US a.nk (NYSE)- 32.14
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a. .... Eleclric (N'i'SE)- 30.46
HMteroDavk*n (N'tSE)-

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Royll Dutcll Slid -12A2
. . . . lk&gt;kl'ng (NASDAQ) -15

••Mil

v...,.....,

When severe weather approaches, lake shelter
and follow these tips:
• Move to the lowest level
• Stay away from windows and glass
• Protect your head and face
• If possible, get under a sturdy !able or other
structure

Wlen thunderstorms threaten, find shelter and
consider this:
• Stay away from windows and glass
• Avoid contact with anything that conducts
electricity

Remember the "30-30 Rule":
If the time between the first flash of lightning and

the resulting thunder is 30 seoo;1ds or leu, the
lightning is close enough to ~-you . After the last
flash of lightning wait 30 minutes beli:h-e leaving

· yOur shelter.

Local Stocks
.a (NYSE)-42.211

lightning, hail,
5trong winds and
possibly tomadou.
During the past 30 years, lightning has killed an
average of 66 people per year.

If you experience a power outage
Tre~t all fd1n wiM •

Tab Care of Your Pets, Too
Be sure your pet is prepared for whatever weather
comes your way.
Consider having a
miaochip implanted in
your pet as a
permanent means of

identification.
Also, think about

llore than half of llflhtnlltf JeaJii.l occur
lifter a Jhunc1en101m ,..·s:o.-:
fM I I Jd.
____

"live" pcw1r llnet

Ne* touch a fallen utility wire, no matter ha.v

.2008 Meigs Flag

.,.._.an Emergency Kit
To best prepare to face a power outage, we
suggest You assemble an ernergeACY kit. Items
you ma,y wish to include are:
• Fll!lshlights and fresh batteries
• Bal.teryi)OWered radios or telev.isions
• Cam.tlaa and matches or lightens
• Dlinkingloookiog water ·
• Portable heatBr (oil or gas)
• Camping equipment such as sleeping bags.
cafl1' stoves, la1llems
• Canned goods and manual can opener
• Manufacturers' instructions for opening
power-operated doors

de\'eloping a "Pet
Disaster Kit" in a sturdy,
plastic container with a tight-fitlir'lg lid lhat ia ready
to take at a momerit's notice. lriclude:

Dogs
•
•

Food
Pooper acooper 8ndtor small plastic bags
• · Crate or portable kerinel
·
'
• Dog colar with 10 tags and leash
• Dog's favorite play toy

harmless it lookS. It can be difficl..tlt to distinguish·
between a poWer line and a cable or telephone
line. All fallen lines should be considered energized Cats
and dangerous. And don't touch anything in
• Food
contact with the line, such as trees, fences or
• Extra litter box, soooper and a week's .
puddles of water, because they can conduct
IUPPIY'of litter
electricity. Keep children and pets away from this
• Crate or por"...,table,..... kennel
potential hazard. Call us at the number on your
• Cat collar with 10 tags and leash
electric bill to report any fallen lines Of equipment.
• Cat's favorite play toy

.)wwl

bMoion II OHSM~ nok

left to right, Michael
Ueving, Chainnan ol.
the Pleasant VaiJev
Hospital Board , ~
Trustee, Alvin A.
laWson, President
and Chief Executive
Oflioer of PVH and
· Charles Fulks,
President of tha
PVH Auxiliary.

t

Football Registration
. Registration is now open
for the 2008 flag football

•

season, the lea~e is open to
boys and girls 10 grades 1-6
beginning with the 2008-09
school.year. The registration
fee is $40 per player, and
$25 for each additional sibling.
The games will lx; played
starting in September on the
Meigs High School practice
field, the final date for registtation is July !st. The
payment must . also be
reeeived by July lst.A
workout/combine will . be
. held ·Oil July 26th at 9 am at
f&gt;{eigs lligh School. All
check must be made out to
Meigs
Flag
Football
League, P.O. Box 7 51 ,
Poll'ieroy, Ohio 45769.
· To regililer on-line go to
www.meigsffl.com,
for
more infomiation go to tbe
website or call 7 4Q-541-

1222.

Eagle hoops camp
t-shirts DOW in
:. CHESTER - Camp . tshirts from the recent 2008
Eastem~gle basketball
i:amp arc now in and available to
picked up Baum
~~~r during business

CoNrACrUs

.f'eiC -1-740-446-2342 eld. 33 .
HW-.3008.

~~- aportsemydoHv-&gt;tinol.com

("&amp;!at!
~ ... ldolpt~ SpoiU Wrtt.r

.....33

t-&gt;~

-ldolpllemydollyoontinel.com
{1-«!)~..... 33
~Oft¥1011y!r1bun0.oom

.._, Crwft, 8ports Writer

o.vki ,....,tiC~!IIM, Ohio

{740) 448 2342, -

33

lcrumO~IIyregnr.com

'

Lakers-Celtics:
A rivalry thai's .been on break
.

WALTHAM, MASS. (AP) Those familiar "Beat L.A.!" chants,
once the sweetest sound of springtime in Bosto14 were replaced by a
most unrecognizable chorus in the
dead of winter last year.
"MVP!" cries f~ a Los Angeles
Laker in the Boston GII!Jien.
Oops, · make that the TD
Banknorth Garden.
Plenty bas changed in the two
decades since the last NBA finals
series between the Lakers and
Celtics, and not only the arenas
where it's contested.
The rivalry that ntade the NBA
must-see TV - the finals were still
shown 9n tape delay when Magic
Johnson was a rookie- was largely ignored in recent years. to the
point that some Boston backers
couldn't even bother to show up
when the Lakers were in town in
January 2007, making it easier for
all those Los Angeles fans to come
cheer Kobe Bryant,
That's not the way it was in the

day s of Johnson same, the philosophy of basketball
and Larry Bird, isn 't the same. The towns are still
when you could- the same. A lot of the same type of
n't think of one people. Bean town is still Beantown,
without the other that 's for sure. But they've won a
- those players baseball World Series now, so
or their teams.
they're not so bedraggled."
"We
talked
Back in the mid- 1980s, when they
about it every met for the championship three
day," John son times in a four-year span, Los
said
Tuesday. Angeles and Boston had the most
"Actually. Larry important rivalry in pro sports. It
.probably will feel the same way. lasted through three cities, starting
During the regular season, that's all with the Celtics' sweep of the
we watched. Where are the Celtics' Minneapolis Lakers in 1959, and
Did they win last night?''
more than 25 years.
With the Lakers and Celtics meet- . Now it's been almost that long
ing again Thursday in the NBA since t)leir last meeting, in 1987,
fmals, the ' NBA got Johnson and also Boston's most recent finals
Bird together on a conference call to appearance. So while veterans such
talk about the way things were then. as Paul Pierce and Bryant can talk of
But it's so long ago, it has no rele- Kevin McHale's hard foul tak.edown
vance today.
of Kurt Rambis in 1984, or
"It doesn 't mean anything now, Johnson's baby sky hook to pull out
· and there's nothing that's sintilar a victory in Boston in 1987, the
now," Lakers coach Phil Jackson younger players in this series havesaid. 'The coaching staffs aren 't the no memories of . anything special

between the teams.
"Last time i1 was a rivalry. I was
born . It was in '86 (actually '87). so
it's been a long time," Celtics second-year point guard Rajon Rondo
said. "I know a little bit about the
history, but not too much."
The Celtics haven 't always been
relevant since, managing only four
playoff appearances from 19962007. The Lakers went on to have
meaningful rivalries with San
Antonio, Sacramento and most
recently, Phoenix. Even Miami felt
like a rival after acquiring Shaquille
0' Neal from Los Angeles, since that
game got the marquee Christmas
Day national TV slot three years
running.
Meanwhile, Celtics-Lakers has
been mostly out of sight, out of
mind.
ESPN showed a game between the
teams two years ago, but ABC hasn't bothered since it landed the

Plellse see Rlv.lry, B:l

Philadelphi
a Phillies'
Pat
Burrell,
center, is
greeted at
the plate
by Geoff
Jenkins,
left. and
Chase
Utley after
hitting a
two-run,

tie-breaking homer
in the

sixth
inning of a
baseball
game with

the
Cincinnati
Reds on
Tuesday in
Philadelphi

a. The
Phillies

won 3-2.
AP photo

BurreD's blast Hfts Phillies past Reds, 3-2
PHILADELPHIA (AP) Ken Griffey Jr. didn't get
anything to hit his only time
up. Pat Burrell didn't miss
the tasty, hanging slider ·he
saw.
Burrell hit a tiebreaking
two-run horner, Adam Eaton
pitched 6 2-3 impressive
mnings and the Philadelphia
Phillies beat the Cincinnati
Reds 3-2 Tuesday night.
"We're on a good roll
now," Burrell said after the
NL East leaders won for the
eighth time in nine games.
"We want to keep it going."
Griffey walked as a pinchhitter .in the eighth inning to
remain one 'shy of 600 home

runs. Griffey wasn 't in the
Reds' lineup for the second
straight game because of
general soreness. He's been
bothered by a sore left knee,
though he could return
Wednesday..
Edwin Encarnacion hit a
solo homer and tripled for
two of Cincinnati's five hits.
Rookie sensation Jay Bruce
had a checked-swing, infield
single in three at-bats.
Junior represented · the
tying run when he came up
with one out, but walked on
four pitches and pitcher
Bronson Arroyo ran for him.
A sellout crowd gave
Griffey a standing ovation

Prep Scerebaard
OHSAA. SI'ATE
SoFI'BALL PAIRINGS
Pairing&amp; .t or the etate high school &amp;oftbaH toumament at Firestone Stadium in

Akron :

Jlrywl w • rs, Spom Writer

-=al

Bl

The Daily Sentinel

Ql\'50"'

· Nonh canton Hoover (27·2) vs. Grove
Clly (28·3), Friday, 3 p.m.; Elyria (24· 1)
vs. Mason (24-8) . Friday 5:30p.m.

Lakewood St. Edward (23-&amp;-1 ) vs.
West Chester Lako~ West (26-1) .

Finals Saturr:IBy, 1 p.m.

DtVIIIQNU
Clyde (24·2) vs . Canlield t21·4·1 ).
Friday 10 a.m.: Dover (19-11) vs. Colma
(23-3), Friday 12:30 p.m.
Cha~ip: Saturday, 3 p.m.
DMIIQNW
Wolilngtorl (22-4) vs. W. Uberty-Salem
(31~1~. Thursday 3 p.m.; Bloomdale
Elmwood (28-1) vs. Hebroo Lakewood
(30-2). Thuroday 5:30p.m.
Chomplonahlp: Saturday, 12:00 p.m.

Annu~l

.
PITTSBURGH (AP)
_The Stanley Cup was out of
its crate, getting one last
p&lt;ilish.
The Detroit Red Wings
had rallied; taken the lead
and were only 35 seconds ·
from hoisting that shiny
prize. That's when a player
no one expected to be on the
ice struck for the Pittsburgh
Penguins. ·
·
Three overtime-s later.
with 23-year-old MarcAndre Fleury stopping
everything the Red Wings
shot at him, a goal shortly
before I a.m. Tuesday sent
the series back to Pittsburgh
- and maybe put a shred of
doubt into the minds of
those in Hockeytown . .
"Here we go again," Red
Wings forward Kris Draper
said Tues&lt;4ly after returmng
to Pittsburgh. "We would
have loved to have been
able to wrap things up, but
that wasn't tlie case. We ' ve
got another crack at it.
"We're still up 3-2 in the
series and we .have another
opportunity
to
close
Ptttsburgh out.''
After their .4-3 win prevented the Red Wings from
winning a fourth NHL
championship in I I sea,
sons, the Penguins hope to
get the 'Igloo rocking
Wednesday night for Game

er Ryan Freel to a strained
right hamstring in the sixth.
Freel · crumbled to the
ground after taking several
steps out of the batter's box
following a grounder to.
shortstop. Freel quickly
hopped up and hobbled off
the field on his own. He ' II
fly , io
Cincinnati on
Wednesday fnr further evaluation.
''He said he heard something pop." Reds manager
Dusty Baker said. "That was 6.
just bold luck."
Detroit was 34.3 seconds
Eaton (2-3) allowed one away from finishing off the
run and three hits; outpitch- Penguins on Monday night

Pieue see Reds. Bl

PINM see G - 6, Bfi

PVH Hospice Tribute
'

DtVISION u
Semifinals Thursday, to a.m. and 1
p .m.
CuyahOga Falls Walsh Jesoh (26-3) " ·
Kenton R&lt;lge (20-6).
Canal Winchester (21 -12) vs . Chardon

Notre Dame-Cathedral Latin (22·5).
Finals Saturday. 10a.m.

Championship: Saturday, 5:30p.m.

and booed when reliever
Tom Gordon didn't throw a
strike. ·
"We didn 't want him to hjt
one," Phillies manager
Charlie Manuel said. "The
tension was there. The
excitement was there. You
. could tel I. You could feel it.
It's good for the game. We
definitel y didn't want him to
tie the game up."
Griffey hit No. 599 at.
home Saturday against
Atlanta. The only players to
reach 600 are Bilrry Bonds,
Hank Aaron , Babe Ruth ,
Willie. Mays and Sammy
Sosa.
The Reds lost center field-

Penguins,
Red Wings
prepare for
Game6

DIYtStoN lit
SemiflfJBIS Friday.· 10 a.m. and 1 p.m.
Hamiltori
'Badin
(25·6)
v&amp;.
Wheelersburg (28·1).
Canton Central Catholic (28·3)
Coldwater (27-4) .

Butterfly Release &amp; Celebration

'

'

Members of the Pleuut Valley Home Health &amp;
Hospice team would like to express our sincere
aratitude to . .follQwing corporatesponsors who
made this
'
p,ossible ...

Finals S.turday, 4 p.m.

Dt1JISION IV
SemifinalS Friday, 4 p .m. and 7 p .m .

Patrick Henry

(25~2 )

vs. Fort Loramie

~25 ~ 3)

vs. Gates MWis

(2().11 )

Benin Hiland

Gilmour Academy (24-4).
Fin.l/s Saturday, 7 p.m.

llftUp'" IV

t;onvoy CIM1VIow (211-1) va. Danvlll&amp;
~). Thuroday 10 a.m.: N: Lewisbuf'l
· Triad (1i-9) vs. · Warren JFK (20·•),
Thurwday 12:30 p.m.
Champjonollip: Saturday, 10 a.m.

OHSAA. STATE
BASEBALL PAIRINQI
PalrlogS lor ihO 11810 h~ achool bue·
baH toumement at Cooper Stadium In
Columbus:

DIVISION I
~Thursday. 4 p.m. .1nd 7 p.m.
Cincinnati Archbishop Moelier (25-6)
va. CMiveland St. Ignatius {27-5).

OHSAASTATE
TRACK &amp; FIELD
Divisional stan times tor the state high
school track and tiek:t championships
this ~ .al J8SS8 Ow&amp;ns Stadium
in Columbus:

Fl'kllv eemmn~1a
DMaion Ill - 9:30a.m.
Division 11 - 1:30 p.m .
Division I - •:ao p.m .

loluruy ftnolo
iliYision 111 - ·9:30 a.m.
Division II -1 p:m .
Oiviston I - 4:30p.m .

.

·

_... •.- lpiCIGI ~•"

..

,_,,..coli.

--~(W· .
(J04) 61J·1400

�Page 82 •

The Daily Sentinel

Wednesday, June 4,

www.mydailysentinel.com

2008

Wednesday; June 4, 2008

www.mydllltpa: :lhJill.com

Person gets 2nd interView with Bulls Pistons fire coach Flip Satinders
CHICAGO
(AP)
Sacramento Kings assistant
coach Chuck Person is set
to have a second interview
with the Chicago Bulls for
their vacant head coaching
job.
A person familiar with the
search, who spoke to The
Associated Press on the
condition of anonymity
because the search is on~&lt;&gt;:
ing, said Person was flymg
. to Chicago on Tuesday. The
interview would happen
either later Tuesday night or
Wednesday.
Person joined the Kings
last year after spending the
previous two as an assistant
with Indiana, where he
played six of his 13 NBA
seasons.

t!trtbune - Sentinel :. l\egister
CLASSIFIED

Person might be a long
shot for a job that numerous
repons have going to Doug
Collins,
but
"The
Rifleman" was known to hit
a few during a career in
which he averaged 14.7
points and shot 36.2 percent
from 3-point range.
The Bulls and Collins,
who coached a young
Michael Jordan and Scottie
Pippen in the late 1980s
before the dynasty took off,
acknowledged last week
having discussions and said
there would be more talks
once Collins' broadcast
duties with TNT ended.
That happened when the
Los Angeles Lakers eliminated the San .Antonio
Spurs m the Western

Conference
finals
on
AUBURN Hll.LS, Mich.
Thursday.
( AP) - In the moniing, tbe
The Chicago Sun-Times;
Pistons fired Aip
citing an
unidentified Detroit
Saunders. By tbe aftemoOii,
source, reponed this week the players were put on
that an announcement could notice.
come as soon as Tuesday, . "I' m not going to sit here
with the Chicago Tribune and make Aip tbe scapegoa~."
saying Collins was the president of basketball Operafront-runner and that the tions Joe Dumars said
search w.ould end this week. Tuesday. "Everybody is in
But Chicago radio station play."
WSCR-AM
reported
Dumars publicly put his
Tuesday· that chairman entire lineup on the trading
Jerry Reinsdorf wants more bloclc, less than a week after
time to .decide whether to tbe Pistons lost in tbe Eastern
Conference final for the third
hire his friend.
It's possible one of the · straight year. ·
Among those available:
many candidates general
fuur
players who have been
manager John Paxson has
together
since winning the
interviewed could wind up
2004
NBA
title together, plus
as an assistant and an heir
another starter who just finAI' photo
apparent to the new coach.
ished his fourth sea5on with In this April 8 file photo, Detroit Pistons coach Rip Saunders
~-= are 110 sacred cows shouts instructions to ·his team in the second half of the
met 10 times in .the finals growing up in Los Angeles, here," Dumars said "You lose Pistons' 98-94 ·loss to the New Yo111 Knicks in an NBA basfrom 1959-87, with the I got to see it firsthand. My that sacred&lt;Ow stalils when ketball game in Auburn Hills, Mich.
Celtics winning the first hatred of the Celtics went a you lose three straightyears." coach.
Celtics, -Dumars said he bad
eight. From 1983-87 alone, little deeper. Once we got a
fromPageBI
Messages seeking comment
Three starters -. Chauncey seen enough from this group.
they played nearly · 30 chance to play. them, you
left on Saundefs' rell Billups, Richard llamilton,
"We didn't ~ it dooe,"
tried to avenge all the loss" phone.
Tayshauo Prince - played Dumars said. ' As I walked
NBA' s television rights. · games, counting playoffs.
Since then, it's been es that Elgin (Baylor),
Saunders sill!led a four-year . for all three coaches, Rasheed out of The Palace, I bad a real
TNT, the league's other
lerry
(West),
and
Wilt
twice
a
year,
and
that's
it.
contract
wortfi up to $26 mil- Wallare was acquired in 2004 sense of calm."
broadcast partner, hasn't
(Chamberlain)
went
So
can
the
current
players
lion
three
years ago. His deal and Antonio McDyess signed
Dumars was at ease
televised a Lakers-Celtics
through."
came
less
than
a
day
after
in
2005.
·
because
be knew exactly what
understand
the
rivalry
the
game since 2002.
No
matter,
Johnsdn
says.
terms
of
''Tbere
are
25,
26
teams
that
he
wanted
to do.
Detroit
finalized
"Well ,
the
Celtics way their predecessors did?
larry
Brown's
$7
million
sev·
would
love
to
be
where
we
Ftrst,
fire
Saunders. Then.
They'll
figure
it
out.
"I don't think those guys
weren't good enough to be
"Will they understand the erance packa~e after he are, but good has not been trade at least one of his
on TV and the Lakers .were will know what the rivalry
helped them wm a title and .......t
gh " Du
·d starters in a move or two he
rivalry?
Trust me, when almost
always good with Shaq and is about until they play that
mars S31 •
repeat in his two sea- r.;--::-:: enou '
'I appreciate everythinJt that doesn't e~t to ha'fu:;n
Kobe ," Celtics guard Sam first game in front of the that ball goes up on 50
Thursday,
they'll
underW;e
Pistons
averaged
near_
Rick
Carlisle, Larry · rown before the
A drnft on une
fans
in
Boston,"
said
Cassell said .
stand,"
he
said.
Jy
59
victories
in
three
regular
and
Aip
Saunders
have
done,
26.
Cooper,
a
Laker
Michael
"The intensity is not up
Wallare seems to be tbe
"It might not be under- seasons under Saundelli, wbQ but I also know Jbey were
to that level right now. I from 1979-90 whom Bird
banded
some
great
teams
player
mm1 likely to be dealt
think if they get to the has said defended him as standing what we went trailed only ftred Dallas
"Jt's
not liR they had to beCause of his ~year confinals, if we play the Lakers well as anyone;. "I wouldn' t through, Larry . and I, but Maverick&amp;· coach Avery take bad teams and make tract, inconsistent play and
next year in the fmals and say they hale us, but the they'll have their own Johnson by two wins and San them iood The next ooach is powerful pmonality that lifts
the year after that, I think passion that they don't rivalry because it's for all Anlonio Spurs coach Gregg
· to inherit a~ team." his teammates and dragS them
the rivalry will become like want them to even score a the marbles, it's for every- Popovich by ,a victory duriilg ~Cuny 15 tbe lead- downdepeodingonhismood.
thing. It doesn't matter the
it was in the '80s. But right basket.
was 30-21 in the iiJg ~?"'m.tonme.be ~:::!:s
"I view him the
war,
"I don't think (the current whether they understand · S~rs
now it ' s just two teams
ffi
~
the
Pis10ns
losli1lh
~
"""""""'
that
I
do
all
the
other
guys,
'
players) had the sense that the rivalry or not. They are PIayo s or
who respect one another."
'
He was on Sauwm• staff and Dumars insisted. "Make no
mistake, .everybody is in play
At least there's still the a lot of us had growing up going to create their own mg in Game 6 of the Eastan is a filQner Piston.
new
rivalry,
right,
on
Bryant-Ray Allen feud. watching the '60s, '70s
~~nf:":ac~ ~ Other candidates include right now."
.
They developed a dislike of Celtics-Lakers rivalry. Me Thursday night."
ence finals games, the most Johnson 3fld Terry Poru:r,
Before roming to Detroit,
each other when Allen was
byanNBAcoachsince 1971 3IICJihl;rass1stantlastseasoom Saunders was 411-326 with
out West playing in Seattle,
NBA FINALS
without reachiqg the NBA _ Delr91t .. and . a . fonner the Minnesota Timberwolves.
so much so that it was
finals, according to STAT'S.
M!l~ Bucks coach.
He led MinneSOia to eight
rumored· that one of the
Under Saunders Detroit
'I m gomg to talk to a rew straight postseason appearbecame the second team in people this wedt," Dumars ances, including seven firstreasons Allen refused to
league history to lose in the Sai!l ·"As we nonnaiiY. do, round exits and an appearllllre
consider suiting up for the
ro•
·,d before the NBA finals we'll act quickly. 'J1Iis will not in the 2004 conference finals.
U.S. national team was
three'
ears in a row, · · ·
be a loog-drawn-out process." After winning franchisebecause he dido 't want to
S1-D
Dumars decided a year ago recool 58 games, he was fired
the Celtics from 1fs]~51,
play with. Bryant.
(12-3~
according
to
STATS.
to
brin2 back his key players with a 25-26 mait during the
Maybe they can have the
Saunders · . extended as well as Sanndcrs, while 2004-05 seasoo. ·
McHale-Rambis moment
Detroit's Eastern Conferenoe infusing eDCig)' with rookies
Celtics guard Sam Cassell
in this series?
finals appear.mce streak to six and young reserves.
expects Saundefs, one of his
"Everything's
fine ,"
years, the first fi:ancbise to
But after watching the former coaches, to be back in
Bryant said. "Everything's
accomplish that feat since the Pistons blow a 10-Jllld lead the lea2ue.
·
FEl Of;_,. o10.S
fine."
Los
Angeles
takers
of
the
with
I
0-plus
minutes
left
in
"He'll
get
a
job
real
sooo-31.4
Oh well.
1980s, after Rick Carlisle Game 6 of tbe rooferenoe maybe even today tJr tomor- 1
SOURCE: ~8rlrrr"d' •w lei" ••
The Celtics and Lakers
started it in his two scmSQ0\1 as_ finals against .the · Boston row," Cassell said.
. .·

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w.w:u
~noo:;;~:::,;.::;l
.., . . . . . . , . . . . . ... .... ffllln . . pt ' ' · 1DI'Ginllrlllkllllfl•
CUiisclkwi wit be.._. irl ... rn.t•w....._edltk&gt;n.
....... eoc ..... Ailll •c.-.t . - c.rd . . . . .. • All .......... ad dw: ..... .ubjlct tD ... ...-_, fair HoUIIIng Act of 1968. • This
....... . . . .__.... . . ,.-.... £OE . . . . . . . . . . . . ,
lifll ..... M!Y.Owatiwir•lfl \'iDidon of the • •· Will not be rnpon1ibleior

......---'""'1
..-;;·;;;;CARI.:;.;;.YLE;;;;;;;;;;;;;---------,1"
GlwA!
I~ ~ 'KIT
I

Ohlo'llllor
P.lli . . . . . .. .

~

Borders$3.00/perad
Grcnphlcs SOC for smoU

•· dey
................. for

~~~;~--~.rrtku~-~"""'~~~·~p~~·~·~·-§-§..~· 2...,...~--. .......__..., ......,...
................... .......

: .-!:.2 -•lndude-A~
::':""___
.._

Now you am have borders and graphics
~
addeclioyo~rclassifiedods
(.~

• . . . . . --be JWapild*

.... v..... .,. • ..,, •••• ......_

Su • aotut Ads
Should Include 1bese Items
To Help Get !hlp aoose ...

same

-

The Daily Sentinel • Page 83

t~l
Cleaning
Service.
COmmerica\ &amp; Residential,
Experienced w/Relerenoes

·

All,_,..,_ Mvertislng
inth!.nuw I 5 ill
.-;ect to the Fedeml
Fair ttou.ing .Ac'l of 1181
whictl nwkw H 1"-glll to
ad 11M "any

p .... ,.,,ce,llmildon ar
clecrimkM!tion b..:l on
...,., ootor, l'tiUgion,. -~~
:t.mH~ ...auu or Mtloftlt

odgin. or any Intention to
mHe any uuch
pltlfrerenoe, limitation or
dlacriminlltion."

Thlu newepaper will not
tcnowingly accept
ltdveoliwmeuts for r.al
emte which it; in
violation of 1he law. OW'
I'Mdefa are hereby
informed thai all
dWI!IIIings ach~ertfMI'Cf' in

tnil newspaper ere
available on un eq1111l

n...,;:0 P:;,::PD;;";;;"";;;;"'::.;•;:•:;:;·..,;,;•·....I

304-675-3~08 leave mes· - - - - - - _58_:ge______ HUD Homes• 3 bed, onty
$ 17,0001 for listmgs BOO ·
620-4946 e)( A019

For fast results, advertise in The Daily Sentinel classifieds!
.,.....-&lt;»... .- R:•s ... t

t~

..c::: .... &lt;»-,.

-----=-••~ r-.ilc::.e:a~- ..... .....,~--.,..--~----.:&gt;..eaa-.eo~~

~

........ ..,... ,....,. ... .- -=»c:..:...-_

CLASSIRED INDEX

PUBUC NOTICE
The
Village
Of
Syracuse is oeq.-tlng
engl.-ring pnopoule
for ... - n g pool-

~: Replacemenl

Queetiona may be
dlreclad 1D
llholfloOMOv•lmn.lllll
The Vlllloge
... right to l'ljecl: ony

ow--

:U:."':s,__

Of
opproxlllllllely 1500 Eilc
Cunnlngluom,
IMt ol exlating 8 Inch lllooyor
· line along Rov June4,18,20011
JonesRoad. n.pooJect would Include all
connections
ond
Public Notice
oppurtancn I I - -

.cl.
2. Conotructlon ol a
. _ 6 Inch line
: from Ror JonestolheRulllicHIIIa-.
Approxlllllllely 1200
wllh three lire
hydo 1111a, vorlous connectlons and oppurtenancea 81 . - . .
3. lnalaltmion o1 ~
.,... ..lve(IIPRVYaull
wtlh . . - , and · Unaa and appurte"""""" a to
eotwi8CI1he Syracuae
water ayatem to the
- 0 1 ' eyltem tor
backup- 181 vice.
4. lnaUoll . . . . Inch
Hne from , . _ nre
hydoedatPhiiiiOMin
Ruatle Hills -.o to
exllllng · hvdrant on
ll(.dgamonlllrlll.
Engl,_,lng Mrvicft
-lnciudtfl! .....•'ll
do•lnge and Ollloinlng . llfiiii'ORI,
poapeatlaoo and ......
"' bid _ _ .., onlile auperwtalon af
-ion
inapectlona, pnp-

eo.-.-

In ...
Court af llolp County,
Ohio

LanyW.aw-,alat.
Plaltodll
...
n.o.... H. lludtov,al

at.,

Oalexloo..

c.. No.~

Lagat Notlca
0 I , _ . , . . _ H.
Haadlev, whoM IMt
" - " addNal 5176 . illdcrle A....
Newlik, CA M54IO;
'llvrtle Haldley niUi
Myrtle
Comllack,
Adclren
-;
John
Cool Ill ell,
Adclren
U-;
Robert 8 Blll)'l,
Add.- Unkl-1;
- Anna 1M 1t111'dley,
AIUo-Ut•-~-

lhelr ~ -

-

•ura -.- .....

by thlllled IIIII on . .
11th dar af April, 2DDit,
larrY W• ...,._

-

a-.

Rewa J.
Plllltll&amp;, ftleCI tllllr
I 4 I 1.11 ..... Wt
1'611- '
rlnJ

flam ... P' • "calion in ANCE DUE ON CONllhlct1 1D aid FIIIIATION OF SALE
.......,..mt.
n. ... ralul did not
Dentae
L
Bii!1CII Include an Interior
.(011421411
a.-otlon ol lhe

=

bot•a• LG1a &amp; JAil 7 Boalnga ..,

comnctora and MY
C1 lOft
9lhe"
"'-of ..... Cauollll,
' earyfor ... IUCIIJIIul OH, . . . . . oompMiionaf ... prolo llu.OI•Cf•DU .

..,.1oM-

«t.

qua--

Poopoalla
eiiiiJ
include
. and eo.pao1ea af.,....
tlnll on almllor PfOJ,
ecta, liiOng with till
Fal8l ClOIII af yooK .....,._
-for-proJect.
P10paalla be
I o~ 1D Fred L
car.nt.
Mullnwp,
Aodoo~nhiloator
for
:-::..: Sro uae,
1M
'"-111A..,
M"S I rt,Ohlo45710
no._ lhM1 •:00 P.ll.
J4/kr 7, 2001.

v.-.

::a

=:r:-::raltollll
E. Beegle,
Lot No. land I ~Ohio SINal, :..;;.:~~~:.-:::
Pooi60W, Ohio 457a llolp County Sl.m f*t ot Lot HcL I af J.F. Pooperty
Ownen: Lot 313 _. 1110 _ .
(7401112-Q30
Attornav For n. Bullington'&amp; Addition Molino Fietda
Lot 312, T - 1 - .
(517,14,21 , 21,'(514,11 Plaltill"
1D the Villoge of PriorllaedRola. .- : Ringe 1 3 - . I I
srr-oatrooosllo.cl tlR.221,PIIge3tll
,_,....ln"'*-12.
P.O. Boll 868
to Q1eleo E. llld lllloy P P N : I 2 0 - ...... «11 af ... llolp
Public Notice
Twinlbuog,Ohlo- A. Ct•"'"'l' oa rocorc1- 00070.000,120- County Daed Bgal&lt;a,
3J0.4Z5 1201 .
edlnDaed-23hl 00071.000,120 ·- Caunly af llolpSHERFFSALES
C5121,21,(514
Poge
171, 111tt1ga 00073 . 000,120- llliaSIIIIIafOhto: '
~ASE
IIUIIBER:
Counly . - ' a 00074.000, llld 12111- n.:t I: llyl ••• on
07CY127
0111ce, 11o1p County, ~
. . &amp;II ..._ a1 1Nnt
w.na ....., Publlc:Notlce
Ohio,-belngaport APPRAISED
.AT Straetin•..-n It,lllllaoraiAII 1-o
af100acntlotNo.2tl. $55,0011 TERIIS OF~- ... I 'in'lilllld
Plilloodll
SHERFF
SALES T-owlolp - 1- Noo11o, SAL£: CANNOT BE I p.t af . . Vllegll af
VS ·
CASE
NUIIBER: Ronge - 13- .- 1, SOLDFORLESSntAN llld' 1 ot,
llllelp
Leo 0, a.lley &amp; "**a 07C'11.08
Su11on
Township, 213
OF
THE Counly, Ololo, Ill lhe
a.lley Ill at
.,.,_
Bank llolp Counly, St1i111 af APPRAISED VALUE. Sol II ul af
DEFEHliUfTS
....lonlol
Trvat Olllo and f*11cu1e11'. 111% OOWit ON DAY Of' l.til No. • in
COURJ OF co•ON Con;""' a ~. deaclill8d oalotlowl: SALE, CASH OR CEll- AJ lb• to ......_.;
PLEAS,IEIGS COUN- ale
.
101518" iron nFEO CHECK, BAL- In a E lllr
TY, OHIO.
.
Plalnlltl VS pin
HI
at ... AliCE DUE ON COli- dlt.clion -.g 1M
.. PUA S I"IICE OF AN Flelda a1 a1 OEFEN- North- cornar af F1R11A110N OF SA1.E Soulh h af llald La1
ORDER OF SALE 10 OANTS COURT OF llald Lot HcL I af lhe The _..tut did No. •II Jill a af
IE W1EO FAOII CO-ON
PLEAS, J.F.
Bufllngton'a . , lto. . lot 110 ~ -.c. a1
SAID COURT • 11tE IIElGS COUNTY, OHIO. Addition;
.....tnoo11on of 1M light anglea in •
ABOVE
EN1111..ED In ......__ af M1 Thence liking ... .......
1M F•lt A U 110
M:J'ION,
I
WILL onler af ute Iii Not1h line of aid Lot ~ E. I 1(111, leal; ...,_ ill •
~ 10 IALE AT dlo- froM South . . . . 35' 24" ,llllelp
It I . - I'UILIC AUCnON ON coun ln.,. _ _ Eat . • .dlola- a1 Alton..,
For Tile _ _ . . _ _
THEFRONTSTEPSOF 1led ICUon, I wtll111D.tllllaoiiD • SM" Plilloilllf
afllaldLaiHcL••,._
THE lllBQS COUNTY . _ I i i . . Ill ..... lnln pin 1111; ·
....,_ &amp; A!llue
- a f 118 laol Iii . .
COURT HOUSE ON Me IIICilon on .,. Thence leaving aalil P.O.Bol •
·
Eoat af 1Nnl
FRIDAY Jllne
af .,. llolp Hortlo line llld along Tlllnoburg,Ohto- tllowal; ....,. in •
2DDit AT 10 A.ll., OF Counlr Court " " ' - . . En1 line af aid 330GS C201
Nutll•lt
dlt.cllon
SAID DAY, T1tE FOL· on Ftldaf, June 27111, Lot HcL
(5121 , 21,CII4
along . . &amp;II..._ af
LOIIIG DESCRIBED 2DD1t Ill 10 1111, af llald . . . . Soot
1 carlhlnl ....... a '
lEAL EITlloTE;
dloy, ... lalaaL'II af 1.ti1 HcL t Ill 1
af 10 laol Iii ...... ot
e
J In . . . . af J1 I I d ...r- 'I I a af 50.1111 laol
Public: Notice
I
Ohio, Countt "' ........ 1 J in . . Ccounlr . . . • .... ...
.
'ho:ll: . . . . . . . .
... in . . Jualllolpaf ofllolplnha.af -IDIIAI-Iila StlBWFIIALES
... af Lat. No_ . i n
lclplo. .
Ohio llld In h Vllop IM"Inon pin . . .., h
CAIE NUl FER: Pill
'a ' 1 II1Nn Iii
Tile
Ill
af
llld EalilllneafLotNo. l; 07CY142
11..-n II
._
11 11 5

--&amp;--

:w~LESS"=
APPRAISED VALUE.
111% D0Mt ON DAY OF
SAL£,CASHORCERTFIED atECI(, BALAliCE DUE ON CONRNIATIONOFSALE
The _ .... did
· . , lnllnlot
ll&amp;lllllnatlon of the
.......
~ E. lleogle,
llolpCouniJStwill.
AIIDrnttv For The
Plilloilllf
Jolin 0. a..nk
5801 ~Drive
44236

"**'• 3311-342
-.Ohio
an

Baglo•••

c:aonv -

27111,...,.

4x4'a For Sole.....-----·-

EMCFS: VOI..UIE 159,
iJiuld .....aoallloloed .., for ... ......,_ •
' t in
af NGE 01157
Public: Nollce
-tlud,
ml1111tlon af ...... lllddlopiHI In lhe APPRAISED
AT IIEIGS
COUNTY
EXCEPTING THERE only. ·
Caunly af llolp $45,0011 .TERIIS OF OFFICE OF ECOIIOIIfROII THE FOUOW- Properly8ddom:12311 SloloafOhto.
SAL£: CANNOT BE IC ANO WOIIKFOIICE

•

I

"

I5J21,

Apartotoanta for ............... ---·--·-··· ..... 440
Auction llld Rae - -·····-·----··--··..810
AulD---780
Auto ~~opa~r&amp;_________
,_,·
..._·--···-··-··.._._,_....- -·.710
Autos
Sole.-----···-·-·····- ···--·····-·- 710
&amp;
Sola-·-··-·-······-·-·· 750

=
=··

-far

DEVELOPMENT

lor

~ ~,
~t

el

YIP

flullding S.~~ Ill!

muat be
--

Bu-,.,.....

=

Ringe 14, Toaold!lp 7
ln . . _ . , ..., _
aflaclun:ll.
Pnp
IJJ 111:

..... LAIIII,I,J,I and . . . . . . . . II 1
tin· IUFFFNCI10FI'I af1111.0-IDaSM"
ADIIIJION ID ... lnln pin ae1 an ...
Vlllseaf.,oe •
. . . . . . af llald Lot
011 11111* .... elllurn . _ ~• . . Road, Rill Jl J til Pill IFet* No.I;
.
•
copr of till Alllllr
2. .....
n a - •long uld
Complolill file IIINtll I'Npii'J Owtea. Leo Aleo ... ~
. . . . h Not1h . - froM . . ot11ca ur ..
tt.ta J. " ' t d In h Vllop . . . . Nut II . . carCtatll af ·c:o.ta,....,
af.,IIC III,Couottal- af l.til No_ lila.
-·
1111 rl U n, """' Daed A I Q ae: llolp and ...... af II I - af IIAI llelgl
Cod it~ OA :lllt,=WZ,
Olllo,- 1w1n1 a :=t _. ..... a - diF
c:ourw-, Pame., PPII:ttJ
&gt;0011
af
8uiFio e1 o'a af MAl-~~~
OH451WI.
API'AAIIID
AT A IMtan • . . . . po~ It I paint af
~ notice w11 lUll . . .. - 1EAIII OF rm did til"'*- 2 '1(11••• -otaltllntr
_.. ..... for I UF..a: ' CAJIIM' H ................ ~ . . . . laol In
-•••culw ....., IOlDI'DIIL.aiTHAII c.n, Pill......., Lal No. t llld 147.M
lhe po •n M o M
OF
THE llldl&amp;lng- . . . . . . . . . . laolln Lot No. I
being.., ... liMo., AI fUIPQ VALUE. ~~Farly
•loll- for a - af 514125
af June, 211101. 1l1a 10%DOMIOIIDrlYOF ....,
. . . . laol elbject 1D
ciNnclatolti will haw SALE, CAIH OR CEJI. Said alley ( - 1 all legal
,_,.,
-~~~~ llafll (2111 Cleyl TIFIED CHECK, BAL- l&amp;lng
50'rt00' lol llldlttlfllkt-way.

..,

:::::-.:...u:.=
I

o....., ..,

a

·--340

Campil. Ftp ': •••-...... _.:_...-

Carda"'
- -c..
· - ___
---- -...............
-- ......010
__
1to
ChlldiEldooty

loreo. .lgaco,.nty-

E = - l c . . - • , - · - -- ........140 ·
Eq\vnllor
. .......
- ..-----·----..
410 .
......._.
_ __
.
--·--130

::;~

SHOP

.--'-',..,...,-,,.----.

OPEN HOUSE Sun Jum
8th, 2·4pm, 578 Jay Dnvl
2,268 SQ tl - 4 bedroom , :

..--7'10

orla Hllllil ID dlrec-

Fann EqulpotleiL. ...........- - - · -........-110
r ....... for - . ..........................................Ato
F.....,. for Sola ...................... - ................... 330

CLASSIAEDS

For Lane ........................................-.....-.410
For Sole ..... _.,_...................- -..·--515
For Sole..- TrMe......~ .....................- .510
Foula&amp;V.; Ialit - · -- _ 510
Fwu,.._.RI J
•
•
. Gare.t . . , . . . _ _ ..... ..150
&lt;ilu
1- ··-·- - ..-040

4

. """"'

-

·-·-- ·-·-1150

Hay
-to140
Help&amp;We
f. ...... ·-·...,. ___ _.110
Home k 4
- f o r Sola.......................- ... - ...........- 310

o............ ..--·-·---···••o .

..

-

- -····----··--·-····--·--510

-lor
- ·-·--·---··-·--·--··-·-··-••o
In -·-····-··-':.,.····-···-··········---020

lnSU1'111C8-·-- -···········-·····-···- ..·-·-······130
Uwn It Gardin Equlpn61t ......_..........._••.•.Mo

uv e11,. •

______..............................-.ao

Lost llld ;,_.,,_... ._..,_,_,,_ .... _ ......,_,_...010
lots &amp; .... g ----····---.. - ...- ..- ·- 350
~~---·-· ..--··---·- · .... _no

m -·---·-··--.540
Rf
ep
ar
i r-_ ___; _
~-----o
__ 421)
Miet 111n •• Mcsdw

--lorSIIe-·--·-........., Iii t.a.l----·--·-----....220
- q iaa&amp;4WI
740

::.:Ll;:n:::

1. • - - · -

--···--51'0

lluslaol ..... _.......
P__.. ....... - ......................... - ...........11115
Peta for Sola ....._................... _
.___ $10

..._ In· EMS pot,
..._A-..IIIur OIIID,
11•11112
FII!FENIFAN1'S
· tool on . . Nan11 ....
COURT OF C1li"FOII ., . . . . . . . . allot
Pl£A8, FIEIOI COUN- • I I . . . Iii .1o11n
TV, OHIO,
OloMr.
.. PURit "PICE OF AN Said PPor,.Millllieoutaa Oleo
ORDER OF tW.E or no-.,
IE -ECJBI FROM loulh Jtd .......
SAID COURT .. T1tE IllS S 1 ar.
0111o
ABOVE
AC110N,
I
WILL PPII: ~~- ·
EXPOIJE 10 tW.E AT 1Mf"f JJD OMPUBUC AUCnOII ON CURREFIT OWIIER:
THE FIIOIIT STEPS Of' ~A.-..
THE lllBQS COUNTY PAOPEAtt AT: . .
COURT H0UtE ON loulh
1FilnF,
~Y,JUNE 27, 211101 rn p Pl,OIIIDAT 10 A.ll., OF SAID "'1M1111UIIDAY, THE FOUOFiiiG ~HftiZ5 Dt10
OESCRIIIED
REAL PIIOR DEED IE Ll
VS

.

8 - Oppattunllv•.- -····-- · - ··-.210
.-140
c........ , ........... ____ ____
.. 710

zt•••

0

- - · --·--·-550

au.-andBt 'Jioga

::'.:::..~.:.1,:.::II

-·- -·-·-725

-An~ ...._..,_.-·-··--·······-····-··-····-··-·····-·-·----·------···-·-510

t-..,.....

::P: .,uc=
::'-"':' .:"=: ::Co..r1
...."~
.: W: :;~~1:!.":,", ,_; t;::n:_a:Joahlu:"' =:..::::.::1.::. ~,.!iliff
or
a
11

mad ESTATE;

MANEW
MOD\JI,f.IIS
2 Slory. Caoe Cod
, ' Ra""' Models
ltiiG£ SALE!
Midwest Homes
741),628·2870

Plu-.g &amp; Haating .........-------·-·120
P&lt;al=lanal Senrlcee ...._........- - - -.230
A-, TV a ca Repair.................- · - -' •
Real- W..:lsJ ........................-.110
Scloaola - . - ................. ,_ ........ ___150
Sead ' &amp;- -..... - ...... - ...............150
S11u.iiuna Wanltld- ....··---·--..........120

' - f o r -..........................- ......._. _... .

enmn.m ..._,_

Spatting -

.....................,_ .......- ......:_520

SUV'a for Sola.........i,._.............,_•._ .....- -720
r..-.1or Sola ___.........._......._................... 715
Upl&amp;. , r .....
.
·-·..:------170
v- For Salo.......-··---·-···-·-·--·-·-·730
Weolodlo lluy- -..

r

--··------··-·-·01111

W-ID Buy- F - So'4&gt;1 1101 ...........- ..-120
• - To Do-----······---- 110
. W-ID ........ - -....................... - ....A7D
Yard Sole- Gallipalo$.. -···-··• ..••••··..·•••··-072
Yen:l Sst Pocu•ofl'llltl• --·- ..····--·--014
Yard '*"'L PI
1'1"1 ..........................- ... 071
.!.."! •

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

---

•

'

�Page 82 •

The Daily Sentinel

Wednesday, June 4,

www.mydailysentinel.com

2008

Wednesday; June 4, 2008

www.mydllltpa: :lhJill.com

Person gets 2nd interView with Bulls Pistons fire coach Flip Satinders
CHICAGO
(AP)
Sacramento Kings assistant
coach Chuck Person is set
to have a second interview
with the Chicago Bulls for
their vacant head coaching
job.
A person familiar with the
search, who spoke to The
Associated Press on the
condition of anonymity
because the search is on~&lt;&gt;:
ing, said Person was flymg
. to Chicago on Tuesday. The
interview would happen
either later Tuesday night or
Wednesday.
Person joined the Kings
last year after spending the
previous two as an assistant
with Indiana, where he
played six of his 13 NBA
seasons.

t!trtbune - Sentinel :. l\egister
CLASSIFIED

Person might be a long
shot for a job that numerous
repons have going to Doug
Collins,
but
"The
Rifleman" was known to hit
a few during a career in
which he averaged 14.7
points and shot 36.2 percent
from 3-point range.
The Bulls and Collins,
who coached a young
Michael Jordan and Scottie
Pippen in the late 1980s
before the dynasty took off,
acknowledged last week
having discussions and said
there would be more talks
once Collins' broadcast
duties with TNT ended.
That happened when the
Los Angeles Lakers eliminated the San .Antonio
Spurs m the Western

Conference
finals
on
AUBURN Hll.LS, Mich.
Thursday.
( AP) - In the moniing, tbe
The Chicago Sun-Times;
Pistons fired Aip
citing an
unidentified Detroit
Saunders. By tbe aftemoOii,
source, reponed this week the players were put on
that an announcement could notice.
come as soon as Tuesday, . "I' m not going to sit here
with the Chicago Tribune and make Aip tbe scapegoa~."
saying Collins was the president of basketball Operafront-runner and that the tions Joe Dumars said
search w.ould end this week. Tuesday. "Everybody is in
But Chicago radio station play."
WSCR-AM
reported
Dumars publicly put his
Tuesday· that chairman entire lineup on the trading
Jerry Reinsdorf wants more bloclc, less than a week after
time to .decide whether to tbe Pistons lost in tbe Eastern
Conference final for the third
hire his friend.
It's possible one of the · straight year. ·
Among those available:
many candidates general
fuur
players who have been
manager John Paxson has
together
since winning the
interviewed could wind up
2004
NBA
title together, plus
as an assistant and an heir
another starter who just finAI' photo
apparent to the new coach.
ished his fourth sea5on with In this April 8 file photo, Detroit Pistons coach Rip Saunders
~-= are 110 sacred cows shouts instructions to ·his team in the second half of the
met 10 times in .the finals growing up in Los Angeles, here," Dumars said "You lose Pistons' 98-94 ·loss to the New Yo111 Knicks in an NBA basfrom 1959-87, with the I got to see it firsthand. My that sacred&lt;Ow stalils when ketball game in Auburn Hills, Mich.
Celtics winning the first hatred of the Celtics went a you lose three straightyears." coach.
Celtics, -Dumars said he bad
eight. From 1983-87 alone, little deeper. Once we got a
fromPageBI
Messages seeking comment
Three starters -. Chauncey seen enough from this group.
they played nearly · 30 chance to play. them, you
left on Saundefs' rell Billups, Richard llamilton,
"We didn't ~ it dooe,"
tried to avenge all the loss" phone.
Tayshauo Prince - played Dumars said. ' As I walked
NBA' s television rights. · games, counting playoffs.
Since then, it's been es that Elgin (Baylor),
Saunders sill!led a four-year . for all three coaches, Rasheed out of The Palace, I bad a real
TNT, the league's other
lerry
(West),
and
Wilt
twice
a
year,
and
that's
it.
contract
wortfi up to $26 mil- Wallare was acquired in 2004 sense of calm."
broadcast partner, hasn't
(Chamberlain)
went
So
can
the
current
players
lion
three
years ago. His deal and Antonio McDyess signed
Dumars was at ease
televised a Lakers-Celtics
through."
came
less
than
a
day
after
in
2005.
·
because
be knew exactly what
understand
the
rivalry
the
game since 2002.
No
matter,
Johnsdn
says.
terms
of
''Tbere
are
25,
26
teams
that
he
wanted
to do.
Detroit
finalized
"Well ,
the
Celtics way their predecessors did?
larry
Brown's
$7
million
sev·
would
love
to
be
where
we
Ftrst,
fire
Saunders. Then.
They'll
figure
it
out.
"I don't think those guys
weren't good enough to be
"Will they understand the erance packa~e after he are, but good has not been trade at least one of his
on TV and the Lakers .were will know what the rivalry
helped them wm a title and .......t
gh " Du
·d starters in a move or two he
rivalry?
Trust me, when almost
always good with Shaq and is about until they play that
mars S31 •
repeat in his two sea- r.;--::-:: enou '
'I appreciate everythinJt that doesn't e~t to ha'fu:;n
Kobe ," Celtics guard Sam first game in front of the that ball goes up on 50
Thursday,
they'll
underW;e
Pistons
averaged
near_
Rick
Carlisle, Larry · rown before the
A drnft on une
fans
in
Boston,"
said
Cassell said .
stand,"
he
said.
Jy
59
victories
in
three
regular
and
Aip
Saunders
have
done,
26.
Cooper,
a
Laker
Michael
"The intensity is not up
Wallare seems to be tbe
"It might not be under- seasons under Saundelli, wbQ but I also know Jbey were
to that level right now. I from 1979-90 whom Bird
banded
some
great
teams
player
mm1 likely to be dealt
think if they get to the has said defended him as standing what we went trailed only ftred Dallas
"Jt's
not liR they had to beCause of his ~year confinals, if we play the Lakers well as anyone;. "I wouldn' t through, Larry . and I, but Maverick&amp;· coach Avery take bad teams and make tract, inconsistent play and
next year in the fmals and say they hale us, but the they'll have their own Johnson by two wins and San them iood The next ooach is powerful pmonality that lifts
the year after that, I think passion that they don't rivalry because it's for all Anlonio Spurs coach Gregg
· to inherit a~ team." his teammates and dragS them
the rivalry will become like want them to even score a the marbles, it's for every- Popovich by ,a victory duriilg ~Cuny 15 tbe lead- downdepeodingonhismood.
thing. It doesn't matter the
it was in the '80s. But right basket.
was 30-21 in the iiJg ~?"'m.tonme.be ~:::!:s
"I view him the
war,
"I don't think (the current whether they understand · S~rs
now it ' s just two teams
ffi
~
the
Pis10ns
losli1lh
~
"""""""'
that
I
do
all
the
other
guys,
'
players) had the sense that the rivalry or not. They are PIayo s or
who respect one another."
'
He was on Sauwm• staff and Dumars insisted. "Make no
mistake, .everybody is in play
At least there's still the a lot of us had growing up going to create their own mg in Game 6 of the Eastan is a filQner Piston.
new
rivalry,
right,
on
Bryant-Ray Allen feud. watching the '60s, '70s
~~nf:":ac~ ~ Other candidates include right now."
.
They developed a dislike of Celtics-Lakers rivalry. Me Thursday night."
ence finals games, the most Johnson 3fld Terry Poru:r,
Before roming to Detroit,
each other when Allen was
byanNBAcoachsince 1971 3IICJihl;rass1stantlastseasoom Saunders was 411-326 with
out West playing in Seattle,
NBA FINALS
without reachiqg the NBA _ Delr91t .. and . a . fonner the Minnesota Timberwolves.
so much so that it was
finals, according to STAT'S.
M!l~ Bucks coach.
He led MinneSOia to eight
rumored· that one of the
Under Saunders Detroit
'I m gomg to talk to a rew straight postseason appearbecame the second team in people this wedt," Dumars ances, including seven firstreasons Allen refused to
league history to lose in the Sai!l ·"As we nonnaiiY. do, round exits and an appearllllre
consider suiting up for the
ro•
·,d before the NBA finals we'll act quickly. 'J1Iis will not in the 2004 conference finals.
U.S. national team was
three'
ears in a row, · · ·
be a loog-drawn-out process." After winning franchisebecause he dido 't want to
S1-D
Dumars decided a year ago recool 58 games, he was fired
the Celtics from 1fs]~51,
play with. Bryant.
(12-3~
according
to
STATS.
to
brin2 back his key players with a 25-26 mait during the
Maybe they can have the
Saunders · . extended as well as Sanndcrs, while 2004-05 seasoo. ·
McHale-Rambis moment
Detroit's Eastern Conferenoe infusing eDCig)' with rookies
Celtics guard Sam Cassell
in this series?
finals appear.mce streak to six and young reserves.
expects Saundefs, one of his
"Everything's
fine ,"
years, the first fi:ancbise to
But after watching the former coaches, to be back in
Bryant said. "Everything's
accomplish that feat since the Pistons blow a 10-Jllld lead the lea2ue.
·
FEl Of;_,. o10.S
fine."
Los
Angeles
takers
of
the
with
I
0-plus
minutes
left
in
"He'll
get
a
job
real
sooo-31.4
Oh well.
1980s, after Rick Carlisle Game 6 of tbe rooferenoe maybe even today tJr tomor- 1
SOURCE: ~8rlrrr"d' •w lei" ••
The Celtics and Lakers
started it in his two scmSQ0\1 as_ finals against .the · Boston row," Cassell said.
. .·

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Famly pot .... Hllll8 645-

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....... eoc ..... Ailll •c.-.t . - c.rd . . . . .. • All .......... ad dw: ..... .ubjlct tD ... ...-_, fair HoUIIIng Act of 1968. • This
....... . . . .__.... . . ,.-.... £OE . . . . . . . . . . . . ,
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CLASSIRED INDEX

PUBUC NOTICE
The
Village
Of
Syracuse is oeq.-tlng
engl.-ring pnopoule
for ... - n g pool-

~: Replacemenl

Queetiona may be
dlreclad 1D
llholfloOMOv•lmn.lllll
The Vlllloge
... right to l'ljecl: ony

ow--

:U:."':s,__

Of
opproxlllllllely 1500 Eilc
Cunnlngluom,
IMt ol exlating 8 Inch lllooyor
· line along Rov June4,18,20011
JonesRoad. n.pooJect would Include all
connections
ond
Public Notice
oppurtancn I I - -

.cl.
2. Conotructlon ol a
. _ 6 Inch line
: from Ror JonestolheRulllicHIIIa-.
Approxlllllllely 1200
wllh three lire
hydo 1111a, vorlous connectlons and oppurtenancea 81 . - . .
3. lnalaltmion o1 ~
.,... ..lve(IIPRVYaull
wtlh . . - , and · Unaa and appurte"""""" a to
eotwi8CI1he Syracuae
water ayatem to the
- 0 1 ' eyltem tor
backup- 181 vice.
4. lnaUoll . . . . Inch
Hne from , . _ nre
hydoedatPhiiiiOMin
Ruatle Hills -.o to
exllllng · hvdrant on
ll(.dgamonlllrlll.
Engl,_,lng Mrvicft
-lnciudtfl! .....•'ll
do•lnge and Ollloinlng . llfiiii'ORI,
poapeatlaoo and ......
"' bid _ _ .., onlile auperwtalon af
-ion
inapectlona, pnp-

eo.-.-

In ...
Court af llolp County,
Ohio

LanyW.aw-,alat.
Plaltodll
...
n.o.... H. lludtov,al

at.,

Oalexloo..

c.. No.~

Lagat Notlca
0 I , _ . , . . _ H.
Haadlev, whoM IMt
" - " addNal 5176 . illdcrle A....
Newlik, CA M54IO;
'llvrtle Haldley niUi
Myrtle
Comllack,
Adclren
-;
John
Cool Ill ell,
Adclren
U-;
Robert 8 Blll)'l,
Add.- Unkl-1;
- Anna 1M 1t111'dley,
AIUo-Ut•-~-

lhelr ~ -

-

•ura -.- .....

by thlllled IIIII on . .
11th dar af April, 2DDit,
larrY W• ...,._

-

a-.

Rewa J.
Plllltll&amp;, ftleCI tllllr
I 4 I 1.11 ..... Wt
1'611- '
rlnJ

flam ... P' • "calion in ANCE DUE ON CONllhlct1 1D aid FIIIIATION OF SALE
.......,..mt.
n. ... ralul did not
Dentae
L
Bii!1CII Include an Interior
.(011421411
a.-otlon ol lhe

=

bot•a• LG1a &amp; JAil 7 Boalnga ..,

comnctora and MY
C1 lOft
9lhe"
"'-of ..... Cauollll,
' earyfor ... IUCIIJIIul OH, . . . . . oompMiionaf ... prolo llu.OI•Cf•DU .

..,.1oM-

«t.

qua--

Poopoalla
eiiiiJ
include
. and eo.pao1ea af.,....
tlnll on almllor PfOJ,
ecta, liiOng with till
Fal8l ClOIII af yooK .....,._
-for-proJect.
P10paalla be
I o~ 1D Fred L
car.nt.
Mullnwp,
Aodoo~nhiloator
for
:-::..: Sro uae,
1M
'"-111A..,
M"S I rt,Ohlo45710
no._ lhM1 •:00 P.ll.
J4/kr 7, 2001.

v.-.

::a

=:r:-::raltollll
E. Beegle,
Lot No. land I ~Ohio SINal, :..;;.:~~~:.-:::
Pooi60W, Ohio 457a llolp County Sl.m f*t ot Lot HcL I af J.F. Pooperty
Ownen: Lot 313 _. 1110 _ .
(7401112-Q30
Attornav For n. Bullington'&amp; Addition Molino Fietda
Lot 312, T - 1 - .
(517,14,21 , 21,'(514,11 Plaltill"
1D the Villoge of PriorllaedRola. .- : Ringe 1 3 - . I I
srr-oatrooosllo.cl tlR.221,PIIge3tll
,_,....ln"'*-12.
P.O. Boll 868
to Q1eleo E. llld lllloy P P N : I 2 0 - ...... «11 af ... llolp
Public Notice
Twinlbuog,Ohlo- A. Ct•"'"'l' oa rocorc1- 00070.000,120- County Daed Bgal&lt;a,
3J0.4Z5 1201 .
edlnDaed-23hl 00071.000,120 ·- Caunly af llolpSHERFFSALES
C5121,21,(514
Poge
171, 111tt1ga 00073 . 000,120- llliaSIIIIIafOhto: '
~ASE
IIUIIBER:
Counly . - ' a 00074.000, llld 12111- n.:t I: llyl ••• on
07CY127
0111ce, 11o1p County, ~
. . &amp;II ..._ a1 1Nnt
w.na ....., Publlc:Notlce
Ohio,-belngaport APPRAISED
.AT Straetin•..-n It,lllllaoraiAII 1-o
af100acntlotNo.2tl. $55,0011 TERIIS OF~- ... I 'in'lilllld
Plilloodll
SHERFF
SALES T-owlolp - 1- Noo11o, SAL£: CANNOT BE I p.t af . . Vllegll af
VS ·
CASE
NUIIBER: Ronge - 13- .- 1, SOLDFORLESSntAN llld' 1 ot,
llllelp
Leo 0, a.lley &amp; "**a 07C'11.08
Su11on
Township, 213
OF
THE Counly, Ololo, Ill lhe
a.lley Ill at
.,.,_
Bank llolp Counly, St1i111 af APPRAISED VALUE. Sol II ul af
DEFEHliUfTS
....lonlol
Trvat Olllo and f*11cu1e11'. 111% OOWit ON DAY Of' l.til No. • in
COURJ OF co•ON Con;""' a ~. deaclill8d oalotlowl: SALE, CASH OR CEll- AJ lb• to ......_.;
PLEAS,IEIGS COUN- ale
.
101518" iron nFEO CHECK, BAL- In a E lllr
TY, OHIO.
.
Plalnlltl VS pin
HI
at ... AliCE DUE ON COli- dlt.clion -.g 1M
.. PUA S I"IICE OF AN Flelda a1 a1 OEFEN- North- cornar af F1R11A110N OF SA1.E Soulh h af llald La1
ORDER OF SALE 10 OANTS COURT OF llald Lot HcL I af lhe The _..tut did No. •II Jill a af
IE W1EO FAOII CO-ON
PLEAS, J.F.
Bufllngton'a . , lto. . lot 110 ~ -.c. a1
SAID COURT • 11tE IIElGS COUNTY, OHIO. Addition;
.....tnoo11on of 1M light anglea in •
ABOVE
EN1111..ED In ......__ af M1 Thence liking ... .......
1M F•lt A U 110
M:J'ION,
I
WILL onler af ute Iii Not1h line of aid Lot ~ E. I 1(111, leal; ...,_ ill •
~ 10 IALE AT dlo- froM South . . . . 35' 24" ,llllelp
It I . - I'UILIC AUCnON ON coun ln.,. _ _ Eat . • .dlola- a1 Alton..,
For Tile _ _ . . _ _
THEFRONTSTEPSOF 1led ICUon, I wtll111D.tllllaoiiD • SM" Plilloilllf
afllaldLaiHcL••,._
THE lllBQS COUNTY . _ I i i . . Ill ..... lnln pin 1111; ·
....,_ &amp; A!llue
- a f 118 laol Iii . .
COURT HOUSE ON Me IIICilon on .,. Thence leaving aalil P.O.Bol •
·
Eoat af 1Nnl
FRIDAY Jllne
af .,. llolp Hortlo line llld along Tlllnoburg,Ohto- tllowal; ....,. in •
2DDit AT 10 A.ll., OF Counlr Court " " ' - . . En1 line af aid 330GS C201
Nutll•lt
dlt.cllon
SAID DAY, T1tE FOL· on Ftldaf, June 27111, Lot HcL
(5121 , 21,CII4
along . . &amp;II..._ af
LOIIIG DESCRIBED 2DD1t Ill 10 1111, af llald . . . . Soot
1 carlhlnl ....... a '
lEAL EITlloTE;
dloy, ... lalaaL'II af 1.ti1 HcL t Ill 1
af 10 laol Iii ...... ot
e
J In . . . . af J1 I I d ...r- 'I I a af 50.1111 laol
Public: Notice
I
Ohio, Countt "' ........ 1 J in . . Ccounlr . . . • .... ...
.
'ho:ll: . . . . . . . .
... in . . Jualllolpaf ofllolplnha.af -IDIIAI-Iila StlBWFIIALES
... af Lat. No_ . i n
lclplo. .
Ohio llld In h Vllop IM"Inon pin . . .., h
CAIE NUl FER: Pill
'a ' 1 II1Nn Iii
Tile
Ill
af
llld EalilllneafLotNo. l; 07CY142
11..-n II
._
11 11 5

--&amp;--

:w~LESS"=
APPRAISED VALUE.
111% D0Mt ON DAY OF
SAL£,CASHORCERTFIED atECI(, BALAliCE DUE ON CONRNIATIONOFSALE
The _ .... did
· . , lnllnlot
ll&amp;lllllnatlon of the
.......
~ E. lleogle,
llolpCouniJStwill.
AIIDrnttv For The
Plilloilllf
Jolin 0. a..nk
5801 ~Drive
44236

"**'• 3311-342
-.Ohio
an

Baglo•••

c:aonv -

27111,...,.

4x4'a For Sole.....-----·-

EMCFS: VOI..UIE 159,
iJiuld .....aoallloloed .., for ... ......,_ •
' t in
af NGE 01157
Public: Nollce
-tlud,
ml1111tlon af ...... lllddlopiHI In lhe APPRAISED
AT IIEIGS
COUNTY
EXCEPTING THERE only. ·
Caunly af llolp $45,0011 .TERIIS OF OFFICE OF ECOIIOIIfROII THE FOUOW- Properly8ddom:12311 SloloafOhto.
SAL£: CANNOT BE IC ANO WOIIKFOIICE

•

I

"

I5J21,

Apartotoanta for ............... ---·--·-··· ..... 440
Auction llld Rae - -·····-·----··--··..810
AulD---780
Auto ~~opa~r&amp;_________
,_,·
..._·--···-··-··.._._,_....- -·.710
Autos
Sole.-----···-·-·····- ···--·····-·- 710
&amp;
Sola-·-··-·-······-·-·· 750

=
=··

-far

DEVELOPMENT

lor

~ ~,
~t

el

YIP

flullding S.~~ Ill!

muat be
--

Bu-,.,.....

=

Ringe 14, Toaold!lp 7
ln . . _ . , ..., _
aflaclun:ll.
Pnp
IJJ 111:

..... LAIIII,I,J,I and . . . . . . . . II 1
tin· IUFFFNCI10FI'I af1111.0-IDaSM"
ADIIIJION ID ... lnln pin ae1 an ...
Vlllseaf.,oe •
. . . . . . af llald Lot
011 11111* .... elllurn . _ ~• . . Road, Rill Jl J til Pill IFet* No.I;
.
•
copr of till Alllllr
2. .....
n a - •long uld
Complolill file IIINtll I'Npii'J Owtea. Leo Aleo ... ~
. . . . h Not1h . - froM . . ot11ca ur ..
tt.ta J. " ' t d In h Vllop . . . . Nut II . . carCtatll af ·c:o.ta,....,
af.,IIC III,Couottal- af l.til No_ lila.
-·
1111 rl U n, """' Daed A I Q ae: llolp and ...... af II I - af IIAI llelgl
Cod it~ OA :lllt,=WZ,
Olllo,- 1w1n1 a :=t _. ..... a - diF
c:ourw-, Pame., PPII:ttJ
&gt;0011
af
8uiFio e1 o'a af MAl-~~~
OH451WI.
API'AAIIID
AT A IMtan • . . . . po~ It I paint af
~ notice w11 lUll . . .. - 1EAIII OF rm did til"'*- 2 '1(11••• -otaltllntr
_.. ..... for I UF..a: ' CAJIIM' H ................ ~ . . . . laol In
-•••culw ....., IOlDI'DIIL.aiTHAII c.n, Pill......., Lal No. t llld 147.M
lhe po •n M o M
OF
THE llldl&amp;lng- . . . . . . . . . . laolln Lot No. I
being.., ... liMo., AI fUIPQ VALUE. ~~Farly
•loll- for a - af 514125
af June, 211101. 1l1a 10%DOMIOIIDrlYOF ....,
. . . . laol elbject 1D
ciNnclatolti will haw SALE, CAIH OR CEJI. Said alley ( - 1 all legal
,_,.,
-~~~~ llafll (2111 Cleyl TIFIED CHECK, BAL- l&amp;lng
50'rt00' lol llldlttlfllkt-way.

..,

:::::-.:...u:.=
I

o....., ..,

a

·--340

Campil. Ftp ': •••-...... _.:_...-

Carda"'
- -c..
· - ___
---- -...............
-- ......010
__
1to
ChlldiEldooty

loreo. .lgaco,.nty-

E = - l c . . - • , - · - -- ........140 ·
Eq\vnllor
. .......
- ..-----·----..
410 .
......._.
_ __
.
--·--130

::;~

SHOP

.--'-',..,...,-,,.----.

OPEN HOUSE Sun Jum
8th, 2·4pm, 578 Jay Dnvl
2,268 SQ tl - 4 bedroom , :

..--7'10

orla Hllllil ID dlrec-

Fann EqulpotleiL. ...........- - - · -........-110
r ....... for - . ..........................................Ato
F.....,. for Sola ...................... - ................... 330

CLASSIAEDS

For Lane ........................................-.....-.410
For Sole ..... _.,_...................- -..·--515
For Sole..- TrMe......~ .....................- .510
Foula&amp;V.; Ialit - · -- _ 510
Fwu,.._.RI J
•
•
. Gare.t . . , . . . _ _ ..... ..150
&lt;ilu
1- ··-·- - ..-040

4

. """"'

-

·-·-- ·-·-1150

Hay
-to140
Help&amp;We
f. ...... ·-·...,. ___ _.110
Home k 4
- f o r Sola.......................- ... - ...........- 310

o............ ..--·-·---···••o .

..

-

- -····----··--·-····--·--510

-lor
- ·-·--·---··-·--·--··-·-··-••o
In -·-····-··-':.,.····-···-··········---020

lnSU1'111C8-·-- -···········-·····-···- ..·-·-······130
Uwn It Gardin Equlpn61t ......_..........._••.•.Mo

uv e11,. •

______..............................-.ao

Lost llld ;,_.,,_... ._..,_,_,,_ .... _ ......,_,_...010
lots &amp; .... g ----····---.. - ...- ..- ·- 350
~~---·-· ..--··---·- · .... _no

m -·---·-··--.540
Rf
ep
ar
i r-_ ___; _
~-----o
__ 421)
Miet 111n •• Mcsdw

--lorSIIe-·--·-........., Iii t.a.l----·--·-----....220
- q iaa&amp;4WI
740

::.:Ll;:n:::

1. • - - · -

--···--51'0

lluslaol ..... _.......
P__.. ....... - ......................... - ...........11115
Peta for Sola ....._................... _
.___ $10

..._ In· EMS pot,
..._A-..IIIur OIIID,
11•11112
FII!FENIFAN1'S
· tool on . . Nan11 ....
COURT OF C1li"FOII ., . . . . . . . . allot
Pl£A8, FIEIOI COUN- • I I . . . Iii .1o11n
TV, OHIO,
OloMr.
.. PURit "PICE OF AN Said PPor,.Millllieoutaa Oleo
ORDER OF tW.E or no-.,
IE -ECJBI FROM loulh Jtd .......
SAID COURT .. T1tE IllS S 1 ar.
0111o
ABOVE
AC110N,
I
WILL PPII: ~~- ·
EXPOIJE 10 tW.E AT 1Mf"f JJD OMPUBUC AUCnOII ON CURREFIT OWIIER:
THE FIIOIIT STEPS Of' ~A.-..
THE lllBQS COUNTY PAOPEAtt AT: . .
COURT H0UtE ON loulh
1FilnF,
~Y,JUNE 27, 211101 rn p Pl,OIIIDAT 10 A.ll., OF SAID "'1M1111UIIDAY, THE FOUOFiiiG ~HftiZ5 Dt10
OESCRIIIED
REAL PIIOR DEED IE Ll
VS

.

8 - Oppattunllv•.- -····-- · - ··-.210
.-140
c........ , ........... ____ ____
.. 710

zt•••

0

- - · --·--·-550

au.-andBt 'Jioga

::'.:::..~.:.1,:.::II

-·- -·-·-725

-An~ ...._..,_.-·-··--·······-····-··-····-··-·····-·-·----·------···-·-510

t-..,.....

::P: .,uc=
::'-"':' .:"=: ::Co..r1
...."~
.: W: :;~~1:!.":,", ,_; t;::n:_a:Joahlu:"' =:..::::.::1.::. ~,.!iliff
or
a
11

mad ESTATE;

MANEW
MOD\JI,f.IIS
2 Slory. Caoe Cod
, ' Ra""' Models
ltiiG£ SALE!
Midwest Homes
741),628·2870

Plu-.g &amp; Haating .........-------·-·120
P&lt;al=lanal Senrlcee ...._........- - - -.230
A-, TV a ca Repair.................- · - -' •
Real- W..:lsJ ........................-.110
Scloaola - . - ................. ,_ ........ ___150
Sead ' &amp;- -..... - ...... - ...............150
S11u.iiuna Wanltld- ....··---·--..........120

' - f o r -..........................- ......._. _... .

enmn.m ..._,_

Spatting -

.....................,_ .......- ......:_520

SUV'a for Sola.........i,._.............,_•._ .....- -720
r..-.1or Sola ___.........._......._................... 715
Upl&amp;. , r .....
.
·-·..:------170
v- For Salo.......-··---·-···-·-·--·-·-·730
Weolodlo lluy- -..

r

--··------··-·-·01111

W-ID Buy- F - So'4&gt;1 1101 ...........- ..-120
• - To Do-----······---- 110
. W-ID ........ - -....................... - ....A7D
Yard Sole- Gallipalo$.. -···-··• ..••••··..·•••··-072
Yen:l Sst Pocu•ofl'llltl• --·- ..····--·--014
Yard '*"'L PI
1'1"1 ..........................- ... 071
.!.."! •

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

---

•

'

�Pllge B4 • The Daily Sentinel
c.dolnlris
,_a _ _ _ _ ae - · ·-

The fmlily of

Mtlbel "Jacm" Mictuul
would like 10 extend sinOC!e thanks
for all tbe .flower.;, memorial
donations 10 Holzer Hospiee and
Bradbury CbW'Ch of Christ. food and
family dinner, cards and especially
tbe prayen at her passing.
Thanks to tbe kind staff of Fishe.rAnderson-McDaniel Funeral Honi:s
and Overl&gt;rook: Nursing Center's 400
hall.
A very special thanks to Tom
Runyon, minister of the Bradbury
Cburcb of Christ, who was always
there for Mom when she needed him.

~~~~--~

aO'FO'n

2008NOW 125,100
SAllE.._..

r•

=.':"
ymldo..;-........

rn
m,mtt
asthorue.aom

Pot, i"ete, Paula and ldlm and families

1 ..., 2

-

Repol

11,100

;to&lt;

7~8-2750

m~·C....
_;~::::;;:;;,:.;;;;;;.,.

electric . $13,500
(740)256-1389

Call

100 acres. Galli&amp; Co.
Suitable 1or homeSite, great
hunting area. .C19-23C:HM6

r f

lor

2BR -

..,., _,

......., _ _ , _

(740)1192:5858

In Eureka. - - 212 ani """· 3 -

and

Alder

Nwtll

GRFENHOUSE
Syracuse. Ohio
Now .,at f•

1

""""'t"''

~~=====~

6408,
25&amp;6718
..... '12511·
11 Of Rent
rent s-oo
dopooll.
boltl,..-Dip. 7~1..()245
· no pall.
441 -()583 dllya.
2IIA 1Pl CIA. [T«l) . .1•
"3 Bedroom 'House in 0184
MM:u•.aMiOJii
Syracuse. $500/m-. + 28R in 1oom $400/renl ~ Moii:1WiDiiE
dopooll Hud App. No PW.
·'
(304)675-5332 weekends $400/&lt;11!1&gt;.
•ncl · lEW MID UIED S1UL
7«&gt;59Hl265
· traah, ,_ carpot. steel Pipe Aebar
2
•
. no •polo. S39- "1M· leave For
Conctele,
Angle, ·

Cllll.2bathut91&lt;0odorSt.

11

. 9!12-5776

Dr-

Ohilnnel, Flat Bar, S1eel 1 _ _ _.;:::;:::;:::~::.;;:1

II"·

$850 per montf1 + $850 2br,
$0160,
3bf, $840 Grating
for
Draina,
·depo&amp;n. Aolorencos req. 111Dnth. aame Depoeit pluo
&amp; Wllkways. L&amp;1.
r-.1100
electric, waaher, dryer 5crap Metala'tlpon MondaV.
Nloo big 2·3 br. home In hool&lt;up, No Pols. :JOols61'4- Tueaday, Wedneaday &amp;
country •" appliaOces 0023 or ~1Q.07.76
fridly, 8am-4.30pm. CloBed
'
.
'
· Thursday, Saturday
&amp;.
ijO(Ige, hugo yatd. pond. 0
....... •
Sunday (740l"fl-1'000
$800
month,
· phon&lt;~ · 52 Westwood
·
(740)591~ or (740)696- Drive, .from S365 to $560. -~
Sl'EEL
--AACH
---.
1106
·
7&lt;10 U6 ;!568.
Equal
+loualng Opportunity. Thia
8UIIJWOSI
Mla.E ll!y;s
Is an Equal Ill 1111 USA. , -llil'lr
~ Opponunlty Provider and "" - • • • or Employer.
Htlgh- _
......
, 25~..:.~.
2Br at Johnoono Mobile
~jomel'art&lt;. CIII .w&amp;-2003 Clean
1br,
fumiBhild JO'ICM' Flnt ~tnt
Apartment Na Smoking, SlnJed- ·1 12D1R

r

Shnibs &amp; Azaleas
Open M-S 9,5
Closed Sunday

"""""'" .,_,....,.. on•

3bedJOOIII,2 .bath,E.1tCIIIIJ:I1 ......·. ---·1'1 .acre !lot, ·$400 21170

'COiidllioli,

~s-

~
. '

eo•·--E

month, No .lnalda Pell, ,llCIIIY.ENEIIJLY I..OCAT·
Rollh•- 11C)4;185:11588
1
or 304-&lt;593-8670
_.-y-yn-..;;
Townhouee
apartments,
and/or arnoll hou8e6 fOA
o4Bfl, goa, no pels, rat·
11 1
req. $5001fent fEN7f. C.. (7.&amp;0)4' • ,
1or
~a
inlormation.
$50illdel&gt;. 2-~

L.a------..
--~·.,

~~

.1

2 Vorkshlre Tenters tor adoplion, .AKC !Oglatarad, home
railed, vaccinated &amp; heatttl
guarant-~. It Interested
kindly - contact • me on
EllmYiew • sam.leonarda0101JOoglemiltcom lhen I can get bade.
Apa bnads · with you .
opiB. $38S and '-"· 7
- _rno
_ old
_____ire_To___
__r

~

Caring Pet
Cremations
GVC

GAS SAVER
SALE
(Silop Locally!
Tuesday- Sat1:1rday

NIKE - f&lt;,Swiss
flip Flops
$17.99

Other selecl .items
11()"k- 20%

Kipling Shoe Co.
'300 2nd Ave. Galipolis; OH
(acrtliiS fTtlm 1he city park)

The Gallipolis Elks Lodge
No. 107 will hOld their af\lllual
Soccer Shoot
Sunday, June :8 , 2008. :11 will
be l:leld at the Elks Fann on
SR 588. Sign up will stalil at
1:30 p,m. with the competni~m
starting at 2l00. Oompetitioo is
open to·all boys and ·girls bom
on 8131/1 993ci&gt;r after. There
will be four age .groups with
boys and gir1s divisions.
Trophies will be awarded for
first, ·second, and third plaoe in
each division. This event is
free of charge, so ,come on out
and bring a triend.

CIA, WID

paya

-

-..p, Tonanl
· EHO

17
(3CM_..30
-

LIOing 1 and 2
Bedroom Apto. at VIllage
Manor and Ri.....ide Aplo.ln
Middloport. from $327 to
15i2. 7&lt;10-1192·5064. Equol
&lt;iloilli•IQ QQ!iOilunfty.
-

!

AKC (M) pup. All shols +
llhol, haS all pape!S, .
has rnicfOChip. 006-3601

-

J AND II ELECTRICll

SOuth
1•

Herb Eliott Dodridu ~ill 011&amp;; WV

4•

Oloio Cmllladiod14074

........

.vu:.-• C..rdlk.otioo 119-1"

I_,.,.;,.J!r!::!!!!!!'!!!l.!!!

6/4108. $350M $400f 74113118-8&lt;153

i

$325. 256-1~

FRANK &amp; EARNEST

CAR PENTER
SERVICE

i.

BARNEY

Hft11a• ""•e&amp;rj.IH Fli liile
a

€1GHT -BALL IN

EASE, OL' BULLET--VA

1'!-I'CORI\IE~

lwth&amp;l , ......

ONLY HAflA TAI&lt;E
COI"lMANDS FROM
rr......_..:....._,
ME !!

POCKET!!

Stanley Tree-

•Prompl and Quality

References Available!·
Call Gary Stanley @
740-591.' 8044

FJrum; It

2•

Pass

Pass

Pass

Pass

35-

19

45

exile
24 Protazoim

='J:

48 Tolel 11

49 L..-,_

..,_

len'lloty

27

Sela-..

-52 G.- ca
org.
·
53 Par1y fib

5Maui..,.. 28 Marina

7=·)

oight

6 Why?

29 tanary'o

54 MS

dinner
34 Perc:olrtes,

8 Earned,

37Riviln

,

polilhon'

as water

36 cashmere
kin

9 Trendy

38 Taddlera'
pon:bea
39 Spoil

='ir

20-heroic478*-Y
22 ~ i!Jk&gt;
""""25 Bricklayer's
tool
·
need
SO" ra.24i Job benefit
a;tplo;•

-- --·
Ia win

10 Bullring
llhout
42 Tree J
11 GelhHched
housn?

German phi losop~er Georg HagBI
claimed, "The Ieamer always begins by

finding· fault, but the scholar sees the
positive merit in everything.M .
Surely the Ieamer always has his faults
pointed oul to him by the scholar.
After lhis deal. North and South lound
fauft wnh each other's decisions when
they reached only tour spadas an&lt;! tool&lt;
all 13 lricks after West unde!S1andably
did not lead the heart ace. How """ld
you arbitrate? How should six spades
have been reached?
North thought South should have
opened two clubs. But attholtgh Soutn's
hand would probably have won nine
lricks all on its own (a primary acid test),
wnh onl1 16 high-card points, ft was too
weak. One spade was correct
South said lhat North underllid with two
spades - lHid howl Smce North knew o1

(H you erllJioy the Losing Trd&lt; Count,
the North hand has ooly seven losers,
whK:h ~ lhe number 1or lorcing to game,
bul with only eight high·card j)Oints,

&amp;Removal

•Experienced

Pass

32 Choriah
33 Comet.ck

43 Chud&lt;

three-~ gam4Hnvitationallimh raise ·

Trimming

*lns~ured

Eabi

31_,_

13 Weekly

at least a nine-card fit, he should have
added three poims lor his singlelon. giv·
ing 11 total points. Tl'is is Ideal lor a

Racine, Ohio 740-247-2019
O..teta:
Jon Yin ...... ,
Paul Rowe

Cell: 740-416-!047 '
email:

j,lfLLO! Tl-4\~ 1:&gt; Tfli W/1-'IU.""' ,...WOUG\&gt; '(().) Lll'£ lr.l TO ""q
I:&gt;:,UE. YOU
OCPNO'fl\rnT.
T~E. C.~EC.K. '(().)
p., llf.f~t:&gt;
~~FOil. '1'~

j~Oaotcom

r

.

H~T':i ~OT ~E.Cf$&gt;..~-""'
W~'( ~i'l.lUSI'
T~OOI&gt;.

CI\ELKr

FAIJC.E.T

I"\\:&gt;T~T

...
_.~;:·~--~--..
~
STRAWBERRIES at Vlo!ll'a

~I&gt;

W~
CNEAAl~n'

L.f.T It

"'00

".;........·- ·-

CELEBRITY CIPHER
byl,.uis~
Celetrit)' ~ C!}'~Xograms aJe creal.ed from IJIO!Iiols by larilous pecple, past and ~
Each Ieder tn the Cipher sllnds fof 8'\Cithet

puUing in one notch would be a wise

THE BO.RN LOSER
,...
.

Wt&gt;-:)
oou...Nt.~'f

TodaYs clue 0 equa!s U

move.)
OVer three spades, South might irrimedi·
atel1 bid lour no-trump, Blaoi&lt;Wood. but
mighl also control-bid (cue-bid) tour
clubs to suggest a slam. Then North
should bo happy to control-bid lour dia·
monds. True, he does not have the ace,
bul he has a good hand fof a limit raise.
And South can always doubla-dledc. on
aces wnh Blackwood. SQUih would do
that here, then bid six spades.

•

" RVL

PNMR

RLHHKDFKSX

RVL ' LSXZKMV ·zcSXOCXL
DHNP

RVL

VLHL

RN

XNJLHSPLSR

IN ·HEM KS
CHL: K ' P

CSE ·K'· P

VLZT ." -HNSCZE

HLCXCS

PREVIOUS SOLUTION - ' Baseball is reassuring. It makes""' teel
wor~ ~ not goinglo bi&lt;W up.' · Poet Sharon Olds

as~ lhe

':::' S@i..~lA-"'r-~s· won

- , . - I I East of
Syracuse on AI. 124. Yoo

Wll

E!llt.d bw CLAY R. I'OI1AH

OReor~&lt;~•go

letters of lh
four "'"'mblod ward&gt; below 10 form lour 1imple wordl.

"EHSLAVE TtiE I'\OLLUSK •
DOESII'T JIJ$T f'L,._Y
SOII!iS! WE'RE . "

'111...-.tay, Ju. . 5, 2008

ar--o.ot

In the year ahead , ~ number of needed
changes ooukl .take plaoe thai will prove
to be lleartwarmlng: they will also turn

I'IIJLTISEMSOil.Y

June 5, 6, 7

EXPERIEHCE ~

Rain or Shime

miles on Oak Growe
Road, Racine
H&amp;H

fi:IITiilure: Porlable dish
washer,
water bed.
wedge, end tables, hutch &amp;
table, etc.

rvs.

i

Guttering

f

•
----~.. !

Clothes: 3x to 3l
l'lll11111' n1~. ilems.
WELL. 60 AUEAO AND SIIOOT..
IAMAT AAE '{()U WAITING FOR 7

74o441 ~9010

GIWWIN6 ..

COWandBOY
IOONT (£T M Sill

PSI CONSTRUCTION

ltff, IINVONE CI.N STACK .
AB1ICil OF OLD VAWJMS
tJ1 RAN!Xlfi4.LYS?i.ASH
PAINT ON ACANVAS,BUT

IF ICANi OECIPHEII
Y!UIBIE,

CORNEll STONE
CONSTRUCTION

THEliWHAr5 " - THEPOINT?

WITHOUT MEA~ING,
HAS THE WIST REAI...L.Y
CIZEATED W . tJ1 HAVE
THEY CIZEATED SOMETHING
THAT ME11ELY GOES WELL
WlfH THE F[J!tjiT!JlE?
ANI)

I

(__

---..

GARFELO

1'J.IEY ruu:N'T RfAL &amp;00P
AT 5J.IARP TURNS

frigidaire 15,00 l!TU K.
greot$150 OliO 304675"5161 II no ....,laaWJ

Fer R......,..Ung and New Hoose ........,
C.U: MAKCUM CONSTKUCHON

• Room Additions • Garages • Vinyl
and Wood Siding • Roofing • Pole
Barns • Patio's, Porches and Decks

-·

740-985-4141

Cell: 740-416-1834
25+·y...,. upmat% Fret~ E~

llntE
Ct.ASSIFIEDS
\

CO S YKT

I I I 12 I

r

ZA EMA

I'

I'

I I

tender -

' WHSEL

m

"""'1...._...._
1.__1'~..-~
I

!

6

5

I

• An old timer once told me
that one skill thal most
people seem to be born with

0

TVNEN1

:I'll I'l I

0
y011

fj

is that of making - ·-.
Comph!ll! lhe d1ua:IO quoreo
by flll;ng In !too mbsing warclo
develop from otep No, 3 beloW.

PRINT NUMBERED
LnTERS IN SQUARES

e ;~~c:~iVETTERS I I I I I I I I I
SCRAMW'Ili ANSWEltS 6!3108

Gullt:t- Flush - Yucca - utopia - IS on YOU
,
The student was berating binuelf for his miSiake. The teacheP
•
counseled him by saying, ''Don't be tougher on y~inelf than :
life IS on YOU.•

ARLO &amp;JANIS

and

! HAVE. Ail:W&amp;ATHIIJC:. 50\Tf
WAIJ1' 1"0 SEE~

·.! i

~--

personal put-down. Whafs good tor one

Is good tor bolh.
AQUARIUS (Jan·. 20-feb. 19) - USEi
your common sense 1o h andle maners ·
that relate to your W'Ofk, but use your
heart, too, when dealing with oo-wori&lt;ers .
eapeclal!y If you are Changing or trans·
forming aomethlng they did.
PISCES (Feb. 20-March 20)- Th!s ta an
excellent day to arrange a social activity
with some friends , e~iall ylf you can
act as the host Of hOtteaa. lnatlnC1ively,
you'l kriow how to 8fllu~ that everyone
hu ._good lfrne.
"AlES (Mal'Ctl 2 1-Apr!l
19) O..•lopu....,ts an~ giving you custodial
oontrat at thil: time owr thOH whO are
un.tMe 10 tend totally lor themH!vea. In

CMea, you could actually be

younger thlin your charv-.
TAURUS

20.May 20 ) It
bl a good listener
b9cau.. 1hertl RJ muol1 10 be teamed
from othera abOut wt~p to herwjH!i a
rwa.ntty enooumred JMHWORIII problem.
(April

behoow. you

GRIZZWELLS

10

ep.n your mind to all augu-Uona.

.1\-\Ai'!1

~'7':1

~~~pi}A'(

~t-11'1

fiWL~~ICK?lllSE

AtM'ZIl-\6,

SOUP10NUJZ
...II!W M&lt;lllll'r.tCllrtoN is
l'lalk aND r wa~ ~J4 1

~)'~ ;&gt;~--

\

be

SAGIITARIUS (Nov. 23·0ec. 21)- Vou
* Ill instinctively take a cold, unfeeling
busineas matter and translorm It Into
80fll8thlng that can do much good tor
othera and make them teet protacted.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19) - If a
partner takes a cold and meaningless
Protect and singte--hanOedly transforms It
fnto a thing af beauty, don't take it as a

Advertise
in this space for
$64 per month

BARGAINS

I

glff.of caring . Which Is wor1h m ore than

any material i1em.
CANCER (June 21 -July 22) Endeavors you undenake on behalf of
your tam~y or thoae you lo~.~e will be
tremen1!?usly 's uccesatu t. If possible.
don't fal'l'n out anything you can comfonably handle.
LEO {July 23--Aug . 22) - More often
than not, you enjoy ·being in the m1ddle of
where the action is, but a little solitude
could do you mUCh good . Peapetul sur·
roundings can help sor1 out your feel·
ings[
·
Vlf100 (Aug. -23-Sept. 22) - Sha ring
time with caring lrfends could bring that
. which ts important to you back into locus.
so doli'! select jiJBt anybOdy to hang out
with. Good pals open your heart, whiCh
opens your mind .
LIBRA (Sept. 23--0ct . 23) - l!Aiess
some form of custodial interests con·
fronts vou. you may not push yourself as
much as usual. Concern tor others
brings out your beal qualities, and you'll
do what8118r it takes.
SCORPtO (Ocl . 24-Nov. 22)- Vou won 'l
neoeasarily feel 1J'Ie need lo dictate to
. others about how they should tead their
lives, but II someone uks for advice,

eom~~

AAif. ~ No11C:W

47239 Riebel Road, Long Bottom, OH

out to be for you r ultimate good .
Aagardles&amp; of their origin, you'll be glad
they occurred .
GEMINI (May 21·June 20) -Your atten·
tion could be 1ocuaed m ore on l'rtiViding
for kwed ones then•for yourselt ; however,
by doing so, you,l give them the precious

your suggestions wilt
constructive.

(

I

.

•••

RDom'1Sitollll&amp;

-E~&amp;Piumblng
·-

Nort.b

1 Channelrowf
2 Wyo.
neighbor
3 Remov-

26 Slci27 Jamie
-Ct.ltil
28 FYinolel
30 Ra zd
4 Gave up

A 2

West

-·-

DOWN

•

G.4N P~6GJIIf

'flee 11111'"1

·www.d '

A J 10

Who was at fault
for the slam miss?

A/tl APf'fTITf
SUPPJf6S.4/tiT
fO~ ITf

Big Garage/¥an!! Sale
~ .'5

w~

YO~·· c s

lloofing&amp;-..

10 '

t
•

for music
18 Mr. Mineo
19 And,
lorH..,o
21 Cllapel(2 wdo.)
23111ad&lt;,

oP.,ning lead: .. Q

/

....,.....,. • ........,.
hdo lllldlfloroh Oeob
, WV Gll72l

•

17c-

Dealer: South
Vulnerable: Neilher

1/1411 mo.

CKC West Hghland WMe
Work
Terriers (Woelles) 1at shols, •R
bl R
v.m. wt cit Ready to 00 ,
easona e ates

Immaculate 2 bedroom Reg. Golden Retriever pups,
apartment New carpet &amp; firB1 shot&amp; and wormed.

- · •fnlsWy painlad &amp;
daoorated, WID hook._,.
Baautlful country &amp;atting,
Only 10 m/nu!86"""' '-'·
·Must see to apprer31e.
$AOOimo. (81.)595-7773 or
1-800-11l8-46116, (740)64551153

SIDp &amp;Compare

L-..::;

-

j

7:1111 All-1:00PM

Wf I&gt;Ori'T JVST TfU.
YOU TO ST.4!rV~ .4
CO"O TI¥S'E 1&gt;.4YS ---

llnatltulion

===----:---:

.. '

Remodeling
Hours

7

West
Ea•\
• 8
lfA Q96
•K J 7a :t
• 5 I 2
• 6 4
. QJ941
•K I0~65
South
• AQJJ0953

MONTY

•New Homes
•Gar.,s
•Complete

Now'$5.00

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

r

•

s,.rutc
Specials
!Oin. Bos1on Ferns
While they las~ over
2000 .to choose from.
Flowering &amp; Foliage
BaskeU;, Bedding &amp;
Vegetable Flats
4 in. fotiage pot

06-(14-(18

• K 76 2
• 8 4s
• KQ987

BUBB.UWS

vilor
Mualtlave ·
exper. R will
be required to
lakeatest.
Applications
available .at front
desk of

_ ..-....,.
-·~·
·

no pels, (740)992-5858

Phillip

n ,_

- - - - - - - - 2 bedloom apartment fof
2 bedloon) holM
111111. ntnt .In Mh:lllopor., no~

1ms"
1
iL,__,::Amll::;:;HZ=i._.l
~ .29 acres on Chambers

-

NEA Crossword Puzzle

BRIDGE

3 p!11 . . 11 ...

·1!111olft-. 211 ~ -1115 ....·-+ -··740-.

~•:
1'1027
8% '1"11!0
lil1ingo -

Mid\Nest Home&amp;

dR •

The Daily Sentinel• Page 85

AUEYOOP

,3 ...1D11p!ll
Cook

,' - . 1in
..S lliddiBPI!II,
Mqli!od....
7«1-22:18.
.

_.........
1.......

199/mOI~:boe,ll:loll,-

°F'MN0E
UIED-

, """ - ' ·

_.,,.lilY

. . -~
_..,

wn,mydllilysentinel.com

Hiring

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

- - -- - - - ..,_lllioliiiiiiiiiliial_.
3 BR · Like New'

~

June 4, 2008

COOLSPOT 11
St. Rt. 50
Coolville, Ohio

~218

mony --·
a ...-.
•= .liiOIII.E HOME LOT FOR ""~-.::=-..,.~

Ad. wnh septic, wa1er &amp;

"What the heart has once known. ir
will never forger."

.........

--lor--.
rn-----__,
"='= I

Coumy-

1214.3&amp; PI' manit, tnoludta G 'b : 'il .r.ny .... ~~~MY
~
138,000. 740-708..,. ..,. (740)385-2434
10116
• .

Wednealiay~

\

\

�Pllge B4 • The Daily Sentinel
c.dolnlris
,_a _ _ _ _ ae - · ·-

The fmlily of

Mtlbel "Jacm" Mictuul
would like 10 extend sinOC!e thanks
for all tbe .flower.;, memorial
donations 10 Holzer Hospiee and
Bradbury CbW'Ch of Christ. food and
family dinner, cards and especially
tbe prayen at her passing.
Thanks to tbe kind staff of Fishe.rAnderson-McDaniel Funeral Honi:s
and Overl&gt;rook: Nursing Center's 400
hall.
A very special thanks to Tom
Runyon, minister of the Bradbury
Cburcb of Christ, who was always
there for Mom when she needed him.

~~~~--~

aO'FO'n

2008NOW 125,100
SAllE.._..

r•

=.':"
ymldo..;-........

rn
m,mtt
asthorue.aom

Pot, i"ete, Paula and ldlm and families

1 ..., 2

-

Repol

11,100

;to&lt;

7~8-2750

m~·C....
_;~::::;;:;;,:.;;;;;;.,.

electric . $13,500
(740)256-1389

Call

100 acres. Galli&amp; Co.
Suitable 1or homeSite, great
hunting area. .C19-23C:HM6

r f

lor

2BR -

..,., _,

......., _ _ , _

(740)1192:5858

In Eureka. - - 212 ani """· 3 -

and

Alder

Nwtll

GRFENHOUSE
Syracuse. Ohio
Now .,at f•

1

""""'t"''

~~=====~

6408,
25&amp;6718
..... '12511·
11 Of Rent
rent s-oo
dopooll.
boltl,..-Dip. 7~1..()245
· no pall.
441 -()583 dllya.
2IIA 1Pl CIA. [T«l) . .1•
"3 Bedroom 'House in 0184
MM:u•.aMiOJii
Syracuse. $500/m-. + 28R in 1oom $400/renl ~ Moii:1WiDiiE
dopooll Hud App. No PW.
·'
(304)675-5332 weekends $400/&lt;11!1&gt;.
•ncl · lEW MID UIED S1UL
7«&gt;59Hl265
· traah, ,_ carpot. steel Pipe Aebar
2
•
. no •polo. S39- "1M· leave For
Conctele,
Angle, ·

Cllll.2bathut91&lt;0odorSt.

11

. 9!12-5776

Dr-

Ohilnnel, Flat Bar, S1eel 1 _ _ _.;:::;:::;:::~::.;;:1

II"·

$850 per montf1 + $850 2br,
$0160,
3bf, $840 Grating
for
Draina,
·depo&amp;n. Aolorencos req. 111Dnth. aame Depoeit pluo
&amp; Wllkways. L&amp;1.
r-.1100
electric, waaher, dryer 5crap Metala'tlpon MondaV.
Nloo big 2·3 br. home In hool&lt;up, No Pols. :JOols61'4- Tueaday, Wedneaday &amp;
country •" appliaOces 0023 or ~1Q.07.76
fridly, 8am-4.30pm. CloBed
'
.
'
· Thursday, Saturday
&amp;.
ijO(Ige, hugo yatd. pond. 0
....... •
Sunday (740l"fl-1'000
$800
month,
· phon&lt;~ · 52 Westwood
·
(740)591~ or (740)696- Drive, .from S365 to $560. -~
Sl'EEL
--AACH
---.
1106
·
7&lt;10 U6 ;!568.
Equal
+loualng Opportunity. Thia
8UIIJWOSI
Mla.E ll!y;s
Is an Equal Ill 1111 USA. , -llil'lr
~ Opponunlty Provider and "" - • • • or Employer.
Htlgh- _
......
, 25~..:.~.
2Br at Johnoono Mobile
~jomel'art&lt;. CIII .w&amp;-2003 Clean
1br,
fumiBhild JO'ICM' Flnt ~tnt
Apartment Na Smoking, SlnJed- ·1 12D1R

r

Shnibs &amp; Azaleas
Open M-S 9,5
Closed Sunday

"""""'" .,_,....,.. on•

3bedJOOIII,2 .bath,E.1tCIIIIJ:I1 ......·. ---·1'1 .acre !lot, ·$400 21170

'COiidllioli,

~s-

~
. '

eo•·--E

month, No .lnalda Pell, ,llCIIIY.ENEIIJLY I..OCAT·
Rollh•- 11C)4;185:11588
1
or 304-&lt;593-8670
_.-y-yn-..;;
Townhouee
apartments,
and/or arnoll hou8e6 fOA
o4Bfl, goa, no pels, rat·
11 1
req. $5001fent fEN7f. C.. (7.&amp;0)4' • ,
1or
~a
inlormation.
$50illdel&gt;. 2-~

L.a------..
--~·.,

~~

.1

2 Vorkshlre Tenters tor adoplion, .AKC !Oglatarad, home
railed, vaccinated &amp; heatttl
guarant-~. It Interested
kindly - contact • me on
EllmYiew • sam.leonarda0101JOoglemiltcom lhen I can get bade.
Apa bnads · with you .
opiB. $38S and '-"· 7
- _rno
_ old
_____ire_To___
__r

~

Caring Pet
Cremations
GVC

GAS SAVER
SALE
(Silop Locally!
Tuesday- Sat1:1rday

NIKE - f&lt;,Swiss
flip Flops
$17.99

Other selecl .items
11()"k- 20%

Kipling Shoe Co.
'300 2nd Ave. Galipolis; OH
(acrtliiS fTtlm 1he city park)

The Gallipolis Elks Lodge
No. 107 will hOld their af\lllual
Soccer Shoot
Sunday, June :8 , 2008. :11 will
be l:leld at the Elks Fann on
SR 588. Sign up will stalil at
1:30 p,m. with the competni~m
starting at 2l00. Oompetitioo is
open to·all boys and ·girls bom
on 8131/1 993ci&gt;r after. There
will be four age .groups with
boys and gir1s divisions.
Trophies will be awarded for
first, ·second, and third plaoe in
each division. This event is
free of charge, so ,come on out
and bring a triend.

CIA, WID

paya

-

-..p, Tonanl
· EHO

17
(3CM_..30
-

LIOing 1 and 2
Bedroom Apto. at VIllage
Manor and Ri.....ide Aplo.ln
Middloport. from $327 to
15i2. 7&lt;10-1192·5064. Equol
&lt;iloilli•IQ QQ!iOilunfty.
-

!

AKC (M) pup. All shols +
llhol, haS all pape!S, .
has rnicfOChip. 006-3601

-

J AND II ELECTRICll

SOuth
1•

Herb Eliott Dodridu ~ill 011&amp;; WV

4•

Oloio Cmllladiod14074

........

.vu:.-• C..rdlk.otioo 119-1"

I_,.,.;,.J!r!::!!!!!!'!!!l.!!!

6/4108. $350M $400f 74113118-8&lt;153

i

$325. 256-1~

FRANK &amp; EARNEST

CAR PENTER
SERVICE

i.

BARNEY

Hft11a• ""•e&amp;rj.IH Fli liile
a

€1GHT -BALL IN

EASE, OL' BULLET--VA

1'!-I'CORI\IE~

lwth&amp;l , ......

ONLY HAflA TAI&lt;E
COI"lMANDS FROM
rr......_..:....._,
ME !!

POCKET!!

Stanley Tree-

•Prompl and Quality

References Available!·
Call Gary Stanley @
740-591.' 8044

FJrum; It

2•

Pass

Pass

Pass

Pass

35-

19

45

exile
24 Protazoim

='J:

48 Tolel 11

49 L..-,_

..,_

len'lloty

27

Sela-..

-52 G.- ca
org.
·
53 Par1y fib

5Maui..,.. 28 Marina

7=·)

oight

6 Why?

29 tanary'o

54 MS

dinner
34 Perc:olrtes,

8 Earned,

37Riviln

,

polilhon'

as water

36 cashmere
kin

9 Trendy

38 Taddlera'
pon:bea
39 Spoil

='ir

20-heroic478*-Y
22 ~ i!Jk&gt;
""""25 Bricklayer's
tool
·
need
SO" ra.24i Job benefit
a;tplo;•

-- --·
Ia win

10 Bullring
llhout
42 Tree J
11 GelhHched
housn?

German phi losop~er Georg HagBI
claimed, "The Ieamer always begins by

finding· fault, but the scholar sees the
positive merit in everything.M .
Surely the Ieamer always has his faults
pointed oul to him by the scholar.
After lhis deal. North and South lound
fauft wnh each other's decisions when
they reached only tour spadas an&lt;! tool&lt;
all 13 lricks after West unde!S1andably
did not lead the heart ace. How """ld
you arbitrate? How should six spades
have been reached?
North thought South should have
opened two clubs. But attholtgh Soutn's
hand would probably have won nine
lricks all on its own (a primary acid test),
wnh onl1 16 high-card points, ft was too
weak. One spade was correct
South said lhat North underllid with two
spades - lHid howl Smce North knew o1

(H you erllJioy the Losing Trd&lt; Count,
the North hand has ooly seven losers,
whK:h ~ lhe number 1or lorcing to game,
bul with only eight high·card j)Oints,

&amp;Removal

•Experienced

Pass

32 Choriah
33 Comet.ck

43 Chud&lt;

three-~ gam4Hnvitationallimh raise ·

Trimming

*lns~ured

Eabi

31_,_

13 Weekly

at least a nine-card fit, he should have
added three poims lor his singlelon. giv·
ing 11 total points. Tl'is is Ideal lor a

Racine, Ohio 740-247-2019
O..teta:
Jon Yin ...... ,
Paul Rowe

Cell: 740-416-!047 '
email:

j,lfLLO! Tl-4\~ 1:&gt; Tfli W/1-'IU.""' ,...WOUG\&gt; '(().) Lll'£ lr.l TO ""q
I:&gt;:,UE. YOU
OCPNO'fl\rnT.
T~E. C.~EC.K. '(().)
p., llf.f~t:&gt;
~~FOil. '1'~

j~Oaotcom

r

.

H~T':i ~OT ~E.Cf$&gt;..~-""'
W~'( ~i'l.lUSI'
T~OOI&gt;.

CI\ELKr

FAIJC.E.T

I"\\:&gt;T~T

...
_.~;:·~--~--..
~
STRAWBERRIES at Vlo!ll'a

~I&gt;

W~
CNEAAl~n'

L.f.T It

"'00

".;........·- ·-

CELEBRITY CIPHER
byl,.uis~
Celetrit)' ~ C!}'~Xograms aJe creal.ed from IJIO!Iiols by larilous pecple, past and ~
Each Ieder tn the Cipher sllnds fof 8'\Cithet

puUing in one notch would be a wise

THE BO.RN LOSER
,...
.

Wt&gt;-:)
oou...Nt.~'f

TodaYs clue 0 equa!s U

move.)
OVer three spades, South might irrimedi·
atel1 bid lour no-trump, Blaoi&lt;Wood. but
mighl also control-bid (cue-bid) tour
clubs to suggest a slam. Then North
should bo happy to control-bid lour dia·
monds. True, he does not have the ace,
bul he has a good hand fof a limit raise.
And South can always doubla-dledc. on
aces wnh Blackwood. SQUih would do
that here, then bid six spades.

•

" RVL

PNMR

RLHHKDFKSX

RVL ' LSXZKMV ·zcSXOCXL
DHNP

RVL

VLHL

RN

XNJLHSPLSR

IN ·HEM KS
CHL: K ' P

CSE ·K'· P

VLZT ." -HNSCZE

HLCXCS

PREVIOUS SOLUTION - ' Baseball is reassuring. It makes""' teel
wor~ ~ not goinglo bi&lt;W up.' · Poet Sharon Olds

as~ lhe

':::' S@i..~lA-"'r-~s· won

- , . - I I East of
Syracuse on AI. 124. Yoo

Wll

E!llt.d bw CLAY R. I'OI1AH

OReor~&lt;~•go

letters of lh
four "'"'mblod ward&gt; below 10 form lour 1imple wordl.

"EHSLAVE TtiE I'\OLLUSK •
DOESII'T JIJ$T f'L,._Y
SOII!iS! WE'RE . "

'111...-.tay, Ju. . 5, 2008

ar--o.ot

In the year ahead , ~ number of needed
changes ooukl .take plaoe thai will prove
to be lleartwarmlng: they will also turn

I'IIJLTISEMSOil.Y

June 5, 6, 7

EXPERIEHCE ~

Rain or Shime

miles on Oak Growe
Road, Racine
H&amp;H

fi:IITiilure: Porlable dish
washer,
water bed.
wedge, end tables, hutch &amp;
table, etc.

rvs.

i

Guttering

f

•
----~.. !

Clothes: 3x to 3l
l'lll11111' n1~. ilems.
WELL. 60 AUEAO AND SIIOOT..
IAMAT AAE '{()U WAITING FOR 7

74o441 ~9010

GIWWIN6 ..

COWandBOY
IOONT (£T M Sill

PSI CONSTRUCTION

ltff, IINVONE CI.N STACK .
AB1ICil OF OLD VAWJMS
tJ1 RAN!Xlfi4.LYS?i.ASH
PAINT ON ACANVAS,BUT

IF ICANi OECIPHEII
Y!UIBIE,

CORNEll STONE
CONSTRUCTION

THEliWHAr5 " - THEPOINT?

WITHOUT MEA~ING,
HAS THE WIST REAI...L.Y
CIZEATED W . tJ1 HAVE
THEY CIZEATED SOMETHING
THAT ME11ELY GOES WELL
WlfH THE F[J!tjiT!JlE?
ANI)

I

(__

---..

GARFELO

1'J.IEY ruu:N'T RfAL &amp;00P
AT 5J.IARP TURNS

frigidaire 15,00 l!TU K.
greot$150 OliO 304675"5161 II no ....,laaWJ

Fer R......,..Ung and New Hoose ........,
C.U: MAKCUM CONSTKUCHON

• Room Additions • Garages • Vinyl
and Wood Siding • Roofing • Pole
Barns • Patio's, Porches and Decks

-·

740-985-4141

Cell: 740-416-1834
25+·y...,. upmat% Fret~ E~

llntE
Ct.ASSIFIEDS
\

CO S YKT

I I I 12 I

r

ZA EMA

I'

I'

I I

tender -

' WHSEL

m

"""'1...._...._
1.__1'~..-~
I

!

6

5

I

• An old timer once told me
that one skill thal most
people seem to be born with

0

TVNEN1

:I'll I'l I

0
y011

fj

is that of making - ·-.
Comph!ll! lhe d1ua:IO quoreo
by flll;ng In !too mbsing warclo
develop from otep No, 3 beloW.

PRINT NUMBERED
LnTERS IN SQUARES

e ;~~c:~iVETTERS I I I I I I I I I
SCRAMW'Ili ANSWEltS 6!3108

Gullt:t- Flush - Yucca - utopia - IS on YOU
,
The student was berating binuelf for his miSiake. The teacheP
•
counseled him by saying, ''Don't be tougher on y~inelf than :
life IS on YOU.•

ARLO &amp;JANIS

and

! HAVE. Ail:W&amp;ATHIIJC:. 50\Tf
WAIJ1' 1"0 SEE~

·.! i

~--

personal put-down. Whafs good tor one

Is good tor bolh.
AQUARIUS (Jan·. 20-feb. 19) - USEi
your common sense 1o h andle maners ·
that relate to your W'Ofk, but use your
heart, too, when dealing with oo-wori&lt;ers .
eapeclal!y If you are Changing or trans·
forming aomethlng they did.
PISCES (Feb. 20-March 20)- Th!s ta an
excellent day to arrange a social activity
with some friends , e~iall ylf you can
act as the host Of hOtteaa. lnatlnC1ively,
you'l kriow how to 8fllu~ that everyone
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Page B6 •

The Daily Sentinel

www.mydallysentineLeom

Astros blank Pirates, 2-0 Trainer says no issues with Big Brown's cracked hoof..~
'

PITTSBURGH (AP) There's a _guaranlfied way for
a team in a bad hittin~ slump
to win. That's ~outpllch the
opponent,
and
Wandy
Rodrig~z and the Houston
Astros' bullpen did eKaetly

that.
• Lance
Berkmlin
and
Miguel Tejada doubled in
runs and Rodriguez pitched
six shutout innings in his second start after coming off the
disabled list, and the Astros
stopped a five-game losing
streak by beating the
Pittsburgh Pirates 2"0 on
Tuesday night.
The Astros still aren't scoring - they've totaled ohl y
eight runs m six games, and
were ootsrored 19-3 while
l:leing swept in a three-game.
weekend
series
· b~
Milwaukee. They didn t
need many runs in this game,
not with Rodriguez limiting
the Pirates to five bits while
teaming with three relievers
on Houston's third shutout of
the season.
: Chris· Sampson, Doug
Brocail and Jose Valverde
finished up · the five-hitter
with a hitless innin~ each,
with ValveFde gettmg his
16th save in 19 opportunities.. The three relievers
retired all nine 'batters they

faced.

··"When things·aren't going
well. what you need more
•
anything else is someO!le to.step up an~ive you a
great pitching
ormance,
that's what we got tonight,"
8eJlkman said'. "We still didn 't score a )ot of runs, and
things were a little difficult,

Game·6

but Wandy was the story."
Kaz Matsui went 4-for-4
with a sacrifice bunt and
scored both Astros runs, on
Berkman's RaJ double down
the eight-field line in the first
and Tejada's double in the
sixth. Berkman, the NL player of the month for May.
went 1-for-4 to lower h1s
avemge to .382.
The Pirates, shut out for
the first time this season,
loaded the bases against
Rodriguez in the sixth but the
left-bander · got
Adam
LaRoche to line out to short·
stop Tejada for the l'iru!l out
"Any time we hit it hard, it
was at somebody," Pirates
manager John Russell said.
"We didn 't create much
offense to support our pitching."
If LaRoche's ball had been
hit a few feet into the gap, tbe
Pirates likely would have
tied it. Instead; they became
the last NL team to be shut
out for the first time this season.
.
"I stayed with the fastball
and did what I wanted to
with it, I hit it as hard as I
could - but I hit it right to
his chest," said LaRoche, a
traditional . slow starter who
is hitting .211. ''I'm just not
lucky right now."
Rodriguez (2-1) hadn't had
much success in Pittsburgh,
going 0-3 with a 5.87 ERA in
his last four starts there. He
also was 3-11 in his last 18
road starts, but didn't allow a
runner as far as third base
until Jack Wilson and Freddy
Sanchez singled and Xavier
·
Nady walked m the s1xth.

of sports. You have to he
ready to play the next one
again."
, Osgood has been praised
fromPageBl
throughout the series as
being a guy who can shake
when Maxime Talbot came off a bad goal or a bad loss
out of nowher,e to score the and imme!;liately . face the
tying goal. Fleury, who had next chall.eilge. He joined a ·
already played ail excep- few of his teammates in
tiona! game, was on the meeting the media at a
bench for an extra attacker. downtown hotel Tuesday
Surprisingly, that man and showed no signs he was
.
was Talbot, who hadn't particularly troubled.
served that role this season.
h
h
·
T e two-time c amp10n
Penguins . coach Michel goalie with the Wmgs
Therrien went with a hunch rocked back in his chair as
and it paid off. ·
he listened to Kris Draper
On arid on the game went. and Brian Rafalski answer
Most of the action was tilted questions. Rafalski,_ a twotoward the Penguins end, tline Cup wm:ner w1th· New
but fleury played his own Jersey, was set to be the star .
game of "Can you top this?" after his goal gave Detroit a
The goaltender made 24 3-2 lead with 10:37 left in
saves after regulation regulation.
.
four fewer than Red Wings
It was that goal that had
counterpart Chris Osgood the Joe Louis Arena crowd
made in the entire game chanting; "We want the
and an astoundin_g 55 over• Cup," and they were on the
all in the fifth-longest game verge of getting it, too.
in fmals history.
"I wasn't really aware
. When Petr Sykora's goal that it was bein~ wheeled
finally ended it midway out," Osgood Said. "I was
through the third time, scor- . more trying to focus on try·
fth
ing at a time when NBC · · k
should have been well into mg to eep tt out o e net.
You don 't really think about
"Late Night With Conan it at the· time. Afterward, it
O'Brien" on the East Coast, might breeze through your
the tired and injured mind a few times that
Penguins tried to muster up you're close. You can't realthe energy to celebrate their ly do anything about it
S)Jrvival and get ready for after...
another eliinination game.
Now they again have to ·
"They kind of had it .in figure out how to shut down
their pocket, and it is going Penguins captain Sidney
'f'o ·be hard for them to get up
for the game, too," Sykora Crosby, who assisted on
said. "The preparation is two of Pittsburgh ' s four
going to be the same for us. goals, and Evgeni Malkin,
...1 can't wait for tomor- the enigmatic 21-year-old
NH-L MVP finalist who
ww night because the build- earned his first point of the
ing's going to be really loud series with a feed to Sykora
here."
the winner 49:57 into
This is where Detroit. can for
..
overtime
.reall y reIY. on the expenence
Fl
·
· 1 ..
it.· has .b uilt u.p not only as a.
· eury 15 certam Y gammg
confidence and Therrien
championship-caliber club . says his club is getting betfOr the past decade, but also ter every game. The results
on recent postseason histo· suggest that could be true,
ry.
e\(en if the Red Wings'
The Red Wings finished .dominant play at times says
each of their three prev-ious otherwise.
Pittsburgh has won two of ·
series .on the road, including
the ·western Conference the past three games in the
~ainst Dallas after fallin.Jl_ series, · despit~ being
at home in Game ~ outscored 8-2 in the .third •
Detroit's 3·0 series lead period, and is 9-1 at home.
quicldy became 3-2 before The Penguins had only two
it ended in six.
shots in the · third on
Sound familiar?
Monday before Talbot put
.. The Red Wings are faced two on Osgood. in scorjng
with figuring out a way to · the tying goal.
avoid filling their heads
Sykora's tally, which he
with what-ifs. No team had predicted in the dressing
ever been that close to win- room . during an overtime
ning the Cup and not done intermission,
was
it.
Pittsburgh 's third in 22
"When you 're in the mid- power-play chances.
4Je of everything, you don't Only six teams that have
think about that," said trailed 3-1 in the fmals have
defenseman
Nicklas survived until a Game 7,
Lidstrom, one win away and the 1942 Toronto Maple
from becoming the first Leafs are ·the lone club to
European to capCain a Cup come all. the way back to
winner, "It's 1 afterward ·win the Cup - erasing a 3when you realize we did 0 hole against the Red
. have a great chance to ·win Wings.
but we didn 't.
"It's a great feeling to
"You have . to put that come to the rink and work
behind you and move on to for Game 6," Therrien said.
the next game. It does stink "We' re still fo.c using on
right after when you had a Game 6. There's a lot of
Chance, but that's the beauty work io be done."
I

Gold Wmgs and Ri~s
Festival edition
inside today's Sentinel

'

NEW YORK (AP) - A
feisty Big Brown was back
in his barn after a final workout Tuesday for the .Belmont
Stakes, and Rick Dutrow Jr.
wasted no time zeroing in on
the crack in the colt's left
front hoof.
No blood.
.
"I didn't see any," the
trainer said, promptly relayc
ing the good news to hoof
specialist Ian McKinlay by
phone. "I said that he went
~ood and I don't s~ apy
1ssue at all. I told him that
everything was beautifl\1." ·
Big Brown ran five f\rrlongs in I :00.03 wtth
Dutrow
and
co-owner
.Michael Iavarone looking on
near the finish line, where
they expect Big Brown (()be
proclaimed . a Triple Crown
champion on Saturday.
No such celebration has
taken place at this track since
1978, when Affmned dueled
with Aiydar and captured
thoroilghbreol racing's highest honor.
"We're as happy as we can
be," Qutrow said. "There's
not any issues with our
horse. He does whatever you
would want him to do."
Like Dutrow, Iavarone was
all smiles, and already looking beyond the Belmont. If
the colt comes out of the race
in good shape.. he said Big
Brown would run in the
Travers at Saratoga m

Reds
fromPageBl
ing Aaron Harang (2-8).
Eaton has won ·consecutive
starts after going winless in
his frrst 10.
· A cqnstant target for
boos because he's pitched
poorly after signing a fr~­
agent contract ·before last
season, Eaton left to a
standing ovation, and
tipped his ha't' to the crowd.
"I think it was the best
stuff I've had," Eaton said.
J .C . R omero and Gor d on
combined for four outs,
and Brad Lidge finished
for his 15th save in as
many ·chances. Lidge
· d E ncarnac10n
·
·
retue
on a
shallow fly with two runners on to end it.
Harang gave up three

August and the Breeders' and do something. He's beep
Cup Classic at Santa Anita in kind of bored the last couple
October.
. days with just a bisic gal"We '11 tum him over at the lop."
end of the year" to Three
He entered the 1 1/2-mile
Chimneys farm, he said.
oval near the clubhouse turn
That's where Big Brown . and began jogging, then galwill begin his bree~~f- loping. Nevin kept a strong
career as part of a $50 · - hold on Big Brown as be
lion deal Iavarone · and the made his way around the
other owners · .agreed · to tmck wifh all eyes on him. ·
before the Preakness.
Even Funny Cide, whose
Tuesday's . workout was 2003 Triple Crown bid was
important in two ways: Big derailed on a sloppy
Brown did it without a patch Belmont track, stood near
on his hoof, and it was his !~Je mil watching Big Brown
first so-called breeze since m !&gt;etween his stable pony
two days before he won the dulles..
.
. ,
Kentucky Derby on May 3.
Nevm S31d ~~ w~ a 'ne_runtil B1g
The quarter cmck that was vous wreck
discovered May 3@ is being Brown came safely off the
held together by stainless u:ack. Back at the barn, she
steel sutures until McKinlay hIgerh-.fived .another exercise
patches it Friday. Dutrow 0 de
originally .planned to have
"You don't want him to go
him do it Monday, but decid- too fast and leave our race on
ed to wait so Big Brown the track," she said. "Today
could work out without it was a little bit more pressure
and let any seepage in the because we want him to do
area drain.
everything right and in the
"We jumped over a big right way and that's exactly
hurdle today," he said. "He's what he did .. He's eager and
right on target, couldn't be happy to do tt."
any better."
·
Dutrow became slightly
Exercise rider Michelle annoyed under persistent
Nevin detected a certain quesllioning about the hoof.
feistiness in Big Brown.
"You keep going over this.
"He'-s been acting a little I don ' t understand it," he told
rough, wanting to do more, reporters. "The horse is fine,
so I knew he was going to be . the quru:rer crack has _not
ready for this," she said. "He been an 1ssue for some tune
was pretty strong, just now. ·He breezed· great, he's
because he was ready to go coo~ out good, there's no

runs an.d nine hits in sixplus innings. He didn't get
any run support again the ·Reds have scored 16 ·
runs in his eight losses:
"We're not scoring for
Aaron," Baker said. "He
made one mistake to Pat
and l.ost it."
·
. Chase Utley led off
Philadelphia's sixth with a
double.
After · Ryan
Howard struck oilt, Burrell
hit a towering drive into
the left-field seats to give
the Phillies a 3-1 lead.
"I feel the only mistake I
made was the hanging slid·
er to Burrell," Harang said.
"If I make a good pitch
instead of hanging it, I
probably get him swing-

tn.g." '
Encarnacion tripled to
start the eighth off Gordon.
Pinc.h-hitter
Javier
Valentin's sacrifice fly cut
it to 3-2, but Gordon got

blood. what else is there?' ·. ,,
With the workout ovet; .
Iavarone focused on the race-. ·
He said 800 frie~ lllllli• ',
tives will be on hand, wid! ·
500 in a tent and 300 SC8l:;
tered around ·the .clubhOuse,
grandstand and owner's box.
He's been advised there's a
50-person limit in the winner s circle.
·
"We'll have to draw a lot- ·
tel)'," he said.
Post positions will be
drawn Wednesday, but
Dutrow dismissed that as a
mere technicality.
. "I would like to 'draw outside, but the poSf ~n is
not goinl! to get fiim 'b eat,"
be said. li'He'U adapt to anything pace is not an issue for
hi_m.';
.
·•. ·
d
If the other ~orses oot ~0
to ~ I~, Btg B~~ ~
he sa~d. If they go, he H~tt.
Big Brown has a hght ·
schedule· ~e rest . of ~e
week.
W,•th
ram
tn
~ednesday s forecast, ·he
wit! ~alk around tb,e bam.
He 11 J~ Thursday and: gal!op Friday, when McKinlay
ts S';lpposed to glue !he
acrylic patch on~ hoof.
_It appears ~t etght;l;l~S
will take on B1g Brown, Wtth
Japanese-bred Casino Drive
the ()oly one beside~ the
Derby!Preakness
WIDDer
likely to have single-digit
odds.

out of the . inning af~r bled to start the. P.llillies'
walking Griffey.
seventh.
Left-hartder
Encarnacion hit a solo Danny Herrera: entered for
shot leading off the third to his big league debut and
give the Reds a 1-0 lead. retired Victorino · on a
Eaton had retired the first grounder to shortstop.
six
batters
before After Utley was inteiltionEnc.a rnacion lined his lOth ally
walked,
Herrera
homer into the left-field ·fanned Howard and BUrrell
seats.
. tO escape ·the jam.
Utley had a broken-bat
"I was very iQJ.pre.s,s ed
RBI single wlth two outs in with him," Baker said. "He ·
the third to tie it at I. wasn't scared....
Utley, who lea,ds the
Notes~ RolHns stole l!iS .
majors with 21 homers, 23rd and 24th consecutive
didn't hit one out for the · bases, dating to last .seafirst time in six games.
son. It's the longest streak
Before getting hurt, Freel in the majors .... Victorino
made a sensational play to was 0-for-3 with a wailt;
save a run in the fifth. With s_napping his 14-g~~~
two outs and a runner on · ung streak .... Do!&gt;bs .
third, Freel made a head- the majors with 14'. bits·8 (.a
first, diving catch on a pinch-hitter.
.: .
sinking · liner by Shane Cincinnati's Jerry Hairston
Victorino.
was 0-for-4, ending his 10Harang left after pinch- · game hitting streak.... The .
hitter Greg Dobbs smgled Reds have lost 14 of 17 on
and Jimmy Rollins dou- the road:

FAC announces festival
art competition, A6

•

•

·.... .
•

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio
)0 t

I:\ IS • \ ol. ;; -. i'l:o .

T i ll RSll \\ . ,Jl ':\E :; ,

:!:!.;

"'"' · "'~da ih'l• nlilll'l .t· on•

:.!008

SPORTS
.•

.

• 02 track and field state
pnwilwi. See Pqe Bl
8Y BRIAN J. REED
BREEDOMYDAILYSENTINELCOM

ROCKSPRINGS - An
occupancy permit is all that
prevents the University of
Rio Grande from opening
its new Meigs• Center · at
Rock.springs . . •
Construction on the new
Bernard V. Fultz Center for
Higher Education has been
completed, and Wednes~y.
furniture · was
bemg
installed. The center's
director, Brent Patterson,
said the building will be
ready for use laterthis summer, and fall quarter classes
will be offered there beginning in August.
The center, loca!ed on a
hill adjacent to the Meigs
Middle School. is owned by
the
Meigs
. County
Community Improvement
Corporation and leased to
the university. It will

0BITUARIFS
· Page AS
. • Gertrude Erwin, 90
·• Jnvny Grcnm, ss
• Mary Holter, 84

Brian J. Reed/photo

Desks, tables and other fumiture were delivered to the
Bemard F. Fultz Center for Higher Education Wednesday,
as the University of Rio Grande continues to plan the opening of. its Meigs Center there.
·

Racine to
lay out
annexation

INSIDE.
"

replace the university's cen- computers with wireless
ter in Middleport, which .internet access, allowing
closed with the conclusion students to use them anyof the spring quarter.
where in the building. The
Luanne Bowman, vice building also has the lastest
president · for academic energy-efficient · heating
affairs, said the building has and air conditioning and
·
not yet been connected to electrical systems.
Patterson said tlhe univerthe sewerage package plant
at Meigs High School, the . sity plans to offer 18 classonly obstacle preventing the es in the fall quarter, includstate from issuing the neces- ing an increase in general
·education and business
sary occpuancy permit.
The new center includes courses. A schedule of fall
eight 720 square-foot class- offerings will be available
rooms, a distance learning later thii summer.
While course offerings
lab, computer lab, conferand·
hours of operation
ence rooms and office
were
limited
at the
space .. A large conference
room, large enough to seat Middleport location, the
about 125 people, is served new Fultz Center will be a
· by a small food-serving full-time, day and evening
area, and will be available facility. Its course offernot only for classroom use ings, Patterson said, will be
designed to serve local fullbut also to the public for
time students now commumeetings.
niting to the main Rio
The new center will be
equipped with 30 laptop ............. tenter. As

.•.

Gal1ia-M~igs

Patrol Post
celebrates 75
years of service

plan at

StAFF REPORT
NEWS.-II.VSENTINEL.coM- _

meeting

GALLIPOLIS -The Ohio
. State Highway Patrol (OSHP)
BY 8E'n1 SERGENT
is very excited to be celebmt· BSERGENlOMYDAILYSENTlNEL.OOM
ing 7 ~ years of service to the
great State of Ohio.
RACINE - Officials in
OSHP's
Gallia-Meigs
Racine will lay out their
Post is inviting the public to
annexation proposal at an
anend an open house in celinformational meeting .at 7
ebmtion of it's 75th anniverp.m., Tuesday, June 17 at
sary. The open house will be
the Racine
Municipal
held on June 14, from I p.m.
B.uiiding where not only
to 3 p.m. at the Gallia-Meigs
officials but the public will
Post. located at 396 Jackson
get to state their case for or
Pike, Gallipolis .
against the proposal. .
• ·Qijtlng for a cat !Se.
On Nov. 15, . 1933. the
The
case
village
officials
first
patrolmen rolled out of
.SeePIIeAl
hope to make include the
Camp Perry prepared to
. • Easlem Higl School
following benefits as they
enforce traffic laws and pro:band awards presented. see them: .
mote safety. 75 years later,
•
Increased
·
population
OSHP is looking back on
;See.,. A3
results in increased potenwhat it has accompli shed
::. Annu8l catfiSh
tial for grants · assisttng in
and how it has tr:p1sformed
:·~set ·for
more infrastructure and ecoto become one of the most
''
nomic
growth.
According
to
respected law enforcement
'.Sai!Jrday. See Pille A6 officials, companies .s uch as
agencies in the wQrld .
grocery or retail stori~s look
On that first day in 1933,
at the· population of an area
60 newly-trained and sworn
before making that decision
law enforcement officer"'
to
build. If annexation is
•• .
1:.
.
Staff photo equipped with six cars and 54
approved Racine's popula- Yesterday afternoon this section of Mulberry Avenue was closed due to rising water which motorcycles rode out of the
,.. .-··-~- : --· .rtion would go from 800 to
OSHP's first training facility
was alleviated, somewhat, when a village worker unplugged a clogged dram.
possibly 1,200.
knowh as Camp Perry. Their
Pomeroy has around
objective was to leave the
2,000 residents
while
snow-covered
training
Middleport's population is
grounds near Lake Erie and ·
approJUmately
2.200.
man their assigned posts scatlpcreased population is also
tered throughout the state.
believed to be leverage for
The highway patrolman of
Racine to ~et in on public
that day looked very different
works proJects that may
from today's trooper. Each
normally go to larger viiBY BE111 SERGENT
to the Pomeroy Parking officers to not only ·direct patrolman wore a leather coat, •
!ages in the county.
BSERGENTOMYDALYSENTINELOOM
Lot
wall.
Yesterday traffic bui to redirect traffic . helmet, goggles. breeches,
• The presence of local
·
h
h· h
law enforcement via the
evemng t e amp II eater away from the site due to and boots and patrolled on a
POMEROY -A rising was
already
halfway what the Ohio Departmen1 motorcycle. There was no
Racine Police Department.
river, street flooding, closed underwater which may of Transportation called ~ diversity among the patrol"
• Refuse/ttash pick up roads and trees slipping affect this weekend's Gold hillside slip. The roadway at men in the division. all were
'
e:very Tuesday at a cost of from the saturated earth Wings and Ribs Festival to the intersection was closed white males.
:.,. • *"ON8 - IS PAGES
Today the OSHP has more
$11 a month. Those n:si- were just a few unwanted an extent but it will not as of press time and an
iwne's .Mailbox
A3 dents currently purchasmg gifts heavy Cains brought to stop it, with the proverbial undetermined amount of than 1.500 sworn troopers
wat,er from the Tu&amp;:rs Meigs County yesterday.
show going on.
.
Verizon customers were who are trained at. the acad~n¢rrs
A3 Pl.
atn.s _Chester
ater
Between midnight and 6
Yesterday afternoon sec- affected.
emy in Columbus and more
District .will not have t~ PW:- p.m. on Wednesday, the lions . of Mulberry and
Workers for American than 1,000 professional and
. .
chase water .from Rilcme if lower pool at the Racine · Union Avenues were closed Electric Power were busy in non-sworn staff. all of which
annexed. AI'!&lt;&gt;• the sewer · Locks and Dam raised due to high water. At one Syracuse yesterday evening display a wide spectrum of
l:;omics
upgrade roJect propo~ed seven feet, going from }5.5 point water was knee deep where anothef tree had fall- diversity: they are from dJfEditorials
by the yr~use Racme feet to 22.5 feet after. a day on Mulberry Avenue though en, this time on power lines ferenl· ethni~ backgrounds,
Sewer . D1stnct for t~e of steady, pounding rains.
village workers were able to on Dusky Street. The female and male. Troopers
~ovies
Tackervil~e area IS not a vii- · A spokesperson for the unclog a drain to alleviate at Syracuse Fire Department now drive cruisers and wear
!age. project and has .. no Racine Locks and D_am said least part of the problem. was also on the scene.
an award-winning uniform
Qbitua'ries
beanng on .annexatJ_on: the latest prediction in terms Members of the Pomeroy
things
have
Also during the after- · Man y
A6 However, ~acm~ officials of a water crest was a( 33.3 / Police Department also noon's heavy rains, it was changed over the years but
J.ilaces to go ·
•
recently. ~d ~stden~ cur- feet on Friday but .that esti- assisted
two
stranded reported four to six inches one thing has remained a
8 Section Ie!It!Y hvmg 10 Racl_ne, as mate is expected to be 1 motorists at this time.
8. ~rts
of water was over the new constant ~ the Patrol 's goal
"":'th. all c~storners 10 ~e revised today at I p.m. and
The Pomeroy Police . road (US 33) at Bashan.
to make Ohio roadways
Weather
A3 distnct.. w1ll be finan~mg will likely rise.
·
Department liJ1fd Me1gs
ln addition, an afternoon safe. apprehend and arrest
the project to an extent, an
Using that 33.3-foot County Sheriff's Office power outage in Mason , criminals, provide aid to
c -Ohio
p Ill hiQI Co.
extent depe~de~t on what crest prediction, the water kept busy mto the late W.Va. took out the traffic those in need: and treat all
~IS the distn~t, not the should rise to between 37- evening hours when a tree light at the foot of the 1 citizens with courtesy.
village, can receiv~ for the 38 feet in Pomeroy which near the section of Nye Pomeroy-Mason Bridge ,
Please join us in celebrating
upgrade to Tackerville.
is about halfway u.p the Avenue and ()hio 833 ~ell causing tr;lffic delays in the 75 years of service to you, the
citizens, of the State of Ohio.
" ' ' " Ml leclnL AS
rugged river gage attached onto phone ltnes, requmng already congested area.
I
'

WEATIIER.
1 .'

•

Rai--••s

•
rtver,

havoc

~pieds
..
~

.
.

.

v....,

•

J
f

•

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