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l

Tul!!lday, June 17, ~

-.mydailysentinel.com

lifts Gerntaily over Austria ~
. to quartertinals 0r Eoro 2008;:
and.m

Aspiring trainers learn more about pursuit . Ballack

WESTERVJUE (AP) To soek an athletic-lrainAt' the General Motors
At ev~ Jll3i?lice and game, ing major at Otterbe\!1. she plants in Toledo and
~ellc tnnners treatmg would fmt have to take · Defiance,
for example,
mJW"ed . players me part of courses such as chemistry lrainers employed by a rebaBY TIE Assocwm PIIEa
lbe action and part of .the and anatomy.
bilitation-seiVices company,
team.
·
·
Many of the .25 other WO!l:-Fit, offer tips on pre'VlENNA, Austria Baker
wanted
in.
.
accredtted
Ohio.
programs
venting
iniuries
from
the
use
"-6""
'
Germany captain Michael
"You pretty much know make similar demands of of equipment as well as Ballack scored on a
muscle soreness.
every athlete.w said Baker, a applicants.
IS-year-old who just fin"A lot Of kids don' t realize
A hurt employee is treated wicked second-half free
ishedberfirstyearasalrain- what athletic training is," on"site, much like a football kick Monday for a 1-0 win
inJl aide at WestclVille South said Bonnie Goodwin, dircc- player in a training room_ over Austria and a place in
Htldt School in suburban tor of the program at Capital except that the worker is the quarterfinal s of the
Columbus.
University
in
Bexley. expected to return for eight European Championshi p.
"It's kind of cool when "There's such a science hours the neKt day.
In a game marked by the
lhey conic up to you and ask base. This is really. like . "Companies are under- ejection of both coaches
being doctor."
standing this is important to before halftime , Ballad:
you how to stretch.fl ·
The job is demanding. too
At Ohio State University. d,o,fl said Susan Peel, vice sent in a 25-yard shot in
- which aspiring trainers' about 155 students typically president of operations for the 49th minute to advance
don't oeoessarily realize.
declare a pre-athletic-train- Work-Fit. "You just ·can't Germany and end the
The professionals they see ing major as incoming fresh - give ' them an aspirin and hopes of its smaller neighortban~levision, after all. are men.
f
send tbem back to the line." bor.
gmg out with football
More than hal
have
A · desire to help others
Germany finished Group
stars - not study)ng medi- changed their minds by draws some young people tO 8
Cr ·
cine, cleaning up blood or spring.
•
. athletic training, which is
as runner-up 10 oana
' lugging ice to the playing
" Not everybody bas the sometimes likened to ours- and will face 2004 runnerfield.
dedication to be able to do ing.
up Portugal in the quarterTo introduce middle- and that," said Mark Merrick,
In what used to be a male- finals on Thursday.
high-school students to the program director. "It' s prob- dominated career, women
Having been irked by
realities of the profession, an ably more of a time commit- represent 64 percent of the several decisions against
mea of study that has seen ment tbap any other under- association's student mem- his team, including a yelsteady growth in .the past graduate program I could bers.
two decades, Nationwide think of."
The Children's Hospital
Cbil~.n 's Hospital last
Of the evaporated pool of camp attracted twice as
week basted its thiid annual 70 applicants. 20 to 25 are many girls as boys.
training camp for potential accepted into the major after
Many of the participants
froml'ageBl
trainers.
their freshman year.
me athletes themselves Baker. amoog 27 central
Tbe
survtvors
find some of whom shared stoObio students enrolled in the expanding opportunities in a ries during lectures of fm- struck out 536 batters in 298
three_--da)' workshOJ? on the field_ that the American gers and shoulders gone innings during his prep
bosp11.!!1 s WestclVille cam- Medical Assocultton recog- awry.
c3reer, and got a $2.3 milhad aln:4!dy learned a ni ~ a5. an a1Jied hcal.th pm- . Suclt experiencrs sp~ an lion bonus when he signed
· few lessons firsthand:
fes~ton til 1.990.
mterest in athleuc tramlng, with Cincinnati.
A football team with twoSince then, membership in too.
·
He dominated in the
a-day practices requires lhe the
National
Athletic
As a 12-year-old athlete in · lower minors, striking mit
same of i.ts trainers.
Trainers Association has basketball, · volleyball and
125 batters in 103 · 2-3
No matter how much time more than doubled - from track, Allie Schroeder of
innings
at Class A in 2005.
is spent trying rhe technique 14.598 .members to 32,404 · Hilliard sees athletic trainHe
was
picked as the org-don a friend. a wrist or an thi.s year.
ing as allowin~ her to help .
ankle is easily taped incor~People are more health- people with inJuries she has. oization 's top minor league
cortscious, wellness-con- known.
· player a year later, when he
. rectly.
The body seems to have a scions,"
said
Briiw
She bas had a wrist taped went 7-I with a 1.59 ERA in
million parts, with just as Robinson, chairman .pf the enough times that her fttst Double-A.
With the rotation in flux
many ways to burt them.
association •s· secondary- attempt on someone else
last
season, fans and local
1be camp gave her further school committee. "The was deemed successful- at
commentators
clamored for
instruction on injury preven- whole idea. of injury .preven- least by her workshop partthe team to call up Bailey,
tioo and rehabilitation, car- lion bas become more Of an oer.
• diopulmonary resu~itati~n issue."
:·You're a good taper," who was still only 21.
and the use nf athlenc-tramc
These days, athletic train- satd 12-year-old ·Mo Ruff, Former general manager
ing equipment.
ers work not only with admiring her immobilized Wayne Krivsky insisted
.
· Bailey needed wOik - his
Partic1pants also visited sports teams but also with wrist.
"I know - rightr' said breaking pitch and change·
the traininjl facilities - the military, frre and police
up were sub-par, and he was
squads,
perforrning-.arts Schroeder, smiling.
complete wtth a cadaver at Otterbein College, a groups, and even factory
And she has six more slow to the plate with runWesterville school that workers prone to overuse. ·years to practice before col- ners .on base - and dido 't
Baker is Considering.
and repetitive-stress injuries. lege.
want to rush ·him.

u--

a

Bailey

- - pu,,

low card to striker Erwin
Hoffer for a late but minor
challenge on Ballack
Austria' s
Josef'
Hickersberger was the ftrsl
coach expelled, in the 41st
minute.
Germany' s
Joachim Loew then stood
toe-to-toe with a UEFA
official before being sent
from the field a s well .
The coaches shook
hands before trudging
away, with whistles and
jeers echoing arounlf the
stadium from bemused
fans. But the jeers, at least
those of the German fans,
soon turned to cheers.
Croatia I, Poland 0
KLAGENFURT, Austria
- Ivan 'Kiasnic, the first
kidney transplant recipient
to play at the European
Championship, scored for

Employee of

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•

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Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio

SPORTS
• Lakels, Celtics battle in
Game 6. See Pile 81

'
Finally, the club gave him
a shot. It dido 't work out so
well.
· Bailey went 4-2 with a
5.76 ERA in nine starts last
season, when he fanned 28
and walked 28 in 45 I· 3
innings. He tended to go
deep into . ~unts and bad
aouble fimshmg oil' batters,
who could handle his fastball
Bailey get a chance to
win a spot in the rotation
this SJ?nDg, but struggled
with his control and wound
up in the minors. He was
promoted on June 5 wben
fifth starter Josh Fogg went
on the disabled list, and bas
showed little progress in his
three starts.
Baker said the club will
consider· sending Bailey
back to Triple-A Louisville
to work on his other pitches.
"He didn't have a second
pitch be could throw for
strikes," Baker said. "You
saw it. He .coaildo't get his
other stuff over."
When he .was called up
last season, Bailey was con-

Ohio to allow a-wheeled
vehicles on roads, A6

the Month, A3

·
Croatia. The 28-year-ol•
striker connected in th;
53rd minute when be
swept in a left-footed shot•
from a cross by stand-iii
..
'
captain Danijel PranjtC. ~
Croatia was assured the
top spot in the group and
will play Turkey in the
quarterfinals Friday in
Viemia. Poland needed tO
win convincingly' anci
hope
Austria
beaf
Germany to advance.
Croatia won all threC
group games . for the fllSi
time in three toumarnenl
appearances.
..
Klasnic gave Croatia the
lead
· · th
after threatemng c
defense all night. He was
knacked down during the
play, but got back ,up in
time to take Pranjic's pass
and beat goalkeeper Artui
Borne.
:
sidered the organ.iUtion·~

• top ·pitching prospect in
more than a decade Now;
be's not even the top one ill

his age group - 22-yea-~
. old Johnny Cueto won a
spot in the rotation durinl
· spring training and has WOI!
five ~ames,
·
-1
Bailey-doesn't know whit
to do next.
:
'1f I knew, I'd fJglll'C it
our." Bailey said. "The
main thing 1s r m just D&lt;J!:
pitching (well). Physically, t
feel fine."
·
· In his second start:
bailey's fastball often regiS.:
tered below 90 mph. ll wu
. back up to 93 mp_b on
Sunday, but it wasn't
enough. .The Red Soli: let
· him get deep into a count; .
then waited for one ofihose
· fastballs.
Afterward, Bailey knew ·
he could be headed back to
Louisville.
,
"Those discussions ani
out of my band,fl Bailej
said "Whatever decisioo$
Dusty makes, ['IJ just bave
to respect them."
:

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OBnuARIES
Page AS

Sutton residen~ speak against annexation ·
BY BEnt Si:.nGE.hT . .
I!SEFIGa.lrOMYIWLYSENT]NELOOM

RAClNE - During .J&amp;t
night's packed informatioruil
meeting ort tile Village of
Racine's annexation proposal, 1a majority of Sutton
Township !eSidents 3ttendi~
1hc l!lOP1jng spoke ~st it
In a previous council
meeting, officials said its
decision to move foiward or
drop the plan would hinge
OJI the reactioo from resi~ts ~~lust night's meeting.
Smce Jt was not an official
meeting night, council
couJd not take a vote on
continuing or dropping the
proposal and did not officially say what's next in the
annexation process by the
time the meeting abruptly
ended with several people
speaking at once.
However, if the point was
«? give citizens an opportumty · to be heard, officials

a resounding " no"
·
from those .in attendance
which roughly numbered
around 50. Approximately
119 landowners would be
affected by the annexation.
The biggest complaint
from the citizens possibly
aifected was. a rise in propeny taxes if that pmpeoty
would be annexed from
Sutton Township into the
Village of Racine. Meigs
County Auditor Mary DyerHill and Treasurer Elect
Peggy Yost were also. 111 the
meeting to provide information on just how much those
taxes might go up.
Byer-Hill gave examples
of one property with an
assessed value of $21,200
whose taxes would go up ·
approximately $13 .~3 on
the half-year ·if it moved
from .the township to the
village. Another eKample A ·de
.
·
Sergent/phota
. es1 nts of Sutton Township who would be affected by the Village of Racine's annexaPI e,_t
,.., A5 tion proposal g1ve a show of hands against it at last night's information meeting.
.
heard

-

' • John Olarles
: Handley, Ph.D., 70

Association
$2K away from
fireworks goal

: •JimmyA.I~

70
• Phyllis R Vtning, 74

INSIDE

I

BY BRIAN J. REED
BREED ~ MYDAILY SENTINE L . COM

.. ;o.i_

MiDDLEPORT -

With less

·weeks. ..U).. ·SO bef9R
lndepen~nce Day: the Middl epon

than

Commumty AssoctatJOn ha s raised
a little more th an half of the
money needed for its annual fireworks display.
As sociation Preside nt Brenda
Phalin said Tuesday the associ ation
signed a $ 5,000 contract . with
Ham~urg Fireworks for thi s vear · ~
July 4 di splay. The money is du e
on July I.
· The association raised $ 1.000
from its recent Bear Bas ket Bingo
fundraiser, and has received anoth·
er estimateti $2.000 in donatio ns
from .a recent direct mai I appeal.
Phalin said .
·
Two additional fundraise rs are
planned to raise fund s. On Friday,
the association will spo nsor
"Lunch Alon g the Ri ver.. in Dave
Dil.es Park. A lunch of hot dogs..
sloppy joes, potato chips. cole
slaw, cookies and soft drinks will
be . sold for $5. with all proceeds
gomg toward the cost of the fireworks. Students from Bitanga's
Martial Arts Studio will present a
program at noon .
Beth Gloeckner of Beth's Pl ace
will donate proceeds · from three

REACH 3 COUNTIES
• Stmner food
fJ'ieaway plamed. .

•

SeePJ!IIeAJ

· • Meigs County Court
·news. SCI!! .hF A6
.~. FOLI'dalion are.s

Place Your Paid Classified Ad In Wednesday's
Gallipolis DaUy Tribune, Point Pleasant Register or
DaDy Sentine~ And It Will Run For FREE In
.The Tri.County Marketplace!
REACH ()VER
17 .,()()() HOUSJ1~H()LDS!

··~Sei!PifjeAJ
'• ·~

'

Pluse see. Fhworb, AS

~~t 'all~olis mall~ Qtribunt
. .. 740-446-2342
nw.mydailytrilo.com

~oint Jltasant ltfgisttr

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INDEX
2 SECDONS -

l2

p AGI!S

Anirie's Mailbox

304-675-1333
www.mydailyregister.com

Movies

Obituaries

POMEROY - Yesterday the
Food and Drug Administra tion
added Ohio to a list of states reportWeather
A6 ing patients suffering from sal moC-OIIIov...,.r I ' 11 ceo. nella linked to tomatoes not grown
in Ohio. Ohio-grown· -tomatoes are
still safe for consumption.
Ohio was added along with
Arkansas, Kentucky, Maryland,
c North ~lina and Washington,

•

BY CH~RLENE HOEFUCH
H OEFUCHC MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

POMEROY - About 130.volunteers e nrolled in the Retired Seni or
Volunteer program of the Meigs
County Coun.cil on Ag ing were recogniZ.ed at a luncheon for their more
than 33,000 ho urs of service at 49
different locations.
A " Hats off to Volunteers.. theme
art.nJ.~
was carried out for the e\'ent marlti.ng
'the 35th anniversary of the program.
It was held at the Bradford Church of
Chris t activity building. Dian a
Coates, RSVP director, spoke of the
impac t which hours worked by volunteers
have on local organizations.
after
non-profit
businesses, schools and in
Coleen Murphy Smith, registered
DC whic~ have reported patients. sanitarian with the Meigs County nursmg homes and other heal th care
infected Wtth salmoneUa while trav- Health Department, said at this time facilities and agencies.
eling. A total of 28 states have
She reported there are 169 volunthere have been ~ outbreaks of sal reported similar cases linked to susteers
e nrolled serving 33.490 hours
monella linked to tomatoes conpect tomatoes.
from Apri l 2007 to April 2008. The
sumed in Me igs County. Since ttie
top stations with hours were the
The Columbus Dispatch reported
two of the three Ohio cases of sal- outbreak began. Smitli said many Meigs Cooperative Parish. 7.535 ;
Shade
Historical
mo nella li nked to o ut-of-state local tomato retailers have pulled Cheste r
tomatoes
from
shel
ves
or
menus,
or
Association. $3,503; Syrac use
tomatoes were confirmed in
Columbus in Frankl in County last have bee n consulting the FDA's Community Center. 3.352. and the
week. No one was hospitalized but website for a listing of tomato pro- Meigs County Humane Society
patients showed symptoms fro m duci ng states whit b have been Thrift Store. 2.203.
May 21-24. The · three patients
PIIIM-TI l -.AS
PI l i M - 'llllul bars, AS

Ohio-grown tomatoes still safe

Editorials

~ports '

'Hats off to
Volunteers' theme
of RSVP program

Sal•ttonella cases reported in Ohio

Comics
.

The DaDySentinel
740-992-2155 .

Why are these children measuring themselves?
They are "thinking on their feet," studying human
anatomy. A week-long science camp at Meigs
Middle SchOol is led by "Science Man" Danyl Lee
Baynes of the Minority Aviation Education
·
Association , and sponsored by the Rio Grande
Community College Meigs Center and Ohio
Appalachian Center for Higher Education . Middle
sch&lt;&gt;?l students participating in the free camp are
leamang about biology, engineering, chemistry and
phys1cs through hands-on activities like this one.
Students also learned knot-tying prior to disecting a ·
cow's heart. Incidentally, the measuring activity pictured demonstrates an interesting oddity of the
human body: the measurement of a human's arm
from wrist to elbow, his clenched fist and his foot
from toe to heel are, more or less, the same.

·.

Calendars
Classifieds
'

lhn

· B Section

:~~~~ ~p~~ =:a!~~~

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.The Daily Sentinel

•

BY JosEF FEDERIIAN

NATION •

WoRLD

san

:rill'

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~MPLOYEE
r---- - - - -

.

The officials all spoke on

condition of .anonymity,
dley were not ,perbecause
JERUSALEM The
mitted
to
speak for the
Gaza Strip~s rUling Hamas ·
record
with
!!he
infonnation.
militant group said Tuesday
Israeli
_government
it bas .ucbed a cease-fm:
spokesman
Matt
Regev
with Israel meant to halt a
would
not
confum
a
deal,
cycle o~ deadly Palestinian
but
voiced
hope
for
its-sucrocket attacks that rained
cess.
buitdreds of rockets on
"lf'there is a total absence
Israel in ·the past year and
of
terror attacks from Gaza
Israeli reprisals that have
into
Israel, .and if them is an
kiUed
hundreds
of
· end to anns buildup in Gaia
Palestinians.
Strip and JliOvement on the
The accord. set to go into
hostage
Gilad Schalit, that
effect at 6 a.m. Thursday
will
indeed
be a new reali(II p.m. EDT Wednesday),
ty," be said.
has the biggec aim of ending
Many obstacles threaten
Israel's yearlong .economic
the
latest deal.
1
blockade ofGaza and bring.
Israel
is suspicious of
.ing home a ca.ptive Israeli
Mamas' motives &amp;iDee !he
soldier.·
:groU,p
bas said it Wlds rouse
But the _phased approach
die
1ullw
rcann. ~qoci­
is prone to pitfalls, and past
.abons oo Scbaliure ~ tto
buces have quicldy broken
be al1Dp1icaltd. lsnd .has
down. Israel cautiously
balkM :at Hamas f~Mwwls
promised a "new reality" if
dill! it Jdeaae bliud!tids of
!!he rocket fire ends.
Palestinian prisoners, includ. The announcement capped
Ing people oonvioted in the
months of Egyptiao-brodeaths
of Israelis, in
kered negotiations thai have
exchange
for him.
AP ,__
been repeatedly marred by
violenoe. The deal was fust . Palestinians g8tt.er around ~ WI1ICkage of a car that was hit ,in an Israeli missile strike in l&lt;ihan Vounis, southern Gaza · There is also die constant
dlreat of .an outbreak in WJannounced 1n Cairo by Strip Tuesday:. Palestinian officials .s ay five militartts ,were killed and two wounded in the strike by ;l_sraeli ailiCraft.
Ience~ as Tuesd'ly'uagblin,g
Egypt'·s ·stale-run news
.
•
.agency-.md---quic:Jdy llM· l)y Hamas-linkecfnlilitants evilluate howl ong It would elsewhere is a good thing wolllld begin wopen Gaza's · demonstrlled. Gaza'·s-lallif- ·
.fumed by Hamas. However, in a cruss-bOrder raid two last," be said, adding, "The and we're supportive of fbo~der .crossings to letn:~ore sqpc mcludeslilamiclibad
Mamas said it would respond years ago. .
Israeli military is ready foe Egyptian efforts and other supplies into the area. A a'lid other~ lii'IDed .groups
efforts to achieve thi s," w~k later, he said, Israel tbat sometimes ·act indqlento any Israeli anacts.
~ 't'IIIItS Israel to lift any development."
Undersooring d1e fcagile its cripplillg blockade -of
Past informal cease-fires deputy spokesman Tom planned to allow in addi- W:ntly ,of Hamas.
tiona! goods.
For now, Hamas appears
siwation, lsr.teli airccaft Gaza, which has led to with Hamas, most recently Casey said.
"But
saying
you
have
a
In
a
fmal
phase,
the
·
O
ffi10
be relying on calls for
a~cked three targets in widespread shiHtages of · in November 2006, lasted
·southern Gaza, tilling six fuel, electricity and basic only for several weeks. loaded guo to my head but cial said, Israel would eon- . Palestinian unity to mainPalestinian militants, Gaza gOOds. Israeli imposed me Th~y were never formally you are not going to frre it sider approval of the tain the •truce. lt made sure
medical officials said. In ~ctions after Hamas vio- signed because Hamas and today is far different than ..reopemg -o f Gaza's Rafah to include Islamic Jihad in
response, Palestinian mili- lently . seized control of Israel do not recognize each taking the gun down, lock- · border .crossing with Egypt the consultations with
tants fired seven rockets Gaza last year, and has other. Israel and the ing it up and saying you're He said .the idea is for the Egypt On Tuesday, Islamic ·
Jihad ·said it would honor
into Ismel, die Israeli mili- tightened the blockade PalestiniiUis declared a truce not going to. use it again," uuce to last six months.
The Rafah crossing, the the agreement as long as
tary said.
recently in response to in February 2005. Hamas, he said.- "Even if this is in
which killed scores :of fact a true report, it hardly main gateway for GaZ.a's Israel didn't attack.
Still, after months of increased rocket fire .
An improvement in living
fighting, both sides ~med · Gaza Hamas
leader Israelis in suicide bomb- ' takes Hamas out of the te:r- L4 million people to travel
abroad, has been sealed conditions in Gaza could
interested in a period of Mahmoud Zahar said all the · ings, largely abided. by the rorism business." .
The state-run E,gyptian since the Hamas takeoverlltf also strengthen the calm.
calm.
armed factions in Gaza are cease-fire until .June 2006.
Israel wants to halt the on board wilh the truce.
Palestinian
P.resideRt news agency MENA cited .aaz.a. "Q1e closure bas.pre- Gaza is suffering from dire
incessant rocket .and mortar Speaking after another Mahmoud Abbas, a rival -of an unidentified high-level vented
from travel- shortages of fuel, cement
attacks on its southern com~ Hamas official outlined Hamas, welcomed ·me Egyptian official as ·saying a ing fm
· cal dire, stucties and other basic ¥oods. If
residents feel rebef, it is
munities that have killed details of the truce at a news accont "Pre.sident Abbas "mutual .and ·simuitaoeous ' and family W.sits.
In IIIIIuary, Hamas blew likely to build public supseven Israelis over the past · conference, Zahar said oonsidus ttJe (truce} as .a caJm7' would take . effect
year. Israeli reprisals have Hamas will not put dGwn its national interest for our Thursday. It described the up the border wall ibetwecn port for the quiet
Iranian-backed Gaza mili.killed more than 4(1() weapcms,'because he did not ~pie," 'Said a .staJement ' calm as the ''fmt phase" of Egypt and Gaza, .aliowin,g
people to move in and.out of lllllts bave been 1bomi:Nirding
Palestinians, many of them believe Israel would imple- ~m ·his West RM11t·offi&lt;ie. · a w.ider deal.
ci..m-s, ~ w- _ . ,die ccuc-fiR:, t 'lk ..,_, ~w-n..=;.e ~
Egy~ Israeli and Egypt for nearly &lt;two weeks _,e p llarii,Associated Press tafty based don't !rust them, 1)ut 'let' s · Depamni:rit said tt was sup- Hamas ;officials all said the bcrore it was resealed.
.llllil iualtaiS'i'OC seven yea-s.
on figures from hospital see," he said.
pOrtive of effolts to bring talks wGuld quickly move to . A Hamas official said dle Tbe nr.e of fire ina\: d
officials.
Israeli Defense Minister calm to Gaza and southern the larger issues of the issues of Rafah and Schalit afta-lsrael pulled. its ~
Israel also wants an end to Elmd Barak said Thesday Israel while insisting that blook.ade and Schalit, the would be linked, and be and J!dllroi oot of Gaia: m
Hamas anns smuggling into ·that no deal was in place yet. Hamas remained a tel'forist captive soldier.
·
expected talks to begin 2!005 aoct 'Was stepped up
An Egyptian official told within days. Israeli defense fwther iast year after
Gaza from Egyp.t, and the "It is too soon -10 anD!JUDCC a organization.
relwll of Cpl. Gilad Schalit, truce, and .even wben it
"We -believe that estab- The Associated Press that officials said they expected Hamas wrested power from
the lstacli soldier capWred begins, if it"does, it is bard to lishio,g calm ·in Gaza and · after three days, Israel negotiations on Schalit to forces loyal to Abbas.

ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

GULFPORT, IIJ. - The
risin,g Mississippi River
broke through a levee
Tuesday, forcing authorities
to rescue about a half-.dozen
people by helicopter, boat
and four-wheeler. as flood- ·
waters moved south into
Dlinois and Missouri.
But . even as the water
jeopardized scores of additional homes and businesses, officials said the damage
could have been worse if
the federal government had
not taken steps to clear
flood-prone land after historic floods in 1993.
On Tuesday, the flooding
h;llted car travel over two
bridges linking lllinois and
Iowa and threatened to
cover areas near tiny
Gulfpurt with I 0 feet of
·water.
"(' m not going hack after
· this one," 83-year-old Lois
Russell said as she watched
water surround her bouse
near Gulfport. It was the
third tinle she had fled her
home because of flooding
since 1965.
"It was a good place to
raise my seven kids," she
said, crying. "I know I
haven't lost anything thai
feels important because I
·have a big family."
The area was inundated
after a levee broke near
Gulfport. The details of the
rescues
were
unclear
because of discrepancies in
the numbers of people
involved and the circumstances described by state
and local officials. But
authorities agreed that
boats, helicopters and an
all-terrain vehicle were
involved in the efforts.
Preliminary
.estimates
were that the flooding bas
ca.used more lh.an $1 .5 billion in damage in Iowa, and
that f.gure wjll undoubtedly
\

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Dear Annie: I am going
out with a great guy. He has
a good job and a nice car,
gets along with my family,
· everything. He is only a year
older than I am. The problem is, he is an alcoholic.
"Todd" drinks . almost.
every night when he. gets off
work and sometimes in the
morning, too. I have asked
him to stop, and we have
gotten into numerous fi~hts
because of his drinking.
He's already lost his license
once because of his driving
under the influence .
Annie, I would do anything for Todd because he
has helped me get my life
back . on track. Thanks to
him. I have a decent job and
am saving to get an apartment.
Is there anything I can do
to help him, or am .J better
off Jetting him go.? -

...

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confused

SH mltliil photo

'· 1':luc, RN, Patient Services, second from left, was recently named the Pleasant Valley Hospital"Employee of the
•• , 11 , Blue has been an employee of PVH for 31 years. She resides in Rio Grande with her husband, Robert. They
·. "o children, Suzanne Wamimont and Jennifer Coleman, and1our grandchildren Caleb, Tyler, Claire and Jackson.
· ,. ; " wn with Blue are, at left, Sandy Wood, Vice President of Patient Services, Blue. AI Lawson, JD, FACHE,
. :" '"'"''I and Chief Executive Officer of PVH, and at far right, Lori Nunn, Assistant Manager of MedicaVSurgical Services.
&lt; ,,,
, 'I 'eceive a $50 award , a congratulatory certificate and VIP parking. In addition, she will also be entered in the
'v ~,ustomer Service Employee of the Year recognition.
·

Dear Confused: You can
(alcontact
Al-Anon
anon.alateen.org) at I-8884AL-ANON (1-888-4252666) for support and information . However,
we
strongly urge you to keep
your distance from Todd
unless he gets help for his
alcohol addiction . You cannot "fix" him. He has to do
it himself. And he should do
it before you get more
involved with him .
Dear Annie: I am a 16year-old male and consider
myself very social. The
problem is, I am not good
with names. I often run into
Jlll?P.Ie who know ine, but I
can t remember who they
are or how I know them.
I feel very awkward and
do all I can to dodge saying
their name. I try to jog my
memory by askin~ how
their family is or 1f they
remember the last time I
saw them. I don't want to
offend the other person by
admitting I don't recall who
they are . Is there some
pohte way to ask?- Owen
mVennont
Dear Owen: Most experts
agree that the best way to
remember someone's name
is to · repeat it after being
introduced. Then. if possible, try to associate the
name with some characteristic about the person. or with
someone you are reminded
of who has the same name.
Some pepple even make a
short rhyme ('Tall Paul" or
"No-Meat Pete" for example). If you can repeat the

undation offers mini-ga-ants

~}

~

\

·1.1 , , t\IV ILLE -

The
for Appalachian

improve educational oppor,
tunities
for families and
. q., '"
ul'ferin g a new children in Appalachian
· ~ ran i re~'Uurces for Ohio. Eligible projects and
, t~i'a1 1 Ohi(l commu- programs include, but are
not limited to: health; nutri'•1 •uQh the 2008 I'm
(, f Appalac hia tion, physical activities and
Acce's
to programs promoting well·'
early-childhood,
'·'"" Mini-Grant pro- ness;
school-readiness and pre•: '.l1 ni-Grant Program kindergarten programming;
'' 1ue awards ranging after-school and summer
learning programs; class' 10 10 $2 .500 to fund
room enrichment activ·ities;
•
. rl ,.._, and project s that
' n•,·i de ~..du catJO nal oppor- workforce training and
. "''" to ~tudent s within de velopment: and college
li·
'"'
counties · of access and retention.
Orga ni zations serving
, . ·l tian Ohio.
' 1•
I nund(ltion invite~ one or more of the 29 cou n, ' fnr.initiatives that ties in Appalachian Ohio

are invited to apply. ·
Eligible applicants include
schools, not-for-profits and
organizations
with
50 I ( c )(3) status.
"Access to quality educational opportunities, beginning in early childhood,
continuing through postsecondary education and
then lifelong, is essential to
the health and well-being of
families and the future prosperity of Appalachian
Ohio," · said Cara Dingus
Brook, president and CEO
of the Foundation · for
Appalachian Ohio. "The
I'm a Child of Appalachia
Fostering
Access
to

Education Mini-Grant program is designed to be easily accessible to respond
quickly to educational
needs and classroom enrichment
activities
in
Appalachian Ohio."
Fostering Access to
Education
Mini-Grant
guidelines and application
are now ·available at
www;appalachianohio.org.
For more information or
IQ reqiU'!st a p&lt;lper copy, contact Laura Risler, MiniGrant Program-Coordinator,
at
740-753-1111
or
lrisler@jJao.org. Grant proppsals must be postmarked
by July 21, 2008.

"lolzer Clinic makes donation to Relay for Life
I

' POLIS - Benny 's $750 in donations to the ACS
of lloller Clin ic with the total team donation
·'.! " .t llrdrJiser for lhe
being $21.165. Benny's
,,.,,. · \\1 i Game Sy,;t.em Buddies was once again the
,,,; .,
llhll lCY for the
#I team in fundraising for
., ,,, "" l.'ailt4" r Soc iety's th~ Gallia County event. The
'1 !.. , f, , I ife. Tomma . team is the only Gallia
1 ~·, .. '" " ,,, the wi nner. ·
County Team to attain the
llllldrHi,cr netted over "diamond" status (donation
' · ,&lt;f, 1" ·

•-.

of more than $20,000.)
Benny's Buddies team
members include Amy
Wedemeyer, Angie Swartz.
Charlotte Norvell , Kiona
Norvell, Jennifer WestfalL Jo
Ann Hannan, Julia Whitt,
Payton Whitt, Kim Ballinger, .
Les11 Carpenter, Melissa

Hutchinson, Nancy Gard,
Sharee Luckeydoo, Shirley
Engle, Sue Allen, Wenda
Hunt,. Carla Miller, Carolyn
Carman, Karen Edgar, Robin
Payne, Kayla Payne, Sherry
Fellure, Sherry Roberts,
Wilma Gooch, Debbie
Manley and Marvin Baird.

planned .

Summer food

person's name several times
during your first encounter.
·
it will help.
However, if you do forget
(and we all do), it's OK to
say, "I'm really sorry. but I
have a terrible problem
remembering names: Can
you please tell me yours
again?" lf you are upfront
and noticeably embarrassed
by your gaffe. you are more
likely to be forgiven .
Dear . Annie: I've been
married for 22 years. A&gt;
soon as I said "I do," I was
kicked to the back of the
closet like an old shoe .
When I saw the letter from
"Cravin~
Intimacy
in
Indiana,' I read it to my
husband, along with several
of the
brokenhearted
responses from your readers
explaining how they felt so
rejected .and unloved.
When I finished, I asked
my husband if this is what
he wanted for me. He said.
"No. I' II talk tQmy doctor.''
But he forgot. Twice. So the
third time. 1 went with him
to his regular checkup and
asked his doctor, "Is there
anything you can · do to
make my husband more
interested in having sex?"
The doctor looked at my
husband's curly biker beard .
and said, "I'm glad you said
something because I wouldn't have checked that."
It turns out his testosterone levels were way low.
so the doctor began giving
him shots - one every two
weeks for 12 weeks. Now
my husband is chasing me
around the house . And he
helps with the housework
· and in the garden. He's losing weight, getting stronger
and growing back hi &gt;
armpit hair.
I don't know what happened to my old husband,
but they can keep him . rm
· banging on to this new guy.
Thanks to everyone who
wrote in to share their pain.
It was the catalyst fo r
change in my Jjfe . - New
Shoe in Mic~~fhn
·
Annie's M · ox is written by KDthy Mitchell and
Morey Sugar, longtime editors of the Ann 1Ander.1·
cobunn. Please e-mail your
questions to anniesmailbox@comcast.net, or wriJe
to: Annie's Mailbox, P.O.
Box 118190, Chicago, IL
60611. To find out more
about Annie's Mailbox.
and-read features by other
Creators Syndicate writers
and cartoonists, visit th&lt;'
Creators Syndicate Web ·
page at www.creators.com.

Community Calendar
City, Ky. will be si nging at
the Middleport Church of
Jennifer McBride
the Nazarene on Sunda~ .
Thursday, June 19
of Chester and her
SYRACUSE - Meigs I 0:30 a.m. Pastor Len
two children ,
County Board of MRDD, Powell invites the public.
members of
regular meeting. 4 p.m ..
Sacred Heart
Carleton
SchooL
' ·
Catholic Church in
Monday, June 23
Pomeroy, were
Friday, June 20
RACINE
-Southern
among the many
MIDDLEPORT
- The
Local School Board. regular
volunteers who
meeting, 8 p.m. , high school Big Bend Community Band
hetp.ed pack food
will present a concert in
media room.
baskets for the
Dave
Diles
Park .
Middleport.
7
p.m.
election'
Meigs
Clubs and
Parish's sum
will include swing. big
food giveaway
hand, marches, and patriotir
Tuesday. The food
music . Free. open to the
will be given away
Friday, June 20
public. take lawn chair and
from 9 a .m. to
SALEM CENTER - · enjoy.
noon Friday at the
Star Grange #778 and Star
Junior . Grange #878 fun
Mulberry
Community Center .ni!lbt and work session on
fatr booth display. with
to families who
Monday, June 23
potlWJk supper at 6:30 p.m.:
applied.
RUTLAND
Oasi'
foiiQ'Wed by work session.
Photo COUI'IMy ol111e
Christian
Fellowship
Vacation Bible School. 6c •• ,.. .... 8:30 p.m., through June 26.
Rutland Church of Christ.
Power Lab is the theme. for
Sunday, June 22
MIDDLEPORT - The children ages three through
Singing Byrds of Junction fifth grade.

Public meetings

Other events

.......

t._

BY KATHY MITCHELL ;
AND MARCY SUGAR

•·

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.ue,..._ ..........

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1

a sandbag."

91eca•C

to 'fix' himself

I

through DJinois levee

.
road ttack:s remained open.
leff Campbell, .a farmer A bridge downriver in
carrying sandbags on his Keokuk also Rmaincd
four-wheeler, said be spot- open.
ted .pigs swimming away
To the north in Cedar
from a flooded hog famn Rapids, floodwaters bad
near Oakville. 'They were dropped enough dlat officlimbiqg a levee, poking cials let hundreds of people
holes in the plastic tbat oovreturn to their damaged
.12\ed iit, be ·said.
.
One tired pig was lying at homes and businesses.
· (he bottom of the levee
"like :a pink sand~,"
Campbell said. .
Reports of raw sew~e
and farm runoff m~floodwa­
ters raised ooncems about
public health. But eqJCitS ·
said most people are mwt
enough to av01d the ·tainted
water. ..1)'picaliy we don't
see die outbreaks of dis• "'*-"" a!, ...,.,._buttJilt!
eases dlat people fear," said
• 1()HNfi~·W*nllll
Mike Allred of the Centers
• c.lomSWtPtet·-...... ,.....,
.for Disease Control and
Prevention.
lf'be rising water forced
Briar.1 Wiegand, left, and his son, CGit,.sit .on the edge -of the sandbag.tevee near Kingstoo,
·
t
he
closure
of the
Iowa Tuesday. The Wtegands were working on a near breech of the levee until about three
.
Mississippi
bridge
in
in the morning.
·
·
Burlington and stopped ca1'
traffic on the bridge in liort
rise as the high water moves moved to Garber, Elkport'.s · ·had yet to crest.
twin city across the Turi&lt;.ey
People were urged to Madison. The brid~ 's raildownstream.
Still , · officials said the River, but others abandoned ' evacuate .an area near
Gulfport as tloodwaters ·
cost would have been even the area.
"There's nothing there in lhrea!Med about .12 square
higher if the f~ _government had not purchased Elkport anymore," said miles
of
fMmland.
low-lying land after the Helen Jennings of Garner. Henderson CoUDty llc!?WY
1993 deluge, which caused '1'hey built new hauses in Sheriff Donald Seitz said a
$12 billion in damage.
lfi.fferent places."
. ' major highway could Ill:
Since then, the governSome of those who stayed under 10 feet of water by
ment 'bought out.more than are.paying a price .
midday Wednesday.
9,000 homeowners, turoi~
The federal government
On the Iowa side of the
much of the land into parks bought about a quarter of river, a sandbagging !&gt;Jlerll·
and undeveloped areas that the home s in Chelsea, . tion was moved south to the
pm. . ..,,, . ?
can be allowed to flood with low a. after the 1993 outskirts of Burlington .after
c- .. swa r..-Hantnlllillllf .... ..,tilt
less · risk. The Federal floods, but most of the 300 floodwaters streamed across
MeipC.Uty Jlc:aldi DtpM t
Ca il : w...
Emergency Management residents stayed. At least state Highway 99.
I'
?1'
Pa
a
_.tiltM
"
a)C
z!t;yC ; •
Agency bas ·moved .or I0 homes are now inundatOakville
Aposto11c
De
•
flood-proofed about 30,000 ·ed by the Iowa River to Church ".is now an island,"
,.
-e
a .,._.,.
properties. ·
their first noors.
said Carly Wagenbach, who
._...,_...._, ......._ nis~b: I I 1
The effort ri:quired whole
Residents take it in stride. was taking food to levee
communities to be moved, said Mayor Roger Ochs.
wmters.
~tlel:tNilli"-l4lillll.-yL
.
· such as Rhineland, Mo., and
"For the most ·part, it's
'Officials were also con11:e
dutllt7/l\ -*~
another flQOd." he said . cerned about the integrity of
Valmeyer, IIJ.
ln Iowa, FEMA spent "For Chelsea, it's more of a levee that protects a
c.... AM-ew . . 'ttllt
$1.6 million to buy out resi- an inconvenience."
drainage area S&lt;iuth of
ttl-a1.6
dents of Elkport, population
On Tuesday, Oooding Oakville.
• • a' t . . . . . . . .
80, and then knock down remained far more serious
"It's outrageous," said
the village's remaining .in parts of southeast Iowa, Sreve Poggemiller. "We' re
buildings. Some residents where the Mississip.pi River hanging on by a thread - or

OF 'I'HF: MONTH Alcoholic has

•

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BY II•IM Suuea• Fee:

ANNIE'S MAILBOX

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Mississippi-R iver

PageA3

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Jun=:e,;;,.;;,t8;:;,;...,2~oo8

~Sunday.

ASSOCIATED PAESS WRITER

BY THE BEND·

Daily Sentinel

Coope::r

organirations

Youth events

·.',.'
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..••
.•

Church events

·-

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. '"io girl dies

.•

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- The
lli ghwa) Patrol
, rar-old girl died
'.' Da! when an
••
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" 11h he,· father
.,.•
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in Father's Day ATV accident
central Ohio was driving the·
ATV a: about 7:30 y.m.
Sunday when she missed a
left curve and overcorrected . She was pronounced
Jead at a local hospital.
The girl"s'father. 33:yearold Kevin Carlson. was sitting next to her in the p.assenger seat. He was taken to

.

Better Retirement

the hospital with non-life
threatening injuries .
The patrol s~ys th~ ~sh
remams under mvesngauon .
and charges are pendmg.

l'lwd IJc

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til · If*\ )'Ill'

Retirement should be one of me most enjoyoble r.mes ofyour lite. yet rruny
people ""' financially unprepared fOr it. I can creote a plan deslf!'led !D help
you enjoy retirement ContaCT ~ !D discuss IRAs and other avarlable opt1ons.

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•

BY JosEF FEDERIIAN

NATION •

WoRLD

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~MPLOYEE
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.

The officials all spoke on

condition of .anonymity,
dley were not ,perbecause
JERUSALEM The
mitted
to
speak for the
Gaza Strip~s rUling Hamas ·
record
with
!!he
infonnation.
militant group said Tuesday
Israeli
_government
it bas .ucbed a cease-fm:
spokesman
Matt
Regev
with Israel meant to halt a
would
not
confum
a
deal,
cycle o~ deadly Palestinian
but
voiced
hope
for
its-sucrocket attacks that rained
cess.
buitdreds of rockets on
"lf'there is a total absence
Israel in ·the past year and
of
terror attacks from Gaza
Israeli reprisals that have
into
Israel, .and if them is an
kiUed
hundreds
of
· end to anns buildup in Gaia
Palestinians.
Strip and JliOvement on the
The accord. set to go into
hostage
Gilad Schalit, that
effect at 6 a.m. Thursday
will
indeed
be a new reali(II p.m. EDT Wednesday),
ty," be said.
has the biggec aim of ending
Many obstacles threaten
Israel's yearlong .economic
the
latest deal.
1
blockade ofGaza and bring.
Israel
is suspicious of
.ing home a ca.ptive Israeli
Mamas' motives &amp;iDee !he
soldier.·
:groU,p
bas said it Wlds rouse
But the _phased approach
die
1ullw
rcann. ~qoci­
is prone to pitfalls, and past
.abons oo Scbaliure ~ tto
buces have quicldy broken
be al1Dp1icaltd. lsnd .has
down. Israel cautiously
balkM :at Hamas f~Mwwls
promised a "new reality" if
dill! it Jdeaae bliud!tids of
!!he rocket fire ends.
Palestinian prisoners, includ. The announcement capped
Ing people oonvioted in the
months of Egyptiao-brodeaths
of Israelis, in
kered negotiations thai have
exchange
for him.
AP ,__
been repeatedly marred by
violenoe. The deal was fust . Palestinians g8tt.er around ~ WI1ICkage of a car that was hit ,in an Israeli missile strike in l&lt;ihan Vounis, southern Gaza · There is also die constant
dlreat of .an outbreak in WJannounced 1n Cairo by Strip Tuesday:. Palestinian officials .s ay five militartts ,were killed and two wounded in the strike by ;l_sraeli ailiCraft.
Ience~ as Tuesd'ly'uagblin,g
Egypt'·s ·stale-run news
.
•
.agency-.md---quic:Jdy llM· l)y Hamas-linkecfnlilitants evilluate howl ong It would elsewhere is a good thing wolllld begin wopen Gaza's · demonstrlled. Gaza'·s-lallif- ·
.fumed by Hamas. However, in a cruss-bOrder raid two last," be said, adding, "The and we're supportive of fbo~der .crossings to letn:~ore sqpc mcludeslilamiclibad
Mamas said it would respond years ago. .
Israeli military is ready foe Egyptian efforts and other supplies into the area. A a'lid other~ lii'IDed .groups
efforts to achieve thi s," w~k later, he said, Israel tbat sometimes ·act indqlento any Israeli anacts.
~ 't'IIIItS Israel to lift any development."
Undersooring d1e fcagile its cripplillg blockade -of
Past informal cease-fires deputy spokesman Tom planned to allow in addi- W:ntly ,of Hamas.
tiona! goods.
For now, Hamas appears
siwation, lsr.teli airccaft Gaza, which has led to with Hamas, most recently Casey said.
"But
saying
you
have
a
In
a
fmal
phase,
the
·
O
ffi10
be relying on calls for
a~cked three targets in widespread shiHtages of · in November 2006, lasted
·southern Gaza, tilling six fuel, electricity and basic only for several weeks. loaded guo to my head but cial said, Israel would eon- . Palestinian unity to mainPalestinian militants, Gaza gOOds. Israeli imposed me Th~y were never formally you are not going to frre it sider approval of the tain the •truce. lt made sure
medical officials said. In ~ctions after Hamas vio- signed because Hamas and today is far different than ..reopemg -o f Gaza's Rafah to include Islamic Jihad in
response, Palestinian mili- lently . seized control of Israel do not recognize each taking the gun down, lock- · border .crossing with Egypt the consultations with
tants fired seven rockets Gaza last year, and has other. Israel and the ing it up and saying you're He said .the idea is for the Egypt On Tuesday, Islamic ·
Jihad ·said it would honor
into Ismel, die Israeli mili- tightened the blockade PalestiniiUis declared a truce not going to. use it again," uuce to last six months.
The Rafah crossing, the the agreement as long as
tary said.
recently in response to in February 2005. Hamas, he said.- "Even if this is in
which killed scores :of fact a true report, it hardly main gateway for GaZ.a's Israel didn't attack.
Still, after months of increased rocket fire .
An improvement in living
fighting, both sides ~med · Gaza Hamas
leader Israelis in suicide bomb- ' takes Hamas out of the te:r- L4 million people to travel
abroad, has been sealed conditions in Gaza could
interested in a period of Mahmoud Zahar said all the · ings, largely abided. by the rorism business." .
The state-run E,gyptian since the Hamas takeoverlltf also strengthen the calm.
calm.
armed factions in Gaza are cease-fire until .June 2006.
Israel wants to halt the on board wilh the truce.
Palestinian
P.resideRt news agency MENA cited .aaz.a. "Q1e closure bas.pre- Gaza is suffering from dire
incessant rocket .and mortar Speaking after another Mahmoud Abbas, a rival -of an unidentified high-level vented
from travel- shortages of fuel, cement
attacks on its southern com~ Hamas official outlined Hamas, welcomed ·me Egyptian official as ·saying a ing fm
· cal dire, stucties and other basic ¥oods. If
residents feel rebef, it is
munities that have killed details of the truce at a news accont "Pre.sident Abbas "mutual .and ·simuitaoeous ' and family W.sits.
In IIIIIuary, Hamas blew likely to build public supseven Israelis over the past · conference, Zahar said oonsidus ttJe (truce} as .a caJm7' would take . effect
year. Israeli reprisals have Hamas will not put dGwn its national interest for our Thursday. It described the up the border wall ibetwecn port for the quiet
Iranian-backed Gaza mili.killed more than 4(1() weapcms,'because he did not ~pie," 'Said a .staJement ' calm as the ''fmt phase" of Egypt and Gaza, .aliowin,g
people to move in and.out of lllllts bave been 1bomi:Nirding
Palestinians, many of them believe Israel would imple- ~m ·his West RM11t·offi&lt;ie. · a w.ider deal.
ci..m-s, ~ w- _ . ,die ccuc-fiR:, t 'lk ..,_, ~w-n..=;.e ~
Egy~ Israeli and Egypt for nearly &lt;two weeks _,e p llarii,Associated Press tafty based don't !rust them, 1)ut 'let' s · Depamni:rit said tt was sup- Hamas ;officials all said the bcrore it was resealed.
.llllil iualtaiS'i'OC seven yea-s.
on figures from hospital see," he said.
pOrtive of effolts to bring talks wGuld quickly move to . A Hamas official said dle Tbe nr.e of fire ina\: d
officials.
Israeli Defense Minister calm to Gaza and southern the larger issues of the issues of Rafah and Schalit afta-lsrael pulled. its ~
Israel also wants an end to Elmd Barak said Thesday Israel while insisting that blook.ade and Schalit, the would be linked, and be and J!dllroi oot of Gaia: m
Hamas anns smuggling into ·that no deal was in place yet. Hamas remained a tel'forist captive soldier.
·
expected talks to begin 2!005 aoct 'Was stepped up
An Egyptian official told within days. Israeli defense fwther iast year after
Gaza from Egyp.t, and the "It is too soon -10 anD!JUDCC a organization.
relwll of Cpl. Gilad Schalit, truce, and .even wben it
"We -believe that estab- The Associated Press that officials said they expected Hamas wrested power from
the lstacli soldier capWred begins, if it"does, it is bard to lishio,g calm ·in Gaza and · after three days, Israel negotiations on Schalit to forces loyal to Abbas.

ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

GULFPORT, IIJ. - The
risin,g Mississippi River
broke through a levee
Tuesday, forcing authorities
to rescue about a half-.dozen
people by helicopter, boat
and four-wheeler. as flood- ·
waters moved south into
Dlinois and Missouri.
But . even as the water
jeopardized scores of additional homes and businesses, officials said the damage
could have been worse if
the federal government had
not taken steps to clear
flood-prone land after historic floods in 1993.
On Tuesday, the flooding
h;llted car travel over two
bridges linking lllinois and
Iowa and threatened to
cover areas near tiny
Gulfpurt with I 0 feet of
·water.
"(' m not going hack after
· this one," 83-year-old Lois
Russell said as she watched
water surround her bouse
near Gulfport. It was the
third tinle she had fled her
home because of flooding
since 1965.
"It was a good place to
raise my seven kids," she
said, crying. "I know I
haven't lost anything thai
feels important because I
·have a big family."
The area was inundated
after a levee broke near
Gulfport. The details of the
rescues
were
unclear
because of discrepancies in
the numbers of people
involved and the circumstances described by state
and local officials. But
authorities agreed that
boats, helicopters and an
all-terrain vehicle were
involved in the efforts.
Preliminary
.estimates
were that the flooding bas
ca.used more lh.an $1 .5 billion in damage in Iowa, and
that f.gure wjll undoubtedly
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Dear Annie: I am going
out with a great guy. He has
a good job and a nice car,
gets along with my family,
· everything. He is only a year
older than I am. The problem is, he is an alcoholic.
"Todd" drinks . almost.
every night when he. gets off
work and sometimes in the
morning, too. I have asked
him to stop, and we have
gotten into numerous fi~hts
because of his drinking.
He's already lost his license
once because of his driving
under the influence .
Annie, I would do anything for Todd because he
has helped me get my life
back . on track. Thanks to
him. I have a decent job and
am saving to get an apartment.
Is there anything I can do
to help him, or am .J better
off Jetting him go.? -

...

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confused

SH mltliil photo

'· 1':luc, RN, Patient Services, second from left, was recently named the Pleasant Valley Hospital"Employee of the
•• , 11 , Blue has been an employee of PVH for 31 years. She resides in Rio Grande with her husband, Robert. They
·. "o children, Suzanne Wamimont and Jennifer Coleman, and1our grandchildren Caleb, Tyler, Claire and Jackson.
· ,. ; " wn with Blue are, at left, Sandy Wood, Vice President of Patient Services, Blue. AI Lawson, JD, FACHE,
. :" '"'"''I and Chief Executive Officer of PVH, and at far right, Lori Nunn, Assistant Manager of MedicaVSurgical Services.
&lt; ,,,
, 'I 'eceive a $50 award , a congratulatory certificate and VIP parking. In addition, she will also be entered in the
'v ~,ustomer Service Employee of the Year recognition.
·

Dear Confused: You can
(alcontact
Al-Anon
anon.alateen.org) at I-8884AL-ANON (1-888-4252666) for support and information . However,
we
strongly urge you to keep
your distance from Todd
unless he gets help for his
alcohol addiction . You cannot "fix" him. He has to do
it himself. And he should do
it before you get more
involved with him .
Dear Annie: I am a 16year-old male and consider
myself very social. The
problem is, I am not good
with names. I often run into
Jlll?P.Ie who know ine, but I
can t remember who they
are or how I know them.
I feel very awkward and
do all I can to dodge saying
their name. I try to jog my
memory by askin~ how
their family is or 1f they
remember the last time I
saw them. I don't want to
offend the other person by
admitting I don't recall who
they are . Is there some
pohte way to ask?- Owen
mVennont
Dear Owen: Most experts
agree that the best way to
remember someone's name
is to · repeat it after being
introduced. Then. if possible, try to associate the
name with some characteristic about the person. or with
someone you are reminded
of who has the same name.
Some pepple even make a
short rhyme ('Tall Paul" or
"No-Meat Pete" for example). If you can repeat the

undation offers mini-ga-ants

~}

~

\

·1.1 , , t\IV ILLE -

The
for Appalachian

improve educational oppor,
tunities
for families and
. q., '"
ul'ferin g a new children in Appalachian
· ~ ran i re~'Uurces for Ohio. Eligible projects and
, t~i'a1 1 Ohi(l commu- programs include, but are
not limited to: health; nutri'•1 •uQh the 2008 I'm
(, f Appalac hia tion, physical activities and
Acce's
to programs promoting well·'
early-childhood,
'·'"" Mini-Grant pro- ness;
school-readiness and pre•: '.l1 ni-Grant Program kindergarten programming;
'' 1ue awards ranging after-school and summer
learning programs; class' 10 10 $2 .500 to fund
room enrichment activ·ities;
•
. rl ,.._, and project s that
' n•,·i de ~..du catJO nal oppor- workforce training and
. "''" to ~tudent s within de velopment: and college
li·
'"'
counties · of access and retention.
Orga ni zations serving
, . ·l tian Ohio.
' 1•
I nund(ltion invite~ one or more of the 29 cou n, ' fnr.initiatives that ties in Appalachian Ohio

are invited to apply. ·
Eligible applicants include
schools, not-for-profits and
organizations
with
50 I ( c )(3) status.
"Access to quality educational opportunities, beginning in early childhood,
continuing through postsecondary education and
then lifelong, is essential to
the health and well-being of
families and the future prosperity of Appalachian
Ohio," · said Cara Dingus
Brook, president and CEO
of the Foundation · for
Appalachian Ohio. "The
I'm a Child of Appalachia
Fostering
Access
to

Education Mini-Grant program is designed to be easily accessible to respond
quickly to educational
needs and classroom enrichment
activities
in
Appalachian Ohio."
Fostering Access to
Education
Mini-Grant
guidelines and application
are now ·available at
www;appalachianohio.org.
For more information or
IQ reqiU'!st a p&lt;lper copy, contact Laura Risler, MiniGrant Program-Coordinator,
at
740-753-1111
or
lrisler@jJao.org. Grant proppsals must be postmarked
by July 21, 2008.

"lolzer Clinic makes donation to Relay for Life
I

' POLIS - Benny 's $750 in donations to the ACS
of lloller Clin ic with the total team donation
·'.! " .t llrdrJiser for lhe
being $21.165. Benny's
,,.,,. · \\1 i Game Sy,;t.em Buddies was once again the
,,,; .,
llhll lCY for the
#I team in fundraising for
., ,,, "" l.'ailt4" r Soc iety's th~ Gallia County event. The
'1 !.. , f, , I ife. Tomma . team is the only Gallia
1 ~·, .. '" " ,,, the wi nner. ·
County Team to attain the
llllldrHi,cr netted over "diamond" status (donation
' · ,&lt;f, 1" ·

•-.

of more than $20,000.)
Benny's Buddies team
members include Amy
Wedemeyer, Angie Swartz.
Charlotte Norvell , Kiona
Norvell, Jennifer WestfalL Jo
Ann Hannan, Julia Whitt,
Payton Whitt, Kim Ballinger, .
Les11 Carpenter, Melissa

Hutchinson, Nancy Gard,
Sharee Luckeydoo, Shirley
Engle, Sue Allen, Wenda
Hunt,. Carla Miller, Carolyn
Carman, Karen Edgar, Robin
Payne, Kayla Payne, Sherry
Fellure, Sherry Roberts,
Wilma Gooch, Debbie
Manley and Marvin Baird.

planned .

Summer food

person's name several times
during your first encounter.
·
it will help.
However, if you do forget
(and we all do), it's OK to
say, "I'm really sorry. but I
have a terrible problem
remembering names: Can
you please tell me yours
again?" lf you are upfront
and noticeably embarrassed
by your gaffe. you are more
likely to be forgiven .
Dear . Annie: I've been
married for 22 years. A&gt;
soon as I said "I do," I was
kicked to the back of the
closet like an old shoe .
When I saw the letter from
"Cravin~
Intimacy
in
Indiana,' I read it to my
husband, along with several
of the
brokenhearted
responses from your readers
explaining how they felt so
rejected .and unloved.
When I finished, I asked
my husband if this is what
he wanted for me. He said.
"No. I' II talk tQmy doctor.''
But he forgot. Twice. So the
third time. 1 went with him
to his regular checkup and
asked his doctor, "Is there
anything you can · do to
make my husband more
interested in having sex?"
The doctor looked at my
husband's curly biker beard .
and said, "I'm glad you said
something because I wouldn't have checked that."
It turns out his testosterone levels were way low.
so the doctor began giving
him shots - one every two
weeks for 12 weeks. Now
my husband is chasing me
around the house . And he
helps with the housework
· and in the garden. He's losing weight, getting stronger
and growing back hi &gt;
armpit hair.
I don't know what happened to my old husband,
but they can keep him . rm
· banging on to this new guy.
Thanks to everyone who
wrote in to share their pain.
It was the catalyst fo r
change in my Jjfe . - New
Shoe in Mic~~fhn
·
Annie's M · ox is written by KDthy Mitchell and
Morey Sugar, longtime editors of the Ann 1Ander.1·
cobunn. Please e-mail your
questions to anniesmailbox@comcast.net, or wriJe
to: Annie's Mailbox, P.O.
Box 118190, Chicago, IL
60611. To find out more
about Annie's Mailbox.
and-read features by other
Creators Syndicate writers
and cartoonists, visit th&lt;'
Creators Syndicate Web ·
page at www.creators.com.

Community Calendar
City, Ky. will be si nging at
the Middleport Church of
Jennifer McBride
the Nazarene on Sunda~ .
Thursday, June 19
of Chester and her
SYRACUSE - Meigs I 0:30 a.m. Pastor Len
two children ,
County Board of MRDD, Powell invites the public.
members of
regular meeting. 4 p.m ..
Sacred Heart
Carleton
SchooL
' ·
Catholic Church in
Monday, June 23
Pomeroy, were
Friday, June 20
RACINE
-Southern
among the many
MIDDLEPORT
- The
Local School Board. regular
volunteers who
meeting, 8 p.m. , high school Big Bend Community Band
hetp.ed pack food
will present a concert in
media room.
baskets for the
Dave
Diles
Park .
Middleport.
7
p.m.
election'
Meigs
Clubs and
Parish's sum
will include swing. big
food giveaway
hand, marches, and patriotir
Tuesday. The food
music . Free. open to the
will be given away
Friday, June 20
public. take lawn chair and
from 9 a .m. to
SALEM CENTER - · enjoy.
noon Friday at the
Star Grange #778 and Star
Junior . Grange #878 fun
Mulberry
Community Center .ni!lbt and work session on
fatr booth display. with
to families who
Monday, June 23
potlWJk supper at 6:30 p.m.:
applied.
RUTLAND
Oasi'
foiiQ'Wed by work session.
Photo COUI'IMy ol111e
Christian
Fellowship
Vacation Bible School. 6c •• ,.. .... 8:30 p.m., through June 26.
Rutland Church of Christ.
Power Lab is the theme. for
Sunday, June 22
MIDDLEPORT - The children ages three through
Singing Byrds of Junction fifth grade.

Public meetings

Other events

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t._

BY KATHY MITCHELL ;
AND MARCY SUGAR

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a sandbag."

91eca•C

to 'fix' himself

I

through DJinois levee

.
road ttack:s remained open.
leff Campbell, .a farmer A bridge downriver in
carrying sandbags on his Keokuk also Rmaincd
four-wheeler, said be spot- open.
ted .pigs swimming away
To the north in Cedar
from a flooded hog famn Rapids, floodwaters bad
near Oakville. 'They were dropped enough dlat officlimbiqg a levee, poking cials let hundreds of people
holes in the plastic tbat oovreturn to their damaged
.12\ed iit, be ·said.
.
One tired pig was lying at homes and businesses.
· (he bottom of the levee
"like :a pink sand~,"
Campbell said. .
Reports of raw sew~e
and farm runoff m~floodwa­
ters raised ooncems about
public health. But eqJCitS ·
said most people are mwt
enough to av01d the ·tainted
water. ..1)'picaliy we don't
see die outbreaks of dis• "'*-"" a!, ...,.,._buttJilt!
eases dlat people fear," said
• 1()HNfi~·W*nllll
Mike Allred of the Centers
• c.lomSWtPtet·-...... ,.....,
.for Disease Control and
Prevention.
lf'be rising water forced
Briar.1 Wiegand, left, and his son, CGit,.sit .on the edge -of the sandbag.tevee near Kingstoo,
·
t
he
closure
of the
Iowa Tuesday. The Wtegands were working on a near breech of the levee until about three
.
Mississippi
bridge
in
in the morning.
·
·
Burlington and stopped ca1'
traffic on the bridge in liort
rise as the high water moves moved to Garber, Elkport'.s · ·had yet to crest.
twin city across the Turi&lt;.ey
People were urged to Madison. The brid~ 's raildownstream.
Still , · officials said the River, but others abandoned ' evacuate .an area near
Gulfport as tloodwaters ·
cost would have been even the area.
"There's nothing there in lhrea!Med about .12 square
higher if the f~ _government had not purchased Elkport anymore," said miles
of
fMmland.
low-lying land after the Helen Jennings of Garner. Henderson CoUDty llc!?WY
1993 deluge, which caused '1'hey built new hauses in Sheriff Donald Seitz said a
$12 billion in damage.
lfi.fferent places."
. ' major highway could Ill:
Since then, the governSome of those who stayed under 10 feet of water by
ment 'bought out.more than are.paying a price .
midday Wednesday.
9,000 homeowners, turoi~
The federal government
On the Iowa side of the
much of the land into parks bought about a quarter of river, a sandbagging !&gt;Jlerll·
and undeveloped areas that the home s in Chelsea, . tion was moved south to the
pm. . ..,,, . ?
can be allowed to flood with low a. after the 1993 outskirts of Burlington .after
c- .. swa r..-Hantnlllillllf .... ..,tilt
less · risk. The Federal floods, but most of the 300 floodwaters streamed across
MeipC.Uty Jlc:aldi DtpM t
Ca il : w...
Emergency Management residents stayed. At least state Highway 99.
I'
?1'
Pa
a
_.tiltM
"
a)C
z!t;yC ; •
Agency bas ·moved .or I0 homes are now inundatOakville
Aposto11c
De
•
flood-proofed about 30,000 ·ed by the Iowa River to Church ".is now an island,"
,.
-e
a .,._.,.
properties. ·
their first noors.
said Carly Wagenbach, who
._...,_...._, ......._ nis~b: I I 1
The effort ri:quired whole
Residents take it in stride. was taking food to levee
communities to be moved, said Mayor Roger Ochs.
wmters.
~tlel:tNilli"-l4lillll.-yL
.
· such as Rhineland, Mo., and
"For the most ·part, it's
'Officials were also con11:e
dutllt7/l\ -*~
another flQOd." he said . cerned about the integrity of
Valmeyer, IIJ.
ln Iowa, FEMA spent "For Chelsea, it's more of a levee that protects a
c.... AM-ew . . 'ttllt
$1.6 million to buy out resi- an inconvenience."
drainage area S&lt;iuth of
ttl-a1.6
dents of Elkport, population
On Tuesday, Oooding Oakville.
• • a' t . . . . . . . .
80, and then knock down remained far more serious
"It's outrageous," said
the village's remaining .in parts of southeast Iowa, Sreve Poggemiller. "We' re
buildings. Some residents where the Mississip.pi River hanging on by a thread - or

OF 'I'HF: MONTH Alcoholic has

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BY II•IM Suuea• Fee:

ANNIE'S MAILBOX

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Mississippi-R iver

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Jun=:e,;;,.;;,t8;:;,;...,2~oo8

~Sunday.

ASSOCIATED PAESS WRITER

BY THE BEND·

Daily Sentinel

Coope::r

organirations

Youth events

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Church events

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. '"io girl dies

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- The
lli ghwa) Patrol
, rar-old girl died
'.' Da! when an
••
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" 11h he,· father
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in Father's Day ATV accident
central Ohio was driving the·
ATV a: about 7:30 y.m.
Sunday when she missed a
left curve and overcorrected . She was pronounced
Jead at a local hospital.
The girl"s'father. 33:yearold Kevin Carlson. was sitting next to her in the p.assenger seat. He was taken to

.

Better Retirement

the hospital with non-life
threatening injuries .
The patrol s~ys th~ ~sh
remams under mvesngauon .
and charges are pendmg.

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Retirement should be one of me most enjoyoble r.mes ofyour lite. yet rruny
people ""' financially unprepared fOr it. I can creote a plan deslf!'led !D help
you enjoy retirement ContaCT ~ !D discuss IRAs and other avarlable opt1ons.

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PageA4

OPINION

The Daily Sentinel

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~ Wednesday, June 18,' 2008

Wednesday, June 18, 2008·

.

'Obituaries

•

The Daily Sentinel
111 Court Stteet. PonllltOy, Ohio

'

(740) 992-2156 • FAX (740) 992-2157
www.mydtlllyMnttnel.com

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
Dan Goodrich
Publisher
Charlene Hoeflich
General Manager-News Editor

Congress shall malu no law resputing an
aurblishmmt of religion, or prohi,iting the
fru exercise thereof; or abriJiging the frutlom
of speech, or of the prus; or the right of the
people peauably to assemble, and to petition
the Government for a redress ofgrievances~
7

._ The First Amendment to the U.S. Constitution

TODAY IN HISTORY

'

Exordsm threatens ]indals candidacy
A poisonous cloud has
been circling the Republican
presidential nomination this
. season. First, it was "the
Mormon question" raised
against ·
former
Massachusetts · Gov. Mitt
Romn~y. which was used as
a political sledgehammer by
one of his primary opponents. Now, it's religious
writing from the youth of
the still-young Louisiana
Gov. Bobby Jindal. Can we
please not go there again?
Can we please not use religion against another candidate this cycle?
As the media twitters
about recently elected
Jindal being considered as a
possible choice for John
McCain's vice presidential
running mate, a buzzkill
arrives. On the Left blogosphere, , an article Jindal
wrote as a young convert to
Catholicism has resurfaced,
presumably tQ serve as disqualifying evidence.
As it happens, I don't
want McCain to pick Jindal
f9r his ticket, but not
because of this. Jindal -is a
young, bright light of the
Republican Party. He's a
whiz kid, an authentic conservative, antl a- man who
loves his country, his family
and his God. Jindal has
quite a job before him in
Louisiana. As a fan of his, I
want to see him do it. Then
we can talk about electing
him president, after he's
done the impossible and
changed the. face of
Louisiana politics .- a job
he is already hard at work
doing.
This is not the first time
Jindal's religious writings
· have surfaced. They were

Today is Wednesday, June 18, the !70th day of 2008.
There are 196 days left in the year.
Today's Highlight in History: On June· 18, 1983, astronaut Sally K. Ride became America's first woman .in space
as she and four colleagues blasted off aboard the space
shuttle Challenger.
Oil this dat!!:-1!1_!]7!!, American force!; entered l'hiladelphia
as the British withdrew during the Revolutionary War.
In 1812, the United States declared war against Britain.
In 1815, Napoleon Bonaparte met his Waterloo as British
and Prussian troops defeated the French in Belgium.
In 1858, the United States and China signed a treaty promoting "peace, am.ity and commerce."
In 1908, William Howard Taft was nominated for president by the Republican national convention in Chicago.
In ·1!128, Amelia Earhart became the first woman to fly
across the Atlantic Ocean as she completed a journey with
pilots Wilmer Stultz and· Louis Gordon from
Newfoundland to Wales in about 21 hours.
In 1940, during World War II, British Prime Minister
Winston Churchill urged his countrymen to conduct themselves in a manner that would prompt future generations to
say, "This was their finest hour." .
In 1948, a United Nations commission finished drafting what would become the Universal Declaration of
Human Rights.
In 1958, i'I11sident Eisenhower expressed support for his
chief of staff, Sherman Adams, who was accused of
improperly accepting gifts from a businessman. (Adams
resigned in September 1958.)
five years ago: Convicted rapist Andrew Luster, heir to
the Max factor fortune, was arrested in Puerto Vallarta,
Mexico,- after five months on the run. Baseball Hall-offaner Larcy Doby. who broke die American League's
OOior bauler in 1947, died in Montclair, N.J.; he was ·
believed to be 79.
One year ago: Nine firefighters died in a lire at a furniture store and warehouse in Charleston, S.C. Yahoo lnc.
Chairman Terry Semel ended h.is six-year tenure as chief
executive officer, handing over the reins to eo:-founder
Jerry Yang. Vilma Espin Guillois, wife of acting President
Raul Castro. and a former rebel fighter, died in Havana,
Cuba, atage 77.
Today's Birthdays: Actor Ian Carmichael is 88. Columnist
Tom Wicker is 82. Rock sin~er-composer-musician Sir Paul
McCartney is 66. Movie cntic Roger Eben is 66. Actress
Constance McCashin is 61. Actress Linda Thorson is 61.
Actress Isabella Rossellini is 56. Actress Carol Kane is 56.
Rock singer Alison Moy~ is 47. Country singer-musician
Tim Hunt is 41. Rock singer-musician Sice (1be Boo
Radleys) is 39. Rhythm-and-blues singer Nathan Morris
(Boyz U Men) is 37.Aotress Mara Hohel is 37. Rapper Silkk
the Shocker is 33. Actress Alana de Ia Garza is 32. Country
singer Blake Shelton is 32. Actress Renee Olstea!J is 19.
Thought for Today: "Women must .try to do things as men
have tried. When they fail, their failure must be but a challenge to others." - Amelia Eartwt, American aviator
(1897 -1937?).

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Kathryn
Lopez

used a~ainst him during his
camprugn for governor, as
Democrats tried to take
Protestant voters from him,
accusing him of being "antiProtestant." As it happened,
their accusation was based
on a 9uote from John Calvin
that Jindal used in one of his ·
pieces. In defeat, I hope the
Dems hold reroedial reading
classes for their political
consultants.
Now, the msmuation
appears to be that Jindal is a
weirdo. The an.icle that is
circulating revolves around
an "exorcism" Jindal expe. rienced as an undergraduate
at Brown University. While
·exorcisms should not be
tried at home or in your
dorm room, it is not breaking news that there is evil in
the world. That a young
man recognized this while
in college "is not a scandal.
Although calling the then23-year-old 's
. story
"bizarre," the "Talking
Points Memo". Web site
concedes, it's not a "blockbuster." Writers there warn,
"Jindal's battle with the
dark forces may become an
. issue should his Veep candidacy proceed. While it's .
hardl~ a blockbuster revelation, Jt could provide fodder ·
for bloggers and late-night
comics to tum his cand.ida- ·
cy into a media sideshow."

How lovely would it have
been if these liberal bloggers had added, "While all
are free to do so, that, of
course, would be silly and
antithetical to the spirit of
our found,ing."
As I said, I don't think
now is the time for Jindal to
go national. B!lt that these
writings would yet again be
used against him leaves ·me
daydreaming
about
a
Romney-Jindal
ticket.
Romney, of course, knows
all too well that there is religious intolerance in this
country.
.
As Romney said in his
speech on "Faith in
America" during the primary campaign last year: "It is
important to recognize that
wh.ile differences in theology exist between the
churches in America, we
share a common creed of
moral convictions. And
where the affairs of our
nation are concerned, it's
usually a sound rule to
focus on the latter - on the
great moral p'rinciples that
urge us all on a common
co!)rse. Whether it was the .
cause of abolition. or ci vii
rights or the right to life
itself, no moveniem of con'science can succeed iii
America that cannot speak
to the convictions of religious people."
He emphasized in a follow-up speech to the Becket
Fund for Religious Liberty
this spring ''that non-believers have just as great a stake
as believers in defending
religious liberty."
The freedom whether to
believe is a fundamental
one. We all should recognize it and defend it.

Democrats, Republicans,
religious persons and atheists ought to stand united.
In his New Oxfol'd
Review piece on encountering the devil. at college,
Jindal concluded, "I learn~
a lasting lesson in humility
and the limits of human
understanding. Was the purpose of that niilht served
when so many mdividuals
were inducted into tlie
Church? Did I witness spiritual warfare? I do not hav~
the·answers, but I do belie~
in the reality of spirits;
angels and other relal~
phenomena that I can. ntnther touch nor see."
While we' re all likely to
hear more details aboltl
what Jindal described in his
"exorcism" piece, most stpries will skip over the bqttom line. Jindal knows there
is good and evil, and prays
for the wisdom to know difference and to stay awar
from the evil. That's a confidence-inspiring
mor.al
compass. The essay in questlion
demonstrates
an
impressive core to Jindal. If
only more politicians had
such humility - and Jindal
had it before he was 25!
As George Washington
put it, "No people can be
bound to acknowledge arid
adore the invisible hand
which conducts the affairil
of men more than the peOple of the United States."
Bring on the public servants
who so believe and their
defense of the right nullo. ,
(Kathryn. wpez is tl1e editor of National Review
Online (www.lwliona/review. com). She can be contacted at klope z@ national~ ·
review. com.)
',.

·'

John Charles Handley PhD was

.~mory Untvers1ty Hospital in AUanta, Ga.

.'·· He attended Sacred Heart ~rade school in p
~du.ated_ from Pomeroy H1gh School in 1~5~~Y~:Ss
~edtcton:rn . There he met his wife, Phyllis Blackwood
,:tney mamed on Dec. 28, 1957. "
·
... Johp entered Ca~s Institute ofTechnology, graduated ~ith
;~~rs ~d MelVlng(B.S_. in Engineering Science in June,
·'n l%J ~ asters o Sc1ence m Aeronautical Engineering
,! • . · e. was employed by Douglas Aircraft in Santa
_.MO!llca, Cahf,_ Whi.l e there, he worlced in the Aerothermo
/)ol~&lt;l; Mechanics ~nd Physics groups. He then accepted ~
_pos~uon a~ Georgta Institute of Technology as a research
·engmeer m _the S_chool of Aerospace Engineering. Dr.
~':laD4J.ey ~1ved)us P~.D. from Georgia Tech in 1976 with
_~ thests lltle&lt;! an Expenmental Investigation of Catalysis ili
the ~ombustton of Composite Solid Propellants.
, ThiS research base helped Dr. Handley's later worlc on
the Hydroge~ Fuel bus wh1ch was to be used during the
1
i 996 OlympJc Games m Atlanta.
~ · He is survived b~ his wife of 50+ years and their six chil- ·
'dee~; Debh1e Fanmn, John C. Handley, Jr., Steve Handley,
, Melinda Dav1s, Dan Handley, and Amanda Handley; II
_-grandchtldren; ststers, Margaret Jurado of New York N.Y.
-and Mary Sue Peters of Cincinnati.
'
Dr. J:Iandley enjoyed his many collections which includ--ed antique t?ys and trains .. He .was active in many clubs,
frequ~nted auctiOns for h1s collecllons, enjoyed wood~
'Work.mg, and loved attending Georgia Tech football and
basketball games.
,
~· A funeral ,Mass was held June 14 at St. Jude's Catholic
;Church in Sandy Springs, Va.

Jim111y A. Hedlert
~

.

an;,

c., ' ....

......

c ............

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IS

m· ~

x,

•

----·-26-Oulsldlo...,.

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.

;rJ;ic=yth~~:~i~~sh :
rates stead 1 2
four- ear
percent, a
4- Y
. • at the June
2 25 sessmn.
The Labor De
•
..
panme~t s
Producer Price Index, wh1ch
measures the costs of goods
before . they , reach store
shelves, leaped 1 .~ percent in
~ay, the btggest m.crease m
SIX m~~ G_
allopm&amp; energyan_
pnces,_wh.ichare
especta11 y squeezmg bustnessi1 profits
. ~ .figured
, promi.
nen Ym
mdex s p•ckup.
On Wall Street, !he news
sent stocks tumbhng. The
Do J
·
.
w one~ mdustnal s lost
:gsi~ 3bmts to close at
• · ·

fo!

~~h~n

manufacturers and

demandd from would-be buy··
ers_ an - more recent! Y The F~deral Re serve nsmg mon~age rates, are
reponed that mdustnal pro- adding to bmlder headaches·
duct ion fell 0 2 percent ·
··s ut"Jd ers are
.
d ·
h·
. ·
. m
omg t e
May, the second stratght exactly the right thing _
monthly dechne. Plant s cutting back·· said David
·
· ' economist
· at
opera· te d at on1Y a 79 ·4 per- Setders
chtef
cent · capacity, the lowest the National Association of
since September 2005 after Home Builders. "Now I' m a
the Gulf Coast hurricanes. little more worried on the ·
And, there was more fallout interest rate froni. 1 think
from a deeply depressed we'll see mortgage rates
housmg market.
recede to some degree ff
Th
be
f
h
·
· be a tougher road
·
. e num r o new ous- not, 11· will
mg projects started in May for hou si ng than antici atfell3.3 percent to a 975,000 ed," Seiders said.
p
pace - the lowest ,· n 17
The h -·
1
h
ousmg s ump as
years - as builders pulled been the bi est dra on the
back further. Builders are economy. J~i~h hasgslowed
smanmg as unsold homes as sharply m recent months.

I

-

·:; POMEROY -. Jimmy A. Heckert, 70, Pomeroy, passed

•.••

.• ''

~ He was born on June 10, 1937, in Weston, W.Va., son of
Jhe late Charles A. and Ruby B. (Fortney) Heckert. He was
graduate of Southeast High School in Ravenna, Ohio, class
of 1955_. He was employed as a millwright by General.
J.fotors m Lordstown, Ohio, fo~ 30 years. He loved to hunt
·""d fish and he dearly loved his grandchildren.
In_ a_ddition to his parents, he was preceded by a sister,
_Patncm Heckert Whisman and father-in-law, fred Riggs. ·
, He IS survived by. his wife of 47 years, Edith Riggs
Heckert. Pomeroy: children, James A. Heckert and h.is wife
Rhonda of Rootstown, Ohio; Cynthia Lynn Sullivan and h~
~us~and, AI~ of Pon Clinton, Ohio; grandch.ildren. Spencer
Sulhvan, Cr.ug, _Clark and Kaley Heckert; mother-m-law,
. Lutchie S~cy R1ggs; step ~dchildren, Ashlea and l)'ler
B~ankenshtp; brothers ,and sJsters-in-law, David and Carol
· Riggs. PomeT?Y• and Hem and Gloria Riggs, Windham,
Ohio. alon~ w1th many nieces and nephews.
. ,
There wtll be no .calhng hours and no service is scheduled at this time. AITaJ~gements were handled by Anderson
McD~iel F':lner~ Ho~e in Pomeroy:
; Online registry IS available at www.andersonmcdaniel.com

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·
t RSVP
I
Charlene Hoellieh/photo
' on was gtven o .
vo unteers setVing 25, 20, 15 and 10 years at t(le 35th annual anniversary of the
prog":'m. Recogmzed were left to nght, front , Rose N1day, Mary Loudner, and Marilyn Powell, 25 years; Opal Tyree, 20
Yea_t:S, and ~thy Anthony, 15 years~ and sta,ndtng. Gladys Cumings and Rosalie Story 15 and Jottn Bentley uaft.
6 unch, bane Dill and Rita Slav1n 10 years .
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· ·~r

Special

R. Vlninl

recogn "ti

·Community dinner

declared safe, including
Ohio-grown tomatoes. · ,
· • The manager of a local
restaurant who wished to
remain unidentified said
customers didn' t seem too
.
r - - - - : - - - - - - , concerned by the outbreak
and though the restaurant
continued to sell tomatoes.
those
tomatoes
were
· checked to be sure they
were grown in a state which
the fDA bas declared safe
in this situation.
In add.ition to tracking
where die restaurant's tomatoes come from, tho manager said the stem is removed
from the produce before it's
washed, soaked and then
rinsed again just to be safe .
The FDA said types of

Birth announced
.
.

Patricia and Richard fink
Lancaster and Daniel
~;lilen!&gt;ler of Racine are tlie
maternal grandparents and
and Debbie Bader of
l.alncasler are the paternal
grandparents. The infant has
a sibling; McKenzie .Pierce.
-10, of Lancaster.

tomatoes· grown in suspect
stales ·which consumers
should avoid are raw red
plum , red Roma or red
round tomatoes . Safe for
consumption are grape
tomatoes, cherry tomatoes
and tomatoes sold with the
vine still attached. Go to
the FDA's website at
http :/lwww.fda.gov for an
updated list of . states
declared safe, unsafe and
states reponing i.llnesses
linked to. the suspect
tomatoes.

l'f.ltFOR.~-... ; Ull\f'P.\'Tkh

Fireworksfromr.A•

I

nights of entertainment
roward the fireworks. disjnay. Gloeckner will match
4onated performance fees
from local musician Troll,
Kip Grueser of K&amp;D
Karaoke and Mark Ward,
ftost of the bar's Open
fdike night, and
serve
. on
Saturday.
lunch

will

Proceeds from the lunch
will also go toward· the fireworks d.isplay. She win
also hold an auction and
other fundraising activities
this weekend,
The fireworks display
will conclude a day's ~
of Independence Day activiti~ The associatioo plans

events in Dave Diles Park
beginning~y ~"'the after-

noon, includlbg-Storytelling
by Donna Wilson, a karaoke
contest, live music and a •
patriotic pro~
The asSOCiation will also
hold the ttaditiona1 July 4
parade, and award prizes to
outstanding entries.
I

luncheon with the trio
'Truly Saved" composed
of Craig Harriso·n, Kathy
McDaniel. and Jackie
White singing. Numerous
door prizes donated by
local businesses were
awarded to conclude the
event.

from Page At

The gist of the meeting ·s
d.ivisive lone was voiced by
another unidentified citizen
who said :· "You guys want
th.is annexation. we don't: ··
During the meeting.
Councilman Jim Harmon
said for him the proposal
would go forward or end last
night based on what the people wanted, whether or not
the people heard had an .

Smith said· the FDA can
actually take a : biotype" of
the produce and track
down the outbreak like a
fingerprint might link a
person to a crime. There
has been no announcement
yet as to where the bacteria
originated.

impact on the deci sion of
village officials to move forward or stop was not known
when the meeting d.isinte- ,
grated into disagreement.
- (iRRND -

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SHOWTIMES FOR WED. 61181118
1lii INCRFJJIRII

IRH.tl' •lf..t.~
1:1, 1:1,!21,1.
SOS Of l\MDP 11\,-13 tjU't!,lll,.
1lii RAPI'fJ\Nr• !l 1 1:1, tl, Ill, 1:11.
KLINGllP&amp;\~• i!G• 125, t:US. 4:1,
111.1:15. . . ta,
ZOIH\~ 11'\ rtt
125.1:e. 4:1, 4;1,
7:11, lji,ti,1HI.
!I£XA~'Il Tllflln ,,
1tl,ti.IS.HI.
INDIAM J(l\1,\l •l t·U• , jl, tl. .,. ta.
1lii Sll!~ ,,,
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I'RI'«'E C\SPIA I ,, ,.JJ•
Ill. ta.
IRO~ ll!~ '" "t.''

..

,

1l\ll01 1:l

SHJ\1 I ' l l c,'-;

--··--··---·-•

Rita Slavin for I 0 years.
Kathy McDaniel , · the
Partners in Care coordinator, also recognized volunteers who work in the program for those with memory deficiency and presented
·
gifts to each one.
A program followed the

Tomatoes rrom Page Al

; MIDDLEPORT- Middleport Oturch of Christ will bold
a tree ~mm~ty dinner from ~:30 to 6 p.m. on June 27 at
~Family Life Center, South Fifih Avenue·and Main Street.
~ The menu will be turkey hot dogs with sauce and cheese,
potato salad, cole ·slaw and a dessert.
'

LANCASTER- Jeff and
Julia Hensler .Bader of ·
#:..l.anca!;ter · announce the
of a daughter, Raelynn
on May 16. She
::~~~ 7 pounds, 2

Niday, and Marilyn Powell
with 25 years service;
Bunny Kuhl and Opal
Tyree with 20 years of volunteering;
Dorothy
Anthony, Gladys Cumings
and Rosalie Story for 15
years, and John Bentley,
Mary Bunch, Irene Dill and

used a piece of property to the township. Still. resiassessed at $41 ,290 which dents felt raising taxes in
meant taxes would go up any amount were unaccept$127 on the half.year if able ;md the arguments of a
moved from the township to larger population being
the village.
enticing to businesses , such
Mayor J. Scott Hill said it as a grocery store, locating
was his belief the village in Racine were d.isputed. An
would not gain any addi- unidentified citizen pointed
.tiona! taxes for the 'first out Middleport couldn't
eight years dne to some of keep a grocery story and it
those taxes still being paid had over 2,000 residents.

'

SYRACUSE - 1be Syracuse Community Center will
ve an ice ·Cream social Sunday with serving from II a.m.
6 p.m. Six flavors of homemade ice cream will be served
~ong with sandwiches and desserts.
.
In conjunction with the .social, a: blind draw double-elimination comhole tournament will be held at 2 p.m. Signup
. will end ~t I :30 p.m.. Entry fee is $!0 per person. Prize
·money will be detemuned by the nlll!lber of entrants. For
more information or to sign up call 992-2365.

.

Volunteers rrom Page AI

·Annexation

Social, tournament

0

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.

~:Ct!.i'l~!':i~:n~J

~~way at hts residence on June 4, 2008.

7

a...,_.

well as foreclosed homes

•

t

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

The economy's problems

7

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mJ'n:

Local
Briefs
·r
.

The Daily Sentinel

0

a
d

- a blend of high-costseand
slow growth that ensures
the Federal Reserve's most
like!
.
·
. Y move«?-" mterest rates
next week wtll be ·no move
whatsoever
· Be
anlc:
Chairman
8 em e
n
d h'
11
h
an
1~ co e_agues ave
~~ mcrc:&lt;~sll_lgly clear
~ .me med to cut
of aggravatisn ~:ti~~ f~
theothe haodgboosti ·
.
r &amp; , d II _ ng ~tes
too soon 1o ·ten o m11alton
woold h n
al
u an econ~my
:~~ by bousmg,
t
'
cJal woes.
'The Fed · ·
bo "

Saturday, June -l.4, 2008, at Overbrook Center in Middleport.
, She was bomAug.25, 1933, in Pomeroy, daughter of the
.~te Ho~ard and Minnie Nelson Vining. . ·
. Survtvm~ are her brother and sister-in-law, Eldon and
j.Vanda Vmmg of Rutland; several nieces and nephews· and
. She gave special recogoi• spec.ial caregiver, Terri Smith of Syracuse.
'
:. Bestdes her parents, she was preceded in death by five llon to volunteers serving in
the program for 25. 20, 15,
SISters and three brothers.
.
·
and
I 0 years and presented
S~rvice will be at 2{'.m. on Wednesday, June 18, 2008, at
~w1_ng Fune~ H?me m Pomeroy with Rev. Doug Cox offi- .them with certificates ,and
flowers.
Ciall~g. Bun a! will be in Rocksprings Cemetery.
·
Included in 'that group
Fnends called fror.n 6-9 p.m. on Tuesday at the funeral
were
Jackie Hildebrand,
· .
horne.
Mary
Loudner, . Rosy

Heaven is only nine holes away

....

'

after. the latest batch of eco-

ahe~esal~ln~es ~arrel~ n~mtc d barometers were and high prices for fuel and pile up, adding to 'already
industri:'J 1~ti;~st~~t ~ rehease Tuesday.. T.hat's raw ',"aterials are taking a swollen supply. Sagging

:bommlro.ntononFeb.l9,1938andd.iedJu~ 12 ·2008 t

·POMEROY ~ Pbyllis R. Vming, 74, of Pomeroy, died

Letters to the editor are welcome. They should be less
than J()() won:ls. All letters are subject to ediLing, nmst be
. signed, and include addre s~· and ttdephone number. No
'. unsigned letters will be published. Le~rs should be in '
It's like liv~ng in park course;, build cemeteries
I get a lot of million-dol·
:good taste. addressing issues, not personalities. Letters of lar ideas. I ~et them all the
except for the weekly around them. Make the can
thanks to organiZfttioos and iruiividunls will not be accept- · time. Why, tf I bad a dime
smashing of a window and paths out of tombstones.
ed for publication.
for every million-dollar idea
walking out in your back You' d never have to worry
yard and fmding a guy about broken windows, and
I've ever 'bad, I'd be il mil- ·
wearing plaid shorts, a knee . the dearly departed wouht
lionilire. But someoae's
Jim
always out ~ o:ad,Y .10
, brace, a polo shin and a like all the visitors they' re
Mullen
squash your dream, .always
cap
digging suddenly getting.
baseball
ready to giv.e you some
through your azaleas with
"Did you come to see me
Reader Services
~IJSIIIS 21~
song and dance about bow it
the business end of a golf Jiril; after all these years?" '
will never work, always
club.
"WeU, not just you. !lost
.
eonK11o11 Polley I
.
pooh-poohing an .idea awhile back.. 1 took a
It surprised me to learn a ball in here somewhere
aur matn conoem in all 8tonJs ts 10 Published every alafteiBfmna100onn, Monday
through Friday, 111 'Court Street,
.because no one else is doing vicioos cut with my S-iron, that many of the people · Have you seen itT'
·· ·'
be acicunde. ff you lcnow of an error Pomeroy, Ohio.
Second-clus
it.
Of
oourse,
no
QDe dsc is
who
buy
the~
houses
don't
"Still got that hook. huh!
the ball bit a tree, came
in a story, call tile newsroom at (740) pos10gO Pllid .. " " " -·
doing
it
.
t
hey
didll't
have
even
play
golf.
I
guess
at
Try
two rows up. On top of
Slraight back. and hit J;Dy
.... 3 • The • I · ~ PriU .and
992~56.
the
idea.
night
it's
pretty
quiet.
But
the Ol'tio New~~Jepe~ ~asncialion.
a guy named Winslow." ,
partner, John, right in the
A
few
years
ago;
Willie
, k
Send . . . . conwc·as
I'm
thinking
of
dragging
John started to co~
forehead.
He
chopped
like
a
Our ~~Win ........
Nelson started driving to bis baR of bricks.
John's
lifeless
body
to
the
lioos
to
:The
Dolly
·
111
Coun
.
around.
I d.idn 't have any
(140}--2151.
$Ret, Poii.,Op, Ohio ..5769.
concert dates on a bus lhal
nearest house to call for smelling salts so I took off a
fi
was
right
then
that(
got
D 1 1 II: -Lilli• .w:
burned biofuel. Everybody a million-dollar idea. You help, another thought h.it shoe and held my sock
S...olpllon A-.
laughed and said he was never know what's going to me. lo the big cathedrals under his nose.
0... _,.,
'10»
crazy. Well, he is crazy, but uigger a miUion-doUar idea and churches in Europe,
""':hat
you trying te
'115M
what's that got to do with they bury important people do, kill me? he said.
• ~ Olarlorle · E4 12
having
your
bathtub
·.
.,..,
50'
biofuel? They· re not laugh- oveJflow. having an a pie right in the chiircb. You . ''I'm sorry, I hooked right
A F • · Bliafl-. Ext. t•
Sen1or
A t • · 8ettl Sefvent, Ext. 13
ing DOW.
fall on your head, s
- g · look. down to discover ·the mto the tree."
0...-'10.2l'
When banks started giv- hot coffee in your ap. large piece of slate yGu 're
0...,...
'101.111
"I'm not talking about the
SYaa. . . lhauld ,.... tl ld . .
ing out half-million-dollar knocking your golf ~u y stand.ing on is . actuaUy a ball. I'm talking about your
Aduertiaing
_., .. '-"_No_ .IDOlt,gages to people with Se-nseless - it's just'( - tombstone. You jump aside
'S . . . . ~fi81rio.&amp;t.15
s~k. ~at thing is deadly:·
M:::i\plkMtl:lffMit*I&amp;Z S i n no down payment, no domdling.
@nly to land on another one_
.
· 0 IS . . . . -~&amp;UI
While you were out 1
inoome
and
no
assets,
I
As
I
stood
over
John
·s
The
bodies
are
under
the
had
this great idea."
.iludr a.t. E4 10
don't remember anyone body it came to me floor. in the walls. I never
"~s it have anything to
. . . Subecilptio.,
calling it a crazy idea. I cemetery • golf courses. did fmd out what you had to do w1th Willie Nel'son'"
. ......... c...nty
ki rid of wish Willie Nelson Today, the trend in golf do to get buried in the
ne of these days. it
13'3226
Charlorlel~. Ext. 12 .
bad thought. of it. People courses is to build them in church floor, but I'm pretty Wt(J. .
'64.20
would have-laughed at him, the middle of housing sure that whatever it is. I'm
52Weel&lt;s
' 127.11
(Jim Mullen is the aurlwr
E..... :
called him crazy and developments. You' ve seen not'doing it.
of
" II Ta~s a Village idiot:
.-sOmydailysentinel.com
Countr
maybe we· d be spared the places I'm talking
And when John got hit in Cony;hcatrng the Simple
13 Weeks
'53.ss·
some of this mess we re in. about big, elqlensive hous- the bead; two things came Life .?nd "Bob(&lt; finy
26 Weeks
' 107.10
My crazy idea hit me es surrounding meticulous- together: instead of build.ing · Tattoo. You can reach him
52 Weeks
'214.21 '
www.m~)Sdtlliuel.com
while I was out playing golf ly manicured golf courses. houses around a golf aJ jim_mullen@mywata;m.)

.

Wh ASHINGTON (AP) -

John Chaltes Handley. Ph.D.
A~TA, Ga. -

The Daily Sentinel • Page As

~onomy struggles with rising prices, slow growth

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LETTERS TO THE
EDITOR

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PageA4

OPINION

The Daily Sentinel

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~ Wednesday, June 18,' 2008

Wednesday, June 18, 2008·

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'Obituaries

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The Daily Sentinel
111 Court Stteet. PonllltOy, Ohio

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(740) 992-2156 • FAX (740) 992-2157
www.mydtlllyMnttnel.com

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
Dan Goodrich
Publisher
Charlene Hoeflich
General Manager-News Editor

Congress shall malu no law resputing an
aurblishmmt of religion, or prohi,iting the
fru exercise thereof; or abriJiging the frutlom
of speech, or of the prus; or the right of the
people peauably to assemble, and to petition
the Government for a redress ofgrievances~
7

._ The First Amendment to the U.S. Constitution

TODAY IN HISTORY

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Exordsm threatens ]indals candidacy
A poisonous cloud has
been circling the Republican
presidential nomination this
. season. First, it was "the
Mormon question" raised
against ·
former
Massachusetts · Gov. Mitt
Romn~y. which was used as
a political sledgehammer by
one of his primary opponents. Now, it's religious
writing from the youth of
the still-young Louisiana
Gov. Bobby Jindal. Can we
please not go there again?
Can we please not use religion against another candidate this cycle?
As the media twitters
about recently elected
Jindal being considered as a
possible choice for John
McCain's vice presidential
running mate, a buzzkill
arrives. On the Left blogosphere, , an article Jindal
wrote as a young convert to
Catholicism has resurfaced,
presumably tQ serve as disqualifying evidence.
As it happens, I don't
want McCain to pick Jindal
f9r his ticket, but not
because of this. Jindal -is a
young, bright light of the
Republican Party. He's a
whiz kid, an authentic conservative, antl a- man who
loves his country, his family
and his God. Jindal has
quite a job before him in
Louisiana. As a fan of his, I
want to see him do it. Then
we can talk about electing
him president, after he's
done the impossible and
changed the. face of
Louisiana politics .- a job
he is already hard at work
doing.
This is not the first time
Jindal's religious writings
· have surfaced. They were

Today is Wednesday, June 18, the !70th day of 2008.
There are 196 days left in the year.
Today's Highlight in History: On June· 18, 1983, astronaut Sally K. Ride became America's first woman .in space
as she and four colleagues blasted off aboard the space
shuttle Challenger.
Oil this dat!!:-1!1_!]7!!, American force!; entered l'hiladelphia
as the British withdrew during the Revolutionary War.
In 1812, the United States declared war against Britain.
In 1815, Napoleon Bonaparte met his Waterloo as British
and Prussian troops defeated the French in Belgium.
In 1858, the United States and China signed a treaty promoting "peace, am.ity and commerce."
In 1908, William Howard Taft was nominated for president by the Republican national convention in Chicago.
In ·1!128, Amelia Earhart became the first woman to fly
across the Atlantic Ocean as she completed a journey with
pilots Wilmer Stultz and· Louis Gordon from
Newfoundland to Wales in about 21 hours.
In 1940, during World War II, British Prime Minister
Winston Churchill urged his countrymen to conduct themselves in a manner that would prompt future generations to
say, "This was their finest hour." .
In 1948, a United Nations commission finished drafting what would become the Universal Declaration of
Human Rights.
In 1958, i'I11sident Eisenhower expressed support for his
chief of staff, Sherman Adams, who was accused of
improperly accepting gifts from a businessman. (Adams
resigned in September 1958.)
five years ago: Convicted rapist Andrew Luster, heir to
the Max factor fortune, was arrested in Puerto Vallarta,
Mexico,- after five months on the run. Baseball Hall-offaner Larcy Doby. who broke die American League's
OOior bauler in 1947, died in Montclair, N.J.; he was ·
believed to be 79.
One year ago: Nine firefighters died in a lire at a furniture store and warehouse in Charleston, S.C. Yahoo lnc.
Chairman Terry Semel ended h.is six-year tenure as chief
executive officer, handing over the reins to eo:-founder
Jerry Yang. Vilma Espin Guillois, wife of acting President
Raul Castro. and a former rebel fighter, died in Havana,
Cuba, atage 77.
Today's Birthdays: Actor Ian Carmichael is 88. Columnist
Tom Wicker is 82. Rock sin~er-composer-musician Sir Paul
McCartney is 66. Movie cntic Roger Eben is 66. Actress
Constance McCashin is 61. Actress Linda Thorson is 61.
Actress Isabella Rossellini is 56. Actress Carol Kane is 56.
Rock singer Alison Moy~ is 47. Country singer-musician
Tim Hunt is 41. Rock singer-musician Sice (1be Boo
Radleys) is 39. Rhythm-and-blues singer Nathan Morris
(Boyz U Men) is 37.Aotress Mara Hohel is 37. Rapper Silkk
the Shocker is 33. Actress Alana de Ia Garza is 32. Country
singer Blake Shelton is 32. Actress Renee Olstea!J is 19.
Thought for Today: "Women must .try to do things as men
have tried. When they fail, their failure must be but a challenge to others." - Amelia Eartwt, American aviator
(1897 -1937?).

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Kathryn
Lopez

used a~ainst him during his
camprugn for governor, as
Democrats tried to take
Protestant voters from him,
accusing him of being "antiProtestant." As it happened,
their accusation was based
on a 9uote from John Calvin
that Jindal used in one of his ·
pieces. In defeat, I hope the
Dems hold reroedial reading
classes for their political
consultants.
Now, the msmuation
appears to be that Jindal is a
weirdo. The an.icle that is
circulating revolves around
an "exorcism" Jindal expe. rienced as an undergraduate
at Brown University. While
·exorcisms should not be
tried at home or in your
dorm room, it is not breaking news that there is evil in
the world. That a young
man recognized this while
in college "is not a scandal.
Although calling the then23-year-old 's
. story
"bizarre," the "Talking
Points Memo". Web site
concedes, it's not a "blockbuster." Writers there warn,
"Jindal's battle with the
dark forces may become an
. issue should his Veep candidacy proceed. While it's .
hardl~ a blockbuster revelation, Jt could provide fodder ·
for bloggers and late-night
comics to tum his cand.ida- ·
cy into a media sideshow."

How lovely would it have
been if these liberal bloggers had added, "While all
are free to do so, that, of
course, would be silly and
antithetical to the spirit of
our found,ing."
As I said, I don't think
now is the time for Jindal to
go national. B!lt that these
writings would yet again be
used against him leaves ·me
daydreaming
about
a
Romney-Jindal
ticket.
Romney, of course, knows
all too well that there is religious intolerance in this
country.
.
As Romney said in his
speech on "Faith in
America" during the primary campaign last year: "It is
important to recognize that
wh.ile differences in theology exist between the
churches in America, we
share a common creed of
moral convictions. And
where the affairs of our
nation are concerned, it's
usually a sound rule to
focus on the latter - on the
great moral p'rinciples that
urge us all on a common
co!)rse. Whether it was the .
cause of abolition. or ci vii
rights or the right to life
itself, no moveniem of con'science can succeed iii
America that cannot speak
to the convictions of religious people."
He emphasized in a follow-up speech to the Becket
Fund for Religious Liberty
this spring ''that non-believers have just as great a stake
as believers in defending
religious liberty."
The freedom whether to
believe is a fundamental
one. We all should recognize it and defend it.

Democrats, Republicans,
religious persons and atheists ought to stand united.
In his New Oxfol'd
Review piece on encountering the devil. at college,
Jindal concluded, "I learn~
a lasting lesson in humility
and the limits of human
understanding. Was the purpose of that niilht served
when so many mdividuals
were inducted into tlie
Church? Did I witness spiritual warfare? I do not hav~
the·answers, but I do belie~
in the reality of spirits;
angels and other relal~
phenomena that I can. ntnther touch nor see."
While we' re all likely to
hear more details aboltl
what Jindal described in his
"exorcism" piece, most stpries will skip over the bqttom line. Jindal knows there
is good and evil, and prays
for the wisdom to know difference and to stay awar
from the evil. That's a confidence-inspiring
mor.al
compass. The essay in questlion
demonstrates
an
impressive core to Jindal. If
only more politicians had
such humility - and Jindal
had it before he was 25!
As George Washington
put it, "No people can be
bound to acknowledge arid
adore the invisible hand
which conducts the affairil
of men more than the peOple of the United States."
Bring on the public servants
who so believe and their
defense of the right nullo. ,
(Kathryn. wpez is tl1e editor of National Review
Online (www.lwliona/review. com). She can be contacted at klope z@ national~ ·
review. com.)
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John Charles Handley PhD was

.~mory Untvers1ty Hospital in AUanta, Ga.

.'·· He attended Sacred Heart ~rade school in p
~du.ated_ from Pomeroy H1gh School in 1~5~~Y~:Ss
~edtcton:rn . There he met his wife, Phyllis Blackwood
,:tney mamed on Dec. 28, 1957. "
·
... Johp entered Ca~s Institute ofTechnology, graduated ~ith
;~~rs ~d MelVlng(B.S_. in Engineering Science in June,
·'n l%J ~ asters o Sc1ence m Aeronautical Engineering
,! • . · e. was employed by Douglas Aircraft in Santa
_.MO!llca, Cahf,_ Whi.l e there, he worlced in the Aerothermo
/)ol~&lt;l; Mechanics ~nd Physics groups. He then accepted ~
_pos~uon a~ Georgta Institute of Technology as a research
·engmeer m _the S_chool of Aerospace Engineering. Dr.
~':laD4J.ey ~1ved)us P~.D. from Georgia Tech in 1976 with
_~ thests lltle&lt;! an Expenmental Investigation of Catalysis ili
the ~ombustton of Composite Solid Propellants.
, ThiS research base helped Dr. Handley's later worlc on
the Hydroge~ Fuel bus wh1ch was to be used during the
1
i 996 OlympJc Games m Atlanta.
~ · He is survived b~ his wife of 50+ years and their six chil- ·
'dee~; Debh1e Fanmn, John C. Handley, Jr., Steve Handley,
, Melinda Dav1s, Dan Handley, and Amanda Handley; II
_-grandchtldren; ststers, Margaret Jurado of New York N.Y.
-and Mary Sue Peters of Cincinnati.
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Dr. J:Iandley enjoyed his many collections which includ--ed antique t?ys and trains .. He .was active in many clubs,
frequ~nted auctiOns for h1s collecllons, enjoyed wood~
'Work.mg, and loved attending Georgia Tech football and
basketball games.
,
~· A funeral ,Mass was held June 14 at St. Jude's Catholic
;Church in Sandy Springs, Va.

Jim111y A. Hedlert
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;rJ;ic=yth~~:~i~~sh :
rates stead 1 2
four- ear
percent, a
4- Y
. • at the June
2 25 sessmn.
The Labor De
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..
panme~t s
Producer Price Index, wh1ch
measures the costs of goods
before . they , reach store
shelves, leaped 1 .~ percent in
~ay, the btggest m.crease m
SIX m~~ G_
allopm&amp; energyan_
pnces,_wh.ichare
especta11 y squeezmg bustnessi1 profits
. ~ .figured
, promi.
nen Ym
mdex s p•ckup.
On Wall Street, !he news
sent stocks tumbhng. The
Do J
·
.
w one~ mdustnal s lost
:gsi~ 3bmts to close at
• · ·

fo!

~~h~n

manufacturers and

demandd from would-be buy··
ers_ an - more recent! Y The F~deral Re serve nsmg mon~age rates, are
reponed that mdustnal pro- adding to bmlder headaches·
duct ion fell 0 2 percent ·
··s ut"Jd ers are
.
d ·
h·
. ·
. m
omg t e
May, the second stratght exactly the right thing _
monthly dechne. Plant s cutting back·· said David
·
· ' economist
· at
opera· te d at on1Y a 79 ·4 per- Setders
chtef
cent · capacity, the lowest the National Association of
since September 2005 after Home Builders. "Now I' m a
the Gulf Coast hurricanes. little more worried on the ·
And, there was more fallout interest rate froni. 1 think
from a deeply depressed we'll see mortgage rates
housmg market.
recede to some degree ff
Th
be
f
h
·
· be a tougher road
·
. e num r o new ous- not, 11· will
mg projects started in May for hou si ng than antici atfell3.3 percent to a 975,000 ed," Seiders said.
p
pace - the lowest ,· n 17
The h -·
1
h
ousmg s ump as
years - as builders pulled been the bi est dra on the
back further. Builders are economy. J~i~h hasgslowed
smanmg as unsold homes as sharply m recent months.

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·:; POMEROY -. Jimmy A. Heckert, 70, Pomeroy, passed

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~ He was born on June 10, 1937, in Weston, W.Va., son of
Jhe late Charles A. and Ruby B. (Fortney) Heckert. He was
graduate of Southeast High School in Ravenna, Ohio, class
of 1955_. He was employed as a millwright by General.
J.fotors m Lordstown, Ohio, fo~ 30 years. He loved to hunt
·""d fish and he dearly loved his grandchildren.
In_ a_ddition to his parents, he was preceded by a sister,
_Patncm Heckert Whisman and father-in-law, fred Riggs. ·
, He IS survived by. his wife of 47 years, Edith Riggs
Heckert. Pomeroy: children, James A. Heckert and h.is wife
Rhonda of Rootstown, Ohio; Cynthia Lynn Sullivan and h~
~us~and, AI~ of Pon Clinton, Ohio; grandch.ildren. Spencer
Sulhvan, Cr.ug, _Clark and Kaley Heckert; mother-m-law,
. Lutchie S~cy R1ggs; step ~dchildren, Ashlea and l)'ler
B~ankenshtp; brothers ,and sJsters-in-law, David and Carol
· Riggs. PomeT?Y• and Hem and Gloria Riggs, Windham,
Ohio. alon~ w1th many nieces and nephews.
. ,
There wtll be no .calhng hours and no service is scheduled at this time. AITaJ~gements were handled by Anderson
McD~iel F':lner~ Ho~e in Pomeroy:
; Online registry IS available at www.andersonmcdaniel.com

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Charlene Hoellieh/photo
' on was gtven o .
vo unteers setVing 25, 20, 15 and 10 years at t(le 35th annual anniversary of the
prog":'m. Recogmzed were left to nght, front , Rose N1day, Mary Loudner, and Marilyn Powell, 25 years; Opal Tyree, 20
Yea_t:S, and ~thy Anthony, 15 years~ and sta,ndtng. Gladys Cumings and Rosalie Story 15 and Jottn Bentley uaft.
6 unch, bane Dill and Rita Slav1n 10 years .
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Special

R. Vlninl

recogn "ti

·Community dinner

declared safe, including
Ohio-grown tomatoes. · ,
· • The manager of a local
restaurant who wished to
remain unidentified said
customers didn' t seem too
.
r - - - - : - - - - - - , concerned by the outbreak
and though the restaurant
continued to sell tomatoes.
those
tomatoes
were
· checked to be sure they
were grown in a state which
the fDA bas declared safe
in this situation.
In add.ition to tracking
where die restaurant's tomatoes come from, tho manager said the stem is removed
from the produce before it's
washed, soaked and then
rinsed again just to be safe .
The FDA said types of

Birth announced
.
.

Patricia and Richard fink
Lancaster and Daniel
~;lilen!&gt;ler of Racine are tlie
maternal grandparents and
and Debbie Bader of
l.alncasler are the paternal
grandparents. The infant has
a sibling; McKenzie .Pierce.
-10, of Lancaster.

tomatoes· grown in suspect
stales ·which consumers
should avoid are raw red
plum , red Roma or red
round tomatoes . Safe for
consumption are grape
tomatoes, cherry tomatoes
and tomatoes sold with the
vine still attached. Go to
the FDA's website at
http :/lwww.fda.gov for an
updated list of . states
declared safe, unsafe and
states reponing i.llnesses
linked to. the suspect
tomatoes.

l'f.ltFOR.~-... ; Ull\f'P.\'Tkh

Fireworksfromr.A•

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nights of entertainment
roward the fireworks. disjnay. Gloeckner will match
4onated performance fees
from local musician Troll,
Kip Grueser of K&amp;D
Karaoke and Mark Ward,
ftost of the bar's Open
fdike night, and
serve
. on
Saturday.
lunch

will

Proceeds from the lunch
will also go toward· the fireworks d.isplay. She win
also hold an auction and
other fundraising activities
this weekend,
The fireworks display
will conclude a day's ~
of Independence Day activiti~ The associatioo plans

events in Dave Diles Park
beginning~y ~"'the after-

noon, includlbg-Storytelling
by Donna Wilson, a karaoke
contest, live music and a •
patriotic pro~
The asSOCiation will also
hold the ttaditiona1 July 4
parade, and award prizes to
outstanding entries.
I

luncheon with the trio
'Truly Saved" composed
of Craig Harriso·n, Kathy
McDaniel. and Jackie
White singing. Numerous
door prizes donated by
local businesses were
awarded to conclude the
event.

from Page At

The gist of the meeting ·s
d.ivisive lone was voiced by
another unidentified citizen
who said :· "You guys want
th.is annexation. we don't: ··
During the meeting.
Councilman Jim Harmon
said for him the proposal
would go forward or end last
night based on what the people wanted, whether or not
the people heard had an .

Smith said· the FDA can
actually take a : biotype" of
the produce and track
down the outbreak like a
fingerprint might link a
person to a crime. There
has been no announcement
yet as to where the bacteria
originated.

impact on the deci sion of
village officials to move forward or stop was not known
when the meeting d.isinte- ,
grated into disagreement.
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SHOWTIMES FOR WED. 61181118
1lii INCRFJJIRII

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Rita Slavin for I 0 years.
Kathy McDaniel , · the
Partners in Care coordinator, also recognized volunteers who work in the program for those with memory deficiency and presented
·
gifts to each one.
A program followed the

Tomatoes rrom Page Al

; MIDDLEPORT- Middleport Oturch of Christ will bold
a tree ~mm~ty dinner from ~:30 to 6 p.m. on June 27 at
~Family Life Center, South Fifih Avenue·and Main Street.
~ The menu will be turkey hot dogs with sauce and cheese,
potato salad, cole ·slaw and a dessert.
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LANCASTER- Jeff and
Julia Hensler .Bader of ·
#:..l.anca!;ter · announce the
of a daughter, Raelynn
on May 16. She
::~~~ 7 pounds, 2

Niday, and Marilyn Powell
with 25 years service;
Bunny Kuhl and Opal
Tyree with 20 years of volunteering;
Dorothy
Anthony, Gladys Cumings
and Rosalie Story for 15
years, and John Bentley,
Mary Bunch, Irene Dill and

used a piece of property to the township. Still. resiassessed at $41 ,290 which dents felt raising taxes in
meant taxes would go up any amount were unaccept$127 on the half.year if able ;md the arguments of a
moved from the township to larger population being
the village.
enticing to businesses , such
Mayor J. Scott Hill said it as a grocery store, locating
was his belief the village in Racine were d.isputed. An
would not gain any addi- unidentified citizen pointed
.tiona! taxes for the 'first out Middleport couldn't
eight years dne to some of keep a grocery story and it
those taxes still being paid had over 2,000 residents.

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SYRACUSE - 1be Syracuse Community Center will
ve an ice ·Cream social Sunday with serving from II a.m.
6 p.m. Six flavors of homemade ice cream will be served
~ong with sandwiches and desserts.
.
In conjunction with the .social, a: blind draw double-elimination comhole tournament will be held at 2 p.m. Signup
. will end ~t I :30 p.m.. Entry fee is $!0 per person. Prize
·money will be detemuned by the nlll!lber of entrants. For
more information or to sign up call 992-2365.

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Volunteers rrom Page AI

·Annexation

Social, tournament

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~:Ct!.i'l~!':i~:n~J

~~way at hts residence on June 4, 2008.

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well as foreclosed homes

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The economy's problems

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Local
Briefs
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The Daily Sentinel

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- a blend of high-costseand
slow growth that ensures
the Federal Reserve's most
like!
.
·
. Y move«?-" mterest rates
next week wtll be ·no move
whatsoever
· Be
anlc:
Chairman
8 em e
n
d h'
11
h
an
1~ co e_agues ave
~~ mcrc:&lt;~sll_lgly clear
~ .me med to cut
of aggravatisn ~:ti~~ f~
theothe haodgboosti ·
.
r &amp; , d II _ ng ~tes
too soon 1o ·ten o m11alton
woold h n
al
u an econ~my
:~~ by bousmg,
t
'
cJal woes.
'The Fed · ·
bo "

Saturday, June -l.4, 2008, at Overbrook Center in Middleport.
, She was bomAug.25, 1933, in Pomeroy, daughter of the
.~te Ho~ard and Minnie Nelson Vining. . ·
. Survtvm~ are her brother and sister-in-law, Eldon and
j.Vanda Vmmg of Rutland; several nieces and nephews· and
. She gave special recogoi• spec.ial caregiver, Terri Smith of Syracuse.
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:. Bestdes her parents, she was preceded in death by five llon to volunteers serving in
the program for 25. 20, 15,
SISters and three brothers.
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and
I 0 years and presented
S~rvice will be at 2{'.m. on Wednesday, June 18, 2008, at
~w1_ng Fune~ H?me m Pomeroy with Rev. Doug Cox offi- .them with certificates ,and
flowers.
Ciall~g. Bun a! will be in Rocksprings Cemetery.
·
Included in 'that group
Fnends called fror.n 6-9 p.m. on Tuesday at the funeral
were
Jackie Hildebrand,
· .
horne.
Mary
Loudner, . Rosy

Heaven is only nine holes away

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after. the latest batch of eco-

ahe~esal~ln~es ~arrel~ n~mtc d barometers were and high prices for fuel and pile up, adding to 'already
industri:'J 1~ti;~st~~t ~ rehease Tuesday.. T.hat's raw ',"aterials are taking a swollen supply. Sagging

:bommlro.ntononFeb.l9,1938andd.iedJu~ 12 ·2008 t

·POMEROY ~ Pbyllis R. Vming, 74, of Pomeroy, died

Letters to the editor are welcome. They should be less
than J()() won:ls. All letters are subject to ediLing, nmst be
. signed, and include addre s~· and ttdephone number. No
'. unsigned letters will be published. Le~rs should be in '
It's like liv~ng in park course;, build cemeteries
I get a lot of million-dol·
:good taste. addressing issues, not personalities. Letters of lar ideas. I ~et them all the
except for the weekly around them. Make the can
thanks to organiZfttioos and iruiividunls will not be accept- · time. Why, tf I bad a dime
smashing of a window and paths out of tombstones.
ed for publication.
for every million-dollar idea
walking out in your back You' d never have to worry
yard and fmding a guy about broken windows, and
I've ever 'bad, I'd be il mil- ·
wearing plaid shorts, a knee . the dearly departed wouht
lionilire. But someoae's
Jim
always out ~ o:ad,Y .10
, brace, a polo shin and a like all the visitors they' re
Mullen
squash your dream, .always
cap
digging suddenly getting.
baseball
ready to giv.e you some
through your azaleas with
"Did you come to see me
Reader Services
~IJSIIIS 21~
song and dance about bow it
the business end of a golf Jiril; after all these years?" '
will never work, always
club.
"WeU, not just you. !lost
.
eonK11o11 Polley I
.
pooh-poohing an .idea awhile back.. 1 took a
It surprised me to learn a ball in here somewhere
aur matn conoem in all 8tonJs ts 10 Published every alafteiBfmna100onn, Monday
through Friday, 111 'Court Street,
.because no one else is doing vicioos cut with my S-iron, that many of the people · Have you seen itT'
·· ·'
be acicunde. ff you lcnow of an error Pomeroy, Ohio.
Second-clus
it.
Of
oourse,
no
QDe dsc is
who
buy
the~
houses
don't
"Still got that hook. huh!
the ball bit a tree, came
in a story, call tile newsroom at (740) pos10gO Pllid .. " " " -·
doing
it
.
t
hey
didll't
have
even
play
golf.
I
guess
at
Try
two rows up. On top of
Slraight back. and hit J;Dy
.... 3 • The • I · ~ PriU .and
992~56.
the
idea.
night
it's
pretty
quiet.
But
the Ol'tio New~~Jepe~ ~asncialion.
a guy named Winslow." ,
partner, John, right in the
A
few
years
ago;
Willie
, k
Send . . . . conwc·as
I'm
thinking
of
dragging
John started to co~
forehead.
He
chopped
like
a
Our ~~Win ........
Nelson started driving to bis baR of bricks.
John's
lifeless
body
to
the
lioos
to
:The
Dolly
·
111
Coun
.
around.
I d.idn 't have any
(140}--2151.
$Ret, Poii.,Op, Ohio ..5769.
concert dates on a bus lhal
nearest house to call for smelling salts so I took off a
fi
was
right
then
that(
got
D 1 1 II: -Lilli• .w:
burned biofuel. Everybody a million-dollar idea. You help, another thought h.it shoe and held my sock
S...olpllon A-.
laughed and said he was never know what's going to me. lo the big cathedrals under his nose.
0... _,.,
'10»
crazy. Well, he is crazy, but uigger a miUion-doUar idea and churches in Europe,
""':hat
you trying te
'115M
what's that got to do with they bury important people do, kill me? he said.
• ~ Olarlorle · E4 12
having
your
bathtub
·.
.,..,
50'
biofuel? They· re not laugh- oveJflow. having an a pie right in the chiircb. You . ''I'm sorry, I hooked right
A F • · Bliafl-. Ext. t•
Sen1or
A t • · 8ettl Sefvent, Ext. 13
ing DOW.
fall on your head, s
- g · look. down to discover ·the mto the tree."
0...-'10.2l'
When banks started giv- hot coffee in your ap. large piece of slate yGu 're
0...,...
'101.111
"I'm not talking about the
SYaa. . . lhauld ,.... tl ld . .
ing out half-million-dollar knocking your golf ~u y stand.ing on is . actuaUy a ball. I'm talking about your
Aduertiaing
_., .. '-"_No_ .IDOlt,gages to people with Se-nseless - it's just'( - tombstone. You jump aside
'S . . . . ~fi81rio.&amp;t.15
s~k. ~at thing is deadly:·
M:::i\plkMtl:lffMit*I&amp;Z S i n no down payment, no domdling.
@nly to land on another one_
.
· 0 IS . . . . -~&amp;UI
While you were out 1
inoome
and
no
assets,
I
As
I
stood
over
John
·s
The
bodies
are
under
the
had
this great idea."
.iludr a.t. E4 10
don't remember anyone body it came to me floor. in the walls. I never
"~s it have anything to
. . . Subecilptio.,
calling it a crazy idea. I cemetery • golf courses. did fmd out what you had to do w1th Willie Nel'son'"
. ......... c...nty
ki rid of wish Willie Nelson Today, the trend in golf do to get buried in the
ne of these days. it
13'3226
Charlorlel~. Ext. 12 .
bad thought. of it. People courses is to build them in church floor, but I'm pretty Wt(J. .
'64.20
would have-laughed at him, the middle of housing sure that whatever it is. I'm
52Weel&lt;s
' 127.11
(Jim Mullen is the aurlwr
E..... :
called him crazy and developments. You' ve seen not'doing it.
of
" II Ta~s a Village idiot:
.-sOmydailysentinel.com
Countr
maybe we· d be spared the places I'm talking
And when John got hit in Cony;hcatrng the Simple
13 Weeks
'53.ss·
some of this mess we re in. about big, elqlensive hous- the bead; two things came Life .?nd "Bob(&lt; finy
26 Weeks
' 107.10
My crazy idea hit me es surrounding meticulous- together: instead of build.ing · Tattoo. You can reach him
52 Weeks
'214.21 '
www.m~)Sdtlliuel.com
while I was out playing golf ly manicured golf courses. houses around a golf aJ jim_mullen@mywata;m.)

.

Wh ASHINGTON (AP) -

John Chaltes Handley. Ph.D.
A~TA, Ga. -

The Daily Sentinel • Page As

~onomy struggles with rising prices, slow growth

•
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LETTERS TO THE
EDITOR

•

www.mydailysentinel.com

....•'

Volunteers

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Haunted 1bealre

come to meeting at
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llox Office: Gil 2nd Aw.
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�The Daily Sentinel

LocAL • STATE

PageA6
Wednesday, June 18, 2008

i

Wednesday ••• Mostly
sunny. A chance of showers
and thunderstorms in the
afternoon. Highs in the
· lower 70s. West winds 10 to
15 mph. Chance of rain 30

peroent

Wedaeday lli&amp;ht...PartlY
cloudy. A slight chance of
showers and thunderstotms
in the evening. Lows in the
upper 40s. Chance of rain 20
pen:-ent.
Tllllnday...Partly sunny
with a 20 percent chance of

showers. Highs in the mid
70s.
·
TbUI'Iiday ni&amp;ht...Partly
cloudy. Lows in the lower
50s. Southwest winds 5 to
10 ~h.

Friday ·
tlanup
Saturcbiy.-Partly cloudy.
Highs in the lower 80s.
. Lows in the IIJ¥!~50s.
Sldunlay 11Jcbt Mostly
cloudy with a chance of
showers and thunderstorms.
Lows in the mid 50s.
CbaDce of rain 30 pc;rcent.

Local Stocks
. . \Hf&amp;EI:-G.11

Ohio v-,....., Corp. (HAS-

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P 1 I o ·(HYIEI ~ • •
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claladoiaaiW....., .
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G lft: P 111(740)441oM41....S
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PI
lllllfi04)174-GI74.
111n 11ar we.

Meb lire Willie RandolpJI, Page B6

Dana~

the presiderf
of Myers :
Motors sits in
the driver's ::.
seat of one .•
of the com- ::

Wednesday, June 18, 2008

~

~early 100 After dominating division, Marauders dominate All-TVC
cars compete
s- REPORT
.
·
·
at Skyline
JWI'

pany's elec-:

tric cars July

7, 2006 in :
Tallmadge. {)hio is aboUt

SPORTSOMYOAILYSENTINEL.COM

to let three- :·.
wheeled
'!
electric vehicles on the - ·
road in theS8
times of
. hlgli
gas pnces .
and envii'OI'h~
mental con-.

...

cems. .
AP photo

Ohio to allow fuel-efticierit
3~wheeled vehicles on roads §
BY STEPHEN MAJORS
ASSOCIATED PRESS wRITER

COLUMBUS - As the
price of gas continues to
rise, Ohio is preparing 'to
welcome
fuel-efficient,
three-wheeled vehicles onto
its roads.
The nascent movement to
promote the small, cheap
vehicles, long popular in ·
China and India, has been
stalled in Ohio -albeit ·
unintentionally.
Threewheelers aren 'I allowed on
the J'OII(!s because lltey lrl
a specific designation: They
dQn't classify as motoreycles becalise they Jack .a
saddle, and lltey can't be
tenned automobiles because
they dotft satisfy state safe--.
ty regulations.
.
J;lov. . lied Stricldand ; s
expected to sign a bill next
week that classifies vebicles
that ha,y~, seats as motorcycles:''eiiabling t:hree-wheeiers to join that group. The
new law will take effect in
September.
Gas-powered versions of
three-wheelers cost about
$I OOOO d
gbl 45
• an get rou ·Y
miles per gallon. Prioed at
approximately
$~,000
each, the electric versions
are more expensive and can
run for about 30 miles on a
.
ha~
smg1e c.-ce. ·
Unlike motorcycles, the
vehicles have an enclosed
~='1a!:
drivers will have •to wear a

. $250andcosts,30daysinJail.27su~probalion,phy.
cont veh. intox.; DavtdA. Smith, Racme, $20, failure to control; Joshua T. Smith, Racine, $20 and costs, uaffic cont. dev.
I signs; Kristen A. Smith, Lexington, Ky., $30 and costs.
speeding; Steven '1'. Snyder, Westeville. $30 and costs, speeding; Anthony C. Sowers, Columbus, $30 and costs, seat belt
violation; Hanna M. Spiekard, Novi. Mich., $30 and costs,
imothy M. Spires, Rutland, $20 and costs, tinted
M. Stanley, Brunswick, $30 ~ costs. sp ee 1!na;
tone, Pomeroy. $30 and costs, unproper taggmg;
Adam L. Strader, Westerville, $30 and costs. speeding; ·
Christ.Opher M. Styer, Pomeroy, $30 and costs, speeding;
Susan L. Synold, Guysville, $30 and costs, speeding.
Raymond N. Tate, Mansfield, $30 and costs, speeding;
Macy A. Taylor, Pomeroy, $20 and costs, failure to yield right
of way; Adrienne A. Tenis, Athens, $30 and costs, speeding;
Kathleen E. Tharp, Waterville, $30 and costs, speeding; Paul
W. Thaxton, Racine, $30 and costs, seat belt violation; f&gt;atrick
J. Theiler, Charlotte, NC, $30 and costs, speeding; David R.
Thomas, Middleport, $20 and costs, assured clear di&amp;tance;
Deangelo L. Thompson, Mi~ 180 days. in jail, 177
· "'~lumbu $30 and
suspended,. probati
.
on; Jeffre
rey A· ~vts, ~
s,
.
costs, speeding; Stephan W. Vandine, O&gt;lumbus, $20 and
costs, failure to register; Jack M. V).suri, Saginaw, MiclL, $30
and costs s~g; Victoria L. Vollmar, Weston, $30 and
costs, speed::leSarah K. Wachter, Reedsville, $30 and costs,
speeding; I
y Wadsworth, O&gt;lumbus, $30 and costs,
speeding; Brian E. Wallace, Lowen, $30 and costs. spmling;
Tyrone Waller, Charlotte, NC. $30 and costs, speeding;
Alyson 'S. White, O&gt;Iumbus, $30 and costs. spm!ing; belmet for lite ftrSl year and
Richard A. White, Pomeroy. $30 and costs, se&lt;il belt violalioo; pass a motorcycle skills test.
JB Whitehouse, Mc:Coonelsville, $30 and oosts, ~peeding;
The electric version,
Robert L. Williams, Rutland, $95, 30 days in jail, 29 sus- which has a smaller raJige,
pended, probation, diSOtderly conduct; Charles E. WoOOnan, is tailored to commuters,
Galena, $30 and ~sts, speeding; Michael J. Wyatt,
Middlepm. $30 and costs, seat belt violation; Erin E. Young,
New Haven, W.Va., $30 and costs, 'lpe"ding; Martin M. Zain,
Pickcrington, $30 and costs, ~ing.

Local Weather

Bl

The Daily Sentinel

•

IT::Jx:

I

'J\i.Comaty Juiiior Golf' recap, , . . B6

.

MEIGS COUNIY COUKI NEWS
POMEROY -Meigs County ,Coun Judge Steven L.
Story recently processed the following cases:
·
Leonard R. Morris, Lawback, W.Va., $30 and costs. se&lt;11
belt violation; Terry W. Mullins, Dexter. $25, drug abuse,
$350 and costs, 30 days in jail, 27 suspended, probation, DWI
and/or drugs of abuse, $30 and costs, probation, seat belt violation; James A. Myers, Reedsville, S50 and costs. hunting
w/OO.t valid natural resources license; Patricia A. Nagley,
Toledo, $30 and costs, speeding; Julie Napper, Pomeroy, $30
. and costs, fail to display dog tag; Rhonda F. Neece,
Middleport, $20 and costs, stop sign; ~eremy T. _Northup,
Racine, $20 and costs, assured clear distance; Mtchael A.
Norville, Poineroy, $30 and costs, seat belt violation; Scott
W. Payne, Racine, $350 and costs, 180 days in jail. 177 suspended, probation, license suspended. DWI and/or dru~s of
abuse; Jospeh D. Phillips, Syracuse, $20 and costs, tmted
~;Lori L. Pierce, Middl~port, $100~~ 180da~s in
jail, 179 suspended, probation, domesuc vrolence; yugi! E.
Pilson, Thppers Plains, $30 and costs, seal belt ~lation;
Otristine Porterfield, O&gt;lumbus, $30 and costs, speeding.
Jeremi R. Prater, Reedsville, $70, P.robation, disorderly
conduct, $200 and costs, 60 days in jatl, 57 suspended, probation, driving under suspension; Larry A. Proffitt,
Sissonville; W.Va., $30 and costs, speeding; Jeffrey M.
Rabatin, Charleston, W.Va., $30 and costs, speeding;
Jennifer L. Rachuba, Deleware, $30 and costs, speeding;
Eric A. Rector, O&gt;lumbus, $30 and oosts, speeding; Laura
A. Reed, Tornado, W.Va., $30 and costs, sr.eOOing; Loretta
L. Reitmire, Pomeroy, $25 and costs, failure to control;
Crystal D. Richmond, Pomeroy, $100 and costs, 30 days in
jail, suspended, probation, phy. cont. veh. intox; William S.
Richter, Holbrook, Pa., $30 and costs, speeding; Roben E.
Roach, Columbus, $30 and costs, speeding; Jessica P.
Roberts, Middlepolt, $20 and costs, stop sign; Donald J.
Roush, Reedsville, $30 and costs, hunting w/out valid natural resources license, $50 and costs, hunting w/out special
pennit; Gary L. Roush, Racine, $20 and costs, traffic cont.
!lev. I signs; lohntly .R. SBllders, Rudand, $10 Blld oosl!i,
s~ng; Darrell R. Sayre, Racine, $30 and costs, seat belt
vtolation; Shannon L. Scholderer, Middlepott, $85, 180
days in jail, 177 suspended, probation, theft; Thomas A.
Schoonover, Middlepott, $20 and costs, display plates I
valid sticker; Mary A. Schuler, Rutland, $150 and costs,
disorderly conduct; Amanda B. Searles, Middlepott, $30
and costs, seat belt violation; Brent E. Sears, Charleston,
W.Va.. $30 and costs, speeding; Ernest .Sellers, Long
Bottom. $30 and costs, seat belt violation.
Kimberly C. Sellers, Portland, $200 and costs, 10 days in
jail, seven suspended, probation, driving under suspeilsion;
Sherrie L. Sellers, Black C~k. NC. $30 and costs, speeding;
Lawrence B. Serl&gt;in. O&gt;Iumbus. $30 and costs, speedillj!;
CalebT.Shuler,Middleport,$450andcosts,l80dllysinjail.
In suspended, probation.lice~:dl:nded, DUI; Cecilia J.
Sieh. O&gt;lumbus, $30 and costs, s
g; Steven H. Sigmon,
Penysburg. $30 and coSts, speeding; Keye L. Simpkins.
De
. leware. $30 and costs, ~g; Wesley ~isson. Pomeroy.

Inside

while the gas-powered version is more of an a!J-purpose vehicle.
·
Calls for a change to the
law began with Richard
Runyon. the .owner of
Dick's Suzuki in Leesburg
for 31 years. Runyon
ordered six three-wheeled
vehicles from Trifun Inc.• a
Aorida-based company that
manufactures the vehicles
in China.
Compared with a motor·
cycl~ or a car, the Trifun is a
"super'' deal, Runyon said.
lt can be driven year-round,
has heating and air oonditiOoing, and costs less than
most cars and motolcycles.
"It's a savings thllt Ohio
was going to get cheated out
of," Runyon said.

Runyon told State Rep. have a top speed of over 60
David
Daniels,
a mph, get roughly 45 mill£
RepubJi.can
from per gallon and carry abolll
Greenfield, that the legisla- seven gallons of gas.
~
tive j!litch was blocking
Trifun hopes to launch 8JI
· adopuon of the vehicles.
electric v.ersion later this
Trifun recently began ' year.
production of three-wheelAn
electric
three-!
ers and hopes to sell 3,000 wheeled vehicle sold by
vehicles this year, said Myers
Motors
in
company . President Tighe Tallmadge goes for aboUt
Estes.
$35,000. It has a top speea
"It finally started getting of over 75 lll{'h and tak~
to a point when we were about six to .erght hours tQ
seeing. gas at $2.50 that be fully charged.
.;, ·
this started to make . Backers of the vehicles
sense," Estes said. ..Now are eyeing other parts · Of
that it's at $4, it really Ohio law they say neeil
makes sense."
changing in order to mak:e
The company sells three them more viable.
·
versions of the three- · With the change, OhiO
wheeled vehicles for about moves into line with most
$10,000 each. All three other states.

Rapid.~.Reliable •.• Re5ponsible
Holzer CJiniCs· Urgent Care provides .I;O!Jiuli!jdc'*-.A•.g--lilll!l to

quality health care fOr Allergic ReliCtion., Bums.
•

, Injuries. Spraias, strains and - ...

All on a walk-in-basis 1 days per week.

ltollrd Oaltifled Plr'(Sks.ns

Boston beats Lakers to capture 17th NBA championship

f

131

F'eft.IW

92

ExpeJ #en€«1 Technicians

sr.re

A season ago; there was a
three-way
tie for the TriBY Seem WCII.FE
SPORTS CORRESPONDENT
Valley Conference Ohio
Division crown. In 2008,
SlEWART - As severe ' the Meigs Marauders won
··, passed the title outright, sharing
thunderstorms
through the area, nature's with !JO one, and they were
FtreWOits provided a back- rewarded with more selecStory
Bolin
Evans
drop aeriaf display for the tions than any other team
fans, while on the track and a clean sweep of the
nearly 100 cars put on yet yearly awards on the All- brought home the award. selection from '07 .
anothec explosive show at TVC Ohio list.
The difference is, like the , Senior Aaron Story com- .
Bill~ JarreU's playground at
The Marauders tore TVC crown, they ' re not pleted
an
e)tcellent
sharing it this year as Marauder career this seaSkyline Speedway.
&lt;?~ciafly IM:coming a through the league this sea- junior Bryan DeLong alone son with Dunfee. and he
Chilhcothe resident this son, losing just one time in holds the title of Offensive was named to the all. past ~eek, Danny Smith 10 divisional
games. Player of the Year, and he league team for the first
made tt 5-for-5 in the out- Accordingly, they landed makes the AII-TVC list for time. Junior J.T. Evans also
l&amp;w prints on the Skyline five players on this year's the first time.
made the team for the first
&amp;igh-banks, while defend- all-conference
team,
Completing the awards time.
ing 'champ Larry Bond including all four of their sweep, Meigs .head coach
Dunfee; Story, DeLong,
claimed the Late Model team captains.
Jeremy Grimm was named and Evans were all team
IDain and Mike Mason took
Senior ace Austin Dunfee· Coach of the Year for the captains in '08.
the Vintage American ~ace h:':d a ~tellar seaso~ op th.e se£ood year in a . m w.
Belpre had four p!~yers
Car (VARC) · feaiUft.' pttcher s mound, and for Grimm ·won his third make the AII-TVC team.
Marietta's Mark',.Dickson his effo.ns he was named Jeague title in four seasons while Wellston, who shared
took the AMRA M . ted De'.enstve PI ayer o f t he - and finished with an over- the division crown with
main, Jeremy Blake c·1"'tii'iheo~..y,.,.,.,.--K~
·
ts se.ectton
to the all record of 14-8.
Meigs in '07, had three. .
~kin~~~n J!:~~~-cJI: All-TVC team was his sec- Eleven of the 17 total Nelsonville-York
and
Eric Randolphlllle photo
pers and Ron Pickens ond in as many seasons.
selections on this year's Vinton County each had Meigs senior Austin Dunfee follows throLJgh on .a pitch dLJr·
claimed the mini-wedges.
In 2007, Dave Poole was list· were juniors, one of two players on the Jist, and ing a baseball game against Vinton County on April 29 in
:. At the sta11 of the sprint co-Offensive Player of the them being Clay Bolin, Alexander, the other team Rocksprings. Dunfee was named Def~nsive Player of the
lnain Aaron Higgins and Year for' Meigs, and once wbo joins Dunfee as the witb a share of the '07 title, Year in the Tri'Valley Conference Ohio Division and has
!(eitb Baxter locked wheels again the Marauders have Marauders' other repeat had one.
made the AII-TVC team for. the second season in a row.
. ~d each took a couple ·
sunultaneous roll~vers. to
.NBA Rnals - Game 6
'bring . out the red. On the
r:stal1 Jimmy Nier jlUDped
mto the lead, then Danny
Smith blasted by both Nier
and Naber going into tum
BY TOM WITHERS
three. Naber rode the high
"SSOCIATED PRESS
side of the three-wide
excursion with his momenBOSTON - On a new
tum launching him back
parquet
floor below aging
into the lead at the end of
championship
banners, the
the ftrst circuit.
. Smith then implemented a Boston Celtics won their
slide. job on a lap three 17th NBA tide and a first
resta11 and checked~ut on one - at last - for Paul
Pier;ce, Kevin Garnett and
II!!;~ Qf ~.(iel4. Smith, Ray
Allen
their Big
one of the originil outlaws,
Three
brandished all the horsefor
a
power of his Doug Williams
n
e
w
Trucking mount to fight off
generation.
. PI. nr•' ...
Sktl ....
,,
After
22 long
years,
S.OK'm BRIEFS
lite NBA .
has gmie
J,OOSMeigsFlag
green.
Lifted
RegJstnttion
' by · earsplitting
· Registration is now open
chants
f~ the 2008 flag · football
of "Beat
ieason to boys and gitls in
L.A."
jrades 'f.-6 beginning with Canes WIN 4-2 f r o m
die 2008-09 school year.
!.heir
The registratiO\J fee is $40 adoring crowd, which
per player and ~25 for each included Bostop legends
additional sibling:
. Bill Russell John Havlicek
The games will be played and JoJo White, the Celtics
\' starting in September on the concluded a shocking
Meigs High School .practice rebound of a season with a
field, and the final date for stunning 131-92 blowout
regis.tration js July 1st. over the Los Angeles
Payment must also be Lakers in Game 6 on
received by July 1st. A Tuesday night.
workout/combine will be
With
the
outcome
lie1d on July 26th at 9 a.m. assured, Boston fans sang
at Meigs Hi.gh School. All into·the night as if they were
checks must be made out to in a pub on nearby Canal
Meigs
Flag
Football · Street. They serenaded the
.
.
.
.
.
~~
League, P.O. Box 751,
Boston
Celt1cs
forward
Paul
Pierce
shouts
as
he
holds
the
MVP
trophy
as
the
Boston
Celtics
celebrate
their
131·92 wi n
PI Ma ... R r'' Bl
Pomeroy. Ohio 45769.
over the Los Angeles Lakers to win the NBA basketball Championship in Boston on Tuesday.
To register online go · to
www.meigsffi.com, and for
more infonnation go 1o the
website or call 740-5411222.

.

Health care

11114

.•

of-the-Att Dlagr.ostic

Tesm

Adllanced Lllbor11tory Sentices

tn:bt •allipolil matlp mrtbune.
«bt tolnt tlltasant Jlelfsttr

and The DaDy Sentinel
have launched a new page every
Friday called ''Faith and Family".
If you have a testimonial story,
life-changing event about yourself
·or even a poeni that you would
like to share please email to:

kkeUy@mydailytribone.com
· nfields@mydailyregister.com .
hoeftich@mydailysentinel.com
·Limit your story to .
500-750 words.
~

Dodgers end slump,
outlast Reds 3-1

.Eagle hoops camp
t -shirts available

BY JOE KAY
ASSOCIATED PRESS

: CHESTER - Camp 'flihirts from the recent 2008
J2stern Eagle .basketball
~ are available at Baum ·
Lumber during regular busitless hours for those who
baven 't yet picked theirs up.

..
CoNTACI'Us .
1-740-446-2342 ext. 33

''

, _ - oportsOmydallyseniinel.com

'loPrtt Ste!f

Ettc Awldolph, Spol1s W.rlter
(7..0) ~. ""'· 33

• • 4l\•h•mvc.talt,MI'Itii Mtl.com

·trpl Will ... a, Spol1s Writer
(740) 446-23-42. 11&lt;1. 33
~Omvdlllytrlbuoo.com

1..-y c-, Sp Mta Writer
(7-IQ) "*-2342.11&lt;1. 33
lcrumel'ft)"CMMIy;eQI&amp;H;.com

l

AP,.._

Cincinnati Reds first baseman Joey VOtto fields a ground bail hit by Los Angeles Dodger1&gt;'
James Loney in the second inning of a baseball game Tuesday in Cincinnati. Loney was out
at first.

CINCINNATI The
offense was awful. The rotation was unraveling. The
losing streak had reached
five games. The Los
Angeles Dodgers desperately needed someone to do
something special to end the
misery.
Chad Billingsley took
matterS into hand.
The right-hander took a
shutout into the seventh
inning Tuesday night, and
the Dodgers held on for a 31 victory over the Cincinnati
Reds that ended that Q,v~­
game losing streak and pro·
vided a respite from a run of
really bad days.
"Right oow. we' re a team
that's battling through some
injuries ... said Billingsley
(5-7). who gave up a run and

five hits in 6 1-3 innings.
"It's tough."
Billingsley was a brighl
spot on an otherwi se omi ·
nous day for the Dodgers'
rotation . Brad Pennv went
011 the 15-day disabied list
with a sore shoulder. and
Hiroki Kuroda was sent
back to Los Angeles fo r tests .
on his sore shoulder.
With their offense barely
scoring, the Dodgers needed
a stingy perfonnance from ·
Billingsley. who has twice
shut d&lt;Swn the Reds this season. He hadn ' 1 won since he
pitched
seve n 'lwtoul
inn ings in a 4-1 win over the
Reds on May 20 at Dodger
Stadium.
'Thai wa' hig." manager
Joe Torre said. "Somebody \
gomg lo have to pick 'us up .
Before I came on here. I

Pl••eseeleds.Bl

•

�The Daily Sentinel

LocAL • STATE

PageA6
Wednesday, June 18, 2008

i

Wednesday ••• Mostly
sunny. A chance of showers
and thunderstorms in the
afternoon. Highs in the
· lower 70s. West winds 10 to
15 mph. Chance of rain 30

peroent

Wedaeday lli&amp;ht...PartlY
cloudy. A slight chance of
showers and thunderstotms
in the evening. Lows in the
upper 40s. Chance of rain 20
pen:-ent.
Tllllnday...Partly sunny
with a 20 percent chance of

showers. Highs in the mid
70s.
·
TbUI'Iiday ni&amp;ht...Partly
cloudy. Lows in the lower
50s. Southwest winds 5 to
10 ~h.

Friday ·
tlanup
Saturcbiy.-Partly cloudy.
Highs in the lower 80s.
. Lows in the IIJ¥!~50s.
Sldunlay 11Jcbt Mostly
cloudy with a chance of
showers and thunderstorms.
Lows in the mid 50s.
CbaDce of rain 30 pc;rcent.

Local Stocks
. . \Hf&amp;EI:-G.11

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111n 11ar we.

Meb lire Willie RandolpJI, Page B6

Dana~

the presiderf
of Myers :
Motors sits in
the driver's ::.
seat of one .•
of the com- ::

Wednesday, June 18, 2008

~

~early 100 After dominating division, Marauders dominate All-TVC
cars compete
s- REPORT
.
·
·
at Skyline
JWI'

pany's elec-:

tric cars July

7, 2006 in :
Tallmadge. {)hio is aboUt

SPORTSOMYOAILYSENTINEL.COM

to let three- :·.
wheeled
'!
electric vehicles on the - ·
road in theS8
times of
. hlgli
gas pnces .
and envii'OI'h~
mental con-.

...

cems. .
AP photo

Ohio to allow fuel-efticierit
3~wheeled vehicles on roads §
BY STEPHEN MAJORS
ASSOCIATED PRESS wRITER

COLUMBUS - As the
price of gas continues to
rise, Ohio is preparing 'to
welcome
fuel-efficient,
three-wheeled vehicles onto
its roads.
The nascent movement to
promote the small, cheap
vehicles, long popular in ·
China and India, has been
stalled in Ohio -albeit ·
unintentionally.
Threewheelers aren 'I allowed on
the J'OII(!s because lltey lrl
a specific designation: They
dQn't classify as motoreycles becalise they Jack .a
saddle, and lltey can't be
tenned automobiles because
they dotft satisfy state safe--.
ty regulations.
.
J;lov. . lied Stricldand ; s
expected to sign a bill next
week that classifies vebicles
that ha,y~, seats as motorcycles:''eiiabling t:hree-wheeiers to join that group. The
new law will take effect in
September.
Gas-powered versions of
three-wheelers cost about
$I OOOO d
gbl 45
• an get rou ·Y
miles per gallon. Prioed at
approximately
$~,000
each, the electric versions
are more expensive and can
run for about 30 miles on a
.
ha~
smg1e c.-ce. ·
Unlike motorcycles, the
vehicles have an enclosed
~='1a!:
drivers will have •to wear a

. $250andcosts,30daysinJail.27su~probalion,phy.
cont veh. intox.; DavtdA. Smith, Racme, $20, failure to control; Joshua T. Smith, Racine, $20 and costs, uaffic cont. dev.
I signs; Kristen A. Smith, Lexington, Ky., $30 and costs.
speeding; Steven '1'. Snyder, Westeville. $30 and costs, speeding; Anthony C. Sowers, Columbus, $30 and costs, seat belt
violation; Hanna M. Spiekard, Novi. Mich., $30 and costs,
imothy M. Spires, Rutland, $20 and costs, tinted
M. Stanley, Brunswick, $30 ~ costs. sp ee 1!na;
tone, Pomeroy. $30 and costs, unproper taggmg;
Adam L. Strader, Westerville, $30 and costs. speeding; ·
Christ.Opher M. Styer, Pomeroy, $30 and costs, speeding;
Susan L. Synold, Guysville, $30 and costs, speeding.
Raymond N. Tate, Mansfield, $30 and costs, speeding;
Macy A. Taylor, Pomeroy, $20 and costs, failure to yield right
of way; Adrienne A. Tenis, Athens, $30 and costs, speeding;
Kathleen E. Tharp, Waterville, $30 and costs, speeding; Paul
W. Thaxton, Racine, $30 and costs, seat belt violation; f&gt;atrick
J. Theiler, Charlotte, NC, $30 and costs, speeding; David R.
Thomas, Middleport, $20 and costs, assured clear di&amp;tance;
Deangelo L. Thompson, Mi~ 180 days. in jail, 177
· "'~lumbu $30 and
suspended,. probati
.
on; Jeffre
rey A· ~vts, ~
s,
.
costs, speeding; Stephan W. Vandine, O&gt;lumbus, $20 and
costs, failure to register; Jack M. V).suri, Saginaw, MiclL, $30
and costs s~g; Victoria L. Vollmar, Weston, $30 and
costs, speed::leSarah K. Wachter, Reedsville, $30 and costs,
speeding; I
y Wadsworth, O&gt;lumbus, $30 and costs,
speeding; Brian E. Wallace, Lowen, $30 and costs. spmling;
Tyrone Waller, Charlotte, NC. $30 and costs, speeding;
Alyson 'S. White, O&gt;Iumbus, $30 and costs. spm!ing; belmet for lite ftrSl year and
Richard A. White, Pomeroy. $30 and costs, se&lt;il belt violalioo; pass a motorcycle skills test.
JB Whitehouse, Mc:Coonelsville, $30 and oosts, ~peeding;
The electric version,
Robert L. Williams, Rutland, $95, 30 days in jail, 29 sus- which has a smaller raJige,
pended, probation, diSOtderly conduct; Charles E. WoOOnan, is tailored to commuters,
Galena, $30 and ~sts, speeding; Michael J. Wyatt,
Middlepm. $30 and costs, seat belt violation; Erin E. Young,
New Haven, W.Va., $30 and costs, 'lpe"ding; Martin M. Zain,
Pickcrington, $30 and costs, ~ing.

Local Weather

Bl

The Daily Sentinel

•

IT::Jx:

I

'J\i.Comaty Juiiior Golf' recap, , . . B6

.

MEIGS COUNIY COUKI NEWS
POMEROY -Meigs County ,Coun Judge Steven L.
Story recently processed the following cases:
·
Leonard R. Morris, Lawback, W.Va., $30 and costs. se&lt;11
belt violation; Terry W. Mullins, Dexter. $25, drug abuse,
$350 and costs, 30 days in jail, 27 suspended, probation, DWI
and/or drugs of abuse, $30 and costs, probation, seat belt violation; James A. Myers, Reedsville, S50 and costs. hunting
w/OO.t valid natural resources license; Patricia A. Nagley,
Toledo, $30 and costs, speeding; Julie Napper, Pomeroy, $30
. and costs, fail to display dog tag; Rhonda F. Neece,
Middleport, $20 and costs, stop sign; ~eremy T. _Northup,
Racine, $20 and costs, assured clear distance; Mtchael A.
Norville, Poineroy, $30 and costs, seat belt violation; Scott
W. Payne, Racine, $350 and costs, 180 days in jail. 177 suspended, probation, license suspended. DWI and/or dru~s of
abuse; Jospeh D. Phillips, Syracuse, $20 and costs, tmted
~;Lori L. Pierce, Middl~port, $100~~ 180da~s in
jail, 179 suspended, probation, domesuc vrolence; yugi! E.
Pilson, Thppers Plains, $30 and costs, seal belt ~lation;
Otristine Porterfield, O&gt;lumbus, $30 and costs, speeding.
Jeremi R. Prater, Reedsville, $70, P.robation, disorderly
conduct, $200 and costs, 60 days in jatl, 57 suspended, probation, driving under suspension; Larry A. Proffitt,
Sissonville; W.Va., $30 and costs, speeding; Jeffrey M.
Rabatin, Charleston, W.Va., $30 and costs, speeding;
Jennifer L. Rachuba, Deleware, $30 and costs, speeding;
Eric A. Rector, O&gt;lumbus, $30 and oosts, speeding; Laura
A. Reed, Tornado, W.Va., $30 and costs, sr.eOOing; Loretta
L. Reitmire, Pomeroy, $25 and costs, failure to control;
Crystal D. Richmond, Pomeroy, $100 and costs, 30 days in
jail, suspended, probation, phy. cont. veh. intox; William S.
Richter, Holbrook, Pa., $30 and costs, speeding; Roben E.
Roach, Columbus, $30 and costs, speeding; Jessica P.
Roberts, Middlepolt, $20 and costs, stop sign; Donald J.
Roush, Reedsville, $30 and costs, hunting w/out valid natural resources license, $50 and costs, hunting w/out special
pennit; Gary L. Roush, Racine, $20 and costs, traffic cont.
!lev. I signs; lohntly .R. SBllders, Rudand, $10 Blld oosl!i,
s~ng; Darrell R. Sayre, Racine, $30 and costs, seat belt
vtolation; Shannon L. Scholderer, Middlepott, $85, 180
days in jail, 177 suspended, probation, theft; Thomas A.
Schoonover, Middlepott, $20 and costs, display plates I
valid sticker; Mary A. Schuler, Rutland, $150 and costs,
disorderly conduct; Amanda B. Searles, Middlepott, $30
and costs, seat belt violation; Brent E. Sears, Charleston,
W.Va.. $30 and costs, speeding; Ernest .Sellers, Long
Bottom. $30 and costs, seat belt violation.
Kimberly C. Sellers, Portland, $200 and costs, 10 days in
jail, seven suspended, probation, driving under suspeilsion;
Sherrie L. Sellers, Black C~k. NC. $30 and costs, speeding;
Lawrence B. Serl&gt;in. O&gt;Iumbus. $30 and costs, speedillj!;
CalebT.Shuler,Middleport,$450andcosts,l80dllysinjail.
In suspended, probation.lice~:dl:nded, DUI; Cecilia J.
Sieh. O&gt;lumbus, $30 and costs, s
g; Steven H. Sigmon,
Penysburg. $30 and coSts, speeding; Keye L. Simpkins.
De
. leware. $30 and costs, ~g; Wesley ~isson. Pomeroy.

Inside

while the gas-powered version is more of an a!J-purpose vehicle.
·
Calls for a change to the
law began with Richard
Runyon. the .owner of
Dick's Suzuki in Leesburg
for 31 years. Runyon
ordered six three-wheeled
vehicles from Trifun Inc.• a
Aorida-based company that
manufactures the vehicles
in China.
Compared with a motor·
cycl~ or a car, the Trifun is a
"super'' deal, Runyon said.
lt can be driven year-round,
has heating and air oonditiOoing, and costs less than
most cars and motolcycles.
"It's a savings thllt Ohio
was going to get cheated out
of," Runyon said.

Runyon told State Rep. have a top speed of over 60
David
Daniels,
a mph, get roughly 45 mill£
RepubJi.can
from per gallon and carry abolll
Greenfield, that the legisla- seven gallons of gas.
~
tive j!litch was blocking
Trifun hopes to launch 8JI
· adopuon of the vehicles.
electric v.ersion later this
Trifun recently began ' year.
production of three-wheelAn
electric
three-!
ers and hopes to sell 3,000 wheeled vehicle sold by
vehicles this year, said Myers
Motors
in
company . President Tighe Tallmadge goes for aboUt
Estes.
$35,000. It has a top speea
"It finally started getting of over 75 lll{'h and tak~
to a point when we were about six to .erght hours tQ
seeing. gas at $2.50 that be fully charged.
.;, ·
this started to make . Backers of the vehicles
sense," Estes said. ..Now are eyeing other parts · Of
that it's at $4, it really Ohio law they say neeil
makes sense."
changing in order to mak:e
The company sells three them more viable.
·
versions of the three- · With the change, OhiO
wheeled vehicles for about moves into line with most
$10,000 each. All three other states.

Rapid.~.Reliable •.• Re5ponsible
Holzer CJiniCs· Urgent Care provides .I;O!Jiuli!jdc'*-.A•.g--lilll!l to

quality health care fOr Allergic ReliCtion., Bums.
•

, Injuries. Spraias, strains and - ...

All on a walk-in-basis 1 days per week.

ltollrd Oaltifled Plr'(Sks.ns

Boston beats Lakers to capture 17th NBA championship

f

131

F'eft.IW

92

ExpeJ #en€«1 Technicians

sr.re

A season ago; there was a
three-way
tie for the TriBY Seem WCII.FE
SPORTS CORRESPONDENT
Valley Conference Ohio
Division crown. In 2008,
SlEWART - As severe ' the Meigs Marauders won
··, passed the title outright, sharing
thunderstorms
through the area, nature's with !JO one, and they were
FtreWOits provided a back- rewarded with more selecStory
Bolin
Evans
drop aeriaf display for the tions than any other team
fans, while on the track and a clean sweep of the
nearly 100 cars put on yet yearly awards on the All- brought home the award. selection from '07 .
anothec explosive show at TVC Ohio list.
The difference is, like the , Senior Aaron Story com- .
Bill~ JarreU's playground at
The Marauders tore TVC crown, they ' re not pleted
an
e)tcellent
sharing it this year as Marauder career this seaSkyline Speedway.
&lt;?~ciafly IM:coming a through the league this sea- junior Bryan DeLong alone son with Dunfee. and he
Chilhcothe resident this son, losing just one time in holds the title of Offensive was named to the all. past ~eek, Danny Smith 10 divisional
games. Player of the Year, and he league team for the first
made tt 5-for-5 in the out- Accordingly, they landed makes the AII-TVC list for time. Junior J.T. Evans also
l&amp;w prints on the Skyline five players on this year's the first time.
made the team for the first
&amp;igh-banks, while defend- all-conference
team,
Completing the awards time.
ing 'champ Larry Bond including all four of their sweep, Meigs .head coach
Dunfee; Story, DeLong,
claimed the Late Model team captains.
Jeremy Grimm was named and Evans were all team
IDain and Mike Mason took
Senior ace Austin Dunfee· Coach of the Year for the captains in '08.
the Vintage American ~ace h:':d a ~tellar seaso~ op th.e se£ood year in a . m w.
Belpre had four p!~yers
Car (VARC) · feaiUft.' pttcher s mound, and for Grimm ·won his third make the AII-TVC team.
Marietta's Mark',.Dickson his effo.ns he was named Jeague title in four seasons while Wellston, who shared
took the AMRA M . ted De'.enstve PI ayer o f t he - and finished with an over- the division crown with
main, Jeremy Blake c·1"'tii'iheo~..y,.,.,.,.--K~
·
ts se.ectton
to the all record of 14-8.
Meigs in '07, had three. .
~kin~~~n J!:~~~-cJI: All-TVC team was his sec- Eleven of the 17 total Nelsonville-York
and
Eric Randolphlllle photo
pers and Ron Pickens ond in as many seasons.
selections on this year's Vinton County each had Meigs senior Austin Dunfee follows throLJgh on .a pitch dLJr·
claimed the mini-wedges.
In 2007, Dave Poole was list· were juniors, one of two players on the Jist, and ing a baseball game against Vinton County on April 29 in
:. At the sta11 of the sprint co-Offensive Player of the them being Clay Bolin, Alexander, the other team Rocksprings. Dunfee was named Def~nsive Player of the
lnain Aaron Higgins and Year for' Meigs, and once wbo joins Dunfee as the witb a share of the '07 title, Year in the Tri'Valley Conference Ohio Division and has
!(eitb Baxter locked wheels again the Marauders have Marauders' other repeat had one.
made the AII-TVC team for. the second season in a row.
. ~d each took a couple ·
sunultaneous roll~vers. to
.NBA Rnals - Game 6
'bring . out the red. On the
r:stal1 Jimmy Nier jlUDped
mto the lead, then Danny
Smith blasted by both Nier
and Naber going into tum
BY TOM WITHERS
three. Naber rode the high
"SSOCIATED PRESS
side of the three-wide
excursion with his momenBOSTON - On a new
tum launching him back
parquet
floor below aging
into the lead at the end of
championship
banners, the
the ftrst circuit.
. Smith then implemented a Boston Celtics won their
slide. job on a lap three 17th NBA tide and a first
resta11 and checked~ut on one - at last - for Paul
Pier;ce, Kevin Garnett and
II!!;~ Qf ~.(iel4. Smith, Ray
Allen
their Big
one of the originil outlaws,
Three
brandished all the horsefor
a
power of his Doug Williams
n
e
w
Trucking mount to fight off
generation.
. PI. nr•' ...
Sktl ....
,,
After
22 long
years,
S.OK'm BRIEFS
lite NBA .
has gmie
J,OOSMeigsFlag
green.
Lifted
RegJstnttion
' by · earsplitting
· Registration is now open
chants
f~ the 2008 flag · football
of "Beat
ieason to boys and gitls in
L.A."
jrades 'f.-6 beginning with Canes WIN 4-2 f r o m
die 2008-09 school year.
!.heir
The registratiO\J fee is $40 adoring crowd, which
per player and ~25 for each included Bostop legends
additional sibling:
. Bill Russell John Havlicek
The games will be played and JoJo White, the Celtics
\' starting in September on the concluded a shocking
Meigs High School .practice rebound of a season with a
field, and the final date for stunning 131-92 blowout
regis.tration js July 1st. over the Los Angeles
Payment must also be Lakers in Game 6 on
received by July 1st. A Tuesday night.
workout/combine will be
With
the
outcome
lie1d on July 26th at 9 a.m. assured, Boston fans sang
at Meigs Hi.gh School. All into·the night as if they were
checks must be made out to in a pub on nearby Canal
Meigs
Flag
Football · Street. They serenaded the
.
.
.
.
.
~~
League, P.O. Box 751,
Boston
Celt1cs
forward
Paul
Pierce
shouts
as
he
holds
the
MVP
trophy
as
the
Boston
Celtics
celebrate
their
131·92 wi n
PI Ma ... R r'' Bl
Pomeroy. Ohio 45769.
over the Los Angeles Lakers to win the NBA basketball Championship in Boston on Tuesday.
To register online go · to
www.meigsffi.com, and for
more infonnation go 1o the
website or call 740-5411222.

.

Health care

11114

.•

of-the-Att Dlagr.ostic

Tesm

Adllanced Lllbor11tory Sentices

tn:bt •allipolil matlp mrtbune.
«bt tolnt tlltasant Jlelfsttr

and The DaDy Sentinel
have launched a new page every
Friday called ''Faith and Family".
If you have a testimonial story,
life-changing event about yourself
·or even a poeni that you would
like to share please email to:

kkeUy@mydailytribone.com
· nfields@mydailyregister.com .
hoeftich@mydailysentinel.com
·Limit your story to .
500-750 words.
~

Dodgers end slump,
outlast Reds 3-1

.Eagle hoops camp
t -shirts available

BY JOE KAY
ASSOCIATED PRESS

: CHESTER - Camp 'flihirts from the recent 2008
J2stern Eagle .basketball
~ are available at Baum ·
Lumber during regular busitless hours for those who
baven 't yet picked theirs up.

..
CoNTACI'Us .
1-740-446-2342 ext. 33

''

, _ - oportsOmydallyseniinel.com

'loPrtt Ste!f

Ettc Awldolph, Spol1s W.rlter
(7..0) ~. ""'· 33

• • 4l\•h•mvc.talt,MI'Itii Mtl.com

·trpl Will ... a, Spol1s Writer
(740) 446-23-42. 11&lt;1. 33
~Omvdlllytrlbuoo.com

1..-y c-, Sp Mta Writer
(7-IQ) "*-2342.11&lt;1. 33
lcrumel'ft)"CMMIy;eQI&amp;H;.com

l

AP,.._

Cincinnati Reds first baseman Joey VOtto fields a ground bail hit by Los Angeles Dodger1&gt;'
James Loney in the second inning of a baseball game Tuesday in Cincinnati. Loney was out
at first.

CINCINNATI The
offense was awful. The rotation was unraveling. The
losing streak had reached
five games. The Los
Angeles Dodgers desperately needed someone to do
something special to end the
misery.
Chad Billingsley took
matterS into hand.
The right-hander took a
shutout into the seventh
inning Tuesday night, and
the Dodgers held on for a 31 victory over the Cincinnati
Reds that ended that Q,v~­
game losing streak and pro·
vided a respite from a run of
really bad days.
"Right oow. we' re a team
that's battling through some
injuries ... said Billingsley
(5-7). who gave up a run and

five hits in 6 1-3 innings.
"It's tough."
Billingsley was a brighl
spot on an otherwi se omi ·
nous day for the Dodgers'
rotation . Brad Pennv went
011 the 15-day disabied list
with a sore shoulder. and
Hiroki Kuroda was sent
back to Los Angeles fo r tests .
on his sore shoulder.
With their offense barely
scoring, the Dodgers needed
a stingy perfonnance from ·
Billingsley. who has twice
shut d&lt;Swn the Reds this season. He hadn ' 1 won since he
pitched
seve n 'lwtoul
inn ings in a 4-1 win over the
Reds on May 20 at Dodger
Stadium.
'Thai wa' hig." manager
Joe Torre said. "Somebody \
gomg lo have to pick 'us up .
Before I came on here. I

Pl••eseeleds.Bl

•

�..
Page .82 • The Daily Sentinel

.Finals

the franchise 's fii'St 16 titles.
Garnett dropped to the
parquet and kissed the lepfrom Page Bl
rechaun at center oowt, then
found Hall of Farner Bill
·newest champs in this city ·Russell for a long embrace.
"I got my own. I got my
·of champs, and taunted own," Gametl said. "I hope
'Kobe Bryant and his we made you proud."
Lakers, who drowned in a
"You sure did," Russell
green-andcwhite wave for said.
48 ntinutes.
· Garnett scored 26 points
Rivers pulled Pierce,
with 14 rebounds, Allen Garnett and Allen with 4:01
scored 26 and Pierce, the left and they shared a group
finals MVP, added 17 as the hug with their coach, who
was nearly "run out of town
Celtics, a 24-win team a last sell$00. lo the final
year ago, wrapped up their minute, Rivers, who lost his.
frrst crown since 1986. ·
father at the begilining of
This was total domina- this renlarkable season, was
tion. The Celtics obliterated soaked by Pierce, the
the Lakers, who were tcying Celtics' captain who decid- .
to become the ftrsl team tn ed to stay when things were
overoorne a 3-1 deficit in. bad and was rewarded for
the finals.
his loyalty
It's was Boston's first title
No way.. No how. No
chance.
since the passing of
Boston's 39-point win Auerbach, whose signature
surpassed the NBA recOnl victory cigar was the&lt; only
for the biggest · IDlllgin of · thing missing on this night
viclory in ·a championship Even Auerbach, who died in
clincher; the Celtics beat the 2006, got some satisfaction.
Lakers 129-96 in Game 5 of Led by Rivers,' his beloved
the 1965 NBA fmals.
team denied Lakers coach
Pierce doused Celtics Phil Jackson from overtak:c:Oach Doc Rivers with red ing him with a lOth champi.Gatorade. Owner Wyc onship.
Grousbeck, who named his
· A perfect ending: a 17th
group Balllle.f 17 to leave no title on the 17th of June. ·
The Boston-Los Angeles
doubt about his goal, put an
unlit cigar in his mouth - a rivalry, nothing more than
tribute to Red Auerbach, the . black-and-white footage
patri~h who ,had a band in from the 60s and TV high- ..

Reds
from Page Bl
heard a lot of good things

about Bijin¥sley. You -ean
sec leadership, take-charge
qualities about him."
The 23-year-old pitcher is
2-1 in three career starts
:and one relief appearance
·against the Reds, allowing
only two earned runs in 19
· 2-3 innings. Unlike the last
time he faced the Reds,
Billingsley relied more
heavily on his fastball this
time.
"He wasn't throwing his
breaking ball for strikes,
but it was down," said
· Corey Patterson, who was
1-for-5 and grounded out to
end the game. "He waso:t
hanging it in the strike
:zone. Basically, he did a
good job keeping his pitches down."

lights of players wearing sheets started going up in as Pierce, Kendrick Perkins
short shorts in the 80s to the Celtics' locker room in (shoulder) and Rajon Rondo
young hoops fans, remains preparation for a cham- (ankle) were less than 100
percent. There was also
titled toward the Atlantic pagne ·celebration. .
surrounding
Bryant started 4-of-5 uncertainty
Ocean. The Celtics are 9-2
Allen,
who
stayed
behind in
from
the
field,
but
he
against. the Lakers in the
Los
Angeles
following
shots
in
a
row
missed
seven
finals.
They missed their first and
finished
7-of-22. Game 5 after his youngest
crack at closing out the Everywhere he went, L.A.'s son became ill.
But just as they bad while
series in Game 5, but didn't No. 24 ran smack into a
miss on their second swing, wall of Boston defense as winning 66 games during
running the Lake·rs out of high as the Green Monster a the regular season, the
few miles away at Fenway Celtics got plenty of help
their gym.
•
from. their beoch as PJ .
Bryant, the regularseason Park.
"Defense." Rivers said Brown, James ·posey, Leon
MVP, fin ished with 22
before the game. " Is what Powe and rookie Glen "Big
points.
Baby" Davis came in and
Garnett and Allen were we do."
All-Stars in .other cities,
In the Second half, "Celtics contributed.
It was a group effort by
si:uck · in Minnesota and fan s chanted "You' re not
Seattle, respectively, on (Michael)
Jordan"
at this gang in green, which
teams going nowhere. But Bryant, who will have to bonded behind Rivers, who
brought together in · trades wait for his fourth tide and bonuwed an African word·
laSt summer by Celtics gen- fmt without fotmer team- ubuntu (pronounced Ooheral manager Danny Ainge, mate ShaquiUe O' Neal. The BOON-too) and roughly
a member of the '86 Celtics Lakers, who stole Pau Gasol means "I am, because we
champions, they joined away frcim Memphis in a are" ·in · English, as the .
Pierce and formed an break- mid-season trade to help Celtics' unifying team
able bond, a trio as tight as Bryant. will have the all . motto.
The Celtics gave the
the club's lucky shamrock summer to think about what
.
Lakers
a 12-minute crash
went wrong.
logo.
No team bad to work course of ubuntu in the secWith Garnett scoring 17
points and Pierce adding I0, harder for a championship ond quarter.
Boston outscored Los
Boston built a 23-point half- than these Celtics, who
Angeles
34-19, getting 11
time lead, and unlike Game were playing in their ~
2 when they let the Lakers 26th postseason game. They .field goals on II assists
trim a 24-point lead tn two were pushed to seven games while holding . Bryant to
in the fourth quarter before in lhe first round by Atlanta, three points, all on free
recoveirng, the Celtics kept another seven by Cleveland throws. The Celtics toyed
and then took care of with the Lakers, outworking
coming in waves.
They pushed their lead to Detroit in six to win the the Western Conference's
best inside and out and
31 in the thin! quarter, and Eastern Conference title.
They entered Game 6 of showing the same kind of
with' Boston still up by 29
after three quarters, ' plastic the finals slowed by injuries heart that made Boston the

He left after the Reds
loaded the bases with one
out in the seventh. · Joe
Beimel gave up a run on
Javier Valentin' s groundout, then got Patterson to
ground out, preserving a 2I lead.
'
"Joe did a good job,"
Torre said~ "He doesn't
melt, Joe Beimel. He comes
Juan Pierre and RusseU
in and falls bcihind 2~. but Martin had run-scoring
he knows exactly what he · doubles off Johnny ·Cueto
wants to do. He's been ter- .(5-7 ), who regained his
rific for us there."
control but couldn 't get the
Takashi Saito stiuck out a Reds ·o ut of their rut.
pair in the ninth while get- Cincinnati has lost 10 of its
ting his ninth save in 12 last 15 games, leaving the
chances. The right-hander Reds marooned in last place
· has gotten I 3 ofh~~ last I 5 in the NL Central.
.
.outs by strikeout . , ·
The 22-year-old rookie'
"I'm not exactly ~ . of was coming off his wildest
the reason why, to tell you start. Cueto walked eight in
the truth," Saito said . .only five innings of a 10-3
through a translator. • "I loss to St. Louis on
don't know if strikeol\LS are Wedtlesday, the most walks
· necessarily good or bad. allowed by a Reds pitcher
While I've been striking in nine years. He gave up
guy~ out, runs have 00;11 three walks in seven
scormg."
innings on Tuesday, and

*
~•a:ht

_.._bl•c:-:

]"'to,j(.:.._._~•

.-...~-ca-., -=-~aa._-_.,~

www.mydailylentlnel.com

. 18,2008

m:rtbune- Sentinel-

center of pro basketbal' s
universe in the ' 60s.
House and Posey made 3pumters to pUt die Celtics
ahead by 12 points and baskets by Pien;c, Garnett and
Rondo put Boston ahead by

CLASSIFIED

18.
In the fmal minute,
Garnett floated in the lane,
banked in a one-handed
runner and was fouled. Hi~
free throw made it 56-35,
and aftel" Peddns soomd. the
Ccltics ran to the locker
iOOIIl

leading by 23.

.

On his way off the Ooor,
Garnett screamed, "That's
that"
And so it was.
Note~: Since the finals
began in 1947, 16 ha'&gt;'e

had been shut out twice and
limited to one run another
time during the five-game
losing
streak,
which
matched the Dodgers' season higlL
Ken Griffey k was sick
on Tuesday, keeping him
out of the tineup on the
night picked 1o honor his
one of them led to a run.
600th
home run.
~ "He gave us exactly what
Manager
Dusty B.akcr
we wanted to see," manager
Dusty Baker said. "We just said Griffey became ill on
couldn' t get any runs. Monday, the team' s day off,
Billingsi!=Y has shut us and wasn't feeling much ·
down both times he's faced better.
Griffey was on the field
us: ·
Angel · Berroa waited wilh his family while the
with one out in the third and team showed . highlights of
scored on Pierre's double tD his career on the video
left. Jeff Kent singled and board. Griffey tumed his
backward
and
scored on Martin' s double cap
the
crowd ·
in the fourth, Kent also addressed
briefly.
doubled lrome a run in tbe
"I just · want to thank
eighth with his third hit of
everybody for coming
the game,
These days, three runs here," be said. "Thank
qualify as an outburst for you ."'
Fans received a poster
the Dodgers. Los Antwles

~---r

~sday,

Wednesday, .June 18, 2008

w-Ww.mydallysentinel.com

...

E-mail
8 s•,it•eci @mydailytribune,com

gone seven games, the most
recent in 2005 wben San
Antonio had tn go lhl? distance to beat Oettott. ...
With little to say, Jackson
answered three questions
during his pregame news
conference before saying,
"lt's been nice, dJank y011."

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and baseball card showing
his swing on No. 600.
Griffey hit the notewonby
homer last week in Aorida,
becoming the sixth to reach
the IOlllk.
The ceremonies dela)led
the start of ·the game by
:seven minutes.
Notes:
Kuroda was
scheduled
to
·s tart
Wednesday's
game.
Instead, Derek Lowe will
move up a day and take his
place . ... LH Eric Stults was
-called u.p from Triple-A to
replace Penny. He will statt
Thursday' s game . ... IB
lames Loney~ ilno
his l5tb double play, 111051
in the NL.
Pierre
slammed inJo die wall in
left field to take a hit away
from Jay Bruce in tbe sixth.
The Reds rookie outfielder
failed to get a hit in four :athat~, eKteoding his·slump to
()...for-15 and dropping his
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�..
Page .82 • The Daily Sentinel

.Finals

the franchise 's fii'St 16 titles.
Garnett dropped to the
parquet and kissed the lepfrom Page Bl
rechaun at center oowt, then
found Hall of Farner Bill
·newest champs in this city ·Russell for a long embrace.
"I got my own. I got my
·of champs, and taunted own," Gametl said. "I hope
'Kobe Bryant and his we made you proud."
Lakers, who drowned in a
"You sure did," Russell
green-andcwhite wave for said.
48 ntinutes.
· Garnett scored 26 points
Rivers pulled Pierce,
with 14 rebounds, Allen Garnett and Allen with 4:01
scored 26 and Pierce, the left and they shared a group
finals MVP, added 17 as the hug with their coach, who
was nearly "run out of town
Celtics, a 24-win team a last sell$00. lo the final
year ago, wrapped up their minute, Rivers, who lost his.
frrst crown since 1986. ·
father at the begilining of
This was total domina- this renlarkable season, was
tion. The Celtics obliterated soaked by Pierce, the
the Lakers, who were tcying Celtics' captain who decid- .
to become the ftrsl team tn ed to stay when things were
overoorne a 3-1 deficit in. bad and was rewarded for
the finals.
his loyalty
It's was Boston's first title
No way.. No how. No
chance.
since the passing of
Boston's 39-point win Auerbach, whose signature
surpassed the NBA recOnl victory cigar was the&lt; only
for the biggest · IDlllgin of · thing missing on this night
viclory in ·a championship Even Auerbach, who died in
clincher; the Celtics beat the 2006, got some satisfaction.
Lakers 129-96 in Game 5 of Led by Rivers,' his beloved
the 1965 NBA fmals.
team denied Lakers coach
Pierce doused Celtics Phil Jackson from overtak:c:Oach Doc Rivers with red ing him with a lOth champi.Gatorade. Owner Wyc onship.
Grousbeck, who named his
· A perfect ending: a 17th
group Balllle.f 17 to leave no title on the 17th of June. ·
The Boston-Los Angeles
doubt about his goal, put an
unlit cigar in his mouth - a rivalry, nothing more than
tribute to Red Auerbach, the . black-and-white footage
patri~h who ,had a band in from the 60s and TV high- ..

Reds
from Page Bl
heard a lot of good things

about Bijin¥sley. You -ean
sec leadership, take-charge
qualities about him."
The 23-year-old pitcher is
2-1 in three career starts
:and one relief appearance
·against the Reds, allowing
only two earned runs in 19
· 2-3 innings. Unlike the last
time he faced the Reds,
Billingsley relied more
heavily on his fastball this
time.
"He wasn't throwing his
breaking ball for strikes,
but it was down," said
· Corey Patterson, who was
1-for-5 and grounded out to
end the game. "He waso:t
hanging it in the strike
:zone. Basically, he did a
good job keeping his pitches down."

lights of players wearing sheets started going up in as Pierce, Kendrick Perkins
short shorts in the 80s to the Celtics' locker room in (shoulder) and Rajon Rondo
young hoops fans, remains preparation for a cham- (ankle) were less than 100
percent. There was also
titled toward the Atlantic pagne ·celebration. .
surrounding
Bryant started 4-of-5 uncertainty
Ocean. The Celtics are 9-2
Allen,
who
stayed
behind in
from
the
field,
but
he
against. the Lakers in the
Los
Angeles
following
shots
in
a
row
missed
seven
finals.
They missed their first and
finished
7-of-22. Game 5 after his youngest
crack at closing out the Everywhere he went, L.A.'s son became ill.
But just as they bad while
series in Game 5, but didn't No. 24 ran smack into a
miss on their second swing, wall of Boston defense as winning 66 games during
running the Lake·rs out of high as the Green Monster a the regular season, the
few miles away at Fenway Celtics got plenty of help
their gym.
•
from. their beoch as PJ .
Bryant, the regularseason Park.
"Defense." Rivers said Brown, James ·posey, Leon
MVP, fin ished with 22
before the game. " Is what Powe and rookie Glen "Big
points.
Baby" Davis came in and
Garnett and Allen were we do."
All-Stars in .other cities,
In the Second half, "Celtics contributed.
It was a group effort by
si:uck · in Minnesota and fan s chanted "You' re not
Seattle, respectively, on (Michael)
Jordan"
at this gang in green, which
teams going nowhere. But Bryant, who will have to bonded behind Rivers, who
brought together in · trades wait for his fourth tide and bonuwed an African word·
laSt summer by Celtics gen- fmt without fotmer team- ubuntu (pronounced Ooheral manager Danny Ainge, mate ShaquiUe O' Neal. The BOON-too) and roughly
a member of the '86 Celtics Lakers, who stole Pau Gasol means "I am, because we
champions, they joined away frcim Memphis in a are" ·in · English, as the .
Pierce and formed an break- mid-season trade to help Celtics' unifying team
able bond, a trio as tight as Bryant. will have the all . motto.
The Celtics gave the
the club's lucky shamrock summer to think about what
.
Lakers
a 12-minute crash
went wrong.
logo.
No team bad to work course of ubuntu in the secWith Garnett scoring 17
points and Pierce adding I0, harder for a championship ond quarter.
Boston outscored Los
Boston built a 23-point half- than these Celtics, who
Angeles
34-19, getting 11
time lead, and unlike Game were playing in their ~
2 when they let the Lakers 26th postseason game. They .field goals on II assists
trim a 24-point lead tn two were pushed to seven games while holding . Bryant to
in the fourth quarter before in lhe first round by Atlanta, three points, all on free
recoveirng, the Celtics kept another seven by Cleveland throws. The Celtics toyed
and then took care of with the Lakers, outworking
coming in waves.
They pushed their lead to Detroit in six to win the the Western Conference's
best inside and out and
31 in the thin! quarter, and Eastern Conference title.
They entered Game 6 of showing the same kind of
with' Boston still up by 29
after three quarters, ' plastic the finals slowed by injuries heart that made Boston the

He left after the Reds
loaded the bases with one
out in the seventh. · Joe
Beimel gave up a run on
Javier Valentin' s groundout, then got Patterson to
ground out, preserving a 2I lead.
'
"Joe did a good job,"
Torre said~ "He doesn't
melt, Joe Beimel. He comes
Juan Pierre and RusseU
in and falls bcihind 2~. but Martin had run-scoring
he knows exactly what he · doubles off Johnny ·Cueto
wants to do. He's been ter- .(5-7 ), who regained his
rific for us there."
control but couldn 't get the
Takashi Saito stiuck out a Reds ·o ut of their rut.
pair in the ninth while get- Cincinnati has lost 10 of its
ting his ninth save in 12 last 15 games, leaving the
chances. The right-hander Reds marooned in last place
· has gotten I 3 ofh~~ last I 5 in the NL Central.
.
.outs by strikeout . , ·
The 22-year-old rookie'
"I'm not exactly ~ . of was coming off his wildest
the reason why, to tell you start. Cueto walked eight in
the truth," Saito said . .only five innings of a 10-3
through a translator. • "I loss to St. Louis on
don't know if strikeol\LS are Wedtlesday, the most walks
· necessarily good or bad. allowed by a Reds pitcher
While I've been striking in nine years. He gave up
guy~ out, runs have 00;11 three walks in seven
scormg."
innings on Tuesday, and

*
~•a:ht

_.._bl•c:-:

]"'to,j(.:.._._~•

.-...~-ca-., -=-~aa._-_.,~

www.mydailylentlnel.com

. 18,2008

m:rtbune- Sentinel-

center of pro basketbal' s
universe in the ' 60s.
House and Posey made 3pumters to pUt die Celtics
ahead by 12 points and baskets by Pien;c, Garnett and
Rondo put Boston ahead by

CLASSIFIED

18.
In the fmal minute,
Garnett floated in the lane,
banked in a one-handed
runner and was fouled. Hi~
free throw made it 56-35,
and aftel" Peddns soomd. the
Ccltics ran to the locker
iOOIIl

leading by 23.

.

On his way off the Ooor,
Garnett screamed, "That's
that"
And so it was.
Note~: Since the finals
began in 1947, 16 ha'&gt;'e

had been shut out twice and
limited to one run another
time during the five-game
losing
streak,
which
matched the Dodgers' season higlL
Ken Griffey k was sick
on Tuesday, keeping him
out of the tineup on the
night picked 1o honor his
one of them led to a run.
600th
home run.
~ "He gave us exactly what
Manager
Dusty B.akcr
we wanted to see," manager
Dusty Baker said. "We just said Griffey became ill on
couldn' t get any runs. Monday, the team' s day off,
Billingsi!=Y has shut us and wasn't feeling much ·
down both times he's faced better.
Griffey was on the field
us: ·
Angel · Berroa waited wilh his family while the
with one out in the third and team showed . highlights of
scored on Pierre's double tD his career on the video
left. Jeff Kent singled and board. Griffey tumed his
backward
and
scored on Martin' s double cap
the
crowd ·
in the fourth, Kent also addressed
briefly.
doubled lrome a run in tbe
"I just · want to thank
eighth with his third hit of
everybody for coming
the game,
These days, three runs here," be said. "Thank
qualify as an outburst for you ."'
Fans received a poster
the Dodgers. Los Antwles

~---r

~sday,

Wednesday, .June 18, 2008

w-Ww.mydallysentinel.com

...

E-mail
8 s•,it•eci @mydailytribune,com

gone seven games, the most
recent in 2005 wben San
Antonio had tn go lhl? distance to beat Oettott. ...
With little to say, Jackson
answered three questions
during his pregame news
conference before saying,
"lt's been nice, dJank y011."

In One Week With Us
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ca~T;:.::;... (7!~lro~.:S2!42 (7~To992~~~!&amp;
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LA's crowd, but Game ,6

~

, ti OW N ~ Aft

ANNOUIII(DII::JI.'JS

reser11es
11 ,., n~hlto edit.
:· 1• ~t Jr eancel any

'•

,·,td ,;1

.,

rr

l.~ ust

bilf'le

mu.t.,.

Graphics 5CM for small

s1.00 forlar9e

prep~~k:t*

DeMripUon • lndYde A ·ltrioe • Avokl AbbrewilltioM
• ;tnc:lude PhDne Number And~ When Needed
• ~ell; ShOUICI ~n 7 Da. .

T~.11tllbJ~1ornomoNtlwt1McoMafthe._.occupilelbytheemwendontyttwttm:IMMtion. W.
ltlld...,...trom the~ or~ a4 ... ~ Conwctlon will be IMMin a. tnt av.l...,._ ecltlion.
any 10M
.,. ...... o0ntw.nu.l: ·~ n11t I:MI ....iM. •All Nil_..~ ... •ubtK' to the F.-.1 Feir Koultng Act of 1068. · ·Thia
HQ1P11 oniW help ....-c1 lldl; ...tfnu EOE abmdardt.. W. will nal knOWingty .ooept any IMI\WIIaing in vloladon at tM l.w. Will not bll rwpon.lble for
~In ..... tlllln Gllll"thiiJhOM.
...

ar.....-

'I

.~~~
~ .-------------------.~~~
Bidwell U.M.

Church~

hav· . 'k itnear1,......,.,...., __nlll

OHIO VALLEY PUBLISHlNG CO. reCommend
you dO busine8S wilt\

PtPP.It yo~ knqw, an
MOT to send money
, ttlrough the mall until you
have investigated the
offering.

. GJVEI.WM'

·;t•·•

·~
·
LoAN .
111

1- ....~lllllllllllllllll~..,

Free kittens 4 to 5 weeks
·old: 2 gray and wMe and
one tabby.·740-446·7644

••NOTI«:t:••

~

..

"'i"'Cie in the f
1
te edition.

•: nber ad&amp; ar
'I '.'f

pool area. Heated in

ground pool enclosed by prl·
vacy fencing and land&amp;caped. Finished 2 car

go"""'

attached
to .house
·and finished
&amp; heated
3 car
garage
unattached
Excellerrt condition ready to
""""' in. $255,000.00. Call:
(740)949·2217

··

,

. .

4BR avaUabkl 1&amp;1 week 1n
July • Addison Pike $650/reilt • $6501SeC dep NO PETS. C&amp;ll ..S.as-.4 for

r

more info.

MOBIU' lkiMEs
FOR RENT

'

I

04 Clayton, 2br, 1 bath at 47
Mercer11ille Ad. ne11t to
school and gas S1ation. 2566882, 25&amp;-6006. 446·2458

I

rate car ,

·

J"looieo_.__,_~~-

.._._._._ .-...:..

~---~

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

Need Help around the
houae, fn&amp;ide or out?
Paintmg or odd jobs, bi9 or
small, we can dO. 15 yrs exp.
Local Ref. Call 740-388·
0823 or 740-339·045 t

Will do prenure washing
work to your home. No
rou.o to big 1 amal . Call for
more into. 7.-o--794-1340

.•.......
0- ..

·~

All rMI-'*Mh,.rtl-'ng
in thil UIW8pJ1Pir ..
•ubiect to the Fedenll
F•lr Houelng Act af 1111
whlch
IUeu-1 to

tnllba"

~ . COlor.

~~~~~··

will not
toff'MI

--- -

..welliiMi/IW/111

............ In
vloiiiUan allw .... Ovr

insurance .

•

,

MOBI'E HOME LOT FOR
pays electric. EHO
RENT, 1031 Georges Creek
(304)882-3017
Ad , 441 -1n1

Nllglon, . .

familial .a.tut or N1tioM1
origin, or •ny irMntion to
rneke ...r euch
.,,..,.., ..... , llmttMion or
dilcrtminltion.

lw-lnolv......,.

Point PloaS8111 llontiot olllce
needfri g
Part·time Soutllom Locoll Schools Is
Receptiooistl
As&amp;i1tant. accepting applications tor
Willing to train . COmputer, the .pooltiOn "' lmerventioo
phone &amp; customer skiMs are Specialiat. - o d awli·
necessary. Pleastt &amp;end canos shOUld oon1act Tony
resume to: Dental Office. Deem, Superintendent at
by
398&lt;' Indian Creek Ad, (740)740·949·2669
Friday, June 20.
Elkview, WV 25071

· Apartments

pr.,.renoe, Umn.tton or
dt.cflmiMtlon t:IMed on

TINeal

Ohio Valloy Home HeOtth,
tnc. hiring LPN tor an office
achedulinglakkl supervisor
position. Apply at 1480
Jaa&lt;son Pille, Gallipolis; or
pl1one
,« 1-1393.
Ccmpelitive Wages and
benefits including health

EllmView

5 acres Indian Creek
SUbdivision Of1 35, 1 mile
trom Rio Grande. 740-3613 8972
2&amp;3BA !!piS. $385 and up.
CIA. WID Hookup, Tenant

tldverHM "any

M

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

iJ

patio &amp;

dry room. located near
Holmr. S6001ren1 t utilities
and deposit. 740-44t-t459

:-onfidential .

.] I, current
tlAp~lte-:;

professionally landscaped.
Ranch style house wtth 4
beOmOmS, living room. din·
ing room, ldtctlen, large tamny room, centntl air, gas heat
and 1 fireplace. Addition ol a
large Florida room com-·
pletely cedar opens on1o

2 Bedroom trailer 'In Racine
HUD Homes! 3 bed·, only for rent-·$375/month. No
$17 .000! for listings 800· utilities included. 740-591 ·
66t3.
620-4946 e• ROt9

l--=-.,J

Home, Office Ect, Cleaning
of all Kinds, reasonable
rates 304-8,2.0554 or 304675-0960

•

House fof sale in Racine 3BR, 1 H2 bath, finished
area. Approx. ,. acres, all baSement, family and taun-

•NOnC£•

mg a yard sale, baked

Rodney Community Center
Sale, Lots of e11erything .
June 2, from 8-?
2 solid blaok male kittens - - - - - -- ware dropped oH at my
home. 8-9 wks old lo good
homes. 446-7637

Sentinel

wi ll
&lt;L•I sible fo r n
' k 1 t&lt;.Jte than the -cost o
.'\ ~ 1 P. sp&lt;~c:e occupie
: 1 .. 111e erro1 and onl
. ;: 1• " k·st ,:-~~e-rtlon. W
·: "-'1 hP liable fo
til

~ .Alta

,.._Y .tor su-··--·-

person or persons Breaking drink. Some1hing for every&amp; Entering Jerry 's Heating &amp; one. June 20-21
from 9Cooli . 645·28t 0
5.

B
'&lt;'::J ·•t,.otl un the firt
\' r.1~ DJblication an
11,

a.:oo p.m.

All ·Ofeplay: 12 Noon 2
.......... O.ys Prior To
Publkatkwl
Suncley ~y: 1:00

REWAAD :tor intormation on goods, soup beans and

any li!]le.

: ·o·-

su...,..,. ..._

Mow you con have borders,and Qrophics
~
added to your dassified ads
(.~
1m ·
Borders $3.00/per ad
l!_iit1

~

•~KJT&amp;CARLYL£

r

~~

.....~•• For

675-5234

•POUCEI: Ohio._...,,........ ~._ righl toeitl. NteGt. or OlftOel eny lid 111., dml. Enor. mull be ...,_;.don h flm lilly

To Help Get Response ....

n ib!lS;-J;

p..,_.

ln~umn:

• st.rt Vour Ads Witt~ A ·K eyword • lndudllc:ampiele

Successful Ads ·
Should Include These Items

and baseball card showing
his swing on No. 600.
Griffey hit the notewonby
homer last week in Aorida,
becoming the sixth to reach
the IOlllk.
The ceremonies dela)led
the start of ·the game by
:seven minutes.
Notes:
Kuroda was
scheduled
to
·s tart
Wednesday's
game.
Instead, Derek Lowe will
move up a day and take his
place . ... LH Eric Stults was
-called u.p from Triple-A to
replace Penny. He will statt
Thursday' s game . ... IB
lames Loney~ ilno
his l5tb double play, 111051
in the NL.
Pierre
slammed inJo die wall in
left field to take a hit away
from Jay Bruce in tbe sixth.
The Reds rookie outfielder
failed to get a hit in four :athat~, eKteoding his·slump to
()...for-15 and dropping his
:average to .325.

AD.

In Next D•v'•

Sund8y

(304) 675-1333

·/}u.ul~irM

D•lly J:n..c.olumn: 1:00 ;~t.m.
M~y-F.-...y for ln-.rtiOn

Monday thru Friday
8 : 00 a.m! to 5:00 p.m.
/

l\egt~te~

Place

... It waso 't as starry as

brought out ·celebrities
including Aerosmith front•
man Steven Tyler, actor
Leonardo
DiCaprio,
Patriots
coach
Bill
Belichick., who got a huge
ovation when be was shown
on lhe scoreboard, and
Miami Heat star Dwyanc
·
Wade.

~
www.mydailytribune,com
www.mydailysentiriel.com
www.mydli.ilyregister.com

•

l:alo!mad IIWI.III
ll.ttdWiltwl6n

. . .I. . IIOftM . . . .

-"""'Y-

Mtddfepor1 1n town.3 Br.

ranch ,2 112 bath,2 fife
placea,hot water hvat,cen·
lrl l aJr.2 galllges.740-992·
4t97

199/mo! 3 bed, 2 bath. Bank
Repo! (5% oown. 20 years.
8"k APR) for ,listing&amp; 800·
620-4946 8 1(. R027

Immaculate 2 bedroom
apartm ent New carpet &amp;
cabinets, freshl y painted &amp;
decorated. wro hookup.

lbr
$375fmonth.
3br
··~~~
.
S
......,....,,...,.....
10 yracuse .
depoiit Hod App. No Pets.
(304 )675 _5332 weMends

Beautiful _c ountr~ setting,
Only
10 mtnules tram town
M
. .
us1 see to appr&amp;el8.te.
$400/mo. (61 4)595-7773 or
t-&lt;100·798-&lt;686. (740)645·
5953

74Q-59 H l265

.

2 bedroom house tor rent. - - -- - - - ~. (7401992 5858
MiddiepOf't, Beeet'l St. 2 br
00

turniii'Mad apartment , utilities
2·3 8R at 313 Crew6 fld .. paid. deposit &amp; l'eferences.
Patriot Oh. 379·2584 '
no pets . (7401992·0t65
..,.......

-

pet ok. Middleport, N 3rd Ave., 1 b1
S«Klldep turniahed apartment, no
References reqwred 74o- petS. deposi1 &amp; references,
(7 40i992.0 t65
446·3870

2br,

1

~00/rent

&amp;mall

�P8ge B4 • The Daily Sentinel

. . . ..,,June 18, . .
·;JWU:TOOP

The Daily Sentinel • Page 85

.

:::::""'::.:=~ r.·
. ______..

- - .oequioed ... 1'1111. ~

4&lt;6-t27t "'1'09-1157

-.,..---~-Orie bedrnom CObin,
Thur1tan . . .. All utili~&amp;
paid. 7-1.3702

an, IIITEGIIITI', ~­

Phillip
Alder

I!UI~T.

Vf&lt;LLEY
110RSE / LIVESTOCK

TAM fAS. L.(W) liWC
EQ(•oiii:NT TRAILBlS,
CMGO EXt UESS &amp;
~=.,.,~•HOIIESTEADE R
3

_u ____.. . .,. •- .

lll&lt;ilV ... -

HUB BARDS

1. CARGOICOTIICESSION
4 B R I U I - . . . . . - - _ 8+W OOOSE·

e--

Women's Retreat
· June 21st, 2008
8:30 am - 3:00 pm
"Through the Rain"
Psalms 107: 28 - 30
Come join us for fellowship and
fun, goOd food , gift bags, and door

GREENIIOUSH

·

Or,

-

Syraa~~;e,

~

TRAILBIS lW.ES &amp; SER-

Specials
10 in. BO.Ion Fens
Now $5.00
Wllile they last. over
2000 to c:boose from .
AoW&lt;riog (1;. fuliage
Baskot!i. Bedding ·&amp;.
Vegetable Aats
4 in. foliage pol
Shrub&gt; &amp; Az.aleas
Open M·S 9-5
Cl&lt;&gt;sed Sunday

VICE. SPECIAL .20FT
GOOSENECK FlNIIED

6 tiN. 304till ~

$3999. VIEW OUR ENTIRE

------,---~

TRAILER INVENIDRV AT

Tara
TawnhOUM
Apan....,., lle&lt;y Spaaous.
2 Bedrooms, CIA. 1 1&gt;2
Both. • MJII Pbol &amp; Billy

WWW . CA 'R\A 1CHAEL -

entertainment.
A $10.00 registration too will cover
brealdast and midday
o.
Registration and Continental Breakfast

' ""'heel

8:30.

Call Brenda Musgrave, 740-367·7944

:""'-~COlli 6~

(E-mail: dlmusgrave0do"'IIIIIibs.com)
Karen Hawley, 740-992.0707 to ·
tegist&amp;r. Fee may be paid the day of
the retreat.

'

•

Withsomany
·choices, it's easy to
get carried away
with our
Merchandise listings
.IR lh·e dassifieds'
.
.

667'9

r

~

Ohio

Nw-f-'

TRAIL£RS.CQM 7411-«6382S
------Pool. Patio. Stan $C25Mo. Haw you priced a John
No .Pets, Lea• f'lus Deete i1tetf1 'mu'11 be · ~U­
SOCurily ~ Requinld .• pnsedl CMd&lt; OIJI our used
(7.0)S6Hl547.
imlonlooy
. Ill
W WW . CARE 0 . COIJI
T"'"'- T - io - · Camo;chael Equiprno!C. 74D: ing ~· b waiting 44-2(12
list tor .......,_od, 1-br --~.;;..._ _ _ _. ,

prizes speakers, lestimonies, and

begin at

dllor2,

~)675-5101.
~are ~
ll!lough liECK '
l!fTCIES .
FridiJ lrcm _ , 10 ~
EOUIP·
O!fioo, l l - 111 11 ~j IIENTICARIJIICHAEL

Cheshire Baptist Church

~. 1

~2-577,

-

~

-.

-

-

~

.

IllEll

- .... ...

2!1670 BaSI"'" Road

- 45171.Oii o

7401112217

--IISSP'

-

• New HCDmes . .

•Garages

s.uth
9 A6 4 8
t :K7652

.Stop &amp; &lt;iompare

•A
Dealer: South
Vulnerable: 'East-West

J AND II ELECTRICAL
-

9 NT

110. I&gt;JIVIIIG ~ "ro~" POfSPoi'T

NTOMATIGA£.LY MAk~
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YOU A

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HIPdrtd CMIHRJ And FIII'IIIIIH
WHATCHA DOIN',

I' C YO:.Jr&lt;G Ill
-'·

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SMlF?

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NU'IMIN'.

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MUST BE

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T'RIO(Y

U't.

HOW D"VA ll&lt;iNOW WHEN
VO'RE ))ONE ?!

!!

Racine, Ohio 740-247-2019
tell: 740-416-5047
email:
jNhadfnn&amp;at:II.CIXIII

I0" hanging Basket'
$7.75
4'" Geraniums .60¢

Bedding Plants

Call now, tolljr«
t-B11-451-#Jtl7
during that lima:

lllEWINDOW
.
UDY

Hrs M·f 7:30 · 5:00
SaL 8:30 - 4:30 Sun. 1·5

20 years experience

Ed'sG~

. in sewing

It's Our Nature:.

Drapes: Sheers, Rod
Pocket Drapes.
Swags. Valances,
Roman Shades and
More ...
Runners
. CALL SANDY

Concrete Removal

Noble Summit Rd.
Middleport, OH
(8c!ween Bradbury &amp; Rulland]

7411-991-79641

28 Yearo Experience

David Lewis
740·992~971

CANCER {June 21 -July 22) -

wvoa112 Free e..

Manley's ...

Recyc:l•nu

'

ing1DOI
. 4 Look• ff

3~

Roofing, Siding,
Soffit, Decks,
Doors, Windows,
Electric, Plumbing,

•Garagea

Remodeling, Room
Additions
LOCIII Contractor

o-:

"-KeeiMtl
742-2332

I

(

CORNER STONE
CONSTRUCTION

• Aeplacentenl
Windows
•Roollng
•Decb
• Polo Buildings
• Aoom Adclltlona

I

'NONE TAKEN,
£1UJY llliCH.

RICKPft!CE

Construetion

, .

.....

........

740-367-1)544
FNeEali........

740-367-1)536

36 Watch over

37 Fritz, to

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

740-985-4141

Cell: 740-416-IB34
25+ yean experi~tlce Free EstimAies .

AdVertise
in jhis-space for
$64 r month
'

.

'

attire

Brenda-

9 ·Common

,hlmaeK

role

river

28 Deriaive

51 Reault

onort
3D Handful ol

52 Stockhlllm

carrier

conon

COIIIIIICtion

38 - okwondo 10 Riverta,_ 34 Zodioc
39 Windy City 12Football
Bymboi
train.
pall
35 Summer
40 BucOlic
13 Mild
flowera

CELEBRITY CIPHER
.

br Luis Campos

Ceh!onty Qpler crYPtovrams n

C~eated!rom qucti.1011SI7(fa'llcus P&amp;Ople

mlh! cdler saarmtor anotr.er
Tclday's clue: Mequals D

Eadlll!!tt~

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AGW."

AN

LEPU

• RGAHR

P U L E P 'N' U AN

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pa!t w Pfesenl

AGMUYAJYU

YEEN

e· HZ

PULAGANBUGBU . " •

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HZRG

LRG'N

UP LR G' N
ETMUG

GRNZ

PREVIOUS SOLUTION - 'Things on the who~ are much laster in America:
people dont 'stand for election,' they 'run for office.' " · Jessica "Mitford

'~~~~, S@R4\\~-.~£~s· WOlD
~MI
1411oci by ClAY R. ,ClUN - - - - - 0 R10m111go letre11 of the
lour saambled

wolds be-

low to lll'l11 luur limplt WOI'dl.

WHASTE . ,

! 1111
1

2
.

H UM T 0

'r I I I

You gen-

Hand~ng a
serious responsibility Is not a hea vy
assignment, and you won',t hesitate to

@ PRINT

accept it but it is such a pleasant job
because of the people whO share it with

E)

LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 23) - You won't be
afraid to take on alt that i&amp; thrown at 'you
because you seem to gain momentum
a!! you go along. Since you're a stronger
finisher than a staner. it'll leave you feel ing uplifted.
SCORPIO (Oct . 24-Nov. 22) - Don't
anchor yourself in one spol 1or too long
because it could make you feel restles!!
and uneasy. Schttdukl your assignments
in ways that let yoU get out and move
aro~.nd a bit
SAGrtTARIUS (Nov. ~Dec . 2 1) - This
is an excellen1 time to budget your
accounts. because you'll be a far more
competent manager of your resources
than you usualt~ are .P
'fbt/11 be especia l! ~
good at wiggling out of trouble .
CAPRI CORN (Dec _ 22 ·Jan. 19) Having the freedom and independence
to do what you want will be important to
you, so be prepared to sidestep anyone
who wants to impose h!s or her affairs on

ARIES (March 21 -April 19) - Although
you m a~ nol think you did anyth1ng ape · ,.
'\ clal. everyone elle Hema to bel1e11t1 you
) went wa.y beyond the ce.ll of d uty. The
aoknowl«::gment you ~WI will be generoiA.
TAUAUS (,t,prll 20-Moy 20) - '"" ottl·
1UOI Will De a Dig PIUI ~ Clel llng wlm
auoolat• abo~o~t a Mrloue matte r

c.u: MARCUM CONSTRUCTION

47239 Riebel Road, Long Bootom, OH

6 Bullelpooof

,8 Singer

IUifoce

AQUARIUS (jan. 20·Feb. 19) - Take
care of private mat1ers at this lime
because you alone know wha t you want
and how to handle: them . Once you get
others out of your hair. you'll ha11e the
peace of mind to proroeed .
PISCES (Feb. 20·Marc h 20\ Something importanl Is fOunded upon a
realistic premise, 80 don't lei anyone dis·
courage you from seeing il in a different
light. Remain positive and you' ll get pos·

Drywall,

--.-.-

7--·
5 FOOl pedal

33 Road

you

For Remodeling 111111 New Hoooe BuUdinJ:

....Ia,

Woody's

32 VIlli region

R1ve resul!s.

-1

Nil!.

air
19 •Gntlel:.
brother
20 IGUitarilt
··5 TNnl&lt;
•Chet OLdlltljiiOOW.IJho
. 22 Creom pull 46 •8111\t
·23 Add OIYgen 47 c.p
24 Showy
48 •Luau
Wllio:aonB
lilies
25 Overdoes 1 50 Scol1ilh

are a highly sociill pemon, you're likely t o

New Homes, iloom Acldilioos, Remoclellng,
Metal &amp; Sbialgle llooofs, Siding, Ded&lt;s,
llalhroom R&lt;modeliuc Liooased .&amp; Insured

• Vinyl Siding

2 -Aiamoo,

40 Wave
ohppl•t•
41 Strike
·
·011111,..
43 'Pel name

be in a more industrious mood than a
,social one, Plan your tlme around do{ng

PSI CONSTRUCTION

/

.

29 Oldfuton

something productive.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept 22} -

J&amp;L

1 Bikini IWf
'3Hole-mak·

you.

General Contraclor 35 Years
EJ&lt;peoien&lt;e. New Homes,
Aomodeling &amp; Home Repair,
Licensed and Insured WV
030318 304·458·1668 (H)
304·511-0759 (C)

18 Taioetothe

erally don't mind doing things alone. but
you will enjoy shar,ing time with others at
this time. So make plans that Include
conv1vial companions. Don 't walt tor
them to call you
LEO tJu ly 23-Aug. 22) - Ahhough you

Willi llle right Ia mine
the without
encuntbt•oiCe to the
autf8Ce ·iond all . ny
and rlghta Of ny

eo._,,.•

---

Pass

expletives

DOWN

yoursetf.

Ino

Cell: 7··991-3~

11an.
. 20GB AT 10 A.M., OF
PEI!IIANENT MIICEL SAID DAY, THE FOL·
NO. 160181120011
LOWING DESCRIBED
COMMONLY KNOWN, IlEAL ESTATE;
AS: 241 RIVEAVIEW SIIU81e
In
llelgs
Cheryl l.eMw
along .,, ml,...l DRIVE.
POMEROY, County, Ohio, To-WI
DEFENIWITS
- ; and being OHIO 45788
Beginning In h .ceilCOURT OF a.MON !'8COIIIId In llle DMd No.:
11- ter ol St. II. No. :M&amp;,
PLEAS, MEIGS COliN- llec«da Of llllgl 011621100
N~ 80 Rods and
TY OHIO.
County, ...,... h tal- Prior deed laJeouucw: Ealt .. lVIII foam t1te
In punuunce Of an lowloig (Mit llllrlol, 1o- Volume 238, " - 135 aouttowat of
order of. llle to me wtt: hglnnlng at !he Apprai- al $40,000 IMICiiOII no. 211. Thence
dllected from aald uouttowat of T - of Sale: Cannot aoutto 31 deg. 30 oourt In ........ IIIII· the lot 111M or foo nwfy be aald for .... llwt Weal 20 lloda; Thence
lild ·action, l will owned by Thomas 2/:lnh olllle uppo uleed riOI1h 10 Dig 20 Min
...,.,.. to au1e at pub- Jones In the uouth value. 10% - . on. Weal 32 lloda to the Toy PoodiSs $300. 740-446- RV Service at Carmichael
lie aue1lon cin 11\e fn&gt;nt lilird ol 100 """' Lat day ol aule, ~ or North , line ol G. W. 2455. A5k for Reg;na
r..il... 741)-446-3825
llllpl of ttoe Meigs No. 303 InT........., 2, certHillcl - . bat- Marcum 33.211 Acre
County Court Houae ...... 1301Tha0hlo --on-llloii• 1rEI • recoodad In
On Frldlly, July 11,
Purcllloel, tlonolaule.
dlledllook111,llflllll8
2001al 10 a.m., of laid Thence uouth 12 dig. Tha 41P.P' alaal did nol •
ol h 1-dl ol
,_...,
day, the lollowlng e.! lUll Feel 10 .a ·include an 1nt1o1or dMdl , of llllgs
d l l c l l b l d - -. . . . . . In ... lina ......-ion of . . Coullly Ohio, Thence
Tha following real o1 laid Lal No. 531; toouae.
• Ealt on Said North
...... II dllcllbld 11 Thence riOI1h 111 dig. Robert E. Beeglo, Line 40 lloda to h
lollowl:
.2112.111 to h ..,... County 8llarllf place of ilejJinnlnga.
Help Wanted·
MRCEL NO 4: Tha foi. IOIIIMell of At!CII'MY
for
the (:containing 2 .acres,
leMing noul- situ· aald Lol · No. 531; Plllntlll
more or loaa. · .
ate In h vlllaga Of thence
north · 12 u- 'SI111f110n I Cooo•-•IJ - . , as
~. ~ Of degra. Well 118.10 Rolllf,..
~ Old At. Me St.
llelga, ._., of Oltlo taa1 to the no11u 111 POlloK M40
Alllenr. Ohio e5710
and ballndad and Of Mid Lal No. Choclouilll, OH 45201· Pl0j11111f
Ownen:
daiCJIIII d w lollowa: 531; "'*- aaulh 70 M40
Jaddl P. Allman
Iaing lot no. 531. In dagraaa •.111 513-1.141-'1100
Prior Delcl Rallc•oce.
laid ....... bounclld to the plaCe of (1111, :U, (712
212, ...... ._, lali"'"''ll eo! the hgl Mllng, -lning
PPN:IIOii 00005,000
uouth- comer Of .10 11:111 more or loaa.
APPRAISED
AT
Industrial Service Trd.nicians
h n - Jonw Lot . . . . and e&amp;Cipt 1
Pullllc Notice
$60,000 TEAMS OF
in GaUipolis, OH
In h
aaulh 1hird o1 riglll o1 ny 12 taa1
.SALE: CANNOT IE
10011Cntl.aiNo.3031n
and SHERIFF
SALES SOLD1FORLESSTHAN Wrn;k involves industrial cleaning; high
T~ 2, ...... 13 Of upon h
aida ol CAIE
NUII8ER: 213
. OF
THE
pressure water blasting: wet/dry
Thai Ohio Company'l the dlltribecl 01CV131
APPRAISED VALUE .
Puochna,
Thence- for ....... and US _..,.
10%00WNONDAYOF
vacuuming. Hard hat, drug-free and
lmllh 12 d.g.- OM ..... tD and foam h AI a I thot
SALE, CASH OR CER·
Union environment Need HS diploma
clluln andiO llnb, to a l'lllllllining P1r1 of Plalntll
TIFfED CHECK. .IW.com«; ttoenc:e nortto aaldoi.OT NO. 531 IN VS
AJICIE OUE 'ON •COiilor GED and drivers license.
70 !leg. 'I ct-. 1be 10111111 all . - . . P. , _ II II FIIIIIATION OF SALE
40 to a - ; -aof COl alatlng ol .D!FINDANTI COURT Tloa ..... lui did nol
..._ -eo 12 dig. .10 IICnl, and eleo OF CDM•CIN P.I.£AS, lncludl .., inllrlor
For more information call: ·
cllelnl eo· •c alta 'II and _ , _ IIEIGS COUNTY. OHIO. -illlllon 01 h
740-9:ZS·3372.or apply al
llnlal to Henty Pfarr i111 llle .rtpl IIi _,_ IN ..UiaalMNCE OF AN llouM.
.
- II aaa1 .,...._ ol 1 b e - I lit- Cllftii:EN OF SALE 1D II_, .E.
Meigs County
Roller! C:O..,'a aaulh- lng 11om llle btl' I 'II IE OIIIECl'ED FfiOIII Illig&amp; ()ountr 111111111
175 RaceSL
; on laid .10- part ol SAID ·COURT IN THE ~ l"or Tloa
_.., 70 . .. 5
no. 531, h AIIOVE
ENTn:LED -IIIII
Middleport, OH 45760
c:hulne and II - t o
Of auld oa 1
ACTION,
I
WILL a..m.t S.. p on I
or you may submit resume to
._ plecl ol ballnnlng, 1M po a; Ilea II» joint- EXPOSE TO SALE AT llollofuM
conlalnlng IICI'I, ly • kelp tto8t (Mit of PUBLIC AUCTION ON P.O. 1101 5410
.
kblllck@mpwservices.com
- o r 1111.
auld localld on . THE FRONT STEPS OF Clnc~olall, Ohio 452111·
law and ercept the Mid I'IIN!IIIIilog part ol THE IIIEIGS COUNTY 5410
CCIIII and oa.. miMr· Mid lot In l'lfll(r and COURT HOUS£ ON 513-241-3100
MPW. Environmental Services
ale In 11111 preoniln good ap o•lhog concll- I'IIDY MIGUIT tiT, (1118, 2S (7) 2

'i 'IICei'S

271Reain
28 Gi"" a 'big
omlle

GEMINI (Ma~ 21 -June 20) - Your handling of •financial situations shared with
others will be your suong suit. You will
base your decisions on what is best for
1hEI entint group, rather than merely for

-=7~1~141

e.:

Pass

P&amp;Bs
Pass

uno:onwn-

. tilillill
56 ·Downhill

item
.23 .King buter

T.hUNday, June 18, 2DDB
IBy •Bernloe !8ede 1()aol
Shared enterprl&amp;es can hold special
rewards in the year ahead , especially if
you associate yourB4llff ,w ith those Who
are enterprising and futurislic . If a partner has an eacpertise in a particu~ r field.
that's all the better.

·,

$250 per dozen

wide-.-

cry
21 10eojgnor

W'Graph
M ........ ,y:.

48 per flat $6.00
Vegetable plant5

.Plus Pillow. Bedskirts
Table Covers &amp; Table

SHERIFf:'SAlES CASE
NUMBER 07CV128
Ldlllle NA
PI.AlN1lFF
.
VS

oummer
18 Triumphant

~Astro­
! J 1 \ I ._
, , , ·, '-- I · i
'\, .... fl~l ( li

-

-Ins

15 ;Honor
54v....•
16 -tai
17 •Mcaa:Jeur's 55 Exbanaly

king) and claim thai overtrick.

For mort irifm-mlltion: 11isit WWMI.011Ut4114iflgworfeeft.com

,__,,..SM.

53 Shao1r.

heart ace to collect the spade ace (or

s

7•111-f}lfll Mtt11.-Fri.
&amp; s.....

46 •O areiOUI

14 •Numb,

opener rebids in a second suH wrthout a
jump and the responder must bid at the
three-level if he wishes to support the
opfmef's iirst•named suit the opene1
has made a reveree .) H the oponer
reversmr after a one-level response. h
promises at leasl 17 high-card points.
After a two-o~r-one response. though.
this may be shaded to 15 points, and the
auction is then game-forcing.
.
Over three clubs, bidding three no-trump
with 1he blocking singleton elub ace ~
hardly.ideal, bi.rt what else can you do?
You seem to have 10 tricks via three
spades. one heart and si.11 clubs.
However, you need a dummy entry once
the club aca has been unblocked. At tnck
one, carefully overtake dummy's spade
jack with your king (or ace). Then. cesh
the club ace, cross to the spade queen.
and run the dOOs. Finally, return to your

.

&amp;Removal

Please leave messa

13Swiu-

uncontested auction, whenever the

*Prompt and Quality
Work
*Reasonable Rates .

OM:tetS:

millllg&gt;
(hfph.)

Yo.ur-two·heart rebid is called a reverse.
(This is 1he definttion of a reW!rse: In an

Stanley TreeTrimming

*Insured
*E•perienced
Reference&gt; Available!
Call Gary Stanley @
740-591 -8044

46 Tnilllc:

lhr8e dubs.

WVa.121i

.

·-

6 In Ioree
11 •Gailey

English letter wrtter and novelist Horace
Walpole, who died in 1797, woole .
"Mysteoy IS the wisdom ol blockheads:
This week we are trying not to look like
blockheads. which we will n we fail to
find a way to cash a blocked suit - like
the clubs in th1s deal.
You are South, in three no-trump. West
i&lt;lads the spade 10. What would be your
plan?
Although North has only nine high-card
points, his excellent si~e-card club su~
makes h1s hand worth a game·lnvltatlon·
al sequence oi1wo clubs lollowe~ by

OJIVtJt.

_ ______,,_
----- 740.446.9200

$,,.,

Pass

Eolil

is thele .an entry?

-~

J•••·

2•
34

After unbloc1Ung,

Room • ,~ • •
... 1 lh;

. N- ldriat for '""'lldi.ow g,J lffllillfnlllfla
Avei-agt'
compms&lt;llion fm- thtse positions ranges from SiS,fH t4
per ytar .through pcrformalllt...based earnings, plus an outstanding
berujits pocltagt&gt;. Nucor StLel Marion; in. Marion, Ohio, is adding_
worleus NOW. l*rre tht rUit.ion largut stLel producer, and still
growing. Join a team that is highly ~~Wtivated, highly productive,
and dr.dit:attd to stiftty first. Nuror is dll EEO employa.

Nonb

Pass
Pllfls

Opening lead: • 10

CARPENTER
' SERVICE

_01_03_ _ _ __ __

West

1•
2•

..._.....;=~

~,

.........

43AIIIIot
'" Slow opltch

P!lir Ill full

1011

llm&gt;l!lliua lilodriciM c.rtif'...t in OH
01oio Cain "''"' UI074
, _ , 7--14~WJ· ..........

.....

42 Hlilrpln

26 IWiner:y
' ,f eallft

"'A 'K4

YOUNG'S

.6271

5 4 .2

•

Remodeliqg

~"' :~ l&gt;ff~IISIV~

round atJolle.grouncl 2003 Saturn Vue, 1998
pool. Wil have too;.....,.. Chevy Truck, 2 &amp; 10 1rucks,
ble younll!lf. ssoo. 304-675· 2002 Hyundai sonata, 2002
5345
Cava~er. Other quality ,.h;.
8cercise bike . S1amina 890 cles witt1 watTanty ,n stook.
$40. Weslo Cadence 01.15 • Slop "' call CO. Treadmill $100. Call 446- ' 328 Jall&lt;son Pi&lt;e, 740--446-

• 5 3 2
9 K J 8
• J 10 9 3
• 1 sa

• Q! 0 9
e AQ

•Complete ·

a 10 s a
Eost

. 1098 7 6

r--... /

21 ft.

• 7 52
• 8.
• K Iii

~

ACROSS

lSI fool

.. •Q J

2 gen11e r;o""' holses. good
tor adults or otdef child.
$450 each, saddle $100
eactl. 740-367-nso

.2 Cemetery Lots at Kmdand 1995
Chevy
Caprice
Memornol Ganlens·30'-675· Classtt, rum ~;~ood , looks
1349 or 304-65«164
good $1 ,800 304-8112-11277

NEA Crossword Puzzle

BRIDGE

Attnouoh )'OV W.now It Ia Important . .,.uu'll
UFINtw!in&lt;l IM IIIIIN Of a lfflO UIII

.

ln-

•. ~~~~'Q IOUP'IOHUTZ
"'":11---,. ~~ ~·'T 'mt'f~

:r

Wll

~

~

I'IGICIP.

NUMBERED
LE ITERS IN SQUARES

UNSCRAMBLE fORI
ANSWER
.

II

Nature-Peppy - Hence - Emetic - PERMANENT
Ibelieve atrue friend is me who, wbcn you make afool of
yomsel~ doesn't believe 1he condition is PERMANENT.
ARLO &amp; JANIS

�P8ge B4 • The Daily Sentinel

. . . ..,,June 18, . .
·;JWU:TOOP

The Daily Sentinel • Page 85

.

:::::""'::.:=~ r.·
. ______..

- - .oequioed ... 1'1111. ~

4&lt;6-t27t "'1'09-1157

-.,..---~-Orie bedrnom CObin,
Thur1tan . . .. All utili~&amp;
paid. 7-1.3702

an, IIITEGIIITI', ~­

Phillip
Alder

I!UI~T.

Vf&lt;LLEY
110RSE / LIVESTOCK

TAM fAS. L.(W) liWC
EQ(•oiii:NT TRAILBlS,
CMGO EXt UESS &amp;
~=.,.,~•HOIIESTEADE R
3

_u ____.. . .,. •- .

lll&lt;ilV ... -

HUB BARDS

1. CARGOICOTIICESSION
4 B R I U I - . . . . . - - _ 8+W OOOSE·

e--

Women's Retreat
· June 21st, 2008
8:30 am - 3:00 pm
"Through the Rain"
Psalms 107: 28 - 30
Come join us for fellowship and
fun, goOd food , gift bags, and door

GREENIIOUSH

·

Or,

-

Syraa~~;e,

~

TRAILBIS lW.ES &amp; SER-

Specials
10 in. BO.Ion Fens
Now $5.00
Wllile they last. over
2000 to c:boose from .
AoW&lt;riog (1;. fuliage
Baskot!i. Bedding ·&amp;.
Vegetable Aats
4 in. foliage pol
Shrub&gt; &amp; Az.aleas
Open M·S 9-5
Cl&lt;&gt;sed Sunday

VICE. SPECIAL .20FT
GOOSENECK FlNIIED

6 tiN. 304till ~

$3999. VIEW OUR ENTIRE

------,---~

TRAILER INVENIDRV AT

Tara
TawnhOUM
Apan....,., lle&lt;y Spaaous.
2 Bedrooms, CIA. 1 1&gt;2
Both. • MJII Pbol &amp; Billy

WWW . CA 'R\A 1CHAEL -

entertainment.
A $10.00 registration too will cover
brealdast and midday
o.
Registration and Continental Breakfast

' ""'heel

8:30.

Call Brenda Musgrave, 740-367·7944

:""'-~COlli 6~

(E-mail: dlmusgrave0do"'IIIIIibs.com)
Karen Hawley, 740-992.0707 to ·
tegist&amp;r. Fee may be paid the day of
the retreat.

'

•

Withsomany
·choices, it's easy to
get carried away
with our
Merchandise listings
.IR lh·e dassifieds'
.
.

667'9

r

~

Ohio

Nw-f-'

TRAIL£RS.CQM 7411-«6382S
------Pool. Patio. Stan $C25Mo. Haw you priced a John
No .Pets, Lea• f'lus Deete i1tetf1 'mu'11 be · ~U­
SOCurily ~ Requinld .• pnsedl CMd&lt; OIJI our used
(7.0)S6Hl547.
imlonlooy
. Ill
W WW . CARE 0 . COIJI
T"'"'- T - io - · Camo;chael Equiprno!C. 74D: ing ~· b waiting 44-2(12
list tor .......,_od, 1-br --~.;;..._ _ _ _. ,

prizes speakers, lestimonies, and

begin at

dllor2,

~)675-5101.
~are ~
ll!lough liECK '
l!fTCIES .
FridiJ lrcm _ , 10 ~
EOUIP·
O!fioo, l l - 111 11 ~j IIENTICARIJIICHAEL

Cheshire Baptist Church

~. 1

~2-577,

-

~

-.

-

-

~

.

IllEll

- .... ...

2!1670 BaSI"'" Road

- 45171.Oii o

7401112217

--IISSP'

-

• New HCDmes . .

•Garages

s.uth
9 A6 4 8
t :K7652

.Stop &amp; &lt;iompare

•A
Dealer: South
Vulnerable: 'East-West

J AND II ELECTRICAL
-

9 NT

110. I&gt;JIVIIIG ~ "ro~" POfSPoi'T

NTOMATIGA£.LY MAk~
-\IJ. ;..~
YOU A

...

~"I • G\lllllnl

..... Sl&lt;lliijt · -

HIPdrtd CMIHRJ And FIII'IIIIIH
WHATCHA DOIN',

I' C YO:.Jr&lt;G Ill
-'·

.

' MfSTOFER
SMlF?

:

.

Zo1!1515t.l.t. 160 • C.olllpnlls

NU'IMIN'.

OH •••lHAT
MUST BE

JASPER!!

T'RIO(Y

U't.

HOW D"VA ll&lt;iNOW WHEN
VO'RE ))ONE ?!

!!

Racine, Ohio 740-247-2019
tell: 740-416-5047
email:
jNhadfnn&amp;at:II.CIXIII

I0" hanging Basket'
$7.75
4'" Geraniums .60¢

Bedding Plants

Call now, tolljr«
t-B11-451-#Jtl7
during that lima:

lllEWINDOW
.
UDY

Hrs M·f 7:30 · 5:00
SaL 8:30 - 4:30 Sun. 1·5

20 years experience

Ed'sG~

. in sewing

It's Our Nature:.

Drapes: Sheers, Rod
Pocket Drapes.
Swags. Valances,
Roman Shades and
More ...
Runners
. CALL SANDY

Concrete Removal

Noble Summit Rd.
Middleport, OH
(8c!ween Bradbury &amp; Rulland]

7411-991-79641

28 Yearo Experience

David Lewis
740·992~971

CANCER {June 21 -July 22) -

wvoa112 Free e..

Manley's ...

Recyc:l•nu

'

ing1DOI
. 4 Look• ff

3~

Roofing, Siding,
Soffit, Decks,
Doors, Windows,
Electric, Plumbing,

•Garagea

Remodeling, Room
Additions
LOCIII Contractor

o-:

"-KeeiMtl
742-2332

I

(

CORNER STONE
CONSTRUCTION

• Aeplacentenl
Windows
•Roollng
•Decb
• Polo Buildings
• Aoom Adclltlona

I

'NONE TAKEN,
£1UJY llliCH.

RICKPft!CE

Construetion

, .

.....

........

740-367-1)544
FNeEali........

740-367-1)536

36 Watch over

37 Fritz, to

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

740-985-4141

Cell: 740-416-IB34
25+ yean experi~tlce Free EstimAies .

AdVertise
in jhis-space for
$64 r month
'

.

'

attire

Brenda-

9 ·Common

,hlmaeK

role

river

28 Deriaive

51 Reault

onort
3D Handful ol

52 Stockhlllm

carrier

conon

COIIIIIICtion

38 - okwondo 10 Riverta,_ 34 Zodioc
39 Windy City 12Football
Bymboi
train.
pall
35 Summer
40 BucOlic
13 Mild
flowera

CELEBRITY CIPHER
.

br Luis Campos

Ceh!onty Qpler crYPtovrams n

C~eated!rom qucti.1011SI7(fa'llcus P&amp;Ople

mlh! cdler saarmtor anotr.er
Tclday's clue: Mequals D

Eadlll!!tt~

" LUL ·EPV
AGW."

AN

LEPU

• RGAHR

P U L E P 'N' U AN

RG

pa!t w Pfesenl

AGMUYAJYU

YEEN

e· HZ

PULAGANBUGBU . " •

" EGU

HZRG

LRG'N

UP LR G' N
ETMUG

GRNZ

PREVIOUS SOLUTION - 'Things on the who~ are much laster in America:
people dont 'stand for election,' they 'run for office.' " · Jessica "Mitford

'~~~~, S@R4\\~-.~£~s· WOlD
~MI
1411oci by ClAY R. ,ClUN - - - - - 0 R10m111go letre11 of the
lour saambled

wolds be-

low to lll'l11 luur limplt WOI'dl.

WHASTE . ,

! 1111
1

2
.

H UM T 0

'r I I I

You gen-

Hand~ng a
serious responsibility Is not a hea vy
assignment, and you won',t hesitate to

@ PRINT

accept it but it is such a pleasant job
because of the people whO share it with

E)

LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 23) - You won't be
afraid to take on alt that i&amp; thrown at 'you
because you seem to gain momentum
a!! you go along. Since you're a stronger
finisher than a staner. it'll leave you feel ing uplifted.
SCORPIO (Oct . 24-Nov. 22) - Don't
anchor yourself in one spol 1or too long
because it could make you feel restles!!
and uneasy. Schttdukl your assignments
in ways that let yoU get out and move
aro~.nd a bit
SAGrtTARIUS (Nov. ~Dec . 2 1) - This
is an excellen1 time to budget your
accounts. because you'll be a far more
competent manager of your resources
than you usualt~ are .P
'fbt/11 be especia l! ~
good at wiggling out of trouble .
CAPRI CORN (Dec _ 22 ·Jan. 19) Having the freedom and independence
to do what you want will be important to
you, so be prepared to sidestep anyone
who wants to impose h!s or her affairs on

ARIES (March 21 -April 19) - Although
you m a~ nol think you did anyth1ng ape · ,.
'\ clal. everyone elle Hema to bel1e11t1 you
) went wa.y beyond the ce.ll of d uty. The
aoknowl«::gment you ~WI will be generoiA.
TAUAUS (,t,prll 20-Moy 20) - '"" ottl·
1UOI Will De a Dig PIUI ~ Clel llng wlm
auoolat• abo~o~t a Mrloue matte r

c.u: MARCUM CONSTRUCTION

47239 Riebel Road, Long Bootom, OH

6 Bullelpooof

,8 Singer

IUifoce

AQUARIUS (jan. 20·Feb. 19) - Take
care of private mat1ers at this lime
because you alone know wha t you want
and how to handle: them . Once you get
others out of your hair. you'll ha11e the
peace of mind to proroeed .
PISCES (Feb. 20·Marc h 20\ Something importanl Is fOunded upon a
realistic premise, 80 don't lei anyone dis·
courage you from seeing il in a different
light. Remain positive and you' ll get pos·

Drywall,

--.-.-

7--·
5 FOOl pedal

33 Road

you

For Remodeling 111111 New Hoooe BuUdinJ:

....Ia,

Woody's

32 VIlli region

R1ve resul!s.

-1

Nil!.

air
19 •Gntlel:.
brother
20 IGUitarilt
··5 TNnl&lt;
•Chet OLdlltljiiOOW.IJho
. 22 Creom pull 46 •8111\t
·23 Add OIYgen 47 c.p
24 Showy
48 •Luau
Wllio:aonB
lilies
25 Overdoes 1 50 Scol1ilh

are a highly sociill pemon, you're likely t o

New Homes, iloom Acldilioos, Remoclellng,
Metal &amp; Sbialgle llooofs, Siding, Ded&lt;s,
llalhroom R&lt;modeliuc Liooased .&amp; Insured

• Vinyl Siding

2 -Aiamoo,

40 Wave
ohppl•t•
41 Strike
·
·011111,..
43 'Pel name

be in a more industrious mood than a
,social one, Plan your tlme around do{ng

PSI CONSTRUCTION

/

.

29 Oldfuton

something productive.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept 22} -

J&amp;L

1 Bikini IWf
'3Hole-mak·

you.

General Contraclor 35 Years
EJ&lt;peoien&lt;e. New Homes,
Aomodeling &amp; Home Repair,
Licensed and Insured WV
030318 304·458·1668 (H)
304·511-0759 (C)

18 Taioetothe

erally don't mind doing things alone. but
you will enjoy shar,ing time with others at
this time. So make plans that Include
conv1vial companions. Don 't walt tor
them to call you
LEO tJu ly 23-Aug. 22) - Ahhough you

Willi llle right Ia mine
the without
encuntbt•oiCe to the
autf8Ce ·iond all . ny
and rlghta Of ny

eo._,,.•

---

Pass

expletives

DOWN

yoursetf.

Ino

Cell: 7··991-3~

11an.
. 20GB AT 10 A.M., OF
PEI!IIANENT MIICEL SAID DAY, THE FOL·
NO. 160181120011
LOWING DESCRIBED
COMMONLY KNOWN, IlEAL ESTATE;
AS: 241 RIVEAVIEW SIIU81e
In
llelgs
Cheryl l.eMw
along .,, ml,...l DRIVE.
POMEROY, County, Ohio, To-WI
DEFENIWITS
- ; and being OHIO 45788
Beginning In h .ceilCOURT OF a.MON !'8COIIIId In llle DMd No.:
11- ter ol St. II. No. :M&amp;,
PLEAS, MEIGS COliN- llec«da Of llllgl 011621100
N~ 80 Rods and
TY OHIO.
County, ...,... h tal- Prior deed laJeouucw: Ealt .. lVIII foam t1te
In punuunce Of an lowloig (Mit llllrlol, 1o- Volume 238, " - 135 aouttowat of
order of. llle to me wtt: hglnnlng at !he Apprai- al $40,000 IMICiiOII no. 211. Thence
dllected from aald uouttowat of T - of Sale: Cannot aoutto 31 deg. 30 oourt In ........ IIIII· the lot 111M or foo nwfy be aald for .... llwt Weal 20 lloda; Thence
lild ·action, l will owned by Thomas 2/:lnh olllle uppo uleed riOI1h 10 Dig 20 Min
...,.,.. to au1e at pub- Jones In the uouth value. 10% - . on. Weal 32 lloda to the Toy PoodiSs $300. 740-446- RV Service at Carmichael
lie aue1lon cin 11\e fn&gt;nt lilird ol 100 """' Lat day ol aule, ~ or North , line ol G. W. 2455. A5k for Reg;na
r..il... 741)-446-3825
llllpl of ttoe Meigs No. 303 InT........., 2, certHillcl - . bat- Marcum 33.211 Acre
County Court Houae ...... 1301Tha0hlo --on-llloii• 1rEI • recoodad In
On Frldlly, July 11,
Purcllloel, tlonolaule.
dlledllook111,llflllll8
2001al 10 a.m., of laid Thence uouth 12 dig. Tha 41P.P' alaal did nol •
ol h 1-dl ol
,_...,
day, the lollowlng e.! lUll Feel 10 .a ·include an 1nt1o1or dMdl , of llllgs
d l l c l l b l d - -. . . . . . In ... lina ......-ion of . . Coullly Ohio, Thence
Tha following real o1 laid Lal No. 531; toouae.
• Ealt on Said North
...... II dllcllbld 11 Thence riOI1h 111 dig. Robert E. Beeglo, Line 40 lloda to h
lollowl:
.2112.111 to h ..,... County 8llarllf place of ilejJinnlnga.
Help Wanted·
MRCEL NO 4: Tha foi. IOIIIMell of At!CII'MY
for
the (:containing 2 .acres,
leMing noul- situ· aald Lol · No. 531; Plllntlll
more or loaa. · .
ate In h vlllaga Of thence
north · 12 u- 'SI111f110n I Cooo•-•IJ - . , as
~. ~ Of degra. Well 118.10 Rolllf,..
~ Old At. Me St.
llelga, ._., of Oltlo taa1 to the no11u 111 POlloK M40
Alllenr. Ohio e5710
and ballndad and Of Mid Lal No. Choclouilll, OH 45201· Pl0j11111f
Ownen:
daiCJIIII d w lollowa: 531; "'*- aaulh 70 M40
Jaddl P. Allman
Iaing lot no. 531. In dagraaa •.111 513-1.141-'1100
Prior Delcl Rallc•oce.
laid ....... bounclld to the plaCe of (1111, :U, (712
212, ...... ._, lali"'"''ll eo! the hgl Mllng, -lning
PPN:IIOii 00005,000
uouth- comer Of .10 11:111 more or loaa.
APPRAISED
AT
Industrial Service Trd.nicians
h n - Jonw Lot . . . . and e&amp;Cipt 1
Pullllc Notice
$60,000 TEAMS OF
in GaUipolis, OH
In h
aaulh 1hird o1 riglll o1 ny 12 taa1
.SALE: CANNOT IE
10011Cntl.aiNo.3031n
and SHERIFF
SALES SOLD1FORLESSTHAN Wrn;k involves industrial cleaning; high
T~ 2, ...... 13 Of upon h
aida ol CAIE
NUII8ER: 213
. OF
THE
pressure water blasting: wet/dry
Thai Ohio Company'l the dlltribecl 01CV131
APPRAISED VALUE .
Puochna,
Thence- for ....... and US _..,.
10%00WNONDAYOF
vacuuming. Hard hat, drug-free and
lmllh 12 d.g.- OM ..... tD and foam h AI a I thot
SALE, CASH OR CER·
Union environment Need HS diploma
clluln andiO llnb, to a l'lllllllining P1r1 of Plalntll
TIFfED CHECK. .IW.com«; ttoenc:e nortto aaldoi.OT NO. 531 IN VS
AJICIE OUE 'ON •COiilor GED and drivers license.
70 !leg. 'I ct-. 1be 10111111 all . - . . P. , _ II II FIIIIIATION OF SALE
40 to a - ; -aof COl alatlng ol .D!FINDANTI COURT Tloa ..... lui did nol
..._ -eo 12 dig. .10 IICnl, and eleo OF CDM•CIN P.I.£AS, lncludl .., inllrlor
For more information call: ·
cllelnl eo· •c alta 'II and _ , _ IIEIGS COUNTY. OHIO. -illlllon 01 h
740-9:ZS·3372.or apply al
llnlal to Henty Pfarr i111 llle .rtpl IIi _,_ IN ..UiaalMNCE OF AN llouM.
.
- II aaa1 .,...._ ol 1 b e - I lit- Cllftii:EN OF SALE 1D II_, .E.
Meigs County
Roller! C:O..,'a aaulh- lng 11om llle btl' I 'II IE OIIIECl'ED FfiOIII Illig&amp; ()ountr 111111111
175 RaceSL
; on laid .10- part ol SAID ·COURT IN THE ~ l"or Tloa
_.., 70 . .. 5
no. 531, h AIIOVE
ENTn:LED -IIIII
Middleport, OH 45760
c:hulne and II - t o
Of auld oa 1
ACTION,
I
WILL a..m.t S.. p on I
or you may submit resume to
._ plecl ol ballnnlng, 1M po a; Ilea II» joint- EXPOSE TO SALE AT llollofuM
conlalnlng IICI'I, ly • kelp tto8t (Mit of PUBLIC AUCTION ON P.O. 1101 5410
.
kblllck@mpwservices.com
- o r 1111.
auld localld on . THE FRONT STEPS OF Clnc~olall, Ohio 452111·
law and ercept the Mid I'IIN!IIIIilog part ol THE IIIEIGS COUNTY 5410
CCIIII and oa.. miMr· Mid lot In l'lfll(r and COURT HOUS£ ON 513-241-3100
MPW. Environmental Services
ale In 11111 preoniln good ap o•lhog concll- I'IIDY MIGUIT tiT, (1118, 2S (7) 2

'i 'IICei'S

271Reain
28 Gi"" a 'big
omlle

GEMINI (Ma~ 21 -June 20) - Your handling of •financial situations shared with
others will be your suong suit. You will
base your decisions on what is best for
1hEI entint group, rather than merely for

-=7~1~141

e.:

Pass

P&amp;Bs
Pass

uno:onwn-

. tilillill
56 ·Downhill

item
.23 .King buter

T.hUNday, June 18, 2DDB
IBy •Bernloe !8ede 1()aol
Shared enterprl&amp;es can hold special
rewards in the year ahead , especially if
you associate yourB4llff ,w ith those Who
are enterprising and futurislic . If a partner has an eacpertise in a particu~ r field.
that's all the better.

·,

$250 per dozen

wide-.-

cry
21 10eojgnor

W'Graph
M ........ ,y:.

48 per flat $6.00
Vegetable plant5

.Plus Pillow. Bedskirts
Table Covers &amp; Table

SHERIFf:'SAlES CASE
NUMBER 07CV128
Ldlllle NA
PI.AlN1lFF
.
VS

oummer
18 Triumphant

~Astro­
! J 1 \ I ._
, , , ·, '-- I · i
'\, .... fl~l ( li

-

-Ins

15 ;Honor
54v....•
16 -tai
17 •Mcaa:Jeur's 55 Exbanaly

king) and claim thai overtrick.

For mort irifm-mlltion: 11isit WWMI.011Ut4114iflgworfeeft.com

,__,,..SM.

53 Shao1r.

heart ace to collect the spade ace (or

s

7•111-f}lfll Mtt11.-Fri.
&amp; s.....

46 •O areiOUI

14 •Numb,

opener rebids in a second suH wrthout a
jump and the responder must bid at the
three-level if he wishes to support the
opfmef's iirst•named suit the opene1
has made a reveree .) H the oponer
reversmr after a one-level response. h
promises at leasl 17 high-card points.
After a two-o~r-one response. though.
this may be shaded to 15 points, and the
auction is then game-forcing.
.
Over three clubs, bidding three no-trump
with 1he blocking singleton elub ace ~
hardly.ideal, bi.rt what else can you do?
You seem to have 10 tricks via three
spades. one heart and si.11 clubs.
However, you need a dummy entry once
the club aca has been unblocked. At tnck
one, carefully overtake dummy's spade
jack with your king (or ace). Then. cesh
the club ace, cross to the spade queen.
and run the dOOs. Finally, return to your

.

&amp;Removal

Please leave messa

13Swiu-

uncontested auction, whenever the

*Prompt and Quality
Work
*Reasonable Rates .

OM:tetS:

millllg&gt;
(hfph.)

Yo.ur-two·heart rebid is called a reverse.
(This is 1he definttion of a reW!rse: In an

Stanley TreeTrimming

*Insured
*E•perienced
Reference&gt; Available!
Call Gary Stanley @
740-591 -8044

46 Tnilllc:

lhr8e dubs.

WVa.121i

.

·-

6 In Ioree
11 •Gailey

English letter wrtter and novelist Horace
Walpole, who died in 1797, woole .
"Mysteoy IS the wisdom ol blockheads:
This week we are trying not to look like
blockheads. which we will n we fail to
find a way to cash a blocked suit - like
the clubs in th1s deal.
You are South, in three no-trump. West
i&lt;lads the spade 10. What would be your
plan?
Although North has only nine high-card
points, his excellent si~e-card club su~
makes h1s hand worth a game·lnvltatlon·
al sequence oi1wo clubs lollowe~ by

OJIVtJt.

_ ______,,_
----- 740.446.9200

$,,.,

Pass

Eolil

is thele .an entry?

-~

J•••·

2•
34

After unbloc1Ung,

Room • ,~ • •
... 1 lh;

. N- ldriat for '""'lldi.ow g,J lffllillfnlllfla
Avei-agt'
compms&lt;llion fm- thtse positions ranges from SiS,fH t4
per ytar .through pcrformalllt...based earnings, plus an outstanding
berujits pocltagt&gt;. Nucor StLel Marion; in. Marion, Ohio, is adding_
worleus NOW. l*rre tht rUit.ion largut stLel producer, and still
growing. Join a team that is highly ~~Wtivated, highly productive,
and dr.dit:attd to stiftty first. Nuror is dll EEO employa.

Nonb

Pass
Pllfls

Opening lead: • 10

CARPENTER
' SERVICE

_01_03_ _ _ __ __

West

1•
2•

..._.....;=~

~,

.........

43AIIIIot
'" Slow opltch

P!lir Ill full

1011

llm&gt;l!lliua lilodriciM c.rtif'...t in OH
01oio Cain "''"' UI074
, _ , 7--14~WJ· ..........

.....

42 Hlilrpln

26 IWiner:y
' ,f eallft

"'A 'K4

YOUNG'S

.6271

5 4 .2

•

Remodeliqg

~"' :~ l&gt;ff~IISIV~

round atJolle.grouncl 2003 Saturn Vue, 1998
pool. Wil have too;.....,.. Chevy Truck, 2 &amp; 10 1rucks,
ble younll!lf. ssoo. 304-675· 2002 Hyundai sonata, 2002
5345
Cava~er. Other quality ,.h;.
8cercise bike . S1amina 890 cles witt1 watTanty ,n stook.
$40. Weslo Cadence 01.15 • Slop "' call CO. Treadmill $100. Call 446- ' 328 Jall&lt;son Pi&lt;e, 740--446-

• 5 3 2
9 K J 8
• J 10 9 3
• 1 sa

• Q! 0 9
e AQ

•Complete ·

a 10 s a
Eost

. 1098 7 6

r--... /

21 ft.

• 7 52
• 8.
• K Iii

~

ACROSS

lSI fool

.. •Q J

2 gen11e r;o""' holses. good
tor adults or otdef child.
$450 each, saddle $100
eactl. 740-367-nso

.2 Cemetery Lots at Kmdand 1995
Chevy
Caprice
Memornol Ganlens·30'-675· Classtt, rum ~;~ood , looks
1349 or 304-65«164
good $1 ,800 304-8112-11277

NEA Crossword Puzzle

BRIDGE

Attnouoh )'OV W.now It Ia Important . .,.uu'll
UFINtw!in&lt;l IM IIIIIN Of a lfflO UIII

.

ln-

•. ~~~~'Q IOUP'IOHUTZ
"'":11---,. ~~ ~·'T 'mt'f~

:r

Wll

~

~

I'IGICIP.

NUMBERED
LE ITERS IN SQUARES

UNSCRAMBLE fORI
ANSWER
.

II

Nature-Peppy - Hence - Emetic - PERMANENT
Ibelieve atrue friend is me who, wbcn you make afool of
yomsel~ doesn't believe 1he condition is PERMANENT.
ARLO &amp; JANIS

�'

•
'

•

~.mydailysentinel.eom

Tri-County Junior Golf begins play
IIY Fa. CAPBIAIIT
SPO!lTS CORRESPONDENT

POINT

PLEASANT,
W.Va. - The Tri-County
Junior Golf Tour opened
the season at Hidden
VaJiey Monday in some
'b eautiful conditions.
The yollng players were
cruising along and nearly
frnished until skies darkened and the few ulifin·
isbed players had to take a
break while rain fell.
After the half hour delay
the players finished their
round in bright sunshine.
In the premier 15-17 age
gr.oup Kamal Dayal .of
Gallipolis finished very
strong in the final three
·holes after the rain to capture the first place Fruth
trophy with a fine twoover 38. Runner-up David
Greene of Mason, W.Va.,
claimed his trophy with a
steady round of 42 while
Brock McClung of Point
Pleasant was third at 45
ahead of Justin Cavender
and Eric Veith.
The 13-14 bracket featured some II players . In
the final count Nick
Saunders -of Gallipolis
posted a dandy 38 to earn
the first place trophy. Just
two strokes behind was
Opic: Lucas of Point
P·l easant. Tied at third
with 48 apiece came Zane
Warner of Meigs, Erik

SkyJine
610i11P9Bl
-

his challengers. The newlywed. used every granule of
the racing surface he could
in
another , fiat-footed
charge to 1Victory. Naber and
Nier battled nose-to-tail for
nearly twenty laps in an
exciting exchange until Nier
exited on the 21st cir.cuit.
Chillicothe driver Josh
Davis charged back to the
front after doing a 360 on
lap four and dropping back
as far as tenth. Davis used
every inch of the track for a
dramatic drive back:to third.
Tim Hunter and Adam
-Btrausser engaged in a racelong battle with Hunter
eventually claiming fourth.
Behind Davis were Hunter,
Strausser, Greg Mitchell,
Kory Crabtree, Benny
Hickel, Mark Imler; and
Brian Benson.
· Mitchell completed a
· good night after fading to
, ninth, then coming back for
a strong sixth, ' while also
making the fast-car dash:
14-year old rookie Kory
Crabtree continued his
sll!ing of top ten finishes and
35 year-veteran · Benny
!Hickel earned his f1rst oop
·t en run in a sprint car in just
his 7th time in a sprinter.
Hickel was the hard charger
of the race.
Steve Starr led the first
few laps of the VARC vin·tajle car feature after a battle
w1th Mike Swain. Mike
Mason in a 1970 midget
then led the neKt few laps
·before John Lawhorn of
Sinking Springs, Ohio took
the lead in his 1970 USAC
Dirt Champ car. On the last
lap Mason of Wilmington,
Ohio took the lead oo post
the win. Mason brought
home the win ahead of
Lawhorn, Mike Swain, and
Steve Starr.
Friday veteran Larry
Bond was the local hero
after being collected in a
grinding crash the wei!lc

before.
ln the Late Model main,
veteran Bond put it in cruise
control after getting the
jump on Tracy Friuer and
Cluis Garnes. Bond established his own zip code on
the 3/8 mile oval, half trackins the ilext closest com-.
petitors of Garnes and
Fritter. Games lihook Fritter
oil lap 12 and began a run
on Bond as· the defending
champ closed in on heavy
lapped traffic. Garnes cut
the ~ in ha:lf, but on~
Bond cleared traffic he was
off ed running .once again.
Meanwhile
Freddie
Carpenter bagged Fritter for
third and Travis Brookover
foll?~ed in suit. Racin~ for
poSition was at a premiUm.
-carpenter and Brookover
diced through lapped traffic
in putting on a show, as
Fritter faded to a distant
seventh. Pat Oillian bad a
good run as be and last
week 's winner Jeff Burdette

Allbright · of Point and
Jacob Leach of Cheshire.
Close behind them was
Brady
Curry,
David
Michaels,
Andrew
Roseberry and Samuel
G ord on ..
·
Only three players took
~o the li.UCs in the 11 - 12year-old category with
Denver Thomas of Leon,
W.Va., winning the coveted Fruth trophy with 52
strokes .w hile · Michael
MacKnight of Mason
· grabbed the runner-up
spot with 62 . Ryan
Schenkelberg
of
Gallipolis wasthird.
Kelsey Allbright of
Point Pleasant edged out a
solid 51 to earn the first
place trophy in the girls
category · while Libby
Leach of Cheshire took
runner-up honors at 59.
Two brothers battled for
the ten-and-under crown.
At the . end Of the round
Dares Hamid claimed the
crown with a crisp 40 and
Taae Hamid collected the
runner-up trophy at 44.
Both players are .from
Gallipolis.
The tour will get back
underway on Monday
when play for the second
round will take place at
Pjne Hi lls in Pnme roy.
Registration is at 8:30
a.m. with tee-off at 9 a.m.
All area golfers are invited to join.
leap-frogged to fifth and
Chris Carpenter
sixth.
gained another top ten in
eighth, Dan MorriSon came
from 17th to ninth for hardcharger honors and Andy
Bond anchored tt;nth.
Marietta's Mark Dickson
was the elitist of the 18-car
modified feature. Dickson
blasted into the lead as the
rest of the pack battled vigorously for the runner up
slot. Dusty Boley · and
Jeremy Blake had first
stakes on number two, but
the star-studded field led by
Kenny Johnson and Doug
Henry moved into contention. Johnson moved into
second ahead of Blake,
while Henry nosed by
Boley who was left tussling
with Berwanger for fifth
and sixth.
· Dickson in his GRS chassis stretched his lead with a
low-rider ilnage around the
infield tires, while Johnson
blitzed the high-side in his
copyright rim-riding style.
Henry tightened up his run
on Blake, but Blake held on
for a solid third behind
Dickson and Johnson.
Rounding out the top ten
behind the bard charging
Johnson were Blake, Doug
Henry, Dusty Boley, Jeremy
Berwanger, J.P. Roberts,
Roy Roush, Robbie Evans, •
and Louis Krushansky
Darin Roush and Jeremy \
Blake battled tooth-andclaw for the top spot in the
Pure Stock main. One lap
Blake would lead and then
Roush and vice-versa.
Finally, with two laps to go,
the versatile Blake picked
up the pace and continued ·
on to the win.
Behind Blake and Roush
were George Klintworth,
Cun Reck, Matt Holcomb,
Dusty Adkins, Gary Gould,
Eric Francis, Tony Roush,
and Bill Tewksbury.
In the Four-cylinder main
Portland, Ohio's TommY.
Adkins came from the tad
to pass 18 cars and claim
the feature win with a last-,
lap pass over last week's
wmner Tim Christopher.
That came after Adkins was
cited .for jumping on the. initial start, forcing the
Racine-area driver into
overdrive. Adkins ended
Christopher's three-week
win streak, as the rivalry
between the two competitors continues to heighten.
Behind the combatants
Adkins and Christopher
were Tony. Plaugher, Jeff
Rankin, Jeff Blanton, ·
George Klintworth, Ryan
McClain, Barry Kitts,
Bobby Collins, and Greg
King. The Four Cylinders
will run for a hu~e $600 to
win show this Fnday night,
June 20. .
Ron Pickens cleaned up
on the mini-wedge action
after claiming the heat. then
taking the Vienna MiniWedge spc;msored feature.
Behind Pickens were Stevie
Magyar, Kyle Bond, Zach
Fox, Mariah Miller, and
Hunter Brookover.

New York Mets fire Willie
ANAHEIM, Calif. (AP) us," Minaya said. "I can't
- New York Mets manager replace 25 players. A,nd the
In this May 2!
Willie Randolph was fired players care. The players
file phOtD, '(
because the losses and the · give I 00 percent."
New VOrl&lt;~
speculation about his job
"It just wasn't working," .
maf18118r ~ ·
were hurting the' team.
he said. "I think the players
Rar.ldolph · ". That's what general man- were pressing."
leaves.the :•
ager Omar Minaya said
Randolph became the first
field after bat&gt;
Tuesday after Randolph ' s manager it) the majors to get
tfnd practioe ~·
•'
awkward dismissal was fired this season, a move the
before a bas&amp;
announced in a matter-of- Mets released in im e-mail .
batt game
•
fact news release in the dead around 12:15 a .m: PDT
against the :
of night.
Tuesday.
Aorida Marlin'
With the Mets below .500
"Right now, I think we are
in New Vorl&lt;. •
and still wobbling from last somewhat underperformAfter weeks c#
year's colossal collapse, ing," Manuel said. "l think
speculatian :;
rumors about Randolph's we need to freshen up our
that his job
status built to a cres~ndo everyday players." .
was in jeop- !=
over the weekend. Minaya
Minaya said he could' ve
ardy, Willie ~
said the tension went on "far made the decision oo fire
Randolph finat.
too long."
Randolph after last year
ly
got fired by~
"It was not fair to the ended, but wanted to bring
the New Yor1&lt; ::
team, it was not fair to Willie him back. Minaya was the
Mets early · ,
Randolph, it was not fair to one ·who originally hired
Tuesday
whi...
the organization," Minaya Randolph.
most falls ; .
'Pitching coach Rick
said, several hours before
were
sleepl,gt
the Mets played the Los Peterson and ftrst base coach
· ~.
Angeles Angels.
Tom Nieto also were fired in
•
Bench coach Jerry Manuel an enormous overhaul.
Ken Obedd"ell, the club's Manuel
was promoted to manage the
Randolph led the Mets to
Mets and · will stay in that within one win of the 2006 _ manager at Triple-A New
position for the rest of the . World Series. They got' off to Orleans, and Dan Warthen,
year.
a strung start again last year pitching coach for the
"I'm really stunned by it," but plummeted down the Zephyrs, will join the major 2000 after guiding !his
Randolph said as he left the stretch and were unable to , league staff along with Luis to the league's .best roc·~
team hotel shortly before · rebound.
,
Aguayo, a Mets field coordi- (95-67).
A preseason favorite to nator.
·
He steps in for Randoipt£
noon. "I was surprised by
it."
win the NL pennanJ, the
It was a frustrating ~nd for · known for his exception!§
Minaya said he made the $138 million Mets had won th.e 53;;year-old RandOlph, steady play Dllil. slx.tliijC ;
decision
Monday
and two in a row when Randolph who was set to be an NL Star second baseman an.
stressed it was his alone . He was dismissed, He was set to coach at the All-Star game at even-keel demeanor as . a
met with Randolph at the earn $2 million •this season Yankee Stadium next month. longtime coach with tiW
Mets' team hotel after that and is owed $2.25 million in
Yankees co-chairman Hal Yankees.
•·
night's 9-6 win over the 2009, when the Mets move· Steinbrenner, at a promoWith each stretch nf
Angels.
into new Citi Field.
· tional event Thesday for the inconsistent play, chants of
"I think he was resigned to
Randolph said he was All-Star festivities, was "Fire Willie!' grew louder ;I
it. When all is said and done, sorry he wasn' t able to "ful- asked whether the team Shea Stadium and on Net
I think he Was relieved," fill what my dream is, to might rehire Randolph - · York's sports talk radio sl(1
Minaya said.
come here and help this even in an honorary capacity tion.
:
Minaya said it would have team win a world champi- · - to let him take part.
La~ last month, Randol~
been disrespectful to ftre a onship."
"Willie's been a Yankee got a temporary reprie'l
mana~er while he was still -:: Peterson said Mets man- for a lot of years. He's a w~en he mel with owq
in uniform. Instead, Minaya agement "welcomed.me into smart man. We need to let all sh~p. . . , .
;.
said be waitec;l to talk to their home and homes go the dust settle and see what
W1lbe s Job was never ~
Randolph away from the through renovations.
happens, and we'll go from danger going into this mee;
ballpark.
'T m , the hardwood floor there," Steinbrenner said.
ing," Minaya said after If¥
"11 p.m. at night, after a that's getting ripped out and
''A~ything 's a possibility," session. "Willie has my SUP."
game .. . standard procedure they're going to replace it he sa1d.
port. He has the support of
in letting a manager go in with Tuscany tile," he said.
The 54-year-old Manuel our ownership. · ... There. i~
this game," be said.
"This is a team that's takes over a squad that still no lilnbo period. Willie is
At 34-35, the Mets never underachieved and it wiiLget bas-playoff aspirations. He's the manager."
. ~·
found any consistency.
back on track," he said. "I had success before, too.
. But no promises for the
"Is it Willie Ol)ly? No, it's walk out in peace."
·Quiet and confident, future were made.
::

Vaudeville comedy
lights up
State Theater, A6

Holzer Assisted
living to host
.
~abiotic program, Aa

•

...

....

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio
.J 4l(

i

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SPORTS
• Season~ knee
su~ryforVV~

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.JI ' I 1q .!lt.IX

EPA issues ·
BY Bmt SERGENT

•

12with~publicbear-

ing scheduled on Aug. 5 at
Southern
Elementary
COLI,JMBUS
School where the OEPA
Yesterday,
the
Ohio will make a presentation on
Environmental Protection the current drafts and take
Agency issued draft permits formal testimony from resiconcerning the landfill and dents. More information,
waste ·water discharge (401 including a time for the
water quality ~rtification) hearing, will be announced
associated with American later by the OEPA. ··
Municipal Power-Ohio' s · AMP-Ohio is proposing a
coal-frred power plant pro- landfill oo deal with waste
posed' for Letart Falls.
byproduct&amp; at the plant. The
The comment period on landfill is to be localed east
the drllfts will 1'1!11 !.llltil f&gt;ug, . of Letart Falls between the
BSEAGENTOMYDAILYSENTINELOOM

ln\ll.tth,l·t1tllh:llt•n•

P draft perntits
.

.

.

intelsedioos of Hill Road
and Ohio 124, and Hill Road
· and East Letart Road. The
waste water permit bas oo do
with how streams might be
ilnpaned by the power plant.
The permits can be reviewed
at the Racine Library,
acconling oo the OEPA.
Kent Carson, director of
. communications for AMPOhio,
announced. the
issuance of the draft permits
yesteroay afternoon and said
a statement would be- fOitbcoming from the co'mpany. .

Car&amp;On also $ave an
updatf; on the JHUJOCI. say· ing'(he coinpany was in the
final stage of choosing a
prefermfUPC contractor to'
build tbi: plant. Due oo some
setbacts with the weather,
the cOmpany is also still
completing its mitigation
proj~ ,- in Letart Falls to ·
build iJiiW breedin habitats
for the Eas~ ~padefoot
Toad. ' Creating the habitat
was ,jlilrt of the conditions
·set fiXtb l)y the Ohio Power
SitlnJ Boord upon gnmlfllg

AMP-Ohio' s certificate of
eQvimnmental compatibili·
ty and public need.
·
Carson also explained "in
the next ccuple of weeks'"
consultants hired by AMPOhio will be starting phase
two of investigating archeological artifacts on the
plant site in Letart Falls
which was also required by
the OPSB. The first phase
identified
archeological
.areas of interest.
:
Carson also said overall the
Jli'Ojecl rerruiins on schedule.;

'

Pomeroy man
,;I

.,

sentenced on
attempted
murder charge
BY BRIAN

J.

REED

BREECOMYOAILVSENTINEL.COM

OBITUARIES
Page AS
• Opal L. HalfhiU, 64

· • · Engineer is first

sentenced for
economic espionage.

SeePageAl,
• Rio orientation
begins today, including
Meigs Center classes.

SeePage AS
• For the Reoold.
SeePageAS
• Friendship Circle
honors mothers and
.fathers. See Page AS
•BassAnglers
Tournament set for
Gallipolis. See Page A6
.• HMC's Health Fair is .
Saturday. "See ... .A6

WEATHER

' .,... • onl'llge.U

•

POMEROY
A
Pomeroy man charged with
attempted murder and other
crimes has been sentenced
to 10 years in prison on one
count and will be sentenced
next month on two others.
Michael Bums, 47, was
indicted on counts of
attempted murder, attempt:
ed felonious assault ;md
burglary after allegedly
stabbing Lisa Gray, 33, and
Raymond Klein, 23, at a
Mechanic Street residence
on New Year's Day.
Judge Fred W. Crow lU
sentenced llums to the maximum sentence of I0 years
on the attempted murder
char~e. and delayed sen~ncmg on. the other two
charges until July 28. Burns
was remanded to cQstody of
. Chlo1el•tta~ the sheriff for tnrnsportation
Historian Mike Gerlach gives the Red Hat Society members a glimpae d the early lifestyle of Meigs County's early settlt&gt;'"S. to the Orient ·Reception
Cen~r to begin his senteo~. He will be returned
here for the second sentencing hearing next month.
Burns was given credit for
133 days served in local custody, and was placed under a
life~ fueanns disability.
Crow also ofl!ered a postsentence investigation.
Both victims in the case
BY CHARLENE HoeRJCH
WC?re.
hospitalized for their
HOEPI.ICHOMYOAILYSENTINEL.IX&gt;M
IDJunes .
Burns bad previously lived
POMEROY - Members of the local Red Hat
with Gray at \he Mechanic
Society, known for having a good time wherever
Street home where the stabthey go, accepted an invitation last week to visit
bings rok: place but was
the Df&lt;W Colonial-style borne of Toney and Slllillll .
restrained from the residence
Dingess on Lincoln Hill.
under two civil protection
The gracious hostess served a tasty luncheon to
orders at the time of the stabthe 20 or so ladies in their red and purple garb
. bings. He had been convictafter ~hich they toured the spacious structure
ed of domestic violence and
which features .a second-story balcony overlookhad served a jail sentence on
ing the Ohio River.
the charge.
Historian .Mike Gerlach then gave the women a
Burns was arrested two
glimpse of the lifestyle of Meigs County's early
days after the stabbings took
settlers - first the English who came from
place. and has been in jail
Pennsylvania, and then the Germans cr.edjted with All decked out in their red hats and and purple tops, Dorothy Sheets, since then at the Southeastern
Regional Jail in Nelsonville.
PI nee ....... H.t. AI
left, and Cordelia Bentz relax on the stairs ollhe Dingess home.

Red Hat Society
· viSits the
Dingess home

MLEF 'community

~EX

phase' _receives funding

•

BSEAGENTOIMI&gt;\ILVSENTINELOOM

•' 4.,..
•. JIIBCIIONS - l2 PAGES

BY BEnt Sat3Eifl"

t\nnie's Mailbox

ing. However, the ftrst
phase, or ooinmunity' phase,
did, and includes a multipurpose commwiity . complex which is made up of a
rubberized ttack designed

POMEROY
The
Meigs Local Enrichinent
t ,? A,
Foundation (MIEF) recently received $175,000 in for walking and running )lRr.
~Sllifieck
•• •
state c~ital appropriation grams; nature trails designed
~~
funds to help -fmance the for hiking, biking and jogoommunity phase of a pro- ging purposes; multi-purp,litorials
ject which the foundation pose community center
~vies
hopes will benefit residents designed to ~ indoor
livmg not only in the Meigs wellDess and community
Obituaries
Local School District but activities; performing arts
A6 the Southern liM Eastern facilities; a playground with
Places togo
•
Local School Districts.
an "energy tbeme."
B Section . The MLF.P is attempting
Sports
Rep. Jimmy Stewart (R•
to fmance two phases , of Meigs) recently presented
Stall pt.development on land located the MLEF with a $75,000
..Weather
.
The
Meigs
Local
Enrichment
Foundation
recently
received
$175,000
in
state
capital
@-Ohio Volley hbiW&gt;iD!I Co. in Salisbury Township. The check and
Salisbury appropriation funds lor lhe community phase of its $3 million project in Salisbury Townshitl
second phase has to ·dO with Township with a c~k for
buildin2 a new football sta- $100,000 to be specifically which the foundation hopes wiH benefit residents living in all three school districts. Picture&lt;t
dium for Meigs Local but used for the community (from left) John Hood, Salisbury Township trust~, Mike Bartrum, MLEF, Rep. Jimmy
Stewart, Marilyn Andenlon, financial secretary lor Salisbury · Township, Bill Spaun,
~phase did not receive the
SaHibury TOWillhip trJ.t., Steve .. IS98f, trauurw, MLEF.
.
Plnua
...
IIW,AS
• capital appropiation fund-

~dars

•

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'

.-

.

'

,

I

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