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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 .'

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Rai--••s

•
rtver,

havoc

~pieds
..
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.

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•

�.The Daily Sentinel

PageA2

ACROSS THE NATION
.

BY BETH fOUHY
,O,SSOCI,O,TEO PRESS WRITER

WASHINGTON
Hillary Rodham Clinton is
. ending her historic bid to
become the first female
president and will back
rival Barack Obama on
Saturday, capping
17month quest that began
with the words "''m in it to
win it" with a more humble
plea for party unity.
· Hour~
after
Barack
Obama sealed the nomination, Democrats coalesced
around his candidacy, sending a strong signal to
Clinton that it was time to
bow out. The_former frrst
lady told House Democrats
during a private coilference
call Wednesday that she will
express
support
for
Obama's candidacy and
congratulate him for gathering the necessary delegates
to be the party's nominee. ·
"Seaator' Clinton will be
hosting an event in
.
Al'fii*O
_Washington. D.C., to thank
Democratic
presidential
hopeful
Sen.
Hillary
Rodham
Clinton,
0-N.Y.,
adjusts
her
microphone
as
she
speaks at the
her supporters and express
her support for Senator American Israel Public Affai.rs Committee (AI PAC) Policy Conference 2008 W~nesday at the Washington Convention
Obama and party unity. This _ Center in Washington.
'
event will be held on
black
contendef ever.
Democratic congressional signature issue of health longtime political patron,
Saturday to accommodate
Obama Tuesday night leadership released a state- care. This adviser spoke on Clinton was urged to draw a
more of Senator Clinton's
secured
the 2, 118 delegates ment urging the party to condition of anonymity close to the contentious
supporters who want to
to
claim
the Democratic rally behind Obama, and because officials were not campaign, or at least
attend," her communications director Howard nomination, but Clinton several lawmakers includ- authorized to discuss the express support for Obama
stopped short of acknowl- ing Iowa Sen. Tom Harkin, conference call Clinton Her decision to acquiesce
Wolfson said.
edging
· that . -milestone, Colorado Sen. Ken Salazar held with her congressional caught many in tbe camAlso in the speech,
paign by surprise and left
Clinton will urge once-war- Instead, she was defiant, and Louisiana Sen. Mary supporters.
was
bener
posiOther
options
include
the
campaign scrambling to
insisting
she
Landrieu
all
endorsed
their
ring Democrats to focus on
tioned
than
Obama
to
defeat
.
Illinois
colleague.
to
finalize
the logistics and
freeing
her
delegates
the general election and
McCain
in
November.
Obama
also
announced
he
back
Obama
and
ending
specifics
behind her camdefeating Republican presi"What does
Hillary had' named a thr~?C-person her candidacy uncondition- paign departure.
dential candidate John
What
does
she vetting team · that included ally. The official stressed
It was an inauspicious end
want?
McCain.
want""
Clinton
said,
hours
Caroline
Kennedy,
daughter
Clinton
nor
her
for
a candidacy that appeared
that
neither
The only degree of uncertainty was how. Clinton is after telling supporters of the late President John E inner circle bad decided indestructible when it began
specifically what course to - 17 months ago.
exploring options to retain she'd be open to joining Kenne4y. .
vice-presiAn
~dviser
said
Clinton
·
take
other than to recogArmed with celebrity, a
Obama
as
his
her delegates and promote
and her lieutenants had dis- nize that the active state of prodigious ._ fundraising
her issues, including a sig- dential running mate.
But by Wednesday, other cussed various ways a pres- her bid · to become the Rolodex, a battle-tested
nature call for universal
Democrats made it abun- idential candidacy can end, nation's ·rli'st female presi- · campaign team and fpopuhealth care.
lar two-tenn former presi·The announcement closed dantly clear they wanted including suspending the dent had ended.
otJ the telephone call with dent as a husband, many
an epic five. month nomi- something, too: a swift end campaign to retain control
nating battle pining the tirst to the nominating contest.
of her convention delegates impatient congressional observers
believed
Democratic Party chair- and sustain her visibility in supporters including New Clinton's victory in the
serious female candidate
nomination
against the most viable man Howard Dean and the an effort to ·promote .her York Rep. Charles Rangel, a Democratic

a

contest was a sure diing. '
But in Obama, the New
York senator faced an opponent who appeared perfectly
sqited tO the time - a
charisllllltic neWcomer who
opposed the Iraq war· from
tbe beginning and who
offered voters· a compelling
message of change. Clinton
_ voted for the legislation that
authorized military force
against lmq . .
After a disastrous showing in the leadoff Iowa caucuses Jan. 3, Clinton won
New Hampshire's primary
Jan. 8, setting off the Slate.by-state war of attrition
with Obarna that followed.
Her fortunes rose and fell
like a fever chart:_She was
up iri. Nevada_, down in
South Carolina. Then, after
a roughly .even finish on
Super Tuesday Feb. 5, _
she
suffered ·a string of unanswered losses that, almost
before Clinton noticejl, put
Obama so far ahead in the
delegate hunt that all the
big-state victories she
piled liP couldn't close the
delegate gap.
·
By Man:ll, , her options
limited, Clinton: adopted
the persolll!. of.a tenaciOUS .
. fighter for the middle class,
and powered su.,.eessfully
throUgh primaries _in_ staleS
like Ol)io, Petuisylvania,
. lndiana, West Vu:gmia BQd
Kentucky, showing grit th$:
earned her .valuable politi-·
cal currency.
·
-.
· White men, blue-coUar

f UN lTG

'

CHICAGO - First it was
soaring ticket prices and
II.II I I I
vanishing bargain fares,
then new · baggage fees.
Now air travelers are facing
dwindling choices for when
they can fly and where even to such popular tourist
destinations as Las Vegas
and Orlando.
The squeeze, a byproduct
of record oil prices that are
pushing airlines .toward
AP fii*O
financial disaster, accelerat- A United Airlines crew member waits in the doorway of a
ed Wednesday when United plane preparing for departure at Bob · Hope Airport
Airlines announced plans 'to Wednesday in Burbank, Calif. \he nation's No. 2 carrier
take70morejetsoutofser- . said Wednesday that it's cutting up to 1,100 more jobs,
vice · and cut · domestic removing an additional 70 fuel-guzzling airplanes from its
capacity by 17. to 18 percent fleet and slashing domestic capacity as it tries to cope with
in 2008-09. Its discount unit spiraling fuel price.
·
Ted wi II be shut down and
Airline consultant Robert be priced out," said Parsons,
I, I00 additional jobs eliminated, with more to follow.
Mann said the tourism and chief executive of the dis. That came two · weeks travel industries as a whole count
travel
site
after a similar move by are subject to"serious collat- Bestfares.com.
U.S. Rep. Jerry Costello,
AMR Corp .'s American era! damage," with a likely
Airlines, the only U.S. carri- drop in air travelers to hotels chairman of the House aviaer larger than United, which and resorts in places that tion subcommittee, said he
said it would slash domestic have flourished with the pro- is coocemed about small
capacity II to 12 percent liferation of low air fares.
and rural areas losing serafter the peak summer travThe outlook may be vice. He said he strongly
el season. American already grimmest of aiJ for airlines supports the "essential air
has begun eliminating that dmi't cut back enough to sero,:ice" program, which
flights. as have No. 3 Delta · -survive oil prices trading provides federal subsidies to
Air Lines Inc. and others.
above $122 a barrel even guarantee air routes in rural
That's bad news for trav- after a decline from $135. areas, but is taking a waitele~, especially those who That's stiU weU more than and-see approach before
• fl_y out of smaller regional double the $50-a-barrel pric_e considering further financial
atrports that are l_ost_n,g · that Urn ted pegged tts bust- support for carriers.
fltghts and servtce, and Its ness plan to after emerging · "We are .in uncharted
almost certain to get worse from bankruptcy in 2006.
waters here (with potential
"Some airlines will likely mergers· and record-high
unless otl pnces drop and
:take the pressure off rutlines go bankrupt and cease oper- fuel prices) and we need to
to keep shrinkin~- "For the ating," Lehman Brothers see how everything shakes
.next year or so, II s gomg to analyst Joseph Campbell out," the Illinois Democrat
be gloom and doom" in · said in a note to investors said in a telephone interterms of fares and flight Wednesday.
view. As air service to rural
That might help the bot- areas declines, he said, all
options, said air travel
expert Tom Parsons.
tom lines of those that man- options "will have to be on
While United didn 't speci- age to keep flying. but it the table."
_fy routes or flights to be would only speed up a trend
UALCorp.'s United said it
-trimmed, the airlines already of narrowing U.S . flight plans to cut an additional900
bave begu~ targetin~ less options that has been under to 1,100 , salaried, contract
·profitable fltghts even 1f they way for months. .
and management employees
The largest airports may by the end of the year, in
are to leisure destinations
with strong demand. Several see only a small decline in addition to 500 previously
.carriers have cut back on ser- fli$ht options, but smaller announced job reductions.
.vice to Las Vegas. Honolulu ciues such as Lancaster, Pa., The combined reductions
;and elsewhere: Delta's ser- and Ithaca, N.Y., already mean the airline is cuning
·vice to and from Orlando, have lost all service. nearly 3 percent of i.ts 55,600
:Fla., is down 45 percent Experts say others in the workers worldwide.
East, Midwest and beyond
"With fuel at historically
from a year ago.
While demand for ti ckets are likely to see individual high levels, United and our
to
those
destinations carriers depart or al so lose competitors need to' rede.remains solid, the airlines service completely.
fine ourselves in this mar:say they have to focus on
"If you ' re in a small city ketplace ,'· Glenn Tilton,
;higher-priced · and. more you 're , going to have less Umted 's chairman, presi·profitable routes in the face opportunities. and the dent . and CEO, said in -a
lei sure markets are going to .message to employees.
-of sky-high fuel prices:
"

•

Community Calendar

Son should find
his own place
BY KA111Y Mttctm 1

. AND IIARcv SuG"R

· Dear Annie: My husband
IDid I have three children.
0ur eldest, " Bret," decided
to fmish his last year of college closer to borne and will
graduate in December.
· The problem is, I am
unhappy with him living
with us and want him to
find his own place. He
worts 31)d goes to school.
bul the upstairs bedroom he

Harrisonville *225 OES,
J!Wting to eled offiocrs, 7:30
. p.DL, .efreshments served

s-

'I'IRirsdlly,
u
.
CHESTER
-Shade
'lllarsd8y,luar S
TUPPERS PLAINS - ·River Lodge mnolhly stakd
7:30
p.m.
VFW Ladies Auxiliary, 7 meeting,
Refreshments.
p.m..

maldy a year after- the baby
is born.
How sbould the wedding
Friday,JUDe6
invitation be worded since
POMEROY PERI .
they will already be Mr, and Chapta 74, Meigs County,
Mrs.'? And would it be I p.m, at !be Mulbeny
S.•wlwy,J. . ~
wrong to wear a IJ'aditional Community Center. Paul
~UlLAND - Rutland
white wedding gOwn'?
Reed and John MIISSel' to Free WiD Qaptist Oum:h,
My husband rbioks · the talk on !be !oVOitings and ~ebrating Oilldreo Da
invitalioo shoold say they plans of tbe Commtmity Wtt:h Sunday School, I
are renewing their vows lnlprovemeilt Corporation.
a.OL, followed by liitlDlOII
(my daughter does DOl
'IUmday,lUDe 10 .
for youths., the.n cookout,
agree) and that she should
HARRISONVIllE
games, prizes, all area cbilwear wmedting understated. I think sbe should do

Church·events

b

occupies is diny and disor- whatever she wants. ganiud. In addition~ be Modler of the Bride
takes bis clothe~ and shoes
Dear Molher: Oh, go
off in our nicely finished · ahead. In times past, it would
basement and his stuff is he pmpa for yoor daughlt:l'
-.linn to
strewn all over. H1"s .......
.,....,_ tO simply have a ·..........-room is filthy, and his celebrnte her ellisling marmends come over at least riage, but if she wants the
four nights a week to play · full-blown ceremony with
video games until the wee all the trimmings, it's OK to
hours. My husband does not do 50. The invitation can
believe Brei should have to read "John and Jane Doe
pay rent and has DOl helped request the honor of ynur
me enforce the chores that . presence to oeldtrale their
would facilitate better marriage.fleCc.,orsomething
household care. Bret also along those lines.
doem't pay for his car or
Dear
ADDie:
Your
any other bills because my response to "Not Feeling
husband thinks it's our Photogenic" was right on.
responsibility.
She bad come across old
. · Although my son is a photos and love letters from
problem, I believe my hus- her husband's previous girllland is a bigger problem. friends, and you told her to
We just don't see eye to eye put them back and forget
on this issue. I am building about them.
np a lot of resentment for
Many years ago, I . was

wprkets, socially ~a­

et EYei)ODe Know Your Dad·IS·Someeme
Veiy Special With A Father's Day
Thanlr You Tribute •••

To Be PubUshed In The 811nday Times- Sentinel
On Sunday, June 15th!

-

TUPPERS PLAINS -·
Members of the Eastern
High School marching and
concert bands, cboir and
handbell choir, were presented awards earlier this
week at the music boosters' annual awards pro:
·
·
'

·

Andrew Bissell.
Director's AwaJd fcx out· · h'1p b y
Standing MUSICians
underclassmen,
Brenna
Holter and Hannah }VeSt;
Arion Award for oommitment and dedication to
Concert
Band,
Jared
gram.
Russell
md
Holly
Nationid School Choral Edwards;
Palrick
S.
Award for outstanding Gilmore Award for dedicavocal
. musicianship: lion to exoellence 'in musiAndrew .
. Benedum: cianship, Alell Kuhn and
National School Marching Andrew Bissell.
Band Award for outstandJohn Philip Sousa Award ·
ing leadership in Man::hing for exoeUence in · musical
Band, ,-\ndrew Bissell , stu- achievement.
Cassie
dent director: Director's Hauber.
Award for ex_cellence in
Most Improved · Choral
ringinll technique and Performances: April Bartell,
music1ansbip
in Hannah Ridgway, Brittany
Handbells, Alex Kuhn and Rucker; Most Improved

Name)

(Your Father's

and your h
need to sit
4own, calmly, and decide ·
what Bret can afford and
what is in his bl:sl in~.
Some necessities (car insuranoe, for example) may be
beyond his means at the
moment.
However, he
r.hould be i:onttibuting something for rent and he
absolutely should be responsible for his own household
·mess. If you couch this in
:IJ:rnls of "teaching him to be
;independent," maybe your
·liusband will be more ~
:tive. It' s damaging to chil~
~n when the parents don' t
:expect anything from them.
:tell your husband you will
•tlo longer clean up after Bret.
:t.te will be responsible for his
:own room, batluoom and
:Ia~ndry. · If your husband
-obJCCIS, HE can take over
:those chores. You must tum a
:tJiind eye. In December, Bret
·will need to move out, for his
:Own sake, if not yours.
: · Dear Annie: My daughter
:mndy eloped (with the
·full approval of my husband
::~nd me). She is a few
:months pregnant, and they
:plan to have a ~tional
:wedding ceremony approxi-

___________

'.-

planned to toss some old
love letters and ftrSt asked
my hubby if he wanted to
read them. Wbc;n he was
done, he said, "Keep these.
lbey are really beautiful.
You can tell this man loved
you and had a poetic way of
·saying it."
· My husband iiDIDI'Aiately
rose to the top of my ladder
for respecling my memories.
We have been married 37
years and we're still in love.
That lady needs to realize
that 95 percent of love is
lrust. Memorabilia
IK.eeper ill Lisbon, Ollio
Dar Ohio: Your husband
is ~ high on our list, too.
AJiulie~ M•iU...JC is wriJ/ell by ~

POMEROY - New to
. the schedule of events for
· the Gold Wmgs and Ribs
Festival t~ be held this
weekend will ~ a bot dOg
eating contest at I p.m. and
a cookie stacking competilion at l :30 p.m. on
Salwday ~ · ·
· Both events are being
spollSORid by tbe Hayes
eoncession and will be
held at rbeir food concess1on trailer on
the

Pomeroy parlting lot.
The contest is limited to
the first 1S people to sign
up in each age group.
Signup will begin Friday
and continue until the conrest begins on SalllJ'day or
until the limit has been
reached. If someone wbo
has signed p does not show
up then that siOI will be
filled at I L55 a.m.
The contest will be conducted in three age cate-

Love

Love

(Your Name)

(Your Name) ·

box@eo~~~UULitd, or write
to: AJuUe 's Mllilbox, P.O.
IJoJ: 118190, Clricqo, IL
60611. To foul out llfOU
abo Ill A.lllfie 'r · Mtlilbox,
111111 rw4 fet~~~~rer by otlur
CIWIIOn Sy•iicd' wril.uJ;

111111 autoo.USU, risil 1M
Crelllon Sy11diute Web
ptlfe at www.ciWIIDn.coa

City/Statelllp

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""'pin (NASO"Q) - 24.115

(NYIE)- 55.74

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5

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Phooi,_____________

Send Coupon Md P•rment to: The Dally SenUnel "FMbM's 0.,"

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a.nc Corp. (NAS-

Ohio Vi!lley
DAQ)-21.10

:11011 E - (NASDAQ)- 34.111
BoigWMtW (NYSE)- 5G.11
;c.ntury Alundnum (NASDAQ)

Add~ ------------------------------------------

(: M' • (NYIEJ - 51.41
:.,...._ (NYII!)- 41.77

P.O. Box 729, Pomeroy, OhiO 45769

:US . . . (NYIE)- 32.84
" a . - (NYSE)- 21.50
will Bo etlc (NYSE) - 30.45
1..., 0.111ld• am (NYSE} -

:40M
•oil' llolgao (NYSEI- 41.~
(NnE)- 27.74
Blaldl (NYIEI -11.113
'm 'an (NYII!)-

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Will ?' t (NYIE) -11M
Waad(• (NYIE) - rr:n
Wnl m(NtiE)-21.47

D.tlr ..... rwpo!tS . . .11.13
.. 4
p.m. ET ct= tl• qua• o l -

acAiolw ........_ 4, 2001, tworid
eclbrEdw .. ...._ • • w

actwlr nrlllllllf: . . . tn ?r
ill (740) 441-1 Mid !Alley
IIMo•olnPolntPl
(31M)I14-41174.

SF

~

gories and the winner-will
be first one in each cate-

gory to rrrst eat all the hot
dogs they are served. The
7 to ll age group will get
8 hot dogs with buns; the
12 to 16 age group I hot
dogs with buns, and lhe 17
and p category, 15 hot
dogs with buns. ln the
event of a tie additional
hot dogs will be given to
the contestants until the
person eating the most

frrst will be declared the
winner. Water wiU be provided. Regurgitation disqualifies.
·
The winners will receive
prk.es accotding to age category as follows: 7 to II
age group, $10: 12 to 16 age
group. $15; and 17 and up
age catego!Y, $25 .
The cookie stacking caregory is for children in the 4
to 6 age group. Prizes will
be awarded.

.........-

PAGEVllLE -lbe Scipio Volunteer F'tre DePartment's
"Fireman's Festival" will take place this Saturday with several events scheduled throughout the day.
A schedule ofevents is as follows: 7:30-8:30 a.m .. registration for 5K run/walk: 9 a.m., 5K begins at Pageville: 10
a.m., New Haven Fire Trailer demonstration: II a.m. tour
of Medflight helicopter, demo_nslration by V'mce and Larry,
.the crash dummies and SmokY the Bear who will be
appearing tbroughout the day.
At noon, a horseshoe pitching contest will take place at
PageVille: I p.m., ft.reman's battle: 3 P-1)1-. remote control
car hot laps; 4 p.m., heat racing: 5-7 p.m., bog roast which
is $6.50 for adults and $4 for kids under I O: lwaoke will
also take place from 5-7 p.m.
All proceeds benefit the Scipio VFD.

Band concert

Joanne Vaughan (left) of Pomeroy recently made this
queen-sized quilt and pllows to be used as a fundraiser to
MIDDLEPORT - Big Bend Community Band under
pay for postage for caA! packages which will be sent to the direction of Toney Dingess, will perfonn at 7 p.m.
local soldiers currently"seiVing in the military. Vaughan and . Friday in Dave Diles Park in Middleport.
L:!-..
__
Unda Boggs (right) are both members of the Tuppers
The free ronoert is sponsored by the Riverbend Arts Louncil. '
Plains VPN Post 9053 ladies Auxiliary which is organizing
the fundraiser. TICkets can be purchased for $1 or six ticket&amp; for $5 from any member or by calHng 992-3637 or 6676253. The ,drawing is on Aug. 7. According to Bogg$, who
GRATUL~T•r•~~
is the auxiliary's po esident, the group Qlf19fltly sends ~
packages to 12 soldiers setVing In the military, .all of whom
are from Meigs County.

~ CATIE W"".._.... - ~
lOOm dash and 200m dash
And

ORNELIUS ENGLISH

PepelcO (NYSE)- M$7
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ADclly --~&amp;MAGI
Aeri!1 Dolel* illll -liM
. . . . lla1ilt. (NMNQ)-

a

es

•

B8T (HYSE) ~21M

- · · Jll I (NYII!) -

0

Deadlmc For Th1s Spec1al F='ather s Da} Tr1but&lt;_ 1'.
Wednesay. June 11 12.00 Noo ·1

Members of Otoir traveled
to Cleveland to attend a
·
•L
prod uctton
0f
IDe
Broadway musical, "Cats.fl
Membecs of Handbell
Choir and Concen Band
traveled to Cincinnati to
attend a produaion of the
Broadway
musical,
"Wicked. fl Memben&gt; of
Handbell
Choir
and
Coocert Band traveled to
New Ymk City for a performance at the wodd head-.
quarters of IBM.
Music Boosters officers
are : Becky Maxson, president; Renee and Suve
Carson, co-vice presidents; Wendy Hannum, secretary: and Sheryl
Roush, treasurer.

Fire111an's Festival

__:~-----------

:,a (NYSEI- a .ci2
:Abo (IIASOAOI - eo
·~Inc.

YmMNa~s) -------------------------------------

MMching
Band
Musicianship,
Baylee
Collins, Kaitlin Dewh..~....,
-Most Improved Marching
Band Marching Teclmiques,
Kayla Dowell
Most bnproved Concen
Band Performances: Julie
Weddle, Kayte Lawrence,
Jay Warner, Haley Peroas.
The . Eastern
Mw;ic
-Boosters AS50Ciation spoosor the awants for students
and hosted a cookout in
bonor of the mu.sical
achievements of all students
in the program.
1be Music Boosters have
worked diligently to provide supplemental musical
experiences throughout the
2007-2008 school year.

MIDDLEPORT- Mart Ward of Gallipolis, founder and
lead guitarist of ~ local rock: and blues band Strange
Kandy, will host the first-i:ver Open Mic Night at Beth's
Place in Middleport Friday.
The open stage event will run from 8 a.m. to midnight.
Local bands and musicians are invited to participate in the
event. 1bere is no cover charge for performers or tho!jC who
wish to watch the show.
'\
Musicians ~sted in performing for the show may preregister by contacting Ward at Wardl5@strangekandy.com,
or by calling Beth's Place at (740) 992-58~.

cobulut. Plaue e..ml your
qustiD11s to tuiflieriiUiil-

.

FMbM~~-------------------------------------

Friday,Jue6
MASON, W.Va. -OHKan Coin Oub exhibition,
City Nalional Bank.

FII'St open lllic night

Mtuq Sltgtll', lollfiUu ttdi·
ton of 1M AIM lmeders

.I..ocal Stocks
Circle One: A. 1X3 Greeting •..$12.00 · B. 1X5 G~ng wlth Picture...$1S.OO

Other events

Quilt:iilg for a cause

MildieU 111111

: : llaiii'Sday-Mostly sunny.
Sunday
ni&amp;ltt.-Partly
in
· tbe
:Highs in the lower 90s. ·cloudy
·Southwest winds 10 to 15 evening...Then becoming
mostly ·clear. Lows in the
nigbt...Partly mid 60s.
·Cloudy
in
the
Moaday-Mosdy sunny.
:evening ...Then clearing. Highs in the lower 90s.
:Lows in the upper 60s.
Monday nicbt.~.Partly
in
the
:South winds 5 to 10 mph. cloudy
evening...Then becoming
·Early in the evening.
: · Friday-Sunny... HOI with mostly clear. Lows in the
:highs in the lower 90s. mid 60s.
'flo•eglay-Mosdy sunny.
·Southwest winds 5 to 10
Highs in the lower 90s.
:mrrlday
aight.•• Partl y
Thesd•y llichi... Partl y
in
the
:doudy. Lows in the upper cloudy
-60s. Southwest winds 5 to evening...Then becoming
1110stly clear. Lows in the
: 10 mph. Early.
.
through mid60s.
: . Saturday
Wedoesday
••. Mostly·
;Suudlly.-Partly
cloudy.
sunny.
Highs
in
the lower
·Highs in the lower 90s .
90s.
:Lows in the mid 60s.

Name)

s..unlwy, luae 7
SYRACUSE - Sutlon
Township Trustees will
meet 7 p.m. Syracuse
Village hall

· -------,--~--------------------------------

:"Vbiii'SCby

(Your Father's

VillaJe

A. ~

.

Happy
Father's Day

hy,J~~~~e9

SPRINGS . Salisbury
lbwnship
LANGSVILLE
Vao:ation Bible Scbool T11151lle5_, regular IIM'II'tjng,
House of Healing Ministries 6:30 p.m.. home of
at Lan~svillc:, 9 to II :30 Ma011ing Roush.
a.m. daily. Classes for ages
SHADE
-Bedford
4to6, 7tri9and IOto 12. Township Trustees will meet
For IIlOre infonnation con- at 1 p.m. al !be town hall
tract Alyson 992-1687 or
RUILAND ~ Rutland
Jessica, 992-0766.
Council. .egular
•
D!NfJng, 7 pm., civic ............

M

ROCK

Eastern·High School band a01ards
pPfWnnted
n ,

lAK."al Weather

Happy
Father's Day

Th hy,JDMII

dren invited..

hoth.=:~v: =~~;r~ Contests new to Gold Wmgs and Ribs Festival

live Democrats and older
women were . especially
receptive to her mes~e,
and her strong showing wtth
those
voters
exposed
Obama ' s
vulnerabilities
.
among those groups.
Democrats whose No. 1
concern had been ending
the Iraq w.ar at the campaign's outset, started worrying more about the economy. That was a switch from
Obarna' s strength to hers. ·

BY DAVE CARPENTER
AP BUSINESS WRITER

ANNIE'S MAILBOX

'

Air travel options shrink amid·carrier strife

I

ThUI'IIday, .JuDe s. zoo8

.

Clinton to end historic candidacy, support Obama
l

PageAa

The Daily Sentinel

Thursday, Junes; aoo8

mttr

!liCit
IIIPC.

�.The Daily Sentinel

PageA2

ACROSS THE NATION
.

BY BETH fOUHY
,O,SSOCI,O,TEO PRESS WRITER

WASHINGTON
Hillary Rodham Clinton is
. ending her historic bid to
become the first female
president and will back
rival Barack Obama on
Saturday, capping
17month quest that began
with the words "''m in it to
win it" with a more humble
plea for party unity.
· Hour~
after
Barack
Obama sealed the nomination, Democrats coalesced
around his candidacy, sending a strong signal to
Clinton that it was time to
bow out. The_former frrst
lady told House Democrats
during a private coilference
call Wednesday that she will
express
support
for
Obama's candidacy and
congratulate him for gathering the necessary delegates
to be the party's nominee. ·
"Seaator' Clinton will be
hosting an event in
.
Al'fii*O
_Washington. D.C., to thank
Democratic
presidential
hopeful
Sen.
Hillary
Rodham
Clinton,
0-N.Y.,
adjusts
her
microphone
as
she
speaks at the
her supporters and express
her support for Senator American Israel Public Affai.rs Committee (AI PAC) Policy Conference 2008 W~nesday at the Washington Convention
Obama and party unity. This _ Center in Washington.
'
event will be held on
black
contendef ever.
Democratic congressional signature issue of health longtime political patron,
Saturday to accommodate
Obama Tuesday night leadership released a state- care. This adviser spoke on Clinton was urged to draw a
more of Senator Clinton's
secured
the 2, 118 delegates ment urging the party to condition of anonymity close to the contentious
supporters who want to
to
claim
the Democratic rally behind Obama, and because officials were not campaign, or at least
attend," her communications director Howard nomination, but Clinton several lawmakers includ- authorized to discuss the express support for Obama
stopped short of acknowl- ing Iowa Sen. Tom Harkin, conference call Clinton Her decision to acquiesce
Wolfson said.
edging
· that . -milestone, Colorado Sen. Ken Salazar held with her congressional caught many in tbe camAlso in the speech,
paign by surprise and left
Clinton will urge once-war- Instead, she was defiant, and Louisiana Sen. Mary supporters.
was
bener
posiOther
options
include
the
campaign scrambling to
insisting
she
Landrieu
all
endorsed
their
ring Democrats to focus on
tioned
than
Obama
to
defeat
.
Illinois
colleague.
to
finalize
the logistics and
freeing
her
delegates
the general election and
McCain
in
November.
Obama
also
announced
he
back
Obama
and
ending
specifics
behind her camdefeating Republican presi"What does
Hillary had' named a thr~?C-person her candidacy uncondition- paign departure.
dential candidate John
What
does
she vetting team · that included ally. The official stressed
It was an inauspicious end
want?
McCain.
want""
Clinton
said,
hours
Caroline
Kennedy,
daughter
Clinton
nor
her
for
a candidacy that appeared
that
neither
The only degree of uncertainty was how. Clinton is after telling supporters of the late President John E inner circle bad decided indestructible when it began
specifically what course to - 17 months ago.
exploring options to retain she'd be open to joining Kenne4y. .
vice-presiAn
~dviser
said
Clinton
·
take
other than to recogArmed with celebrity, a
Obama
as
his
her delegates and promote
and her lieutenants had dis- nize that the active state of prodigious ._ fundraising
her issues, including a sig- dential running mate.
But by Wednesday, other cussed various ways a pres- her bid · to become the Rolodex, a battle-tested
nature call for universal
Democrats made it abun- idential candidacy can end, nation's ·rli'st female presi- · campaign team and fpopuhealth care.
lar two-tenn former presi·The announcement closed dantly clear they wanted including suspending the dent had ended.
otJ the telephone call with dent as a husband, many
an epic five. month nomi- something, too: a swift end campaign to retain control
nating battle pining the tirst to the nominating contest.
of her convention delegates impatient congressional observers
believed
Democratic Party chair- and sustain her visibility in supporters including New Clinton's victory in the
serious female candidate
nomination
against the most viable man Howard Dean and the an effort to ·promote .her York Rep. Charles Rangel, a Democratic

a

contest was a sure diing. '
But in Obama, the New
York senator faced an opponent who appeared perfectly
sqited tO the time - a
charisllllltic neWcomer who
opposed the Iraq war· from
tbe beginning and who
offered voters· a compelling
message of change. Clinton
_ voted for the legislation that
authorized military force
against lmq . .
After a disastrous showing in the leadoff Iowa caucuses Jan. 3, Clinton won
New Hampshire's primary
Jan. 8, setting off the Slate.by-state war of attrition
with Obarna that followed.
Her fortunes rose and fell
like a fever chart:_She was
up iri. Nevada_, down in
South Carolina. Then, after
a roughly .even finish on
Super Tuesday Feb. 5, _
she
suffered ·a string of unanswered losses that, almost
before Clinton noticejl, put
Obama so far ahead in the
delegate hunt that all the
big-state victories she
piled liP couldn't close the
delegate gap.
·
By Man:ll, , her options
limited, Clinton: adopted
the persolll!. of.a tenaciOUS .
. fighter for the middle class,
and powered su.,.eessfully
throUgh primaries _in_ staleS
like Ol)io, Petuisylvania,
. lndiana, West Vu:gmia BQd
Kentucky, showing grit th$:
earned her .valuable politi-·
cal currency.
·
-.
· White men, blue-coUar

f UN lTG

'

CHICAGO - First it was
soaring ticket prices and
II.II I I I
vanishing bargain fares,
then new · baggage fees.
Now air travelers are facing
dwindling choices for when
they can fly and where even to such popular tourist
destinations as Las Vegas
and Orlando.
The squeeze, a byproduct
of record oil prices that are
pushing airlines .toward
AP fii*O
financial disaster, accelerat- A United Airlines crew member waits in the doorway of a
ed Wednesday when United plane preparing for departure at Bob · Hope Airport
Airlines announced plans 'to Wednesday in Burbank, Calif. \he nation's No. 2 carrier
take70morejetsoutofser- . said Wednesday that it's cutting up to 1,100 more jobs,
vice · and cut · domestic removing an additional 70 fuel-guzzling airplanes from its
capacity by 17. to 18 percent fleet and slashing domestic capacity as it tries to cope with
in 2008-09. Its discount unit spiraling fuel price.
·
Ted wi II be shut down and
Airline consultant Robert be priced out," said Parsons,
I, I00 additional jobs eliminated, with more to follow.
Mann said the tourism and chief executive of the dis. That came two · weeks travel industries as a whole count
travel
site
after a similar move by are subject to"serious collat- Bestfares.com.
U.S. Rep. Jerry Costello,
AMR Corp .'s American era! damage," with a likely
Airlines, the only U.S. carri- drop in air travelers to hotels chairman of the House aviaer larger than United, which and resorts in places that tion subcommittee, said he
said it would slash domestic have flourished with the pro- is coocemed about small
capacity II to 12 percent liferation of low air fares.
and rural areas losing serafter the peak summer travThe outlook may be vice. He said he strongly
el season. American already grimmest of aiJ for airlines supports the "essential air
has begun eliminating that dmi't cut back enough to sero,:ice" program, which
flights. as have No. 3 Delta · -survive oil prices trading provides federal subsidies to
Air Lines Inc. and others.
above $122 a barrel even guarantee air routes in rural
That's bad news for trav- after a decline from $135. areas, but is taking a waitele~, especially those who That's stiU weU more than and-see approach before
• fl_y out of smaller regional double the $50-a-barrel pric_e considering further financial
atrports that are l_ost_n,g · that Urn ted pegged tts bust- support for carriers.
fltghts and servtce, and Its ness plan to after emerging · "We are .in uncharted
almost certain to get worse from bankruptcy in 2006.
waters here (with potential
"Some airlines will likely mergers· and record-high
unless otl pnces drop and
:take the pressure off rutlines go bankrupt and cease oper- fuel prices) and we need to
to keep shrinkin~- "For the ating," Lehman Brothers see how everything shakes
.next year or so, II s gomg to analyst Joseph Campbell out," the Illinois Democrat
be gloom and doom" in · said in a note to investors said in a telephone interterms of fares and flight Wednesday.
view. As air service to rural
That might help the bot- areas declines, he said, all
options, said air travel
expert Tom Parsons.
tom lines of those that man- options "will have to be on
While United didn 't speci- age to keep flying. but it the table."
_fy routes or flights to be would only speed up a trend
UALCorp.'s United said it
-trimmed, the airlines already of narrowing U.S . flight plans to cut an additional900
bave begu~ targetin~ less options that has been under to 1,100 , salaried, contract
·profitable fltghts even 1f they way for months. .
and management employees
The largest airports may by the end of the year, in
are to leisure destinations
with strong demand. Several see only a small decline in addition to 500 previously
.carriers have cut back on ser- fli$ht options, but smaller announced job reductions.
.vice to Las Vegas. Honolulu ciues such as Lancaster, Pa., The combined reductions
;and elsewhere: Delta's ser- and Ithaca, N.Y., already mean the airline is cuning
·vice to and from Orlando, have lost all service. nearly 3 percent of i.ts 55,600
:Fla., is down 45 percent Experts say others in the workers worldwide.
East, Midwest and beyond
"With fuel at historically
from a year ago.
While demand for ti ckets are likely to see individual high levels, United and our
to
those
destinations carriers depart or al so lose competitors need to' rede.remains solid, the airlines service completely.
fine ourselves in this mar:say they have to focus on
"If you ' re in a small city ketplace ,'· Glenn Tilton,
;higher-priced · and. more you 're , going to have less Umted 's chairman, presi·profitable routes in the face opportunities. and the dent . and CEO, said in -a
lei sure markets are going to .message to employees.
-of sky-high fuel prices:
"

•

Community Calendar

Son should find
his own place
BY KA111Y Mttctm 1

. AND IIARcv SuG"R

· Dear Annie: My husband
IDid I have three children.
0ur eldest, " Bret," decided
to fmish his last year of college closer to borne and will
graduate in December.
· The problem is, I am
unhappy with him living
with us and want him to
find his own place. He
worts 31)d goes to school.
bul the upstairs bedroom he

Harrisonville *225 OES,
J!Wting to eled offiocrs, 7:30
. p.DL, .efreshments served

s-

'I'IRirsdlly,
u
.
CHESTER
-Shade
'lllarsd8y,luar S
TUPPERS PLAINS - ·River Lodge mnolhly stakd
7:30
p.m.
VFW Ladies Auxiliary, 7 meeting,
Refreshments.
p.m..

maldy a year after- the baby
is born.
How sbould the wedding
Friday,JUDe6
invitation be worded since
POMEROY PERI .
they will already be Mr, and Chapta 74, Meigs County,
Mrs.'? And would it be I p.m, at !be Mulbeny
S.•wlwy,J. . ~
wrong to wear a IJ'aditional Community Center. Paul
~UlLAND - Rutland
white wedding gOwn'?
Reed and John MIISSel' to Free WiD Qaptist Oum:h,
My husband rbioks · the talk on !be !oVOitings and ~ebrating Oilldreo Da
invitalioo shoold say they plans of tbe Commtmity Wtt:h Sunday School, I
are renewing their vows lnlprovemeilt Corporation.
a.OL, followed by liitlDlOII
(my daughter does DOl
'IUmday,lUDe 10 .
for youths., the.n cookout,
agree) and that she should
HARRISONVIllE
games, prizes, all area cbilwear wmedting understated. I think sbe should do

Church·events

b

occupies is diny and disor- whatever she wants. ganiud. In addition~ be Modler of the Bride
takes bis clothe~ and shoes
Dear Molher: Oh, go
off in our nicely finished · ahead. In times past, it would
basement and his stuff is he pmpa for yoor daughlt:l'
-.linn to
strewn all over. H1"s .......
.,....,_ tO simply have a ·..........-room is filthy, and his celebrnte her ellisling marmends come over at least riage, but if she wants the
four nights a week to play · full-blown ceremony with
video games until the wee all the trimmings, it's OK to
hours. My husband does not do 50. The invitation can
believe Brei should have to read "John and Jane Doe
pay rent and has DOl helped request the honor of ynur
me enforce the chores that . presence to oeldtrale their
would facilitate better marriage.fleCc.,orsomething
household care. Bret also along those lines.
doem't pay for his car or
Dear
ADDie:
Your
any other bills because my response to "Not Feeling
husband thinks it's our Photogenic" was right on.
responsibility.
She bad come across old
. · Although my son is a photos and love letters from
problem, I believe my hus- her husband's previous girllland is a bigger problem. friends, and you told her to
We just don't see eye to eye put them back and forget
on this issue. I am building about them.
np a lot of resentment for
Many years ago, I . was

wprkets, socially ~a­

et EYei)ODe Know Your Dad·IS·Someeme
Veiy Special With A Father's Day
Thanlr You Tribute •••

To Be PubUshed In The 811nday Times- Sentinel
On Sunday, June 15th!

-

TUPPERS PLAINS -·
Members of the Eastern
High School marching and
concert bands, cboir and
handbell choir, were presented awards earlier this
week at the music boosters' annual awards pro:
·
·
'

·

Andrew Bissell.
Director's AwaJd fcx out· · h'1p b y
Standing MUSICians
underclassmen,
Brenna
Holter and Hannah }VeSt;
Arion Award for oommitment and dedication to
Concert
Band,
Jared
gram.
Russell
md
Holly
Nationid School Choral Edwards;
Palrick
S.
Award for outstanding Gilmore Award for dedicavocal
. musicianship: lion to exoellence 'in musiAndrew .
. Benedum: cianship, Alell Kuhn and
National School Marching Andrew Bissell.
Band Award for outstandJohn Philip Sousa Award ·
ing leadership in Man::hing for exoeUence in · musical
Band, ,-\ndrew Bissell , stu- achievement.
Cassie
dent director: Director's Hauber.
Award for ex_cellence in
Most Improved · Choral
ringinll technique and Performances: April Bartell,
music1ansbip
in Hannah Ridgway, Brittany
Handbells, Alex Kuhn and Rucker; Most Improved

Name)

(Your Father's

and your h
need to sit
4own, calmly, and decide ·
what Bret can afford and
what is in his bl:sl in~.
Some necessities (car insuranoe, for example) may be
beyond his means at the
moment.
However, he
r.hould be i:onttibuting something for rent and he
absolutely should be responsible for his own household
·mess. If you couch this in
:IJ:rnls of "teaching him to be
;independent," maybe your
·liusband will be more ~
:tive. It' s damaging to chil~
~n when the parents don' t
:expect anything from them.
:tell your husband you will
•tlo longer clean up after Bret.
:t.te will be responsible for his
:own room, batluoom and
:Ia~ndry. · If your husband
-obJCCIS, HE can take over
:those chores. You must tum a
:tJiind eye. In December, Bret
·will need to move out, for his
:Own sake, if not yours.
: · Dear Annie: My daughter
:mndy eloped (with the
·full approval of my husband
::~nd me). She is a few
:months pregnant, and they
:plan to have a ~tional
:wedding ceremony approxi-

___________

'.-

planned to toss some old
love letters and ftrSt asked
my hubby if he wanted to
read them. Wbc;n he was
done, he said, "Keep these.
lbey are really beautiful.
You can tell this man loved
you and had a poetic way of
·saying it."
· My husband iiDIDI'Aiately
rose to the top of my ladder
for respecling my memories.
We have been married 37
years and we're still in love.
That lady needs to realize
that 95 percent of love is
lrust. Memorabilia
IK.eeper ill Lisbon, Ollio
Dar Ohio: Your husband
is ~ high on our list, too.
AJiulie~ M•iU...JC is wriJ/ell by ~

POMEROY - New to
. the schedule of events for
· the Gold Wmgs and Ribs
Festival t~ be held this
weekend will ~ a bot dOg
eating contest at I p.m. and
a cookie stacking competilion at l :30 p.m. on
Salwday ~ · ·
· Both events are being
spollSORid by tbe Hayes
eoncession and will be
held at rbeir food concess1on trailer on
the

Pomeroy parlting lot.
The contest is limited to
the first 1S people to sign
up in each age group.
Signup will begin Friday
and continue until the conrest begins on SalllJ'day or
until the limit has been
reached. If someone wbo
has signed p does not show
up then that siOI will be
filled at I L55 a.m.
The contest will be conducted in three age cate-

Love

Love

(Your Name)

(Your Name) ·

box@eo~~~UULitd, or write
to: AJuUe 's Mllilbox, P.O.
IJoJ: 118190, Clricqo, IL
60611. To foul out llfOU
abo Ill A.lllfie 'r · Mtlilbox,
111111 rw4 fet~~~~rer by otlur
CIWIIOn Sy•iicd' wril.uJ;

111111 autoo.USU, risil 1M
Crelllon Sy11diute Web
ptlfe at www.ciWIIDn.coa

City/Statelllp

'llltl Lam (NYSE)- 31.44

""'pin (NASO"Q) - 24.115

(NYIE)- 55.74

...

~,.

:c;:lwu : • s,..1 0 40t

5

~···
. . _ (NASI»&gt;I- ·
·us
:&amp;:11r Molding (NAIOAQI- 41 .•

Phooi,_____________

Send Coupon Md P•rment to: The Dally SenUnel "FMbM's 0.,"

,

a.nc Corp. (NAS-

Ohio Vi!lley
DAQ)-21.10

:11011 E - (NASDAQ)- 34.111
BoigWMtW (NYSE)- 5G.11
;c.ntury Alundnum (NASDAQ)

Add~ ------------------------------------------

(: M' • (NYIEJ - 51.41
:.,...._ (NYII!)- 41.77

P.O. Box 729, Pomeroy, OhiO 45769

:US . . . (NYIE)- 32.84
" a . - (NYSE)- 21.50
will Bo etlc (NYSE) - 30.45
1..., 0.111ld• am (NYSE} -

:40M
•oil' llolgao (NYSEI- 41.~
(NnE)- 27.74
Blaldl (NYIEI -11.113
'm 'an (NYII!)-

'

.

-s.n

·lUI

Will ?' t (NYIE) -11M
Waad(• (NYIE) - rr:n
Wnl m(NtiE)-21.47

D.tlr ..... rwpo!tS . . .11.13
.. 4
p.m. ET ct= tl• qua• o l -

acAiolw ........_ 4, 2001, tworid
eclbrEdw .. ...._ • • w

actwlr nrlllllllf: . . . tn ?r
ill (740) 441-1 Mid !Alley
IIMo•olnPolntPl
(31M)I14-41174.

SF

~

gories and the winner-will
be first one in each cate-

gory to rrrst eat all the hot
dogs they are served. The
7 to ll age group will get
8 hot dogs with buns; the
12 to 16 age group I hot
dogs with buns, and lhe 17
and p category, 15 hot
dogs with buns. ln the
event of a tie additional
hot dogs will be given to
the contestants until the
person eating the most

frrst will be declared the
winner. Water wiU be provided. Regurgitation disqualifies.
·
The winners will receive
prk.es accotding to age category as follows: 7 to II
age group, $10: 12 to 16 age
group. $15; and 17 and up
age catego!Y, $25 .
The cookie stacking caregory is for children in the 4
to 6 age group. Prizes will
be awarded.

.........-

PAGEVllLE -lbe Scipio Volunteer F'tre DePartment's
"Fireman's Festival" will take place this Saturday with several events scheduled throughout the day.
A schedule ofevents is as follows: 7:30-8:30 a.m .. registration for 5K run/walk: 9 a.m., 5K begins at Pageville: 10
a.m., New Haven Fire Trailer demonstration: II a.m. tour
of Medflight helicopter, demo_nslration by V'mce and Larry,
.the crash dummies and SmokY the Bear who will be
appearing tbroughout the day.
At noon, a horseshoe pitching contest will take place at
PageVille: I p.m., ft.reman's battle: 3 P-1)1-. remote control
car hot laps; 4 p.m., heat racing: 5-7 p.m., bog roast which
is $6.50 for adults and $4 for kids under I O: lwaoke will
also take place from 5-7 p.m.
All proceeds benefit the Scipio VFD.

Band concert

Joanne Vaughan (left) of Pomeroy recently made this
queen-sized quilt and pllows to be used as a fundraiser to
MIDDLEPORT - Big Bend Community Band under
pay for postage for caA! packages which will be sent to the direction of Toney Dingess, will perfonn at 7 p.m.
local soldiers currently"seiVing in the military. Vaughan and . Friday in Dave Diles Park in Middleport.
L:!-..
__
Unda Boggs (right) are both members of the Tuppers
The free ronoert is sponsored by the Riverbend Arts Louncil. '
Plains VPN Post 9053 ladies Auxiliary which is organizing
the fundraiser. TICkets can be purchased for $1 or six ticket&amp; for $5 from any member or by calHng 992-3637 or 6676253. The ,drawing is on Aug. 7. According to Bogg$, who
GRATUL~T•r•~~
is the auxiliary's po esident, the group Qlf19fltly sends ~
packages to 12 soldiers setVing In the military, .all of whom
are from Meigs County.

~ CATIE W"".._.... - ~
lOOm dash and 200m dash
And

ORNELIUS ENGLISH

PepelcO (NYSE)- M$7
......... (IIASOAQ) -11
I (IItlE) 51.55
ADclly --~&amp;MAGI
Aeri!1 Dolel* illll -liM
. . . . lla1ilt. (NMNQ)-

a

es

•

B8T (HYSE) ~21M

- · · Jll I (NYII!) -

0

Deadlmc For Th1s Spec1al F='ather s Da} Tr1but&lt;_ 1'.
Wednesay. June 11 12.00 Noo ·1

Members of Otoir traveled
to Cleveland to attend a
·
•L
prod uctton
0f
IDe
Broadway musical, "Cats.fl
Membecs of Handbell
Choir and Concen Band
traveled to Cincinnati to
attend a produaion of the
Broadway
musical,
"Wicked. fl Memben&gt; of
Handbell
Choir
and
Coocert Band traveled to
New Ymk City for a performance at the wodd head-.
quarters of IBM.
Music Boosters officers
are : Becky Maxson, president; Renee and Suve
Carson, co-vice presidents; Wendy Hannum, secretary: and Sheryl
Roush, treasurer.

Fire111an's Festival

__:~-----------

:,a (NYSEI- a .ci2
:Abo (IIASOAOI - eo
·~Inc.

YmMNa~s) -------------------------------------

MMching
Band
Musicianship,
Baylee
Collins, Kaitlin Dewh..~....,
-Most Improved Marching
Band Marching Teclmiques,
Kayla Dowell
Most bnproved Concen
Band Performances: Julie
Weddle, Kayte Lawrence,
Jay Warner, Haley Peroas.
The . Eastern
Mw;ic
-Boosters AS50Ciation spoosor the awants for students
and hosted a cookout in
bonor of the mu.sical
achievements of all students
in the program.
1be Music Boosters have
worked diligently to provide supplemental musical
experiences throughout the
2007-2008 school year.

MIDDLEPORT- Mart Ward of Gallipolis, founder and
lead guitarist of ~ local rock: and blues band Strange
Kandy, will host the first-i:ver Open Mic Night at Beth's
Place in Middleport Friday.
The open stage event will run from 8 a.m. to midnight.
Local bands and musicians are invited to participate in the
event. 1bere is no cover charge for performers or tho!jC who
wish to watch the show.
'\
Musicians ~sted in performing for the show may preregister by contacting Ward at Wardl5@strangekandy.com,
or by calling Beth's Place at (740) 992-58~.

cobulut. Plaue e..ml your
qustiD11s to tuiflieriiUiil-

.

FMbM~~-------------------------------------

Friday,Jue6
MASON, W.Va. -OHKan Coin Oub exhibition,
City Nalional Bank.

FII'St open lllic night

Mtuq Sltgtll', lollfiUu ttdi·
ton of 1M AIM lmeders

.I..ocal Stocks
Circle One: A. 1X3 Greeting •..$12.00 · B. 1X5 G~ng wlth Picture...$1S.OO

Other events

Quilt:iilg for a cause

MildieU 111111

: : llaiii'Sday-Mostly sunny.
Sunday
ni&amp;ltt.-Partly
in
· tbe
:Highs in the lower 90s. ·cloudy
·Southwest winds 10 to 15 evening...Then becoming
mostly ·clear. Lows in the
nigbt...Partly mid 60s.
·Cloudy
in
the
Moaday-Mosdy sunny.
:evening ...Then clearing. Highs in the lower 90s.
:Lows in the upper 60s.
Monday nicbt.~.Partly
in
the
:South winds 5 to 10 mph. cloudy
evening...Then becoming
·Early in the evening.
: · Friday-Sunny... HOI with mostly clear. Lows in the
:highs in the lower 90s. mid 60s.
'flo•eglay-Mosdy sunny.
·Southwest winds 5 to 10
Highs in the lower 90s.
:mrrlday
aight.•• Partl y
Thesd•y llichi... Partl y
in
the
:doudy. Lows in the upper cloudy
-60s. Southwest winds 5 to evening...Then becoming
1110stly clear. Lows in the
: 10 mph. Early.
.
through mid60s.
: . Saturday
Wedoesday
••. Mostly·
;Suudlly.-Partly
cloudy.
sunny.
Highs
in
the lower
·Highs in the lower 90s .
90s.
:Lows in the mid 60s.

Name)

s..unlwy, luae 7
SYRACUSE - Sutlon
Township Trustees will
meet 7 p.m. Syracuse
Village hall

· -------,--~--------------------------------

:"Vbiii'SCby

(Your Father's

VillaJe

A. ~

.

Happy
Father's Day

hy,J~~~~e9

SPRINGS . Salisbury
lbwnship
LANGSVILLE
Vao:ation Bible Scbool T11151lle5_, regular IIM'II'tjng,
House of Healing Ministries 6:30 p.m.. home of
at Lan~svillc:, 9 to II :30 Ma011ing Roush.
a.m. daily. Classes for ages
SHADE
-Bedford
4to6, 7tri9and IOto 12. Township Trustees will meet
For IIlOre infonnation con- at 1 p.m. al !be town hall
tract Alyson 992-1687 or
RUILAND ~ Rutland
Jessica, 992-0766.
Council. .egular
•
D!NfJng, 7 pm., civic ............

M

ROCK

Eastern·High School band a01ards
pPfWnnted
n ,

lAK."al Weather

Happy
Father's Day

Th hy,JDMII

dren invited..

hoth.=:~v: =~~;r~ Contests new to Gold Wmgs and Ribs Festival

live Democrats and older
women were . especially
receptive to her mes~e,
and her strong showing wtth
those
voters
exposed
Obama ' s
vulnerabilities
.
among those groups.
Democrats whose No. 1
concern had been ending
the Iraq w.ar at the campaign's outset, started worrying more about the economy. That was a switch from
Obarna' s strength to hers. ·

BY DAVE CARPENTER
AP BUSINESS WRITER

ANNIE'S MAILBOX

'

Air travel options shrink amid·carrier strife

I

ThUI'IIday, .JuDe s. zoo8

.

Clinton to end historic candidacy, support Obama
l

PageAa

The Daily Sentinel

Thursday, Junes; aoo8

mttr

!liCit
IIIPC.

�'

OPINION

:The Daily Sentinel
•

·:The Daily Sentinel

a
,,., .... ._

__

111 Caud. •• • ...

Ohio

(740) 992-2156 • FAX (7

"dlwscla)', .lune s. :110011

All Business: Wachovia,
·UflMu ·shakeups don't faze investors

912-2157

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.

~

Ptdsher
Charlene Huellidl
General Manager-News E«ilor

LONG

.r•

..

:t 6·---

-llle Alst Anaa;a.t eo lhe u.s. Col

'

YORK

. , ~lated
ntt.. and the
rautt ts the masstve losses
1

a ... . pi~':.== banbW.•t
'900thed hccM1se Jbey bow

v IEw

'READER'S

=.~~,:':YJ,~;

.
Changes
.

•
•

be gone, but the pain " far

from ovec.

cial~becau~~'::
rocting lhe maruts f&lt;JTtar-

~~=~seem~

=::

· dial passes, there

They're uhlt MiJd/epoft needs

'

• DMr &amp;&amp;or:

· I ta:cndy visited my bometown .of Middleport lhe week
Prior to Memorial Day. As always, I visit my parents' and
6mdben;' gravesite at Middleport Hill Cemetery. I was
appalled at what I found upon en~ lbe cemetery. tt was
in the worse oondition I have ever seen.
.
·Understanding the recent rains and Ibis bampering mow· ·
ing, I found tombstones toppled over tluoughout, trash bar.rels IJUmed ·OV.er or full of traSh, ·tree limbs laying all. ~·
even along the roadway. Altbou~ I DO longer reside m
Middleport or Meigs County, I Sbll call Middlepott h0.me,
bu~ now, .al~JDg w.im. a lot of ru~ down sectioos of !
Middleport, t.e. bmldings, streets, ~v~t, etc., I ~ ,
embamissed to tell ·someone that posstbly tmgbt be passtt~g
~ lbat lhis was once my hometownl
'Mr. Gerlach. bopefully you can makeor1letforthtnmake
the .changes Middlepon is in desperate need of. Micldlepott
5 in need of help to bring it baclt to tbe wonderful commullity it once was. Feel free to contact myself anytime :to rencler .to assistance in this huge undertaking. monef.al:ily or
whatever is needed.
. Donalion of American ~ by Woodmen of ·die Wodd
C!aCh year by my brother, RiChard Hays, is fantl!sti&lt;::, ltowevcr,
l'feel a denohed fist, ·elbow grea!!e and some boml:town pride
to bring Middleport back. businesses back and more imporllllltly to clean it up to where it used to be, a small town with
a heart, lle1f pride m1 lllOOvalion to move fonvantl
Sen ltll.lla;ri Sr.
· ·
City, Oklll.
&gt;

~

hopes

:~-=:

slump in bome prices haso't
SfoJlped and 1110rtg
defaitb Jl!re growiD$- .,ges
Globally, financial rompanies - including banks,
mortg~ lenden;, insurers
.and more _ have taken
more than $246 billion in
wri~wns 00 IIIOitg&lt;lge~latH! aad other cJeb[ .as&amp;m;
since the litlrt of last year
3COOiding to figures by ~
Associated Press.
for
oompaoies
tile
Wacbovia and W.aMu, lhe
·

_tbs
_ _ _~-:'---+-- 1

TODAY IN HISTORY

-

.

.

LETTERSx
.. TO THE
EDITOR
.

..

.

• Letters to the edrtor are weloom.e. l'hey should be less
iharr 300 words. All letters are subject •to editing, must be
#grwd, imd include address and telephone ~ No
wnsigrred letters will be published. lLtters should be in
iJ.ood taste, addressing issues, 110t persorwlities. I..euers of
f/lanJcs to organi'Qltions and individuals will not be acceptttl for publication.

. The Daily Sentine~
•

.

Reader Services

(USPS21.-L

Ohio~~···~

Publilhed every llamoon. Monday
Our matn COl teen 1 in all stories I&amp; to lhrough Friday, 111 C&lt;luo1 Stmet,
,.._ _ '" •r Ou- ot .. ..- PoitleiOY.· otilo. 'Seoonq-dau
. . . ~. &lt;:al the newwoomat (7~) poot8ge pllld at .........,.
Ilea .... The All"
ted Press Met
Ja2·2156
.
the at,6o Us ; -. • •u aiatlon
',
' ....... ' . Stnd addrels correcOur lllllin nulllber ..

.-

I

0 5

(7to).a-z1lil.
.. . . . . . . . are:

;•

lf P

News

•

lubeci\IIICM Aliles
Br-IIN ·o r - -

One-

. Charlene Hoeflich , Ext 12
Brian-· Ext. 14
I ,.., 8e1li Sa"'"'~ Ext. 13

pv: ,.,
iJi

tions lo llie Dolly · 111 Court
Street, :Poe•~. Otio en~t.

•

'10.27
'115M
50'

o..,_

..

Dlillr

O n e-~'10.27

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.

'103..10
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-....
1D t. Ooty Sidnol. No Sub·

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-·

ocrlpilon Ill' -

a

peon- In . . _

. . . SUbect1ptlon .

.......... eo. ..,

1 Weelcs

26 Weel&lt;s
52 Weeks

'32.216
'64.20
'127.11

aut.lde ...... County
13 Weeks
'53.55
26 Weeks
'107.10
52 Weeks
'21421

•

homes after
muddy flood

'

·,

ofl

Local Briefs

·. Scott McClellan, unleashed

.

.

EllS reunion set

Samuel Johnson, the ioooare yOu!' brains ARE made men of a basset boond
oc1astic l8th&lt;entucy English
of feathers.
already k:Jaow: d!at £. from
essayist, put it best: ~No man
Granted, for McCteltan to being an .inclependcnt dleck
but a bkicldtead, evec wrole,
suggest mat dJe Bush White on . :fOVemrilent .power,
eKa:~p for money." So, sure,
House's critical mistake . today~ .
corporar.e.oonfOilll« Bush .administtation
was· "a decision to tum trolled, oowtier..dominated
secMtaty
Soott
away from candor .and bon- .Washington/New
YoO:
press
McClellan compiled his
esty when those qualities media func6on as £diably,
memoirs with an eye towiro
were most needfd" suggests .and far more smoodbly, lO
making a buck. Since wllen
an
·o nly -virgin-in -the- adv.anoe White House Jll'O"
.are Republicans opposed to
whorelmuse naivete not in pag.anda than McClellaD
Then ~~~ere·~ Bush bim- keeping with his perfoc- himself ever did.
profit?
McClellan '11
memoir, self, whom McCieUan manoe as press secretacy.
But this is unthinkable. So
"W\Iat ~ne¢ Inside the depicts :as a charming fel- Wri:f. at Saloo,oom; Louis
the
networb,
(jkun
.
Bush
1te House ·and 'low who filequent!ly •:ron- Bay .reminds us 1bal the Greenwalll OOICd, roJJcd 0111
W.asbiogtOII'·s Culture of vinoes himself ro belie"~&lt;e Texan was a pattiCIIlarly ''lbcir full ·stable
DlllbiDdception;' bas caused what suits liis ll!!ells at die unpe~asi,;e liar: "Watch millionaife ~ 1Un
ql,litea stir. But can there be moment" and en~es in MoCiellan's old press brief- who play the mleofautboriany Am1:rriicu not cum:ntl)' "setf-de&lt;iption.' '. Do ~ell ings .and you'll see a. man tative joomalists oo die 1V
on the White House payroll Woold this be tbe same who is deeply uncomfort- to join with their White
who doesn' know the """'ldicnt who's _ ......try able ...~ he .writes. "His_ eyes · Hause .allies in mookjng 1011
administration boodwillkcd cl;;imed that ·~hin ~wary! his manner stiff-.. deriding McCieUan'sdairns
the nation into invading Iraq Hussein forced him to his evastons actually sound One media star af1er die ocu
with a.tidal wave of meretri- invade lraQ by refusing. tn · like evasions."
.
- Tom Brokaw, David
cious prop~anda?
admit U.N. anns inspecBut what really provided Gr~gory, Cbaliie Gibson,
. Condi R1ce alibis that tors? This despite the fact sardonic aiDusement during Brian WilliBDJs, Tim Runat
President Bush never · that JI!ding ·those inspec- ~.book 's rollout. was me and Wolf Blitzer- m...,;.
iritended to .mislead the ('iub- tors • ineompetenoe _ never disrngenuous reactJJon of the alized in sync to insist Jba1
lie and "was very clea:r mind they pro""' IOCl .per~ bi~h-dollar press: "If any- nothing could be more
about the reasons for going cent corrll(;t about Iraq's ~_g." !-fc€1ellan · wrote, absurd lhan the Sllg8CIIIion
to war.~ Yeah. well, f recall oonexisteut "wea,pons ·o f
the natwo.al .p ress corps . that they ;ue 'defeRDtial.
Rice testifying under oath mass destruction" ·_ kept ~as probably. too deferen-. complicit enablers' in govc
lhat a OA briefing entitled White House imagineers ttalto.the White House and emmem propaganda."
"bi~ ~:aden J?,e~ ~o busy .until the "dlock and ~o the administration :in
That s.aid; quality joumllS~f!.kem U.S. was · btslon~ · awe" bombardment began.
regardtothemostimportant ism definitely got done
c.al m nature, before 1ts
So w!Ddl do you believe, decision facing the nation amid the IAq P'''P"8M""'
contents were ~sified 1 your president or your lying durin~ : my
years in barrage. One news orpniand everybody saw U !)ad- eyes? Tbc sbccr brazenness Washington, the choice over zation, lheii .Knigbt-Ridder,
p~ctHI ev~ng but the 6f Bush's fictions ~esis a whether to go to war in Iraq. now McClatchy, and a
"The colla~se of the handful of terrific ~
prec1se location of the 9/ll clas~ .:mmao's ptrlOnality:
attach before they . hap- intellectuaUy insecure but administration s ratiooales Jonathan
Landay,
pened. Bush went fi~.
inwardly oootemptllOils of for war, which became Warren - Strobel,
Joe
.. McC~ellan calls Rice bow gullible and easily apparent monlhs after our Gallaway, etc. - were .all
sometimes too accoouno- manipulaled people are. He · invasion, should nev~ have over this 'Story baclt when ·il
~g" as national security may even buy into that make- come as _such a surprise. ... counted. See their stinging
adv1ser. Sbe ,was worse than believe about Saddam at . ln this case, the 'liberal rebuttal to McClellan at .
that. Her false 9/11 testimo- some level. Even for a stone media' didn't live up do its washingtonbureau .typ~­
ny e~ibited ~":0 q'!'llities sociopath, story's aD easier repulation. If it bad, the . pad.com/naliooal&amp;e:Qurity.
essenual to nsm~ m the seU when It's halfway sin· country would have been
(Arkansas
Democrat·
Bush
admimstration: cere. But his strongest belief better served."
Gazette coU.mnist Gene
shameless sycophancy and is lhat George W. Bush is a
Got that, pigeons? The Lyons is a tuitional maga·
an incapacity to be em bar- big cat in a world of pigeons. Bush ·administration's for- zine award winner altd wrassed. Give her the motorMcClellan even reports mer press spokesman sur- author of "The Hllllting of
c.ade and .the big corner overlleariog Bush telling a rounds the phrase "liberal the President." (St. Mar.tin'.r
offioe and there's no false- supporter be can't n:mem· media" with ironical quotes Press, 2000). Y011 CGI1 e·
hood so brazen Rice won' t her if be ever used .cocaine. to indicate what most peo- mail Lr,ons at gene·
embrace it.
If you believe that, chances · pie wilh the intellectual acu- lyonsl@Sbcglobal.lld.)

«

a

I'

CHESTER -The Eastern High School Class ·o f 1983
will bold a reuni0n .at 3 p.m., Saturday, June 21 at the
Chester Masonic Lodge. Bring a snack item. Family ,event.
No aloohol.

Yard sale
nJPPER'S PLAINS- A 1-family 4-H yard sale will be
held from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. on Saturday in the Eastern High
SChool parking lot. The sale is ~ponsored by lakeside
Leaders 4-H Club.

~outages.

liglrtuing fires and
floodi1QW818

reported across
the region.
~Ill'*

when a nearby tree was
struck by lightning, according to a supervisor at 1be
Fort Hamilton Hospital. She
was treated and expected to
be released.
A woman in Waynesville
near Dayton also was taken
to a hospital after ligbtning
struck her one-story house,
said Wayne Township Fire
Chief Paul Scherer. The
woman doesn't have lifelhreatening injuries, be said .
Lightning also caused
problems in nearby Butler ·
County, where frre departments responded to electrical
lines that were on frre from
an apparent lightning strike.
The city of Lebanon had
to go to baclrup communications system for poli~
and fire dispatchers because
one of the. antennas for the
primary system apparently
was hit by lightning, officials said.

a

C/iJthittg11 repellent Q!ld in$pection prevent tick-borne disease

GAILIPOUS - Gelllrude A1111e1ta Noes &amp;win, 9Q. 4 , ·
fw nus· j~Nlr lhe
G•llinn)is, died liuesday, J1111e 3, 2008 at 1he Nhe!l I
· - I l l be ery !Jft'I'O--rE.me
R
u;•.-;n...-W..
iii!IJLI~~.ff1111!Y(jff
Huotmgtmi.
· rgency oorn, ·~._,...... ·..-a.
ofilte 4o 117111llast ,_,_,;.
She was preceded in death by lherbushand, Harold Erwin. ·
g.
. --:"' my
Graveside services will be U a.lll., 'Saturday, June 7, at son came m ~rth a ~k on
Mound Hill Cemetery with Rev. SC0tl Bater ofliiciating. him. It hailn ~ Dtl£n. him Y'!t·
·
•L- Wiilli c.. _ _, H
iso f was able •to get zt QjJ him
. Ammgemeots are by •uc .
s r.UIJE;uu _ome. .
.
arrd.Wl.it. IWhDt lind·ofprob·
GonOOlences to the family .can be e-mailed to www.will- l
.,._ "'-'··
? 1 he
· "'·--'"
--" IOUUWUenoeS.
---"'-'
erM
uu ad
'"-"'-' .cause.
ar
lS...,....,wuODle.OOID
tO send e"Uiilll
hey
d'
·t
spt:e many rseases.

RAVENSWOOD, W.Va. - Jinuny A. Gr.aham, 55, of
Ravenswaod, W.Va., passed away June 4, 2008 at
Pleasant ·Valley Hospital i.n Point Pleasant, W.Va.
Arrangements by Foglesang Tucker Funeral Heme will be
announced at a iater .date.
.

waters I808ded
WednasMyin
Chillicothe.
Strong thlnlerstonns conliuued
to batiBr soUihem
and 08ilbal Ohio
Wednesday, and

FAMILY MEDIC IN E

_Dea_
.

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

..

from their lloo1ed

die

..(N:f,·-·

. · ·Today is 'fll1n'sday, J~~~~e 5, the l571h day of 2008. There
are 209 days· left in the year.
•
• Taday's Highlight in History: On June . 5, 1968, Sen.
~ F. Kennedy was assassinatHI in Los . Angeles'
Ambassador Hotel after claimi~ victory. in caJifomia's
DeiiKlCflltic presidential pritruuy. Gunman Sidtan Bishara
~irban was if1:tmediately arresled
· .
: On Ibis date: In 11184, Civil W.ar bero Gen. Wtlliam T.
Shennan refused the Republican presidential oominaticiD,
!lAying, "I will not &lt;llicept if nominated .and wiU oot rqve if
etected."
.
' ·'(1!lougbt for Today: "What is objectionable, what is dangerous, about extremists is nOt lhat they are eiCtreme, but
that' they are intolerant. 1be evil is not what they say about
their cause, but what they say .about their opponents:" Robert F. Kennedy, U.S. senator ( 1925-1968).

BOnoM

R'SicJence
- \ t h e rrpm.
She was bocn on July S,
At least two injures were
1913, in DeJCICI:,danghter of
it;por:tcd.
.
die l.lte 'W.c!riey and Glada
·
"We
are
ifar
fmm
being
Tbwnas Davis. She was a
done,n Andy Hatms, a
sup;potter .ancl bonl!lrJUY
meteomlogist with lhe
mem'ber &lt;l!lf J0bs 01111~
, Nati&lt;mal Weather Service in
a square danoe caller, a
w~. "We are still
IIICID'ber of lhe Daughten; of
mcmitlinng
very 'large areas
America, Ohester Goll1lcia
•of dumderstonns that we
313, md me 01estcr P.ast
·need SO !ceq! .an eye on for
Counselors Qub Qf the
poten1Dl sev~ weather.~ . '
Dan.ghters of America. She
Hatms ·said oountless fun..
was .a member of llihe 0eJl11er
Del clouds bad been repart. CIIUI'oh cof Ghrist.
ed J}ale lluesday and early
Besides her parents, she .
wa pmoeded in death tby ber !husband, AmJIWu:r; !100&amp;, Wednesday, ibut oo &lt;toma- around .a ptii¥~1y run d0g
About 60,{)QO Duke
.R. Gary Holter .and GtmJoo Holter;~· B1mi1a does bad ibeen confimned.
&amp;hplter south .af ~thens .a nd Energy customers in southLemley; brothers: Klenneth D.aviis, R
DJlviis ancl
Autborii'ties in Ross [pushed .dog bouses . into west Ohio were withoul
RObcl1t Davis.
County in southern Ohio' tillees . and 'hushes. The power late · Wednesday,
Sbe is ·survived by ber darWtter, S:bamn Riftlle, Racine; declared .a ·state re f emer- Athens Gounty dog war- according to the company's
.and grandchilllren: 8i111 {Becky) firedrriok, Rena, Gary R. gency lhecause of surging den hall itO wade through Web site.
Holter, Long Bottom; GFeta i(Ohris) Davis, Btidgcpmt, fklodw.aters rthat washed rtbe water up to his chest to
American Electric Power
W.Va., Wesley (Carrie~ H01ter, Long Bottom, ancl Mmie pa¥ement off some roads ~escue abmlt 20 dogs. lhat bad less lhan 1,000 cus(Jeremy~ R-ose, Racine; geat gAD&lt;'khildl:cn: Keith. Stacey .and left debris and standing got loose..
.
tomers without power
aw:l Tyaer f!lederiok, Tecla I em'ley, Go1too Sprague, water on others.
In Pomeroy . in Mei~s · throughout the state due to
Kristen and Asbleigh D.av.is, Lincoln, JCiianna .and K!irsten · "We'R! eoll0uraging our County, wind and ram storn1s, said spokeswoman
Rfie. .and Bailee, Bra)'don and Bm.gan H01ter; a brolbel:. citizens - anyl!llle ooming caused .a liillside do · slide, Vrkki Michalski. Most were
Oyde (Alice) Davis, Rutland; d!I!Jghtt:rs-in-law, Judy ithm~ R!l!lss &lt;Jaunty - not · blocking uaffic for a couple in the Athens area.
lt:ooklhold, Ptlrt!land and J~ H@lter., Long 80ttrnn; .ll1ld sev- ·to illy to ifjard the water on hOUI'S,Jillthatiities said.
"We're looking at a fairer.alllicces, nephews and s,peciall;iiencls.
.
,
i!he mads &lt;because rtbey may
Cincinnati received 1.64 ly quick restoration, barFuner.aliWill ibe .at ll m .a.m. con Slll:llrday, June 7, 2008, at lbe w~ cout runderoeatb," · inches of rain Ttuesday to set ring any more bad wealher
· A!nderson-McDaniel Funeral HOOIC in Pomeroy. Pastor 'Sbcriff Ron N1ohols sard.
a record for the .date, Hatros that would cause ·more.
Rob Banber wiU oiiliici:ate. B:wia'l will ibe in Mei,g s
The sberilif's dqpartment said. Water ·along itbe Great · widespread
outages,"
Meml!lry Gll11dens. .
.
bad to use a boat to rescue a Miami Riv.er was expected Michalski Said.
mends may call limm 4-8 11un. on Friday, ·at lhe funeral COQp1e motorists who got to rise ta 4ru:e !than 6 feet
Flooding also was reportborne. 1lbe mem~s cof i!he Dae#C!I'S of the .American Sir.anded in deep water abl!lve fload •fllllgeovemight. ed in several communities
lkv~lutiao will oonduct a servKie :111 p.m. .
lluesday night, and at least a
On i!he north side af the around Dayton. Parts of
Mem0tial d&lt;mations 1111ay lhe made ItO itlhe Olei1Lil hlllf-doz.eo homes were city, strong lMmls ripped a Butler and Warren counties
ACademy Budding Fund, 45979. &amp;!le Raad, Rari•, e¥acuated for · a time section m 'lOOf off .a Ford near Cincinnati received 2-3
OH 45771.
·
. because .of the threat of auto dealership. Damage to inches of rain, the National
Online condaleoces may be sent to IWIIRI..lllllk:naamc- . lilasb flooding, Nichols said. the lbu'ilding was .estimated Weather Service said.
daniel.oom.
'to the east, a flash flood at about '$25,1000, .according . In Hamilton, a woman
busted down
fence :to city ofificials.
was injured Tuesday night

either company's ~Nor \bould lhey.
The boanls • bodt o•t••

mlrus ~~~.,n,___

Woodland
lieiglrts residents
11'10119 belongings

Stmng
thunderstorms
eoolinued to hatter soulhem
Ohio
.and
central
W~sday, and power out.ages, ligblloing frres .and
ifiloodil1g · were reported

Mary Kaduyn Davis Holter,
84, Long Bottom, passed
away Qlll June 3, 2008, .at !her

Con.f'l'SJ sludl....Ju- ,_, IDJI'ai"~.,.
=~~·.:!:
Ufdllisfmu.t of rm~, or~ diL , pcacd ~- \l{achovia's
'
ccnciM. t~rnur.
or dril,..••
IM.IIir.N.• "'.I
.~ · ken 1boo.,sor:• and W.aMu'11
.J·~
:t•· ;&amp;--~
!Cary Killinger allowed bod!
~· or oWf *~~:!'.*_~flU of.~~ o•••Mnies to take on WJaC~
.r-- IW'""'~I to ~ • - to pdilln ..c ' ccpllil* ann~!* cJf IDOitGoPn'IIIIIDit "•r 41

Central, southern Ohio hit by severe stom1s
BY THE All DCio\1ID PNESS

Wadtoria'&lt;&gt; CEO gets fired.
...tillc: W.ashingtM MUIUal"s
, top cuallive is ,i1ripped of
his chairman'11 litk: And
. guess Mlat? In~ don't
, fed any bcocc about the

Dan Goocil idl

The Daily Sentinel• P-. As

www.mydailylleotinel.eom

PageA4

•

A.nswer: First, let me
.assure ·you that you don't
ba¥e anything to worry
about wilh your son. A tick
can spread a .disease only if
it bt:tes a person and
becomes imbedded under
the slcin. A tick that is still
crawling around does not
cause .disease. You were
lucky that yau caught the
tick at this slage, before it
could burrow into your
son's skin.
But · your larger point is
correct. Ticks can be the
carriers of several type.s of
disease. To help you .and my
other readers out, l will give
you some general information on tick·borne diseases
in •the United Slates.
In most tick -borne diseases,
the tick is the "travel host'' of
the illness. By this, I mean
that the tick doeso 't actually
have the disease but acquires

a disease-causing !pill - .a tly on the body of the tick
Check yourself and your
bacteria, virus ror pmsite - until it releases its grip pets for loose ticks and ~t
on the human flesh. This them off before they blte.from an .animal bast ·
The11, when ·the tick feeds
on a human it can pass the
disease-causing agent on to
the · person who may
become sick. In these cases,
the tick does not have lhe
illness; it just transmits it to
an unluckY human recipient.
It usually requires several ·
hours of feeding on · a
human for disease to be
transmitted.
There are .a wide range of
animals from which ticks
can acquire disease-causing
agents. These animals called "reservoirs" in the
language of public health
officials . - can include
deer, mice, horses, squirrels,
chipmunks, birds, raccoons,
and even sometimes dogs.
Many of the symptoms
of tick-borne illnesses are
similar. They include rash,
fever and general malaise.
Generally there is about a
seven-day
· window
between the tick bite and
the onset of illness.
The proper to way to
remove an imbedded tick is
to put firm, steady traction
- in other words pull gen-

also works on dogs and cats. And, don't panic if you fin&lt;i ·
lf you yank on the tick, lhe an imbedded tick. Remove it
body will come off leaving promptly and properly and
the bead and mouth parts write down the date and
behind. This can cause a time. Most of the time the
localized skin infection.
Pc:rson won't come . down
Once a tick bas been sue· with a disease, but it's
cessfully removed, make a always better to be prepare&lt;t·
note of the date and time.
Family Medicilfe® u , II·
Keep an .eye on the person weekly cohillt11. To s,j,iW
for signs of illness, like questWns, write tD Mllldls
fever and fatigue, as well as A. Silllpson, D.O., M.B.A.,
an unusual rash. If your Oltio Uninrsity Collqe of
child or loved one becomes Osteopathic Me&amp;illt, P..O.
ill, be sure to tell the doctor · Box II 0, Athe~, OIIW
.that you removed an imbed· 45701, or via e-lrulil to
ded tick, show lhe doctor readerquestions@fa•ily·
the site and tell hilii or her •edicillenews.org. Me6:111
when you removed it: This· irtformation in ·
tllis
can be a vital piece of med· column is proviMd liS 1111
ical history.
tducatioMl service o';i
As I've ·said many times It dots
not npiiJce
before, prevention is prefer- jUdgment of your persolllll
able to treating the illness · physician, wlw slwuld be
once it develops .. Wear a refied on to diag110se 111111
hat, long pants and a long recommertd
treat111ellll
sleeved shin when going for any tnedical rondiiioru.
out. in the woods or tall Past colunf!IS art IIVailabk .
grass. Use of repellants with ortline at www.j11111ily1Mtli·
DEET is also a good idea.
cillenews.org.

"

u:.:

Racine
l'nlm Page Al
• Future installation of
fire hydrants which officials
believe will lower homeowner's insurance rates to
()ffset a rise in property
taxes.
.• The elimination of a ·
township cemetery levy.
• Street maintenance.
• Existing codified ordinances to, as officials put it,
".protect property from unde·
sirable usage.V Officials
have went on reoord as saying they have ilo prob~m
with huntingldiscbW'gmg
weapons on those properties
that currently sit out of the
village and aredeemed in a

Rio center
from Page Al .
Grande campus, part-time
students, and those seeking
"We ex.pecl· to offer a
more
robust
daytime
schedule ,'.' Patterson said .
That, he said, will hopefully increase enrollment
through the local center,
assist students who are
commuting to the main
camp1,1s, and encour~g.e
high school students ehg1-

The infi!II1llational meetnon-residential area. Als6, if
iog
is not a fonnal vote '011
a piece of property is currently farmland, 1t would the matter thaugh v.illage
still be farmland if annexed officials have said their
plans on moviqg forward, or
into the villaae limits.
Probably the biggest con- not, with the proJXl'al will
cern residents in the pro- hinge on public feedback at
posed annexation area have the meeting.
Recently Racine sent out
IS the issue of bow their
a
questionnaire, which . is
taxes will be affected. For
this reason, village officials not to be confused with any
will ba ve represenlati ves official vote, to gauge pub·
frem bolh the Meigs County lie suppon of the idea. The
Auditor's Offioe and the village sent 119 question·
Meigs County Treasurer's ·naircs to those residents
Offioe at the meeting ·so lhat living within the praposed
each individual can ·get an
accurate, neutral assessment
of what it would fmancially
mean to be included in the
Village of Racine in terms
of property taiCes..
The village's solicitor will
also be at the meeting to
answer legal questions.

ble for the post-secondary
edu~ation option .
Patterson said he ex,pects
the university's enrollment
· of high school students
through the PSEO ln double
through the local bcancb
campus this fall . He said the
university also plans to add
more certificate programs
and technic.al colines.
"The landscape of higher
education is changing,"
Bowman said, "and · the
economy is changing. We
need to determine how we
can best serve out students."

annexation · area
and
[eceived 62 responses. Of
those 62 responses, 44
were against annexation
while 1S were for it This
also means nearly half of
the. people affected never
responded.
Anne~atioo would have
tn be put
to an55
.official
vote
where
at least
percent
of
those affected must approve
the proposal for it to go to
the
Meigs
County
Commissioners for final
approval.

..,,·, 1, . ,, .

. ;, , . (ltUdvl

l.oclled on State Route 7
1/4 mil South ot US 33, Pomeroy, OH

740-411 1150
His: Fri. 1Q.5 Si.&amp; Sm. 9-5

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I'FJI.lOR\t[Sf; -\RiS fL\UE

Ariel • Ann Dater
Eudnwment Fund
!"'the Performing Am Ce-

fiijtffi~~--==l

1•

~;~~~§~~~~

Mn. Aan Dater will m1tcb ~
~ntrlbutions; May 1, l88ll
~y I, 2009. Yoo OlD mokt aliftk
~ be Ariel-Ann Dater Eido
111111 that will IIIII
lito
Ollowin&amp; ways:
• Cllb • Credit Card • Appredattd
Securilios. Pled. . . lleq.- • Lite
Insurance • Seat Sale

a--

1

Box Office: 4212nd A.._
Galllpolla, OH (7411) _,.,_

Rivet City

PI aye~
....Audition~
"Seven Brides for Seven Brotlurs"
Saturday, June 7
10:00- Noon and 1:00- 4:00 pm
Sunday, June 8 - l:OO - 4:00 pm
Loc8tion:

.,

Middleport Chunit of-Christ
Fifth and Main

MWdleport. OR-

�'

OPINION

:The Daily Sentinel
•

·:The Daily Sentinel

a
,,., .... ._

__

111 Caud. •• • ...

Ohio

(740) 992-2156 • FAX (7

"dlwscla)', .lune s. :110011

All Business: Wachovia,
·UflMu ·shakeups don't faze investors

912-2157

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.

~

Ptdsher
Charlene Huellidl
General Manager-News E«ilor

LONG

.r•

..

:t 6·---

-llle Alst Anaa;a.t eo lhe u.s. Col

'

YORK

. , ~lated
ntt.. and the
rautt ts the masstve losses
1

a ... . pi~':.== banbW.•t
'900thed hccM1se Jbey bow

v IEw

'READER'S

=.~~,:':YJ,~;

.
Changes
.

•
•

be gone, but the pain " far

from ovec.

cial~becau~~'::
rocting lhe maruts f&lt;JTtar-

~~=~seem~

=::

· dial passes, there

They're uhlt MiJd/epoft needs

'

• DMr &amp;&amp;or:

· I ta:cndy visited my bometown .of Middleport lhe week
Prior to Memorial Day. As always, I visit my parents' and
6mdben;' gravesite at Middleport Hill Cemetery. I was
appalled at what I found upon en~ lbe cemetery. tt was
in the worse oondition I have ever seen.
.
·Understanding the recent rains and Ibis bampering mow· ·
ing, I found tombstones toppled over tluoughout, trash bar.rels IJUmed ·OV.er or full of traSh, ·tree limbs laying all. ~·
even along the roadway. Altbou~ I DO longer reside m
Middleport or Meigs County, I Sbll call Middlepott h0.me,
bu~ now, .al~JDg w.im. a lot of ru~ down sectioos of !
Middleport, t.e. bmldings, streets, ~v~t, etc., I ~ ,
embamissed to tell ·someone that posstbly tmgbt be passtt~g
~ lbat lhis was once my hometownl
'Mr. Gerlach. bopefully you can makeor1letforthtnmake
the .changes Middlepon is in desperate need of. Micldlepott
5 in need of help to bring it baclt to tbe wonderful commullity it once was. Feel free to contact myself anytime :to rencler .to assistance in this huge undertaking. monef.al:ily or
whatever is needed.
. Donalion of American ~ by Woodmen of ·die Wodd
C!aCh year by my brother, RiChard Hays, is fantl!sti&lt;::, ltowevcr,
l'feel a denohed fist, ·elbow grea!!e and some boml:town pride
to bring Middleport back. businesses back and more imporllllltly to clean it up to where it used to be, a small town with
a heart, lle1f pride m1 lllOOvalion to move fonvantl
Sen ltll.lla;ri Sr.
· ·
City, Oklll.
&gt;

~

hopes

:~-=:

slump in bome prices haso't
SfoJlped and 1110rtg
defaitb Jl!re growiD$- .,ges
Globally, financial rompanies - including banks,
mortg~ lenden;, insurers
.and more _ have taken
more than $246 billion in
wri~wns 00 IIIOitg&lt;lge~latH! aad other cJeb[ .as&amp;m;
since the litlrt of last year
3COOiding to figures by ~
Associated Press.
for
oompaoies
tile
Wacbovia and W.aMu, lhe
·

_tbs
_ _ _~-:'---+-- 1

TODAY IN HISTORY

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LETTERSx
.. TO THE
EDITOR
.

..

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• Letters to the edrtor are weloom.e. l'hey should be less
iharr 300 words. All letters are subject •to editing, must be
#grwd, imd include address and telephone ~ No
wnsigrred letters will be published. lLtters should be in
iJ.ood taste, addressing issues, 110t persorwlities. I..euers of
f/lanJcs to organi'Qltions and individuals will not be acceptttl for publication.

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Publilhed every llamoon. Monday
Our matn COl teen 1 in all stories I&amp; to lhrough Friday, 111 C&lt;luo1 Stmet,
,.._ _ '" •r Ou- ot .. ..- PoitleiOY.· otilo. 'Seoonq-dau
. . . ~. &lt;:al the newwoomat (7~) poot8ge pllld at .........,.
Ilea .... The All"
ted Press Met
Ja2·2156
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the at,6o Us ; -. • •u aiatlon
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' ....... ' . Stnd addrels correcOur lllllin nulllber ..

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News

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lubeci\IIICM Aliles
Br-IIN ·o r - -

One-

. Charlene Hoeflich , Ext 12
Brian-· Ext. 14
I ,.., 8e1li Sa"'"'~ Ext. 13

pv: ,.,
iJi

tions lo llie Dolly · 111 Court
Street, :Poe•~. Otio en~t.

•

'10.27
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50'

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ocrlpilon Ill' -

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peon- In . . _

. . . SUbect1ptlon .

.......... eo. ..,

1 Weelcs

26 Weel&lt;s
52 Weeks

'32.216
'64.20
'127.11

aut.lde ...... County
13 Weeks
'53.55
26 Weeks
'107.10
52 Weeks
'21421

•

homes after
muddy flood

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·,

ofl

Local Briefs

·. Scott McClellan, unleashed

.

.

EllS reunion set

Samuel Johnson, the ioooare yOu!' brains ARE made men of a basset boond
oc1astic l8th&lt;entucy English
of feathers.
already k:Jaow: d!at £. from
essayist, put it best: ~No man
Granted, for McCteltan to being an .inclependcnt dleck
but a bkicldtead, evec wrole,
suggest mat dJe Bush White on . :fOVemrilent .power,
eKa:~p for money." So, sure,
House's critical mistake . today~ .
corporar.e.oonfOilll« Bush .administtation
was· "a decision to tum trolled, oowtier..dominated
secMtaty
Soott
away from candor .and bon- .Washington/New
YoO:
press
McClellan compiled his
esty when those qualities media func6on as £diably,
memoirs with an eye towiro
were most needfd" suggests .and far more smoodbly, lO
making a buck. Since wllen
an
·o nly -virgin-in -the- adv.anoe White House Jll'O"
.are Republicans opposed to
whorelmuse naivete not in pag.anda than McClellaD
Then ~~~ere·~ Bush bim- keeping with his perfoc- himself ever did.
profit?
McClellan '11
memoir, self, whom McCieUan manoe as press secretacy.
But this is unthinkable. So
"W\Iat ~ne¢ Inside the depicts :as a charming fel- Wri:f. at Saloo,oom; Louis
the
networb,
(jkun
.
Bush
1te House ·and 'low who filequent!ly •:ron- Bay .reminds us 1bal the Greenwalll OOICd, roJJcd 0111
W.asbiogtOII'·s Culture of vinoes himself ro belie"~&lt;e Texan was a pattiCIIlarly ''lbcir full ·stable
DlllbiDdception;' bas caused what suits liis ll!!ells at die unpe~asi,;e liar: "Watch millionaife ~ 1Un
ql,litea stir. But can there be moment" and en~es in MoCiellan's old press brief- who play the mleofautboriany Am1:rriicu not cum:ntl)' "setf-de&lt;iption.' '. Do ~ell ings .and you'll see a. man tative joomalists oo die 1V
on the White House payroll Woold this be tbe same who is deeply uncomfort- to join with their White
who doesn' know the """'ldicnt who's _ ......try able ...~ he .writes. "His_ eyes · Hause .allies in mookjng 1011
administration boodwillkcd cl;;imed that ·~hin ~wary! his manner stiff-.. deriding McCieUan'sdairns
the nation into invading Iraq Hussein forced him to his evastons actually sound One media star af1er die ocu
with a.tidal wave of meretri- invade lraQ by refusing. tn · like evasions."
.
- Tom Brokaw, David
cious prop~anda?
admit U.N. anns inspecBut what really provided Gr~gory, Cbaliie Gibson,
. Condi R1ce alibis that tors? This despite the fact sardonic aiDusement during Brian WilliBDJs, Tim Runat
President Bush never · that JI!ding ·those inspec- ~.book 's rollout. was me and Wolf Blitzer- m...,;.
iritended to .mislead the ('iub- tors • ineompetenoe _ never disrngenuous reactJJon of the alized in sync to insist Jba1
lie and "was very clea:r mind they pro""' IOCl .per~ bi~h-dollar press: "If any- nothing could be more
about the reasons for going cent corrll(;t about Iraq's ~_g." !-fc€1ellan · wrote, absurd lhan the Sllg8CIIIion
to war.~ Yeah. well, f recall oonexisteut "wea,pons ·o f
the natwo.al .p ress corps . that they ;ue 'defeRDtial.
Rice testifying under oath mass destruction" ·_ kept ~as probably. too deferen-. complicit enablers' in govc
lhat a OA briefing entitled White House imagineers ttalto.the White House and emmem propaganda."
"bi~ ~:aden J?,e~ ~o busy .until the "dlock and ~o the administration :in
That s.aid; quality joumllS~f!.kem U.S. was · btslon~ · awe" bombardment began.
regardtothemostimportant ism definitely got done
c.al m nature, before 1ts
So w!Ddl do you believe, decision facing the nation amid the IAq P'''P"8M""'
contents were ~sified 1 your president or your lying durin~ : my
years in barrage. One news orpniand everybody saw U !)ad- eyes? Tbc sbccr brazenness Washington, the choice over zation, lheii .Knigbt-Ridder,
p~ctHI ev~ng but the 6f Bush's fictions ~esis a whether to go to war in Iraq. now McClatchy, and a
"The colla~se of the handful of terrific ~
prec1se location of the 9/ll clas~ .:mmao's ptrlOnality:
attach before they . hap- intellectuaUy insecure but administration s ratiooales Jonathan
Landay,
pened. Bush went fi~.
inwardly oootemptllOils of for war, which became Warren - Strobel,
Joe
.. McC~ellan calls Rice bow gullible and easily apparent monlhs after our Gallaway, etc. - were .all
sometimes too accoouno- manipulaled people are. He · invasion, should nev~ have over this 'Story baclt when ·il
~g" as national security may even buy into that make- come as _such a surprise. ... counted. See their stinging
adv1ser. Sbe ,was worse than believe about Saddam at . ln this case, the 'liberal rebuttal to McClellan at .
that. Her false 9/11 testimo- some level. Even for a stone media' didn't live up do its washingtonbureau .typ~­
ny e~ibited ~":0 q'!'llities sociopath, story's aD easier repulation. If it bad, the . pad.com/naliooal&amp;e:Qurity.
essenual to nsm~ m the seU when It's halfway sin· country would have been
(Arkansas
Democrat·
Bush
admimstration: cere. But his strongest belief better served."
Gazette coU.mnist Gene
shameless sycophancy and is lhat George W. Bush is a
Got that, pigeons? The Lyons is a tuitional maga·
an incapacity to be em bar- big cat in a world of pigeons. Bush ·administration's for- zine award winner altd wrassed. Give her the motorMcClellan even reports mer press spokesman sur- author of "The Hllllting of
c.ade and .the big corner overlleariog Bush telling a rounds the phrase "liberal the President." (St. Mar.tin'.r
offioe and there's no false- supporter be can't n:mem· media" with ironical quotes Press, 2000). Y011 CGI1 e·
hood so brazen Rice won' t her if be ever used .cocaine. to indicate what most peo- mail Lr,ons at gene·
embrace it.
If you believe that, chances · pie wilh the intellectual acu- lyonsl@Sbcglobal.lld.)

«

a

I'

CHESTER -The Eastern High School Class ·o f 1983
will bold a reuni0n .at 3 p.m., Saturday, June 21 at the
Chester Masonic Lodge. Bring a snack item. Family ,event.
No aloohol.

Yard sale
nJPPER'S PLAINS- A 1-family 4-H yard sale will be
held from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. on Saturday in the Eastern High
SChool parking lot. The sale is ~ponsored by lakeside
Leaders 4-H Club.

~outages.

liglrtuing fires and
floodi1QW818

reported across
the region.
~Ill'*

when a nearby tree was
struck by lightning, according to a supervisor at 1be
Fort Hamilton Hospital. She
was treated and expected to
be released.
A woman in Waynesville
near Dayton also was taken
to a hospital after ligbtning
struck her one-story house,
said Wayne Township Fire
Chief Paul Scherer. The
woman doesn't have lifelhreatening injuries, be said .
Lightning also caused
problems in nearby Butler ·
County, where frre departments responded to electrical
lines that were on frre from
an apparent lightning strike.
The city of Lebanon had
to go to baclrup communications system for poli~
and fire dispatchers because
one of the. antennas for the
primary system apparently
was hit by lightning, officials said.

a

C/iJthittg11 repellent Q!ld in$pection prevent tick-borne disease

GAILIPOUS - Gelllrude A1111e1ta Noes &amp;win, 9Q. 4 , ·
fw nus· j~Nlr lhe
G•llinn)is, died liuesday, J1111e 3, 2008 at 1he Nhe!l I
· - I l l be ery !Jft'I'O--rE.me
R
u;•.-;n...-W..
iii!IJLI~~.ff1111!Y(jff
Huotmgtmi.
· rgency oorn, ·~._,...... ·..-a.
ofilte 4o 117111llast ,_,_,;.
She was preceded in death by lherbushand, Harold Erwin. ·
g.
. --:"' my
Graveside services will be U a.lll., 'Saturday, June 7, at son came m ~rth a ~k on
Mound Hill Cemetery with Rev. SC0tl Bater ofliiciating. him. It hailn ~ Dtl£n. him Y'!t·
·
•L- Wiilli c.. _ _, H
iso f was able •to get zt QjJ him
. Ammgemeots are by •uc .
s r.UIJE;uu _ome. .
.
arrd.Wl.it. IWhDt lind·ofprob·
GonOOlences to the family .can be e-mailed to www.will- l
.,._ "'-'··
? 1 he
· "'·--'"
--" IOUUWUenoeS.
---"'-'
erM
uu ad
'"-"'-' .cause.
ar
lS...,....,wuODle.OOID
tO send e"Uiilll
hey
d'
·t
spt:e many rseases.

RAVENSWOOD, W.Va. - Jinuny A. Gr.aham, 55, of
Ravenswaod, W.Va., passed away June 4, 2008 at
Pleasant ·Valley Hospital i.n Point Pleasant, W.Va.
Arrangements by Foglesang Tucker Funeral Heme will be
announced at a iater .date.
.

waters I808ded
WednasMyin
Chillicothe.
Strong thlnlerstonns conliuued
to batiBr soUihem
and 08ilbal Ohio
Wednesday, and

FAMILY MEDIC IN E

_Dea_
.

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

..

from their lloo1ed

die

..(N:f,·-·

. · ·Today is 'fll1n'sday, J~~~~e 5, the l571h day of 2008. There
are 209 days· left in the year.
•
• Taday's Highlight in History: On June . 5, 1968, Sen.
~ F. Kennedy was assassinatHI in Los . Angeles'
Ambassador Hotel after claimi~ victory. in caJifomia's
DeiiKlCflltic presidential pritruuy. Gunman Sidtan Bishara
~irban was if1:tmediately arresled
· .
: On Ibis date: In 11184, Civil W.ar bero Gen. Wtlliam T.
Shennan refused the Republican presidential oominaticiD,
!lAying, "I will not &lt;llicept if nominated .and wiU oot rqve if
etected."
.
' ·'(1!lougbt for Today: "What is objectionable, what is dangerous, about extremists is nOt lhat they are eiCtreme, but
that' they are intolerant. 1be evil is not what they say about
their cause, but what they say .about their opponents:" Robert F. Kennedy, U.S. senator ( 1925-1968).

BOnoM

R'SicJence
- \ t h e rrpm.
She was bocn on July S,
At least two injures were
1913, in DeJCICI:,danghter of
it;por:tcd.
.
die l.lte 'W.c!riey and Glada
·
"We
are
ifar
fmm
being
Tbwnas Davis. She was a
done,n Andy Hatms, a
sup;potter .ancl bonl!lrJUY
meteomlogist with lhe
mem'ber &lt;l!lf J0bs 01111~
, Nati&lt;mal Weather Service in
a square danoe caller, a
w~. "We are still
IIICID'ber of lhe Daughten; of
mcmitlinng
very 'large areas
America, Ohester Goll1lcia
•of dumderstonns that we
313, md me 01estcr P.ast
·need SO !ceq! .an eye on for
Counselors Qub Qf the
poten1Dl sev~ weather.~ . '
Dan.ghters of America. She
Hatms ·said oountless fun..
was .a member of llihe 0eJl11er
Del clouds bad been repart. CIIUI'oh cof Ghrist.
ed J}ale lluesday and early
Besides her parents, she .
wa pmoeded in death tby ber !husband, AmJIWu:r; !100&amp;, Wednesday, ibut oo &lt;toma- around .a ptii¥~1y run d0g
About 60,{)QO Duke
.R. Gary Holter .and GtmJoo Holter;~· B1mi1a does bad ibeen confimned.
&amp;hplter south .af ~thens .a nd Energy customers in southLemley; brothers: Klenneth D.aviis, R
DJlviis ancl
Autborii'ties in Ross [pushed .dog bouses . into west Ohio were withoul
RObcl1t Davis.
County in southern Ohio' tillees . and 'hushes. The power late · Wednesday,
Sbe is ·survived by ber darWtter, S:bamn Riftlle, Racine; declared .a ·state re f emer- Athens Gounty dog war- according to the company's
.and grandchilllren: 8i111 {Becky) firedrriok, Rena, Gary R. gency lhecause of surging den hall itO wade through Web site.
Holter, Long Bottom; GFeta i(Ohris) Davis, Btidgcpmt, fklodw.aters rthat washed rtbe water up to his chest to
American Electric Power
W.Va., Wesley (Carrie~ H01ter, Long Bottom, ancl Mmie pa¥ement off some roads ~escue abmlt 20 dogs. lhat bad less lhan 1,000 cus(Jeremy~ R-ose, Racine; geat gAD&lt;'khildl:cn: Keith. Stacey .and left debris and standing got loose..
.
tomers without power
aw:l Tyaer f!lederiok, Tecla I em'ley, Go1too Sprague, water on others.
In Pomeroy . in Mei~s · throughout the state due to
Kristen and Asbleigh D.av.is, Lincoln, JCiianna .and K!irsten · "We'R! eoll0uraging our County, wind and ram storn1s, said spokeswoman
Rfie. .and Bailee, Bra)'don and Bm.gan H01ter; a brolbel:. citizens - anyl!llle ooming caused .a liillside do · slide, Vrkki Michalski. Most were
Oyde (Alice) Davis, Rutland; d!I!Jghtt:rs-in-law, Judy ithm~ R!l!lss &lt;Jaunty - not · blocking uaffic for a couple in the Athens area.
lt:ooklhold, Ptlrt!land and J~ H@lter., Long 80ttrnn; .ll1ld sev- ·to illy to ifjard the water on hOUI'S,Jillthatiities said.
"We're looking at a fairer.alllicces, nephews and s,peciall;iiencls.
.
,
i!he mads &lt;because rtbey may
Cincinnati received 1.64 ly quick restoration, barFuner.aliWill ibe .at ll m .a.m. con Slll:llrday, June 7, 2008, at lbe w~ cout runderoeatb," · inches of rain Ttuesday to set ring any more bad wealher
· A!nderson-McDaniel Funeral HOOIC in Pomeroy. Pastor 'Sbcriff Ron N1ohols sard.
a record for the .date, Hatros that would cause ·more.
Rob Banber wiU oiiliici:ate. B:wia'l will ibe in Mei,g s
The sberilif's dqpartment said. Water ·along itbe Great · widespread
outages,"
Meml!lry Gll11dens. .
.
bad to use a boat to rescue a Miami Riv.er was expected Michalski Said.
mends may call limm 4-8 11un. on Friday, ·at lhe funeral COQp1e motorists who got to rise ta 4ru:e !than 6 feet
Flooding also was reportborne. 1lbe mem~s cof i!he Dae#C!I'S of the .American Sir.anded in deep water abl!lve fload •fllllgeovemight. ed in several communities
lkv~lutiao will oonduct a servKie :111 p.m. .
lluesday night, and at least a
On i!he north side af the around Dayton. Parts of
Mem0tial d&lt;mations 1111ay lhe made ItO itlhe Olei1Lil hlllf-doz.eo homes were city, strong lMmls ripped a Butler and Warren counties
ACademy Budding Fund, 45979. &amp;!le Raad, Rari•, e¥acuated for · a time section m 'lOOf off .a Ford near Cincinnati received 2-3
OH 45771.
·
. because .of the threat of auto dealership. Damage to inches of rain, the National
Online condaleoces may be sent to IWIIRI..lllllk:naamc- . lilasb flooding, Nichols said. the lbu'ilding was .estimated Weather Service said.
daniel.oom.
'to the east, a flash flood at about '$25,1000, .according . In Hamilton, a woman
busted down
fence :to city ofificials.
was injured Tuesday night

either company's ~Nor \bould lhey.
The boanls • bodt o•t••

mlrus ~~~.,n,___

Woodland
lieiglrts residents
11'10119 belongings

Stmng
thunderstorms
eoolinued to hatter soulhem
Ohio
.and
central
W~sday, and power out.ages, ligblloing frres .and
ifiloodil1g · were reported

Mary Kaduyn Davis Holter,
84, Long Bottom, passed
away Qlll June 3, 2008, .at !her

Con.f'l'SJ sludl....Ju- ,_, IDJI'ai"~.,.
=~~·.:!:
Ufdllisfmu.t of rm~, or~ diL , pcacd ~- \l{achovia's
'
ccnciM. t~rnur.
or dril,..••
IM.IIir.N.• "'.I
.~ · ken 1boo.,sor:• and W.aMu'11
.J·~
:t•· ;&amp;--~
!Cary Killinger allowed bod!
~· or oWf *~~:!'.*_~flU of.~~ o•••Mnies to take on WJaC~
.r-- IW'""'~I to ~ • - to pdilln ..c ' ccpllil* ann~!* cJf IDOitGoPn'IIIIIDit "•r 41

Central, southern Ohio hit by severe stom1s
BY THE All DCio\1ID PNESS

Wadtoria'&lt;&gt; CEO gets fired.
...tillc: W.ashingtM MUIUal"s
, top cuallive is ,i1ripped of
his chairman'11 litk: And
. guess Mlat? In~ don't
, fed any bcocc about the

Dan Goocil idl

The Daily Sentinel• P-. As

www.mydailylleotinel.eom

PageA4

•

A.nswer: First, let me
.assure ·you that you don't
ba¥e anything to worry
about wilh your son. A tick
can spread a .disease only if
it bt:tes a person and
becomes imbedded under
the slcin. A tick that is still
crawling around does not
cause .disease. You were
lucky that yau caught the
tick at this slage, before it
could burrow into your
son's skin.
But · your larger point is
correct. Ticks can be the
carriers of several type.s of
disease. To help you .and my
other readers out, l will give
you some general information on tick·borne diseases
in •the United Slates.
In most tick -borne diseases,
the tick is the "travel host'' of
the illness. By this, I mean
that the tick doeso 't actually
have the disease but acquires

a disease-causing !pill - .a tly on the body of the tick
Check yourself and your
bacteria, virus ror pmsite - until it releases its grip pets for loose ticks and ~t
on the human flesh. This them off before they blte.from an .animal bast ·
The11, when ·the tick feeds
on a human it can pass the
disease-causing agent on to
the · person who may
become sick. In these cases,
the tick does not have lhe
illness; it just transmits it to
an unluckY human recipient.
It usually requires several ·
hours of feeding on · a
human for disease to be
transmitted.
There are .a wide range of
animals from which ticks
can acquire disease-causing
agents. These animals called "reservoirs" in the
language of public health
officials . - can include
deer, mice, horses, squirrels,
chipmunks, birds, raccoons,
and even sometimes dogs.
Many of the symptoms
of tick-borne illnesses are
similar. They include rash,
fever and general malaise.
Generally there is about a
seven-day
· window
between the tick bite and
the onset of illness.
The proper to way to
remove an imbedded tick is
to put firm, steady traction
- in other words pull gen-

also works on dogs and cats. And, don't panic if you fin&lt;i ·
lf you yank on the tick, lhe an imbedded tick. Remove it
body will come off leaving promptly and properly and
the bead and mouth parts write down the date and
behind. This can cause a time. Most of the time the
localized skin infection.
Pc:rson won't come . down
Once a tick bas been sue· with a disease, but it's
cessfully removed, make a always better to be prepare&lt;t·
note of the date and time.
Family Medicilfe® u , II·
Keep an .eye on the person weekly cohillt11. To s,j,iW
for signs of illness, like questWns, write tD Mllldls
fever and fatigue, as well as A. Silllpson, D.O., M.B.A.,
an unusual rash. If your Oltio Uninrsity Collqe of
child or loved one becomes Osteopathic Me&amp;illt, P..O.
ill, be sure to tell the doctor · Box II 0, Athe~, OIIW
.that you removed an imbed· 45701, or via e-lrulil to
ded tick, show lhe doctor readerquestions@fa•ily·
the site and tell hilii or her •edicillenews.org. Me6:111
when you removed it: This· irtformation in ·
tllis
can be a vital piece of med· column is proviMd liS 1111
ical history.
tducatioMl service o';i
As I've ·said many times It dots
not npiiJce
before, prevention is prefer- jUdgment of your persolllll
able to treating the illness · physician, wlw slwuld be
once it develops .. Wear a refied on to diag110se 111111
hat, long pants and a long recommertd
treat111ellll
sleeved shin when going for any tnedical rondiiioru.
out. in the woods or tall Past colunf!IS art IIVailabk .
grass. Use of repellants with ortline at www.j11111ily1Mtli·
DEET is also a good idea.
cillenews.org.

"

u:.:

Racine
l'nlm Page Al
• Future installation of
fire hydrants which officials
believe will lower homeowner's insurance rates to
()ffset a rise in property
taxes.
.• The elimination of a ·
township cemetery levy.
• Street maintenance.
• Existing codified ordinances to, as officials put it,
".protect property from unde·
sirable usage.V Officials
have went on reoord as saying they have ilo prob~m
with huntingldiscbW'gmg
weapons on those properties
that currently sit out of the
village and aredeemed in a

Rio center
from Page Al .
Grande campus, part-time
students, and those seeking
"We ex.pecl· to offer a
more
robust
daytime
schedule ,'.' Patterson said .
That, he said, will hopefully increase enrollment
through the local center,
assist students who are
commuting to the main
camp1,1s, and encour~g.e
high school students ehg1-

The infi!II1llational meetnon-residential area. Als6, if
iog
is not a fonnal vote '011
a piece of property is currently farmland, 1t would the matter thaugh v.illage
still be farmland if annexed officials have said their
plans on moviqg forward, or
into the villaae limits.
Probably the biggest con- not, with the proJXl'al will
cern residents in the pro- hinge on public feedback at
posed annexation area have the meeting.
Recently Racine sent out
IS the issue of bow their
a
questionnaire, which . is
taxes will be affected. For
this reason, village officials not to be confused with any
will ba ve represenlati ves official vote, to gauge pub·
frem bolh the Meigs County lie suppon of the idea. The
Auditor's Offioe and the village sent 119 question·
Meigs County Treasurer's ·naircs to those residents
Offioe at the meeting ·so lhat living within the praposed
each individual can ·get an
accurate, neutral assessment
of what it would fmancially
mean to be included in the
Village of Racine in terms
of property taiCes..
The village's solicitor will
also be at the meeting to
answer legal questions.

ble for the post-secondary
edu~ation option .
Patterson said he ex,pects
the university's enrollment
· of high school students
through the PSEO ln double
through the local bcancb
campus this fall . He said the
university also plans to add
more certificate programs
and technic.al colines.
"The landscape of higher
education is changing,"
Bowman said, "and · the
economy is changing. We
need to determine how we
can best serve out students."

annexation · area
and
[eceived 62 responses. Of
those 62 responses, 44
were against annexation
while 1S were for it This
also means nearly half of
the. people affected never
responded.
Anne~atioo would have
tn be put
to an55
.official
vote
where
at least
percent
of
those affected must approve
the proposal for it to go to
the
Meigs
County
Commissioners for final
approval.

..,,·, 1, . ,, .

. ;, , . (ltUdvl

l.oclled on State Route 7
1/4 mil South ot US 33, Pomeroy, OH

740-411 1150
His: Fri. 1Q.5 Si.&amp; Sm. 9-5

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I'FJI.lOR\t[Sf; -\RiS fL\UE

Ariel • Ann Dater
Eudnwment Fund
!"'the Performing Am Ce-

fiijtffi~~--==l

1•

~;~~~§~~~~

Mn. Aan Dater will m1tcb ~
~ntrlbutions; May 1, l88ll
~y I, 2009. Yoo OlD mokt aliftk
~ be Ariel-Ann Dater Eido
111111 that will IIIII
lito
Ollowin&amp; ways:
• Cllb • Credit Card • Appredattd
Securilios. Pled. . . lleq.- • Lite
Insurance • Seat Sale

a--

1

Box Office: 4212nd A.._
Galllpolla, OH (7411) _,.,_

Rivet City

PI aye~
....Audition~
"Seven Brides for Seven Brotlurs"
Saturday, June 7
10:00- Noon and 1:00- 4:00 pm
Sunday, June 8 - l:OO - 4:00 pm
Loc8tion:

.,

Middleport Chunit of-Christ
Fifth and Main

MWdleport. OR-

�·-- - --

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.

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

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~

Bl

The Daily Sentinel

Pqe A6 •

The Daily Sentinel

· Thursday, Junes. aoo8

www.myWUiysentinel.com

'lbursday, June 5, 2008

GoldWinw-,
Ribs Festival
back in
Pomeroy's

Annual

catfish
tournament
set for
Saturday

'

.

MASON, W.Va.- Wi.t h
the 18th Annual Bend. Area
CARE Catfish Tournament
set to take place this weekend, area anglers are hoping to catch the prize-winning catfish. · ·
The tournament is scbed-'
·pled to start at 7 a.m.
Saturday at the Lottie
Jenks Memorial Park in
Mason. As usual, participants will provide a helplog hand for a good cause,
.according to .Elvis Zerkle,
tournament director.
: "The reason we do (the
tournament) is for our
kids for Christmas program, and (the touroa·ment) is our biggest fundraiser for (the charity),''
Zerkle added.
·. He said 76 teatnS already .
pve registered for the early
drawiJ!g, adding that the
catfish tournament grows
each year. He said he
expects a large turnout for ·
this year's event.
: "If we 'have good weather,
I predict this will be the
biggest turnout ever," he
added.
.
·: In fact, · the tournament
bas grown considerably
since it started. According
(o Zerlde, the first tournaOtent had 40 people, and
fOW the event brings in
more than 200 people.
i In addition, the event is
Oot only for fishers, but is
family-oriented,
Zerkle
laid. There will be various
ictivities for children,
Including a casting contest
ind frog jump. .
~· "(The tournament) is a
f8mily event. It originated
~ Father's Day. weekend,
which is why we do father.
kid teams,.. Zerkle said.
This year's catfish tournament also will have
Department of NatUral
Resources members on site
to measure and weigh the
catfish, which will be part
of one of their studies conducted on the river.
. Check:~ in and registration for the tournament is
scheduled for 5 to~ 6: 15
a.m., and the reading of
the rules will follow at
6:30 a.m. The tournament
will begin at 7 a.m. and
end with weigh-in at 4
p.m. Zerkle added that
winners will be required to
pass a mandatory polygraph provided by the
Mason County Sheriff's
Department.
Prizes include : First
place, $1,000; second
place, $600; third place,
$400; fourth place, $300;
fifth place, $200; sixth
, place, $150; seventh place,
5125; eighth place, $100;
ninth place, $75; and lOth
place, $75 . In addition,
first place father-child
teams will receive $50 and
the R.J. Roush Memorial
Father-Son/Daughter trophy. The ftrst plice big cat
winner will receive $300,
while second place will
"'in $100.

GALUPOLIS The
French Art Colony's July
River Recreatioo Festival
Exhibit and CompetitiOn is
hl:ing 3IUIOUIICed. with the
entry deadline set for 8 p.m.
Monday. June 16, acoonling
to Jan Thaler, festival exhibit chair.
.
As she points out, "This
40th annual competition is a
part of the Gallipolis River
Recreation Festival celebration, which takes place over
the July 4th holidaf.. AU
submissions are exhibited.
The artwork selected by the
jurors is displayed throughout July in the Galleries at
Riverby, while all other
woiks will be shown in the
Gallipolis City Park on July
4, as a feature of the 43rd
Annual River Recreation
Festival."
The artwork shown in the
park will be protected under
tents, and is viewed by several thousand visitors.
Entries will be accepted at
the French Art Colony. 530
First Ave., Gallipolis, on
Sunday, June 15 from I to 5
p.m., and oo Monday, June
16t from 5:30 to 8 p.m.
Artists are iiJvited to submit up to four works, and all
should be appropriate for
viewing by both children
and adults. Entry fees are $5
per entry for non-members
of the French Art Colony,
and $2.50 per entry for FAC
members.
All four entries must be
creative, original, solely the
work of the entering artists
and not previously exhibited at the French Art Colony.
Paintings inspired by p!Jo.
tographs should be from
photographs taken by the
artist. Pieces must not
exceed 46"-by-72", or 60
pounds. All pictures DPJst be
framed and wired for hanging. No frames will be
accepted with . tab or sawtooth hangers. Artists, 18
years of age and older, may
register as professional or
amateur. .
A complete list of entry
rules is included on the
entry form.
Jurors for this year's
competition include Amy
Landrum, M.Ed, Fine Arts,
University of Rio Grande
and director of the Lillian
Jones Museum in Jackson;
Ron Luce, active· artist and
Instructor at Hocking
College 'and others, from
Athens; and Margaret
McAdams, ac.tive artist and

downtown
POMEROY
Something for eve'=
about desaibes the
. Gold w~ and Ribs
Festival thts Friday and
Saturday in downtown
' Pomeloy.
.
·
For the fii'Sl rime in IIIIIR;
:ban 30 yeam, power boat
raoes will be
·
to
Pomeroy. The
be
taking. place at II a.m. 011
Saturday and while Bill
Quickel, festival cbainnall;
says be's not' looting for-t
big turnout, be does ~
a gOO!l show for festival
goers to enjoy.
He said this is not a sanctioned
and t~~m: will be
no prizes, that the racing
should gti on a couple of
hours, and will be beJd rain
orshioe.
·
Three new contests lt1l 011
the agenda this year. They
are a bog callinJl CODiest at
6:30 p.in. on Friday, followed on Saturday with a
hot dog eating oootest at I
p.m. and a oookie stacking
con:estat 1:30 p.m.
Again this year, theft will
be art in Fhe ~ on
Saturday wilh local artists
showcasing their talent and
compel;inJ: for prizes totaling $200. The display will
be held in the Court Slmd
mini-pm with Diana
Johnson as chaiimm It will
be in place from 10 a.m. to
4 p.m., at which rime the
winners will be 8IIIIOUIIOCd.
Headline entenainer for
the festival is Sbawna
Corder and the Corder
Boys, performing ·in the ··
riverfront amphitheater at
7:30p.m. Saturday.

.=!iii

race:

SaiA'ldra Koby of Fhe FIBI'lCh Art Colony awards Best d Show in 5he PI of si'lnal Division for
2007 to digital pholographer Bruce Haley. The enby JJ line IDr the FAC's IIMUIII art exflb.
it and compelilion in conjunction with the Gallipolis ~iller Aecnlalion Festival is June 16.

s"

•

"!If.·~. ..

professor,
Ohio
University- Chillicothe,
from Kin~. Ohio.
.
In addition to the jurors'
awards, the Peoples Choice.
Award will be given, one for
the Park exhibit on July 4,
and one. for the People's
Choice from the gallery
exhibit. Also, a Community
Canvas, 4-feet-by -4-feet,
will be in the City Park on
July 4, for viewers of the
outdoor exhibit to express
their appreciation in artistic
form.
From 10 a.m. until 5
p.m., paint, brushes and
smock.s will be provided, as
the canvas constantly

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

.

~-

changes throughout the
The opening Rece{ltion
day. It will then hang in the for artists and guests will be
Gallia County Convenlioo- 'ltlesday, July l ~ 5 ro 7
and Visitors Bureau, dis- p.m. At that time, all of the
playing great community Jurors' selections from the
artistic effort from the competition will be in- the
annual festival.
Galleries at Riverby.
~ Youth Festival compeSponsors for this annual
lilion fooDs are also available event .are the Ohio River
at1he French Art Colony. The .Border Initiative, a joint
drnp-&lt;llf dates for :he youth . program of the Ohio Arts
entries · ~ Friday, June 20 Council and· the West
from 9 a.m.until . 6 p.m.; . Vu-ginia Commission on the
Saturday, June 21, 10 Arts, Fanners Bank. Peoples
a:m.until3 p.m.; II!'I Sunday, BHIICOip. Burnett's Healing
June 22, 2 until5 p.m.
and Cooling, and the
Their work will be on dis- Gallipolis Career College.
play from 10 a.m. until 3
For additional informap.m. in the park on tion,' call the Frt!nch Art
Saturday, July 5.
Colony aJ (74()) 446-3834.

Annored response vehicle to highlight Big Truck Show

RIO GRANDE A
· Engineered
Ballistic
Armored Response vehicle
(BEAR) will join the lineup
at the.' Bob Evans Farm's
Big Truck Show on
Saturday, June 14.
The show offers the public an opportunity for a
"hands on" experience
with this speciali red verucle, as well as other lqe
trucks and vehicles. The
event is free to the public
and held from 10:30 a.m.
to 2 p .m. at the Bob Evans
•
Farm in Rio Grande.
1 ,.._
The BEAR truck is A Ballistic Engineered Annored Response vehide - or
equi~ w~th MARS, a BEAR - will be on display at the thild amuaJ Big Truck
Multtple Adjustable ~p Show at the Bob Evans Fann on June 14.
· .
· For more information, System that enables the Ohio
call Zerlrlt! . aJ (304) 773- Sta~ Highway Patrol ro ·Response Team will be oo people rarely get an oppot:5680 or Jason Roush at mak.e entries O£ rescues from hind to talk about the vehicle tum~ to see, especillly ~. a
(304)
882-2456. second and third siory open- and to walk people through it. settmg where they can
ln[omuJtiori also is avail- ings or rooftops, aa:ording (0
'"Ibis vehicle will be the learn about it, and experiat
www.bt~n­ Lt. Doug Willard. 'fioopcas bi¥hlight .o f our truck show . ence it 'up close '" said
ablt!
'
danacare.com.
from the patrol's Spec\al tbis year md is something Bob Evans FIIDII Manager
7

7

.

Ray McKinniss.
In addition, the Gallia
County .
Sheriff's
Department will bring it
SWAT vehicle. Odler truck.s
on display include :wo
Peterbilt tractors, a 1957 and
a 1961 Mack IIUck.. a Gallia
County Emergency Medical
Services ambulance, and 4by-4 pidrup trucks. .
This is the third year for
the farm's Big Truck Show,
which continues to grow
and
receive
positive
response, said McKinniss.
"The event provides an
opponunity to not only .see
the vehicles, but to climb
inside and see wbat it's like
tO be in one," he said.

For infomunion about
at the Bob Evans
Farm, call (800)994-3276
or (74()) 245-5305; or visit
the websiu aJ www.bobeevt~nts

vans.com.

· . friday's. eiiiCltainmeat
• lineup begins wid! Howard
Writesel and bis band of
Racine. They will be prr~

fonninl!: at4:30 p.m. Counlly
singer Simba J~ will tor-

low ~ 5:30 p.m., and_ prrfomung at 7:30 p.m. will be
the popuia' Insured Sound
with a variety of classic batlads and old rime fa~
Saturday's lineup kicks
· off at 2 p.m. with the Gospel
Bluegrass Gentlemen, fol· lowed at 4:15 p.m. with a
five-member band called
Mixx which bas ~
widely in the Ohio-West
Virginia arena. Casey
Powell fronts dlat group.

Nikki Ward, a

yOUJI8

singer with a countty ~
who performs wilh Tbi!
Ultimate Elvis Tribute Show
across centr.al Ohio, wiD
take the Pomaoy stage at 7

~:t~J:.~=
up the Gold Wmgs and Ribs
Festival for anotber year.
·
Plenty of actioo has been
planned for tJle bika's wbQ
come to town. lben:'s a
guided tour around the
county, includini 10111e historic sites on Saturday
momin$, the best bike contest wtth winners being
named in the calegories of
custom, touriog, stock, llll
and trike in the afternoon,
and, of course, the always
popular
light
parllde .
Sabllday nighL
The route of the ~~
parade which will leaw: the
village at 9 p.m. lw ileal
shonened this week. The
bikes will travel from
Pooaoy to Racine and bact.

......, ___
_
__
.,... __ _
. ..,.. __
·nor "'" - ......... "'
772

7

Lady Marauders land
three on All-TVC team

...._

•

a . - l • p a l o -. . VLftl.
~·-a 4tluull-." · . . . 1 JUil
~

...__

2

.

7

.

1

a-. .............. ia.m.

..

......

Dhillon • · OHSAA Owuc4Jicwwt-.
~

$fOlD'S
8R•F.FS
•
•

2nd
....... Soudtem
..
§'lllla11in' Tornado"
'
" ,..._.ICamp
Souihem

· . RACINE -

Hi&amp;b Sc:hooJ will be hosting

ils ~
~Hustlin'

liDIIIJal Sou7bem
Tornado"
flaskrthall Camp on
!4oadaY, June 16 lhrough
')bunday, June 19 from 9
~ to noon for b(lys and

ems
eotering
!ieCOild
. ~ sixth gtades. The
~

will be conclqctcd by
bead ba*c:Jball ClOIICh

. SHS

.

letJ CaldwelL
: 'Camp instnlclol's will be
lpcmbcn of the &lt;OOidring
itaff along widl aurent and
tordltl v~ity bask.etball

Players

at
Southern.
fundamentals
will be
$iR:ssed with awards being
pveo for COIIIpdilions in 3ab-3, horse IIIII IRe throws.
:;.Cost of the camp is $3S or·

lfjl}
U,C

emergency

•

~Meipftag

~ootW Registndiun

•.
: ; Regislllllion is now open ·
f~ the 2008 flaB foolball
~to boys and .girls in
aiades 1-6 beginning ·wilh
lfle 2008-09 school year.
n.e regiSinllion fee is $40
F. player and $25 for each
. lldditional siblin&amp;.
The games will be played
lllarting in Seprtmber 011 the
Meigs High Sd!not p!liC6ce
field, and the fiaal date for ·
registration is July I sL ·
J&gt;ayment must also be
n!CeiVed by ~uly l_s t. A
~~~ou:tJul~~ will be .
~ on . Y...,... at 9 am at
etgs High School. All
checks must be made out ro
Meigs
FlAg
Football
'

M

back:hander on goal that
Rossa just missed with a tip
- - - - - - - - - · at the right post.
PITISBURGH
It set off a pile-on celebraHockeytown is home to the lion behind the Detroit net
for the Red Wings, as the
Stanley Cup - again.
Using a little Motown disappointed fans in Mellon
magic on the road, the Arena saluted their club
Dettoit Red Wmgs won the once more with a chant of
Stanley Cup for the fourth "Let's Go Pens!"
time
in
II
seasons · In the best night for
Wednesday night with a 3-2 · Swedish hockey since the
victory over tbe Pittsburgh national squad won the gold
~:£•in~ in Game 6 of die medal at the 2006 Turin
s.
.
. Olympics,
defenseman
1be celebration came two Nicklas Lidstrom became
· nights later . than expected. the first European captain of
The Pengu1ns forced the a · Stanley Cup champion.
series. back to Pe~ylvanir·-and Henrik. Zetterberg, who .
by tymg Gam~; 5 Wtth ~.3 had a (:Oal and assist in the
seconds left m regulation Cup clincher, won the Conn
and winning . it sh?rtiY Smythe Trophy as playoff
before 1 a.m. m Detrolt on MVP.
Petr . Sy~ora's JX!Wer-play
His goal 7:36 into the
goalm tnple overume. .
third period, that · was
Undeterred, the . Red pushed m by the backside of
Wings hit the ~oad and Fleury, extended the Red
wrapped ';IP !herr fou~ Wings' lead to 3-1. He tied
stra1ght senes on the ro~ ~n teammate and countryman
th~se. playoff~. Detrolt ts Johan Franzen for the playthird m NHL history w1th II off lead with 13 goals, and
Stanley C':'P. titles,_ trailing matched Crosby for the
fellow Original Stx clubs postseason scoring crown
with 27 points.
Montreal and Toronto. ·
Just like in Game 5, things
Lidstrom is one of five
.got a little dicey for the Red players to be with the Red
Wmgs; who allowed Marian Wings for their four most
Hossa's power-play goal recent titles (1997. 1998,
with I :27 remaining that got 2002, 2008.l
·
the Penguins to 3-2.
Crosby came close in his
Pittsburgh had already third NHL season to adding
pulled Game 5 hero Marc- a Stanley Cup to his resume
Andre Fleury to create a 6- · that already includes a scor.
.
AP pe.- on-4 skating edge.
.- · ing crown and a league
Detroit Red WlfWS captain Nicklas Lidstrom, of Sweden, hoists the Stanley Cup after beat·
With the ftnal seconds MVP award.
i~ the Plttsburgll Penguins 3-2 in Game 6 of the NHL Stanley Cup hockey finals ticlcing down. Penguins capWednesday in Pittsburgh.
tain Sidney Crosby put a
Plzre • CUp, B&amp;
'
-:---------------------------------------------ASSOCIMED PRESS

pboae onmbers, !-shirt size,
IIIII pan:afs sigaann~. If
campen brouJbt home a
camp form from school,
:J.Iey shonld fill out the
~ · · fonn
with the
required information. If
pllticipants have questions
tlley should call Coach
t:afdwell at 949-3129. .

Meigs, Gallia Academy.headed to state championships

'
~y.~4~:9J.
To register online go to
751

www.meigsiD.com.

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

. BY 1M Po5IEu.

same family. All
CJmpen will receive T~· Rqislration . will be
from 8:30 to 9:00 a.m. on
7l.le first day of the camp.
.. C'hr:ds should be written
w the Southern Athletic
jloosten IIIII brought wi:b
:he camprn name, glllde,
and

~

the division.
Wellston
received five selections,
.three of which were repeats
from 2007, while Belpre had
four. Vmton County bad .two
players make the team, and
Nelsonville- York, who did
not win a single game .in the
division, had one.
For the third year in a row,
Wellston senior Erin St:w-gill
won Defensive Player of .t he
Year, and head coach Rick
Perdue won Coach of the
Year. Sturgill was also
named Offensive Player of
the Year, giving the Lady
Rockets a sweep'Cif the TVC
Ohio awards.

Red·Winw- are 2008 Stanley Cup cha•ttpions

for twO CH!IIJID.S from

Home

EltcRw

Meigs senior Amy Barr swifCS at a pitdl dufing a Tri-Val5ey Conference Ohio GMsion softball game against the IUexander lady Spartans on April 14 in Pomeroy. Barr, a~ with
te11mmates Lian Hofftnan and Meri VanMeter, has been named to the 2008 AI~TVC Ohio
softball team.

ROCKSPRINGS
Three members of the Meigs
Lady Marauders suftball
~ have been selected to
the
All-Tri- Valley
Conference Ohio Division
. team for ·the 2008 season .
Senior Amy Barr, junior
Lian Hoffman, and sophomore Meri VanMeter have
all been selected to the AII1VC Ohio team for the first
time in their Meigs softhall
careers. All three players
earned the recognition with
solid seasons both at the
plate and in the field, helping the Lady Marauders to
an 11-11 record.
Meigs finished TVC Ohio
play with a record of 6-4,
tying them for third with
.Alexander. Wellston was
first at 9-1 , .and Belpre was
second at 7-3.
1be Lady Marauders'
thn:e
selections
tied
Alexander for third-most in

For

more information go ro the

--YmiiiUNE.COM

lltebsite or call 74C).S41-

.

1~.

if.agte hoops ramp
!fofJIIins DOW in .
•

: CRESlBt - Camp Tsbitts from the recent 2008
F,ipem Eigle basketball
Qmp IR DOW in and al'lil~

to be pick.ed up at
f'iawn I •nnber during busilltas bours.
.
•

At Ho.lzer Clinic, You Can Always Count on...

..;.
•
~.,.

1-7~

HOLZER
CLINIC··
740-446-538~1

·Medical Excellence,
Local Carin~

....

.

ext. 33

.-1'40 441 . .
4 .......,• •IILcun

,. •m r

.

l:lcRa I 1$1i,lli bW,._
(7Clt 4.%M2,K33

•• 1 t heii;dlltwltitWII.com

;r,..w n

1

,..

a. IIi • ._....,
...... W-.JCNPftle!lh*

(7lq 4. 2112.111. 3S

'

www.holzerclinic.com
•

7 ................cam

....,c...., Ill

......

(741t ••na, 111.ss .
lrluweu:; , s £ .aam

Meigs senior Cornelius English, middle. closes in on the finish Fine during qualifying of the
Division II distl'ict championships at Oak Hill High School on May 21. English , along with
teammate Catie Wolfe, wi77 be competing .Friday at the 2008 OHSAA State Trl)ck and Aeld
Championships at Jesse Owens Stadium in Columbus.

,,

�·-- - --

.......

-

.

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

.

~

Bl

The Daily Sentinel

Pqe A6 •

The Daily Sentinel

· Thursday, Junes. aoo8

www.myWUiysentinel.com

'lbursday, June 5, 2008

GoldWinw-,
Ribs Festival
back in
Pomeroy's

Annual

catfish
tournament
set for
Saturday

'

.

MASON, W.Va.- Wi.t h
the 18th Annual Bend. Area
CARE Catfish Tournament
set to take place this weekend, area anglers are hoping to catch the prize-winning catfish. · ·
The tournament is scbed-'
·pled to start at 7 a.m.
Saturday at the Lottie
Jenks Memorial Park in
Mason. As usual, participants will provide a helplog hand for a good cause,
.according to .Elvis Zerkle,
tournament director.
: "The reason we do (the
tournament) is for our
kids for Christmas program, and (the touroa·ment) is our biggest fundraiser for (the charity),''
Zerkle added.
·. He said 76 teatnS already .
pve registered for the early
drawiJ!g, adding that the
catfish tournament grows
each year. He said he
expects a large turnout for ·
this year's event.
: "If we 'have good weather,
I predict this will be the
biggest turnout ever," he
added.
.
·: In fact, · the tournament
bas grown considerably
since it started. According
(o Zerlde, the first tournaOtent had 40 people, and
fOW the event brings in
more than 200 people.
i In addition, the event is
Oot only for fishers, but is
family-oriented,
Zerkle
laid. There will be various
ictivities for children,
Including a casting contest
ind frog jump. .
~· "(The tournament) is a
f8mily event. It originated
~ Father's Day. weekend,
which is why we do father.
kid teams,.. Zerkle said.
This year's catfish tournament also will have
Department of NatUral
Resources members on site
to measure and weigh the
catfish, which will be part
of one of their studies conducted on the river.
. Check:~ in and registration for the tournament is
scheduled for 5 to~ 6: 15
a.m., and the reading of
the rules will follow at
6:30 a.m. The tournament
will begin at 7 a.m. and
end with weigh-in at 4
p.m. Zerkle added that
winners will be required to
pass a mandatory polygraph provided by the
Mason County Sheriff's
Department.
Prizes include : First
place, $1,000; second
place, $600; third place,
$400; fourth place, $300;
fifth place, $200; sixth
, place, $150; seventh place,
5125; eighth place, $100;
ninth place, $75; and lOth
place, $75 . In addition,
first place father-child
teams will receive $50 and
the R.J. Roush Memorial
Father-Son/Daughter trophy. The ftrst plice big cat
winner will receive $300,
while second place will
"'in $100.

GALUPOLIS The
French Art Colony's July
River Recreatioo Festival
Exhibit and CompetitiOn is
hl:ing 3IUIOUIICed. with the
entry deadline set for 8 p.m.
Monday. June 16, acoonling
to Jan Thaler, festival exhibit chair.
.
As she points out, "This
40th annual competition is a
part of the Gallipolis River
Recreation Festival celebration, which takes place over
the July 4th holidaf.. AU
submissions are exhibited.
The artwork selected by the
jurors is displayed throughout July in the Galleries at
Riverby, while all other
woiks will be shown in the
Gallipolis City Park on July
4, as a feature of the 43rd
Annual River Recreation
Festival."
The artwork shown in the
park will be protected under
tents, and is viewed by several thousand visitors.
Entries will be accepted at
the French Art Colony. 530
First Ave., Gallipolis, on
Sunday, June 15 from I to 5
p.m., and oo Monday, June
16t from 5:30 to 8 p.m.
Artists are iiJvited to submit up to four works, and all
should be appropriate for
viewing by both children
and adults. Entry fees are $5
per entry for non-members
of the French Art Colony,
and $2.50 per entry for FAC
members.
All four entries must be
creative, original, solely the
work of the entering artists
and not previously exhibited at the French Art Colony.
Paintings inspired by p!Jo.
tographs should be from
photographs taken by the
artist. Pieces must not
exceed 46"-by-72", or 60
pounds. All pictures DPJst be
framed and wired for hanging. No frames will be
accepted with . tab or sawtooth hangers. Artists, 18
years of age and older, may
register as professional or
amateur. .
A complete list of entry
rules is included on the
entry form.
Jurors for this year's
competition include Amy
Landrum, M.Ed, Fine Arts,
University of Rio Grande
and director of the Lillian
Jones Museum in Jackson;
Ron Luce, active· artist and
Instructor at Hocking
College 'and others, from
Athens; and Margaret
McAdams, ac.tive artist and

downtown
POMEROY
Something for eve'=
about desaibes the
. Gold w~ and Ribs
Festival thts Friday and
Saturday in downtown
' Pomeloy.
.
·
For the fii'Sl rime in IIIIIR;
:ban 30 yeam, power boat
raoes will be
·
to
Pomeroy. The
be
taking. place at II a.m. 011
Saturday and while Bill
Quickel, festival cbainnall;
says be's not' looting for-t
big turnout, be does ~
a gOO!l show for festival
goers to enjoy.
He said this is not a sanctioned
and t~~m: will be
no prizes, that the racing
should gti on a couple of
hours, and will be beJd rain
orshioe.
·
Three new contests lt1l 011
the agenda this year. They
are a bog callinJl CODiest at
6:30 p.in. on Friday, followed on Saturday with a
hot dog eating oootest at I
p.m. and a oookie stacking
con:estat 1:30 p.m.
Again this year, theft will
be art in Fhe ~ on
Saturday wilh local artists
showcasing their talent and
compel;inJ: for prizes totaling $200. The display will
be held in the Court Slmd
mini-pm with Diana
Johnson as chaiimm It will
be in place from 10 a.m. to
4 p.m., at which rime the
winners will be 8IIIIOUIIOCd.
Headline entenainer for
the festival is Sbawna
Corder and the Corder
Boys, performing ·in the ··
riverfront amphitheater at
7:30p.m. Saturday.

.=!iii

race:

SaiA'ldra Koby of Fhe FIBI'lCh Art Colony awards Best d Show in 5he PI of si'lnal Division for
2007 to digital pholographer Bruce Haley. The enby JJ line IDr the FAC's IIMUIII art exflb.
it and compelilion in conjunction with the Gallipolis ~iller Aecnlalion Festival is June 16.

s"

•

"!If.·~. ..

professor,
Ohio
University- Chillicothe,
from Kin~. Ohio.
.
In addition to the jurors'
awards, the Peoples Choice.
Award will be given, one for
the Park exhibit on July 4,
and one. for the People's
Choice from the gallery
exhibit. Also, a Community
Canvas, 4-feet-by -4-feet,
will be in the City Park on
July 4, for viewers of the
outdoor exhibit to express
their appreciation in artistic
form.
From 10 a.m. until 5
p.m., paint, brushes and
smock.s will be provided, as
the canvas constantly

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

.

~-

changes throughout the
The opening Rece{ltion
day. It will then hang in the for artists and guests will be
Gallia County Convenlioo- 'ltlesday, July l ~ 5 ro 7
and Visitors Bureau, dis- p.m. At that time, all of the
playing great community Jurors' selections from the
artistic effort from the competition will be in- the
annual festival.
Galleries at Riverby.
~ Youth Festival compeSponsors for this annual
lilion fooDs are also available event .are the Ohio River
at1he French Art Colony. The .Border Initiative, a joint
drnp-&lt;llf dates for :he youth . program of the Ohio Arts
entries · ~ Friday, June 20 Council and· the West
from 9 a.m.until . 6 p.m.; . Vu-ginia Commission on the
Saturday, June 21, 10 Arts, Fanners Bank. Peoples
a:m.until3 p.m.; II!'I Sunday, BHIICOip. Burnett's Healing
June 22, 2 until5 p.m.
and Cooling, and the
Their work will be on dis- Gallipolis Career College.
play from 10 a.m. until 3
For additional informap.m. in the park on tion,' call the Frt!nch Art
Saturday, July 5.
Colony aJ (74()) 446-3834.

Annored response vehicle to highlight Big Truck Show

RIO GRANDE A
· Engineered
Ballistic
Armored Response vehicle
(BEAR) will join the lineup
at the.' Bob Evans Farm's
Big Truck Show on
Saturday, June 14.
The show offers the public an opportunity for a
"hands on" experience
with this speciali red verucle, as well as other lqe
trucks and vehicles. The
event is free to the public
and held from 10:30 a.m.
to 2 p .m. at the Bob Evans
•
Farm in Rio Grande.
1 ,.._
The BEAR truck is A Ballistic Engineered Annored Response vehide - or
equi~ w~th MARS, a BEAR - will be on display at the thild amuaJ Big Truck
Multtple Adjustable ~p Show at the Bob Evans Fann on June 14.
· .
· For more information, System that enables the Ohio
call Zerlrlt! . aJ (304) 773- Sta~ Highway Patrol ro ·Response Team will be oo people rarely get an oppot:5680 or Jason Roush at mak.e entries O£ rescues from hind to talk about the vehicle tum~ to see, especillly ~. a
(304)
882-2456. second and third siory open- and to walk people through it. settmg where they can
ln[omuJtiori also is avail- ings or rooftops, aa:ording (0
'"Ibis vehicle will be the learn about it, and experiat
www.bt~n­ Lt. Doug Willard. 'fioopcas bi¥hlight .o f our truck show . ence it 'up close '" said
ablt!
'
danacare.com.
from the patrol's Spec\al tbis year md is something Bob Evans FIIDII Manager
7

7

.

Ray McKinniss.
In addition, the Gallia
County .
Sheriff's
Department will bring it
SWAT vehicle. Odler truck.s
on display include :wo
Peterbilt tractors, a 1957 and
a 1961 Mack IIUck.. a Gallia
County Emergency Medical
Services ambulance, and 4by-4 pidrup trucks. .
This is the third year for
the farm's Big Truck Show,
which continues to grow
and
receive
positive
response, said McKinniss.
"The event provides an
opponunity to not only .see
the vehicles, but to climb
inside and see wbat it's like
tO be in one," he said.

For infomunion about
at the Bob Evans
Farm, call (800)994-3276
or (74()) 245-5305; or visit
the websiu aJ www.bobeevt~nts

vans.com.

· . friday's. eiiiCltainmeat
• lineup begins wid! Howard
Writesel and bis band of
Racine. They will be prr~

fonninl!: at4:30 p.m. Counlly
singer Simba J~ will tor-

low ~ 5:30 p.m., and_ prrfomung at 7:30 p.m. will be
the popuia' Insured Sound
with a variety of classic batlads and old rime fa~
Saturday's lineup kicks
· off at 2 p.m. with the Gospel
Bluegrass Gentlemen, fol· lowed at 4:15 p.m. with a
five-member band called
Mixx which bas ~
widely in the Ohio-West
Virginia arena. Casey
Powell fronts dlat group.

Nikki Ward, a

yOUJI8

singer with a countty ~
who performs wilh Tbi!
Ultimate Elvis Tribute Show
across centr.al Ohio, wiD
take the Pomaoy stage at 7

~:t~J:.~=
up the Gold Wmgs and Ribs
Festival for anotber year.
·
Plenty of actioo has been
planned for tJle bika's wbQ
come to town. lben:'s a
guided tour around the
county, includini 10111e historic sites on Saturday
momin$, the best bike contest wtth winners being
named in the calegories of
custom, touriog, stock, llll
and trike in the afternoon,
and, of course, the always
popular
light
parllde .
Sabllday nighL
The route of the ~~
parade which will leaw: the
village at 9 p.m. lw ileal
shonened this week. The
bikes will travel from
Pooaoy to Racine and bact.

......, ___
_
__
.,... __ _
. ..,.. __
·nor "'" - ......... "'
772

7

Lady Marauders land
three on All-TVC team

...._

•

a . - l • p a l o -. . VLftl.
~·-a 4tluull-." · . . . 1 JUil
~

...__

2

.

7

.

1

a-. .............. ia.m.

..

......

Dhillon • · OHSAA Owuc4Jicwwt-.
~

$fOlD'S
8R•F.FS
•
•

2nd
....... Soudtem
..
§'lllla11in' Tornado"
'
" ,..._.ICamp
Souihem

· . RACINE -

Hi&amp;b Sc:hooJ will be hosting

ils ~
~Hustlin'

liDIIIJal Sou7bem
Tornado"
flaskrthall Camp on
!4oadaY, June 16 lhrough
')bunday, June 19 from 9
~ to noon for b(lys and

ems
eotering
!ieCOild
. ~ sixth gtades. The
~

will be conclqctcd by
bead ba*c:Jball ClOIICh

. SHS

.

letJ CaldwelL
: 'Camp instnlclol's will be
lpcmbcn of the &lt;OOidring
itaff along widl aurent and
tordltl v~ity bask.etball

Players

at
Southern.
fundamentals
will be
$iR:ssed with awards being
pveo for COIIIpdilions in 3ab-3, horse IIIII IRe throws.
:;.Cost of the camp is $3S or·

lfjl}
U,C

emergency

•

~Meipftag

~ootW Registndiun

•.
: ; Regislllllion is now open ·
f~ the 2008 flaB foolball
~to boys and .girls in
aiades 1-6 beginning ·wilh
lfle 2008-09 school year.
n.e regiSinllion fee is $40
F. player and $25 for each
. lldditional siblin&amp;.
The games will be played
lllarting in Seprtmber 011 the
Meigs High Sd!not p!liC6ce
field, and the fiaal date for ·
registration is July I sL ·
J&gt;ayment must also be
n!CeiVed by ~uly l_s t. A
~~~ou:tJul~~ will be .
~ on . Y...,... at 9 am at
etgs High School. All
checks must be made out ro
Meigs
FlAg
Football
'

M

back:hander on goal that
Rossa just missed with a tip
- - - - - - - - - · at the right post.
PITISBURGH
It set off a pile-on celebraHockeytown is home to the lion behind the Detroit net
for the Red Wings, as the
Stanley Cup - again.
Using a little Motown disappointed fans in Mellon
magic on the road, the Arena saluted their club
Dettoit Red Wmgs won the once more with a chant of
Stanley Cup for the fourth "Let's Go Pens!"
time
in
II
seasons · In the best night for
Wednesday night with a 3-2 · Swedish hockey since the
victory over tbe Pittsburgh national squad won the gold
~:£•in~ in Game 6 of die medal at the 2006 Turin
s.
.
. Olympics,
defenseman
1be celebration came two Nicklas Lidstrom became
· nights later . than expected. the first European captain of
The Pengu1ns forced the a · Stanley Cup champion.
series. back to Pe~ylvanir·-and Henrik. Zetterberg, who .
by tymg Gam~; 5 Wtth ~.3 had a (:Oal and assist in the
seconds left m regulation Cup clincher, won the Conn
and winning . it sh?rtiY Smythe Trophy as playoff
before 1 a.m. m Detrolt on MVP.
Petr . Sy~ora's JX!Wer-play
His goal 7:36 into the
goalm tnple overume. .
third period, that · was
Undeterred, the . Red pushed m by the backside of
Wings hit the ~oad and Fleury, extended the Red
wrapped ';IP !herr fou~ Wings' lead to 3-1. He tied
stra1ght senes on the ro~ ~n teammate and countryman
th~se. playoff~. Detrolt ts Johan Franzen for the playthird m NHL history w1th II off lead with 13 goals, and
Stanley C':'P. titles,_ trailing matched Crosby for the
fellow Original Stx clubs postseason scoring crown
with 27 points.
Montreal and Toronto. ·
Just like in Game 5, things
Lidstrom is one of five
.got a little dicey for the Red players to be with the Red
Wmgs; who allowed Marian Wings for their four most
Hossa's power-play goal recent titles (1997. 1998,
with I :27 remaining that got 2002, 2008.l
·
the Penguins to 3-2.
Crosby came close in his
Pittsburgh had already third NHL season to adding
pulled Game 5 hero Marc- a Stanley Cup to his resume
Andre Fleury to create a 6- · that already includes a scor.
.
AP pe.- on-4 skating edge.
.- · ing crown and a league
Detroit Red WlfWS captain Nicklas Lidstrom, of Sweden, hoists the Stanley Cup after beat·
With the ftnal seconds MVP award.
i~ the Plttsburgll Penguins 3-2 in Game 6 of the NHL Stanley Cup hockey finals ticlcing down. Penguins capWednesday in Pittsburgh.
tain Sidney Crosby put a
Plzre • CUp, B&amp;
'
-:---------------------------------------------ASSOCIMED PRESS

pboae onmbers, !-shirt size,
IIIII pan:afs sigaann~. If
campen brouJbt home a
camp form from school,
:J.Iey shonld fill out the
~ · · fonn
with the
required information. If
pllticipants have questions
tlley should call Coach
t:afdwell at 949-3129. .

Meigs, Gallia Academy.headed to state championships

'
~y.~4~:9J.
To register online go to
751

www.meigsiD.com.

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

. BY 1M Po5IEu.

same family. All
CJmpen will receive T~· Rqislration . will be
from 8:30 to 9:00 a.m. on
7l.le first day of the camp.
.. C'hr:ds should be written
w the Southern Athletic
jloosten IIIII brought wi:b
:he camprn name, glllde,
and

~

the division.
Wellston
received five selections,
.three of which were repeats
from 2007, while Belpre had
four. Vmton County bad .two
players make the team, and
Nelsonville- York, who did
not win a single game .in the
division, had one.
For the third year in a row,
Wellston senior Erin St:w-gill
won Defensive Player of .t he
Year, and head coach Rick
Perdue won Coach of the
Year. Sturgill was also
named Offensive Player of
the Year, giving the Lady
Rockets a sweep'Cif the TVC
Ohio awards.

Red·Winw- are 2008 Stanley Cup cha•ttpions

for twO CH!IIJID.S from

Home

EltcRw

Meigs senior Amy Barr swifCS at a pitdl dufing a Tri-Val5ey Conference Ohio GMsion softball game against the IUexander lady Spartans on April 14 in Pomeroy. Barr, a~ with
te11mmates Lian Hofftnan and Meri VanMeter, has been named to the 2008 AI~TVC Ohio
softball team.

ROCKSPRINGS
Three members of the Meigs
Lady Marauders suftball
~ have been selected to
the
All-Tri- Valley
Conference Ohio Division
. team for ·the 2008 season .
Senior Amy Barr, junior
Lian Hoffman, and sophomore Meri VanMeter have
all been selected to the AII1VC Ohio team for the first
time in their Meigs softhall
careers. All three players
earned the recognition with
solid seasons both at the
plate and in the field, helping the Lady Marauders to
an 11-11 record.
Meigs finished TVC Ohio
play with a record of 6-4,
tying them for third with
.Alexander. Wellston was
first at 9-1 , .and Belpre was
second at 7-3.
1be Lady Marauders'
thn:e
selections
tied
Alexander for third-most in

For

more information go ro the

--YmiiiUNE.COM

lltebsite or call 74C).S41-

.

1~.

if.agte hoops ramp
!fofJIIins DOW in .
•

: CRESlBt - Camp Tsbitts from the recent 2008
F,ipem Eigle basketball
Qmp IR DOW in and al'lil~

to be pick.ed up at
f'iawn I •nnber during busilltas bours.
.
•

At Ho.lzer Clinic, You Can Always Count on...

..;.
•
~.,.

1-7~

HOLZER
CLINIC··
740-446-538~1

·Medical Excellence,
Local Carin~

....

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.-1'40 441 . .
4 .......,• •IILcun

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(7Clt 4.%M2,K33

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;r,..w n

1

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•

7 ................cam

....,c...., Ill

......

(741t ••na, 111.ss .
lrluweu:; , s £ .aam

Meigs senior Cornelius English, middle. closes in on the finish Fine during qualifying of the
Division II distl'ict championships at Oak Hill High School on May 21. English , along with
teammate Catie Wolfe, wi77 be competing .Friday at the 2008 OHSAA State Trl)ck and Aeld
Championships at Jesse Owens Stadium in Columbus.

,,

�Page 82 • The Daily Sentinel

Thursday, June 5, 2008

www .mydailysentinel.com

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992-5432

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~ljllfj .6ttzltJid

•

'

,,

�Page 82 • The Daily Sentinel

Thursday, June 5, 2008

www .mydailysentinel.com

•••.mr's'lfle llinel.com
•

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Monday thru Friday
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~.

I

!'Baked Steak. Roast 8eef,
Fried Cbicllal and muCh moreJ

ftoe•s. Hot or Cold. made to order.
Great Hoa Ooas &amp; Hamburaers.
fresh baud diPPed ice cream treats and
milkshakes.

Remember Your Graduate
.With A Dairy Queen Cake
.......,._____ .._ _· - - · - -.. -·77'0

.... ...________________no

a -..... ..._ _______________ 750 ·

..,..., ~ (s-..JII-), ~,..J~

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.,.,
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..

Gall ahead for pick·up at our out side pick-up '«indow

OUR NEW lOCATION!
' · New Expended Menu In~=~~
Grilled Ddi Sandwiches, l
Hand Dipped ke c-...!
Eal.;n Selling or Take-out Dri•e Thru.
NO FRILLS. JUST GREAT IQOD!
"f'lriUv Sltali on Wheels · in froot ,_ NEW Laaotion
2 in Pt. Pleaiam,.wv-304-674-5479

... 0

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Gallipolis Ferry, WV

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..,.,. __
--140

7

.,

' •

..
____.,010

Of,_

c..

Opm £rom 11 am tiD 8 pm (Tuesdali:-S,Widay)
Closed Monday
· Next to the Robert C. Byrd Lo&lt;ls &amp; Dam on Rt.l

Ri.

for

...

..... Wlllkih iii in

··--- 1111
- ........IMO

-

---·----·-····-..·-·------..""&amp;.-.....
,__,....

..

All Jatjor eredil clll'ds G«epted

2208 Jac-kson Ave.
Point Pleasant,WV

304-675-5427

......... Our

d

Hl$ ..ioec '

....

Sin

....... on . . . . .

/

{old 5lrlote Shat. aut 10 ,.,,. '""

..,_
......,

b .... ~

it tunllr ......

.:2•
••

4

O _, iloCI- OPEN HOUSE Sun JUne
........ Lorge yard. CcMnld 8111, ·~- 578 Jay Drivo
7
-- - - · 40- 22611 Bq ft - 4 bodrnom. 3

-Hiring:

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F...~ EIIOIIing Stift

Colli It;
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2712 Linc»&gt;n ~- 3bf. 2ba. don .-.:1 large . . .,.,
dol&amp;dlod CMf cloli!l, limily room. living

-In

· c:o1 tor ""'"' . . - filwplaco.
S78.000
·
yard., ~
~.
3fl4-e1Q: pool. $140,000.110
Call 441 -

1313 or -

2 ~ 304-8202
=::=.----~­

.:;75S-=2980='-- - , - - Middlepor1- home ;, """" in
2llf/1 bo, Home;, 1'1. p,,_ i:ondition, a1ng1e ftoor, 2 br.•
CllpOI, updOiod Bo &amp; Kit. lg. 1 lla1tl.lallndry room. tanoea
2 112 car dot gar. lonood yd . bod&lt; yonj &amp; ouibuiding, call
~~ -

-

·

...,. mes- (740)992' 5894 ,..,. mas- .

sage. pi-ioed to 0811

1540 Eutam AVWI . .

• Gllllpolla, OH
(740) 448 !Ill

$3.95

Find all the
news that
matters
to you.

lUNCH BIIFFET ·
........ a. .......

'" .... "'' -1:

a

8.Uifeli• IMil!' ~Ill

228 W Main, Pomeroy
992-5432

~111Hrun: ~r

The Daily Sen!inel
~ljllfj .6ttzltJid

•

'

,,

�•

lllunldly, Junes. . .

,.... 84 • The Daily Smtinel
I

www.!IIJd r'lyse 1ttinel.com

&amp;ll'fYOOP

• The Daily Sentinel• Page 85 ~

A CliP

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pull P""''- ,..'"8" srufftn. adv boxeo. Dill U:p. ....,
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112 taNt.. liWivel mctc:r rccliDcr. like new dDc qngc.
Frigidai!&lt; ...... &amp; drya. Q""'" bod.. 2 oll'ic:e
c~Wn;.Goo+al. ., 'iOO+,(oq.tMIIIId .......... pdr..
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hole di88""- ..._... spades. flllb), 1m
Due. "nf JW f*e
a
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hind IlK jackt~. , ccmcot tools., greue gum., levels.,

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31 PFC.,..

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Welt l'lla, , CJ&amp; rz

••••

" .,_.,.

.... 741-7-U-mJ

..

Of

LIFE ' .-

~

C.\RPE ~HER
SERVICE

e
,,_

·

IIdia

41"-~

·.......
47?7

T....

7111ion-2l.lutlgo'a

~~.......

II

I Plw..,·s

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51 ;,

~r.,.c~

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szlllll.

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.::=

14 Cot. . . '
15 Pri-·o

51-I'WMs

.....
31 G-.

0 ......,••
44 S 'I II

........

17 Rlidod
11 Crac
20 .........

....,.
45 ......
22111ja.....
painl

A bridge player ought 10 be CUrioos and

--- -

• vigornus inlelect. But times craGullly .., be - · Loolc at
only the East hand. With- side wl-

10 -

...-. your ~-hand opponent CIJ8ns
two spades, a weak lw&lt;Hlid sflowing a
dooent six-card su~ and 5-10 hi~
points. Your partner overcalls three
clubs. And the . _ . . , jumps to four
spades. What would you do?
l1lis deal ·during • Eurq&gt;ean
Teom Championship match many \'8BIS
ago. AI the labia, ·bolh E- '*"-lor

DANG--MlZ PRUNEU...Y-lHAT S&lt;XM\IDS JEST
UKE MAW'S vrrn.ES
I

riwl
2&amp; f 1
•
10 . .
aauld 27 a ••

• • 1' •
4 J11ior c:lly
5 INa IIIII

_.....,

vipous-:

AH£4p .

B

o:,). •

English leoci~r Samuel Johnson
said, 't:uriOSity is one dl the most per-andoor1aincharaclaristicsdla

C1rJNI.ING
INIWf1ucJW

HIGHWAY

...

3ll Elsctlk:
llridle
35 &amp;!IIi calor
S7 line find
:II C:... II&gt;
«&lt;ln;:ouc,a

!!:all
~?

Go on offense
when an are in

FUOO AltES11!00Jol AV.UUNE,
()wnersc O.I&lt;E&lt; Ral"'"'
Auctioneer: Palri&lt;:k H. Bloslocn 1599
Term!i: Cash or Good Oxd. wlid.
Ph c( ]()4)428~26.428-7245, &amp; 481 -9066

DOWN

.a=::..., ,.r::,.

Operling lead: 6 A

g.,..

" :: ... ~ ~ (

....
- •
34
•

........

57W..dll.

22Pii 4
.1-do . . . . 24Pt•1
D
~ = l l l i t l 25

•A ·K97
• K5I

J AND II B.ECILaCAL
!6

511 . . _
54 ~~ 1.. I

......

llllnlllllindo

had lallchdl,
,.,..,..saws
- &amp; · drills,
"" ..4l""""'
40+
pw.·cr
lcl&amp;
lots guns,
JINft
di!forcm typOS of tools. 400+ bo• laos
.t bont
i~&amp; tools., I'
lOO+boJ.Iotspru&amp;pmsA:
kettles, utmsilt., s.il~er "''are., carming jill. prn8lft
cooker!l. lots more household items,
·

Email: blosscn _

'

.....
11 Elm
21Ccwpca•
_

• J 10 6
"'Q 9 I

llnlo ..... llloati. . . ~itoOIIA

• T_.
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11 Jtr.- ,_ 5I ......... II&gt;

" Q

99l-5'm

:&amp;JCtioo@lmsn .co~. Web!iite:www.blosiCI"IliOtiou.oom

41Heir_,

7

• AQ9742

4ill. iJI¥JIIII
Slnbi .t:Auleas
Opcdi-S9-S
&lt;loo&lt;d Suntlay

torches. blacj: smidl 10015, ~·

u·

-

IT I

15
-llltcb
-11 Pl.
I
55 Dllilllt ......_

'l~Ra$

,........_ 200+ hammor .t ball pens .t - . 1 . ridpd &amp;
~ wn:nchei &amp; new pons. ~ files, eloc &amp;
grindrn. sp~l .......... !lay .t -!toots, bdtdcni. collb1« 1oolo, sytbe1; &amp; .-i4b. &lt;lil .,.._ lots

I

·~

w..

_

-

0 Rllll.-cl

11:..

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S,-.&lt;aio '

....

42 Selent's

1 F-,

t1 llldllr
e,.or12 Olllicll

•J10651
"107511

upa\11111
GIIIDIIIOOSI

.....so...

pullc:ys. ......,

NEA Crossword Puzzle

panaJties. ll\a OUicome by AlbertllormM, an E~ who is
one at the bell- bndge wr11ers and

!!

k.--+--1-

·

.

who """ the World Senior Pairs tille in
1990 with Alan Hiroo. Dormer MIJie of

-ltlol

East's
he -~·Ill
king's
But bollr Sou1hs . tour spades doubled. They rullad the
club lead on 1he boarll and ran the
spade jad&lt; through East, orcpecting hrm
1o ha.., the king tor his double . A
moment later, the deClarers wnoaded
one h&amp;an ana two ct~Mo ids, claiming

ransom:

"rP'\. IN -TO.. GOLit.':&gt;.

WIUJ'S "(~LI~E'.?

't.'l'\ to- c..R.IP'\.II'W-IJslr,I':IU. .""" r(;.(£, TAA~ TOO e,N&gt;l WAA?
!:&gt;It&gt; '1'00 OCT~ f'Oil-r

P'!IS 590.

CELEBRITY CIPHER
br Lllil Clll$111

Cellirlly ~ ~ • Cltlllcl m

1lUGIDnB biJ tln\U pe.x~e. • " ,....
Ech ...... the~stnlib" lllllhlr

.

Trrllly's Cill!: A!!qUBSL

.

When the lui S1udied, aach
East shook his In amazemanl
when he saw that....., cltlbs- makable wi1h a good
the~ suit.
Dormer surnmtld n up ""'1: 'When thras
players ... bidding vigorou&amp;ly,1hefoufth
player wi1h a 111rong hand
should proosed with cau1ion:the olhers
may all haw freak - . H will
ortan be bottar1o support panner lhan 1o
double for paoally:
.

"""""In

'FII WZD UYYG DZFT NWIN Ziti FD l

tii. :Dfl, CSI FG NWY PSI SC fN
lZXYI ZGT UYWSATYl lYHI. "

.

- ISPFIS fiSlfNZ

PREVIOUS SOLUTION- "'ut ol """'""l have~ 1he tllmnJISIIIIIill;lhe mosl """"'"" ChaTliCIIIt$110 oearad oilh scars.'· Katiil Gitlran
:

~-= S@~4\\\-4£~s·
ltlllool lor
?GWtll
ClAY I.

. •

lsuiCI$ ......

*'"

=

of 1ht

faur
b'ad . . . litlaw 10 font faur . . . ......
..,
_
_- Ooal
Fridor
.......
Oofl't be afraid

strike old: on~ DWn ·in1hl )'8Br ahead.
Engaging in tr.h ¥0ti¥iliw can put you
on a pdl ·ol ........... Md anligt'ltenment that oould...._·you top~E!es you've
o n l y - abOut
Jla.IINI (May .2 1.Juno201- When you
"" thingo

ttom 1ho -

I

I I l 1l
1

GE GU0
3

-

., your

heart, you wiN ·actually 'haw a bettef
che.-1&lt;11' produ&lt;ing loi;er ~ 1han
from that which you dO tor' sheer gain
alOne. h can pay to be b!Gt*lrted.
CANCE1'I (June 21-July 22)- , . , _ ,
proiect&amp; will run more wmoalhly 1hml

ETC L E
5

-jabs"'d..iosyau~loati&gt;­
Bf&amp;. '1bu know what you Rnl and how
~ want tt done, white suaog.atM hhe
to gU88S.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) -

•uc•••••-•

· 4" Gonmiums JiOtt
lledtlingPiants

48 per tlal 56,00

Caring Pet
Cremations

GVC

Racofood
Dnve
June 7 from 8-1
Racine, across from post

olfioe Aooepli"" food &amp;.
monetary OOIIatiOIIS for
Meigs Coop Parish Food
Pantry;
West Vilginia St.- Farm
.u..eum Annul! Board
1111 Blilig &amp; EledioJ I
. . be June 101h 7 pm
MOles ~be paid .

The Gallipolis Elks lodge
No_107 will hold 1hilir aiUial
Soccer Shoal
· Sunday, June 8, 2008-lt will
be held allhe Elks Fann on ·
SA 588-.$i0n up will slalt at
1:30 p_m; with 1he competition
staJ1ir:lg at 2:00. Cunq:eiT •• ·is
open to al boys and gilts bom
on 813111993 ·or alter. There
.wil be lour age gi'UI4lS with
boy&amp; n Qids dMsions.
T1oph ·e&amp; wil be awanted for
first, aeoond, and 1hid place in
eiiCh dioiaiun. This event is
he ol dage, ao oome on out
101 bring a friend.
Van! Sale
I 51Ud1r•..11118 Jlh
~ l nJI!ehu .. Villlgeof

Q

1118Gfilw1drilleonlle~

going Ill Ctl8llet' ...
Waldl b: lign.

Vegtnbleplatns
$2.50 per tiQrin
!Irs 'M-'F 7:30- 5:00
Sttt. 8:30 - 4:30Soa. 1-5

PSI CONSTRUCTJQ;,

.llti'•Go-·1_ ..
Noble Sllllltlld Rd.

..__.,,,]

NOT~SOLVETHE

SOCIAL 5EW1ITY CRISIS
BY MAKING AN "[)U)fEJPL..E
SPACE CATAPULT."

Mitldlepcxt 00

-----.Pipefor

Concntle,

•Ftiday

Col tuction

•"AJwll!iiiJJa

.......

Cha1nel} a..0...,
G&lt;lllng
For
Dllna.,a &amp; fllal:iiillfl. L&amp;l
Scrap -Open Moncltrr.

Tuooday

COIUm

Wednoodoy 1

..;.,o:30pm Cloootl

~ · ~

•T Jl

n. ....

Cao Ap b

D I II IIA llf .1111...

i.f'Millr

.:p.r...:
-----·11;,,40~)4«;--~;..;.;'.;;300;.;.,-. .{JMDR).
0.
PEts
-Sw!

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....

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W

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C
If (' IR
IQ)W;;;;';jt;;,;-;;;; ·l a II r o Y o a o o t
CKC-1~-~~~- C pao. .... . .
-lltol,lao .. _
ha rniaocl._,. ~3801

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1Joe
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740.... _._ I !Yo:-••.. c. •seA.-.., ,,

Tortiotl c - ) 111- . . . . .
C 11J
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a
ii~'."'-l«iiF
Ml (WIAI . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
388-9053
kc
. . I 7 I 7 or•Jii $

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II

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n-•

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OJJ!or,

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..... you. 'fbu _ , ·
~ ~. unlee5 WQU ....,.wt1twm or her
to "" oomothlng _.....

7

I' .

Dr ...
ARIES (March 21~1 11i1)
b" gaugtng ttw w.nlrii and
needl ot otheTI .,. acoaptitn • I ., thil

)OUr tlwtincts

_.New a-• 57

e• ..

5......

· anything .... do tor tho good ol
Glhera wtlltum OU! to bl • monutnernal

.....-.

---

,.._...,..tn __ .,.,_
.... -~,
Wlf!US (Apttl ~ 201 -

~"15"•

-II!

-

1

.............. .,our cup ~- . 10"

and Wood SicliiJ8 • Roo #i1111 • Pole
Ibm&amp; •l'llio's, Puocba . t DCcb

7',&amp;A

..

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_.10NUTZ

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Cd~

7-4G-41&amp;-1134

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.? ~
........ ~se

1 21
.... .... .

&amp;,t •.., AI. 124. 'IIIII $
It ...... ,_ 0 - P i
can pidL
...., llf . . A I
i .(1121, ill) I, 12

11£ #11"l'I'I\IDE.Qf

In thlS C!'!I!!Ce for
*~
. . . _..._••IOinlh
~
··~ - -

·'_..;,...;;,..;.;..,~;,,;;,;.,.;,;;.;.;;::,::.::,:..__J

- --.

I

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.--

47239 aiebd 1.0111, LootJIGIIota. 0H

011 . . IIJaila ..

I I .... lllfllll ...... -

"'an.- ..

.....

-1riltering -

rou

- ·

......... .. Jill AI I

..,_,

your 1ime on maaningleaa activitiea.
lnwotw youtHtf in acw•wthing
find
stimulating but ~.. ·
PISCES (Fob. 20-..:h 20) a
chlnoe that aorneone ~ reoenrty rrie1
and would like to know t.tter
the

::.,-~~
ini.::O: : ..\L:.t! "'t't: ::ta'~ ~
c.:~
OON!ml~
aam.leonortls010goovle- hltM I
4Jp 8lld 110...., .._..._. 11,
• R00111 Addiliom • r~- • Vi.myl
1

ARLO&amp;JHIS

AQUARIUS (Jon. ~. 19) - Being
actNe and prodlJChve d be more fun

IE, M l l 1 •

D1 ·
11 :fl ,._
i'ccpu
*"&gt;, MC ro/ O d - n, AII 1 I&amp; A,t
...._
·. _ , . : - , ·_
2011. n. W I' w Ca I""O:Il'$.P.o:e;

Sluciy- AltJae - Welsh- NiDclty - MISTAm
AI old W. CBe illld me IIIII one ltill11171nat peaple,
11111D to lie bin 1lidt isdtll f# n"'itc MISTAKf£

ttw•tiioenl.

and -

"--K

._

0B

much_..,,..

I

1

n ao .-. ~~;.J~a~~~=~~~§~~~~
. . . .

1

CAf'fliCORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19) - might not find mingling the =-!
too w;;;loning , ~being with one or two
cklse friends lot' the sheer oompa:nionlhlp will pnMdo
and con-

.,....,

5

.SCUM.lEJS ANSWBS 6 ~~

duco petOOnl) benelils .. - . • C&gt;O&lt;Jkj
be in .,.. area wtJere ~ ·..,. neo.oer aper~
ated be1ora. ao ITI0¥8 carefUlly.

•lllutiSI

......

IIIr

· ••• got (lOIII' l""*lloMng .

-

opportUnity lha1 has tho

a ·

A &lt;it M17-411
.a

_, I at! ill 4 D J 1

I

-1.,-

_e_;,~ ~sruwru. :.:;AN,;:;,;SW;,:.;:El£_m-IRS
R_;, l...._._l. . .~l~...l

SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23-Dec. 21) There's a good ohanoe you'll spot a nMll'

•Ra 14

i'c j nl (PEP),
I t ........ •

.. . . . . . . . . . . . . CooJit

7

-

i

STO~[

COWSTAUCTID~

""

SCORPIO (Oct 24-Nov. 22)- Hyou loot
)'OIJ 're in a M , ft\1 to ·do somerhhtg h t
has • degree of lldYenture dached to lt.
. Ewm ff It'&amp; aali'npte u checking out a

SOOIV,IIJT THEY'EE

.
."'
.'

While pemor11

with whom you share your cay arv apt to
IIWDr the spotlight , you will preler to be
the drr.ctor behind the soenes. Ammge
things so that EMH'yOI"'9 gets What he or
she wants.
VIRGO (Aug . 23-Sepl. 22) - H (lOIII'
expecla:tiol" aPe a bit -higher than usual,
do not put a aamper on thole others.
trwte.d , do your own 1hing and let aaociates do what theV want. In the end, producing big 1hings win speak volumes .
LIBRA (Sept . 23-0ct. 23)- Handling dHficutt assigl~•~ents won't bother you one
bit. and you'l do an adm·irabte job.
Howewt, don't expect or damand.crthers
to Deal wtlh big pro;ect5; just beciiUiile you

m

., . Ool11i*
10" hanging Baskets
$7.75

I

I · PAKNID .

to by 8QI'Illllhing new or

I

I

�•

lllunldly, Junes. . .

,.... 84 • The Daily Smtinel
I

www.!IIJd r'lyse 1ttinel.com

&amp;ll'fYOOP

• The Daily Sentinel• Page 85 ~

A CliP

Ill

BRIDGE

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

ACROSS

s ., .... .,.~
10-_ _

, _ _ .,1 I

,

a'

Phillip
Alder

$11~-

• c·. ••
........... ...
·~·-6---riiW•IIi.!l54
R i l l - • ' I ..............
a-.4
...... _ . 51
15- A. . , _ . _ _
.......... _ _ ... l ...... .,_..
......... '*1
~~~= 40 + wagnerlitiU.... 12 clrow ..._"''
l oil ' - ' 14 •till -~ 6 (*&lt;. lOIII+ gmtb jn. 8+ cht:ny
30&gt; sad
...... lnp$. old ""'"""" milk boltb. iroo " alum ....
laos hooks. 40&lt; .... grioolcn, 25+ mil ......
litk. lfi ...., . - . fi 1loe ........ - .
'lirinldcr caM. 200+ griddle&gt;·litil"" " iron
10 "" ~.. pilda pu- ..... pl.m'S, fi+
pull P""''- ,..'"8" srufftn. adv boxeo. Dill U:p. ....,
lioas, bog ...._.,. 7 ·lodge r;l:illeu. pluo lob .....,
~--.m. 2pc oak pnld ""' - cilpholrd. mol1og
112 taNt.. liWivel mctc:r rccliDcr. like new dDc qngc.
Frigidai!&lt; ...... &amp; drya. Q""'" bod.. 2 oll'ic:e
c~Wn;.Goo+al. ., 'iOO+,(oq.tMIIIId .......... pdr..
...... - · double &amp; pole ..... f - . .-..
hole di88""- ..._... spades. flllb), 1m
Due. "nf JW f*e
a
-40+ ~
• .,..... j()+ block .plane&lt; drill bits, (]0+ 100+
hind IlK jackt~. , ccmcot tools., greue gum., levels.,

I'

.

- --

N-..,.,..·
_,....,

·-

• KJ 3
• I 3 I
• A J 10 8 7 6 I

Spri+
IOiL.......,Fcms
Now$5.00
Wbile dley IUL&lt;&gt;vcr ·I
::!OOO .. moo...

'*""

!!:all
• It 8

"A 916

c::=

..

25 liD!Ir's

.aid

21 Soulh s..

:.

31 PFC.,..

GioC&amp; r n
Welt l'lla, , CJ&amp; rz

••••

" .,_.,.

.... 741-7-U-mJ

..

Of

LIFE ' .-

~

C.\RPE ~HER
SERVICE

e
,,_

·

IIdia

41"-~

·.......
47?7

T....

7111ion-2l.lutlgo'a

~~.......

II

I Plw..,·s

'N;

)1~

51 ;,

~r.,.c~

Aault

szlllll.

:M C3POor

.::=

14 Cot. . . '
15 Pri-·o

51-I'WMs

.....
31 G-.

0 ......,••
44 S 'I II

........

17 Rlidod
11 Crac
20 .........

....,.
45 ......
22111ja.....
painl

A bridge player ought 10 be CUrioos and

--- -

• vigornus inlelect. But times craGullly .., be - · Loolc at
only the East hand. With- side wl-

10 -

...-. your ~-hand opponent CIJ8ns
two spades, a weak lw&lt;Hlid sflowing a
dooent six-card su~ and 5-10 hi~
points. Your partner overcalls three
clubs. And the . _ . . , jumps to four
spades. What would you do?
l1lis deal ·during • Eurq&gt;ean
Teom Championship match many \'8BIS
ago. AI the labia, ·bolh E- '*"-lor

DANG--MlZ PRUNEU...Y-lHAT S&lt;XM\IDS JEST
UKE MAW'S vrrn.ES
I

riwl
2&amp; f 1
•
10 . .
aauld 27 a ••

• • 1' •
4 J11ior c:lly
5 INa IIIII

_.....,

vipous-:

AH£4p .

B

o:,). •

English leoci~r Samuel Johnson
said, 't:uriOSity is one dl the most per-andoor1aincharaclaristicsdla

C1rJNI.ING
INIWf1ucJW

HIGHWAY

...

3ll Elsctlk:
llridle
35 &amp;!IIi calor
S7 line find
:II C:... II&gt;
«&lt;ln;:ouc,a

!!:all
~?

Go on offense
when an are in

FUOO AltES11!00Jol AV.UUNE,
()wnersc O.I&lt;E&lt; Ral"'"'
Auctioneer: Palri&lt;:k H. Bloslocn 1599
Term!i: Cash or Good Oxd. wlid.
Ph c( ]()4)428~26.428-7245, &amp; 481 -9066

DOWN

.a=::..., ,.r::,.

Operling lead: 6 A

g.,..

" :: ... ~ ~ (

....
- •
34
•

........

57W..dll.

22Pii 4
.1-do . . . . 24Pt•1
D
~ = l l l i t l 25

•A ·K97
• K5I

J AND II B.ECILaCAL
!6

511 . . _
54 ~~ 1.. I

......

llllnlllllindo

had lallchdl,
,.,..,..saws
- &amp; · drills,
"" ..4l""""'
40+
pw.·cr
lcl&amp;
lots guns,
JINft
di!forcm typOS of tools. 400+ bo• laos
.t bont
i~&amp; tools., I'
lOO+boJ.Iotspru&amp;pmsA:
kettles, utmsilt., s.il~er "''are., carming jill. prn8lft
cooker!l. lots more household items,
·

Email: blosscn _

'

.....
11 Elm
21Ccwpca•
_

• J 10 6
"'Q 9 I

llnlo ..... llloati. . . ~itoOIIA

• T_.
...t

11 Jtr.- ,_ 5I ......... II&gt;

" Q

99l-5'm

:&amp;JCtioo@lmsn .co~. Web!iite:www.blosiCI"IliOtiou.oom

41Heir_,

7

• AQ9742

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~ wn:nchei &amp; new pons. ~ files, eloc &amp;
grindrn. sp~l .......... !lay .t -!toots, bdtdcni. collb1« 1oolo, sytbe1; &amp; .-i4b. &lt;lil .,.._ lots

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panaJties. ll\a OUicome by AlbertllormM, an E~ who is
one at the bell- bndge wr11ers and

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who """ the World Senior Pairs tille in
1990 with Alan Hiroo. Dormer MIJie of

-ltlol

East's
he -~·Ill
king's
But bollr Sou1hs . tour spades doubled. They rullad the
club lead on 1he boarll and ran the
spade jad&lt; through East, orcpecting hrm
1o ha.., the king tor his double . A
moment later, the deClarers wnoaded
one h&amp;an ana two ct~Mo ids, claiming

ransom:

"rP'\. IN -TO.. GOLit.':&gt;.

WIUJ'S "(~LI~E'.?

't.'l'\ to- c..R.IP'\.II'W-IJslr,I':IU. .""" r(;.(£, TAA~ TOO e,N&gt;l WAA?
!:&gt;It&gt; '1'00 OCT~ f'Oil-r

P'!IS 590.

CELEBRITY CIPHER
br Lllil Clll$111

Cellirlly ~ ~ • Cltlllcl m

1lUGIDnB biJ tln\U pe.x~e. • " ,....
Ech ...... the~stnlib" lllllhlr

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Trrllly's Cill!: A!!qUBSL

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When the lui S1udied, aach
East shook his In amazemanl
when he saw that....., cltlbs- makable wi1h a good
the~ suit.
Dormer surnmtld n up ""'1: 'When thras
players ... bidding vigorou&amp;ly,1hefoufth
player wi1h a 111rong hand
should proosed with cau1ion:the olhers
may all haw freak - . H will
ortan be bottar1o support panner lhan 1o
double for paoally:
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PREVIOUS SOLUTION- "'ut ol """'""l have~ 1he tllmnJISIIIIIill;lhe mosl """"'"" ChaTliCIIIt$110 oearad oilh scars.'· Katiil Gitlran
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~-= S@~4\\\-4£~s·
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strike old: on~ DWn ·in1hl )'8Br ahead.
Engaging in tr.h ¥0ti¥iliw can put you
on a pdl ·ol ........... Md anligt'ltenment that oould...._·you top~E!es you've
o n l y - abOut
Jla.IINI (May .2 1.Juno201- When you
"" thingo

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heart, you wiN ·actually 'haw a bettef
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from that which you dO tor' sheer gain
alOne. h can pay to be b!Gt*lrted.
CANCE1'I (June 21-July 22)- , . , _ ,
proiect&amp; will run more wmoalhly 1hml

ETC L E
5

-jabs"'d..iosyau~loati&gt;­
Bf&amp;. '1bu know what you Rnl and how
~ want tt done, white suaog.atM hhe
to gU88S.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) -

•uc•••••-•

· 4" Gonmiums JiOtt
lledtlingPiants

48 per tlal 56,00

Caring Pet
Cremations

GVC

Racofood
Dnve
June 7 from 8-1
Racine, across from post

olfioe Aooepli"" food &amp;.
monetary OOIIatiOIIS for
Meigs Coop Parish Food
Pantry;
West Vilginia St.- Farm
.u..eum Annul! Board
1111 Blilig &amp; EledioJ I
. . be June 101h 7 pm
MOles ~be paid .

The Gallipolis Elks lodge
No_107 will hold 1hilir aiUial
Soccer Shoal
· Sunday, June 8, 2008-lt will
be held allhe Elks Fann on ·
SA 588-.$i0n up will slalt at
1:30 p_m; with 1he competition
staJ1ir:lg at 2:00. Cunq:eiT •• ·is
open to al boys and gilts bom
on 813111993 ·or alter. There
.wil be lour age gi'UI4lS with
boy&amp; n Qids dMsions.
T1oph ·e&amp; wil be awanted for
first, aeoond, and 1hid place in
eiiCh dioiaiun. This event is
he ol dage, ao oome on out
101 bring a friend.
Van! Sale
I 51Ud1r•..11118 Jlh
~ l nJI!ehu .. Villlgeof

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1118Gfilw1drilleonlle~

going Ill Ctl8llet' ...
Waldl b: lign.

Vegtnbleplatns
$2.50 per tiQrin
!Irs 'M-'F 7:30- 5:00
Sttt. 8:30 - 4:30Soa. 1-5

PSI CONSTRUCTJQ;,

.llti'•Go-·1_ ..
Noble Sllllltlld Rd.

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NOT~SOLVETHE

SOCIAL 5EW1ITY CRISIS
BY MAKING AN "[)U)fEJPL..E
SPACE CATAPULT."

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your 1ime on maaningleaa activitiea.
lnwotw youtHtf in acw•wthing
find
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PISCES (Fob. 20-..:h 20) a
chlnoe that aorneone ~ reoenrty rrie1
and would like to know t.tter
the

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AQUARIUS (Jon. ~. 19) - Being
actNe and prodlJChve d be more fun

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CAf'fliCORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19) - might not find mingling the =-!
too w;;;loning , ~being with one or two
cklse friends lot' the sheer oompa:nionlhlp will pnMdo
and con-

.,....,

5

.SCUM.lEJS ANSWBS 6 ~~

duco petOOnl) benelils .. - . • C&gt;O&lt;Jkj
be in .,.. area wtJere ~ ·..,. neo.oer aper~
ated be1ora. ao ITI0¥8 carefUlly.

•lllutiSI

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opportUnity lha1 has tho

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SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23-Dec. 21) There's a good ohanoe you'll spot a nMll'

•Ra 14

i'c j nl (PEP),
I t ........ •

.. . . . . . . . . . . . . CooJit

7

-

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STO~[

COWSTAUCTID~

""

SCORPIO (Oct 24-Nov. 22)- Hyou loot
)'OIJ 're in a M , ft\1 to ·do somerhhtg h t
has • degree of lldYenture dached to lt.
. Ewm ff It'&amp; aali'npte u checking out a

SOOIV,IIJT THEY'EE

.
."'
.'

While pemor11

with whom you share your cay arv apt to
IIWDr the spotlight , you will preler to be
the drr.ctor behind the soenes. Ammge
things so that EMH'yOI"'9 gets What he or
she wants.
VIRGO (Aug . 23-Sepl. 22) - H (lOIII'
expecla:tiol" aPe a bit -higher than usual,
do not put a aamper on thole others.
trwte.d , do your own 1hing and let aaociates do what theV want. In the end, producing big 1hings win speak volumes .
LIBRA (Sept . 23-0ct. 23)- Handling dHficutt assigl~•~ents won't bother you one
bit. and you'l do an adm·irabte job.
Howewt, don't expect or damand.crthers
to Deal wtlh big pro;ect5; just beciiUiile you

m

., . Ool11i*
10" hanging Baskets
$7.75

I

I · PAKNID .

to by 8QI'Illllhing new or

I

I

�. Paa

86 • The Daily Sentinel
much on his shot b!Jt man-

Cup

aged to sg11eeze the JIIICk
between Fleury's pads to
make it 2-0.

fnJmPageBl
Brian

Rafalski

'ft1e

gave

Decroit a l-0 lead in the firsl
period and Valtteri Fdppula
doubled it in the second:
Chris Osgood made 20
&amp;aves and improved to 14-4
in the playoffs after taking

"white-&lt;~ut"

clad
aowd tried to muster up a
"Let's Go Pensl~ chant, but
the .stifling Red Wings
defense took every bit as
much out of the fans as it
did the Penguins' usually
potent offense.

Rafalski · struck first just
5:03 into die game, giving
the Red Wmgs die critical

1-0 lead -

an .advantage

that proved to be the pmcursor of the winning tean1 in

all but one game of the
series.
The Dearborn, Mich.,
native and twO-tinte Cup
winner with New lmiey, in
his first season with the
hometown Red W"mgs, was
in line to have die Cup-wine
niJ!.g goal when be gave
Detroit a 3-2 lead in the
third period of Mooday
night's marathon.
Sykora wrecked those
plans, but nothing CIOIIld
de
Rat~• ki _.,. __
ny
... s
... ..,. two
failed clearing attempts by
Penguins defenseman Rob
Scuderi Datsyut passed the
puck into the right circle to
Zetterberg, · who, while
falling down, moved it ro
Rafalslri in die · left cirole.
Rafalski snapped a shot that
sailed through a screen by

Pittsburgh shots were
over for No. I goalie
blocked; passing lanes were
Dominik Hasek in the flfSI closed off, and the puck
round of the playoffs. seemed to he oonstantly oa
Osgood allowed only 30 the sticks of the Red Wmgs.
· goals in 19 games.
1Jw is until an interference
Detroit earned its final call was made against Pavel ·
two victories of the champiwbo protested the
onship series in Pittsburgh; ~,&amp;•k
ty all the way to die
where the Penguins won
x and then while inside.
·their first nine postseason
That set up the goal the
games. Until the Red Wmgs Pengum's have been waiting
came to town. the Penguins
badn't lost at borne since ~ ~!ii;oEvt;:i
Malkin, who b.adn't soom1
February. .
·
the linching'
f
· Fleury, brilliant in making
0
smce
c
game
Ss saves Monday oigbt in the Eastern Conference
PittsbUJ"gb's thrilling 4-3 finals. .
.
Mal!rin coming off a seawin in triple overtime,
.
.
oouldn't rqleat that perfor- son in which he had 47 big Tomas Hob,istrom right
mance. Fllppula's rrJJOnnd
and 1Oft points, had in front of Fleury and in to .The Detroit Red Wii1!S oolebrate with tile S1anley Cup 8lter their 3-2 win Olier tile
f&gt;ercuills In Game 6 of the NHL ~Stanley Cup finals in ~on V!e dn 1
n OIJIIII)letely pointless make it 1-0.
goal 8:07 into the second
Although Malkin got
period was certainly one until Petr Sykora scored the
overtime
goal
off
his
pass
to
Pittsburgh
back in it with a
he'd like to have back.
.
goal,
the
Mikacl Samuelssoo faked win Game 5. This time, power-play
shot as he aqJl toward the Crosby fouod him in the left Penguins blew a ~-&lt;In-3
right cirole and then let go a circle with a cross-ice feed, advantage for the second
drive that Fleury blocked and Malkin ripped a shot time·in 1be series in the first
with the stick. The rebound between Osgood's pass to period that really set the
came right back out in front Cllt the deficit in half at tone for the Penguins'
to Fllppula, wbo didn't get 15:26.
ouster.

.......
""'it*-"••

C's

.

.

,.

Annual PVH Hospice 'Tribute~,~~~;.;

a

Butterfly Release &amp; Celebration

. State

Academy _., oot die only
Blue and Wilde story~
oo tbi!i weekend, ., senior
Luke Watts will be making
fnJmhgeBI
bis first trip to Jesse Owens
. .Stadium in lhe pole vault
tl·vely.
event.
The Blue Angels will
"'
fini-L--' ...,_.. 13
nncsibly
n'atts
"""" uwu at
have six events to .-feet, 9 incbes last weekend
sc:oo: team points wilh. 80 at the Byesville regional
~ em~s on bigh pbe- and enters Friday morning'~
ings will he key if the Blue final tied with two oChers
and Wbite are to bring home for die fourlh.beg qualifythis year's 02 girls crown. ing height Watts is the first
good ·news ~or GAHS, Blue Devil ro qualify tor
m tbat respect, IS lbat pre- sure since Jeff Payton made
liminary qualifying times it in the pole vault in 2005
indicate that the Angels
·lf Watts. can fini&amp;b in the
should be competing in top&lt;igbt, he woubl beoome
· the first Devil·to score in die
most of those six finals.
· : Geiga' enters Sattmlay'-. state championship since
long jump final with the 2002 - wheo 1Y s111110011 s,
longest qualifying jump, Josh Peny, Daniel Roush
ma!ring bee the early and Tom Bose c:om1rined ro
favolite to. win gold in that score eight points in dJi'a:
~vent Ge•fer also OOme'O different events. Watts will
~to Fridays lOOm semifi- be malring his first liip to
lllll witb the flitest time in Jesse Owens Stadium
ra heat and ilCCOIId-fastest Meigs had its~ female
· o\'e11111 Geiger was die sure· athlete qualify for stare last
~-:up !n tbe long jump year .men Devan ~:t'
and eigttth in die lOOm made it to d!C800m
.
finals onc yalf 11g0.
This year, junim Catie
· Jackson - die defending Wolfe did one better -.tate nmner.up in die 400m q~ twice in both tbe
dash - enters Friday's 100m
200m dashes.
~&amp; with die fourth
fastest
lim time i.n bee

:nre

beat

Wolfe - who will be
making ill's first trip to Jesse
Owens Stadium - bas a lit-

de harder road to get to the
finals in either qent, entecing Friday's semis with the
slowest tune in the 200m
dasb lllld the 12th fasU:st
time in the lOOm dash.
Wolfe also bas dJe sixth
fastest lime in her lOOm
dash .qualifier.
. Fmally, there i~ ~nt
MHS graduate Cornelius
~&amp;b - who wlll! n~med
Ohio Valley Pobhsbing•s
Olfeosiwe Player oflhe Year
in football JUst last fall.
Eilglisb will be making bis
final Maroon and Gold
C"'nce at Jesse Owens
·urn during his fii'!it
state qualifier in the 200m

Members ofdle Pk••••t Valley Roille Re11t1 .,.
Boaplce team would like to express our sirQN,· .·. ':!.&lt;\~
gratitude to
corporate sponsors.WhO ·
made

...

dash.

~glish enters Fri~y
With the seYend! fastest moe
in
beat and d!e. I~
fastest oveGIIL F..n,;lish will
be .hl:aded ~0 ~tllCky
Christwl Umvers1ty next
fall for football.

.ltwl\ • •

llis

61$-1«10

~eighth fasn:st~ver­

all, wbich would .advance
ller to tbe finals if every-

1hing &amp;UDds.

.

· Cfose qualified for both
tbe lOOm and 300m hurdles
events a year ago, but enters
Chis weekend only in the

.

;

hurdl~. The odd!i of
Close making her first hmdie finals are slim, as tbe .
~ores enters Friday
..,_tb the sixth fastest time in
her beat and l2dl oveGIIL
The top-four in each semifinal advance to Saturday's

:300m

finals.

..;.

.

. The relays will also be
crucial
for
Gallia
Acwiemy's title bopes, as
:the 4d00m and 4x200m
!leams enter Friday's qualifying with a pair of die
eight-fastest times. The
4xJOOm squad has the sec4JI)d fastest time in its semifiul beat and the fowth
- Cutest overall The 4x200m
tRill has the third fasest ·
1imc in its qualitia and the
fifth fastest overall
GAHS - witb this same
.q uater - · was nmner-up in
~ 4x200m relay a year ago
and eighth in the 4xl00m
I

I

r

fiaat

The An&amp;els will be: without last year's &amp;late J'llllllC'lup in 1be 3200m IUD, junior
Lauren Adkins - who fiD.
ilbed fifth at regiona!s. That
loss, and 1be loss
chose
poims, make placing high in
thole six events even lll(ft
im.ponam for die An,gels.
Some teams .that will be
~ GAHS fm the
D2 girls ~ title will be
Cu,pbop ~ a.istian

«

~~m~ ~. Akron

ltuchtd. Kettering Alter and
Wmensville

Heights.

CVCA will have

paruci-

pmts in II dilfcmit eYCIIIts,

lollowed by Ouville, AltaWmnsville Heights
irith nine eventS each.
Defeuding D2 champion
Akron Bucillel will be oompcriq iD five sepm-ate

'': 1k'·

sidJ

of

Gallia

~-------------~·

•

'

'"

.

.

..

�. Paa

86 • The Daily Sentinel
much on his shot b!Jt man-

Cup

aged to sg11eeze the JIIICk
between Fleury's pads to
make it 2-0.

fnJmPageBl
Brian

Rafalski

'ft1e

gave

Decroit a l-0 lead in the firsl
period and Valtteri Fdppula
doubled it in the second:
Chris Osgood made 20
&amp;aves and improved to 14-4
in the playoffs after taking

"white-&lt;~ut"

clad
aowd tried to muster up a
"Let's Go Pensl~ chant, but
the .stifling Red Wings
defense took every bit as
much out of the fans as it
did the Penguins' usually
potent offense.

Rafalski · struck first just
5:03 into die game, giving
the Red Wmgs die critical

1-0 lead -

an .advantage

that proved to be the pmcursor of the winning tean1 in

all but one game of the
series.
The Dearborn, Mich.,
native and twO-tinte Cup
winner with New lmiey, in
his first season with the
hometown Red W"mgs, was
in line to have die Cup-wine
niJ!.g goal when be gave
Detroit a 3-2 lead in the
third period of Mooday
night's marathon.
Sykora wrecked those
plans, but nothing CIOIIld
de
Rat~• ki _.,. __
ny
... s
... ..,. two
failed clearing attempts by
Penguins defenseman Rob
Scuderi Datsyut passed the
puck into the right circle to
Zetterberg, · who, while
falling down, moved it ro
Rafalslri in die · left cirole.
Rafalski snapped a shot that
sailed through a screen by

Pittsburgh shots were
over for No. I goalie
blocked; passing lanes were
Dominik Hasek in the flfSI closed off, and the puck
round of the playoffs. seemed to he oonstantly oa
Osgood allowed only 30 the sticks of the Red Wmgs.
· goals in 19 games.
1Jw is until an interference
Detroit earned its final call was made against Pavel ·
two victories of the champiwbo protested the
onship series in Pittsburgh; ~,&amp;•k
ty all the way to die
where the Penguins won
x and then while inside.
·their first nine postseason
That set up the goal the
games. Until the Red Wmgs Pengum's have been waiting
came to town. the Penguins
badn't lost at borne since ~ ~!ii;oEvt;:i
Malkin, who b.adn't soom1
February. .
·
the linching'
f
· Fleury, brilliant in making
0
smce
c
game
Ss saves Monday oigbt in the Eastern Conference
PittsbUJ"gb's thrilling 4-3 finals. .
.
Mal!rin coming off a seawin in triple overtime,
.
.
oouldn't rqleat that perfor- son in which he had 47 big Tomas Hob,istrom right
mance. Fllppula's rrJJOnnd
and 1Oft points, had in front of Fleury and in to .The Detroit Red Wii1!S oolebrate with tile S1anley Cup 8lter their 3-2 win Olier tile
f&gt;ercuills In Game 6 of the NHL ~Stanley Cup finals in ~on V!e dn 1
n OIJIIII)letely pointless make it 1-0.
goal 8:07 into the second
Although Malkin got
period was certainly one until Petr Sykora scored the
overtime
goal
off
his
pass
to
Pittsburgh
back in it with a
he'd like to have back.
.
goal,
the
Mikacl Samuelssoo faked win Game 5. This time, power-play
shot as he aqJl toward the Crosby fouod him in the left Penguins blew a ~-&lt;In-3
right cirole and then let go a circle with a cross-ice feed, advantage for the second
drive that Fleury blocked and Malkin ripped a shot time·in 1be series in the first
with the stick. The rebound between Osgood's pass to period that really set the
came right back out in front Cllt the deficit in half at tone for the Penguins'
to Fllppula, wbo didn't get 15:26.
ouster.

.......
""'it*-"••

C's

.

.

,.

Annual PVH Hospice 'Tribute~,~~~;.;

a

Butterfly Release &amp; Celebration

. State

Academy _., oot die only
Blue and Wilde story~
oo tbi!i weekend, ., senior
Luke Watts will be making
fnJmhgeBI
bis first trip to Jesse Owens
. .Stadium in lhe pole vault
tl·vely.
event.
The Blue Angels will
"'
fini-L--' ...,_.. 13
nncsibly
n'atts
"""" uwu at
have six events to .-feet, 9 incbes last weekend
sc:oo: team points wilh. 80 at the Byesville regional
~ em~s on bigh pbe- and enters Friday morning'~
ings will he key if the Blue final tied with two oChers
and Wbite are to bring home for die fourlh.beg qualifythis year's 02 girls crown. ing height Watts is the first
good ·news ~or GAHS, Blue Devil ro qualify tor
m tbat respect, IS lbat pre- sure since Jeff Payton made
liminary qualifying times it in the pole vault in 2005
indicate that the Angels
·lf Watts. can fini&amp;b in the
should be competing in top&lt;igbt, he woubl beoome
· the first Devil·to score in die
most of those six finals.
· : Geiga' enters Sattmlay'-. state championship since
long jump final with the 2002 - wheo 1Y s111110011 s,
longest qualifying jump, Josh Peny, Daniel Roush
ma!ring bee the early and Tom Bose c:om1rined ro
favolite to. win gold in that score eight points in dJi'a:
~vent Ge•fer also OOme'O different events. Watts will
~to Fridays lOOm semifi- be malring his first liip to
lllll witb the flitest time in Jesse Owens Stadium
ra heat and ilCCOIId-fastest Meigs had its~ female
· o\'e11111 Geiger was die sure· athlete qualify for stare last
~-:up !n tbe long jump year .men Devan ~:t'
and eigttth in die lOOm made it to d!C800m
.
finals onc yalf 11g0.
This year, junim Catie
· Jackson - die defending Wolfe did one better -.tate nmner.up in die 400m q~ twice in both tbe
dash - enters Friday's 100m
200m dashes.
~&amp; with die fourth
fastest
lim time i.n bee

:nre

beat

Wolfe - who will be
making ill's first trip to Jesse
Owens Stadium - bas a lit-

de harder road to get to the
finals in either qent, entecing Friday's semis with the
slowest tune in the 200m
dasb lllld the 12th fasU:st
time in the lOOm dash.
Wolfe also bas dJe sixth
fastest lime in her lOOm
dash .qualifier.
. Fmally, there i~ ~nt
MHS graduate Cornelius
~&amp;b - who wlll! n~med
Ohio Valley Pobhsbing•s
Olfeosiwe Player oflhe Year
in football JUst last fall.
Eilglisb will be making bis
final Maroon and Gold
C"'nce at Jesse Owens
·urn during his fii'!it
state qualifier in the 200m

Members ofdle Pk••••t Valley Roille Re11t1 .,.
Boaplce team would like to express our sirQN,· .·. ':!.&lt;\~
gratitude to
corporate sponsors.WhO ·
made

...

dash.

~glish enters Fri~y
With the seYend! fastest moe
in
beat and d!e. I~
fastest oveGIIL F..n,;lish will
be .hl:aded ~0 ~tllCky
Christwl Umvers1ty next
fall for football.

.ltwl\ • •

llis

61$-1«10

~eighth fasn:st~ver­

all, wbich would .advance
ller to tbe finals if every-

1hing &amp;UDds.

.

· Cfose qualified for both
tbe lOOm and 300m hurdles
events a year ago, but enters
Chis weekend only in the

.

;

hurdl~. The odd!i of
Close making her first hmdie finals are slim, as tbe .
~ores enters Friday
..,_tb the sixth fastest time in
her beat and l2dl oveGIIL
The top-four in each semifinal advance to Saturday's

:300m

finals.

..;.

.

. The relays will also be
crucial
for
Gallia
Acwiemy's title bopes, as
:the 4d00m and 4x200m
!leams enter Friday's qualifying with a pair of die
eight-fastest times. The
4xJOOm squad has the sec4JI)d fastest time in its semifiul beat and the fowth
- Cutest overall The 4x200m
tRill has the third fasest ·
1imc in its qualitia and the
fifth fastest overall
GAHS - witb this same
.q uater - · was nmner-up in
~ 4x200m relay a year ago
and eighth in the 4xl00m
I

I

r

fiaat

The An&amp;els will be: without last year's &amp;late J'llllllC'lup in 1be 3200m IUD, junior
Lauren Adkins - who fiD.
ilbed fifth at regiona!s. That
loss, and 1be loss
chose
poims, make placing high in
thole six events even lll(ft
im.ponam for die An,gels.
Some teams .that will be
~ GAHS fm the
D2 girls ~ title will be
Cu,pbop ~ a.istian

«

~~m~ ~. Akron

ltuchtd. Kettering Alter and
Wmensville

Heights.

CVCA will have

paruci-

pmts in II dilfcmit eYCIIIts,

lollowed by Ouville, AltaWmnsville Heights
irith nine eventS each.
Defeuding D2 champion
Akron Bucillel will be oompcriq iD five sepm-ate

'': 1k'·

sidJ

of

Gallia

~-------------~·

•

'

'"

.

.

..

�'.

1008-G&amp;ld Wm~$ld Ribs Festival

p J?l•

n

v..s,.•••ue s' 2008

2008 Gold Wings and -Ribs Festiv~l

'11111ndaJ,J. . s,..

•Page3

·Festival lineup includes 'something for everyone'
· -.,Ciim

lira

?I

HOEfi.ICHAtYDM.-COiol

Friday .June j · ·

WELCOME
- ~e Gold .Wi.~s and-Ribs Fes~vat
Chamnan, his .officers, and ·COIIlJll.l.ttee
_ welcome you to Meigs County for this
event.

-

· The many hours spent in pt:eparatj.on
will be ·seen this ·weekend with die
biggest festival r.et. The entertainment
and the food will appeal to ev_efyone
~ for the-first time in over 30 years
.you will see power boat racing on the
0100 River here in Meigs County.
We want to thank the corporate spon~s..
advertisers, the Pomeroy
Merchantti Association, Pomeroy
VJJJage Council and the community for

the.ir support.

OUr -special thanks to Gold Wing
Olapter E3 and Paul DarneD~ for leading the festival for die farst fi~
· Be iUre to sample an the
ribs and cast tour vote for the tide o.f
Ohio' Best Ribs. As alway ~~no
charge .t o . · anyof
events.
·We hope you v~ a great tirne1

. ...... .

....

~

·- -· ·····"""

POMEROY - Something for· eyeryone about
describes the 2008 Gold W'Ulgs and Ribs Festival which
takes place Friday and Saturday in downtown Pomeroy.
For the fii'St time in more than 30 years. power boat
races wiD be returning to Pomeroy. The races will be
taking place at ll a.m. on Sablrday and· while Bill
Quickel, festival cbairman, says he's not looking for a
big turnout, he does expect a good show for festival
. goers-to enjoy.
· · , He said this is not a sanctioned race and there will ~
no prizes, that the racin~ should go on a couple of
hollB', and will be held ram or shine.
·
Three new contests are on the agenda this year. They
are·a hog calling contest at 6:30 QD Friday, followed on
Saturday with a bot dog eating CQntest at 1 p.m. and a
cookie stacking contest at l:30.p.m.
• Again this year there will be art in ·the park on
Saturday with local artists showcasing their talent and
competmg for prizes totaling $200. The display will be
held in the Court Street minirparlc with Diana Johnson
as chairman. It will be in place from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m.
at which time the winners will be announced.
There will be plenty of good entertainm~t on both Friday and Satlmlay.
·
· The headline entertainer for the festival is Shawna
Corder and the Cooler Roys~ They wiii be perfonning
in the riverfront .a mphitheater at 7:30p.m. on Saturday.
Well known for her bright pe~nality and exceytional
singing style, the performer won America's Largest
Country Music Talent Sealtb and is a finalist in the .
Northeast Regional Compc"lition in Wheeling, W. Va. A
CD featuring original songs bas been recorded with
new Colony Records and will soon be released.
Friday's entertainment lineup begins with Howard
Writesel and his band of Racine. They will be perform?
ing at 4:30 p.m. ~untry sinser Simba Jordan .will fol?
low at 5:30p.m. and perfonnmg at 7:30p.m. will be the
popular Insured Sound with a variety of classic ballads
and old time favorites.

B=~'::!c~~3:w'!:cl~~~;;~!&lt;:l:e~

five?member band called Mixx which bas appeared
widely in the Ohio-West Vuginia arena. Casey Powell
fronts mat grouc&amp;r!:th her dynamic -lead vOcals and
uses bee early d
· training to make e~erything she
does higb energy.
'.
Nikki Ward, a young sinF with a country twang
who pet{oiDlS with The Ultlinate Elvis Tribute Sbow
across central Ohio will be taking the Pomeroy stage at
7 p.m. on Saturday night, j~st before ~r ~ her
band wraps up the Gold Wmgs and Ribs Fesuval for
another year.
·
.
.
Plenty of action has been planrwl for the bikers wbo
come to town. lbere's~· tour around the count)'
which iDcludes some hi
· sites on Saturday mom?
~.the best bike oon
with winnen being named in
JbC categories of custom, touring, stock, rat and trike in
the aftemoon. mel, of course, the always popular light

parade Saturday niJdrt.
. 'will leave the vii
Therouteoftheiightpade wbidl,
bas been sbortened this y~. The bikes
will &amp;om Pooleroy to Racine and t.ct.

..:!1m.

7

•:•:•!1111::::.!:.

auq ' .. ••r rat 11 t1 11e • • r' !I t1r tiW t J 1 t.,
~W: I . . . . . Fr I ll.llle . . . . . . lleJ 11 1 ... 11'1:7' uza1r1111•nllll
n 1 11u1

�'.

1008-G&amp;ld Wm~$ld Ribs Festival

p J?l•

n

v..s,.•••ue s' 2008

2008 Gold Wings and -Ribs Festiv~l

'11111ndaJ,J. . s,..

•Page3

·Festival lineup includes 'something for everyone'
· -.,Ciim

lira

?I

HOEfi.ICHAtYDM.-COiol

Friday .June j · ·

WELCOME
- ~e Gold .Wi.~s and-Ribs Fes~vat
Chamnan, his .officers, and ·COIIlJll.l.ttee
_ welcome you to Meigs County for this
event.

-

· The many hours spent in pt:eparatj.on
will be ·seen this ·weekend with die
biggest festival r.et. The entertainment
and the food will appeal to ev_efyone
~ for the-first time in over 30 years
.you will see power boat racing on the
0100 River here in Meigs County.
We want to thank the corporate spon~s..
advertisers, the Pomeroy
Merchantti Association, Pomeroy
VJJJage Council and the community for

the.ir support.

OUr -special thanks to Gold Wing
Olapter E3 and Paul DarneD~ for leading the festival for die farst fi~
· Be iUre to sample an the
ribs and cast tour vote for the tide o.f
Ohio' Best Ribs. As alway ~~no
charge .t o . · anyof
events.
·We hope you v~ a great tirne1

. ...... .

....

~

·- -· ·····"""

POMEROY - Something for· eyeryone about
describes the 2008 Gold W'Ulgs and Ribs Festival which
takes place Friday and Saturday in downtown Pomeroy.
For the fii'St time in more than 30 years. power boat
races wiD be returning to Pomeroy. The races will be
taking place at ll a.m. on Sablrday and· while Bill
Quickel, festival cbairman, says he's not looking for a
big turnout, he does expect a good show for festival
. goers-to enjoy.
· · , He said this is not a sanctioned race and there will ~
no prizes, that the racin~ should go on a couple of
hollB', and will be held ram or shine.
·
Three new contests are on the agenda this year. They
are·a hog calling contest at 6:30 QD Friday, followed on
Saturday with a bot dog eating CQntest at 1 p.m. and a
cookie stacking contest at l:30.p.m.
• Again this year there will be art in ·the park on
Saturday with local artists showcasing their talent and
competmg for prizes totaling $200. The display will be
held in the Court Street minirparlc with Diana Johnson
as chairman. It will be in place from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m.
at which time the winners will be announced.
There will be plenty of good entertainm~t on both Friday and Satlmlay.
·
· The headline entertainer for the festival is Shawna
Corder and the Cooler Roys~ They wiii be perfonning
in the riverfront .a mphitheater at 7:30p.m. on Saturday.
Well known for her bright pe~nality and exceytional
singing style, the performer won America's Largest
Country Music Talent Sealtb and is a finalist in the .
Northeast Regional Compc"lition in Wheeling, W. Va. A
CD featuring original songs bas been recorded with
new Colony Records and will soon be released.
Friday's entertainment lineup begins with Howard
Writesel and his band of Racine. They will be perform?
ing at 4:30 p.m. ~untry sinser Simba Jordan .will fol?
low at 5:30p.m. and perfonnmg at 7:30p.m. will be the
popular Insured Sound with a variety of classic ballads
and old time favorites.

B=~'::!c~~3:w'!:cl~~~;;~!&lt;:l:e~

five?member band called Mixx which bas appeared
widely in the Ohio-West Vuginia arena. Casey Powell
fronts mat grouc&amp;r!:th her dynamic -lead vOcals and
uses bee early d
· training to make e~erything she
does higb energy.
'.
Nikki Ward, a young sinF with a country twang
who pet{oiDlS with The Ultlinate Elvis Tribute Sbow
across central Ohio will be taking the Pomeroy stage at
7 p.m. on Saturday night, j~st before ~r ~ her
band wraps up the Gold Wmgs and Ribs Fesuval for
another year.
·
.
.
Plenty of action has been planrwl for the bikers wbo
come to town. lbere's~· tour around the count)'
which iDcludes some hi
· sites on Saturday mom?
~.the best bike oon
with winnen being named in
JbC categories of custom, touring, stock, rat and trike in
the aftemoon. mel, of course, the always popular light

parade Saturday niJdrt.
. 'will leave the vii
Therouteoftheiightpade wbidl,
bas been sbortened this y~. The bikes
will &amp;om Pooleroy to Racine and t.ct.

..:!1m.

7

•:•:•!1111::::.!:.

auq ' .. ••r rat 11 t1 11e • • r' !I t1r tiW t J 1 t.,
~W: I . . . . . Fr I ll.llle . . . . . . lleJ 11 1 ... 11'1:7' uza1r1111•nllll
n 1 11u1

�~-.·-

Page4.•

.

2008:Gold Wings ~d Ribs Festival

'lbunday, J,.e 5, 2008

' Thunday, Ju. 5, 2808

~··

I

· ··

..

~

-

2008 Gold Wings and Ribs Festival

- --

· ... s

·Rib vendors
to·vie for ·
fupaward

~~~~illl~lll

Again this year a winner for the OhiO's
Best Ribs plaque will be selected at the
Gold Wmgs and Ribs Festival to take
place this weekend on the Pomeroy partmg lot.
The winner
be selected on 'a point
system by vote of the festival goers and a
panel of three judges. The decision wiD be
made on the basis of appearance, taste,
tenderness and texture with the· people's
choice ballots counting for 25 percent of
the total score and the vote of each of three.
judges counting for 25 points each to
up with a total score.
·
The judges will be served samples of
ribs at the judge's table on the stage at I
p.m. and the results will be handed to the
festival committee representative. That
committee will then ooUect all the pe&lt;r
pie's choice ballot boxes and count them
to detennine the winner to be announced
at4 p.m.
·

~

Last year's
winnerof
the Ohio's
Best Ribs

Howard Writesel
and his band will
perfonn at 4:30
pm. on Friday at
the Gold Wmgs
and Ribs Festival.

AwaKd was
' Butch
Blankenship
of Pomeroy.
Here Bill
Qui~l presents him

will

the plaque
as his wife,
Michelle,
.
and a helper
Justin
Mosier of
Albany look

come

on.

ENJOY THE

TNT PIT STOP

GOLD WINGS 6
RIBS.Fl 1VAL

CONVENIENCE STOREs
.

t

SUNOCO
Stare .... l

....

Ntddlei"'O'to Oft

\

......
&amp;

WELCOME
NGERSI .

MAMI'ftON MAMI'HON
swe~~oa~ez
Cblltei~Oit

ti5-JJ50

S....Roacel24 '·
&amp;nc1111. OR

ft2.&amp;fZ

SUNOCO
2Dda.e.

Nt .. aeron. 011
112-JJtl

BOMB, AtrrO, LIR, HEALTH~ FLOOD
SR. SIFR BONDS BUSINESS

$EE
YOU
AT THE
. I. CtUSoll Crow

GOLD
WINGI
&amp;RIB!
PEITNAL

PJ.
-

\

.www.ilsurarm-plus.oom
~114CutSI..

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

.Aaoss/Fn~~'IMCowtbst
. . .. . . ... .. ..... . .

Kr fli•. . McO•autlh~ IL Ph.
awwtae . . .,LPII.
Pia ac•_._ Pll. 992~2955
112 fall MalnSIIael

HOIItS
Mon-fttlam-8pm
Sill. e.m - s ~

Panwzot,Ohla
a • a •• •

•

0

'

�~-.·-

Page4.•

.

2008:Gold Wings ~d Ribs Festival

'lbunday, J,.e 5, 2008

' Thunday, Ju. 5, 2808

~··

I

· ··

..

~

-

2008 Gold Wings and Ribs Festival

- --

· ... s

·Rib vendors
to·vie for ·
fupaward

~~~~illl~lll

Again this year a winner for the OhiO's
Best Ribs plaque will be selected at the
Gold Wmgs and Ribs Festival to take
place this weekend on the Pomeroy partmg lot.
The winner
be selected on 'a point
system by vote of the festival goers and a
panel of three judges. The decision wiD be
made on the basis of appearance, taste,
tenderness and texture with the· people's
choice ballots counting for 25 percent of
the total score and the vote of each of three.
judges counting for 25 points each to
up with a total score.
·
The judges will be served samples of
ribs at the judge's table on the stage at I
p.m. and the results will be handed to the
festival committee representative. That
committee will then ooUect all the pe&lt;r
pie's choice ballot boxes and count them
to detennine the winner to be announced
at4 p.m.
·

~

Last year's
winnerof
the Ohio's
Best Ribs

Howard Writesel
and his band will
perfonn at 4:30
pm. on Friday at
the Gold Wmgs
and Ribs Festival.

AwaKd was
' Butch
Blankenship
of Pomeroy.
Here Bill
Qui~l presents him

will

the plaque
as his wife,
Michelle,
.
and a helper
Justin
Mosier of
Albany look

come

on.

ENJOY THE

TNT PIT STOP

GOLD WINGS 6
RIBS.Fl 1VAL

CONVENIENCE STOREs
.

t

SUNOCO
Stare .... l

....

Ntddlei"'O'to Oft

\

......
&amp;

WELCOME
NGERSI .

MAMI'ftON MAMI'HON
swe~~oa~ez
Cblltei~Oit

ti5-JJ50

S....Roacel24 '·
&amp;nc1111. OR

ft2.&amp;fZ

SUNOCO
2Dda.e.

Nt .. aeron. 011
112-JJtl

BOMB, AtrrO, LIR, HEALTH~ FLOOD
SR. SIFR BONDS BUSINESS

$EE
YOU
AT THE
. I. CtUSoll Crow

GOLD
WINGI
&amp;RIB!
PEITNAL

PJ.
-

\

.www.ilsurarm-plus.oom
~114CutSI..

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

.Aaoss/Fn~~'IMCowtbst
. . .. . . ... .. ..... . .

Kr fli•. . McO•autlh~ IL Ph.
awwtae . . .,LPII.
Pia ac•_._ Pll. 992~2955
112 fall MalnSIIael

HOIItS
Mon-fttlam-8pm
Sill. e.m - s ~

Panwzot,Ohla
a • a •• •

•

0

'

�- -

.

-· ...........

- ...

-- - -__ __ ----- -.......,..

....

...,..

..

-

...

2008 Gold Wings and ·Ribs Festival

n

wday,J. . s,a.

S...ba.to bring country.

music to festival

POMEROY - The Gold Wmgs
and Ribs Festival will get a taste of
country wben Simba Jordan takes the
stage at 5:30p.m. on Friday, delivering his unique Nashville sound to the
crowds gathered at the Pomeroy
Amphitheater.
Not only does .Simba consider
himself a singer but a performer. He
grew up listening to country music
legends, idolizing George Jones,
Randy Travis and Tim. McGraw.
Growing beyond.just idolizing county music legends, Simba is following
his own dream ofbecoming a country artist. He's worked with
Nashville
producer/songwriter
Lonnie Wilson and is still the only
entertainer to be named both the.
Male Vocalist and Male Entertainer
of the year in the Adult New Country
Division for the N()nh American
Country
Music.
Association,
International; and was one-half of

.

.

~--

!!'•

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

-- ....

.... - · - "

~·

--

·Page 1

Insured Sound

~":Jii.
;:·r

.brings the boogie

die dUet in die same year. Simba was
a state finalist in die Colgate"County
Music Showdown for; die state of
Ohio in 2003 and. 2006. S"IOlba also
made the top 100 out' of 20.000 lbat
andilioned for lbe USA Network.s
Nashville .Star in lbe fall of 2006.
Simba bas entertained at several
large venue sbows including the
American Q.uarter Horse Congress
with Sfl· estiinatM I n:ii:llion participants and patrons. He pedorms at
charity events lik.e the Toys for Tots,
Bike and Barbecue and the Muscular
DystrophyTeletbon.
. "No where else-can you tmd a better entertainer and live perfonilcr,"
said Kathi Paugh, state e~ecutive
director for the Buckeye Country

POMEROY - Insured Sound, perfonning at
7:30 p.m. Friday evening at the Pomeroy
Amphitheater, will get the crowd moving with is
unique blend of Motown, favorite dance oldies,
Frank Sinatra and classic ballads.
Insured Sound provides first-class entertain- ·
nient for audiences across Ohio and West
Virginia with a sound distinctly its own. The
group has performed for the Parkersburg
HomecomiDg Festival, the Manetta Stemwheel
·Festival, Charleston Regatta, West Virginia State
Treasurer John Perdue and countless concerts ,
weddings , fundraisers and parties.
lnsured Sound takes pride in its musicianship,
versatility and professional attire.
_The group cqnsists of members Gregg Ring .
from Cleveland (originally from Belpre), Harold
Stockwell, a life~long resident of the Mid-Ohio
Valley, Susan Hickman from Parkersburg, W.Va;,
Rick Barnhart from Mineral Wells , W.Va. and
Matt Piatt from Williamsontown, W.Va.
Insured Sound "insures" a good time will be
had by all .

· Music~on..

.. "I have ooe goal in _life; ·to keep my
fans~ bact; for more, year after
year," :said·Simba.

Enjoy th.e 2008
Gold Wings &amp; Ribs
Festival!
'

.....---

. 2008 Gold ·.Wings and Ribs Festival

Thunday~ Jue S, l808

•

. ..

Powe11•s

PROUD TO SUPPORT
THE GOLD WINGS AND
RIBS FESTIVAL

.

AUTO • HOME • BUSINESS

.·@Home
Oc:J

• Motorcycles
•ATVs

·Boats
...plus the same great auto and home
coverages you've counted on for years

Street
Pomeroy OH .
111

@)

.HEALTH • LIFE • RETIREMENT

700 E.

Open SUn-Silt 7

.

~Nationa,l

gBank .

(740)992-5252

.

@~[J@@Q[]~@

~

Phallllatg

-f

.

-7pm

Silt 9am-3om
Closed Sunil~

Racine
740-949-2210

(740) 992-1536

Syracus~

7 40-992-6333

.

-10pm

(!}
-."'!:,;:

www.foodfalnnk.com

�- -

.

-· ...........

- ...

-- - -__ __ ----- -.......,..

....

...,..

..

-

...

2008 Gold Wings and ·Ribs Festival

n

wday,J. . s,a.

S...ba.to bring country.

music to festival

POMEROY - The Gold Wmgs
and Ribs Festival will get a taste of
country wben Simba Jordan takes the
stage at 5:30p.m. on Friday, delivering his unique Nashville sound to the
crowds gathered at the Pomeroy
Amphitheater.
Not only does .Simba consider
himself a singer but a performer. He
grew up listening to country music
legends, idolizing George Jones,
Randy Travis and Tim. McGraw.
Growing beyond.just idolizing county music legends, Simba is following
his own dream ofbecoming a country artist. He's worked with
Nashville
producer/songwriter
Lonnie Wilson and is still the only
entertainer to be named both the.
Male Vocalist and Male Entertainer
of the year in the Adult New Country
Division for the N()nh American
Country
Music.
Association,
International; and was one-half of

.

.

~--

!!'•

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

-- ....

.... - · - "

~·

--

·Page 1

Insured Sound

~":Jii.
;:·r

.brings the boogie

die dUet in die same year. Simba was
a state finalist in die Colgate"County
Music Showdown for; die state of
Ohio in 2003 and. 2006. S"IOlba also
made the top 100 out' of 20.000 lbat
andilioned for lbe USA Network.s
Nashville .Star in lbe fall of 2006.
Simba bas entertained at several
large venue sbows including the
American Q.uarter Horse Congress
with Sfl· estiinatM I n:ii:llion participants and patrons. He pedorms at
charity events lik.e the Toys for Tots,
Bike and Barbecue and the Muscular
DystrophyTeletbon.
. "No where else-can you tmd a better entertainer and live perfonilcr,"
said Kathi Paugh, state e~ecutive
director for the Buckeye Country

POMEROY - Insured Sound, perfonning at
7:30 p.m. Friday evening at the Pomeroy
Amphitheater, will get the crowd moving with is
unique blend of Motown, favorite dance oldies,
Frank Sinatra and classic ballads.
Insured Sound provides first-class entertain- ·
nient for audiences across Ohio and West
Virginia with a sound distinctly its own. The
group has performed for the Parkersburg
HomecomiDg Festival, the Manetta Stemwheel
·Festival, Charleston Regatta, West Virginia State
Treasurer John Perdue and countless concerts ,
weddings , fundraisers and parties.
lnsured Sound takes pride in its musicianship,
versatility and professional attire.
_The group cqnsists of members Gregg Ring .
from Cleveland (originally from Belpre), Harold
Stockwell, a life~long resident of the Mid-Ohio
Valley, Susan Hickman from Parkersburg, W.Va;,
Rick Barnhart from Mineral Wells , W.Va. and
Matt Piatt from Williamsontown, W.Va.
Insured Sound "insures" a good time will be
had by all .

· Music~on..

.. "I have ooe goal in _life; ·to keep my
fans~ bact; for more, year after
year," :said·Simba.

Enjoy th.e 2008
Gold Wings &amp; Ribs
Festival!
'

.....---

. 2008 Gold ·.Wings and Ribs Festival

Thunday~ Jue S, l808

•

. ..

Powe11•s

PROUD TO SUPPORT
THE GOLD WINGS AND
RIBS FESTIVAL

.

AUTO • HOME • BUSINESS

.·@Home
Oc:J

• Motorcycles
•ATVs

·Boats
...plus the same great auto and home
coverages you've counted on for years

Street
Pomeroy OH .
111

@)

.HEALTH • LIFE • RETIREMENT

700 E.

Open SUn-Silt 7

.

~Nationa,l

gBank .

(740)992-5252

.

@~[J@@Q[]~@

~

Phallllatg

-f

.

-7pm

Silt 9am-3om
Closed Sunil~

Racine
740-949-2210

(740) 992-1536

Syracus~

7 40-992-6333

.

-10pm

(!}
-."'!:,;:

www.foodfalnnk.com

�-·- -- --- --· --

.-.a·

2808 .G old Wings and Ri~. Festival,

n ...,.,J. . s, . .

n

·-·

-

...

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

2008 Gold Wings an~ Ribs Festival

.ay,J. . S,llll

Scenes from the 2007.festiVal

-- - . - -·- --...

&gt;

• Page9

Scenes from ·the 2007 festival ·

I

~

.

At 1 t a: There's always plenty to eat and drink at the
Gold Wings and Ribs Festival. Concessions open at 11
.a.m. both Friday and Saturday.
l.tllt: Entertainment in the riverfront amphitheater on a

At 1 a: INhen it come to things to buy, there's plenty to select
from. Vendors will be on the Pomeroy parldng lot selling all sorts of
mer.ct.andise.

warm summer evening always attracts a crowd. This
picture was taken at ·last year's performance of
Insured Sound.

IN;{ I There's nothing like beautiful bikes to atttact attention.

Join Far111ers Bank
at e2008 G.
WI gs &amp; Ribs
Festival!
.

sto··.; · By
And See -Us

.

.

..

I

(
P

. -u

a

e'.
r nn

'

._

53

r

sa

1

..........

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~

992-5432

.
.

...

'

....

· Cluc.-GutFa

1 •'

.,.,_.. l&amp;tr•r
Mwu •• ( u Jlrtlfl
7

•u s a '"

,.... •riF7

rm
711 sw
ss rs

228 W Main, Potneroy
.

-

. . . , .

&gt;

'

.

~to our

•

DtJring
The Festival! ·

'

.

..

.

"s

It's
\%Are!

�-·- -- --- --· --

.-.a·

2808 .G old Wings and Ri~. Festival,

n ...,.,J. . s, . .

n

·-·

-

...

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

2008 Gold Wings an~ Ribs Festival

.ay,J. . S,llll

Scenes from the 2007.festiVal

-- - . - -·- --...

&gt;

• Page9

Scenes from ·the 2007 festival ·

I

~

.

At 1 t a: There's always plenty to eat and drink at the
Gold Wings and Ribs Festival. Concessions open at 11
.a.m. both Friday and Saturday.
l.tllt: Entertainment in the riverfront amphitheater on a

At 1 a: INhen it come to things to buy, there's plenty to select
from. Vendors will be on the Pomeroy parldng lot selling all sorts of
mer.ct.andise.

warm summer evening always attracts a crowd. This
picture was taken at ·last year's performance of
Insured Sound.

IN;{ I There's nothing like beautiful bikes to atttact attention.

Join Far111ers Bank
at e2008 G.
WI gs &amp; Ribs
Festival!
.

sto··.; · By
And See -Us

.

.

..

I

(
P

. -u

a

e'.
r nn

'

._

53

r

sa

1

..........

,....

~

992-5432

.
.

...

'

....

· Cluc.-GutFa

1 •'

.,.,_.. l&amp;tr•r
Mwu •• ( u Jlrtlfl
7

•u s a '"

,.... •riF7

rm
711 sw
ss rs

228 W Main, Potneroy
.

-

. . . , .

&gt;

'

.

~to our

•

DtJring
The Festival! ·

'

.

..

.

"s

It's
\%Are!

�....

- ---. -

.

- -

- --- .... -

•.-.u ·

2008 Gold Wings and Ribs festival

_. 2008 Gold Wings and Ribs Festival

Pc ...

--

The·Gospel
Bluegna Geademm
wiD perfonn at 2
.P.m. on Saturday at
the Gold Winp and.
Jass Festival. Making
up the group are
from the left, John
Clark' mandolin·' ·
John Dean, fiddle;
Glen Rowe, guitar; ·
Terry Sprulin, bass; ·
Jim Whittington,
banjo, Jeff Dennison,
lead guitar, and
..

kneeling Cole
Spurlin, guitar.

•

See~

Scrap .

(740) 992-3919
f-ade* ••"'"· e.e iM W, let u "- fM '- tf ~·u•e U.

2008

Hours: •••·Fri tG-5 Sat. -1-5

_Gold Wings &amp; Ribs
Festival

,4
...
..._.-.....

o.r,...

CII

I

. •
I

-~
................
tlte

'

·Store

100 W Main St. • Pomeroy, OH

Aet4e

Valley

~

•.!!1-

f
~

-r

~-

Closed Sunday

-1!!-.!!1- - - - • - - - . . • - --1!!.-

Ingels Electronics

11

J~welry &amp; Picture Gallery

J

8t Supply
Co • .

..

t

106 N. 2nd Avenue

i

555 PcutSb eel

1

Middleport, Ohio

:

1 :: J

l.~ -Iii---~'!2~!!2_:;~;.~ -lii-.a- __,
- ..... ...... .

.

.......... .

..

... . . . . .

. .......

~

.......... .

�....

- ---. -

.

- -

- --- .... -

•.-.u ·

2008 Gold Wings and Ribs festival

_. 2008 Gold Wings and Ribs Festival

Pc ...

--

The·Gospel
Bluegna Geademm
wiD perfonn at 2
.P.m. on Saturday at
the Gold Winp and.
Jass Festival. Making
up the group are
from the left, John
Clark' mandolin·' ·
John Dean, fiddle;
Glen Rowe, guitar; ·
Terry Sprulin, bass; ·
Jim Whittington,
banjo, Jeff Dennison,
lead guitar, and
..

kneeling Cole
Spurlin, guitar.

•

See~

Scrap .

(740) 992-3919
f-ade* ••"'"· e.e iM W, let u "- fM '- tf ~·u•e U.

2008

Hours: •••·Fri tG-5 Sat. -1-5

_Gold Wings &amp; Ribs
Festival

,4
...
..._.-.....

o.r,...

CII

I

. •
I

-~
................
tlte

'

·Store

100 W Main St. • Pomeroy, OH

Aet4e

Valley

~

•.!!1-

f
~

-r

~-

Closed Sunday

-1!!-.!!1- - - - • - - - . . • - --1!!.-

Ingels Electronics

11

J~welry &amp; Picture Gallery

J

8t Supply
Co • .

..

t

106 N. 2nd Avenue

i

555 PcutSb eel

1

Middleport, Ohio

:

1 :: J

l.~ -Iii---~'!2~!!2_:;~;.~ -lii-.a- __,
- ..... ...... .

.

.......... .

..

... . . . . .

. .......

~

.......... .

�~ -Gold WiDgs and
.

I

Ribs Festi~al ·

2008 Gold Wings -and Ribs Festival

.

to~rfonn

.

Shawna Corder and the

·Corder-Roys to perfot-.n

Min is .a five-member band feaRocky Leonhart is the bassist,
turing music for .all ages. The group adding aead and backup vocals. He

. I

•

I

'

I

"WeD knOwn for her bright personality and exceptional s_inging
style,. Shawna Corder wows audi·ences at venues throughout Ohio, ·
West Virginia, Indiana, and
florida," says LB. Wbyde of the •
Advoade.
·
New Colony Records artist
Shawna Corder .has been the opening a~t for national headliners
including Brad Paisley, Trick Pony,
Josh Gracin , Andy Griggs, Blue
County, Sawyer Brown, David Lee
Murphy, Lee Roy Parnell, John
Berry, Sammy Kershaw, Exile,
Kevin Sharp, Styx , Pinmonkey,
· Michael Mason and Bonepony. ·
Shawna Corder and her band. the
Corder-Roy will peJ;fonn at 7:30
p.m. on Saturrlay during the Gold
Wings &amp; Ribs Festival.
Shawna's song, "Call" was voted
a hit on WCLT T-lOO's "Hit or '
Miss" contest, and the song will be
· included on her new CQ.
Shawna recently won the
America's Largest Country Music
Talent Search, Colgate Country
Showdown's West Vlfginia State
Title in Parkersburg, W.Va. She
also does voice overs, jingles, and
radio and television commercials.

·will perlorm at 4:i5 p.m . on is the ~p's sound· and lighting
Saturday at the Gold Wings &amp; Ribs . technician, too. lie has entertained
Festival in Pomeroy.
crow.ds not only in the mid.Qbio
The band was featured on the Valley, but across the United ..-"·-=
main stage of the 2005 Marietta States, wotting with a variecy of
Stemwheel Festival, opening for show grruq&gt;s.
_ ·
ooger Unger is the .drummer
Rick K and the AD Nighters, and
was cliosen to open the new patio at and business manager. He was
the Blennerbassett Hotel ip over 2.5 years .experience entertainParkersburg, W.VJt. during the . ing people in the region and in
city's 2005 Hemeooming.
Myrtle Beach, S!C. He has shared
Casey Powell ,fronts the · group his talents with some of the top ·
with dynamic lead v.ocals and high- bands in the area, and is a valuable
energy perfmmance. She is a born addition to MJXX.
entertainer, and made the finals on
Otadie Read.has .played in bands .
the 2002 American Idol. show.
.,m Australia .and tbe U.S., touring
Peggy Read provides lead and enensive1y .across the midwest.
backup vocals and ,p ercussion... Oqe -of the Mid-Ohio Valley"s preBorn into a musical family~ she mier guitar instructors, he .attiO ·
1
hwas pe.rformed in rock, oowitry sings lead ;and ~ vocals.
Mike 'Schmidt :is the group'·s
and show bands for a large part ef
her life. Her sou1ful vocals and ngbt-!hand man.· doing most wciik
dynamic . harmonies contriQute . tcbind :the &lt;Scenes before and .after 1111 .......,..,.
greatly to .the Mixx sound.
tach Show.

.......
Asinger with a 'country twang'
Nikti W.ard. who works with the of Kentucky."
"UJri""'C Elvis Tribute Show doing

aoross Central Ohio

will be
performing at 7 p.m. Saturday night
at the Gold Wmgs and Ribs Festival.
She has .been entertaining since
the fifth grade when she won the
Starlight Entertainment Award
with her rendition of "Blue Moon

shows

Sbe is &lt;lescribed as the "little lady
with a counby twang" who was runner-up in the All Ohio Talent
Showcase in Marysville. That was
the event which put her on tbe road
for performances all over Ohio. This
summer she will be trying out for the
First American Idol contest.

•

ads.
423W.

,. BROGAN-WARNER INSURANCE SERVICES

740-992-5600
..." . . . . .. . . . . .. ..... .. .
.

.... . .. ........ .
~

~ e a.to • Ho•• •

-~JCIIes

F.i• • B••l•••i •8oata

•C•••••rc•l •Ba•lllal C••~
~~
......... ..
~·

. .....

. . ..... .
~

•

• I

'

214 E. "r'n S1111t
Pomrroy. Ohio 45/18

.

Meigs County's
Only Liquor
Agency
1 Mil Sbeet • IIi dleport. OH

74G-992-G008
.................... N6f . . .

.....,a...

�~ -Gold WiDgs and
.

I

Ribs Festi~al ·

2008 Gold Wings -and Ribs Festival

.

to~rfonn

.

Shawna Corder and the

·Corder-Roys to perfot-.n

Min is .a five-member band feaRocky Leonhart is the bassist,
turing music for .all ages. The group adding aead and backup vocals. He

. I

•

I

'

I

"WeD knOwn for her bright personality and exceptional s_inging
style,. Shawna Corder wows audi·ences at venues throughout Ohio, ·
West Virginia, Indiana, and
florida," says LB. Wbyde of the •
Advoade.
·
New Colony Records artist
Shawna Corder .has been the opening a~t for national headliners
including Brad Paisley, Trick Pony,
Josh Gracin , Andy Griggs, Blue
County, Sawyer Brown, David Lee
Murphy, Lee Roy Parnell, John
Berry, Sammy Kershaw, Exile,
Kevin Sharp, Styx , Pinmonkey,
· Michael Mason and Bonepony. ·
Shawna Corder and her band. the
Corder-Roy will peJ;fonn at 7:30
p.m. on Saturrlay during the Gold
Wings &amp; Ribs Festival.
Shawna's song, "Call" was voted
a hit on WCLT T-lOO's "Hit or '
Miss" contest, and the song will be
· included on her new CQ.
Shawna recently won the
America's Largest Country Music
Talent Search, Colgate Country
Showdown's West Vlfginia State
Title in Parkersburg, W.Va. She
also does voice overs, jingles, and
radio and television commercials.

·will perlorm at 4:i5 p.m . on is the ~p's sound· and lighting
Saturday at the Gold Wings &amp; Ribs . technician, too. lie has entertained
Festival in Pomeroy.
crow.ds not only in the mid.Qbio
The band was featured on the Valley, but across the United ..-"·-=
main stage of the 2005 Marietta States, wotting with a variecy of
Stemwheel Festival, opening for show grruq&gt;s.
_ ·
ooger Unger is the .drummer
Rick K and the AD Nighters, and
was cliosen to open the new patio at and business manager. He was
the Blennerbassett Hotel ip over 2.5 years .experience entertainParkersburg, W.VJt. during the . ing people in the region and in
city's 2005 Hemeooming.
Myrtle Beach, S!C. He has shared
Casey Powell ,fronts the · group his talents with some of the top ·
with dynamic lead v.ocals and high- bands in the area, and is a valuable
energy perfmmance. She is a born addition to MJXX.
entertainer, and made the finals on
Otadie Read.has .played in bands .
the 2002 American Idol. show.
.,m Australia .and tbe U.S., touring
Peggy Read provides lead and enensive1y .across the midwest.
backup vocals and ,p ercussion... Oqe -of the Mid-Ohio Valley"s preBorn into a musical family~ she mier guitar instructors, he .attiO ·
1
hwas pe.rformed in rock, oowitry sings lead ;and ~ vocals.
Mike 'Schmidt :is the group'·s
and show bands for a large part ef
her life. Her sou1ful vocals and ngbt-!hand man.· doing most wciik
dynamic . harmonies contriQute . tcbind :the &lt;Scenes before and .after 1111 .......,..,.
greatly to .the Mixx sound.
tach Show.

.......
Asinger with a 'country twang'
Nikti W.ard. who works with the of Kentucky."
"UJri""'C Elvis Tribute Show doing

aoross Central Ohio

will be
performing at 7 p.m. Saturday night
at the Gold Wmgs and Ribs Festival.
She has .been entertaining since
the fifth grade when she won the
Starlight Entertainment Award
with her rendition of "Blue Moon

shows

Sbe is &lt;lescribed as the "little lady
with a counby twang" who was runner-up in the All Ohio Talent
Showcase in Marysville. That was
the event which put her on tbe road
for performances all over Ohio. This
summer she will be trying out for the
First American Idol contest.

•

ads.
423W.

,. BROGAN-WARNER INSURANCE SERVICES

740-992-5600
..." . . . . .. . . . . .. ..... .. .
.

.... . .. ........ .
~

~ e a.to • Ho•• •

-~JCIIes

F.i• • B••l•••i •8oata

•C•••••rc•l •Ba•lllal C••~
~~
......... ..
~·

. .....

. . ..... .
~

•

• I

'

214 E. "r'n S1111t
Pomrroy. Ohio 45/18

.

Meigs County's
Only Liquor
Agency
1 Mil Sbeet • IIi dleport. OH

74G-992-G008
.................... N6f . . .

.....,a...

�··-

2008 Gold Wings and Ribs .Festival

P-.14•

Festival Fun along the
Meias C,.,q is lw-for
its, Ill _,....._,.1~·3 ., 111111

,..,_,.willlle•emy·..
Tire seat~~~ lids off lllis
weuiiiL

GoldWinp&amp;
Ribs Festival
June6-7

I

I

I
r

t

The Gold Wmgs &amp; Ribs
Festi:va gets undetway Friday
with an impressive lineup of
entett,ainers, a variety of con. tests , rhe selection of die producers of Ohio's Best Ribs,
ooat races, a guided motoocycle tour, and a· li§h.t parnde
from Pomeroy !lo Racine ad
back.

Day
July4

'
I

Days.

C.11_1lw Fair -

July 18-11)

Aug.ll-16

Fol'dlosewhoenjoytakinga
*P blck-in history, the small
tow&amp; of Olesta' otfc6 a day
of liwino
hi«,_,.
·m ...__
_ L - . . t --.
.._,
-:3
of Olfio''S · olde~t wanding

The Meii.- Co
Fair
migbt well~ llhe -=ia1 ev.
of the i;ummer for tis :a_·on·-~

-

10(;

.._,...

and

'JI

cultural community. -.-ea·
an
onBRmmit~ to · 'S ·0 wcase

. .hils

..t Ar1s Feslinl
Aug.22-23
·

IOOII31bou
- ' rr:1
Fm dlose who 1ove the blues
se.
good about eoun- . .antf~&lt;v,e .atts., dtis oevent is
Days is a biDe · et(erydling
try tivm.a.
· &lt;llesra--:-Siude
,.._
•
:..••&amp;-.: ~
e
heComiJla
a bot ticket. Held at
~ expenrooe iiiWUCUIIlC ....,........
The fair iis open to e "hits
:c
oostillmes, .a-OWl W&amp;: baJl, five from IL-•1. 1..ft•~ &amp;~:- ·,.._...,.1..-- . ll:he Sheets F.amn near
umsic., and die ohio 1fanoonica
IUI.!.Iw .11li&amp;I.IB/I_. )IAI.l ~!:Jab
Hamswwitte, die Footbills
Pita
. ~uts, 4-11 .and~ Drg.ani- Bbles and Am;· Festiw.al feayen; cllam.pionship.
zamttns. as well as talented
·
ti,Ires musicians oo two stages
Big
Blues Bade .adult g~, talented craft-s- and displays and -demonstra-

tions tmm tocitl .artians. .
July 25-26
unique lbis is a free cu1tw:af event
Roct.mgs F.airgmunds, ilhe spon5@r.ed lby the Foothills
One of ilhe hottest musicat .Meigs Colillicy Fair includes a Music F~undation., designed
ev.ents of die SJIID!Il¢Jr, die Big demofi~ oomy, !live ;music \tQ tpresetw.e Appalachian teaBend BI.Ja ~ preseilts great evew mgbt, · d a midway . .ditions.
blues :and jazz widl _the Ohio.· fjE!!!!I!!!!!!II!!II!!I!I~--------ii!BI!!!I!!!!!e:;1
Riv« and Pomeroy" Ri;vafrunt

Amplritbeater as a backdrop. .·
The weekendrieketed
· Three Meigs County oomm••- Blues BaSh begins • a :series
oities host July 4 festivities - of free '"Rhydun on die River"'
Middleport, Racine, and oonoetts in June.
Rutland. Each ~leb.r.ation The Pomeroy Blues and Jazz
iocludes an Independence O.ay 'Society spoosors die atJ.Xleit
par.ide and ftreworks.
series., with die first~ on
Live mu.sic, oonoessioos and June 27. ihe · Blues Bash is
odler activities also make these scheduled for July 25-21, v.( tb
mid-SJ•mmer celebrations fun .acts on two tages
Che
for dJe whole f.amily.
Pomeroy riwdiOnt. .

people and bakers.
Held
at
1!he

110E.

.740-992-5853
.
Sbeet ·

Poaae...,OH

�··-

2008 Gold Wings and Ribs .Festival

P-.14•

Festival Fun along the
Meias C,.,q is lw-for
its, Ill _,....._,.1~·3 ., 111111

,..,_,.willlle•emy·..
Tire seat~~~ lids off lllis
weuiiiL

GoldWinp&amp;
Ribs Festival
June6-7

I

I

I
r

t

The Gold Wmgs &amp; Ribs
Festi:va gets undetway Friday
with an impressive lineup of
entett,ainers, a variety of con. tests , rhe selection of die producers of Ohio's Best Ribs,
ooat races, a guided motoocycle tour, and a· li§h.t parnde
from Pomeroy !lo Racine ad
back.

Day
July4

'
I

Days.

C.11_1lw Fair -

July 18-11)

Aug.ll-16

Fol'dlosewhoenjoytakinga
*P blck-in history, the small
tow&amp; of Olesta' otfc6 a day
of liwino
hi«,_,.
·m ...__
_ L - . . t --.
.._,
-:3
of Olfio''S · olde~t wanding

The Meii.- Co
Fair
migbt well~ llhe -=ia1 ev.
of the i;ummer for tis :a_·on·-~

-

10(;

.._,...

and

'JI

cultural community. -.-ea·
an
onBRmmit~ to · 'S ·0 wcase

. .hils

..t Ar1s Feslinl
Aug.22-23
·

IOOII31bou
- ' rr:1
Fm dlose who 1ove the blues
se.
good about eoun- . .antf~&lt;v,e .atts., dtis oevent is
Days is a biDe · et(erydling
try tivm.a.
· &lt;llesra--:-Siude
,.._
•
:..••&amp;-.: ~
e
heComiJla
a bot ticket. Held at
~ expenrooe iiiWUCUIIlC ....,........
The fair iis open to e "hits
:c
oostillmes, .a-OWl W&amp;: baJl, five from IL-•1. 1..ft•~ &amp;~:- ·,.._...,.1..-- . ll:he Sheets F.amn near
umsic., and die ohio 1fanoonica
IUI.!.Iw .11li&amp;I.IB/I_. )IAI.l ~!:Jab
Hamswwitte, die Footbills
Pita
. ~uts, 4-11 .and~ Drg.ani- Bbles and Am;· Festiw.al feayen; cllam.pionship.
zamttns. as well as talented
·
ti,Ires musicians oo two stages
Big
Blues Bade .adult g~, talented craft-s- and displays and -demonstra-

tions tmm tocitl .artians. .
July 25-26
unique lbis is a free cu1tw:af event
Roct.mgs F.airgmunds, ilhe spon5@r.ed lby the Foothills
One of ilhe hottest musicat .Meigs Colillicy Fair includes a Music F~undation., designed
ev.ents of die SJIID!Il¢Jr, die Big demofi~ oomy, !live ;music \tQ tpresetw.e Appalachian teaBend BI.Ja ~ preseilts great evew mgbt, · d a midway . .ditions.
blues :and jazz widl _the Ohio.· fjE!!!!I!!!!!!II!!II!!I!I~--------ii!BI!!!I!!!!!e:;1
Riv« and Pomeroy" Ri;vafrunt

Amplritbeater as a backdrop. .·
The weekendrieketed
· Three Meigs County oomm••- Blues BaSh begins • a :series
oities host July 4 festivities - of free '"Rhydun on die River"'
Middleport, Racine, and oonoetts in June.
Rutland. Each ~leb.r.ation The Pomeroy Blues and Jazz
iocludes an Independence O.ay 'Society spoosors die atJ.Xleit
par.ide and ftreworks.
series., with die first~ on
Live mu.sic, oonoessioos and June 27. ihe · Blues Bash is
odler activities also make these scheduled for July 25-21, v.( tb
mid-SJ•mmer celebrations fun .acts on two tages
Che
for dJe whole f.amily.
Pomeroy riwdiOnt. .

people and bakers.
Held
at
1!he

110E.

.740-992-5853
.
Sbeet ·

Poaae...,OH

�Corporate
sponsor, A:J.

Booth Brothel'S
to perfonn in
Point Pleasant~ As ·

•

•
-~ Phillies shut out Reds.

··:Sel:l'llgleBl.
.

•,

Bv BRIAN J. REED .
liREEDOMYDAILYSENT!NELCOM

POMEROY
Four
Meigs County communities
and a non-profit agency 'will
receive funding for projects
through the Community
Development Block Grant
formula program.·
Meeting Thursday, Meigs
County
Commissioners
approved funds through the
program, which provides
federal funding for community ~jects. The funds :ire
adtn1nistered. through the
Ohio
Department
of

Development.
.
Syracuse for water improveCommissioners received ments: Village of RaCUle for
$124,000
through the fire equipment; and the
CDBG program for 2008. Rutland Volunteer Fire
$24,000 was allocated for Department for consbllction
fair housing activity and of a new fire facility.
program · administration.
Commissioner Jim Sheets
Commissioners approved said the funding awarded
$20,000 in funding for each for Syracuse Village is part
of five eligible projects.
of a local match required for
Funding was awarded to the village's Community
the. Meigs County Council Distress grant application
on Aging for a meal delivery through the CDBG · provehicle: Scipio Township gram, which would provide
Trustees for turnout gear up to $500,000 for a comand other ftre equipment for ll}Unity-wide improvement
the township fire depart- program:
This year's CDBG formument; the Village of

Ia allocation is similar to
that of last year, after several ·years of decreased fundin~ from the state, Sheets
satd. Last year, commissioners allocate'd $104,0W
to local projects, including
ball field repairs in communities and repairs to the
Chester Academy building.
While
commissioners
awarded funding yesterday,
the communities will not
likely receive actual funding
until November, Sheets said.
ln other business, commissioners:
• Approved release of

mortgages issued through
the Community Housing
Improvement Program to
Lisa Lewis, Pomeroy,
Josephine
Hill.
Long
Bottom, Vicki Hanson,
Pomeroy,
and
Arleeq
Lawhorn, Pomeroy.
• Approved resolutions
and contracts for the
Department of Job and
Family Services.
• Recessed until Friday
for the payment of bills.
Present
were
Commissioners Sheets and
· Mick Davenport and Clerk
Gloria Kloes.

Investigation
still open in
fatal fire ·
Bv BEnt SERGENT
BseR&lt;lEHTOMI'OAJLYSENTlNELCOM

•

::PngeA3

:.• "-Y K. Holter; 84
:.• "-Y lee, 86
: • Claresli:le Matheny, 85
:~ Clilfold Snyder, 86
::0. Clarence Wdl, 80
•

Page 16•

JNsmE

Festival

Thursday, Juae 5, 2008'
. ...

. _ , , . , . . . _ . o.;l,• ..... ••

....

.~

..

~

. • PHS Aluinni . · ...

... ..

: ·~~
awarded. See .,. A1
I 0 4-H Otb oontib.rtes
.
.
· ~fire depaitne tl

s.r.Al

.

. ~

·WEATHEil

INDEX
,

:&amp; SllcnoNs

- a6 PAlli!S

Annie•s Mailbox

Calendars
)

A8
8 6

Classifieds
Comics

.

A8 ·

.._ ~ •
O¥t

A[,-7

A3

•

on yot•r ··.--•nd, w~ have one..-.
•

•

'

-

'

·o fyotJr

"

., .......

' '
'" .

'

.

~

..

..

'

•

•

'

'

..

POMEROY -

Nearly

8

without . electricity late
Wednesday and early
Th.u rsday due to storms
that moved in and out of

the area.

Legislation snuffs out tobacco prevention programs
Bv

BETH SERGENT
BSERGENTIIMYOAILVSENTINEL.COM

POMEROY
- The
Holzer Tobacco Prevention
were repotted to be without Program, which has a
electrical service. At II p.m., branch in Meigs County,
the number of customers will cease to exist on June
affected was at 1,905. 30 after HB 544 was signed
Repairs began overnight, into law by Gov. Ted
and only eight were out of Strickland, abolishing the
Ohio Tobacco Prevention
service bY 7 a.IJL yesterday.
Rennie said another out- Foundation immediately.
Todd Tucker, coordinator
age yesterday left approxifor
the Holzer Tobacco
mately 43 customers in the
Pomeroy service area with- Prevention Program which
out electricity. Their service services Mei~s , Gallia,
was restored Thursday Jackson Counties said the
OTPF is where the ·proafternoon.
Rennie said the outages gr.un receives its funding
were primarily the result of and in fact was slated to
trees from outside the AEP receive nearly $500,000
this year to maintain preright of way falling into
vention services.
power lines due to the
According to Strickland's
strong winds accompanying office , the governor signed
'
the bill to move Ohio tobac-

. Wednesday night, Rennie
said, When 62 CUStOmerS

.....,_,. .,.u

Home National Bank
Goes 4 for4
Special ·CD Rates
4% for 4 Years*

PLEASANT VALLEY -H OSPITAL
-

ne r--~ f

Bv BRIAN J. REED
BREEDOMYDAILVSENTiNELCOM ·

Jeff Rennie, corporate
spokesman for AFP, said
fell onto pow.er lines
A3 ~
due to heavy winds 'a nd
Section rain, causing serviee inter~ons duoughout ~e
A2 company's
Pomeroy servibe
ara. Rennie said electricity
wa restoml to the final
cus&amp;omer at approximately
2 p.m. 'Ibur&amp;day.
The first outage was
, . re,ported at 10 p.m.

B8

•

AEP reports.widespread
outages after stonns ·

52,000 American Electric
87 Power customers · were

rmtorials .
~aith • Values

•

LONG BOTIOM -The
investigation into a fatal
house ftre which killed a
Long Bottom woman on
Thesday morning remains
open . and
unfinished,
according to the office of
the Ohio Ftre Marshal.
Yesterday, .
Shane
Cartmill, spokesperson for
the office of the Ohio Fire
Marsbal, ·said interviews
. fue
concerning the
were still bein¥ contduc:ted- t'
and would conunue today.
On Thesday, Cartmill said
that in light of new information his office received,
additional interviews would
be conducted in an effort to
determine if the fire was
accidental 01: suspicious in
nature. At this time the
cause of the fire rel;IIains
undetennined. ·
Cartmill added preliminary autopsy results from the
victim, Mary Kay Holter, 84,
Long Bottom, may arrive at
his office today or possibly
Monday, though there were
no guarantees. He explained
sometimes this process
,
,
BMh Sergentlphoto
could take as long as. six to Yestet:day evening the Pomeroy Pari&lt;ing Lot was busy wilh volunteers setting !JP for this weekend's Gold Wings and Ribs
10 weeks to complete a.thor- Festival. Despite the high water, the festival will go on and begins today. Concessions open at 11 a.m., at 4:30 p.m.
ough investigation.
Howard Writesel and his band performs; 5:30p.m., Simba Jordan, country singer perfi:l1111s; 6:30p.m. "BBO Hog Callin'"
contest; 7:30 p.m., Insured Sound perfo1111s. The festival concludes Saturday niQht
·
......... FIN.AJ

.

.

'

• '1·"1&gt;-"".•:• ._ .. .

co prevention efforts to the ' and cessation programs.
Ohio Department of Health.
In an email, Tucker told
The bill immediately abol- supporters and members of
ishes the OTPF. and autho- local tobacco prevention
Ohio
Treasurer coalitions he regretted the
rizes
Richard Cordray to liqui- situation but was grateful to
date the Foundation' s $270 all who supported _the proI;Dillion in remaining funds. gram in various ways.
Tile statement went on to ·
HB 544 allows $230 million
from Ohio's tobacco master say: "Please continue to fight
settlement agreement to the use of this most deadly
help support the $1.57 bil- . product; remember, tobacco
li.on bipartisan economic use kills more people each
stimulus packaj!e. The year than AIDS, alcohol
remaining $40 million will abuse, drug use, frres, murbe distributed to · the ders, and suicides combined.
Tobacco Use Prevention As healthcare pro.viders, we
Fund, which will be admin- . can no longer ignore this fact
istered
by
the Ohio ifwe are truly on a mission to
Department of Health.
'encomage wellness and
ODH recently notified strive to improve the health ·
clients, such as Holzer status of the people and comTobacco Prevention, the munities we serve.' If there
department will not be able are any changes during the
to fulfill the contracts coming month, we will let
entered into by the OTPF to
Poop
AI
provide tobacco prevention 1'1 Mt -

Racine 740-949-2210
Syracuse·740-992-6333

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