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•.
7

. . ., liaH-itatflltl

·•

· Pag~

- ~ GAttiiENING ~

Eacaward

•

sptce up
GARDENING: ·
garden, Creating your own Eden
a theme BY
DEAN foellQc

f()R ll1E ASSOCIATED PRESS

BY DEAN fosolcK

:

'~'·
. '

Micldleport .• Pomeroy, Obio

are

.aro

School
derno6tion
delayed until late this week
a·n

• Woods oonlf!lbad(
·.. ba!!S pa.ydt.

BY

MIDDLEPORT
Demolition of the abandoned and. unsafe Park
Street School has bee~
delayed on two fronts. bul
..-W!Irpnrt Mayor .Micbael
Gcrladt experts lbe build~to a1111e down sometime
this wedt.
.
Vtllage O.mcil approved

. Rev. Marsh Hudson-Knapp feeds goldfish in the waier feature in the bible galden in
of the First Congtegational 01un:l1 in Fair Haven, vt., Thursday, June 5. Aoootding to
Hudson-Knapp people who 11f0W gardens grow in faith, which accounts in 1a1ve part
lhe Bille garden he helped "'e'!lillhad adjacent to his chun::h a quarter-Q!Oiuly ago.

, •,.,,. . r •..,. ."'"'"

~

Administrator
Famon Roberts to hire a
firm to fill the well and cap
it off. 1be weU is a small
one, believed to ha'l'e been
left from the days the buildillg served t!bc Ridi Valley
Dairy. It must be filled with
a special chemical foam
material, which .e:x,pands
and becomes inpenet:rable
~ it is in inside the well.. ·
Gerl~ch said both the

electrical wire removal and
the \veil abandonment are
expected to be COD~P.leted
"SOlin," .a nd the bwlding
~hould come down later this
week. He told council last
month the demolition was a
priority for the' villa'-e
because of a slluctural failure in one comer that threatens the wboie building:s
integrity.
'
The building has been

·-..;..

used, for !ong-teilll storage
of village equipment, but is
now considered ~rnsafe for
occupancy.. Even sGrne
wooden structures left over
from the old miniature golf
COUrse in Genet:al Hartinger
Park and other items will be'
left there because village
workers cannot remove
them without endangering

"r-MeN.,aiLAS

NEWSOMYDAILYSENTINEL.COM
'

..

_

INSIDE

Hi11l•p 3 •
,.~&amp;micy docb;ale.
t

I ~·. .

,'$et . . A3 .
'; .Student.science lair

I

. fnZ1da.·1* .-. .U
• Jl1e !fer pooncil holds

STAFf' Ra IHIT
.NEWSOMYIWLYSENT!N!'L.COM

ms .Wij). See . . 43

RE£1)SVIIJ.E C«y
Shaffer was ROCndy selected to be a founding member
of
The
Ohio
State
University's
t · BEAM

• WIC WI* and Cnift

Fal' ......., Set .
Set . . AS
• IOiiliooallca! fmds
a.. ar Uflkl busi ess as.

Society.
1be I BEAM Society is
an 88 member student
or~arliz.ation whose purpose is to repreSent tbe
•mpact each county in Ohio
has on The Ohio State
University.
student
from each .county w.as dinsen through a selective

See . . AS
• PHSdassc e'abla1es
· 5011~.
SeePa,eAS

One

• Hundreds Oldel9d
mt1ee hon es in Iowa.

,,._

~,.A6

C'~

•
.~.nnng

Far
whop

Signs ide~&lt;~lif)'1he planls in the bible garden next to the First Congregational Church m
Haven, Vt., Thursday, ~ s. Aocotding to Rev. Marsh H~ people
gardens grow in .faith, which aooounts in lafve part for the Bible garden he helped est&amp;
1ished adjaoenl to bis church a quar.ter-Q!fllury ago.
~

tobacco

'

application process in Older
The Ohio Union, the stuto find students who UUiy dent Union on Ohio State's
embody the spirit of their campus, is currently be~
borne county. Shaffer was reconstructed and w.i11 be
in · 2010.
chosen and will serve as .t he completed
student representative from Members ·Of the I .BEAM
·
Meigs County.
society will continue to play
Members of the I BEAM a role in the de¥elopment of
Society . will show their the Ohio Union.
Cory is from Reedsville
oounty ptide by
as a
n:presen~tive at ·. · erent and gnduated from Eastern
Ohio State events. Recently, High School. He is a student
members of the I BEAM at Ohio State llllljmng in preSociety signed the tinal arcbiteclllre. He is .a member
beam that was placed on the of inb:anlural basketball. For
oew Ohio Union .on May 9, . rnore infoonation .about the I
society
v1s1t
2008, securing their place in BEAM
history.
.
http://obiounion.osu.edu.

sed:cf.

Part .of Patrol history

'

progressing:
near bridge:

Solution offered
but rwt taken, so far

.

8'1' BETH SERGENT

BY aen. Smcrorr

BSERClENTCMYDAILYSENTINEL.coM

8SEflllEM"OUYDAlLY81!N1'1NEJ...OOM

O.W.onPagii.U .

INDEX
·,

June is National Weight Loss Month!

:a StlcnoNB- 12 p~
Annie's Mailbox
A3
.

Call

~·

Calendars

A3

Classifieds

83-4

Comics
Editorials

A4

Movies

As

Sports

Bsection

Weather

Bs

A3

.c...,.-v.-.,r ·no c..

4

COUiM.Bus- Although
what. some coosider a .solution tv the ONJSBiion of toblc- ,
co pn:vallioD ....-fund..... 1Jccn .....c:d by the
Amaican
'
Le
.
fV'p
110 far die ~ '
Dqw1ment .o{ Healdl basn't
~to lhatolfet. .

•no.

H recelltly DOtif:WI ,

organizations that ba4 been ·
receiving funds froln the 1
now defunct Ohio Tobacco
Prevention Foundation that
their funding would cease
on June 30. H\)l.zer
Tobacco Prevention was
one of the local ~grams
affected and wtll cease
operations at the end of the
mooth unless alternate
funding is secured.
The ALF intervened iB
the court case between the
OTPF and the state in

.fief•• ... PIPINalllt...dills.. AI

-

NEW HAVEN, W.Va. One man is in the hospital
.and another.in jail following
. what Mason County authorities say was an .argument at
a Broad Run Road residence
early Sunday that resulted in
one man being shot. The victim, identified by
WOWK-TV as Shawn
Rlillips of New Haven, was
taken to the hospital following the alleged incident,
.although the name of the hospital and· his condition was
oot known as of late Sunday.
firank1in K. Richards, whom
the 1V station sailil was 1ium
Poo:Je'roy, was taken ,inlo custodY as the alleged shooter.
Details on .the incident were
sketchy, although WSAZ.r1V
reported on its website that
the alleged shooting arose
from an argument at the resi"
dence shortly after midnight
Richards bas reponedly been
charged by Mason County
sheriff's deputies with
attempted murder and wanton
endangerment and is in the
Western Regional Jail at
BarlJoursville.
WSAZ reported that
Phillips was shot two or
three times.
The incident is the second
in a week in Mason County
involving gun violence.
West Virginia State Police
and Mason County authorities are still investigating the
shooting death of Christopher
Ray Roush, 29, at his Clifton
residence on June 7. The suspect in the slaying, who burst
mto the residence and shot
Roush, fled from the scene:
either south toward Point:
Pleasant or crossed into Ohio;
authorities said.

Road work ~

pftvention
funds

Where are yQu on your
weight.loss jot1rney?

Let us help you 9M back on track!
4 46.5825 or 877.527.4957

Vtllage

incident
• •
mJuresl

'

'

the demolition a week ago.
The building is coosidered
"enn:mcly unsafe," but
American Electric Power
baS been delayed in remov. .
lines from the
lllg ·~
f
.
propeat)',l( because .o bad~
~eallcr ·pow«~ last
week; and a well discovered
during preparanon for the
demolillon Dlllst be abandoned and secured.
Coimcil also authorized

Shooting·

t .h r o u

.

J. REED

8REEDO~ILYSENliNE'LCOM

See ~"~FBI

those are

.

. hips, A2

•

or-apricot, good-versusevil debate stemming from
Genesis (2:16-3:19).
"lt's bee.n a hotly contested issue bul I'm oot a historical botanist, so we
decided to please both faclions. We had an apricot tree
growmg iB our garden for a
long time but after it wiBterk:iUed, we replaoed it with
an apple: (tree).~
Climate willing. there
sooies of biblical plants gardeoers can dloose for their
yards - Ol'llalllelltal, medicinal and ~- Among

People who grow gardens grow in faith, accordGardens can do more than ing to th~ Rev. Marsh
""'food on the table or ere- Hudson-Knapp,
which
raccounts in large part for
ate curl! appeal. For some, the Bible garden he helped
lbey're a reflection of val- established adjacent to his
ues.
church a quarter'-Century
,An avid reader? That ago.
~ mean waxiJlg poetic
"A lot of people's spiri4 a Sbakespeare garden, tuality is rooted in nature,"
would ilivolve land- said Hudson-Knapp, passeipmg with all the plants tor
of
The
First
mentioned in his plays and Congregational Church of
soanets. Going through a Fair Haven, Vt. "There's
bbJe period? If Picasso always been a deep (bibli- them:
could stick with one color. cal) connection with gar• Grapevines (Vitis
so can yoilr garden. (Or try dening. With each new vinifera). No plant is
blpoms in only riotous red.) season, life is bursting refen:ed to more frequently
. Here are some other sug- forth again."
in the Bible than the grape
~ons for themes that can
A Bible garden is not a along with many of its
~fashioned into gardens:
theme · recollliJieoded for
the
casual
hobbyist: products (wine, raisins,
:. Colonial: Model your
·
) F'
. CultivatiBg every . flo
.
.
wer, syrups and vmegar
. igs
....r.~.a after the restored
'~"
· and ·srapes
"
..-shrub, food crop or fruit
o ften were
Moravian designs iB Old mentioned
tn . the mentioned
together,
Salem, Mass-., by dividing a Scriptures is a dau.nting Musselman said, because
small' patdt of ground into objective, especially if their fruit ripened about
squares separated
by
· to be euct- •'-·
·
tedwalk"th you •re trym_g
...., .same Ume.
and
1
)IV.Ilys
mter..p an
wt
ing about plant choice.
• Date palms (Phoenix
ve,getables, herbs, fruits and More than 120 plants have daclylifeo) were valued for
flowers.
Or look to be~:n mentioned in the their ,,;.,.rv fn!it as .well as
Monlisello,
near · Bi6le, ilthougti thittOtiil is the ~bility of their
Cbarlottesville, Va., where open to interpretation.
leaves, which wet:e used for
'nlomas Jefferson, one of · How do you de•·
..,rmloe, making basJtrts. rope
' s, rugs
1)te more horticulUiral presi- for example, exactly wbal __ _.
~
dents, grow more than 350 kind of "burning bush" W!l5 """'I'OOJS.
wrieties of fruits and veg- cited in the story of Moses
• Dill (ADethum grave~s iB his mountaintop (Exodus: Chapter 3; Verse oleos) leaves and seed were
.orohard!; and gardens, rang- 2). Or . what is meant by used for flavoring and
ing from asparagus to such fi uurativc:. imagery as adding variety to othelwise
Javender. tomatoes to table "grain-;;' "trees" or "sweet bland foods. Many herbs
grapes.
smelling plantT'
and spices were considered
"We di:cided not to be all so valuable during the peri• Perfumed: Place this
scented garden near a bed- that precise," Hudson- od that they were used for
room window 6r anywhere Knapp said iB a telepbooe tithing, Musselman said.
you spend a few tranquil interview. "We use substi• Olive cmc · (Olea
:boors outdoors. Go heavy lutes · at times, especially europaea). The . Bible has
on the lavender, lilacs, ber- where we can't duplicate about 25 references to the
l.tage roses, sage and veibe- the $fOWiBg conditions of olive tree and more than
Oa, to cite just a fragrant certaill plants. That means 160 .references to its oil,
few.
.
goinJ wtheith the botanibucal which was used with foods,
' • Tea: Plant an herbal cousiDS;
same genus t for illwninalion, as an oint- ·
species."
and
__ .. &amp;
bre w of p Jan!s ·that can ·be. a different
1bcre arc plants of the . men~ · soap ......or P£!"'
converted into enjoyable Bible and then there arc SCIVII1g leather and oerwn
teas. That includes the flow- plants of the . Bible lands, . ~als. The Quran ~llfions
ers and foliage from basil, said
Lytton
.John olives as a condiment,
peppermint, rose hips, Musselman, Who chairs the Musselman said. ·
®li!I!Ami le~ ..Ja¥eo.der .and Department of B~ical
DeuteroDOtJI)' describes
'lt.moo thyme, among many Sciences at Old Dominion "a land of wheat and bar~:...:ou'c.•
Culti"vate an ~~vcrsity jllld is author of ley, of grapevines. fig tmes
..-.. ...
Figs, Dates, Laurel and and pomegranates; of olive
explosive mix of the old Myrrh: Plants of the Bible oil and boney." Numbers
red, white and blue with and the Quran."
·
.a t t - " as a flag
''Ori inal
. I
f ll :5 refers to .CilCumbcrs,
flo---· n......-·~
. g . trans a!0£5 .o
melons, leeks, onioos and
or made into some kind of the King James vers100 did- garlic. And let us not forget
lively Fourth of July oolor n't have much kaowledge · L - --~.a •-- . thorn
display.
about plants native to the "':' &lt;JJJUJ;U p.llll1t&amp;.
s,
• Roof: Top Q{f a slur\iy Near East so they read into a brien, nettles and bramoutbuilding with a layer of lot of things " he said.
bles.
sod sown 1iberally w,itb
A notable '.example is the
"Eumplcs Of
wildflowers. Or UliC s.uccuc apPle, as in the forbidden ~~y ~ved fpr institulents, cactus and other fruit from the tree of tlODs, · which telld to hav.e
drought resistant plants on .k nowledge in the Garden . more room," . Musselman
the roof of structures wl:lere of Eden, said Musselman, said. "But then, who wants
they can be ffiaiotained and who has made an academ- to plant a bunch of thistles
enjoyed.
ic career of winnowing the iB their backyard! .
~ Alphabet: A good learn- bo~ical from the then1n lddi.tion to eliplaioing
ing tool for the entire fami- logtcal.
the biblical merence. '
ly. Start by• plantiBg some
"App~ were not part of Musselman rewmmend~
alyssum iB a sunny spot and the agnculture fr?m that identifying the plants by
gh era.. It was more likely an """"IIOD and scieDtific
_ .... your w·ay
then Wuu.
. apncot that Adam . banded
.
the letters to zinnias.
Eve if you want to be literal liiiDCS, SIIICC. many of the
• Friendshi,p: Each bloom about it. Apples had 00 nat- plaa~
elt~r . . ~
becomes
a
treasured ur31 role in that part of the Mc:dilcmmean m oogm or
relllinder of the friend or world."
bave become obscure in
relative who gave you the
Hudson-Knapp, whose ~nteliiJI&lt;!rary
cultures.
slip, seed or plant. Label Bible garden has had sev- 'lbat gives people an
and date each plant before eral makeovers, found a opportunity to visualize the
adding it to your perennial convenient way to get species as it's used iB the
garden.
around the ongoing apple- Scriptures."
'f;OAlliE ASSOCIATED PRESS

scho

•

POMEROY
- As
motorists have noticett;
progress is being made ori
both the new West Main
Street and section of Ohicj
833 near the new bridge site
with Ohio Department of
Transponation officials still ·
hopeful they"ll have traffic
on the new Main Street by.
the end of this month.
The new West Main
Street will run under the
new bridge and according to
ODOT's Project Enginner
Carey Betzing. the contrac·
tor has currently been work·
ing on curb and ·gutters to
prepare for pavement on the
new West Main Street and
'
"'""' «..ir#llhclla section of Ohio 833.
Fonner .Meigs County Sheriff and Gallia County Chief Deputy Bob Hartenbactl, at left,
Betzi ng added work
examines one of the motorcycles still used by the State Highway Patrol during an open
began last week on the
hou8e Saturday at the Gallia-Meigs Post. Trooper Andrew Bennett of the Cincinnati
south end of the project near
Molorcyde Unit, oenter, explains features of the motorcycle to Capt. Paul Pride of District
Auto Zone and Save- A-Lot
9 hea~rters in Jackson, and a fonner trooper ,at Gallipolis. The open l)ouse was held
10 calebtate the 75th anniversary of the patrol's creation in Ohio.

...... _.t.t,AJ

..
li

�PageA2

COMMUNU'Y

The Daily Sentine"
l
.

Monday, .June 16, 2008

:Community Calendar

LETART FALLS - Scott
and Janey Brinager of Letart
Falls recently welcomed .the
birth of their ~ son,
T1111othy Reed Brinager on
April 22 at Women and AdkiM of .Sandyville,
Ctilldren's Hospital in W.Va., the late Tim
Charleston,
W.Va.
He Brinager; maternal great
weighed nine. pounds and grandparents are Robert
seven ounces and was 21.5 Chapman pf Syracuse and
inches long. Tunothy joins the .late Bever!y Chapman,
brother Cruz Brinager who Donna Hill of Apple Grove
and the late Dallas Hill;
is three years old.
Maternal grandparen~ are patemal great grandparents
Lori Hill and Roger Sb,arp of are Betty Carpenter .of
Racine, Dean.Hill of Apple Racine and the late James
Grove; paternal grandpar- Carpenter, Cecil and Ruby
ents are Cricket and Frank Brinager of Racine.

Elght'h ....... from Soulhem Local in Wnhlngton, DC

Southern students·visit Washington, DC
!bree

~:b..a~~

from lltr

Southern Local School
District visited Washington,
OC on a class trip. A tour

PageA3
Monday, June t6, 2oo8

'

birth

bus took the students to
view the Capitol, White
Smithsonian
House, ·
Museum. manr mvnuments
and places of interest.
At a recent Southern
Local School Board meet-

BYTHEBEND

The Daily Sentinel

Brinager

. WASHINGTON, DC Before school ended for the
year, 33 eighth graders and

..

: Public meetinp

ly, Friday and Sandra Wise,
Saturday.

Mooday, June 16
LETART FALLS
Letart Township Trustees
~~~· ~ting, 5 p.m.,
. ·.
o , building.
Tuesday, June 17
. RACINE
tnf~rmational . meeting,
·Racme annexation plans, 7 ·
P·":l·•. Racine Municipal
Bwlding.

.- Church events
Mooday, June 16
SYRACUSE - Syracuse
Community
Church,
:second Street, revival
;through June 21 with evan·gelist Nonnan Taylor, 7
:p.m. nightly. Singers, Teresa
:Preston, Monday; Rev.
:James Patterson, Tuesday;
•Joe McCloud, Wednesday;
:sid and Carol Hayman,
;'Thursday; The Roush fami-

ANNIE'S MAILBOX

Clubs aDd
organizations
Monday, June 16
POMEROY - Pomeroy
Order of the Eastern Star
186, 6:30 p.m. at the
~hester hall for potluck:,
with meeting to foUow at
7:3.0 p.m. Election of officers. Annual reports.

Other events
Friday, June 28 .
MIDDLEPORT -

The

Big Bend Community Band
will present aconcert In Dave
Diles Park. Middleport. 7
p.m. Selections will include
swing, big band, marches,
and patriotic music. Free,
open to the~· take lawn
chair andeo.JOY.

:. Student achievers .·

ing, students gave a presentation to the board
about their trip complete

lures was made by Chase
Graham which showed
photos of points of interest
with tbe help.__uL.,P_uwer _ nn the._tdp. l!l.atalie Marler,
Point and Mr. Cooksey, Alison Brown and Emily
one Of the chaperones. Ash also participated in the
Also a scrapbook of pic- preselltatu;m. .
·'

....

Getting past those old·.inwges
thi~ behavior ILQt strike
them as rude'/ Or, should 1
CODSCIOUS decision to envianswer my doorbeU from
Dear AllDie: I am 20 sion something more pleas- now on with an ashtray in
years old and engaged to the ing - pedlaps substitute one hand and a trash bag in
girl of.my dreanis. "Liza" is your face for his. If you do the other? - Trying to
beaittifnl.. smart and vay this each time, it will get Keep Clam ·
loving: We have no prob- easier and, unless you delibDear Clean: It's OK to
!ems in our relationship.
erately bring up the old teU someone to put out the
Before she dated me, Liza images, they will fade a)'lay. cigarette before tbey enter
dated one of my best If you cannot do this, you your home. The (ood is
friends. In fact, l once wit- may be on your way w a more oomplicated. It's rude
nessed them making out at a . total
obsession
with to drop bits of edible debris
party. The problem is, every thoughts tbat wiU eventual- all over someooe 's bouse.
time we become intimate, ly desblly your relationship. Employees can be instructed
that image plays · in my
pear Annie: Am I crazy, not t1.&gt; eat inside. Relatives
head. I ' k:now what hap- or is it perfectly OK these and friends who knock on
pened before w~; dated is days to lmock on someone's your doo£ canying goopy,
not really my business, but I door with a doughnut in crumbly food should be
told, "Wait right here while I
feel I should let her '!mow band, smoking:a cigarette'1
what is bothering me.
. I am in the midst of get you a napkin." Then
·1 know Liza would never remodeling the interior of steer theni into the kitchen.
cbeat on me, but ~ing her my home. The contractors
Dear ADDie: I read the
talking to another guy bas doing these various projects letter {rom . "Heartbroken
hurt and troubled me at come to my door widt a cig- Mom," whose son sustained
times. How do I tell bee arette ~y in progress, a ·brain injury. I have a dissomething sbe did in bee · with the asbes so long they abled husband who was
past is affecting me every wiU fall at any moment Or . brain-injured while serving
they're eating. the stickiest, In the military. You wonder
time we make · love? n-bled iD Teus
most gooey doughnut they why God would do this to
Dear Teus: .This isn't can find, Without a plate or you. I compare it to a fami1-.RIIIY kilil~ problem. it's - lli!Pkin.--'l'hlly-prooeed to do ly picturo thai has (;rasbed
'yours. Site cannot do any- my remodeling with these to the floor and you have
thing about the images . in staples of.life in band, con- put it back: together with
tape and glue.
your head. She can only be stantly.
the beautiful, smart, loving
I can ask: an employee nOt
lt was very hard at first,
person you think she is. It's to smoke or eat in my and I cried and told the
up to you to replace those . bouse, but what about my social worker dtaJ: I dido 't
bllublesome pictures with brodter"in-law, who showed know how to start picking
soinetbing else. ·Whenever up widt a sweet roD? Does . up the broken pieces of the

BY KA111Y Mm:HEu.
AND MARCY SUGAR

stait to remember Liza
kissin~ your friend, make a

you

picture ((BIDe. I was so
shocked and stressed.
Yes, people make idiotic
remarts. My husband getS
a VA pension plus disabili~
ty, and some people ~m
to think: I woo the lottery.
They say, "You're so lucky
to get these pensions." I've
learned to reply, " Don't
you think: I would rather
have my husband's health
and ability to · wort.
instead?" That makes them
understand the stupidity of
their remark..
Life changes, &gt;and sometimes quicldy. But ·eventu·
ally you will be able
look: at all the good yoli
have, instead of grieving
the loss of what should
have been. - Been lbere

to

for

15Y~rs

ANtie 'J Mtlilbox is writkif by KDtltJ Mib:hU 111111
Mtucy
ID..p,u Mitoi'J of 1M Allll Uuu1Ns

s...,.,

cobutua. Pf«ts~ ~-lfUiil JOIIT

qrustWIU to tullWSifllliiIJo~lfd, IW wriU
to: A.111W'f ~~~ P.OBox 118196, C~, IL

66611. To

.fillll 0111

IIIDn ·

a6o11t AIIIW 's Mllilbox,
111111 retl4 f«~~r~ra by odur .
Ctwltoni SJwfimt• wriUrs
111111 autDollists, 11isit 1M
CtWJtorr Sy11#NIIe W~b
ptJCe Ill

-·-C1l!llltorr.CO&amp;

,.,~...­

i='rfth graders from the Meigs Intermediate School, Kelsey,
Hudson and Mitctlell Howa.Q, 1ied in judging of their science projects and were presented trophies for their
achievement. They also won first and · second places in
lheir dass lor the Yesteryear essay contest with the
;annooncement being made at a reception at the Meigs

Senior Center.

REACH 3 COUNTIES
•

I
•

. Place Your Paid Classified Ad In Wednesday's
.Gallipolis Dally Tribune, Point Pleant Register or
DaUy Sentinel, And It Will Run For FREE In
The Tri-County Marketplace!

'

..
'

.

POMEROY - Ben A.
Holter, son of Alan and
Valerie Kaye Holter, 34421
:Dairy Lane, Pomeroy,
recently graduated with
;hi8b distinction . from the
College of Pharmacy at
Ohio Northern University.
ffe received the degree of
Doctorate of Pharmacy_
: On campus, Holter was
active in Phi Eta Sigma
scholastic honorary for
'freshmen men, and Delta
Si.gma Phi social fraternity.
· · Holter is a puate of
'Easte(Il Local Htgh School .
. Ohio
Northern
:University's quality, stu'dent-centered education disotinctively combines the libera! arts with professioital
programs .for more than

3,600 students in its five
coUeges: Arts &amp; Sciences,
Business Administration,
Engineering, Pharmacy and
Law.

•

Chester council holds meeting
· CHESTER -A report on
the death of Mary K. Holter,
:longtime
member
of
Chester Council
323,
Daughters of America, was
.given at a recent meeting.
:· Doris Grueser presided at
'( be meeting which opened
~ith
pledges · to . the
Christian flag and Amencan .
.:.flag, singing of the National

Anthem, and the Lord's
Prayer.
It was reported thai Jo Ann
Ritchie had injured herself in
a faU. Quarterly birthdays
were observed. Attending
were Doris Grueser, Everett
Grant, Julie Aeming. Opal
Hollon, Charlotte Grant,
~ Eicbinga", and Jo Ann
Ritchie.
·

.

'

.~ ;
'

·.

$':' "("-,.:

·-JOint l)ltasanf ·

lbt jallijoti.flll,.~ibunt

.111e Daily Sentinel

. ' ' 3o4-675;,..,.,.,

74f.44.1J42 .

nw

740-992-2155

www.mydailyregiter.com
- J

•.
•

•

•

-'

•

· Moaday-Partly sunny in
· ..Then becomthe morrung.
·ill&amp; mostly cloudy. A chance
'or- showers. A chance of
)h~onns. Some ·thriLl-~~erstorms · may produce
jUsty winds and sllljll! !!"il:
ffi,hs around 80. Scs'uthwesl
winds 5 to 10 mph. Chance
:ohain 50 percent.
Moaclay oight...Mostly
cloudy with a chance of
showers and thunderstonns
in dte evening...Then partly.
~L- •.&lt;u wjth a slight chance.
~~wers .and thunder-

storms after midnight. Lows
in the mid 50s. West winds
5 to 10 mph. Chance of rain
SO percent.
....._,._Mostly sunny.
Highs in the lower 70s.
Nortbwesl winds S to 10
mph.
'l'uetMbly ailht... Pl!I1Jy
cloudy. Lows in the mid
50s. Northwest winds 5 to
. 10 mph.
. W•t•day
tbi'ou&amp;b
Friday-Partly
cloudy .
Highs in the mid 70s. Lows
in the mid 50s.
•

I lai~...­

Pictured are Meigs Primary students who were recognized with prizes for their w011&lt; il) the Ac:oelerated Reader program:
Bladley Logan, Kevin Yooog, Allison Hanstine, Donna Alkinson along with AR Teacher Connie Halley and Michael
Bartrum who presented some of the .kids with an autographed football.

Meigs

•

RUTLAND -Before the school
year ended, students at Meigs Primary
were awarded prizes for the top points
they accumulated throughout the year
in Accelerated Reader. Accelerated
Reader is ·a reading program where
students .read the book, take a test on
the computerto measure their compre- .

J.A)cal Weather

.

"

;llolter graduates with
: pharmacy doctorate

Sib

readerS ·a warded
hension and earn· points for their
gnides. The top two students wilh the
most points were Bradley Logan with
, 213 points and Donna Atkinson with
190 points. The top two students with
the highest percent correct on their
tests were AUison HMfield and Kevin
Young. The top point student and the

top percentage student out of every
class also received a prize, for the;:
boys it was an autographed football by
Michael Bartrum and the girls
received various prizes. The rest of the
students later cashed in their points for
several different prizes. The bicycles
were donated by the Athens Wai-Mart .

~bt ~allipoltl mail!'

Qtribunt,
tEbt Joint lUrasant l\tgistrr

·. and The Daily Sentinel
. have laooched a new page every
Friday caUed "Faith and Family".
If you have a testimonial story,
life-changing event about yourself
or even a poem that you would
like to share please emaH to:
kkeUy@mydailytribune.com
nfields@mydaHyregister.com
hoeftich@mydailysentinelcom
Limit your story to
S00-750 words.
Please include a phone number
in your email.

�PageA2

COMMUNU'Y

The Daily Sentine"
l
.

Monday, .June 16, 2008

:Community Calendar

LETART FALLS - Scott
and Janey Brinager of Letart
Falls recently welcomed .the
birth of their ~ son,
T1111othy Reed Brinager on
April 22 at Women and AdkiM of .Sandyville,
Ctilldren's Hospital in W.Va., the late Tim
Charleston,
W.Va.
He Brinager; maternal great
weighed nine. pounds and grandparents are Robert
seven ounces and was 21.5 Chapman pf Syracuse and
inches long. Tunothy joins the .late Bever!y Chapman,
brother Cruz Brinager who Donna Hill of Apple Grove
and the late Dallas Hill;
is three years old.
Maternal grandparen~ are patemal great grandparents
Lori Hill and Roger Sb,arp of are Betty Carpenter .of
Racine, Dean.Hill of Apple Racine and the late James
Grove; paternal grandpar- Carpenter, Cecil and Ruby
ents are Cricket and Frank Brinager of Racine.

Elght'h ....... from Soulhem Local in Wnhlngton, DC

Southern students·visit Washington, DC
!bree

~:b..a~~

from lltr

Southern Local School
District visited Washington,
OC on a class trip. A tour

PageA3
Monday, June t6, 2oo8

'

birth

bus took the students to
view the Capitol, White
Smithsonian
House, ·
Museum. manr mvnuments
and places of interest.
At a recent Southern
Local School Board meet-

BYTHEBEND

The Daily Sentinel

Brinager

. WASHINGTON, DC Before school ended for the
year, 33 eighth graders and

..

: Public meetinp

ly, Friday and Sandra Wise,
Saturday.

Mooday, June 16
LETART FALLS
Letart Township Trustees
~~~· ~ting, 5 p.m.,
. ·.
o , building.
Tuesday, June 17
. RACINE
tnf~rmational . meeting,
·Racme annexation plans, 7 ·
P·":l·•. Racine Municipal
Bwlding.

.- Church events
Mooday, June 16
SYRACUSE - Syracuse
Community
Church,
:second Street, revival
;through June 21 with evan·gelist Nonnan Taylor, 7
:p.m. nightly. Singers, Teresa
:Preston, Monday; Rev.
:James Patterson, Tuesday;
•Joe McCloud, Wednesday;
:sid and Carol Hayman,
;'Thursday; The Roush fami-

ANNIE'S MAILBOX

Clubs aDd
organizations
Monday, June 16
POMEROY - Pomeroy
Order of the Eastern Star
186, 6:30 p.m. at the
~hester hall for potluck:,
with meeting to foUow at
7:3.0 p.m. Election of officers. Annual reports.

Other events
Friday, June 28 .
MIDDLEPORT -

The

Big Bend Community Band
will present aconcert In Dave
Diles Park. Middleport. 7
p.m. Selections will include
swing, big band, marches,
and patriotic music. Free,
open to the~· take lawn
chair andeo.JOY.

:. Student achievers .·

ing, students gave a presentation to the board
about their trip complete

lures was made by Chase
Graham which showed
photos of points of interest
with tbe help.__uL.,P_uwer _ nn the._tdp. l!l.atalie Marler,
Point and Mr. Cooksey, Alison Brown and Emily
one Of the chaperones. Ash also participated in the
Also a scrapbook of pic- preselltatu;m. .
·'

....

Getting past those old·.inwges
thi~ behavior ILQt strike
them as rude'/ Or, should 1
CODSCIOUS decision to envianswer my doorbeU from
Dear AllDie: I am 20 sion something more pleas- now on with an ashtray in
years old and engaged to the ing - pedlaps substitute one hand and a trash bag in
girl of.my dreanis. "Liza" is your face for his. If you do the other? - Trying to
beaittifnl.. smart and vay this each time, it will get Keep Clam ·
loving: We have no prob- easier and, unless you delibDear Clean: It's OK to
!ems in our relationship.
erately bring up the old teU someone to put out the
Before she dated me, Liza images, they will fade a)'lay. cigarette before tbey enter
dated one of my best If you cannot do this, you your home. The (ood is
friends. In fact, l once wit- may be on your way w a more oomplicated. It's rude
nessed them making out at a . total
obsession
with to drop bits of edible debris
party. The problem is, every thoughts tbat wiU eventual- all over someooe 's bouse.
time we become intimate, ly desblly your relationship. Employees can be instructed
that image plays · in my
pear Annie: Am I crazy, not t1.&gt; eat inside. Relatives
head. I ' k:now what hap- or is it perfectly OK these and friends who knock on
pened before w~; dated is days to lmock on someone's your doo£ canying goopy,
not really my business, but I door with a doughnut in crumbly food should be
told, "Wait right here while I
feel I should let her '!mow band, smoking:a cigarette'1
what is bothering me.
. I am in the midst of get you a napkin." Then
·1 know Liza would never remodeling the interior of steer theni into the kitchen.
cbeat on me, but ~ing her my home. The contractors
Dear ADDie: I read the
talking to another guy bas doing these various projects letter {rom . "Heartbroken
hurt and troubled me at come to my door widt a cig- Mom," whose son sustained
times. How do I tell bee arette ~y in progress, a ·brain injury. I have a dissomething sbe did in bee · with the asbes so long they abled husband who was
past is affecting me every wiU fall at any moment Or . brain-injured while serving
they're eating. the stickiest, In the military. You wonder
time we make · love? n-bled iD Teus
most gooey doughnut they why God would do this to
Dear Teus: .This isn't can find, Without a plate or you. I compare it to a fami1-.RIIIY kilil~ problem. it's - lli!Pkin.--'l'hlly-prooeed to do ly picturo thai has (;rasbed
'yours. Site cannot do any- my remodeling with these to the floor and you have
thing about the images . in staples of.life in band, con- put it back: together with
tape and glue.
your head. She can only be stantly.
the beautiful, smart, loving
I can ask: an employee nOt
lt was very hard at first,
person you think she is. It's to smoke or eat in my and I cried and told the
up to you to replace those . bouse, but what about my social worker dtaJ: I dido 't
bllublesome pictures with brodter"in-law, who showed know how to start picking
soinetbing else. ·Whenever up widt a sweet roD? Does . up the broken pieces of the

BY KA111Y Mm:HEu.
AND MARCY SUGAR

stait to remember Liza
kissin~ your friend, make a

you

picture ((BIDe. I was so
shocked and stressed.
Yes, people make idiotic
remarts. My husband getS
a VA pension plus disabili~
ty, and some people ~m
to think: I woo the lottery.
They say, "You're so lucky
to get these pensions." I've
learned to reply, " Don't
you think: I would rather
have my husband's health
and ability to · wort.
instead?" That makes them
understand the stupidity of
their remark..
Life changes, &gt;and sometimes quicldy. But ·eventu·
ally you will be able
look: at all the good yoli
have, instead of grieving
the loss of what should
have been. - Been lbere

to

for

15Y~rs

ANtie 'J Mtlilbox is writkif by KDtltJ Mib:hU 111111
Mtucy
ID..p,u Mitoi'J of 1M Allll Uuu1Ns

s...,.,

cobutua. Pf«ts~ ~-lfUiil JOIIT

qrustWIU to tullWSifllliiIJo~lfd, IW wriU
to: A.111W'f ~~~ P.OBox 118196, C~, IL

66611. To

.fillll 0111

IIIDn ·

a6o11t AIIIW 's Mllilbox,
111111 retl4 f«~~r~ra by odur .
Ctwltoni SJwfimt• wriUrs
111111 autDollists, 11isit 1M
CtWJtorr Sy11#NIIe W~b
ptJCe Ill

-·-C1l!llltorr.CO&amp;

,.,~...­

i='rfth graders from the Meigs Intermediate School, Kelsey,
Hudson and Mitctlell Howa.Q, 1ied in judging of their science projects and were presented trophies for their
achievement. They also won first and · second places in
lheir dass lor the Yesteryear essay contest with the
;annooncement being made at a reception at the Meigs

Senior Center.

REACH 3 COUNTIES
•

I
•

. Place Your Paid Classified Ad In Wednesday's
.Gallipolis Dally Tribune, Point Pleant Register or
DaUy Sentinel, And It Will Run For FREE In
The Tri-County Marketplace!

'

..
'

.

POMEROY - Ben A.
Holter, son of Alan and
Valerie Kaye Holter, 34421
:Dairy Lane, Pomeroy,
recently graduated with
;hi8b distinction . from the
College of Pharmacy at
Ohio Northern University.
ffe received the degree of
Doctorate of Pharmacy_
: On campus, Holter was
active in Phi Eta Sigma
scholastic honorary for
'freshmen men, and Delta
Si.gma Phi social fraternity.
· · Holter is a puate of
'Easte(Il Local Htgh School .
. Ohio
Northern
:University's quality, stu'dent-centered education disotinctively combines the libera! arts with professioital
programs .for more than

3,600 students in its five
coUeges: Arts &amp; Sciences,
Business Administration,
Engineering, Pharmacy and
Law.

•

Chester council holds meeting
· CHESTER -A report on
the death of Mary K. Holter,
:longtime
member
of
Chester Council
323,
Daughters of America, was
.given at a recent meeting.
:· Doris Grueser presided at
'( be meeting which opened
~ith
pledges · to . the
Christian flag and Amencan .
.:.flag, singing of the National

Anthem, and the Lord's
Prayer.
It was reported thai Jo Ann
Ritchie had injured herself in
a faU. Quarterly birthdays
were observed. Attending
were Doris Grueser, Everett
Grant, Julie Aeming. Opal
Hollon, Charlotte Grant,
~ Eicbinga", and Jo Ann
Ritchie.
·

.

'

.~ ;
'

·.

$':' "("-,.:

·-JOint l)ltasanf ·

lbt jallijoti.flll,.~ibunt

.111e Daily Sentinel

. ' ' 3o4-675;,..,.,.,

74f.44.1J42 .

nw

740-992-2155

www.mydailyregiter.com
- J

•.
•

•

•

-'

•

· Moaday-Partly sunny in
· ..Then becomthe morrung.
·ill&amp; mostly cloudy. A chance
'or- showers. A chance of
)h~onns. Some ·thriLl-~~erstorms · may produce
jUsty winds and sllljll! !!"il:
ffi,hs around 80. Scs'uthwesl
winds 5 to 10 mph. Chance
:ohain 50 percent.
Moaclay oight...Mostly
cloudy with a chance of
showers and thunderstonns
in dte evening...Then partly.
~L- •.&lt;u wjth a slight chance.
~~wers .and thunder-

storms after midnight. Lows
in the mid 50s. West winds
5 to 10 mph. Chance of rain
SO percent.
....._,._Mostly sunny.
Highs in the lower 70s.
Nortbwesl winds S to 10
mph.
'l'uetMbly ailht... Pl!I1Jy
cloudy. Lows in the mid
50s. Northwest winds 5 to
. 10 mph.
. W•t•day
tbi'ou&amp;b
Friday-Partly
cloudy .
Highs in the mid 70s. Lows
in the mid 50s.
•

I lai~...­

Pictured are Meigs Primary students who were recognized with prizes for their w011&lt; il) the Ac:oelerated Reader program:
Bladley Logan, Kevin Yooog, Allison Hanstine, Donna Alkinson along with AR Teacher Connie Halley and Michael
Bartrum who presented some of the .kids with an autographed football.

Meigs

•

RUTLAND -Before the school
year ended, students at Meigs Primary
were awarded prizes for the top points
they accumulated throughout the year
in Accelerated Reader. Accelerated
Reader is ·a reading program where
students .read the book, take a test on
the computerto measure their compre- .

J.A)cal Weather

.

"

;llolter graduates with
: pharmacy doctorate

Sib

readerS ·a warded
hension and earn· points for their
gnides. The top two students wilh the
most points were Bradley Logan with
, 213 points and Donna Atkinson with
190 points. The top two students with
the highest percent correct on their
tests were AUison HMfield and Kevin
Young. The top point student and the

top percentage student out of every
class also received a prize, for the;:
boys it was an autographed football by
Michael Bartrum and the girls
received various prizes. The rest of the
students later cashed in their points for
several different prizes. The bicycles
were donated by the Athens Wai-Mart .

~bt ~allipoltl mail!'

Qtribunt,
tEbt Joint lUrasant l\tgistrr

·. and The Daily Sentinel
. have laooched a new page every
Friday caUed "Faith and Family".
If you have a testimonial story,
life-changing event about yourself
or even a poem that you would
like to share please emaH to:
kkeUy@mydailytribune.com
nfields@mydaHyregister.com
hoeftich@mydailysentinelcom
Limit your story to
S00-750 words.
Please include a phone number
in your email.

�Monday, .June 16, 2008
.

.

Page-A4 .

OPINION

The Dail
. y Sentinel

=

On ~ ll, 2001,
. Anlftw ~ an academic research
ar:
. Rhode Island
· · did
: w1W may 01Jb3Bec1 aod
. dv• '"' A....,.;. MIS did. On
: his way home tiom Mllk, be
mipped ar a bnnhrore and
boupt a book: Olboullslam.
As be m-alls, it was IIOIDe~
'
Ka1m Amlstt

111 Court lk I• ~Ohio
(740) 912-2158 • FAX (740) 992-2157

)IIWW.II!Jd ., tl . . . oW

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
Dan Goodlich
Publisher

::1::::famousdidn't~
infamoos

aa.tene lbelllch ·

. ~ is
_ fur beino •

Genelal Manager--.'\lews E&lt;itor

--=-• .....tn...

,Dien8
.West

of Islam aDd the West, ·Ibn
"'

gistforls~·R:..fing~ "~

of the book aloud tbal same
night to his 'Wife, also an
· academic, as ..._, weat
about IICCIOIIIltiDg"(;i fiieDds
' and family in mar nalive
New Vert City, be fouod the
book "beacley" and tup:dicia!, lackin.ll" DOt cllily the

.T Q DAY [.N H I$ T 0 R Y

his ~ have
resnlttd in two ~y
resean:Jied and lrail~
tomes of his own: "The
UJy;acy of Jihad,~ publis.bed
in ~.and "The~ of
Islamic . Aotisemttism,"
wbidt haS justoomeout, gar-

neling rnthusiastic adolaoce
schobdybdtbewasuscdto comment from academics
. in scientific ~-m. but ("a ground breaking evrnt"
also a aJODeCiioa to .uofo!d- said Stevrn T. K.liiZ, director
ing events. Even a more of the Elie WJetdC......,.for
extensive swvey of readily · J11daic Stllldies, Boston
available wO!b on Islam Uoivemty ), historians ("'t is

. Today is Monday, June 16, !be 168th day of 2008. There
are 198 days left in the year.
lbday's .Highligbt in History: On June 16, 1858, as be

~IlK ni!!!CJi.J ~i~ raJty's oomi~on for
US
. . Senate" Abtabam Lmooln said the slavery 1ssue had ·
1;0 be resolved, ckdaring, "A ·house divided against itself

staDd..,.,
: On this dale: (o 1883, baseball's first "Ladies' Day~
took place as !be New Yod Golbams offered women l'ree
admjssioo to a game against die Clevellmd Spiders. (New
Yodt won, S-2.}
.
_ .
(o 1897, die govelilmeal SJgl"'d a treaty of annexalloo
with Hawaii.
·
: ln 1903, Fool Motor Co. was~.
· (o 1932, President Hoover and 1ce I'R:sident Clwil;s
Curtis ~ JPIIIIII!inatcd .at lhe Rqlublican national wo- ·
~in~- ·
.
.
(o 1931; die N'a«iooaa (aduli1lial Reoovc:ry Act became
...... ( l t - .... ~ dowa by lbe Supreme Cowt.)
. Ia tefSS, . 'l 'qle 'Pius XII exoomOMmPcd Al:geDtine
Prcri • "' Jum DomiJI&amp;u Ptmn for ~IfldliD! two priests
(rom 116 00"111')'. (llowewr-..die bin • • dli:ll:tit~ely liW
iD 7963 .._die ('Mholic: Oudl""' lwed dut Paoo bad
oilmty bcca dac 2: d widtew••• • ,;. •ioo).
Ia ·~ tbe
Court. in Kent IV. Dalles, ruled 1hat
am. RiJct:well
~ ... be •"'•inl :a passpurt
"""""""of bis o• ..;, ..tliljllillllli.
(o l%3, tbe wodd'1 fil1lt fauale ~ bveleL, Vafm!ina'
Tacs!itova. was 1••........, i!!lo ~ by tbe Soviet Uaioo
.tload \bstok 6.
.
(o 1918. Presidrllt oder and PaniD!llnian leader Om.v
Toilijos ez.rln•11 • 6e - - . . . . . of 'Mih-- MioJn for die,.;
eanM(

yielded similar plar:ibldes

iuoled less in Islamic lheol~
ogy and historY lban in the

cootempoi3Jy ~cal die·t.ates of mulllCillturalism.
The s&amp;nrilit in him wmtl:d
to !plow uiore.
· ·
Thus martcd lbe WICxP"""""' be:inningof a rigorOilS and illl.l!!!ioati~ xademic odyssey dcrp UIIO lbe
study of Islam - "thi!i
depressing obsession of
mine .~ as 8ostom calls it. It
bas alSO acquainted lhe
marlCal reseatdl« widl a
global fratemity of lsla!nic
sdlolars, wbicb iDoludes abe
two be calls his D1I'Dklrf;: abe
Egyptian"bom hillforiaa of
dhimmjt!Jde, Bat Ye'(l[,
the Palristani-bom scboJar

a

$40 million, decade-long
Nationallnstilules of Helltb
reoal sllidy in\101vin8 IIICft
than 4,000 palimts in die
UoitM Stales, C,nacla and
Brazil Not ooly dial (and
this is SQlJIC'Abing char: has
~me, both .as wbal
you might call a oonlia-e in
Islamic.inquiry and also as a
friend), be bas applied
essentially the same :5Cientific principles be uses in
medical research 'to tbcstudyoflslanL
"We are used to analynng
things Vel)' critically and
takilig almost everything
witb a grain of salt,~ Bostom
explained recently, discussing bis w~ as a midical resean:bel' at Rhode
ls1aod Hospital, lhe IBIIj«
.teaching bospital affiliatr4
with Brown Uoivemty.
· Such analysis includes, for
example, monthly gatherings known as morbidity
and IOOitality ~views wbeie
emm&gt; and .,..ersigbts in
medical ~t .-e aitically euminnl "We arc ..
trained to Chink ilbe wiks
. ~.neverhigb«beral•sewe .

•

•

RalllDI!pdS .....

=

Cllrilaim Faupe _.
Getmany is ded eel • IC:l~
tlalfactbyhi,e~•i•wiuda•
Banard
1"4 7 .

Lewis_,
........... mcil • l,&amp;w
Wnpt

F

TCMa"). Boltam's o• 7
sions, bBd 011 • 11mJ ~
~p1em _. •c•• " • ,

' PO~OY -· Randy W. Hart, Jr. son of Randy ud
Sbecri Hart of Salem Center has Been inducted to the Pi
Sipa Alpha Natio~ Pol~tical Scieoce Honor Society,
Iota Zeta ~ ~o _Umversity. Randy is a thUd year
student at Ohio UruvefSity and a 2005 grad11ate of Mriors ·
High SchooL
-sc

eyewitness ••MM•M• v' ·-ebe jll e Ms in '7lle I J l
of Islamic Anlisrmith= ·
suggeitodlerwise.

Both abe · aab· S .;,;...·
book and die jihad boat.
llr.f&lt;e il are c.lllllllndllll.._
a.ty. l'bey Cl(lt:ll widt 7IIIIB
inlroductory ~ "'
Boslom,
be

•

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says, to ";;
·p.o-·
-posals. Ia ,._
P.. lie
p:cscmsbishyp4 .d_.
Oli bis ii:MEqa ·; r•• of . ,_
evjdmao: and dlila ·. ;..: '
diladintheratoftle.:,.;,

iudt .._" ·

11111111aia1" ......;l.s lrey • -~
magnificent,~ said Martin
from both Muslim aDII . . ..
· Gilbett, official biographer
Muslim !i011roeS dill .~
of Winston ~j. -and
ncwr bdQac bcm a• !' 5 I·
eipel1S {"'ne of lbe most
iDto fnVid• Sudl.U. · I ·
imponant boob of our
serve · "• a lCilily •I , .. ,.
ii1M," uid Ayaan Him Ali, .n .Niq wid! life ,and flnMn UJ1. "b: iF4ts
aulhor, :"lnfidc.Jj.
·
· deaih.Jfyou . SOIIldbiDg fCaflfurlleaueha'iD . .~·
The obvious question is: wroog,youk.ifpcople.~
tonbis.l c •
· :.
How does a medical
Bri!J!ID! !illdl slrqJiicism
After all, an hislln'. a ill'
IC-mer 5tudyiog homo- D ~ to dJe SIU!iy of sciolcc:, lbe ll'Udlliei · cysteine's .effect on caidio- [slam (wbe«, be maintains, evidence.
•:
v.ascular disease in patients "gelling III'"'M'tlling wrong~
(~ ~If il il ~ J ·
. suffering lirom chronic kid- Qll1 kill even people), nist /9r 1M lll'v';t;• •
ney problenis shift his foeus Bosrom sooo fouod hi!D!i!':lf TUMs., SM is rile ••# 71 6/
10 dJe Study of jihad and butting up iopinst j)jWISU!SI!S "J'he Ot!lllla ~
GriJI!• .
·an?li-Semitism in Warn?
teachings OO!JIIafi&lt;tril by lhe "P: H_. Aml!rica'.- AIH r 1
Answer: He doesn't. That · voluminous evidro:le be was lkve/opmerlt b .,..,_,
is, .mile ftnbalbd on his ga!berin,g.
T~
anti- Down
·
Welloi!'nt
lslamio s1udies, Bostom Selndisffi in Islam, the ~ CivilitPtiaft. • lllltl lttu· ill
a likJoDg Dlmoa:at, b lbe 'ject "of his new book. The btog al. ~ .,_
way - bas · ~ d!e riew tbat Islamic ami- edit be cn-urted w
Piinciple ID\Q1igator in a Semi?ism is a ~tabvdy ' ~st@I/OiQM.f1111.} .

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A look at 'the·dollar's .long slide

.,

Q: WUt ..-e die • - lac. At. the same time, the mOie aiJI:a;tive to fon:i,p·
t.aeN .u d diudovantagu ecOnomies of Europe imr~. 8u! it could lie .a411 :a weak Idler?
expanded, drioving .u p the blow to ao alindy f'n!li-·

8r T• . . _

Today's Binlldayli: Act11r Bill OlbtK. is 73. Au5bor Erich
~ is 11. Author Joyce c-1 ~is 70. Counuy singer

a· y"Cmb-Ollddock is (I)_ ~ Lamoat Dozier is
'WCik U.S. dollal" is
A: It's basically die mir- valueoflbeeuro.apinsttbe economy and iacaeae
61. ~ iiqer
· l.evat is 66. AciRss Ill1be
~
..'&amp;lfOpllltoi!apiD- ror~ U.S. maoufactur- .OO!ba:. Apd_ ~aW~t •ribalp recenionrisb.
.
Joan Vlll1 Ad is 65, RbydmHnd-blues si.,er JMICII Slllith
prioe5
higher,
making
ers
and
olber
.
e
qmers
ben'intemt
QIU
br
dte
&amp;!I'
fD
The
~Q(lilion
iii
fardlie
(11)£ ~Siics} is 58. Boxa- Roberto Duran is S7. ~
siiF · Vannelli is 56. Aaless Lawie Mdcalf i&amp; S • ~
·efit as American ,products ~=.~..s~- .:..~ government ' to buy u.s.·
~ Jamy Sbimin~ is 41. Al:k:Jl" James l'llriclt 'liM for Arne•" ••• a OWl'beo••e mlalively .c:beaprL - · - - ...... .dollan on ~ ~- -'
'118 ........ eo&amp;dy. More foo:i8n tourists caD .SCf'VCid to push dolm .. . rency l1lllltets - c.al!eclSCualt is 40. AdOl" Eddie Cibri.an i.s 35. A&lt;tiCs5 Olina ·
SbaYers is 31. Aclre1ii Missy Peregtym is 16. A&lt;tress Olivia A t tbe1lalllelime,it's ........t . llffml to visit the Unitfxl OOU.'s value. 1111; &amp;iilr intcrvention-eidawf , .
eqolielr;. 'llltK~s bern States. But it costs more for -has fallen sbalply against on its own or in •• w ear·
H:ackis2S. Singa"~Mw lleGarmG("American ldol")is 21.
a
ftunyoftalkfulmP«Wient
Americans ,t o tr.avel .abroad dll!curnintbeputyt.ar.
with otba COIIIItrieL Solae·
11ntgbt for Today: "We fe.- ~ bef~ we hate
Bu
~ ~ .CJ!Ia- bigh-level or buy iinpo!ted produCts, · Q: Wllllt i5 d.e_U.S.
European allies 11a\'C . . ..
it. A dlild &lt;Who fears ooi~s bcoomes a man who bates
officials ~~ ·days,_!IOIIle t"ueling.inftation.
a
?'1 p '571 1- •
gested Ibis couneofm- ·
JJOise.~- Cyril CoonoUy, British critic (1903-1974).
of it seem•ntJy conll3dic!oly,
That's pretty mud! the sit- 11 ' 1
blaming die dollar'&amp; t1 ::; ·
about ilbe ~ c1 a Wltion right now. And jf the
A: U,S. ofliia.,!&amp;, 'lililllllf for infcct.mg tbelr. 0W11
~dollar. '
cloUar (IIIOti.oueS t!l sink, it lhe llailay ~. ~VI' 001mries widi inflarioL · :
Some
~
,
and
'
I:)(JIIIAI ~!ring more i.ntlatioo L~ ...,..,.,., b wa
To do dlis, the
•
wen; lbout ~!.*dol- and .tfleli lrigger a seU~ff . dut .a ~-,c~o~.w is,ia the could draw down ils l!llllllY
value in
OOIJII- by~ ofU.S. in~o~est- nMioo•sbefi!t inlere&amp;t. Ycube of euro&amp;, Jl!ll aal odw-~~
l..l&amp;r:r 1o dtt! eJii9T am M"lor -- 'TIM!y sltoMid ~ kss tries
m~ lll: home- aOO'. 'IY"MS, .makiD,! it hanlcr to adminisrrarioo did llCI!hina ClP
.:
amcacy •t lzi'm , . _ J(J() tOOnls. All ktters DR wbject to &amp;liting, ll!ll&amp;f ~
wb a strollp" dol!a" coald pay down de IIMional ddll to bad up its .assertion with oa deposit with die New·
leadmaU.S. RaJWdy: aDd inc«asing ri&amp;b of action ud many policy- Yolk lftlertJ'
!t'e Bit*·
~u:m ~~te7:!::::
a
.
reoession.
makers
d~y welCO!Dild -and buy doDan. .
.. .
Otltlussing issues, llDI pusoiiiJlitil!s. lLttus of
ak., lr'v _, a
Q: Wila's • r I f • die slide, mainfDhccause it
Q: Brw lbly II dlrll ..
"-b to organfuJiiotu tlll4 iNJiviJwds will not~ IJIXI!J1l·
%...
~ IIII:IJ..
-• -_
. . . •• ••
....
• .......~
·" ~ expo«sn
.
....
....
• .•. ...,,
•
._.....to-.........
....
• . . . . 1 ....
•~
elljoT publicaJi.on.
A: lf libe dollar pW!s
iliad a ' pllira? expanding, I! rare bright spot
A: Thet-e have llflm !niwe4
agamst other Clllll'eDCieS, it
A: It's a dlmct one, since in a ttoublecl teooDOIIly.
signals. PaulsOn, ilbe uais said to be lil:rellfthe"ing. · oil is geneGIIIy bought and
Over the last w.eek, how- swy e:iucwy, said ia
Its buying powes I1ICmlliCS sold in ciOilars. 1be OlW'e the ever, officials have si~ . 1:11e television iDII!Irriewl• ·
relative to the odlr.rauten· ~alue of de gRieliliack goes that they don't want fwther Monday and l'ues1sy . ..
acs.
If ils e!CbaD,r Glte OOwn, die more it costs to .declines. Bush, Treasury lbe. admjnistnltioo .._, _
Jteader Senrices
dec!inel; .
oda air· buy die same barrel of oil.
Secretary Henry Paulson ingoo!ookolftheUIIId,.
ICtlcies,
it
is.
aid
to
be
Of
OOWlie,
deo:
.-e
iOiber
and
Federal
Re.serwe it might use to =-.r 1111:·
C I I tJtallct
Nr PNICI .....-y ...,,oan, .~~~on~~~w
ft*miD!
lt':
s
.
~w:. ~ iaYOived in IOfiBy~s Chairman Ben Bemanke dollar's v.alue - W
z·
In .. .. to tl1!ough l'riaoy, U1 ·c -t-11I&amp;:R
.are
ah
.PJI
aad
'!")!:Hf
'$4-a-~rllon
pso-.
have
all
issued
&lt;t•ements
abeuliC
.
o
fgoWA•n.,..,._.
..
. ..... - a t .. ..,... Poo-. Olio.
1111
di lldv.a,... to i11o11! a line ~- They _... bacli:.inJI; the need for: a vm?ion to pulla lbe dalllr's
4fta_,.,.. bo:uua-natV&lt;IIll
Pueetiu47J.
~ aoda eakdal!ar- -~drm_, fl-. (]Iiiia . stroog.donar andeip~Li~ value hipT
I
ll.n.~
--;2151.
~--,
with
IIMOIIII
JE 1 ao4 lelia, politicat ,_...., DOIIC41I about die aOIUI'Y·
But Bush himwdf, 4 7 ·
~ auil7weu• 1 r
in ·oil~
~A aroqg dollar is in our in,g to"rqxdeis in Slovlllia' ., -.. n. Dllr ......... 411 Oourt ·
Q: .... ~- . . . - - ~ons, idle :initi!ity, ot .nation's interes?s. lt is in lbe on Tueiday, signathl lilae.
(7. . . 11141. .
-.Ax:woy, DtiD' 45711.
tats.ta•
••• '! ~duAl of major·~- inleres75oflbe global coooo- interest in sud! a cnne.
a1 7 I 7
A:~S~mDA:dal:arloin&amp; IJOI!ntrie' to
nr
my," Bush -saidMoudayasbe suggestinginStead"dulrdI I
the
:
jX'lCie
to
U.S.
•
•
R
production,
and
,
J
!P!t.et
enibw\rd 011 a European tour, .ati\'C value of cc:- eies
'
,"1127
of
foreip
JIIY""m
:and
llt.l"specu],Mion
Q: Wllat ma be._ to -will end up settiJ13 die pmp' a.:...,OI,._I_o,&amp;t. 12 .
"'tiM
NWcs. 1ba
110 blq&gt;
1be weaker dollar bas st.!p or rrvaw • Har er valuation of die dallar.~
•
Dlllr
... -ANd. &amp;1.14
inftilion
·
i
adlecl.U.S.ilOIIbernainajorfactot::anone
slicle!
· Tbc I,J.S. hasn't iaaward
21 ?a c
a I ............. &amp;l 1ll OM_.
lll!lllel'li
ahp
lr
fil
Wten
!bat
oould
lhi.Uten
'
t
be
A:
Coouncots
by
those
in Clll'R:IlCY nw• e tilace
"1127
~ '
~ II:ll~ ftnip couo- •' 111 oea .o f.a U.S. mxJVC.IY. 1bme officials. wliidl !10IIIe Bu&amp;b ~'Gfta ia 2001. ·
A?hatllf. . ·
•, • _ _ . , - !DeS. lt'sUIIIPIIyasiplofa Q: ....
call j~wboniq. be~ · And
110 buy
0 -"Y lbat is firIS
ltllla:O...
......
&amp;l15
·-IO
.
.
D
I
I
y
l
l
l
o
.
llroog
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
,
·
nudge
up
the
dollar
on
cloUan
alllld
bw"IIW.
FOr ·
'c
.
.
Oliolo Eid 1e . ...-. I¥ .... .. • lln 111{ oo all qlindrn.
A: 1he &amp;tbir bl,' lbcm on Monday and 1\e!iday, espe- OJJe rllinl. it wo.f4 tae
Q: A.- die a . .
eitelldcd slide ap'in&amp;t . cially •11gainst the .euro llld great 5WDi of .... '1 .., '
a . ... :ludro.l&lt;. E.d ' 10
....!
odla" major ~'· tbe yen. Some traders mite •Y cifh ,. . 11le
'
r,ra •
A: ,U.s.pu.-....!leol•w &lt;1'l•ia1ty die euro and the believethedollar'sslumpis ~ " ' " " •
· is·
..... ..,.. Counlf
more
e~w:
Jnl!lll'lieU, JlpPOCse yea. for about tift nearing an end. 8ut tbe dollbe
laip,at
ill
die
wodd.
wi5ll
o ..... _ ,_Ext. 12
13Weeks
'32.26
mali: ing • l!lnlr6 fur U.S. yean - ..a period ,dwiUJ Jar remained -under pressure over $1 trillion tr.ted C'&amp;':ll
26 Weeks
'64.20
~aoies
SO """lflele .in ~ 1he U .S. b:Pde.deficit an~ options ~or:govemment day. Seeins the U;S. tryq
' 127.11
52Wellls
·fore 1gn mw\ets. It aho · wi!b the ~ of :the, wod4 ac71on w~ limited.
to prop vp die gn%U1~ by ·
-·~,com
01' 7dl ...... c-.~r
makes i7 hilda fot fomi&amp;a eeoera:Jiy ilOIItq,ue(l . to
. The Fed ooul4 ·start uis- buy.ing dollars oould ·be13 .......
'53.55 ,
mvestors to bu)' dollar- Widen, equiring 'liMe bor-- ·ing •interest [!Illes apin. That ~ as a •
of d 4 rr
26 .......
'107.10 I
'
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based
seollities
•
of.
wwin&amp;
from
abmad
ud
.
would
~
the
dollar
llon
and
pwible
~ :a
. • •,l • .1
52-111
'2142!
Ieavy
U.'S. -~
fllr1hct
w : I "'lin~ Cbe dol- by making U.S. !-nyestmeots Jmeaed lWIId of lldliJ!e:
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·-The Daily·Sentinel

oJ.u:;'i..!::,...

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their own safety. Gerlach
told oouncil
• 1be demolition is expected to · cost the viiJage
between
$6.500
and
$8,000, depending on how
much debris must be carried frvm lbe ·site and
hauled to a landfill. Gerlach
Slid much debris from the
Qlld school can be buried in
tile building's basement and
covered up.
.
• Gerlach and Roberts have
both said long-1Mn ·pbms
for !he site on Park Stmet,
J¥:xt to ·the viUage garage,
sbould i!tclude a securitY
fence and a shelter fot
equipment storage.
, Fuel stored in aboveground tanks will be
"

'

register, re~rve space.· or
gel more information.
Research is continuing to
reveal the [ll'!lte&lt;tive properties of bllllllin milk in preventing diseases ranging
from ear infectioos and allergies to diabrtes, obesity. and
canccrs. 1be Morber' s Milk
Bank of Obio expands this
problelioo wbm mother's
milk may oot be available by
supplyin8 dolo- milk.

"We are honored to havethe oppolt)lnity to hos1 this
event to increase awareness
about the health benefits of
mother's milk; provide
breastfeeding information;
and create an opportunity
for local ·vendors 10 display
their products." said Leanne
Cunningham. WIC din:ctoc
All proceeds will be
donated to The Modlec's
Milk Bank of Ohio.

Additional
loan
funds
available
to
businesses
STAFF Re
ORr .

POMEROY
-With
mewed suppmt from lhe
Govemo£'s
OffiCe of
Appalachia
and
the
Appalachian
Regional
Commission',
additional
pumped out of'the tanb for small busineis fiMncin8 is
storage d11ring demolition, now awailable through
and wiD be reiUmed to the . Buckeye
HiUs-Hocling
Regional
'tanb once demolition is· Valley · ·
completed. The village ha1i Devel~
District's
detennioed there are oo Revolvang Loan . Fund to
tmderground fuel tanks.
SUpPOit
job
growth.
The village bas expressed BHIHVRDD
includes
~ in using Brownfield Meigs County.
Redevelopment
fundiog
"We m:eived an additional
from the state to study the $259,000 to fund loans in our
environmental condition of
lbe soil on lbe site, but they
weni tempgooily l!!lllV.aiJable. Now~ rouncil believes ·
it would talre years to oom- ·
plete the oeoessacy analysis
and 'Studie1i required to qualify for ilbe ICdamalion funding. The cost of demoliri.on
will be . shaml among village dep;utmmts.

disuict.~said Buckeye Hills' ancl working or: start-up capSince its inception, the
Business
Development ital needs.
Buckeye Hills Revo!Ying
Coonlinator Tma Meunier.
Revolving loans include . Loan Fund Program bas
"If WlllflOIIe has a plan for a fixed interest rates and made 114 loans totaling $6.6
new business or is R3ly to terms of three to 52 years, million a-eating 700 ,v.... and
laketbcirexislingbu$nessl0 depending on the oollaternl retaining 700 jobs"';• our
.d ie next levd, tbe Revolving used to secure the loan. ln eight counties, said Executive
lnan l:'rogQm may be the addirion to ARC, the Director Misty Casto.
resouroe tbey aced CO make Revolving Loan program is
"The RLF program is one
tbal pima reality.,;
also fiinded by · the of the primary economic
.RLF loans fiU the 'gap' Economic Development developmenl tools serv~
bctweco conventional bank Ad'"nistr.i.tion and Farmers small bllsinesses in rural
fillliiiCio8. owner equity and Home Administration.
The program has geothetotal.amount necessary
Because one full-time job ernted $19.4 million .in pri•
to eomplete a ~sed eqQivalent - 40 hours per vale funds invested in the
business project. Eltgibie · week - must be created or region with an additional
activities include acquiring rerained for every .$25.000 $3 .4millioninpublicfimds."
or improving land and of Revolving Loan financlnformo.tion is available
bllildings, consiiUOiion, new ing, these loans focus on from Buckeye Hills at 376machinery or equipment, creating jobs.
0360.

areas.

Preventionrrom P.At

terms of the use of tobacco to preliCnl to the court to ·
soettlement · money being honor the stare's tobaooo .
placed in the state' s eco- conlrol oommitments unril a
nomic -stimulus package decision is made in !he •
. recently signed in1o law. ca8e." 1be ALF's kWc is
According to Gov. Ted that ·p attiesusedeuctfydlis
Strickland' s office, the process to continue IObacco
Pon•oy High Schoo?, Class of 1t5e
governor recently signed a control pmgr:ams elrlier in
bill to move Oh1o tobacco the case.
prevention effons to lhe
ACCOilding to die ALF
Obio
Department
of press release, 0011 has not
POMEROY - Members Larry Dale Baker, Linda Manin, Metropolis. IlL ; Davis Jeffers, Kenneth ·
Health . .~e bill immedi- yetrespondlld. tolbe~
of
abe Pomeroy ~ Basnett, Jack Braley, Shirley Carl. and Vicli:.ie Clark Eblin, Jerry and Barbara
abolished .tbe Oil+ ~
dMiu.P . I f•tndatiotl .
~l«&lt;l
,Class of l9S8 ·
Landet1i, Larry Tracy, Jim Shrevei Burlington, Ky ..; Fields, Jack Follrod and
'
.authorized . Ohio ; spolrespe:l'iqlll 'said. :+'we
.•••,
llbe
SOdu••!'~~et'&amp;lll'
,
Withee. Roger Grindley. . Joseph . L, · Kenpedy, Rose Werry. Roger and
Tl:easuret' Ridlard Corcl!:af ...,...;. . .... 11 fill dill,ot
dlr:ir
higlucbool
gra.luaBill
Sterrett, Dicldtummel, Collierville, Tenn..
Barbara Hysell, Don and;
to . liquidate
· the · WiD join GUr eft'Ms 110 brip
David and Lana Kern, JoEUen Roush, Mary Lou
Foundatioo's $270 million tbeliC life-savillg . pngmns tion with a ~et-toged:la at Jobn Strickland, Kathe111
the
GraCe
q,isoopal
OJw:cll
Roush
and
Danny
Zirkle.
A
Sterling,
Va.; Phil an4 Ann Smith Hawkins and Regina,
in . remaining funds . HB in plaoe during the remain-'
Annex
on
Saturday
afterc
white
rose
represented
each
.
Icenhower
Hoffman, Simpson. Sue Smith Zirkle,,
:544 :allows $230 million der of the litigatioo.~
noon,
May
24.
deceased
member.
W"JlliamsiOwn,
W.Va.;
Tom Michael and Doris Wellsfrom 'Ohio's tobacco masThe ALF ~lease also
Spec:ial
guest
a;tnm~g-was
·
Many
shared
memories
of
Brown,
Port
Clinton,
OH; Menz and guests of the·
t« iettlemcnt agreement to goes on to say: ':'We are
lbclp ~ the $1 .57 bi!l- acutely aware of lbe ~ Coach Dick Rdtoo of their days at Pomeroy High Harold and Rachel Roush class; Rosalie Nelson·
noo "'bipanisan" economic char: Ohioans wiU pay if the M-sfield who cOidled the School and later in the after- Stout, Hilliard; Dorrence Johnson. Charlone Murray
.unutus packa~e. The state siiCI:eeds in diverting 1958 balidl•all team to b: no&lt;in, a group photo was and Donna Hess, Clinton; Rowley. Diane · Hood;:
OlampiOnsbi.p. ~:liken in front -of the old Bill an'd Doris Imboden Connie Folmer, Susan and·
mmajning $40 million will lheliC funds from sobacoo SEOAL
be distributed to the controL lf we succcc:d in Team IIIC!IIben attmding Pomeroy High School. Ford, Cincinnati ; Dan MitcheU Metts, Howard K ..
Ron
Martin, Several
classmembers Struble,
Powell;
Fay Parker, Rick Crow, Norman
Tolwico Use Prevention our le,gal claiJD, we pledae . were
Mm:upolis,
ID~.
Joe
Kmnedy,
brought
memoribilia
to
Thomas
DeWees,
Grove
Price. David Boney and
FWlll, which wiU be to use 1betie funds for die
Colliaville,
Trnn.,
and
fuJm
share
with
the
group.
City;
Ed
Boney.
Columbus;
Peggy
Crane.
.
.administered b~ Ohio benefit of Ohio .and fully
lhe
class
of
1959,
PaUl
Mementos
of
engraved
tumBill
and
Dorothy
Arnold
At
the
end
of
the
afterDe!wtment of . dL
expect that we would ~K­
. ~ng to a press ate an Ohio offi.ce for dlis Folll1!7", Sydney, Ohio, Carl biers and badges were given Fisher, Torch; Pat Norbett noon the classbooks which
Hood, Pt.Pleasant, W.Va., to those attending as well as and Jay Neutzling, Marion; contained the biographies ·
release · from the ALF, purpose.~
·
~. libe Ohio S11p1eme
1be fouDdltinn was creat- and Brooe Zilik, P\iwcroy. . individual bags of purple Viola Brown Hunt and sis- and piciUres of the last 50
Each shared memcw:ies of and white popoom fur- ter, Columbus; Wilma years were handed out.
Cow:t has imJlosed a freeu ed in I~ out of the landtheir
time on lhlt team. Dished by Tom Brown.
Ohlinger Accord. Hebron;
The anniversary planning
oo lbe OTI'fl's funds, me DWk Master Settlement
Those attending were Jim Bob and Janice Parker and committee consisled of
&gt;QIIII!I has also made it clear AgtM!WM (MSA) lJeN een Cheerleader 1helma Davis
.Jeffers
was
also
bouoo:d.
and
,Becky
Baker, Carolyn Phillips Surface. Marcia Grueser Arnold.
dull !be state can seek per- lhe tobacco iod"stry; -46
The
class
had
dalicattd
its
Benbrook,
Texas;
Ron
and Marietta; Bill and florence Tom Brown. Thelnui Davis'
mission to spend fund&amp; to state gove:mmeiD .-1 fiw:
yearbook
10
Coach
lktton
Anna
Murray,
TYler,
Texas;
Bearhs Wood. Coolville.
Jeffers. Roger Hysell,
booor OTPF's comlnit- U.S. ilaritllries. It is loc"'M
and
Crystal!
Attending from Meigs Florence Bearhs Wood,
ments " One of those com- . in Washington, D.~ and isa ancl it was his first trip bact Banon
to
Pomeroy
in
SO
years~
He
Campbell,
Euless,
Texas;
County
were Dale and Pany Carolyn Phillips Surface.
mitments
was
nearly SOI(cl(3• .ooo-profil Olpniis
tbc
only
living
teacbec
of
Tom
Games,
Denver,
Colo.;
Douglas
Arnold, Marcia · Mary Lou Smith Hawkins.
~.000 to· tbe Holur zation.
the
class.
,
Roger
and
Marilyn
White
Grueser
Arnold
and Stacie Fay Thomas DeWees,
10baooo
PreveJ!fion
Progmns like .· Holur
Tom
Brown
oooductell
a
Bankes.
Melbourne.
Fla.
;
·
Arnold,
John
Beaver.
Bob . Rachel Roush Stout and
Program · ·for
Gatlia- Toblli::OO Pre"ention are
Jrioon-Meigs Coun?ie~.
holding out bope !hat a last memorial service for the Robert Slack. East Windsor, and Gladys Chaney. Larry Dale and Patty Douglas
WJib the freeze of funds ditch ellori to secme fund- twelve deceased membr&gt;.'i;.. .12enn.; Roo and Maxine and Phyllis «;urtis. Thelma Arnold.
sbU in place, ALF said it iDg will help save tobacco
iCQBtacted
lbe
· Ohio prevention P""&amp;'*"i it has
Dt1•~nt of Health to say 1J11Piemeole4, including a
1lle oqanizatioo was "ready branch offioe in Meigs
BY 7•MFS RAMI¥"'..-'lllt complex will house simply building machines." · during World War II.
aad iWilling to discuss a plan County oo Second Srreet
:AS~SOC=IA::'E~D-''-IE-::S::-S
' ---:-"'::::_~cocbl~~it simulators~ an altitude
Companies wi II come to
Construction of the new
her and a centrifuge.
Wright-Patterson to take complex will add to WrightDAYlON -lbe largest
"This wiU make Wright- advantage of the human- ·Patterson 's 16 million square
consttuction project at Patterson for human-perfor- perfonnance expertise and feet. As many as 400 conWright-Patterson Air Force mance research the dominant resources, said Michael struction workers are expectBase since World War U center m.. the_Departmen1_of Gessel of the .Dayton . ed on site to excavate. lay
In temli of driving 011 die an undertikin2 that will Defense, S:Ud Joe Sctabt~ Development Coalttlon m foundations. erect girders.
to
for tbe .tie in
'tlaween new .and -old Main new bri~e. if a motorist is make tbe base tie military' s executive director of the Air Washmgton [).C.
and build the roofs and exte.$Kect. He explained CR;Ws CJ:'O!ISing tbe brid£e from dominant center for~- Force Research Lab, which
In 1939, Wright Field and riors. The wortcers have been .
• ..llso gettmg ready ·fur West Vuginia, once tbat :!aor:a:ec;:seardl - . is ts located at the base.
Panerson Field merged to given their own entrance to
,on Main Street .and motorist aoives at the eod
The new oomple_x stems become what would be the base to speed construe~ d Ohio 833 Mlich of ilbe bridJe 011 abe Ohio
rraffic later dur- side. dae will be Ill) left .:~'!;::-'-=: =v~b~~ g,~J:~efx! called Wrig~t-~atterson. lion and minimize any dis. Clllll- 2005
The 300 butldings that ruption of base operations.
rum an4 alP motbriiU will l!beiitiO.~
_,jila&amp;etwo.
...-r-.· .
extsted on the base grew to
'T Allie will first be reroul- bear right on a new section l*x ~to be~The 19,500-person gov- a peak of more than 4,000
od,oa?iJ lbe new Main Street · of Ohia 8.33 near Jle mtain- ed by 2011. ExcaVlllioo will emment work force at
- fiRA "" O
.
.IIIII Bcmng said thele was a ing wall. Motorists wiD begin in-nest come August Wright-Patterson is expect~:
the sub-contractor 1hen come to a stop light
The complex will be borne ed to swell by at least 1.000 .
' ~ ~ MtJ '"I-•~
,~
aJIIIil be in this week to allowing them to tum feft to military researdl on 'SUCh wben the complex is filled .
SIIOWTIIIES FOR tiON.IIIMII
1llalle asphalt on new Main towards Pomeroy' or right things as bow humans inttc- with aerospace-medicine
Middlepon, a act with aircraft, respond to scientists and researchers
~ and the new section towards
lllfi!OIIDIL
of OhiO 833, though he route which travels under . warfigbting conditions, han- from Air Force installations
?lilt:' 11:-U!
1~ til, IS,_........................ ::::-:::-::=
the new bridge.
die the stream of data and in TeK.as. Arizona. · New
~~~nliCd the word "chance."
ftltroltMI~; ARTSll:M'MJ
~!ll~~o?P·~~:-u· 1t,tt.w,a
The approach to the stimuli ~ the ...-dpt ;and Mexico and Florida.
,.IJI .· radditio~ Betziog
liE ILUPI.Wi' I! 1a,a1,. tl.
apsi 'd the tie in near bridge ancl iotelc~ are are _.-ected by lli3h .alti- a : , e willlllllke the INTO THE WOODS
Ll'NG RiPlr.nl' o1t1 111, , ...... ;
area a ~t for
Aillo Zollo must be placed being done in ~ so that tudes and gravi«Miooel ..... Da
June'X1&amp;28
Among o?ber thinp, de bi
research funding
_ . exifitiQg traffic which tnlffic can stay moving
. . 7:1,. . . . :
lrill imPact traffiC in that while oonstructioo contin- four--buifding .conip1e&amp; will and personnel that lladi\ion.._ 1he majority of the ues. That traffic will be become home to the U.S. ally have gone to big universaid
Loren
daiaqe woric: on the pro- moved onto the New Main Air Foroe Sdlool of sities."
!lU~I?lan . , 1a.•••
jed ~ be finished in S!ftlet before the approach Aerospace Medicine, which Thompson, a defense analyst
10 the bridge is finished. will train flight surgeons for at the Lexington lnstitute in
tile aext few weeks.
?!IIA.It\IO!I!Molt1l•
S
I S.IICicl'linl ,
. "Jf an goes well ·we TrafJic- will first be tibiftcd lhe Air FOrce and U.S. allies VIrginia. " More and more of
dieD around 11be world. Other the Air Fon:e research on
mould .have traffiC on the 011t0 oew MaiD
Main S!ftlet under de 01110 pad« lbe- JIC!dioo mieMdl wi1P 'include pro- human factors focuses on
-~= 4ZI2nd-. . . . by ~
of ilbe .of Ohio 813 ' beiicle the .wriDI ::oltim ·&amp;omdlemi- ptw:maceutical and behavcal.ad
~
ical
threats.
10ral
research
rather
than
C•'lpolla,
OH (7&lt;101 oMI-ARTS
rrtaining
wall
.
.lilpolh," 8etzing said. t:

PHS class relebrates soth anniversary

.!l*i

falidt

EDITOR

vacalion plans, bul the Meigs
WIC staff hope a short drive
10 Fooleloy to pWcipate in a
Mother's Milk Wlilk aDd
Craft Fair can malrie a wooderful "5raycalion."
Evca~s will be held on
A • l with lbe ooe mi!e
!:fsnning ar: 6:.30 p.m.
ancl
to be displayed

from 6-8 p.m. The walk will
follow Pomeroy' s paved
walking path along the bank
of lbe Ohio River with free
T-shirts available 10 ~
registering for the walk
before June 30. Craft Fair
space may be ~eserved for
$10 before July 15. Tiered
sponsorships are also available: Gold $50, Silver $35,
and . Bronze $20. Contact
992.0392 or 992-6626 to

:,jY

. ·

LETTERS TO THE

POMEROY - The· swnna beat and rising gas
prires can put a &lt;lampe.- oo

DelayedhnlP2¥Al

OJ:klll

ln bodl hoc*s

.

Hart inducted in Pi Sigma Alpha

'yiiS..S

taries, hiA.•ia!

'

!lOCKSPR!NGS - Scienre Camp '08 f~ "The
Science Man will be_ beld from 9 a.rn.-2 p.m. "-inning
Mooday-Fn~y at Meigs Middle School Next ye3;~~
seventh_and etghth graders are invited to attend Luoch will
be (XQVIded each day and there will be T-shin:s door prizes
~
Enron by calling 740-245-1236 or
J~St~no.edu. . The camp is sponsoml by abe new
Umvemtr of Rio Grande Meigs Center anc1 the Ohio
Appalacbian Center for Higher Educati011. ·

more·

I..Clo • I

("''be

,

One year . .; A Nadh ~ S.. .Bar dilc:ipliuy
oommiuee :said dit.8J•""' ............. Mike ~IMDJ would
be d;dwwrd for his di&amp;alliW pn mlioa of..Jine l&gt;l*e
Uniwa-sily lal:roHe ~
ro; c~ 'of. J:IIIC. Six

=iDfo:aP"'aieaollllli.illS ''
,Teon.U.S. :ailta •
"'Suun~ Wi!liann: 'Ida reboalllboard dte iotrollliilaal S(IIICI' ........ for: lbe lxg ill ~ . . ~igbt by'31))' '
wonan qpassing die rc:Wtd of I days ~y as1nmaut '
SbiQIMIII llocid at the t,tir_ipllllC Ration iq l
.

WIC Walk and Craft Fair registration set

Science camp set

:e

P•••u CanaJIKIIks~

Local Britfs

Monday~.,... i6; . . . .

Islam's legacy of anti-Semitism

The Daily Sentinel

The Daily Sentinel • Pqe As

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Ohio to be cen

f military's human-perfonnance research

-

Bridge fioaaPafjeAl

prepare

aspwt
~ve

,..,=re

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sum

end.

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�Monday, .June 16, 2008
.

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Page-A4 .

OPINION

The Dail
. y Sentinel

=

On ~ ll, 2001,
. Anlftw ~ an academic research
ar:
. Rhode Island
· · did
: w1W may 01Jb3Bec1 aod
. dv• '"' A....,.;. MIS did. On
: his way home tiom Mllk, be
mipped ar a bnnhrore and
boupt a book: Olboullslam.
As be m-alls, it was IIOIDe~
'
Ka1m Amlstt

111 Court lk I• ~Ohio
(740) 912-2158 • FAX (740) 992-2157

)IIWW.II!Jd ., tl . . . oW

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
Dan Goodlich
Publisher

::1::::famousdidn't~
infamoos

aa.tene lbelllch ·

. ~ is
_ fur beino •

Genelal Manager--.'\lews E&lt;itor

--=-• .....tn...

,Dien8
.West

of Islam aDd the West, ·Ibn
"'

gistforls~·R:..fing~ "~

of the book aloud tbal same
night to his 'Wife, also an
· academic, as ..._, weat
about IICCIOIIIltiDg"(;i fiieDds
' and family in mar nalive
New Vert City, be fouod the
book "beacley" and tup:dicia!, lackin.ll" DOt cllily the

.T Q DAY [.N H I$ T 0 R Y

his ~ have
resnlttd in two ~y
resean:Jied and lrail~
tomes of his own: "The
UJy;acy of Jihad,~ publis.bed
in ~.and "The~ of
Islamic . Aotisemttism,"
wbidt haS justoomeout, gar-

neling rnthusiastic adolaoce
schobdybdtbewasuscdto comment from academics
. in scientific ~-m. but ("a ground breaking evrnt"
also a aJODeCiioa to .uofo!d- said Stevrn T. K.liiZ, director
ing events. Even a more of the Elie WJetdC......,.for
extensive swvey of readily · J11daic Stllldies, Boston
available wO!b on Islam Uoivemty ), historians ("'t is

. Today is Monday, June 16, !be 168th day of 2008. There
are 198 days left in the year.
lbday's .Highligbt in History: On June 16, 1858, as be

~IlK ni!!!CJi.J ~i~ raJty's oomi~on for
US
. . Senate" Abtabam Lmooln said the slavery 1ssue had ·
1;0 be resolved, ckdaring, "A ·house divided against itself

staDd..,.,
: On this dale: (o 1883, baseball's first "Ladies' Day~
took place as !be New Yod Golbams offered women l'ree
admjssioo to a game against die Clevellmd Spiders. (New
Yodt won, S-2.}
.
_ .
(o 1897, die govelilmeal SJgl"'d a treaty of annexalloo
with Hawaii.
·
: ln 1903, Fool Motor Co. was~.
· (o 1932, President Hoover and 1ce I'R:sident Clwil;s
Curtis ~ JPIIIIII!inatcd .at lhe Rqlublican national wo- ·
~in~- ·
.
.
(o 1931; die N'a«iooaa (aduli1lial Reoovc:ry Act became
...... ( l t - .... ~ dowa by lbe Supreme Cowt.)
. Ia tefSS, . 'l 'qle 'Pius XII exoomOMmPcd Al:geDtine
Prcri • "' Jum DomiJI&amp;u Ptmn for ~IfldliD! two priests
(rom 116 00"111')'. (llowewr-..die bin • • dli:ll:tit~ely liW
iD 7963 .._die ('Mholic: Oudl""' lwed dut Paoo bad
oilmty bcca dac 2: d widtew••• • ,;. •ioo).
Ia ·~ tbe
Court. in Kent IV. Dalles, ruled 1hat
am. RiJct:well
~ ... be •"'•inl :a passpurt
"""""""of bis o• ..;, ..tliljllillllli.
(o l%3, tbe wodd'1 fil1lt fauale ~ bveleL, Vafm!ina'
Tacs!itova. was 1••........, i!!lo ~ by tbe Soviet Uaioo
.tload \bstok 6.
.
(o 1918. Presidrllt oder and PaniD!llnian leader Om.v
Toilijos ez.rln•11 • 6e - - . . . . . of 'Mih-- MioJn for die,.;
eanM(

yielded similar plar:ibldes

iuoled less in Islamic lheol~
ogy and historY lban in the

cootempoi3Jy ~cal die·t.ates of mulllCillturalism.
The s&amp;nrilit in him wmtl:d
to !plow uiore.
· ·
Thus martcd lbe WICxP"""""' be:inningof a rigorOilS and illl.l!!!ioati~ xademic odyssey dcrp UIIO lbe
study of Islam - "thi!i
depressing obsession of
mine .~ as 8ostom calls it. It
bas alSO acquainted lhe
marlCal reseatdl« widl a
global fratemity of lsla!nic
sdlolars, wbicb iDoludes abe
two be calls his D1I'Dklrf;: abe
Egyptian"bom hillforiaa of
dhimmjt!Jde, Bat Ye'(l[,
the Palristani-bom scboJar

a

$40 million, decade-long
Nationallnstilules of Helltb
reoal sllidy in\101vin8 IIICft
than 4,000 palimts in die
UoitM Stales, C,nacla and
Brazil Not ooly dial (and
this is SQlJIC'Abing char: has
~me, both .as wbal
you might call a oonlia-e in
Islamic.inquiry and also as a
friend), be bas applied
essentially the same :5Cientific principles be uses in
medical research 'to tbcstudyoflslanL
"We are used to analynng
things Vel)' critically and
takilig almost everything
witb a grain of salt,~ Bostom
explained recently, discussing bis w~ as a midical resean:bel' at Rhode
ls1aod Hospital, lhe IBIIj«
.teaching bospital affiliatr4
with Brown Uoivemty.
· Such analysis includes, for
example, monthly gatherings known as morbidity
and IOOitality ~views wbeie
emm&gt; and .,..ersigbts in
medical ~t .-e aitically euminnl "We arc ..
trained to Chink ilbe wiks
. ~.neverhigb«beral•sewe .

•

•

RalllDI!pdS .....

=

Cllrilaim Faupe _.
Getmany is ded eel • IC:l~
tlalfactbyhi,e~•i•wiuda•
Banard
1"4 7 .

Lewis_,
........... mcil • l,&amp;w
Wnpt

F

TCMa"). Boltam's o• 7
sions, bBd 011 • 11mJ ~
~p1em _. •c•• " • ,

' PO~OY -· Randy W. Hart, Jr. son of Randy ud
Sbecri Hart of Salem Center has Been inducted to the Pi
Sipa Alpha Natio~ Pol~tical Scieoce Honor Society,
Iota Zeta ~ ~o _Umversity. Randy is a thUd year
student at Ohio UruvefSity and a 2005 grad11ate of Mriors ·
High SchooL
-sc

eyewitness ••MM•M• v' ·-ebe jll e Ms in '7lle I J l
of Islamic Anlisrmith= ·
suggeitodlerwise.

Both abe · aab· S .;,;...·
book and die jihad boat.
llr.f&lt;e il are c.lllllllndllll.._
a.ty. l'bey Cl(lt:ll widt 7IIIIB
inlroductory ~ "'
Boslom,
be

•

it..-a

says, to ";;
·p.o-·
-posals. Ia ,._
P.. lie
p:cscmsbishyp4 .d_.
Oli bis ii:MEqa ·; r•• of . ,_
evjdmao: and dlila ·. ;..: '
diladintheratoftle.:,.;,

iudt .._" ·

11111111aia1" ......;l.s lrey • -~
magnificent,~ said Martin
from both Muslim aDII . . ..
· Gilbett, official biographer
Muslim !i011roeS dill .~
of Winston ~j. -and
ncwr bdQac bcm a• !' 5 I·
eipel1S {"'ne of lbe most
iDto fnVid• Sudl.U. · I ·
imponant boob of our
serve · "• a lCilily •I , .. ,.
ii1M," uid Ayaan Him Ali, .n .Niq wid! life ,and flnMn UJ1. "b: iF4ts
aulhor, :"lnfidc.Jj.
·
· deaih.Jfyou . SOIIldbiDg fCaflfurlleaueha'iD . .~·
The obvious question is: wroog,youk.ifpcople.~
tonbis.l c •
· :.
How does a medical
Bri!J!ID! !illdl slrqJiicism
After all, an hislln'. a ill'
IC-mer 5tudyiog homo- D ~ to dJe SIU!iy of sciolcc:, lbe ll'Udlliei · cysteine's .effect on caidio- [slam (wbe«, be maintains, evidence.
•:
v.ascular disease in patients "gelling III'"'M'tlling wrong~
(~ ~If il il ~ J ·
. suffering lirom chronic kid- Qll1 kill even people), nist /9r 1M lll'v';t;• •
ney problenis shift his foeus Bosrom sooo fouod hi!D!i!':lf TUMs., SM is rile ••# 71 6/
10 dJe Study of jihad and butting up iopinst j)jWISU!SI!S "J'he Ot!lllla ~
GriJI!• .
·an?li-Semitism in Warn?
teachings OO!JIIafi&lt;tril by lhe "P: H_. Aml!rica'.- AIH r 1
Answer: He doesn't. That · voluminous evidro:le be was lkve/opmerlt b .,..,_,
is, .mile ftnbalbd on his ga!berin,g.
T~
anti- Down
·
Welloi!'nt
lslamio s1udies, Bostom Selndisffi in Islam, the ~ CivilitPtiaft. • lllltl lttu· ill
a likJoDg Dlmoa:at, b lbe 'ject "of his new book. The btog al. ~ .,_
way - bas · ~ d!e riew tbat Islamic ami- edit be cn-urted w
Piinciple ID\Q1igator in a Semi?ism is a ~tabvdy ' ~st@I/OiQM.f1111.} .

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A look at 'the·dollar's .long slide

.,

Q: WUt ..-e die • - lac. At. the same time, the mOie aiJI:a;tive to fon:i,p·
t.aeN .u d diudovantagu ecOnomies of Europe imr~. 8u! it could lie .a411 :a weak Idler?
expanded, drioving .u p the blow to ao alindy f'n!li-·

8r T• . . _

Today's Binlldayli: Act11r Bill OlbtK. is 73. Au5bor Erich
~ is 11. Author Joyce c-1 ~is 70. Counuy singer

a· y"Cmb-Ollddock is (I)_ ~ Lamoat Dozier is
'WCik U.S. dollal" is
A: It's basically die mir- valueoflbeeuro.apinsttbe economy and iacaeae
61. ~ iiqer
· l.evat is 66. AciRss Ill1be
~
..'&amp;lfOpllltoi!apiD- ror~ U.S. maoufactur- .OO!ba:. Apd_ ~aW~t •ribalp recenionrisb.
.
Joan Vlll1 Ad is 65, RbydmHnd-blues si.,er JMICII Slllith
prioe5
higher,
making
ers
and
olber
.
e
qmers
ben'intemt
QIU
br
dte
&amp;!I'
fD
The
~Q(lilion
iii
fardlie
(11)£ ~Siics} is 58. Boxa- Roberto Duran is S7. ~
siiF · Vannelli is 56. Aaless Lawie Mdcalf i&amp; S • ~
·efit as American ,products ~=.~..s~- .:..~ government ' to buy u.s.·
~ Jamy Sbimin~ is 41. Al:k:Jl" James l'llriclt 'liM for Arne•" ••• a OWl'beo••e mlalively .c:beaprL - · - - ...... .dollan on ~ ~- -'
'118 ........ eo&amp;dy. More foo:i8n tourists caD .SCf'VCid to push dolm .. . rency l1lllltets - c.al!eclSCualt is 40. AdOl" Eddie Cibri.an i.s 35. A&lt;tiCs5 Olina ·
SbaYers is 31. Aclre1ii Missy Peregtym is 16. A&lt;tress Olivia A t tbe1lalllelime,it's ........t . llffml to visit the Unitfxl OOU.'s value. 1111; &amp;iilr intcrvention-eidawf , .
eqolielr;. 'llltK~s bern States. But it costs more for -has fallen sbalply against on its own or in •• w ear·
H:ackis2S. Singa"~Mw lleGarmG("American ldol")is 21.
a
ftunyoftalkfulmP«Wient
Americans ,t o tr.avel .abroad dll!curnintbeputyt.ar.
with otba COIIIItrieL Solae·
11ntgbt for Today: "We fe.- ~ bef~ we hate
Bu
~ ~ .CJ!Ia- bigh-level or buy iinpo!ted produCts, · Q: Wllllt i5 d.e_U.S.
European allies 11a\'C . . ..
it. A dlild &lt;Who fears ooi~s bcoomes a man who bates
officials ~~ ·days,_!IOIIle t"ueling.inftation.
a
?'1 p '571 1- •
gested Ibis couneofm- ·
JJOise.~- Cyril CoonoUy, British critic (1903-1974).
of it seem•ntJy conll3dic!oly,
That's pretty mud! the sit- 11 ' 1
blaming die dollar'&amp; t1 ::; ·
about ilbe ~ c1 a Wltion right now. And jf the
A: U,S. ofliia.,!&amp;, 'lililllllf for infcct.mg tbelr. 0W11
~dollar. '
cloUar (IIIOti.oueS t!l sink, it lhe llailay ~. ~VI' 001mries widi inflarioL · :
Some
~
,
and
'
I:)(JIIIAI ~!ring more i.ntlatioo L~ ...,..,.,., b wa
To do dlis, the
•
wen; lbout ~!.*dol- and .tfleli lrigger a seU~ff . dut .a ~-,c~o~.w is,ia the could draw down ils l!llllllY
value in
OOIJII- by~ ofU.S. in~o~est- nMioo•sbefi!t inlere&amp;t. Ycube of euro&amp;, Jl!ll aal odw-~~
l..l&amp;r:r 1o dtt! eJii9T am M"lor -- 'TIM!y sltoMid ~ kss tries
m~ lll: home- aOO'. 'IY"MS, .makiD,! it hanlcr to adminisrrarioo did llCI!hina ClP
.:
amcacy •t lzi'm , . _ J(J() tOOnls. All ktters DR wbject to &amp;liting, ll!ll&amp;f ~
wb a strollp" dol!a" coald pay down de IIMional ddll to bad up its .assertion with oa deposit with die New·
leadmaU.S. RaJWdy: aDd inc«asing ri&amp;b of action ud many policy- Yolk lftlertJ'
!t'e Bit*·
~u:m ~~te7:!::::
a
.
reoession.
makers
d~y welCO!Dild -and buy doDan. .
.. .
Otltlussing issues, llDI pusoiiiJlitil!s. lLttus of
ak., lr'v _, a
Q: Wila's • r I f • die slide, mainfDhccause it
Q: Brw lbly II dlrll ..
"-b to organfuJiiotu tlll4 iNJiviJwds will not~ IJIXI!J1l·
%...
~ IIII:IJ..
-• -_
. . . •• ••
....
• .......~
·" ~ expo«sn
.
....
....
• .•. ...,,
•
._.....to-.........
....
• . . . . 1 ....
•~
elljoT publicaJi.on.
A: lf libe dollar pW!s
iliad a ' pllira? expanding, I! rare bright spot
A: Thet-e have llflm !niwe4
agamst other Clllll'eDCieS, it
A: It's a dlmct one, since in a ttoublecl teooDOIIly.
signals. PaulsOn, ilbe uais said to be lil:rellfthe"ing. · oil is geneGIIIy bought and
Over the last w.eek, how- swy e:iucwy, said ia
Its buying powes I1ICmlliCS sold in ciOilars. 1be OlW'e the ever, officials have si~ . 1:11e television iDII!Irriewl• ·
relative to the odlr.rauten· ~alue of de gRieliliack goes that they don't want fwther Monday and l'ues1sy . ..
acs.
If ils e!CbaD,r Glte OOwn, die more it costs to .declines. Bush, Treasury lbe. admjnistnltioo .._, _
Jteader Senrices
dec!inel; .
oda air· buy die same barrel of oil.
Secretary Henry Paulson ingoo!ookolftheUIIId,.
ICtlcies,
it
is.
aid
to
be
Of
OOWlie,
deo:
.-e
iOiber
and
Federal
Re.serwe it might use to =-.r 1111:·
C I I tJtallct
Nr PNICI .....-y ...,,oan, .~~~on~~~w
ft*miD!
lt':
s
.
~w:. ~ iaYOived in IOfiBy~s Chairman Ben Bemanke dollar's v.alue - W
z·
In .. .. to tl1!ough l'riaoy, U1 ·c -t-11I&amp;:R
.are
ah
.PJI
aad
'!")!:Hf
'$4-a-~rllon
pso-.
have
all
issued
&lt;t•ements
abeuliC
.
o
fgoWA•n.,..,._.
..
. ..... - a t .. ..,... Poo-. Olio.
1111
di lldv.a,... to i11o11! a line ~- They _... bacli:.inJI; the need for: a vm?ion to pulla lbe dalllr's
4fta_,.,.. bo:uua-natV&lt;IIll
Pueetiu47J.
~ aoda eakdal!ar- -~drm_, fl-. (]Iiiia . stroog.donar andeip~Li~ value hipT
I
ll.n.~
--;2151.
~--,
with
IIMOIIII
JE 1 ao4 lelia, politicat ,_...., DOIIC41I about die aOIUI'Y·
But Bush himwdf, 4 7 ·
~ auil7weu• 1 r
in ·oil~
~A aroqg dollar is in our in,g to"rqxdeis in Slovlllia' ., -.. n. Dllr ......... 411 Oourt ·
Q: .... ~- . . . - - ~ons, idle :initi!ity, ot .nation's interes?s. lt is in lbe on Tueiday, signathl lilae.
(7. . . 11141. .
-.Ax:woy, DtiD' 45711.
tats.ta•
••• '! ~duAl of major·~- inleres75oflbe global coooo- interest in sud! a cnne.
a1 7 I 7
A:~S~mDA:dal:arloin&amp; IJOI!ntrie' to
nr
my," Bush -saidMoudayasbe suggestinginStead"dulrdI I
the
:
jX'lCie
to
U.S.
•
•
R
production,
and
,
J
!P!t.et
enibw\rd 011 a European tour, .ati\'C value of cc:- eies
'
,"1127
of
foreip
JIIY""m
:and
llt.l"specu],Mion
Q: Wllat ma be._ to -will end up settiJ13 die pmp' a.:...,OI,._I_o,&amp;t. 12 .
"'tiM
NWcs. 1ba
110 blq&gt;
1be weaker dollar bas st.!p or rrvaw • Har er valuation of die dallar.~
•
Dlllr
... -ANd. &amp;1.14
inftilion
·
i
adlecl.U.S.ilOIIbernainajorfactot::anone
slicle!
· Tbc I,J.S. hasn't iaaward
21 ?a c
a I ............. &amp;l 1ll OM_.
lll!lllel'li
ahp
lr
fil
Wten
!bat
oould
lhi.Uten
'
t
be
A:
Coouncots
by
those
in Clll'R:IlCY nw• e tilace
"1127
~ '
~ II:ll~ ftnip couo- •' 111 oea .o f.a U.S. mxJVC.IY. 1bme officials. wliidl !10IIIe Bu&amp;b ~'Gfta ia 2001. ·
A?hatllf. . ·
•, • _ _ . , - !DeS. lt'sUIIIPIIyasiplofa Q: ....
call j~wboniq. be~ · And
110 buy
0 -"Y lbat is firIS
ltllla:O...
......
&amp;l15
·-IO
.
.
D
I
I
y
l
l
l
o
.
llroog
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
,
·
nudge
up
the
dollar
on
cloUan
alllld
bw"IIW.
FOr ·
'c
.
.
Oliolo Eid 1e . ...-. I¥ .... .. • lln 111{ oo all qlindrn.
A: 1he &amp;tbir bl,' lbcm on Monday and 1\e!iday, espe- OJJe rllinl. it wo.f4 tae
Q: A.- die a . .
eitelldcd slide ap'in&amp;t . cially •11gainst the .euro llld great 5WDi of .... '1 .., '
a . ... :ludro.l&lt;. E.d ' 10
....!
odla" major ~'· tbe yen. Some traders mite •Y cifh ,. . 11le
'
r,ra •
A: ,U.s.pu.-....!leol•w &lt;1'l•ia1ty die euro and the believethedollar'sslumpis ~ " ' " " •
· is·
..... ..,.. Counlf
more
e~w:
Jnl!lll'lieU, JlpPOCse yea. for about tift nearing an end. 8ut tbe dollbe
laip,at
ill
die
wodd.
wi5ll
o ..... _ ,_Ext. 12
13Weeks
'32.26
mali: ing • l!lnlr6 fur U.S. yean - ..a period ,dwiUJ Jar remained -under pressure over $1 trillion tr.ted C'&amp;':ll
26 Weeks
'64.20
~aoies
SO """lflele .in ~ 1he U .S. b:Pde.deficit an~ options ~or:govemment day. Seeins the U;S. tryq
' 127.11
52Wellls
·fore 1gn mw\ets. It aho · wi!b the ~ of :the, wod4 ac71on w~ limited.
to prop vp die gn%U1~ by ·
-·~,com
01' 7dl ...... c-.~r
makes i7 hilda fot fomi&amp;a eeoera:Jiy ilOIItq,ue(l . to
. The Fed ooul4 ·start uis- buy.ing dollars oould ·be13 .......
'53.55 ,
mvestors to bu)' dollar- Widen, equiring 'liMe bor-- ·ing •interest [!Illes apin. That ~ as a •
of d 4 rr
26 .......
'107.10 I
'
!"*
based
seollities
•
of.
wwin&amp;
from
abmad
ud
.
would
~
the
dollar
llon
and
pwible
~ :a
. • •,l • .1
52-111
'2142!
Ieavy
U.'S. -~
fllr1hct
w : I "'lin~ Cbe dol- by making U.S. !-nyestmeots Jmeaed lWIId of lldliJ!e:
'
'

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·-The Daily·Sentinel

oJ.u:;'i..!::,...

ow - ""'"'""'

PQIIIIOI•,.

o..-.n-'-•
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•

I

.

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.
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their own safety. Gerlach
told oouncil
• 1be demolition is expected to · cost the viiJage
between
$6.500
and
$8,000, depending on how
much debris must be carried frvm lbe ·site and
hauled to a landfill. Gerlach
Slid much debris from the
Qlld school can be buried in
tile building's basement and
covered up.
.
• Gerlach and Roberts have
both said long-1Mn ·pbms
for !he site on Park Stmet,
J¥:xt to ·the viUage garage,
sbould i!tclude a securitY
fence and a shelter fot
equipment storage.
, Fuel stored in aboveground tanks will be
"

'

register, re~rve space.· or
gel more information.
Research is continuing to
reveal the [ll'!lte&lt;tive properties of bllllllin milk in preventing diseases ranging
from ear infectioos and allergies to diabrtes, obesity. and
canccrs. 1be Morber' s Milk
Bank of Obio expands this
problelioo wbm mother's
milk may oot be available by
supplyin8 dolo- milk.

"We are honored to havethe oppolt)lnity to hos1 this
event to increase awareness
about the health benefits of
mother's milk; provide
breastfeeding information;
and create an opportunity
for local ·vendors 10 display
their products." said Leanne
Cunningham. WIC din:ctoc
All proceeds will be
donated to The Modlec's
Milk Bank of Ohio.

Additional
loan
funds
available
to
businesses
STAFF Re
ORr .

POMEROY
-With
mewed suppmt from lhe
Govemo£'s
OffiCe of
Appalachia
and
the
Appalachian
Regional
Commission',
additional
pumped out of'the tanb for small busineis fiMncin8 is
storage d11ring demolition, now awailable through
and wiD be reiUmed to the . Buckeye
HiUs-Hocling
Regional
'tanb once demolition is· Valley · ·
completed. The village ha1i Devel~
District's
detennioed there are oo Revolvang Loan . Fund to
tmderground fuel tanks.
SUpPOit
job
growth.
The village bas expressed BHIHVRDD
includes
~ in using Brownfield Meigs County.
Redevelopment
fundiog
"We m:eived an additional
from the state to study the $259,000 to fund loans in our
environmental condition of
lbe soil on lbe site, but they
weni tempgooily l!!lllV.aiJable. Now~ rouncil believes ·
it would talre years to oom- ·
plete the oeoessacy analysis
and 'Studie1i required to qualify for ilbe ICdamalion funding. The cost of demoliri.on
will be . shaml among village dep;utmmts.

disuict.~said Buckeye Hills' ancl working or: start-up capSince its inception, the
Business
Development ital needs.
Buckeye Hills Revo!Ying
Coonlinator Tma Meunier.
Revolving loans include . Loan Fund Program bas
"If WlllflOIIe has a plan for a fixed interest rates and made 114 loans totaling $6.6
new business or is R3ly to terms of three to 52 years, million a-eating 700 ,v.... and
laketbcirexislingbu$nessl0 depending on the oollaternl retaining 700 jobs"';• our
.d ie next levd, tbe Revolving used to secure the loan. ln eight counties, said Executive
lnan l:'rogQm may be the addirion to ARC, the Director Misty Casto.
resouroe tbey aced CO make Revolving Loan program is
"The RLF program is one
tbal pima reality.,;
also fiinded by · the of the primary economic
.RLF loans fiU the 'gap' Economic Development developmenl tools serv~
bctweco conventional bank Ad'"nistr.i.tion and Farmers small bllsinesses in rural
fillliiiCio8. owner equity and Home Administration.
The program has geothetotal.amount necessary
Because one full-time job ernted $19.4 million .in pri•
to eomplete a ~sed eqQivalent - 40 hours per vale funds invested in the
business project. Eltgibie · week - must be created or region with an additional
activities include acquiring rerained for every .$25.000 $3 .4millioninpublicfimds."
or improving land and of Revolving Loan financlnformo.tion is available
bllildings, consiiUOiion, new ing, these loans focus on from Buckeye Hills at 376machinery or equipment, creating jobs.
0360.

areas.

Preventionrrom P.At

terms of the use of tobacco to preliCnl to the court to ·
soettlement · money being honor the stare's tobaooo .
placed in the state' s eco- conlrol oommitments unril a
nomic -stimulus package decision is made in !he •
. recently signed in1o law. ca8e." 1be ALF's kWc is
According to Gov. Ted that ·p attiesusedeuctfydlis
Strickland' s office, the process to continue IObacco
Pon•oy High Schoo?, Class of 1t5e
governor recently signed a control pmgr:ams elrlier in
bill to move Oh1o tobacco the case.
prevention effons to lhe
ACCOilding to die ALF
Obio
Department
of press release, 0011 has not
POMEROY - Members Larry Dale Baker, Linda Manin, Metropolis. IlL ; Davis Jeffers, Kenneth ·
Health . .~e bill immedi- yetrespondlld. tolbe~
of
abe Pomeroy ~ Basnett, Jack Braley, Shirley Carl. and Vicli:.ie Clark Eblin, Jerry and Barbara
abolished .tbe Oil+ ~
dMiu.P . I f•tndatiotl .
~l«&lt;l
,Class of l9S8 ·
Landet1i, Larry Tracy, Jim Shrevei Burlington, Ky ..; Fields, Jack Follrod and
'
.authorized . Ohio ; spolrespe:l'iqlll 'said. :+'we
.•••,
llbe
SOdu••!'~~et'&amp;lll'
,
Withee. Roger Grindley. . Joseph . L, · Kenpedy, Rose Werry. Roger and
Tl:easuret' Ridlard Corcl!:af ...,...;. . .... 11 fill dill,ot
dlr:ir
higlucbool
gra.luaBill
Sterrett, Dicldtummel, Collierville, Tenn..
Barbara Hysell, Don and;
to . liquidate
· the · WiD join GUr eft'Ms 110 brip
David and Lana Kern, JoEUen Roush, Mary Lou
Foundatioo's $270 million tbeliC life-savillg . pngmns tion with a ~et-toged:la at Jobn Strickland, Kathe111
the
GraCe
q,isoopal
OJw:cll
Roush
and
Danny
Zirkle.
A
Sterling,
Va.; Phil an4 Ann Smith Hawkins and Regina,
in . remaining funds . HB in plaoe during the remain-'
Annex
on
Saturday
afterc
white
rose
represented
each
.
Icenhower
Hoffman, Simpson. Sue Smith Zirkle,,
:544 :allows $230 million der of the litigatioo.~
noon,
May
24.
deceased
member.
W"JlliamsiOwn,
W.Va.;
Tom Michael and Doris Wellsfrom 'Ohio's tobacco masThe ALF ~lease also
Spec:ial
guest
a;tnm~g-was
·
Many
shared
memories
of
Brown,
Port
Clinton,
OH; Menz and guests of the·
t« iettlemcnt agreement to goes on to say: ':'We are
lbclp ~ the $1 .57 bi!l- acutely aware of lbe ~ Coach Dick Rdtoo of their days at Pomeroy High Harold and Rachel Roush class; Rosalie Nelson·
noo "'bipanisan" economic char: Ohioans wiU pay if the M-sfield who cOidled the School and later in the after- Stout, Hilliard; Dorrence Johnson. Charlone Murray
.unutus packa~e. The state siiCI:eeds in diverting 1958 balidl•all team to b: no&lt;in, a group photo was and Donna Hess, Clinton; Rowley. Diane · Hood;:
OlampiOnsbi.p. ~:liken in front -of the old Bill an'd Doris Imboden Connie Folmer, Susan and·
mmajning $40 million will lheliC funds from sobacoo SEOAL
be distributed to the controL lf we succcc:d in Team IIIC!IIben attmding Pomeroy High School. Ford, Cincinnati ; Dan MitcheU Metts, Howard K ..
Ron
Martin, Several
classmembers Struble,
Powell;
Fay Parker, Rick Crow, Norman
Tolwico Use Prevention our le,gal claiJD, we pledae . were
Mm:upolis,
ID~.
Joe
Kmnedy,
brought
memoribilia
to
Thomas
DeWees,
Grove
Price. David Boney and
FWlll, which wiU be to use 1betie funds for die
Colliaville,
Trnn.,
and
fuJm
share
with
the
group.
City;
Ed
Boney.
Columbus;
Peggy
Crane.
.
.administered b~ Ohio benefit of Ohio .and fully
lhe
class
of
1959,
PaUl
Mementos
of
engraved
tumBill
and
Dorothy
Arnold
At
the
end
of
the
afterDe!wtment of . dL
expect that we would ~K­
. ~ng to a press ate an Ohio offi.ce for dlis Folll1!7", Sydney, Ohio, Carl biers and badges were given Fisher, Torch; Pat Norbett noon the classbooks which
Hood, Pt.Pleasant, W.Va., to those attending as well as and Jay Neutzling, Marion; contained the biographies ·
release · from the ALF, purpose.~
·
~. libe Ohio S11p1eme
1be fouDdltinn was creat- and Brooe Zilik, P\iwcroy. . individual bags of purple Viola Brown Hunt and sis- and piciUres of the last 50
Each shared memcw:ies of and white popoom fur- ter, Columbus; Wilma years were handed out.
Cow:t has imJlosed a freeu ed in I~ out of the landtheir
time on lhlt team. Dished by Tom Brown.
Ohlinger Accord. Hebron;
The anniversary planning
oo lbe OTI'fl's funds, me DWk Master Settlement
Those attending were Jim Bob and Janice Parker and committee consisled of
&gt;QIIII!I has also made it clear AgtM!WM (MSA) lJeN een Cheerleader 1helma Davis
.Jeffers
was
also
bouoo:d.
and
,Becky
Baker, Carolyn Phillips Surface. Marcia Grueser Arnold.
dull !be state can seek per- lhe tobacco iod"stry; -46
The
class
had
dalicattd
its
Benbrook,
Texas;
Ron
and Marietta; Bill and florence Tom Brown. Thelnui Davis'
mission to spend fund&amp; to state gove:mmeiD .-1 fiw:
yearbook
10
Coach
lktton
Anna
Murray,
TYler,
Texas;
Bearhs Wood. Coolville.
Jeffers. Roger Hysell,
booor OTPF's comlnit- U.S. ilaritllries. It is loc"'M
and
Crystal!
Attending from Meigs Florence Bearhs Wood,
ments " One of those com- . in Washington, D.~ and isa ancl it was his first trip bact Banon
to
Pomeroy
in
SO
years~
He
Campbell,
Euless,
Texas;
County
were Dale and Pany Carolyn Phillips Surface.
mitments
was
nearly SOI(cl(3• .ooo-profil Olpniis
tbc
only
living
teacbec
of
Tom
Games,
Denver,
Colo.;
Douglas
Arnold, Marcia · Mary Lou Smith Hawkins.
~.000 to· tbe Holur zation.
the
class.
,
Roger
and
Marilyn
White
Grueser
Arnold
and Stacie Fay Thomas DeWees,
10baooo
PreveJ!fion
Progmns like .· Holur
Tom
Brown
oooductell
a
Bankes.
Melbourne.
Fla.
;
·
Arnold,
John
Beaver.
Bob . Rachel Roush Stout and
Program · ·for
Gatlia- Toblli::OO Pre"ention are
Jrioon-Meigs Coun?ie~.
holding out bope !hat a last memorial service for the Robert Slack. East Windsor, and Gladys Chaney. Larry Dale and Patty Douglas
WJib the freeze of funds ditch ellori to secme fund- twelve deceased membr&gt;.'i;.. .12enn.; Roo and Maxine and Phyllis «;urtis. Thelma Arnold.
sbU in place, ALF said it iDg will help save tobacco
iCQBtacted
lbe
· Ohio prevention P""&amp;'*"i it has
Dt1•~nt of Health to say 1J11Piemeole4, including a
1lle oqanizatioo was "ready branch offioe in Meigs
BY 7•MFS RAMI¥"'..-'lllt complex will house simply building machines." · during World War II.
aad iWilling to discuss a plan County oo Second Srreet
:AS~SOC=IA::'E~D-''-IE-::S::-S
' ---:-"'::::_~cocbl~~it simulators~ an altitude
Companies wi II come to
Construction of the new
her and a centrifuge.
Wright-Patterson to take complex will add to WrightDAYlON -lbe largest
"This wiU make Wright- advantage of the human- ·Patterson 's 16 million square
consttuction project at Patterson for human-perfor- perfonnance expertise and feet. As many as 400 conWright-Patterson Air Force mance research the dominant resources, said Michael struction workers are expectBase since World War U center m.. the_Departmen1_of Gessel of the .Dayton . ed on site to excavate. lay
In temli of driving 011 die an undertikin2 that will Defense, S:Ud Joe Sctabt~ Development Coalttlon m foundations. erect girders.
to
for tbe .tie in
'tlaween new .and -old Main new bri~e. if a motorist is make tbe base tie military' s executive director of the Air Washmgton [).C.
and build the roofs and exte.$Kect. He explained CR;Ws CJ:'O!ISing tbe brid£e from dominant center for~- Force Research Lab, which
In 1939, Wright Field and riors. The wortcers have been .
• ..llso gettmg ready ·fur West Vuginia, once tbat :!aor:a:ec;:seardl - . is ts located at the base.
Panerson Field merged to given their own entrance to
,on Main Street .and motorist aoives at the eod
The new oomple_x stems become what would be the base to speed construe~ d Ohio 833 Mlich of ilbe bridJe 011 abe Ohio
rraffic later dur- side. dae will be Ill) left .:~'!;::-'-=: =v~b~~ g,~J:~efx! called Wrig~t-~atterson. lion and minimize any dis. Clllll- 2005
The 300 butldings that ruption of base operations.
rum an4 alP motbriiU will l!beiitiO.~
_,jila&amp;etwo.
...-r-.· .
extsted on the base grew to
'T Allie will first be reroul- bear right on a new section l*x ~to be~The 19,500-person gov- a peak of more than 4,000
od,oa?iJ lbe new Main Street · of Ohia 8.33 near Jle mtain- ed by 2011. ExcaVlllioo will emment work force at
- fiRA "" O
.
.IIIII Bcmng said thele was a ing wall. Motorists wiD begin in-nest come August Wright-Patterson is expect~:
the sub-contractor 1hen come to a stop light
The complex will be borne ed to swell by at least 1.000 .
' ~ ~ MtJ '"I-•~
,~
aJIIIil be in this week to allowing them to tum feft to military researdl on 'SUCh wben the complex is filled .
SIIOWTIIIES FOR tiON.IIIMII
1llalle asphalt on new Main towards Pomeroy' or right things as bow humans inttc- with aerospace-medicine
Middlepon, a act with aircraft, respond to scientists and researchers
~ and the new section towards
lllfi!OIIDIL
of OhiO 833, though he route which travels under . warfigbting conditions, han- from Air Force installations
?lilt:' 11:-U!
1~ til, IS,_........................ ::::-:::-::=
the new bridge.
die the stream of data and in TeK.as. Arizona. · New
~~~nliCd the word "chance."
ftltroltMI~; ARTSll:M'MJ
~!ll~~o?P·~~:-u· 1t,tt.w,a
The approach to the stimuli ~ the ...-dpt ;and Mexico and Florida.
,.IJI .· radditio~ Betziog
liE ILUPI.Wi' I! 1a,a1,. tl.
apsi 'd the tie in near bridge ancl iotelc~ are are _.-ected by lli3h .alti- a : , e willlllllke the INTO THE WOODS
Ll'NG RiPlr.nl' o1t1 111, , ...... ;
area a ~t for
Aillo Zollo must be placed being done in ~ so that tudes and gravi«Miooel ..... Da
June'X1&amp;28
Among o?ber thinp, de bi
research funding
_ . exifitiQg traffic which tnlffic can stay moving
. . 7:1,. . . . :
lrill imPact traffiC in that while oonstructioo contin- four--buifding .conip1e&amp; will and personnel that lladi\ion.._ 1he majority of the ues. That traffic will be become home to the U.S. ally have gone to big universaid
Loren
daiaqe woric: on the pro- moved onto the New Main Air Foroe Sdlool of sities."
!lU~I?lan . , 1a.•••
jed ~ be finished in S!ftlet before the approach Aerospace Medicine, which Thompson, a defense analyst
10 the bridge is finished. will train flight surgeons for at the Lexington lnstitute in
tile aext few weeks.
?!IIA.It\IO!I!Molt1l•
S
I S.IICicl'linl ,
. "Jf an goes well ·we TrafJic- will first be tibiftcd lhe Air FOrce and U.S. allies VIrginia. " More and more of
dieD around 11be world. Other the Air Fon:e research on
mould .have traffiC on the 011t0 oew MaiD
Main S!ftlet under de 01110 pad« lbe- JIC!dioo mieMdl wi1P 'include pro- human factors focuses on
-~= 4ZI2nd-. . . . by ~
of ilbe .of Ohio 813 ' beiicle the .wriDI ::oltim ·&amp;omdlemi- ptw:maceutical and behavcal.ad
~
ical
threats.
10ral
research
rather
than
C•'lpolla,
OH (7&lt;101 oMI-ARTS
rrtaining
wall
.
.lilpolh," 8etzing said. t:

PHS class relebrates soth anniversary

.!l*i

falidt

EDITOR

vacalion plans, bul the Meigs
WIC staff hope a short drive
10 Fooleloy to pWcipate in a
Mother's Milk Wlilk aDd
Craft Fair can malrie a wooderful "5raycalion."
Evca~s will be held on
A • l with lbe ooe mi!e
!:fsnning ar: 6:.30 p.m.
ancl
to be displayed

from 6-8 p.m. The walk will
follow Pomeroy' s paved
walking path along the bank
of lbe Ohio River with free
T-shirts available 10 ~
registering for the walk
before June 30. Craft Fair
space may be ~eserved for
$10 before July 15. Tiered
sponsorships are also available: Gold $50, Silver $35,
and . Bronze $20. Contact
992.0392 or 992-6626 to

:,jY

. ·

LETTERS TO THE

POMEROY - The· swnna beat and rising gas
prires can put a &lt;lampe.- oo

DelayedhnlP2¥Al

OJ:klll

ln bodl hoc*s

.

Hart inducted in Pi Sigma Alpha

'yiiS..S

taries, hiA.•ia!

'

!lOCKSPR!NGS - Scienre Camp '08 f~ "The
Science Man will be_ beld from 9 a.rn.-2 p.m. "-inning
Mooday-Fn~y at Meigs Middle School Next ye3;~~
seventh_and etghth graders are invited to attend Luoch will
be (XQVIded each day and there will be T-shin:s door prizes
~
Enron by calling 740-245-1236 or
J~St~no.edu. . The camp is sponsoml by abe new
Umvemtr of Rio Grande Meigs Center anc1 the Ohio
Appalacbian Center for Higher Educati011. ·

more·

I..Clo • I

("''be

,

One year . .; A Nadh ~ S.. .Bar dilc:ipliuy
oommiuee :said dit.8J•""' ............. Mike ~IMDJ would
be d;dwwrd for his di&amp;alliW pn mlioa of..Jine l&gt;l*e
Uniwa-sily lal:roHe ~
ro; c~ 'of. J:IIIC. Six

=iDfo:aP"'aieaollllli.illS ''
,Teon.U.S. :ailta •
"'Suun~ Wi!liann: 'Ida reboalllboard dte iotrollliilaal S(IIICI' ........ for: lbe lxg ill ~ . . ~igbt by'31))' '
wonan qpassing die rc:Wtd of I days ~y as1nmaut '
SbiQIMIII llocid at the t,tir_ipllllC Ration iq l
.

WIC Walk and Craft Fair registration set

Science camp set

:e

P•••u CanaJIKIIks~

Local Britfs

Monday~.,... i6; . . . .

Islam's legacy of anti-Semitism

The Daily Sentinel

The Daily Sentinel • Pqe As

'-*"

*'

r.. ._dill

.

a-

.

inla..,.

Ohio to be cen

f military's human-perfonnance research

-

Bridge fioaaPafjeAl

prepare

aspwt
~ve

,..,=re

'
""

t••

sum

end.

-

- ~-

•

-

•

•• .1

-

-

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1:15,··· ,

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�Page A~

NATION. WORLD

'

The Daily Sentinel

lgsjde

llonday,~Unel6,2ool

Bl

The Daily.S~ntinel

MLI,. 'lsl'wBZ
I , al!lti'Wm, . . 16

'

.

,.

. '
••• •
•••

-

UN chief: Saudi to~
.boost oil production

-

'. f

RIYADH, Saudi Arabia
Saudi At:abia plans
to~ its oil production
by 100,000barrels a dar. next
month, die kingdom s oil
minista" told U.N. chief Ban
Ki-moon oo Sunday, according to Ban's spokesman.
"The U.N. secretacy-generc
al met with Oil M'mister Ali
al-Naimi in the port city of
Jiddah during a one-day ·triP.
to the world's largest oil
producer.
Farban Haq, a spokesman
who is traveling with Ban,
said in an e-mail that the
U.N. chief said ai-Naimi
told . him Saudi Arabia
would increase ·&lt;~il · produclion by 200,000 batrels a
day from June to July. In
May, the kingdom increased
its production by 300,000.
By July,
production
sbould be at 9.7 million barreJs a day, Haq said.
Ban also said Saudi
Ar.lbia ·understands that the
aurent price of oil, w~ch
topped $139 per barrel earlier. this month, i~ not oormal, aooonling to the official Saudi Press AgeiiCy.
"lbe king believes th!!t'
the cUITetlt oil prices are
aboonnally high, and he is
ready to restore prices to
their lii'Pfi'lpriate levels,"
SPA quoted Ban as telling
reponers in Jiddab. The
report carried by SPA was in
Arabic, · and it did not say
what language Ban spoke in.
~audi Arabia is concerned
that sustained high oil
prices 'will eventually slacken the world's appetite for
·Oil, aff~g the king!lom in
the long tlUll.
Tbe 200,000-barrel-.a--day
boost is not insignifi~l · it w.ill raise Saudi Arabia's
daily production by about i
percent But to a marlret
d!at has been sending oil
prices soaring to record
~~eights due in part to strong
global .demand, the move
(AP) -

AP Ill"*'

a

Bu!tingtoo resident Scott Co~n, left, throws sandbag to Ryan Mullenix, second from. right, ~ I?erek ~ve~nd, oentei. holds the boat steady white the three helped in e!forts to keep water out of ~orial Auditonum which sits on the
edge of the Mississippi River S1:1nday in Bur1ington, 'Iowa.
·

I

..- I'

-

.. ElseWhere, $tate olfuiials Advaooed
Techoo1~gies tom of the libraly. I weq,"
BY Au Bl G. 81 f"
girded fur serious t\looding . i..aboralmies, designed by be said. But 1ben be jo\ed
MDJIMSAI..lat
thFealti in Burlington and GelJrY, Mason.dlokfd up. . about ~ ,'W'dbag duty
ASSOCIATED PRESS 'WiiiiTERS
southeast Iowa. ilwluding
"I got tears m my .eyes with a hullcin_g Hawllicye
IOWA CITY, Iowa - A Fott 'Madison and KOOkUL when l saw what was bap- football player. ·
week's work of frantic Officials said 500 National pening here," she said.
"I weigh l29, he weighs
sandbagging by students, Guard troops had already
Across die river, Art about JOO ·poonds,- be said
professors and .t be National been sent co Budingtoo, a . Bu~ .West was sur- "He would ship dlese thing
Guard oouldn 't spare ilhis Mississippi Riv.er town of rou
· by a la,goon uf lillat were like ·dead · bQdies
bucolic ooUege •fDWn from about 27;000, and some peG- IIlJilty water. Destgned by to me. But dJat was ifil¥:. We
the surgin,g Iowa River, p1e were bei_ng evacuated.
Steve Holl, ~t · _was ~ of worlred tGgdbei and ,got tt
wbioh bas swamped .&lt;Julver said the southeast- only H b~dings m die . done."
than a.dozen ·campus build- em part
the s~te was wodd reoog~•zed ~ year
Elsewhere in the Midwest,
ings and forced dle evacua- ~y to ·~ maJor and by~ American ~stt~ of hundreds of Diiblllbers of the
tioo Suuday of hlllldreds of StlflOUS fJ~g on every Arobitects. . · saul
Rod illiuais National Ouard
neatby hwnes.
p8lt afdle . ~stern bor- ·1dmettz, ~ of ~am- bealled to oommunities
1be swo11en river, which 11er of our 'Slate from New pus .and facili.ues plano mg.
al . . the
Uen
00
bisectS this city of about Boston and down."
1be .damage would ba11e
~ . .
s~ ...
60,000 residents, was topIn Cedar Rapids been ·worse had it oot been Misstsstppt .ver an ·
• Y,
ping out at about 31.5. feet where flooding had forced for the Herculean efforts of for sandbaggmg duty ·'Mille ,
- a foot and a balf below lhe evac.uation of about students, faculty, National emergency
m~ageO:~
earlie£ predictions. But it 24,000 people :from their Guard troops and others ~fficaals eyed £a1!1·swo=,u
still posed a lingering threat, homes - residents waited who .swarmed the campus pvers across the state.
and wasn't expected to hours to get their ftiSI up- over sevet:al
. to erect
begin
receding
until close look since flooding mile.s of ~at11d~1
Monday Digbt.
hammered most of the cicy some as 'high as
~I'm focu!ICd 4llll what we earlier &lt;llhis week.
O.:Saruaday ~~=;~
can save," University of
Same ·gcew ,augry after ,tccrs filled ~
Iowa President Sally Mason l011g waits to pass ~gh more than
.
said as she toured ber strick- checkpoints. ·Cedar ~ids bags, Lebnettz s31d.
en campus. "We'lldeal with officials also were inspectLebnetti was confill.ent
this when we get past the ing homes for possible elec- that buildings that .hadn't
crisis. We're not ,past the trical and structural bazards. flooded by Sunday were
crisis yet."
"It's stllpid," said VlllOC well-protected. He said the
Tbe university said Hi Fiala, wbo said be waited for . most pressing issue was
buildings had been flooded, hours before police aUowed flooding in the six miles of
including one designed · by him to w.atk five blocks to underground tunnels that
acclaimed architect Frank his house. '1'eople are down feed steam to campus build0. Gebry, and said others on their knees and they're ings for power. Workers
were at risk.
'kickirlg them in the teeth."
pumped water from the tunlt~wa City Mayor Regeoia
The city's municipal nels into the streets and
Bailey said 500 to 600 . water system was back to down toward the river.
homes were .o rdered to 50 percent of capacity
Some buildings at the
evacuate and hundreds of Sunday, .a big viCtory after Arts Campus on the river's
others were ·under a volun- three .o f 1ihe ·City's four '\Vetil bank had as much as 8
taty
evacuation order driDicing water collection feet of water inside.
1hrough the moming. The . wells were contaminated by
A1l electiv,e and non- ·
petroleum-laden emergency procedures were
city had no estima~ of the . murky,
number of homes that bad floodwater. That contamina- canceled at the University
tioo had left only about 15 hos.Pital, and non-critical
actually flooded
Bailey said homeowners million gallons a day for the ,pauents were dischatlged,
wiD not be · allowed back city of more than 120,000 Mason said. Nurses were
until the city determines and the suburlls that depend brought in from elsewhere
it's safe.
on its water system.
to ensure all emergency
HP.
23
Gov. Chet Cui ver said it . After much of the shifts would be covered.
was "a little bit of good .University ·of Iow.a's Arts
Bruce Brown, 64, a mired
3.CVUNOU
aews" that the river had Campus flooded in 1993, radiology professor at
crested, but cautioned that raised walkways were · University of Iowa Hospitals
die situation w.as still pre- installed that doubled as and Clinics, spent three days
carious.
berms. But those were ftlling sandbags on the east
"Just because a river quickly overwhelmed by bank. But picturesque brick
crests does not mean it's not the Iowa River's rising Danforth Cbapel where his
'a serious sil!lation," he said. waters.
.
daughter was matiied. tlood":You're still. talking about a
Standing ~de the gntyish ed anyway.
'
very, very dangerous public water swrounding the linlec
"When I think about movsafety threat."
stone and stainless steel lowa ing rare books from the bot·

'!

lti

might be seen as marginal.:
· The oil market largely
ignored Saudi Arabia'•
300,000-barrel-a-day outpill
increase last month.
~ •
In .eleclronic trading on
the New Yorli: Mercaittile
Exchange late Sundas,
Crude oil fubires were do\\\!1
54 .cents :at $134.32 a barreil.
The kingdom has .callCit
for a meeting of
producf.
i.og and consuming COUJI.
tries on June 2f in Jiddah 111
discuss ways of dealitj
with soaring eDCI'!lY prices.
The New York T~
reported on Saturday, cititJ&amp;
.unnamed 111lalysts and ol
traders briefed by Saull
officials, that a producti011
increase of about SOO,O&lt;Jt
barrels per day was to bi
anoaunced following thi
meeting.
~
On Satwday, al-Naiml
adviser told The AssociakC
Press that the miois1rr woo¥
address tbe productioo
increase reports the next da,;
But on Sunday, the
Ibrahim ai-Mnhanna,
•
there was no meetiQg tQ
address the repor1S scllediilct
Further attempts to ~ ·
ai-Muhanna by phone Iat4"
Sunday went unanswered.;
Saudi Arabia, the world'!
hu·gest oil producer, is COilcerned that sustained ·higli
oil . prices will even~
slacken the world's appetili
for oil, affecting the kin&amp;:;
dom in the loo~ run.
:
Crude
poces
ha~
:reached record highs, sill"
passing $139 per barrel oit
June 6 .after surging nearJt
$11 in the biggest singl4t"
day price leap ever.
;..
· The prices bad
Friday, with the
.
light, sweet crude forq
delivery falling $1.88 to
at $134.86 on the New Y.
· Mercantile Exchange. _
London, July Brent crude loll
$1.84 to settle at $134.25 -1$
the ICE Futures exchange.

ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

BISMARCK. N.D. Pillsbury Mayor Darrel
Brudevold said voter tumout
in me city's ~election
usuatll.~ fairly tqh.

'1

say a balf4ozat

'JII'OPie U8UIIIy make it ·to h

jlok,- be said.. 1'bll ~
seiiiS about a quarta' of 1he

residents in me Barnes
County tiiiining community,
in southr:aslfrll North Dakora.
But on June 10, no one
showed up. Not ev.eo diose
oo the ballot. ·
Bnadevold ran unopposed
foc re-elrctioo.· His wife,
Ruth, and
Lindseth
faced no challengers for
their aldennan seats.
"Evoyb.xly has got a job
and.they're busy,~ Brudevold
said. "It just worked out that
· nobody seemed to go down
there to the polls.
Only about. II people live

Dan

fl

in ·Pillsbury proper, and the
remainder of the residents
live oo fanns outside the
city. ~ is no precinct in
town, so residents llUlst drive
about 12 miles to neighborin,g Sibley to cast their votes. .
Brudevold's wife, Ruth,
. runs the beauty shop and is
the town's postmaster. She
said ·sbe was too bqsy with
work ,to mallie it to the polls.
Brudevold said be intended .to vote, but that be had
.crops to tend.
He said be assumed al
least ooe pel'50n wou.ld
show up to vote. But since
no one did. Brudevold said
he 'II ask stale elrction officials wbat to do next.
Brudevold, !lbas been
mayor for a do
ears and
was an aide
before
lhat, said he doesn't think
the current five-member
body will change.
Barnes County Auditor
Ed MCGough said those in

•

office can stay there and
appoint .people, includin~
themselves, to the jobs until
the next election.
"l presume things w.ill
stay the same," Brudewld
said. "We're just 11little village, and wbeo yo~ 'reelect~to ooe of those Jobs, well,
once you get it, you ·got it."
1be oouncil meets about
five times a year, Brudevold
~d. Members are'eacb paid
$48 annually, and a good
portion of that goes for
doughnuts at the meetings
or gas to get there, he said.
Brudevold said be has no
~ for a gavel because
attendance at the meetings
is lackluster at best.
"Not everybody usually
makes it to the meetings, so
it really doeso 't get out of
hand." be' said. '1be only
time we reaDy get people to
show up is when we want to
raise taxes - then everybody shows up."

Monday, June 16, 2008

Another dramatic·finish for Woods forces playoff
liT Douaf1 , . .

on each side of the fairway
on the 527-yard dosing bole
and bad to lay up, ·
·
. SAN DIEGO - Tiger
Westwood's 15-foot birdie
Woods wasn't sure if his left putt never bad a chance, losk.- would, allow him to lllll speed and turning away.
finish 72 holes of 1he U.S. He sfiot 73.
Open. After yet another
From an unpredictable lie
defining momont at ~y in the right I'OUgh. Woods
Piues, be was thrilled to get gouged a wedge out to 12
a chance at 18 more.
feet right ~f
the · . He
1lown to his last stroke, started to
as the
Woods holed a 12-foot putt neared the le, paused
birdie putt tbat curled into to ·make sure it was in, dien ·
the right side of the cup on clenched and pumped both
the 18th bole to force a play- fists toward him with his
off with Rocco Mediaie, bead to the sky.
who oould only walllh on
"Unbelievable. I · knew
· 1V as Woods delivered be 'd make it," .Mediate said
another epic momont ·in an as he watched from a scor()pen loaded with them.
ing l'OOIIL
Mediate, trying to become Woods sbot 73 and will be
the oldest : o n at age in a playoff for the third
45, two-~ furor par from time in a major, this one 18
above the ridge
an even- boles of stroke play on
par 71 to finisb at 1-under Monday.
.
283, the first time since
The 50,000 fans at Torrey
2004 that sotneone ~ Pine,, w!to tbwJbl they bad
par in a
Open.
seen it all dunng a most
'It loobd like it mW1t be relDlllbble week, now get a
good enough when Woods little bitllKil1C.
AP pllolo
and Lee Westwood of
It will be the first playoff Rocco Mediate, .left, shakes hands with Tiger WoodS after both players finished the fourth
England, both one sbot
round :Of the US Open championship with a one-under-par for the tournament at Torrey
..
. _ . . . ,... 111
behind, hit into the bunker
Pines Golf Course on Sunday in San Diego. The 18-hole playoff will be held Monday.
---------:--------------------------'---.,.----------ASSOOIATED l'RESS

oil

Red Sox
s•nash
.
Cincinnati
.

liT .loEb
ASSOCIATED PRESS

CINCINNATI - Manny
was, out of the linrup. Big

Papi was oot of town. The
Boston Red Sox sure didn't
iook like themselves with
their two biggest hitters

ad"!:;

gQOC.

.

Couldn't teU b the
. ~ lhough. y ~
Coco Crisp kept Boston'.s
~ JiDCUp rolling by
driving in four runs.Jacoby Ellsbury homered
and" ·stole two more bases
foc a Red Sox rookie ltCOid
~ a 9..0 victory over dte
Cincinnati Reds on Sunday.
The Red Sox bit four
bomers in their most lopsided victory of the season,
ooe they pulled off wiibout
their two bigcest threats.
Manny Ramirez sat out a
~od straight game with a
sore right lianistring, and
· David Ortiz was in BOSIOO
taking ~ of.a sore wrist.
Boston kept ·t he wins
coming - 12 .in its last 16
games. .
"Those guys make us better, no doubt," Crisp said.·
''Without tbem, we were
still able to put up some
runs. It shows we're a good
team without our two super-

ana

:=l

Stars

ft

· ui

~. ~sltury

~, ,

I

u.s.

Lakers beat Celtics
.·to3-98 in Game 5
BY TOM Wma•

.a

J•df;.......

flaiiCy (0-3), who bas lost
each of his dlrce statts dli&amp;
..._ aad .may be beedec!
bid to dte lllinon. After 1he
poe. Jli!Mtap Dusty Baker
was -nOIIOOIIliDittal wben
asked about Bailey's future.
. ·'Thece's ~ot to be some
discussion,' Biker said. "If
you're not making pitches,
AUld that's your job, you•ve
&amp;ol· w figure out what's up
. li8d
They hit him pm-

i!l''

9'

I '

."

' osb Bockett (7-4) turned
lhe big lead into his fint
urcer victory over .the
Reds. WOO hit him hard the
two ,times lie faced them
with Florida.
Beckett
'81lowcd six hits - thRle by
~oe)' Votto in seven
•nmngs.
Then, for the first time,
tbe Red Sox :left .town mlil-

~ston

took two of three
in a city thal holds nothing
but bad memories for its
APpldo
fans. The Red Sox lost two los ~les Llikers :forward .l!oiJe Bryant, front, dribbles away from Boston Celtics forward
of three in Cincinnati during P•.!l•.Brown JnUie leOCIIidhalfo!Game 5 of the NBAbaskelball finals Sunday in Los Angeles.

the 1975 World Series,
which the B~ Red Machine
finisbed off m Game 7 at
Fenway Park.
Sinoc then, 1he traditionbound franchises have met
twice in intcrleague series,
liT H' 1
with the Red Sox~ by
ASSOC~TED PRESS
far tbe better of tt. ~
swept a three-game series at
BROOKLYN, Mich..
Fenway Park in 2005, and Da1e Eambaldl Jr. is enjoy:Won the last two games over ing that old winning feel and
. )he weekend with a lineup he doesn't much care what
his detracton have w say
ptissing its .top two threats.
.. ..We swung die :bats early about it
l:eal well, we spread it out · Hl can undenrand bow it
and had a· good day at the might look, especially if
ballpark," manager Terry you're not Dale Jr. fans,"
Fnricona said.
Little E said Sunda after
by
: Crisp was a ~st the ending a 76-race
last two days. He
Kevin stretching his 1ut fuel load
beyond the limit
at
Michigan
Internatiodal
.. · - · 1 112
Speedway. "I ·m ow ·exactly
w"hlt they're going to say
Monday.
"I mean, my fans are
: 1-7~8111.33
happy IDd I'm happy for
tbem. 1be other balf are
' -1-7~ 44t 3008
,..
going to tear this 1part on
. . . . -lllf)IR•ft¥ililt;blburw.oum'
bow we won this race. But I
l ...,
80! the trophy and 1 got me
pomu. I got to.see my~
_,_.u a,q
,
and my owner and my fami(7«1) • • 234.2 ..... S3 ~
-.......emrJIIIt~.com
ly ~ooight ~s happy_ as
1hey
ve lieeo m a long bme.
file Randulpl~ $Jl taW'*'
... It's a pretty big day fcx
(?«l) 44t 234.2, .... S3
me."
.
.
~em,JsJI,wiliiwl.com ~
1be
most
popular
driver
m
a....yc.-,.. ...,..,
NASCAR won this oqe by
[740) 4•;23"2.• . S3
gambling,
iOIIIebow going
~crume..,...l)o gt
.cam

~s

ALLPOWER EQUIPMENT
ONEM!l.EWESI'OFA1HENSON .
JIIXITE511/:12

AnDlNS, OH
,.,.a,,
...n..tm

"r-f-.0.'*-"""'""""""

VIS/TOUR N£WESTWCA1TON
BUS. RT. l3SOUllHF LANCASThR
l.ANCASnlR, OH
7*f5'41Z1

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Celtics' . parquet
floor
ASSOCIATED PRESS
Tuesday night to force a
winner-take-all Game 7, ·
LOS ANGELES -. Pack where anything is possible.
up the championship trophy
Especially with Bryant,
and book a fligbt back to the game's best player, on
Boston, the NBA finals hand.
·
aren't over yet
"We've won on the road
Bryant · said.
The Los Angeles Lakers before,"
arc beaded East to try a his- "We've played in tough
toric comeback of their own. environments before."
Kobe Bryant scored 25
But the league's MVP and
points; including a decisive uberforce, who spent much
dunk in the fmal minure - of last summer grumbling to
and Lamar Odom added 20 Lakers management for help
as the Lakers, playing with to get him a fourth champipride on their sw"studded onship ring, didn 't have to
stage, prevented the Celtics fly a solo mission to extend
from winning a 17th .title L.A.'s season for at least
with a 103-98 win in Game another game.
5 on Sunday night to close
Pau Gasol had 19 points
to 3-2 in this restored rival- and 13 rebounds, Odom had
ry.
11 rebounds and four blocks
''We didn't want to see and Derek Fisher added IS
any champagne popping," points.
·
"We were aggressive. We
Odom said. "It wasn't easy.
I wouldn't expect it to be." played hard," Lakers coach
No team has overcome a Phil Jackson said . "Not
3-1 deficit in the finals to smart all the time but we
w!n a title. The first 28 · played hard."
'
failed, and now the Lakers,
Paul Pierce led the Cellics
who blew a 24-point lead with 38 points, Kevin
and lost Game 4 and nearly Garneu added 13 points and
squandered a 19-point lead 14 rebounds, and Ray Allen ·
in Game 5, have a chance to had 16 points. Bul Boston's
do something extraordinary.
They'll have to win on the
M tne see F I , 112

Earnhardt wins on fumes

Voter turnout for tiny North Dakota town: Zero
BY J•wsiiAc:PHERSON

'

.

-

_..,._"'*'-"lai.IJ..
..,,...,
.........., ..... _

......""_.-.....- ......

1\!I!I.JI.tGYOliVAUE . . . . . . . . . . . . . _. t · W -

•

••

the last 55 laps on the twomile oval, including three
laps of overtime, without
stopping for gas.
He gave most of the credit
for his fli'St win in more than
two years to crew chief Tony
Euty.

uWe came in on that last
stop and we were going to
be about six laps short, and I
saved six . laps of oas,"
Earnhardt said. "So," (we
were) J'ust real lucky. I have
to hand it to Tony Jr. for
being a risk-taker. ... . He's
done a good job this year
getting us good ftoishes, bettcr finisbes than we should
probably have."
A couple of late cautions
belped and Ewy detemrined
1he No. 88 ChevrOlet was
only going to be about two
lips short ilf finishing at that
point With about 20 ~aps to
go, Ewy radioed Earnhardt
to try to save more fuel and
gave ~ the worst-casescenano.
"We miss it by one lap, we
finisb 25th," Eury said. "If
we pit and put fuel in it
we're going to fmisb 25th.
So, who cares? Go for it"

As the laps wOQDd down,
dri'l'er after driver was
forced to pit for a splasb of
gas, and Earnhardt, wbose
last victory came on May 6,
2006, at Ricbmond. ·inherited the lead with five to go in
regulation. It appeared he
bad things under control
·UntiJ former IodyCar sw
Sam Horuisb Jr. spun on lap
198, bringing out another
caution.
Knowing the race was
~oing to be extended betood
tts scheduled 200 laps, l:iury
told Earnhardt to · shut the
engine off and coast whenever he could under the caution flag in a desperate effort
to save more gas.
Junior did just that, coasting fast eoougb at times that
be ~sed the pace car ·until NASCAR warned Eury
to have Earnhardt cut it out
"I didn't know how mucb
they were going to worry
about it," Earnhardt said.
MAll the cars out there are
gassing it, shutting 'em off,
coasting about a half
AP~
straightaway, cranking 'em NASCo\R Sprint Cup Series dri\'ef Dale Earnhardt Jr. celebrates his Ufelocl\ 400 win at Michigan International
Plun-' ' . . Ill Speedway in BI'004&lt;\Iyn; Mich. Sunday.
'

�Page A~

NATION. WORLD

'

The Daily Sentinel

lgsjde

llonday,~Unel6,2ool

Bl

The Daily.S~ntinel

MLI,. 'lsl'wBZ
I , al!lti'Wm, . . 16

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•••

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UN chief: Saudi to~
.boost oil production

-

'. f

RIYADH, Saudi Arabia
Saudi At:abia plans
to~ its oil production
by 100,000barrels a dar. next
month, die kingdom s oil
minista" told U.N. chief Ban
Ki-moon oo Sunday, according to Ban's spokesman.
"The U.N. secretacy-generc
al met with Oil M'mister Ali
al-Naimi in the port city of
Jiddah during a one-day ·triP.
to the world's largest oil
producer.
Farban Haq, a spokesman
who is traveling with Ban,
said in an e-mail that the
U.N. chief said ai-Naimi
told . him Saudi Arabia
would increase ·&lt;~il · produclion by 200,000 batrels a
day from June to July. In
May, the kingdom increased
its production by 300,000.
By July,
production
sbould be at 9.7 million barreJs a day, Haq said.
Ban also said Saudi
Ar.lbia ·understands that the
aurent price of oil, w~ch
topped $139 per barrel earlier. this month, i~ not oormal, aooonling to the official Saudi Press AgeiiCy.
"lbe king believes th!!t'
the cUITetlt oil prices are
aboonnally high, and he is
ready to restore prices to
their lii'Pfi'lpriate levels,"
SPA quoted Ban as telling
reponers in Jiddab. The
report carried by SPA was in
Arabic, · and it did not say
what language Ban spoke in.
~audi Arabia is concerned
that sustained high oil
prices 'will eventually slacken the world's appetite for
·Oil, aff~g the king!lom in
the long tlUll.
Tbe 200,000-barrel-.a--day
boost is not insignifi~l · it w.ill raise Saudi Arabia's
daily production by about i
percent But to a marlret
d!at has been sending oil
prices soaring to record
~~eights due in part to strong
global .demand, the move
(AP) -

AP Ill"*'

a

Bu!tingtoo resident Scott Co~n, left, throws sandbag to Ryan Mullenix, second from. right, ~ I?erek ~ve~nd, oentei. holds the boat steady white the three helped in e!forts to keep water out of ~orial Auditonum which sits on the
edge of the Mississippi River S1:1nday in Bur1ington, 'Iowa.
·

I

..- I'

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.. ElseWhere, $tate olfuiials Advaooed
Techoo1~gies tom of the libraly. I weq,"
BY Au Bl G. 81 f"
girded fur serious t\looding . i..aboralmies, designed by be said. But 1ben be jo\ed
MDJIMSAI..lat
thFealti in Burlington and GelJrY, Mason.dlokfd up. . about ~ ,'W'dbag duty
ASSOCIATED PRESS 'WiiiiTERS
southeast Iowa. ilwluding
"I got tears m my .eyes with a hullcin_g Hawllicye
IOWA CITY, Iowa - A Fott 'Madison and KOOkUL when l saw what was bap- football player. ·
week's work of frantic Officials said 500 National pening here," she said.
"I weigh l29, he weighs
sandbagging by students, Guard troops had already
Across die river, Art about JOO ·poonds,- be said
professors and .t be National been sent co Budingtoo, a . Bu~ .West was sur- "He would ship dlese thing
Guard oouldn 't spare ilhis Mississippi Riv.er town of rou
· by a la,goon uf lillat were like ·dead · bQdies
bucolic ooUege •fDWn from about 27;000, and some peG- IIlJilty water. Destgned by to me. But dJat was ifil¥:. We
the surgin,g Iowa River, p1e were bei_ng evacuated.
Steve Holl, ~t · _was ~ of worlred tGgdbei and ,got tt
wbioh bas swamped .&lt;Julver said the southeast- only H b~dings m die . done."
than a.dozen ·campus build- em part
the s~te was wodd reoog~•zed ~ year
Elsewhere in the Midwest,
ings and forced dle evacua- ~y to ·~ maJor and by~ American ~stt~ of hundreds of Diiblllbers of the
tioo Suuday of hlllldreds of StlflOUS fJ~g on every Arobitects. . · saul
Rod illiuais National Ouard
neatby hwnes.
p8lt afdle . ~stern bor- ·1dmettz, ~ of ~am- bealled to oommunities
1be swo11en river, which 11er of our 'Slate from New pus .and facili.ues plano mg.
al . . the
Uen
00
bisectS this city of about Boston and down."
1be .damage would ba11e
~ . .
s~ ...
60,000 residents, was topIn Cedar Rapids been ·worse had it oot been Misstsstppt .ver an ·
• Y,
ping out at about 31.5. feet where flooding had forced for the Herculean efforts of for sandbaggmg duty ·'Mille ,
- a foot and a balf below lhe evac.uation of about students, faculty, National emergency
m~ageO:~
earlie£ predictions. But it 24,000 people :from their Guard troops and others ~fficaals eyed £a1!1·swo=,u
still posed a lingering threat, homes - residents waited who .swarmed the campus pvers across the state.
and wasn't expected to hours to get their ftiSI up- over sevet:al
. to erect
begin
receding
until close look since flooding mile.s of ~at11d~1
Monday Digbt.
hammered most of the cicy some as 'high as
~I'm focu!ICd 4llll what we earlier &lt;llhis week.
O.:Saruaday ~~=;~
can save," University of
Same ·gcew ,augry after ,tccrs filled ~
Iowa President Sally Mason l011g waits to pass ~gh more than
.
said as she toured ber strick- checkpoints. ·Cedar ~ids bags, Lebnettz s31d.
en campus. "We'lldeal with officials also were inspectLebnetti was confill.ent
this when we get past the ing homes for possible elec- that buildings that .hadn't
crisis. We're not ,past the trical and structural bazards. flooded by Sunday were
crisis yet."
"It's stllpid," said VlllOC well-protected. He said the
Tbe university said Hi Fiala, wbo said be waited for . most pressing issue was
buildings had been flooded, hours before police aUowed flooding in the six miles of
including one designed · by him to w.atk five blocks to underground tunnels that
acclaimed architect Frank his house. '1'eople are down feed steam to campus build0. Gebry, and said others on their knees and they're ings for power. Workers
were at risk.
'kickirlg them in the teeth."
pumped water from the tunlt~wa City Mayor Regeoia
The city's municipal nels into the streets and
Bailey said 500 to 600 . water system was back to down toward the river.
homes were .o rdered to 50 percent of capacity
Some buildings at the
evacuate and hundreds of Sunday, .a big viCtory after Arts Campus on the river's
others were ·under a volun- three .o f 1ihe ·City's four '\Vetil bank had as much as 8
taty
evacuation order driDicing water collection feet of water inside.
1hrough the moming. The . wells were contaminated by
A1l electiv,e and non- ·
petroleum-laden emergency procedures were
city had no estima~ of the . murky,
number of homes that bad floodwater. That contamina- canceled at the University
tioo had left only about 15 hos.Pital, and non-critical
actually flooded
Bailey said homeowners million gallons a day for the ,pauents were dischatlged,
wiD not be · allowed back city of more than 120,000 Mason said. Nurses were
until the city determines and the suburlls that depend brought in from elsewhere
it's safe.
on its water system.
to ensure all emergency
HP.
23
Gov. Chet Cui ver said it . After much of the shifts would be covered.
was "a little bit of good .University ·of Iow.a's Arts
Bruce Brown, 64, a mired
3.CVUNOU
aews" that the river had Campus flooded in 1993, radiology professor at
crested, but cautioned that raised walkways were · University of Iowa Hospitals
die situation w.as still pre- installed that doubled as and Clinics, spent three days
carious.
berms. But those were ftlling sandbags on the east
"Just because a river quickly overwhelmed by bank. But picturesque brick
crests does not mean it's not the Iowa River's rising Danforth Cbapel where his
'a serious sil!lation," he said. waters.
.
daughter was matiied. tlood":You're still. talking about a
Standing ~de the gntyish ed anyway.
'
very, very dangerous public water swrounding the linlec
"When I think about movsafety threat."
stone and stainless steel lowa ing rare books from the bot·

'!

lti

might be seen as marginal.:
· The oil market largely
ignored Saudi Arabia'•
300,000-barrel-a-day outpill
increase last month.
~ •
In .eleclronic trading on
the New Yorli: Mercaittile
Exchange late Sundas,
Crude oil fubires were do\\\!1
54 .cents :at $134.32 a barreil.
The kingdom has .callCit
for a meeting of
producf.
i.og and consuming COUJI.
tries on June 2f in Jiddah 111
discuss ways of dealitj
with soaring eDCI'!lY prices.
The New York T~
reported on Saturday, cititJ&amp;
.unnamed 111lalysts and ol
traders briefed by Saull
officials, that a producti011
increase of about SOO,O&lt;Jt
barrels per day was to bi
anoaunced following thi
meeting.
~
On Satwday, al-Naiml
adviser told The AssociakC
Press that the miois1rr woo¥
address tbe productioo
increase reports the next da,;
But on Sunday, the
Ibrahim ai-Mnhanna,
•
there was no meetiQg tQ
address the repor1S scllediilct
Further attempts to ~ ·
ai-Muhanna by phone Iat4"
Sunday went unanswered.;
Saudi Arabia, the world'!
hu·gest oil producer, is COilcerned that sustained ·higli
oil . prices will even~
slacken the world's appetili
for oil, affecting the kin&amp;:;
dom in the loo~ run.
:
Crude
poces
ha~
:reached record highs, sill"
passing $139 per barrel oit
June 6 .after surging nearJt
$11 in the biggest singl4t"
day price leap ever.
;..
· The prices bad
Friday, with the
.
light, sweet crude forq
delivery falling $1.88 to
at $134.86 on the New Y.
· Mercantile Exchange. _
London, July Brent crude loll
$1.84 to settle at $134.25 -1$
the ICE Futures exchange.

ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

BISMARCK. N.D. Pillsbury Mayor Darrel
Brudevold said voter tumout
in me city's ~election
usuatll.~ fairly tqh.

'1

say a balf4ozat

'JII'OPie U8UIIIy make it ·to h

jlok,- be said.. 1'bll ~
seiiiS about a quarta' of 1he

residents in me Barnes
County tiiiining community,
in southr:aslfrll North Dakora.
But on June 10, no one
showed up. Not ev.eo diose
oo the ballot. ·
Bnadevold ran unopposed
foc re-elrctioo.· His wife,
Ruth, and
Lindseth
faced no challengers for
their aldennan seats.
"Evoyb.xly has got a job
and.they're busy,~ Brudevold
said. "It just worked out that
· nobody seemed to go down
there to the polls.
Only about. II people live

Dan

fl

in ·Pillsbury proper, and the
remainder of the residents
live oo fanns outside the
city. ~ is no precinct in
town, so residents llUlst drive
about 12 miles to neighborin,g Sibley to cast their votes. .
Brudevold's wife, Ruth,
. runs the beauty shop and is
the town's postmaster. She
said ·sbe was too bqsy with
work ,to mallie it to the polls.
Brudevold said be intended .to vote, but that be had
.crops to tend.
He said be assumed al
least ooe pel'50n wou.ld
show up to vote. But since
no one did. Brudevold said
he 'II ask stale elrction officials wbat to do next.
Brudevold, !lbas been
mayor for a do
ears and
was an aide
before
lhat, said he doesn't think
the current five-member
body will change.
Barnes County Auditor
Ed MCGough said those in

•

office can stay there and
appoint .people, includin~
themselves, to the jobs until
the next election.
"l presume things w.ill
stay the same," Brudewld
said. "We're just 11little village, and wbeo yo~ 'reelect~to ooe of those Jobs, well,
once you get it, you ·got it."
1be oouncil meets about
five times a year, Brudevold
~d. Members are'eacb paid
$48 annually, and a good
portion of that goes for
doughnuts at the meetings
or gas to get there, he said.
Brudevold said be has no
~ for a gavel because
attendance at the meetings
is lackluster at best.
"Not everybody usually
makes it to the meetings, so
it really doeso 't get out of
hand." be' said. '1be only
time we reaDy get people to
show up is when we want to
raise taxes - then everybody shows up."

Monday, June 16, 2008

Another dramatic·finish for Woods forces playoff
liT Douaf1 , . .

on each side of the fairway
on the 527-yard dosing bole
and bad to lay up, ·
·
. SAN DIEGO - Tiger
Westwood's 15-foot birdie
Woods wasn't sure if his left putt never bad a chance, losk.- would, allow him to lllll speed and turning away.
finish 72 holes of 1he U.S. He sfiot 73.
Open. After yet another
From an unpredictable lie
defining momont at ~y in the right I'OUgh. Woods
Piues, be was thrilled to get gouged a wedge out to 12
a chance at 18 more.
feet right ~f
the · . He
1lown to his last stroke, started to
as the
Woods holed a 12-foot putt neared the le, paused
birdie putt tbat curled into to ·make sure it was in, dien ·
the right side of the cup on clenched and pumped both
the 18th bole to force a play- fists toward him with his
off with Rocco Mediaie, bead to the sky.
who oould only walllh on
"Unbelievable. I · knew
· 1V as Woods delivered be 'd make it," .Mediate said
another epic momont ·in an as he watched from a scor()pen loaded with them.
ing l'OOIIL
Mediate, trying to become Woods sbot 73 and will be
the oldest : o n at age in a playoff for the third
45, two-~ furor par from time in a major, this one 18
above the ridge
an even- boles of stroke play on
par 71 to finisb at 1-under Monday.
.
283, the first time since
The 50,000 fans at Torrey
2004 that sotneone ~ Pine,, w!to tbwJbl they bad
par in a
Open.
seen it all dunng a most
'It loobd like it mW1t be relDlllbble week, now get a
good enough when Woods little bitllKil1C.
AP pllolo
and Lee Westwood of
It will be the first playoff Rocco Mediate, .left, shakes hands with Tiger WoodS after both players finished the fourth
England, both one sbot
round :Of the US Open championship with a one-under-par for the tournament at Torrey
..
. _ . . . ,... 111
behind, hit into the bunker
Pines Golf Course on Sunday in San Diego. The 18-hole playoff will be held Monday.
---------:--------------------------'---.,.----------ASSOOIATED l'RESS

oil

Red Sox
s•nash
.
Cincinnati
.

liT .loEb
ASSOCIATED PRESS

CINCINNATI - Manny
was, out of the linrup. Big

Papi was oot of town. The
Boston Red Sox sure didn't
iook like themselves with
their two biggest hitters

ad"!:;

gQOC.

.

Couldn't teU b the
. ~ lhough. y ~
Coco Crisp kept Boston'.s
~ JiDCUp rolling by
driving in four runs.Jacoby Ellsbury homered
and" ·stole two more bases
foc a Red Sox rookie ltCOid
~ a 9..0 victory over dte
Cincinnati Reds on Sunday.
The Red Sox bit four
bomers in their most lopsided victory of the season,
ooe they pulled off wiibout
their two bigcest threats.
Manny Ramirez sat out a
~od straight game with a
sore right lianistring, and
· David Ortiz was in BOSIOO
taking ~ of.a sore wrist.
Boston kept ·t he wins
coming - 12 .in its last 16
games. .
"Those guys make us better, no doubt," Crisp said.·
''Without tbem, we were
still able to put up some
runs. It shows we're a good
team without our two super-

ana

:=l

Stars

ft

· ui

~. ~sltury

~, ,

I

u.s.

Lakers beat Celtics
.·to3-98 in Game 5
BY TOM Wma•

.a

J•df;.......

flaiiCy (0-3), who bas lost
each of his dlrce statts dli&amp;
..._ aad .may be beedec!
bid to dte lllinon. After 1he
poe. Jli!Mtap Dusty Baker
was -nOIIOOIIliDittal wben
asked about Bailey's future.
. ·'Thece's ~ot to be some
discussion,' Biker said. "If
you're not making pitches,
AUld that's your job, you•ve
&amp;ol· w figure out what's up
. li8d
They hit him pm-

i!l''

9'

I '

."

' osb Bockett (7-4) turned
lhe big lead into his fint
urcer victory over .the
Reds. WOO hit him hard the
two ,times lie faced them
with Florida.
Beckett
'81lowcd six hits - thRle by
~oe)' Votto in seven
•nmngs.
Then, for the first time,
tbe Red Sox :left .town mlil-

~ston

took two of three
in a city thal holds nothing
but bad memories for its
APpldo
fans. The Red Sox lost two los ~les Llikers :forward .l!oiJe Bryant, front, dribbles away from Boston Celtics forward
of three in Cincinnati during P•.!l•.Brown JnUie leOCIIidhalfo!Game 5 of the NBAbaskelball finals Sunday in Los Angeles.

the 1975 World Series,
which the B~ Red Machine
finisbed off m Game 7 at
Fenway Park.
Sinoc then, 1he traditionbound franchises have met
twice in intcrleague series,
liT H' 1
with the Red Sox~ by
ASSOC~TED PRESS
far tbe better of tt. ~
swept a three-game series at
BROOKLYN, Mich..
Fenway Park in 2005, and Da1e Eambaldl Jr. is enjoy:Won the last two games over ing that old winning feel and
. )he weekend with a lineup he doesn't much care what
his detracton have w say
ptissing its .top two threats.
.. ..We swung die :bats early about it
l:eal well, we spread it out · Hl can undenrand bow it
and had a· good day at the might look, especially if
ballpark," manager Terry you're not Dale Jr. fans,"
Fnricona said.
Little E said Sunda after
by
: Crisp was a ~st the ending a 76-race
last two days. He
Kevin stretching his 1ut fuel load
beyond the limit
at
Michigan
Internatiodal
.. · - · 1 112
Speedway. "I ·m ow ·exactly
w"hlt they're going to say
Monday.
"I mean, my fans are
: 1-7~8111.33
happy IDd I'm happy for
tbem. 1be other balf are
' -1-7~ 44t 3008
,..
going to tear this 1part on
. . . . -lllf)IR•ft¥ililt;blburw.oum'
bow we won this race. But I
l ...,
80! the trophy and 1 got me
pomu. I got to.see my~
_,_.u a,q
,
and my owner and my fami(7«1) • • 234.2 ..... S3 ~
-.......emrJIIIt~.com
ly ~ooight ~s happy_ as
1hey
ve lieeo m a long bme.
file Randulpl~ $Jl taW'*'
... It's a pretty big day fcx
(?«l) 44t 234.2, .... S3
me."
.
.
~em,JsJI,wiliiwl.com ~
1be
most
popular
driver
m
a....yc.-,.. ...,..,
NASCAR won this oqe by
[740) 4•;23"2.• . S3
gambling,
iOIIIebow going
~crume..,...l)o gt
.cam

~s

ALLPOWER EQUIPMENT
ONEM!l.EWESI'OFA1HENSON .
JIIXITE511/:12

AnDlNS, OH
,.,.a,,
...n..tm

"r-f-.0.'*-"""'""""""

VIS/TOUR N£WESTWCA1TON
BUS. RT. l3SOUllHF LANCASThR
l.ANCASnlR, OH
7*f5'41Z1

t•o11-*&gt;rSqm-·

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1)1)1"2. ··---·
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~I

J

Celtics' . parquet
floor
ASSOCIATED PRESS
Tuesday night to force a
winner-take-all Game 7, ·
LOS ANGELES -. Pack where anything is possible.
up the championship trophy
Especially with Bryant,
and book a fligbt back to the game's best player, on
Boston, the NBA finals hand.
·
aren't over yet
"We've won on the road
Bryant · said.
The Los Angeles Lakers before,"
arc beaded East to try a his- "We've played in tough
toric comeback of their own. environments before."
Kobe Bryant scored 25
But the league's MVP and
points; including a decisive uberforce, who spent much
dunk in the fmal minure - of last summer grumbling to
and Lamar Odom added 20 Lakers management for help
as the Lakers, playing with to get him a fourth champipride on their sw"studded onship ring, didn 't have to
stage, prevented the Celtics fly a solo mission to extend
from winning a 17th .title L.A.'s season for at least
with a 103-98 win in Game another game.
5 on Sunday night to close
Pau Gasol had 19 points
to 3-2 in this restored rival- and 13 rebounds, Odom had
ry.
11 rebounds and four blocks
''We didn't want to see and Derek Fisher added IS
any champagne popping," points.
·
"We were aggressive. We
Odom said. "It wasn't easy.
I wouldn't expect it to be." played hard," Lakers coach
No team has overcome a Phil Jackson said . "Not
3-1 deficit in the finals to smart all the time but we
w!n a title. The first 28 · played hard."
'
failed, and now the Lakers,
Paul Pierce led the Cellics
who blew a 24-point lead with 38 points, Kevin
and lost Game 4 and nearly Garneu added 13 points and
squandered a 19-point lead 14 rebounds, and Ray Allen ·
in Game 5, have a chance to had 16 points. Bul Boston's
do something extraordinary.
They'll have to win on the
M tne see F I , 112

Earnhardt wins on fumes

Voter turnout for tiny North Dakota town: Zero
BY J•wsiiAc:PHERSON

'

.

-

_..,._"'*'-"lai.IJ..
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.........., ..... _

......""_.-.....- ......

1\!I!I.JI.tGYOliVAUE . . . . . . . . . . . . . _. t · W -

•

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the last 55 laps on the twomile oval, including three
laps of overtime, without
stopping for gas.
He gave most of the credit
for his fli'St win in more than
two years to crew chief Tony
Euty.

uWe came in on that last
stop and we were going to
be about six laps short, and I
saved six . laps of oas,"
Earnhardt said. "So," (we
were) J'ust real lucky. I have
to hand it to Tony Jr. for
being a risk-taker. ... . He's
done a good job this year
getting us good ftoishes, bettcr finisbes than we should
probably have."
A couple of late cautions
belped and Ewy detemrined
1he No. 88 ChevrOlet was
only going to be about two
lips short ilf finishing at that
point With about 20 ~aps to
go, Ewy radioed Earnhardt
to try to save more fuel and
gave ~ the worst-casescenano.
"We miss it by one lap, we
finisb 25th," Eury said. "If
we pit and put fuel in it
we're going to fmisb 25th.
So, who cares? Go for it"

As the laps wOQDd down,
dri'l'er after driver was
forced to pit for a splasb of
gas, and Earnhardt, wbose
last victory came on May 6,
2006, at Ricbmond. ·inherited the lead with five to go in
regulation. It appeared he
bad things under control
·UntiJ former IodyCar sw
Sam Horuisb Jr. spun on lap
198, bringing out another
caution.
Knowing the race was
~oing to be extended betood
tts scheduled 200 laps, l:iury
told Earnhardt to · shut the
engine off and coast whenever he could under the caution flag in a desperate effort
to save more gas.
Junior did just that, coasting fast eoougb at times that
be ~sed the pace car ·until NASCAR warned Eury
to have Earnhardt cut it out
"I didn't know how mucb
they were going to worry
about it," Earnhardt said.
MAll the cars out there are
gassing it, shutting 'em off,
coasting about a half
AP~
straightaway, cranking 'em NASCo\R Sprint Cup Series dri\'ef Dale Earnhardt Jr. celebrates his Ufelocl\ 400 win at Michigan International
Plun-' ' . . Ill Speedway in BI'004&lt;\Iyn; Mich. Sunday.
'

�Page B2 • The Daily Sentinel

MLB Standings

-

...

~
EMIDivio!On

·- . . .

~-

~

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T-Boy4,Fio&lt;ida1

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;Chicago
St L.ou;.

Finals

MiMIMOtli 9, Milwaukee .. , 12 innings

WLPotGB
.41 30 .sn 37 32 .536 3
3( 35 .493 6
33 35 .485 6•
29 42 .408 12

·Philadelphia
'Florida

45 25 .&amp;43 -

,
I

42 29 .592 3 ~
36 33 522
3( 36 .486 11
33 37 .471 12
.Cincinnati
33 38 .465 12.
-Divilion
WLPdGB
:Artzor37 . 33 .5211 Lol . . . . .
31 38 ..... 5~
' 31 '4lh43l ' S~
'son lilonclooo ao 40 .4211 7
Colar.m . 21 41 ·. ..

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·Mitwau~&lt;ee
~l'tllot&gt;ufVh

N . Y - 8, Hou&amp;m4
Son Diogo 8, CkMIIand 3, 10 innings
Colotado 2, Chlcogo White Sox 0
Bdimore 8, PllllburJjh 7
T - 01 N.Y. Mels, ppd., rain
~&lt;or-. City 12, ArizDna 3
Ooklond 4, San Franciic:o 0
A - 9, LA Angels 4
Wulalo . . . 5, &amp;iente 2

......,.._

Dotroit s. LA. Dodgo&lt;o.
Clr•land 7, Sen Diego 3

Cllicogo CUb17, ToroniD •
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Chicago CL.«lS 6, TOmniO 2 •
petroit 12, L,A. Dodgers 7
AIWMI1 LA. Angelo, Ioiii
- 61 Cilc:innali 4, 10 . . . .
lluoidoj'o&lt;St.IJ&gt;Uio 3, 'Phlodelphio 2
Boston {CCion .._ 11 at Phl-lphia
·
(Harnois 6-4), 7c05 p.m. ·
:T-JIIr4,Florido 1
~ 9, Milwaukee 4, 12 innings . . N.l' Mels (f'eltrey 2-6) 11 LA Angels
III.Y.8, HOUS!on 4
(Jor.Wea""' 6-6), 10c05 p.m.
Florida (Millo&lt; +S) ot Seat11e (SilVa 3-7),
. Son llii!IO~Ii. Cleveland 3, 10 imin$0
~2. Chicago While Sooc 0
10:1D p.m.
a, ~ 1
Dotroit (\lorlonder 3-11) 11 San T-iort N.Ho!ols, .ppd.. nlin
(l&gt;irailum 11-1), t0c15 p.m.
· -C;ty12, Arizona3
- 4, San Ftarii$b 0
•
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,)~tonto 9, LA. Angols 4

&gt;Woshinglon 5, - 2

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~­
Dodgors 4

BOSltJN

l;:lowoland 7, San Diogo 3
Ohlcago Cubs 1. Toromo 4

RED SC1K

LHP-

IIQi&gt;Od 10 terms

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lHP-

Moo, -

Seth

OF
Thomas
Oi8aro&amp;d8rkl. RHP ~ Kehrt and 28

Andrew

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~rwh 5, Bo~imore 4, 10 innings
f'lorida 9. T - 'Boy 3

-ul&lt;oe4,Minnooo1a2
,...Y. 'l'anla&gt;es 13, Houston 0
Colorado 5, Chicago White S.. 3

_

St. Louis 7, PhiladelPhia 6, 10 innings
Ooldand 5, SOn Ftancisco 3

Frezza.

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ZachGeroilo.
.CLEVELAND INDII\Ns-Ag190&lt;1 ID ,
term&amp; wi1h INF Lonnie C -.
DETROIT TIGEFiS-Op11oned ftHP
Aquiline lopez 1o T - (ILl. Purchued
1he contract 111 RHP eddie Bonine 11om
To-. Optioned LHP Ckly R_.,. 1o

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OAKUIND ATHLETICs-Agn&gt;ed to
terms wi1h C Peter Palllmore and QF

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Herold, 26 -

N.v. Mets 4, T-. 2. 2n11 """"'
9, Cincinnati 0

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at L.A. Angel&amp;, lata
.

.Rashun Dixon.
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TEXA~ . RANG~R&amp;- 1!9!!1!11"' .t.l4f' ·
.,,... (Colon 4· 1I a1 Philadelphia Kason Gilbbaro '""" Oldallc&gt;na.IPOI,).,
lliamels 6-4), 7c05 p.m.
Designated AHP Robinson Tejeda lor
Atlanta (Jurrjens 6·3) at Colorado assignment.
(Jimenez 1-6), a:os p.m.
TORON10 BLUE JAY5-ktiwlto!l C
N.Y. Me1s (fie~ 2-6) a1 LA Angels Gregg Zaun from the 15-day Dl.
C.Jer.Weaver 6-6), 10:05 p.m.
Optioned C Curtis Thigpen 1o Syracuse
.
florida (Milklr 4·5) 11 Seaftlo (Sliva 3-7), (IL).
10:10 p.m.

Oetrctt (Verlander 3-9) at San francisco
(Uncecum-8-1),

10 : 15~m .

--

W L Pet, GB
44 28 .an

2.

Boston

Tampa Bay

:40 29 .510
37 33 .529 6
3( 34 .500 8
35 36 .493 'a}.

Bal1irnono

.Toronto

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GB
38 31 .551 -

' Chicago
:Minnesota

a.

Clewtland
DetroH

33 37 .471
32 37 .464 6
28. 42 .400 10:1

Kansas Cl1y

Oalcland

Texas
Seattkl

s•

36 .486 4~

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Los Angeles

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41
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28
31
'36
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551
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Aosatoo '""" To ...... (~. (lpllonod

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CLNCHWJ &amp;US 11olnsbltod J!HP
Gary ·MIIJ• lid 4tom . . !befNuement
list. O!&gt;IIOniod lHP llonnl' ' liOn'eta 1o
J.oui- (a,).

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COLORADO~C

Edwin -

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Oolorodo Springs

{PCL). Optioned INF .Jqna1hen Herrera
1o Colorado Springs.
NEW YORK METS-Activatod OF Trot
Nbcon. Delignatod ·OF Dllfll ot.gulla 1or
aiiolgnmont.
PITTSBURGH PIRATEs-Agreed 10

term&amp; with 381Jooen)y - · JB c..tvin
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Dll1iotQpher Slnlm..,. and .bF Cole

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3
7
17

Whlto.

ST. LOUIS CARDINALS-Activa1ed
RHP Jaion l~uoen fnlm 1he 1S.

day DL Rocatlod fUiP Anthony f1e1oes
11om Morriphis (PCL). Optioned RHP
Marl&lt; Womlll and OF Joe Mather 1o

Nlolf1llii&amp;.
SAN FRANCISCO GIANTS--Optioned
LHP Patrick lollocll to Fresno (PCLI.

Chicago Culls 6, Toronto 2

Detroit 12, L.A. Dodgers 7
Boo1on 6, Cincinnati 4, 10 lnnin$0

center criticized for being
pillowy soft. dido 't back
down underneath and was
able to get Garnett into foul
fromPageBI
trouble.
But just as they did in
Big Three couldn' t do~ Game 4, when they staged
their first chance at winning the big$esl comeback in
it all, and now will get two finals history. the Celtics
ClliCks at home to finish the pushed the Lakers to the
job.
brink of summer with anothAfter scoring 15 points -in er raQ.y. This one fell a little
the first quarter, Bryant went short. but the outcome was
cold from the floor and fin- still in doubt when Pien:e,
ished just 8-of-21. But he who grew up hating Boston
made a big steal. pokin$ the like every other kid from
ball away from Paul Pieroe L.A., made two free tluuws
and streaking down to deliv- with I : 14 remaining to get
er a two-handed 'dunk with the Celtics to 97-95.
37.4 secoods ~
Fisher then missed a
The Celtics (:alled a' time- jumper and the Celtics
out, Jack Nicholson·jul'l'i)IM appeared to he in business
to his feet and !be score- when Pierce fought off two
board in S~les'. Cen~ Lakers for a rebound. But as
flashed: Not In Our HQuse!
he dribbled toward the basWhen the fioal . Jtom ket, IJryant reached around
sounded, purple .and. ,gold and knocked the ball away to
streamers feU fro,nl ~.qjl­ · Odom, who then fed Bryant
ing and the ~
....~.~:... · ~s for his slam.
SJ,ill, the Celtics wouldn' t
announcer said. "GaD\!:· 6
will ·he TUesday' oiglU 'i n go away.
After Bryant missed one
Boston. This is not over yet.fl
On Satu,rday, Bryant 'had of two free throws with 16
said
i.s far from mu... seconds left, Eddie House
nailed a 3-pointer to make it
and he coul!l be ri_ghl :
Accused of being selfish 101-98 with 14 seconds left.
and too tnugh 011 his not-as- House then nearly stole the
ta~ ~s. Brylinl ensuing inbounds pass, but
can bow,to the od!er Lakers Bryant, sprawled out on the
f&lt;ir · sending. the saies back floor. got the ball to Fisher,
across OOIIIIIIy. .•
.
who drew a desperation foul.
Fisher then made two free
GasOI, the 7-f~ Spanish
•

.

j

"this

.

'

·l/1/IINJ.:rlli':l .

Cup-··

fromPageBl

-liprtnl
.,..,. ••

'tl

I

N8nl8
Wins Pts.
back up, gas it, coast.
1 . Kyle Buooh
2213
•
Everybody's doing it. ·
2. Jell Burton
1
·32.
-84
'There's no rules specifi- 3. Da)!! Eamhanl Jr. 1
4. C.rl Edw.d&amp;
3
·206 '
cally against that, but I was 5. Jtmmie.Jonnson
1
·254
1
·287
getting a little greedy ... I 6. Denny Hamlin
7. Kasey Kahne
2
-324
wanted to coast farther, so 8.
GregB111e
0
·329
I'd gas it harder and coast 9. Je11Gor&lt;lon
0
·337
10. KevtnHaNlck
0
·396
and just let
past the pace
11 . Tcnys-rt
0
-439
him come on and catch back 12. Clint Bowyer
1
-449
up, and that way I could. 13. Devld RaiiiO
0
..59
keep my motor off longer."
14.- 0
-4113
TIUII! Jr.
·0
·543
It wod.ed out just right as 15. ,6.11rtan Vtclcoos
0
-546
the green flag came out on
17.11yan1
-572
0
-634
lap 202 for a two-lap sprint ,B.TrowioKqpll
111.1&lt;11t1Buoch
0
-&amp;76
to the finish, which was 20.
tlol&gt;by ~
0
then cut .short when Patrick
Carpentier spun on lap 203, · becau~ he's been through
freezing the field and allow- so much. I' m glad to be able
lllg Junior to coast - this to win for him, for Tony Jr.,
for the team for believing in
time behind the pace car to· his 18th career victory me."
·
and first at Michigan.
Kasey Kahne, coming off
"lbey can write what they a victory the previOI.!S week
want, but we won one," in Pocono, fmished second
Earnhardt said in the jubila- and ,almost came up with
lion after the Lifelock 400. his fourth victory in hiii last
He gave his new boss, five starts, · includiflg ·t he
Rick Hendrick, &lt;Jilly his sec- non-points all-star race last
ond vi~ of the season. month in Charlotte.
Hendrick's teain won 18of
Matt Kenseth finished
36 races a year ago, but has third, followed by Brian
snuggled to reach Victocy Vickers, Tony Stewart and
Ciide in 2008, with a lone two-time defending Cup
victory by two-time defend- champion Jimmie Johnson.
Ke11seth, \llbo led Several
ing Cup champion Jimmie
Johnson until Sunday.
times, said .be might have
After leaving the team his won the raoe if not for
late father founded to drilfe, ~shap in the pits on bis
for Hendrick's juggemillll · lut stop. A NASCAR aliithis year, Eambardl llrg •. c:ials; appareiltly thinking
the new phase of his c:am!l Kenselb vias gomg to take
w1tb two 11011-p • ·; vic»- foUr fues instead Gf two,
ries at baytona ill Fdxuary. walbd ia front of his car
But, despite running well 110 just fS the fOJ'IDel' teries
far this season, 't!J"o.nis- champion startrd out of'llis
ing start did not
to Ill)' .pit. lteosetb didn't bit, die
victories in the first f4 0., oftici.ds. bot the besitiDun

car

!

f

races.

COIC'IIim vlluallk,. '""''·

• "We started out and be
wcia the (Budweillel') Clash

~ pointS ~wier 1Cyle
BuiCb fiilisbed a less than

bave 10 worry abollt wina rece now.' TMa
~~~~body llOUtlled it beclnte tt
wun't a noints race."
Headrick ..fci in VICtOry
On:Je. "We've been wail:in&amp;
for this. Been so close."
Eambardt was as relieved
as be was joyful.._.
loq-awai!M victoiy.
'1'bis is
~
beCause it
Rick,' he
Said. "He's such a great man

on Sunday. lbe
,wilhatof.llofJO.
._. . 11lis tea!IOD in
.J\IASC!AR's
three top
- - &amp;o!sbelf .ventb in
the tnlck race here
Saturday, drawiltl aiticism
when be spun out Ron
HODIIday Jr. near the end.
Busch then
flew to
Kentucky,
where
be
aasbcd and finished 30th in
a Nationwide race.

·and the I SO ( ualifYina memorable
three-race
noel and we llid.~We doo'i -w c • 1111 with • 13th·place

nina

I
'

*

~';7th

~

J

a•

------

tfu'ows and stole Boston's
last pass as Laker.i fans,
stunned to silence a few
· nights ago, left the building
~ of seeing another
·
Ie comeback.
is is the II th meeting
- and first since 1987 between the league's two
most stories franchises, and
it could he beaded for a
crescendo bi:fl~ the .
matchups between Bird and
Magic, McHale and 'AbdulJ ab&amp;ar, arid Russell and.
Wesl
Before the game, Lakers
coach Jac:kson said the only
way for his team to approach
a close-out ,game was to
keep playing.
"A lot of .things can happen," he said. -we're young
eooul!)I and dumb enough to
be able to do this."
·
With Bryant, they have~
smarts and skills to get 11
done.
·
,
He made four 3-pointers ip
the first eil!)It mmutes and
his free tlirow gave the
Lakei:s a 25-15 lead. The
Celtics were forced to
extend their defense, and
Bryant made them pay when
he faked a long-range shot
and fired a pass underneath
to Vladimir Radmanovic to
make it29-15.
Odom, a model of inconsistency in the series, drove
the lane for a hooj&gt; to put the

Lakers ahead l)y 16, and
&lt;Jasol's bucket in the final
second made the overl!ead
scoreboard ~: l.akers 39,
Celtics 22.
Most teams mildtt panic.
Not the Celtics. They were
in a bigger bole- 21 points
- after the first quarter in
Game 4 when they staged

www.mydiiHyeutinel.com .

their epic rally.
·
ADd;' sure enOugh. back
Boston ll3l!IC.

When S . Vujacic
scored, the Lak:ers' lead
bulged to 19 and the ob-sotrendy L.A. faithful were
carrymg ·011 like a rowd,Y
East coast ciowd. That s
W.beo the Celtics.hegan chippmg away as Pleroe scored
six points and Allen. T~y
not Ray, scored two ·quick
baskets.
The Celtics' rally seemed
s~ort-lived, ~n

INAbsj!ffl:
www.~.com

www.rnydBilysenliliel.com
www.mydailylegister.com

Gimett

p1cked up his thiid personal,
bot with llie l.akers unable to
get attytbing to drop. Pierce
made a layup and 3 10 make
it43-39 before Odom finally
ended Los Angeles nearly
six-minute scoring drou~t.
The
Lak:ers
bnefly
regrouped but PJ. Brown
scored 011 a putback attd
Pierce hit another 3-pointer
witli 5.2 seconds left as the
Celtics closed to 55-52 at
half and bounded toward .
their locker just 24 minutes
from a title. ·

1\egister
(304) 675-1333
'.

Now you can have borders and CJI"GI)hlcs
~ . oddedtoY.,..dnrlftedads
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.m

Monday thru Friday

.00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m

Borders$3.00/perad
Glap.'1k:s soc for small
$1.00 forkqe

. _. ·...Reds-

. a club rookie record, two great
baserunner.
He matched Boston's season
'bettef
th!ll!._
.
Amby
change&gt;tbe~."hlgll. ;;;-~ maJor league
'
McConnell' s mark from
Drew followed with reconl for steals by a rookie
1908. Cleveland's Kenny at10iher solo shot off Bailey, is 110, set by the Catdiqals'
fromPageBl
in Vince Coleman in 1985....
Lofton stole 66 bases in who gave up five
Youkilis hit solo homers in 1992 for the American only 2 1-3 innings. In his 12 EUsbury's 33 steals are the
the I Oth inning of a 6-4 win League reconl 'by a rookie.
starts over the last two sea- most for a Red Sox player
on Saturday. Crisp also hit 3
·~It 's pretty neat to do sons, the 22-year-old Bailey under age 25 since Tris
two-run shot off Bailey in something that basn"t belen bas more walks 08) than Speaker stole 52 bases in
the second inning, and had a done in Red Sox history for strikeouts (31) along v;ilh a !912 at the age of 24.... C
Jason Varitek was back in
bases-loaded single off 100 years," Ellsb!!ry said. 6.40 earned run average.
~'Still,
it's
all
about
getting
"It's
·a
first
tior
me,"
said
Boston's lineup after miss- ·.
Gacy Majewski that made it
8-0 in the fifth.
momentum in the g;une. I Bailey, who was considered ing three games with at1 illBoston's . lineup didn' t wouldn 't say it's deflating the Reds' · top pitching ness. He went 0-for-2 and
to steal second ·and thin! prospect in a decade. "I walked twice. ... I B SeaD
play like it was depleted.
. ."We can get it from pretty then score, but it does estab-_ guess everybody . goes Casey got another standing
much ,anywhere," Beckett !ish momentum with Josh through stretches like this. 1 ovation and waved his belsaid.
on the mound." ·
. just have to figure.it ouC
met to the crowd when be
Even from 'lbe rookie.
The .24-year-oJd Ellsbwy
Dmw has been Boston's pincb,hit in the eighth.... In
Ellsbury ~me;· game . also ~~ ~is. fi~ homer iQ mainstay in June, batting his three starts this season.
wi.th a single stole second • the third mnmg.
.447 with seven homers and Bailey bas given up six
and third, ~d scom1 ' 00 .'" :"His legs come mio play:' 16 R81s. ~ added a homer.s, walked 10 and
Dustin Pedroia's 'sacrifi.CC&lt; · Francona said . "He s~s 110lo homer off Majewski.
allowed 12 earned Nhs in
fly. Ellsbury's 33 Slcals are · second and third He s ;,.. · Nota: The four homers 12 1-3 innings.
'
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'

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,'

.

runs

.,

PlayQtf :. _
f'rnlll Page Bl

\

)(onday,June16,aoo8
•

www.mydailysentinel.cqm

a..Mful ..... green e)'ld 100 Workers .

..
....
-tolnod 304-675- ....... II!OOd ...... -.g
3508 ·
MoiOrlals provOiod. To
~ floor modal ..... 1480 iwk Free tntorm.Uan
TV, lor 11Ui1g 24 hr. (801 213 4225)

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0

-1oQO.

would have probably Jaken
dial at the ·start of lbe week.
[ think• f lve ·· ptoved . to
m~lf and a few odJcrs tbat
I think there is a major
cballlpi011sbip in me."
Woods even being in contention 00 the back looted
uncertain the way be started.
In the final group for the
sixth time in the last eight
majors, this one was packed
with curiosity over the state
of his knee, and it showed.
Fam stood 2S rows deep
.
the tee, and those in
the
row of the bleacbers
llllb hole turned to
watch. Among those in the
crowd was his swinl! COIIch,

at the U.S. Open- the only
major that goes. 18 boles o.f ·
overtime - since Retief' ·
Goosen defeated Matt
Brooks at Southern Hills in
2001.
And it was made possible
by Woods, among the great- .
est clutch putters of all time,
making a putt that simply
couldn't llllSS.
"A little wobbly down
there,fl be said pf the poa
greens, a grass that gets
bumpier m .t he afternoon
sun. "I played probably 2
Hank Hmey. wbo ple""d
lf2 holes oiltside right. Just
.
a
s Woods fil'lltlrd over tbe
take it back and make a pure
tee shot, "C' moo, buddy.~
stroke, beCause.once it stal\ts
He. &amp;lliJI':bookrd tbe tee
slowing down there ... you
shot
over tbe !allery, and so.
don't know what's going to
began
anodier journey to
happen. All I oould control
double bogey - his second
is my slroke."
·
shot was left and hit a IRle,
The biniie concluded a
his third shot clipped anothweek· in which Woods
er 1rec and stayed in thick
played the frrsl two rounds
rough, his fourth . didn't
with Phil Mickelson, shot ·
reach the green, and he ,got
~ on his back nine Friday
up-aild-down for a 6.
to get 'i nto contention, took
.
.......
That put bim 7-ovec fur
the 54-hole lead Saturday
Tiger
Woods
rea~
after
~
a
IJildO
4JI;Ilt
on
1he
1.8111
tbe
on hit op«"'i.
with two eagle putts totaling
100 feet, and wobbled 011 a· green forcing a pla)'Off - - ADpco Ne t!ie.~ 1he . bole, aod was hi~ tbircJ dollsurgically repaired knee that fourth round of lhe US Open d\llnpiorlship .at Tooey Pines ble bogey oo No:. I.
After a tiJree..putt bogey
often · turned a megawatt Golf Cour.&gt;e on Sunday i.n San 0"""'.
~
..
:.hisfowtb of the
snill.e into .a painful gri· said . of what awaits. "The
nothing
piltt
on
the
last
hole,
on
No. 2, be didn' t make
mace.
.
thing that is most amazing Woods again delivered.
another
mistake until the
,The knee, which sidelined is the man I'm going to play
It was reminiscent of the 13th.
him from the Ma~ters until tomorrow bas won 13 of 2000
I'!GA Championship at
Woods won rhat threethis week. didn 'r seem to these. It's amazing how Valballa,
where be made a
'bother him as much Sunday much it takes. 1 gave all I six-foot birdie putt that hole playoff at Valhalla by
- certainly not wben he had today and I can't com- broke both ways to get mto one shot, and be Willi the
launched into the wildest plain.~
a playoff against Bob May, 2005 Masters in a suddencelebration -o f the week.
Woods has never lost a the aitical Jlieoe 011 his way death playoff with an ~iron
~J iiOOk some things to -major when he had at least a to rour SVaigbt majols.
into 15 feet on the first elltta
kind of .relieve that,~ Woods share of the 54-hole lead.
"It feels very similar to hole ~o ~ Ouis DiMarco.
said of ·the soreness.
and be came close to throw- what Valball.a felt like," . Thisoneuafull~on
Adrenaline maybe?
ing lhis one away on a Woods said. "If 1 didn't a wounded ~ agaiDst a
··Ub, that helps, too," be ~es of questionable deci- make that putt, 1don' t get to 45-year-old wath a back so
said.
sions and poor shots.
continue to keep p!&amp;Ying. AI creaky be. ooce oontemplatMediate made only one
Now,
He tried to reach the 13th ~st, I gave myself a ('hancc: ed . retuemenL
bogey over the · final 13 gR:CD in two from 291 yards to win the tournament M~ tboo1p be.
holes. seizing on his best when a birdie was not IICIC- toiiiOlTOW. And that's all 1 , . nothi
lose.
lllld perbaps only - chance eswy, then pulled it into a can ask fur}'
'"hb:l
bow you
to win a major. He grazed hazard and walked off with
Westwood, ~·
to make odds ·on dill.•
the ~of the cup 011 a IS- bogey to slip one shot become tbc lint
Mediate uid. "'Who blew I
foot birdie cry at the 17th behind Mediate. who had in 38 ,an to win the .S. wotild I;Je bin playiq
lllld hit a
too strong birdied the 14th ahead of ()pen, fell Olle l1nlb sbon. lll'in'lbim "'"MMtow'T' .
011 the 18th, boch Jill'S keep- him.
He hid a oae-lhol lead at 'lbea be nodoed ~
iDI Woods in the game. .
Woods then laid up with the tura an4 fought to stay ........iq • the door ~ 1be
. Mondly will not be the an iron on the 14th, where iD the pme afta' CODieCU- interview room.
first time they have tussled. the tees were moved up 10 tive bogeys early on the
ADd you beller wlleb
Mediate played with a 23- make it play only 267 yards, blck Dille.
younelf tomorrow, pal,"
year..,ld Woods in the fmal hit a sand wedge 20 feet
"It's Sickenina not 10 be in Mediate said playfully.
round of the Phoenix Open beyond the hole and made the playoff tomonow," be MSee, he's a little lll!l'VOIIS
in 1999, where be led by six par. And two shots into the said. ".But all in all, I played right now."
shots and held on to win by right rough on the 15th led Pf"tty good all week. And if
Woock joined die Iaupthree. lt was one of his five to a bogey that put him one &amp;OillCbody said, ' You're ter. Navous'? Problbly not. ·
PGA Tour victories.
shot behind.
going to bave a chance: for a But definitely thrilled 10
"Battle royale," Mediate
Standing over an all-«- playotf on Monday,· tbeo I still be playing.

FIND AJOB
..THE
CLASSIREDS
INDEX

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Find all the
news that
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64Utflllil JDiilp ~~1111r
.... tMUIIIIt ...111u
The Daily Sentinel
. ..,lliafl-ilatiul

~

�Page B2 • The Daily Sentinel

MLB Standings

-

...

~
EMIDivio!On

·- . . .

~-

~

.\

T-Boy4,Fio&lt;ida1

-~
WLPc:IGB

;Chicago
St L.ou;.

Finals

MiMIMOtli 9, Milwaukee .. , 12 innings

WLPotGB
.41 30 .sn 37 32 .536 3
3( 35 .493 6
33 35 .485 6•
29 42 .408 12

·Philadelphia
'Florida

45 25 .&amp;43 -

,
I

42 29 .592 3 ~
36 33 522
3( 36 .486 11
33 37 .471 12
.Cincinnati
33 38 .465 12.
-Divilion
WLPdGB
:Artzor37 . 33 .5211 Lol . . . . .
31 38 ..... 5~
' 31 '4lh43l ' S~
'son lilonclooo ao 40 .4211 7
Colar.m . 21 41 ·. ..

a&gt;

·Mitwau~&lt;ee
~l'tllot&gt;ufVh

N . Y - 8, Hou&amp;m4
Son Diogo 8, CkMIIand 3, 10 innings
Colotado 2, Chlcogo White Sox 0
Bdimore 8, PllllburJjh 7
T - 01 N.Y. Mels, ppd., rain
~&lt;or-. City 12, ArizDna 3
Ooklond 4, San Franciic:o 0
A - 9, LA Angels 4
Wulalo . . . 5, &amp;iente 2

......,.._

Dotroit s. LA. Dodgo&lt;o.
Clr•land 7, Sen Diego 3

Cllicogo CUb17, ToroniD •
T-a. N.Y.Mets7. 1atgame
• . Texas 2 , 2nd 111mo

N.Y. -

- a , Cincinnati o

m......... tolnnlngs

~s. e

'Son._

-~. T-Boy3

Ill

... 4. Minl-2

N.Y.- 1 3 , . _ 0
~ 5, ClllcoOD- Sore 3
o.tdmi:I.S, San Fiad&amp;w S
\\'l1il.lgb1'6, Stoatdt 2
~ City 8, ArizDno 3

lloluodl¥'o-

Chicago CL.«lS 6, TOmniO 2 •
petroit 12, L,A. Dodgers 7
AIWMI1 LA. Angelo, Ioiii
- 61 Cilc:innali 4, 10 . . . .
lluoidoj'o&lt;St.IJ&gt;Uio 3, 'Phlodelphio 2
Boston {CCion .._ 11 at Phl-lphia
·
(Harnois 6-4), 7c05 p.m. ·
:T-JIIr4,Florido 1
~ 9, Milwaukee 4, 12 innings . . N.l' Mels (f'eltrey 2-6) 11 LA Angels
III.Y.8, HOUS!on 4
(Jor.Wea""' 6-6), 10c05 p.m.
Florida (Millo&lt; +S) ot Seat11e (SilVa 3-7),
. Son llii!IO~Ii. Cleveland 3, 10 imin$0
~2. Chicago While Sooc 0
10:1D p.m.
a, ~ 1
Dotroit (\lorlonder 3-11) 11 San T-iort N.Ho!ols, .ppd.. nlin
(l&gt;irailum 11-1), t0c15 p.m.
· -C;ty12, Arizona3
- 4, San Ftarii$b 0
•
... . . . . 1\
1

e-.....

••

,)~tonto 9, LA. Angols 4

&gt;Woshinglon 5, - 2

I

.~ 5, LA
~­
Dodgors 4

BOSltJN

l;:lowoland 7, San Diogo 3
Ohlcago Cubs 1. Toromo 4

RED SC1K

LHP-

IIQi&gt;Od 10 terms

-·Hole,

~

lHP-

Moo, -

Seth

OF
Thomas
Oi8aro&amp;d8rkl. RHP ~ Kehrt and 28

Andrew

'

~rwh 5, Bo~imore 4, 10 innings
f'lorida 9. T - 'Boy 3

-ul&lt;oe4,Minnooo1a2
,...Y. 'l'anla&gt;es 13, Houston 0
Colorado 5, Chicago White S.. 3

_

St. Louis 7, PhiladelPhia 6, 10 innings
Ooldand 5, SOn Ftancisco 3

Frezza.

·ss

ZachGeroilo.
.CLEVELAND INDII\Ns-Ag190&lt;1 ID ,
term&amp; wi1h INF Lonnie C -.
DETROIT TIGEFiS-Op11oned ftHP
Aquiline lopez 1o T - (ILl. Purchued
1he contract 111 RHP eddie Bonine 11om
To-. Optioned LHP Ckly R_.,. 1o

T -.

OAKUIND ATHLETICs-Agn&gt;ed to
terms wi1h C Peter Palllmore and QF

-gton6. - 2

_...,..

AU.

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

Herold, 26 -

N.v. Mets 4, T-. 2. 2n11 """"'
9, Cincinnati 0

t

• Garriocn,-

T - 8, N.Y. Me1i 7 , 1a1111me
-

,

wi1h

,Kanoas Cl1y 8, Arizcoa 3
Allanta
at L.A. Angel&amp;, lata
.

.Rashun Dixon.
.
. ' • .,. '.
TEXA~ . RANG~R&amp;- 1!9!!1!11"' .t.l4f' ·
.,,... (Colon 4· 1I a1 Philadelphia Kason Gilbbaro '""" Oldallc&gt;na.IPOI,).,
lliamels 6-4), 7c05 p.m.
Designated AHP Robinson Tejeda lor
Atlanta (Jurrjens 6·3) at Colorado assignment.
(Jimenez 1-6), a:os p.m.
TORON10 BLUE JAY5-ktiwlto!l C
N.Y. Me1s (fie~ 2-6) a1 LA Angels Gregg Zaun from the 15-day Dl.
C.Jer.Weaver 6-6), 10:05 p.m.
Optioned C Curtis Thigpen 1o Syracuse
.
florida (Milklr 4·5) 11 Seaftlo (Sliva 3-7), (IL).
10:10 p.m.

Oetrctt (Verlander 3-9) at San francisco
(Uncecum-8-1),

10 : 15~m .

--

W L Pet, GB
44 28 .an

2.

Boston

Tampa Bay

:40 29 .510
37 33 .529 6
3( 34 .500 8
35 36 .493 'a}.

Bal1irnono

.Toronto

-~
W L Pot'

GB
38 31 .551 -

' Chicago
:Minnesota

a.

Clewtland
DetroH

33 37 .471
32 37 .464 6
28. 42 .400 10:1

Kansas Cl1y

Oalcland

Texas
Seattkl

s•

36 .486 4~

--·

Los Angeles

'W
41
38
35

L
28
31
'36
24 45

Solo,.,.• _

l'ct
.594
551
.493
.348

~11A'M~~'oBACK5-

ARIZONA PI 'I

P u - tho oantract ol · U&lt;&gt;
Aosatoo '""" To ...... (~. (lpllonod

'EIItDIWI I 1

RH~ lllllr~T-. .
.
CLNCHWJ &amp;US 11olnsbltod J!HP
Gary ·MIIJ• lid 4tom . . !befNuement
list. O!&gt;IIOniod lHP llonnl' ' liOn'eta 1o
J.oui- (a,).

'

.

COLORADO~C

Edwin -

!ram

Oolorodo Springs

{PCL). Optioned INF .Jqna1hen Herrera
1o Colorado Springs.
NEW YORK METS-Activatod OF Trot
Nbcon. Delignatod ·OF Dllfll ot.gulla 1or
aiiolgnmont.
PITTSBURGH PIRATEs-Agreed 10

term&amp; with 381Jooen)y - · JB c..tvin
lllidoiiOll, 9$ .....
n~m ,

c ...

c

Dll1iotQpher Slnlm..,. and .bF Cole

GB
3
7
17

Whlto.

ST. LOUIS CARDINALS-Activa1ed
RHP Jaion l~uoen fnlm 1he 1S.

day DL Rocatlod fUiP Anthony f1e1oes
11om Morriphis (PCL). Optioned RHP
Marl&lt; Womlll and OF Joe Mather 1o

Nlolf1llii&amp;.
SAN FRANCISCO GIANTS--Optioned
LHP Patrick lollocll to Fresno (PCLI.

Chicago Culls 6, Toronto 2

Detroit 12, L.A. Dodgers 7
Boo1on 6, Cincinnati 4, 10 lnnin$0

center criticized for being
pillowy soft. dido 't back
down underneath and was
able to get Garnett into foul
fromPageBI
trouble.
But just as they did in
Big Three couldn' t do~ Game 4, when they staged
their first chance at winning the big$esl comeback in
it all, and now will get two finals history. the Celtics
ClliCks at home to finish the pushed the Lakers to the
job.
brink of summer with anothAfter scoring 15 points -in er raQ.y. This one fell a little
the first quarter, Bryant went short. but the outcome was
cold from the floor and fin- still in doubt when Pien:e,
ished just 8-of-21. But he who grew up hating Boston
made a big steal. pokin$ the like every other kid from
ball away from Paul Pieroe L.A., made two free tluuws
and streaking down to deliv- with I : 14 remaining to get
er a two-handed 'dunk with the Celtics to 97-95.
37.4 secoods ~
Fisher then missed a
The Celtics (:alled a' time- jumper and the Celtics
out, Jack Nicholson·jul'l'i)IM appeared to he in business
to his feet and !be score- when Pierce fought off two
board in S~les'. Cen~ Lakers for a rebound. But as
flashed: Not In Our HQuse!
he dribbled toward the basWhen the fioal . Jtom ket, IJryant reached around
sounded, purple .and. ,gold and knocked the ball away to
streamers feU fro,nl ~.qjl­ · Odom, who then fed Bryant
ing and the ~
....~.~:... · ~s for his slam.
SJ,ill, the Celtics wouldn' t
announcer said. "GaD\!:· 6
will ·he TUesday' oiglU 'i n go away.
After Bryant missed one
Boston. This is not over yet.fl
On Satu,rday, Bryant 'had of two free throws with 16
said
i.s far from mu... seconds left, Eddie House
nailed a 3-pointer to make it
and he coul!l be ri_ghl :
Accused of being selfish 101-98 with 14 seconds left.
and too tnugh 011 his not-as- House then nearly stole the
ta~ ~s. Brylinl ensuing inbounds pass, but
can bow,to the od!er Lakers Bryant, sprawled out on the
f&lt;ir · sending. the saies back floor. got the ball to Fisher,
across OOIIIIIIy. .•
.
who drew a desperation foul.
Fisher then made two free
GasOI, the 7-f~ Spanish
•

.

j

"this

.

'

·l/1/IINJ.:rlli':l .

Cup-··

fromPageBl

-liprtnl
.,..,. ••

'tl

I

N8nl8
Wins Pts.
back up, gas it, coast.
1 . Kyle Buooh
2213
•
Everybody's doing it. ·
2. Jell Burton
1
·32.
-84
'There's no rules specifi- 3. Da)!! Eamhanl Jr. 1
4. C.rl Edw.d&amp;
3
·206 '
cally against that, but I was 5. Jtmmie.Jonnson
1
·254
1
·287
getting a little greedy ... I 6. Denny Hamlin
7. Kasey Kahne
2
-324
wanted to coast farther, so 8.
GregB111e
0
·329
I'd gas it harder and coast 9. Je11Gor&lt;lon
0
·337
10. KevtnHaNlck
0
·396
and just let
past the pace
11 . Tcnys-rt
0
-439
him come on and catch back 12. Clint Bowyer
1
-449
up, and that way I could. 13. Devld RaiiiO
0
..59
keep my motor off longer."
14.- 0
-4113
TIUII! Jr.
·0
·543
It wod.ed out just right as 15. ,6.11rtan Vtclcoos
0
-546
the green flag came out on
17.11yan1
-572
0
-634
lap 202 for a two-lap sprint ,B.TrowioKqpll
111.1&lt;11t1Buoch
0
-&amp;76
to the finish, which was 20.
tlol&gt;by ~
0
then cut .short when Patrick
Carpentier spun on lap 203, · becau~ he's been through
freezing the field and allow- so much. I' m glad to be able
lllg Junior to coast - this to win for him, for Tony Jr.,
for the team for believing in
time behind the pace car to· his 18th career victory me."
·
and first at Michigan.
Kasey Kahne, coming off
"lbey can write what they a victory the previOI.!S week
want, but we won one," in Pocono, fmished second
Earnhardt said in the jubila- and ,almost came up with
lion after the Lifelock 400. his fourth victory in hiii last
He gave his new boss, five starts, · includiflg ·t he
Rick Hendrick, &lt;Jilly his sec- non-points all-star race last
ond vi~ of the season. month in Charlotte.
Hendrick's teain won 18of
Matt Kenseth finished
36 races a year ago, but has third, followed by Brian
snuggled to reach Victocy Vickers, Tony Stewart and
Ciide in 2008, with a lone two-time defending Cup
victory by two-time defend- champion Jimmie Johnson.
Ke11seth, \llbo led Several
ing Cup champion Jimmie
Johnson until Sunday.
times, said .be might have
After leaving the team his won the raoe if not for
late father founded to drilfe, ~shap in the pits on bis
for Hendrick's juggemillll · lut stop. A NASCAR aliithis year, Eambardl llrg •. c:ials; appareiltly thinking
the new phase of his c:am!l Kenselb vias gomg to take
w1tb two 11011-p • ·; vic»- foUr fues instead Gf two,
ries at baytona ill Fdxuary. walbd ia front of his car
But, despite running well 110 just fS the fOJ'IDel' teries
far this season, 't!J"o.nis- champion startrd out of'llis
ing start did not
to Ill)' .pit. lteosetb didn't bit, die
victories in the first f4 0., oftici.ds. bot the besitiDun

car

!

f

races.

COIC'IIim vlluallk,. '""''·

• "We started out and be
wcia the (Budweillel') Clash

~ pointS ~wier 1Cyle
BuiCb fiilisbed a less than

bave 10 worry abollt wina rece now.' TMa
~~~~body llOUtlled it beclnte tt
wun't a noints race."
Headrick ..fci in VICtOry
On:Je. "We've been wail:in&amp;
for this. Been so close."
Eambardt was as relieved
as be was joyful.._.
loq-awai!M victoiy.
'1'bis is
~
beCause it
Rick,' he
Said. "He's such a great man

on Sunday. lbe
,wilhatof.llofJO.
._. . 11lis tea!IOD in
.J\IASC!AR's
three top
- - &amp;o!sbelf .ventb in
the tnlck race here
Saturday, drawiltl aiticism
when be spun out Ron
HODIIday Jr. near the end.
Busch then
flew to
Kentucky,
where
be
aasbcd and finished 30th in
a Nationwide race.

·and the I SO ( ualifYina memorable
three-race
noel and we llid.~We doo'i -w c • 1111 with • 13th·place

nina

I
'

*

~';7th

~

J

a•

------

tfu'ows and stole Boston's
last pass as Laker.i fans,
stunned to silence a few
· nights ago, left the building
~ of seeing another
·
Ie comeback.
is is the II th meeting
- and first since 1987 between the league's two
most stories franchises, and
it could he beaded for a
crescendo bi:fl~ the .
matchups between Bird and
Magic, McHale and 'AbdulJ ab&amp;ar, arid Russell and.
Wesl
Before the game, Lakers
coach Jac:kson said the only
way for his team to approach
a close-out ,game was to
keep playing.
"A lot of .things can happen," he said. -we're young
eooul!)I and dumb enough to
be able to do this."
·
With Bryant, they have~
smarts and skills to get 11
done.
·
,
He made four 3-pointers ip
the first eil!)It mmutes and
his free tlirow gave the
Lakei:s a 25-15 lead. The
Celtics were forced to
extend their defense, and
Bryant made them pay when
he faked a long-range shot
and fired a pass underneath
to Vladimir Radmanovic to
make it29-15.
Odom, a model of inconsistency in the series, drove
the lane for a hooj&gt; to put the

Lakers ahead l)y 16, and
&lt;Jasol's bucket in the final
second made the overl!ead
scoreboard ~: l.akers 39,
Celtics 22.
Most teams mildtt panic.
Not the Celtics. They were
in a bigger bole- 21 points
- after the first quarter in
Game 4 when they staged

www.mydiiHyeutinel.com .

their epic rally.
·
ADd;' sure enOugh. back
Boston ll3l!IC.

When S . Vujacic
scored, the Lak:ers' lead
bulged to 19 and the ob-sotrendy L.A. faithful were
carrymg ·011 like a rowd,Y
East coast ciowd. That s
W.beo the Celtics.hegan chippmg away as Pleroe scored
six points and Allen. T~y
not Ray, scored two ·quick
baskets.
The Celtics' rally seemed
s~ort-lived, ~n

INAbsj!ffl:
www.~.com

www.rnydBilysenliliel.com
www.mydailylegister.com

Gimett

p1cked up his thiid personal,
bot with llie l.akers unable to
get attytbing to drop. Pierce
made a layup and 3 10 make
it43-39 before Odom finally
ended Los Angeles nearly
six-minute scoring drou~t.
The
Lak:ers
bnefly
regrouped but PJ. Brown
scored 011 a putback attd
Pierce hit another 3-pointer
witli 5.2 seconds left as the
Celtics closed to 55-52 at
half and bounded toward .
their locker just 24 minutes
from a title. ·

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. _. ·...Reds-

. a club rookie record, two great
baserunner.
He matched Boston's season
'bettef
th!ll!._
.
Amby
change&gt;tbe~."hlgll. ;;;-~ maJor league
'
McConnell' s mark from
Drew followed with reconl for steals by a rookie
1908. Cleveland's Kenny at10iher solo shot off Bailey, is 110, set by the Catdiqals'
fromPageBl
in Vince Coleman in 1985....
Lofton stole 66 bases in who gave up five
Youkilis hit solo homers in 1992 for the American only 2 1-3 innings. In his 12 EUsbury's 33 steals are the
the I Oth inning of a 6-4 win League reconl 'by a rookie.
starts over the last two sea- most for a Red Sox player
on Saturday. Crisp also hit 3
·~It 's pretty neat to do sons, the 22-year-old Bailey under age 25 since Tris
two-run shot off Bailey in something that basn"t belen bas more walks 08) than Speaker stole 52 bases in
the second inning, and had a done in Red Sox history for strikeouts (31) along v;ilh a !912 at the age of 24.... C
Jason Varitek was back in
bases-loaded single off 100 years," Ellsb!!ry said. 6.40 earned run average.
~'Still,
it's
all
about
getting
"It's
·a
first
tior
me,"
said
Boston's lineup after miss- ·.
Gacy Majewski that made it
8-0 in the fifth.
momentum in the g;une. I Bailey, who was considered ing three games with at1 illBoston's . lineup didn' t wouldn 't say it's deflating the Reds' · top pitching ness. He went 0-for-2 and
to steal second ·and thin! prospect in a decade. "I walked twice. ... I B SeaD
play like it was depleted.
. ."We can get it from pretty then score, but it does estab-_ guess everybody . goes Casey got another standing
much ,anywhere," Beckett !ish momentum with Josh through stretches like this. 1 ovation and waved his belsaid.
on the mound." ·
. just have to figure.it ouC
met to the crowd when be
Even from 'lbe rookie.
The .24-year-oJd Ellsbwy
Dmw has been Boston's pincb,hit in the eighth.... In
Ellsbury ~me;· game . also ~~ ~is. fi~ homer iQ mainstay in June, batting his three starts this season.
wi.th a single stole second • the third mnmg.
.447 with seven homers and Bailey bas given up six
and third, ~d scom1 ' 00 .'" :"His legs come mio play:' 16 R81s. ~ added a homer.s, walked 10 and
Dustin Pedroia's 'sacrifi.CC&lt; · Francona said . "He s~s 110lo homer off Majewski.
allowed 12 earned Nhs in
fly. Ellsbury's 33 Slcals are · second and third He s ;,.. · Nota: The four homers 12 1-3 innings.
'
.
'

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PlayQtf :. _
f'rnlll Page Bl

\

)(onday,June16,aoo8
•

www.mydailysentinel.cqm

a..Mful ..... green e)'ld 100 Workers .

..
....
-tolnod 304-675- ....... II!OOd ...... -.g
3508 ·
MoiOrlals provOiod. To
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TV, lor 11Ui1g 24 hr. (801 213 4225)

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would have probably Jaken
dial at the ·start of lbe week.
[ think• f lve ·· ptoved . to
m~lf and a few odJcrs tbat
I think there is a major
cballlpi011sbip in me."
Woods even being in contention 00 the back looted
uncertain the way be started.
In the final group for the
sixth time in the last eight
majors, this one was packed
with curiosity over the state
of his knee, and it showed.
Fam stood 2S rows deep
.
the tee, and those in
the
row of the bleacbers
llllb hole turned to
watch. Among those in the
crowd was his swinl! COIIch,

at the U.S. Open- the only
major that goes. 18 boles o.f ·
overtime - since Retief' ·
Goosen defeated Matt
Brooks at Southern Hills in
2001.
And it was made possible
by Woods, among the great- .
est clutch putters of all time,
making a putt that simply
couldn't llllSS.
"A little wobbly down
there,fl be said pf the poa
greens, a grass that gets
bumpier m .t he afternoon
sun. "I played probably 2
Hank Hmey. wbo ple""d
lf2 holes oiltside right. Just
.
a
s Woods fil'lltlrd over tbe
take it back and make a pure
tee shot, "C' moo, buddy.~
stroke, beCause.once it stal\ts
He. &amp;lliJI':bookrd tbe tee
slowing down there ... you
shot
over tbe !allery, and so.
don't know what's going to
began
anodier journey to
happen. All I oould control
double bogey - his second
is my slroke."
·
shot was left and hit a IRle,
The biniie concluded a
his third shot clipped anothweek· in which Woods
er 1rec and stayed in thick
played the frrsl two rounds
rough, his fourth . didn't
with Phil Mickelson, shot ·
reach the green, and he ,got
~ on his back nine Friday
up-aild-down for a 6.
to get 'i nto contention, took
.
.......
That put bim 7-ovec fur
the 54-hole lead Saturday
Tiger
Woods
rea~
after
~
a
IJildO
4JI;Ilt
on
1he
1.8111
tbe
on hit op«"'i.
with two eagle putts totaling
100 feet, and wobbled 011 a· green forcing a pla)'Off - - ADpco Ne t!ie.~ 1he . bole, aod was hi~ tbircJ dollsurgically repaired knee that fourth round of lhe US Open d\llnpiorlship .at Tooey Pines ble bogey oo No:. I.
After a tiJree..putt bogey
often · turned a megawatt Golf Cour.&gt;e on Sunday i.n San 0"""'.
~
..
:.hisfowtb of the
snill.e into .a painful gri· said . of what awaits. "The
nothing
piltt
on
the
last
hole,
on
No. 2, be didn' t make
mace.
.
thing that is most amazing Woods again delivered.
another
mistake until the
,The knee, which sidelined is the man I'm going to play
It was reminiscent of the 13th.
him from the Ma~ters until tomorrow bas won 13 of 2000
I'!GA Championship at
Woods won rhat threethis week. didn 'r seem to these. It's amazing how Valballa,
where be made a
'bother him as much Sunday much it takes. 1 gave all I six-foot birdie putt that hole playoff at Valhalla by
- certainly not wben he had today and I can't com- broke both ways to get mto one shot, and be Willi the
launched into the wildest plain.~
a playoff against Bob May, 2005 Masters in a suddencelebration -o f the week.
Woods has never lost a the aitical Jlieoe 011 his way death playoff with an ~iron
~J iiOOk some things to -major when he had at least a to rour SVaigbt majols.
into 15 feet on the first elltta
kind of .relieve that,~ Woods share of the 54-hole lead.
"It feels very similar to hole ~o ~ Ouis DiMarco.
said of ·the soreness.
and be came close to throw- what Valball.a felt like," . Thisoneuafull~on
Adrenaline maybe?
ing lhis one away on a Woods said. "If 1 didn't a wounded ~ agaiDst a
··Ub, that helps, too," be ~es of questionable deci- make that putt, 1don' t get to 45-year-old wath a back so
said.
sions and poor shots.
continue to keep p!&amp;Ying. AI creaky be. ooce oontemplatMediate made only one
Now,
He tried to reach the 13th ~st, I gave myself a ('hancc: ed . retuemenL
bogey over the · final 13 gR:CD in two from 291 yards to win the tournament M~ tboo1p be.
holes. seizing on his best when a birdie was not IICIC- toiiiOlTOW. And that's all 1 , . nothi
lose.
lllld perbaps only - chance eswy, then pulled it into a can ask fur}'
'"hb:l
bow you
to win a major. He grazed hazard and walked off with
Westwood, ~·
to make odds ·on dill.•
the ~of the cup 011 a IS- bogey to slip one shot become tbc lint
Mediate uid. "'Who blew I
foot birdie cry at the 17th behind Mediate. who had in 38 ,an to win the .S. wotild I;Je bin playiq
lllld hit a
too strong birdied the 14th ahead of ()pen, fell Olle l1nlb sbon. lll'in'lbim "'"MMtow'T' .
011 the 18th, boch Jill'S keep- him.
He hid a oae-lhol lead at 'lbea be nodoed ~
iDI Woods in the game. .
Woods then laid up with the tura an4 fought to stay ........iq • the door ~ 1be
. Mondly will not be the an iron on the 14th, where iD the pme afta' CODieCU- interview room.
first time they have tussled. the tees were moved up 10 tive bogeys early on the
ADd you beller wlleb
Mediate played with a 23- make it play only 267 yards, blck Dille.
younelf tomorrow, pal,"
year..,ld Woods in the fmal hit a sand wedge 20 feet
"It's Sickenina not 10 be in Mediate said playfully.
round of the Phoenix Open beyond the hole and made the playoff tomonow," be MSee, he's a little lll!l'VOIIS
in 1999, where be led by six par. And two shots into the said. ".But all in all, I played right now."
shots and held on to win by right rough on the 15th led Pf"tty good all week. And if
Woock joined die Iaupthree. lt was one of his five to a bogey that put him one &amp;OillCbody said, ' You're ter. Navous'? Problbly not. ·
PGA Tour victories.
shot behind.
going to bave a chance: for a But definitely thrilled 10
"Battle royale," Mediate
Standing over an all-«- playotf on Monday,· tbeo I still be playing.

FIND AJOB
..THE
CLASSIREDS
INDEX

week

weeii:-

w•

M

•

Find all the
news that
matter5

to

YUill.

64Utflllil JDiilp ~~1111r
.... tMUIIIIt ...111u
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Pf(TIOifMY
Ofll Tt¥TOP

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This .., are IJOin'ii to look at suits

Sf¥Lf,

that are blocl&lt;ed "' migh1 become

What i6 a bloated sull? h Is one in which
have trioks that cannot be tal&lt;en
lmmodiately. Fgr !1111!111!!!!. YQ~ htvo
doubleton •A.f&lt; in your hand and Q-J-5-4
on the ·boar&lt;!. You hOYe ·four tricks, but ·
only H, etrar cashing - unblooking your aoo and king, you can ge1 ·to the
boon! ·to collect the queen and jaok.
That Suit invotlllid honor-cards. but 111~
· deAl features spot·can:ls: those below
·the rank of the jack. You are in lhree notrump. West leads the spade king. What
woold be your line of play?
~Your 1llnd, With Its three aoos and- - lio-.0......;1,--'
lling&amp;, is -'11 nearer 22 points than 20.
·North i6 ·too weal&lt; to ·contemplate IMt
damonds as a final contnict, so he
by Luis Clmpos
8hOuid raise to "three no-trump and hope
CeletJrityo ~ ~5 111 Cfal!leiJ !rom [JtJiatl)ns by lemous Pfllpifl paslerd jQMnl.
for 1t1e .beat. (Yes, ti"' diamonds makes
e.ctt l«&lt;er 11"1 the crphef stanas ror anotlie!
here, tiui that ian1 the pointl)
TOday 'scJue 16ljUIISK
'The opponents have etruok your
" I V·DD 0 W~TGB· .W'I!TTBNXD:B .VZ
Ac1111as'·heel. Ctearly 1he ·diamond sun
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CELEBRITY CIPHER

,.;n he"' ·torun. for·that, ;&lt;~u wll need 10
find 1 2-2 breal&lt;. But that is not all: Hyou

.R il-. Oh1o 7404Cl.alf ,

are careless, ·the suit will become
blodmd. Alter taking the &amp;pade ace,
cash l'IJUI' diammd Mig, 'than 'lead the

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nina to dummy's aoe. When the opponents' four can:ls are 2-2, you can run
·tho rest of tho BUH (stBrting with 1he

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·lhemBOives. as tl1ey ,.;11 . ff you're
responalva to the proftt motiYe, much ·
· .._..
Is inCicatod . for peraonal gain
when opportunities
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) - Those oamo
p8&lt;ll&gt;le who ....., oppooad 10 .;&lt;)U, -you .. uble In the past, moy be1110.
'first..,.. 1o """""'""' ff lhov ... a ;good
of oction being laid out.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) - .Booauaa
you're abje&gt;to do lhingo
others, you'l ·find that niche you'.ve been
looking tor.M»ur-know-hOw and preeence
wiD meet a ntal need.
LIBRA (Sop!. 23-0ct. 23) - H behOOWIS
YDI:I to auocilte with companions who
are a~vely ft'wolwd In l)fOUfeaiYe, poeiliiM actiYilios, b8'cauao they tend to atnn.
ulate you into actton. Avoid thoSe who
have no urgency about lite.
SCORPIO (Oct. 2..Nov. 22) - Onoe
you're maliV.Iad, "CIIftlcufl ObfectMt&amp; can
be """" ~ than you might

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SCUioiLEI'S ANS'fiBII!I 6/D/01 ·

·ifillu.s - lladF -ldiat- Rdire- OUGHT to BE
True 1.1• IU!II&lt;hijlis lbellt ofdmogingallllion from will! itil,
iDio wbll it OUGHT to B~.

A'ALO ilr JANIS

1hot'a In ;&lt;1U \Will

SAGITllliRILIS ~- :!S.Doc. 21)- One
of, l'IJUI' - . . lo ... obility to
infuee new vtta1tty into aituationslhat ate

beginning to tray at lho · Sell8111l
projects wHI naad
attention.
CAPRICORN (Ooc. 22-Jan. 19) - ""'""
an fldra .tfDn to finalize a metter that
hu boon loll ~- 'lt&gt;ur chancas lor

vour

f

~

are b8ttef than usual because
H.a·lop priority.
_ _ _.il.,jC.,.U AClUARIUS (Jan . 20-Fet&gt;. 19) - H there
ic IOiiiGCIIMt you .wquld ... to get to «now
· H~ up 10 you •10 . - 1ha first
mcMl 'ttM.I CDUII:I Wllt"'fonwer n you think
ltlelo rPkll to , _.... - l o r """
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-•ololo will ol1ino brigt!lly.
Thill'" oomo Into plor lho mon1001 you'ro
tlolcl with I chiiHI qlng dalllu;:tiiW! il.
1lWAUS ~~ 2ll-Miil' 20) - Don~ hoo·

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GEMINI (May 21-June 20) - You'ro
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CANCER (Juna 21-July 22) - Be prepared to mOW! swiftly and effectively

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PREVIOUS SOLUTION - 'Any exwse to live in New York and do an. Has w
lJo one of lite most rewanling OllfiOriences mlite world.' . Tommy Chang

&amp;elllllll) lor at least 11 trioks.

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-----...-· The Daily Sentinel• Page B5

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EJIIIfS IIOUSf t
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got
!WOr1henl·to cash II. Somotlmeo that w11
be 1t1e - • at careleosneso on l'IJUT
.part, but occasiona~ ~ ,., be because ·

Pf(TIOifMY
Ofll Tt¥TOP

-·

' 1he alit - -·
This .., are IJOin'ii to look at suits

Sf¥Lf,

that are blocl&lt;ed "' migh1 become

What i6 a bloated sull? h Is one in which
have trioks that cannot be tal&lt;en
lmmodiately. Fgr !1111!111!!!!. YQ~ htvo
doubleton •A.f&lt; in your hand and Q-J-5-4
on the ·boar&lt;!. You hOYe ·four tricks, but ·
only H, etrar cashing - unblooking your aoo and king, you can ge1 ·to the
boon! ·to collect the queen and jaok.
That Suit invotlllid honor-cards. but 111~
· deAl features spot·can:ls: those below
·the rank of the jack. You are in lhree notrump. West leads the spade king. What
woold be your line of play?
~Your 1llnd, With Its three aoos and- - lio-.0......;1,--'
lling&amp;, is -'11 nearer 22 points than 20.
·North i6 ·too weal&lt; to ·contemplate IMt
damonds as a final contnict, so he
by Luis Clmpos
8hOuid raise to "three no-trump and hope
CeletJrityo ~ ~5 111 Cfal!leiJ !rom [JtJiatl)ns by lemous Pfllpifl paslerd jQMnl.
for 1t1e .beat. (Yes, ti"' diamonds makes
e.ctt l«&lt;er 11"1 the crphef stanas ror anotlie!
here, tiui that ian1 the pointl)
TOday 'scJue 16ljUIISK
'The opponents have etruok your
" I V·DD 0 W~TGB· .W'I!TTBNXD:B .VZ
Ac1111as'·heel. Ctearly 1he ·diamond sun
;&lt;~u

CELEBRITY CIPHER

,.;n he"' ·torun. for·that, ;&lt;~u wll need 10
find 1 2-2 breal&lt;. But that is not all: Hyou

.R il-. Oh1o 7404Cl.alf ,

are careless, ·the suit will become
blodmd. Alter taking the &amp;pade ace,
cash l'IJUI' diammd Mig, 'than 'lead the

..............
.........
·o *L

nina to dummy's aoe. When the opponents' four can:ls are 2-2, you can run
·tho rest of tho BUH (stBrting with 1he

Hf 'N W RTO ·PBXC llf'NKIZP. GMZX 8
C'N •G ABL 'N l«ZA, DXA
WBff ,BNX011~Z."

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- ·~

·lhemBOives. as tl1ey ,.;11 . ff you're
responalva to the proftt motiYe, much ·
· .._..
Is inCicatod . for peraonal gain
when opportunities
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) - Those oamo
p8&lt;ll&gt;le who ....., oppooad 10 .;&lt;)U, -you .. uble In the past, moy be1110.
'first..,.. 1o """""'""' ff lhov ... a ;good
of oction being laid out.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) - .Booauaa
you're abje&gt;to do lhingo
others, you'l ·find that niche you'.ve been
looking tor.M»ur-know-hOw and preeence
wiD meet a ntal need.
LIBRA (Sop!. 23-0ct. 23) - H behOOWIS
YDI:I to auocilte with companions who
are a~vely ft'wolwd In l)fOUfeaiYe, poeiliiM actiYilios, b8'cauao they tend to atnn.
ulate you into actton. Avoid thoSe who
have no urgency about lite.
SCORPIO (Oct. 2..Nov. 22) - Onoe
you're maliV.Iad, "CIIftlcufl ObfectMt&amp; can
be """" ~ than you might

,lillon 111 ..

#

I

•

•

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0
I

The b!en bad a spat with blr
~ ~d. "Agoodlaughanda .
ltlllg sleep" ber odJer CODSOiod
'
'her. "m_tbe--."
• Coolp... 1M dtiiCkle ~UGIId
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by-~nt.~
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SCUioiLEI'S ANS'fiBII!I 6/D/01 ·

·ifillu.s - lladF -ldiat- Rdire- OUGHT to BE
True 1.1• IU!II&lt;hijlis lbellt ofdmogingallllion from will! itil,
iDio wbll it OUGHT to B~.

A'ALO ilr JANIS

1hot'a In ;&lt;1U \Will

SAGITllliRILIS ~- :!S.Doc. 21)- One
of, l'IJUI' - . . lo ... obility to
infuee new vtta1tty into aituationslhat ate

beginning to tray at lho · Sell8111l
projects wHI naad
attention.
CAPRICORN (Ooc. 22-Jan. 19) - ""'""
an fldra .tfDn to finalize a metter that
hu boon loll ~- 'lt&gt;ur chancas lor

vour

f

~

are b8ttef than usual because
H.a·lop priority.
_ _ _.il.,jC.,.U AClUARIUS (Jan . 20-Fet&gt;. 19) - H there
ic IOiiiGCIIMt you .wquld ... to get to «now
· H~ up 10 you •10 . - 1ha first
mcMl 'ttM.I CDUII:I Wllt"'fonwer n you think
ltlelo rPkll to , _.... - l o r """
&gt;PISCES
211) - IArgOr- you~._

(Nb.-

thiiiMMHh611 ._ .

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&lt;

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udu» NOW lfiW * ·••llltil'rU•p _. .11 h-11;-' Ifill
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EEO ••;I Jft
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" ' - you poriorm for othonl.
,...I at
lhe mornonl, "'" jol&gt; you do wl l

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raltoclthia.

_New._'

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"'"'"'ba.l
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lon.

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. ..., ~ tiews:

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'-•11- Stet. &amp; s-.

Un""'

. ARIES (Maitll 21-Aprtl 19) ,...,nlay, you're r.rtng to go ana yoon
-•ololo will ol1ino brigt!lly.
Thill'" oomo Into plor lho mon1001 you'ro
tlolcl with I chiiHI qlng dalllu;:tiiW! il.
1lWAUS ~~ 2ll-Miil' 20) - Don~ hoo·

,,.._is ,;.

•

NolO f QE.f.ID.'
IT'll IIEAU.YKIIJDOF COOl.'

" " " - - «wpor lhan

0

Fer'

1Mt ~ for

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Cdl:7~16-104

25+,...

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Advealise ·
in this space for

$64

&amp;llfJIIIII •

____-. . ....

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tall

..... &amp;iot.lod '.... lltlow ·to farm faur - - -

go - - . , . , .
.gooi.
GEMINI (May 21-June 20) - You'ro
entaring a poattWe cyde and could see
1he 1IT8t aign&amp; of this. Something exdting
i5 stirring, and rou'll be a9ked to participate - ~ rumatn hopeful and in an

A

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ENEEP MSTT

----~o~~~oo~araa' L

\ro~\..K - - _., 11on1 - " " " " " "

IF ""'
l.:ilc:E 1'j,jE

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wou
'::: ·s~~lA~~~tfs·
l!!liiM----

,.;n be . . - •=-"'"ior,you·to initiate a
-"&gt;uatY ho; lblo - .. Whon

CANCER (Juna 21-July 22) - Be prepared to mOW! swiftly and effectively

B

PREVIOUS SOLUTION - 'Any exwse to live in New York and do an. Has w
lJo one of lite most rewanling OllfiOriences mlite world.' . Tommy Chang

&amp;elllllll) lor at least 11 trioks.

Q)Astro\.
,GtliJIIh

•

XNV

•

�,

..... B6 • The Daily Sentinel

Monday, June 16, 2ooS

-.mydaily&amp;entinel.rom

Indians' Sabathia defeats Padres' Maddux Ex-Marshall star dies
~

Post Commander

~

.CLEVELAND . (AP) C.C. Sabathia focused on
facing San Diego's batting
Older, but couldn't help
keeping an eye on his

JACKSONVILLE, Fla.
(AP) - Former Marshall
defensive i:nd Johnathan
Goddard has died in a
motorcycle accident in
northern
Aorida,
the
Florida Highway Patrol
says.
Goddard' s
motorcycle
went off the shoulder of a
road at a high rate of speed
alid overturned about 7:40
p.m. Saturday in Clay
County, Fla., Highway
Patrol Lt. Bill Leeper said. .
Goddard. a resident of
Starke, was pronounced
dead about 6:30 a.m.
Sunday
at
Shands
Jac.ksonviUe
Medical
Center, a nursing supervisor
said.
"This is a terrible loss for
our football family and our

mound ~nent, too.

Sabalhia outpitched Greg
Maddux in a matchup of Cy
Y:oung wiD.Oers, and the
Oeveland Indians defeated
the San DiegQ Padres 7-3 on
Sunday. l.~"

thoughts and prayers . ~
with the Goddard family,!
MarshaU coach
Ma!J
Snyder said. ·
·•
Goddard was the Mi~
American
Conferen\i
defensive player of the yt:s¢
and an Associated Pres,;;
second team all-Americall
in 2004, when he led the
nation with 16 sacks and
tackles for loss. He also was
a finalist for the Bronki
Nagorski Trophy, given ~
the nation's top defensi~
player.
~
Goddard was selected b)'
the Detroit Lions io tl!j
~ixth round of the 2~
NFL draft. He later playllll
briefly for the lndianapo~
Colts and the AreiVI
Football League's CoiOI'lld'Q
Crush.
~

Foreclosure crisis brings

·i nstalled, A3

.

Congress to Cleveland, A6

•

•

2J

"I was more worried about
facing Adrian Gonzalez than
Maddux," said Sabathia,
who held San Diego's slug. ging first !&gt;aseman to an 0for-3 with two strikeouts
while beating the Padres'
venerable-veteran, too.
" I looked at Maddux's
numbers in the paper the
other day and they' re unbelievable," Sabathia continued. "He still gets outs ·and
he works at 'his game .
Somebody told me he spent
four hours in the video room
to get preP.ared to face us.'"
It wasn t eoough.
Ben Francisco hit ·a threerun homer off the right-hanCINCINNATI (AP) Bengals went 7-9last ~
der and Grady Sizemore a
Receiver Chad Johnson · and fans grew weary of bii
solo shot against reliever Cia
Al'plaa
fully participated fu drills complaints that he •s m)
Meredith, his ninth homer in
Cleveland Indians' C.C. Sabathia ,pitches to San Diego Padres' Edgar Gonzalez in the first for the first ume Saturday as longer
appreciated
~
16 g~s. as Cleveland took
•
two .of three in the inter- inning in a baseball game Sunday in Cleveland.
the Cincin11ati Bengals Cincinnati. The Bengali
flee fly.
league series.
a walk for the seventh time "That's rare.
wrapped up their minicamp. refused to deal him,
"''ve been telling people in 15 starts this season, but
"I thought he threw fine.
"C. C. dido 't like giVmg
'I'IIe ·dispunded .receiver Johnson threatened to sit oUi
that nobody here is going to wasn't as sharp as usual. The He kept us in the game, gave up those runs, but didn't let limited h1mself to a few the season. He didn't
hit . . 220 all year," sai~ fopr-time NL . Cy Young us a cb~ to. wip,"
itfa7.e him," !pdian ~ mii.O~- drill~ during workouts on any .of the team's voluo~
Sabathla, who had received wmner hit a batter, threw a · Two outs later, Maddux rut er Eric Wedge said. "He s Thursday arid Friday, com- worlmuts.
..
only ·II runs in his previous wild pitch, and even made Jamey Carroll with a pitch. really worked hard to get plaining through his agent
He faced a fme if he didlfJ
six starts. "These guys are an uncharacteristic error that Francisco then lined the first into a zone and block every- that he has a bad ankle. He attend the mandatory, ~
going to bust out. Early in · led to three unearned runs.
pitch he saw just over the thing else out."
· looked fine during a work- day minicamp. Although qe
the season, it was my fault, I
Cleveland went ahead 3-d wall in left for his fourth
ln the bottom half, Shin- out on Saturday, caJching showed up for the first day
had like a 15 ERA after four in the third after Maddux homer.
Soo Cboo doubled, moved passes from Carsoq Palmer. of workouts on Thursday, he:
"The . home run didn't up on a grounder back to
games. I owe what I'm fielded Franklin Gutierrez's
He declined to.,talk to .the barely participated. Agelil
doing of late to everybody slow roller and threw wildly bother me," Maddux said. "I Maddux and scored on media again, other than to . Drew
Rosellhaus
saiil
else here.:·
to first for an error - only got the ball up and he hit it, ·another slow roller by say "Vote for Obarna" as he Johnson was oothered. by
Coming · off a five-hitter the 52od by the 17-time but you can't just give them Casey Blake for a 4-3 lead. walkc;d off the field - · sore ankle that might nlll'4 .
against
Minnesota
on Gold Glove winner since he opportunities to score. You
Gutierrez's RBI single in apparently throwing his SU{&gt;- surgery. '
. ·,
Tuesday, Sabathia (5-8) carne to the majors in 1986. have to make therb earn it." the. sixth made it 5-3.
port behind Democratic
The Bengals later sai41
struck out I 0 and allowed
"I shouldn't have (made
Sabathia yielded a leadoff
Sizemore · connected for presidential
candidate Johnson had an ankle p~
t11ree runs and six hits over the throw)," Maddux said, double ..to former teammate his 17th homer and Jhonny Barack Obama.
Iem last season. The teaiii
eight innings. His 14th game adding that Sabathia is ''too Jody Gerut to start the game, Peralta added an RBI single
"I think it's been good for had urged him to get it sui•
of doub!ecdigit strikeouts good to give him'extra outs. then struck out the next five. to make it 7-3 in the sev- him to get ~ck into the flow gically cleaned out after tl!t:
"I like watching him pitch.
The left-bander had one enth.
helped him past Charles
of things, coach Marvin fmal game, but he chose 11&lt;!1
Na~y for fifth place in He's got incredible stuff."
bad inning, the fourth, when
Maddux aUowed two Lewis said. "We still have to to do so.
Indians history with 1,239. · Padres manager Bud the Padres tied it at 3~ earned runs and eight hits get some clarity .o n the ankle
Johnson was downcaSt
Maddux (3-5) fell to 0-2 in Black was shocked at the Sabathia yielded four singles over six innings, striking out and being able.to deal with and had little interactioil
seven starts since May 10, · miscue, but not Maddux's in the .inning, including RBI two. He has twn errors
that because it is something with teammates during thf;
when he became the ninth overall performance. ·
hits by Justin Huber and year, only the · third "'-·- ··• we dealt with.ab!!ago."
first ·day of workouts. ~
"He's such a flawless Khalil Greene. Mi'chael since 2001 .he .1Jas had
pitcher to win 350 ~ames.
Jaqnson bas
lobby- was more .upbeat the . Ia$)
The 42-year-old dido t issue defender," Black said. Barrett added a tying sacri- many.
·
il\g· for _a ttade since the two days.
:

Johnson finally works ~ .
out at Bengals minicamg..

,jj'

J•){

•

•

_r'

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio

I '\1~·\•d . -; -. 'l '...!: ·,

I l l "1)\'\

.ll '\I 1-.:.!ooX

\\\.\\

~ ·Woods wins 14th

BY OWE PoiiCWiFF

:major. See .... 81 .

a,cJIIU UI eaMlM-VFEGISTBUXlM

LETART, W.Va. - A
Pomeroy man remains in
jail after he shot and
wounded. another man in a
home late Saturday. ·
Franklin K. Richards, 26,
bas been charged with
attempted murder and five
counts of wanton endangerment after he shot
Shawn Phillips of New
Haven, W.Va., in a home
on Broad Run RDad.

atteni\1

.

~

tam

(Q.

widi'glmshotwounds
alxlomeu and ann.

well as other emergency
personnel with Mason
County
Emergency
Medical Services respond. ed to the Broad Run address
for the victim.
It is alleged that the men
were in a veJbal altercation
at the time of the shooting.
According to Patrolman
lao Smith of the New Haven
Police Department, be and
Patrolman Mitch Waugh ·
responded to . secure the
scene upon a request made
by the responding deputy.
Franklin Alchl1rds
Smith said then he an!l
Around 12:30 a.m., law Waugh received informaenforcement officers as tion about a possible loca-

tion where Richards might
have fled to which was
inside of the Town of New
Haven limits.
Both officers Pfoceeded
to Main Street Apartments,
which is where Richards
supposedly was living, and
found him there, Smith said.
Having weapons drawn, the
officers were able to arrest
Richards without incident.
Later, Cpl. Rick Bennett
of the Mason County
Sl)eriff's De~ took
custody of Richards.
He was taken to the
Western Regional Jail in
Barboursville
after

next week
BY BRIAN J. REED

~

I

1rtctar 11 )I itt

• 42- helvy~ twin-blllde 3-in-1 .._. . . . .
• 181P Kohloro Coo ,.... OHV...,..
•Award..._.fori:cu *••~

. ,,,.....

.

• 2D·IP Kahloro c:aonp. PRO V-'ln
OHV ....
•Oulll'f'llo lll.it ............... llld

Wofnen'and Monev

0011faiaa oftetai
-S.P,...U ,

... Forlle RecoR1 .
.See.. . A5

·No swimming?

• CMg'uer •RUt

It lakes mont than a posted sign to keep Max out of
the waler on a hot SULci! lei' day. "No Swimming"
~ itlle to this Labrador, who accompanied his
muter. Lany GtueSel' of Minelsville, on walk in
downlown Pomeroy Monday afternoon. Max enjoyed
a dip in the Ohio River at 1he Pomeroy levee before
relaxing along 1he p~ with his owner.

fllllbUt( M'

I cl
'bv AQi1g lq/rcfl

a

SeeftwtA5
:• DesiJielaw. Ohio
'd:l.eln't lle6t oc:ta1e · .
.. . . i'lgas,
'\' •fie . . A5

. 811MJ.P

,.M

rtrpt I

.:•' 11!W~

nes;lf!''See

~' .

'

·

.

BY BETH Srn

.~

clamqed After speaking
wid! Mike Flnk. store man~ Rose said it appeared a
&lt;llsprct lOOk a hammer to the

windshield,

I

n..w111 ..,.

• 20 . . tclhlw. c. . . . . . . .
• '- 1 uilillit hj6 htlic
iuiln

••=•

INDEX
.
· a81M•• a

ALLPOWER EQUIPMENT

•
FAMILY OWNED SINCE 1996
1830 OLD LOGAN RD SE • RT. 33 JUST sqUTH OF LANCASTER
8880 UNITED LANE • ONE MILE WEST OF ATHENS ON RT. 50/32
LANCASTER. 0H 43130 • &lt;740) 653-2827
ATHENS. OH 45701 • (740&gt; 593-3279
STORE HOURS MONDAY-FRIDAY 9:00-6:00, SATURDAY 9:00-5:00

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L
1

Calendars
.

f'•ssffieds
Comics

~

lilovies
.

lports
•

Weather

knocking

nlllllmlUSholesintotheglass
.and busting the passenger
side ~s out of ooe truck.
Notbiog appeamt to be taken
from die 2008 fOOl aucks.
Sgt. Boody King was
JWeRtly dispatched to . the
Par Mar oonvenient store
(die Beaxin) after a ~
clat found wbat appeared
to be narootics in the pad;itig lot. The clert: foJiod a

LT11MS

LMIII1RAC'IUII
11 r-duLr ..._.. .~

POMEROY - A com·
plete schedule of course
offerings for the ftrst term at
the new University of Rio
Grande Meigs Center will
be available next week.
The university plans to
begin operating its Meigs .
Center at the new Bernard V.
Fultz Center for Higher
Education .at Rocksprings at
the beginning of the .fall
quarter, which sta1tS Aug. 25.
. Registration for COL.or5,CS at
the Pomeroy ·campus ,ru1
begin with the first session
of freshman orientation
later this week. and university and community college
staff are working closely to
coordinate course ·schedules
and other services to be pro:
vided from the center.
For the past l 0 years, Rio
Grande courses and programs were provided from a·
building in downtown
Middleport. lt closed June I
~s pan of . the lransition to
the new Meigs Center' at
Rocksprings. That center's
director, Gina Pines, will
assume new responsibilities
at the main Rio Graride c;uil- ·
pus, and Brent Panerson has
assumed daily directorship
of the ne"' facility.
The new center is located
adjacent to · Meigs Middle
School on the Meigs Local
campus at the intersection
of U.S. 33 and Ohio 7. on
land provided by the local
school
district.
Fla., was cited for unsafe
University President Greg
backing when a vehicle he
Sojka
taught the fU"st class
was
driving .allegedly
Rio
Grande
offered at the
backed into a parked motorMiddleport
Center
and now
cycle owned by Gary .
Edward, Washington, W.Va. predicts that enrollment will
The motorcycle was located' increase with the convein a parking stall at 112 East nience and facilities of the
Main Street. The motorcy- · new location.
"Rio Grande student s
cle was koock.ed over after
deserve.
the opportunity to
it was bumped.
in an enviattend
classes
Melinda
Laudermilt.
Middleport,
alleged! y ronment whi l,'h support ~
learning in every way:·
backed out of a parting spot
Sojka said.
.
at Colonial Apartments and
Panerson said the univer·
sity plans to offer 18 classes
M 1 - • 1 r t». AS
in the fall quarter. including
ali increase in general education and business courses.
While the Rio Center in .
Middlepon was open only
On July 16, Susanna for evening courses. the
Holstein, "Granny Sue." new center will be a fullfrom SandyVille, WV, will time, day and evening facilpedonn her best stories that ity, offering a " more
she bas sban:d from West robu st~ daytime schedule.,
VII'ginia to stares up and Patterson said.
clown die eut coast.
1be new center has not
Donna Wilson, the pro- yet been approved for occugram coordinator. will teU pancy. pending completion
stories on July 17 in of work o n the center's
Ravenswood and Ripley. sewer system. The new
then in Middlepon and building includes eight
Mason on July 23 . Adele classroom s, a d istance
Browne from Bloomingville. learning lab and computer
Ohio will be sharing stories lab, conference rooms and
in Ravmswood' and Ripley office space.
on July 24.
..While many stude nts

Pomeroy reports vandalism, accidents

.

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Magistrate Cheryl Ross set
bond at $225,000 during
arraignment on Sunday.
This is the second shooting within a week. On· June
7, troopers with the Mason
County Detachment of the
West V'rrginia State Police
responded to the home of
Christopher Ray Roush.
29, in Clifton after he was
shot and killed by an
unknown gunman.
Roush was pronounced
dead at the scene and offi. cers are continuing their
investig!ltioo in that ease a5
well as looking for the suspect in the shooting.

RiO to release
Meigs Center
schedule

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clear ba'~ with white powder
in it w!Ji.ch field tested positive for cocaine.
The following traffic accidents were reported:
A vehicle driven by
Constance · R. Ensien,
Racine, was traveling west
on Mill Street in Mi~n
~n she allegedly
or
sideswiped · a
parked
Chevrolet truck owocd by
the VIllage of Middleport.
Ensien was found at lauit.
The incident was investigaled by Orief Mali E. Proffitt.
Karl R. Kloes, Crestview,

Storytelling sessions get under way July 2

tiated the program. Wilson, in the Ravenswood Library
a local recognized story- and 1:30 p.m. in the Ripley
&amp;eller who has told tales in Library. The s . . Iling
POMEROY- fVMiiol ~ ievri11 \ULEcs, bas ciwge of pogtlllll will run
four
Sbllytdling down~ the developifl3 die program and weeks beginning· on July 2
riva'blsbera~todle . IICCUrina lllalytdlers. .
and ending 011 July 24.
RivedJeal Arts ()uw:jl by
WdliOII said dw this year
Ilene Evans, a well blown
Gte Ollio RMr 8ordca' the ~ has heen artist from Thomas, W.V.a.
lpj!jCjw:fora!ICl"DDdyear~ e~
to
include will bring African folktales
"SSI•iesarlbe Ril!l:ll''&amp; f.d8e." Middleport,
Mason, on July 2-;-3. Jim Hanagan, a
BSedion
will be liDi •her excit- Ravenswood and Ripley, fOilld sclloot principal will
A6 il1g and fun summer pro- W.Va. Six 1iiOiyiCI.Iecs from tdl his own bllllliii'OII5 stograin for younf:r' to Ohio and West Vuginia will ries from his boot, "Stories
5ellior cilium.
year slaiR stories fur all ages on Heard
Around
the
-'Y 400 people eojoycrl Wcdnclidays liJl I 0:30 a.m. l.Amcbroom" oo,f11b;9 . Suzi
the Slories ar die River' s in Middlepon • die Dave Wbaples from "bunbar,
Ed,e iD die villuc·parts of Diles Pa&amp;t, I :30 p.m. in w.Va. will deli2ht tisteoers
Middleport and Mason," Mason, • the city park; and with ber App:Jadrian sto4 tlii4 DoMy
ini- 011 11iun4ays • 16:30 a.m. ries on July

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