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··--- - · - --

Meig County
students named
Regional Scholars, A3

Shuttle Atlantis
closes in on 120
nilllion miles, A.2

Printed on 100%
Recycled Newsprint

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio

Parking
brake set
on mobile
home
ordinance

Page A5
• Louise L. McCarty
• Lester R. Seaman
• Paul Lee Thomas

SPORTS

B Y BETH SERGENT
BSERGENT@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

·Tornadoes win
fourth straight district
See Page 81

Charlene Hoeflichlphotos

Two by two the Eastern High School graduates came down the aisle as the concert band played "Pomp and
Circumstance."

Diplomas awarded
to 63 Eastern grads
BY CHARLENE H OEFLICH
HOEFUCH@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

..

INSIDE

Graduation day is a very special time for graduates
and their parents. Here the affection shows through
as Sheryl Roush adjusts the cap worn by her daughter Mandy, a member of the Eastern High School
graduating class.

• Feds: Government
can't push BP
aside on oil spill.
See Page A2
• Monsanto mobile
technology unit
coming to Marietta.
See Page A3
• Local Briefs.
See Page A5
• Plans announced
for Lake Erie wind
farm. See Page A6

TUPPERS PLAIN-S ~ "I will trust it!:&amp; not an end,
but a great beginning."
Hannah Hysell, the Eastern High School, valedictorian of the Class of 20 I0, used that phrase, a lyric
by the band The Rocket Summer, to introduce her
comments during the commencement program
Sunday afternoon.
"While graduation seems like an end of memorie~
and good times, it is really only the beginning of what
great things are to come in all of our lives," she said.
"Graduation only marks the end of all the memories
leading up to now," she added, " and now we must
Please see EHS, AS

•~===
WEATHER

High: Mid 80s.
Low: 60.
Beth Sergent/photos

Graduations are celebrations of endings and beginnings. Here, girls from Southern High School's Class of
2010 share one last celebratory, silly moment as seniors before receiving their diplomas du'ring Sunday's commencement ceremony in Racine.

INDEX

Let's celebrate!

2 SECTIONS- 12 PAGES

SHS graduates
receive diplomas.

Calendars
.

ssifieds
Comics

BY BETH SERGENT

Editorials
Sports

BSERGENT@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

B Section

© 2010 Ohio Valley Publishing Co.

ll)!ljl,l !1, !1!11
8

D.,.

~

RACINE - Some might say graduating from high
school is like going from the frying pan into the fire
and for Southern High School's Class of 2010, it certainly felt that way as commencement ceremonies
were held inside a roasting Charles W. Hayman
Gymnasium on Sunday afternoon; an afternoon
which saw 49 students receive diplomas.

• •

Please see SHS, AS
t;

Hey, it's all good. Just ask Kyle Cunningham who
gives the "thumbs up" shortly before receiving his
diploma from Southern High School on Sunday.

POMEROY - The
brake has been set
and the wheels have
been removed when
it comes to the
amendment to the
manufactu,red/
mobile home ordinance in P.omeroy
passing its third and
final reading, making
it officially on the
·books.
The . final reading
wa~
unanimously
passed by Pomeroy
Village Council last
night during its regular meeting. The
amendment addresses
trailer usage a~ a permanent
business,
parking of mobile
homes and trailer
coaches, trailers and
mobile homes on private lots, underpinning requirements,
enforcement of violations and penalties
for this new amendment.
As reported earlier,
a major point in the
amendment is mobile
or
manufactured
homes cannot be
older than 10 years of
age in Pomeroy. This
doesn't apply to the
mobile
homes
already located in
Pomeroy before the
amendment
was
approved.
These
be
homes
will
"grandfathered in"
and therefore exempt
from the 10 years or
less stipulation.
Clerk
Treasurer
Kathy Hysell said the
2010 appropriations
for the water fund had
to be increased by
$25,000. Hysell said
the water fund is generating $25,000 more
this year than last
year. This increase in
revenue is likely due
to both new water
rates and new digital
meters being installed
in the village to
en$ure everyone is
paying for the water
they use. Hysell said
most but not all of the
meters have been
installed.
Council
also
approved increasing
appropriations
by
$8,000 in the general
fund to cover the purchase of a mower.
Council then transferred $8 .000 from
the general to the
street fund for operations. Hysell said
council appropriated
$110,000 to the street
department for the
entire year of which
$60.000 has been
transferred.
Council
also
approved $4,000 total
for repair at the
Pomeroy
Fire
Department.
Firefighters are repairing the concrete bays
and though the labor is
voluntary/free, the
supplies (rebar. concrete, rental equip. ment) are not.
This is one of two
stories on this week's
meeting of Pomeroy
Village Council.

�,PageA2

Jhe Daily Sentinel

Tuesday, May 25,

2010

Afghans: 7
arrests in
deaths of 6
NATO troops
Bv ROBERT H REID
ASSOCIATED PRESS

Red Huber/Orlando SentineVMCT

Space shuttle Atlantis thunders off its launch pad at Kennedy Space Center in Florida, Friday, May 14, headed to the International Space Station on the 32nd and final planned mission of its 25-year career.

Shuttle Atlantis closes in on 120 million miles
Unless the White
Atlantis
will
have
Sarafin noted that
crossed 120 million House grants a r~prieve. Atlantis was at the heart
miles,'' he noted.
though, this is it for of cooperation in space
CAPE CANAVERAL,
Atlantis will hit that Atlantis. Only two more between Russia and the
Fla. - Space shuttle milestone
earl} shuttle flights are sched- United States in the years
Atlantis closed in on the Wednesday. just eight uled, by Discovery and after the Cold War ended.
120 million-mile mark as hours ahead of the sched- Endeavour. NASA offi- It made seven trips to
its final voyage neared an uled 8:48 a.m. touch- cials will decide in anoth- Russia's old Mir space
end
and
astronauts down. Discover} is the er week or two whether station during the 1990s.
inspected their ship in fleet leader with more the fall launch dates are and has made I I flights
advance of Wednesday's than 142 million miles, feasible. or how long any to tl,le lntemational Space
landing.
followed by Columbia delays might be, said Station.
The laborious surve} with more than 121 mil- LeRoy Cain. chairman of
"The shuttle has been a
was canied out Monday lion mile::;.
the mission management remarkable vehicle in
using a newly repaired
''It's because of guys team.
that it has served as a
instrument that scanned like you, and the men and
As for Atlantis. Cain peaceful
means
of
Atlantis' wings and nose \:.romen who built Atlantis said time will tell exploring," Sarafin said
for damage. NASA saved and maintain her and tly whether this was irs last
This 32nd flight of
the inspection until the her and her sister ships. flight. 'Til know that for Atlantis saw Russia's
shuttle was flying free of that we're able to peace- sure when Atlantis shows Rassvet compartment
the International Space fully explore," Sarafin up in a museum some- delivere.d to the space
Station.
told the crew. ''We look where," he said. ''Until station. That's Russian
Atlantis
undocked forward to the return of then, we're focused on for Dawn.
from the space station our fair ~hip Atlantis. as this mission and taking
Monday
morning's
Sunday for the last time, well as your return.''
them one at a time."
inspection wa!'. a direct
leaving behind a new 20Shuttle
commander
NASA is under presi- result of the 2003
, foot compartment loaded Kenneth Ham replied dential direction to get Columbia disaster.
with supplies and six that 120 million miles is out of the business ·of
As is the case on every
fresh batteries. The shut- "pretty darn awesome in launching astronauts into flight since then. the
tle program is ending in my mind."'
orbit around the Earth astronauts used a I00another several months.
When 'Atlantis rocket- and, instead. focus on foot, laser-tipped inspecand Atlantis has no more ed into orbit May 14, it sending them to asteroids tion boom to check
missions lined up.
had logged 115.7 million and Mars. The Obama Atlantis' heat shield for
Before signing off. miles in a quarter-century administration
would any micrometeorite damlead flight director Mike of flight. This trip will like private business- to age The wings and nose
Sarafin radioed the astro- add 4.8 million miles pick up the slack. Until are especially vulnerable
nauts and told them after 186 orbits of Earth, that happens. NASA during re-entry. enduring
everyone was ecstatic if the shuttle lands on astronauts will continue the most heat.
A snagged cord prewith their work over the time.
catching rides to and
past l l/2 weeks.
At a news conference, from the space station on vented the astronauts
from conducting a thor"The ride out of the Sarafin noted that it's Russian rockets.
Since this is likely to ongh survey earlier in the
barn that you took with possible Atlantis may set
Atlantis, we did some sail once more. "We'll be Sarafin's last time flight. The cable was
a
math here on the just have to see how the leading a shuttle flight untangled during
ground," Sarafin said. By budget and schedule play control team. he will fly spacewalk last week. and
the time Atlantis gets to out, given the direction from Houston to Florida Mission Control said
Kennedy Space Center, that the agency has:· he for Atlantis' homecom- everything worked pering.
"the
odometer
on said.
fectly Monday.
BY MARCIA DUNN
ASSOCIATED PRESS

Feds: Government can't push BP aside on oil spill
COVINGTON,
La.
(AP) - The Obama
administration's
point
man on the oil spill rejected the notion of removir}g
BP and taking over the
crisis Monday, saying the
government has neither
the company's expertise
nor its deep-sea equipment.
"To push BP out of the
way. it would raise the
question, to replace them
with what?'' Coast Guard
Commandant Thad Allen.
who is heading the federal response to the spill,
said at a White House
briefing.
The White House is
facing increasing questions about why the government can't. assert more
control over the handling
of the catastrophe, which
unfolded after a BP offshore drilling tig blew up
April20.
All of BP's attempts to
stop the leak have failed.
despite the oil giant's use
of joystick-operated submarine robots that can
operate at depths no
human could withstand.
Millions of gallons of
brown crude are now
coating birds and other
wildlife and fouling the
Louisiana marshes.
BP is pinning it-; hopes
of stopping the gusher on
yet another technique
never tested 5.000 feet
underwater: a "top kill."
in which heavy mud and
cement would be shot into
the blown-out well to
plug it up. The top kill
could begin as early as
Wednesday, with BP CEO
Tony Hayward giving it a
60 to 70 percent chance of
success.
Allen said federal law

dictated that BP had to
operate the cleanup. with
the government overseeing its efforts.
"They're exhausting
every technical means
possible to deal with that
leak," he said. "I am satisfied with the coordination
that's going on."
Interior Secretary Ken
SalaLar suggested over
the weekend that the go\emment could intervene
aggressively if BP wasn't
delivering. ''If we find
that they're not doing
what they're supposed to
be doing, we'll push them
out of the way appropriately." he said.
But asked about that
comment Monday, Allen
said: ''That's more of a
metaphor."
Allen said BP and the
government are working
closely together, with the
government holding \'eto
power and adopting an
"inquisitorial"
stand
toward the company'~
ideas. The commandant
also said the government
has the authority to tell
BP what to do. and such
orders carry the force of
law.
Homeland
Security
Secretary
Janet
Napolitano also took a
more measured .tone at a
news conference Monday
in Galliano, La.. with
SalaLar and six U.S. senators who had flown over
the coast to :-.ec the damage. "We continue to hold
BP re-;ponsible as the
responsible party. but we
are on them. watching
them," she said.
BP said it is doing all it
can to stop the leak. Its
chief operating officer.
Doug Suttles, made the

rounds of network morning news shows .to say
that the company understands people are frustrated.
''Clearly
Secretary
Salazar ts telling us that
we need to do this as
expediently as we can,''
Suttles said. "And of
course we are." .
Hayward, BP's chief
executive, walked along
oil-soaked
Fourchon
Beach and said he had
underestimated the possible environmental effects.
''f'm as devastated as
you are by what I've seen
here today,'' Hayward
told reporters after he
spoke with cleanup workers in white overalls and
yellow boots, some shoveling oily sand into
garbage cans. "We are
going to do everything in
our power to prevent any
more oil from coming
ashore, and we will clean
evety last drop up and we
will remediate all of the
environmental damage."
Mark Kellstrom. an
analyst with Summit.
N .J .-based
Strategic
Energy Research. said
time might be running out
for BP to continue calling
the shots. "The rhetoric is
growing
up
in
Washington for the politicians to kick out BP and
let the government take
over," Kellstrom said,
though he added that it
would be a mistake.
BP had hoped to try a
top kill earlier but needed
more time to get equipment into place and test it.
A top lcill has worked on
aboveground oil wells in
Kuwait and Iraq but has
never before been attempted so f&lt;rr underwater.

•

Suttles satd the b•ggest·
technical challenge is that
the fluid must be pumped
in very quickly, and engineers need to make sure it
goes into the well. not out
through the leaking pipe,
which could make the
leak worse.
A containment device is
on the seatloor. ready to
be put in place if the top
kill fails or makes the leak
worse. It is a smaller version of a 100-ton box that
BP lowered several weeks
ago in hopes ?f captuling
much of the mi. But it got
clogged with icy crystals.
and BP was forced to
abandon it.
Engineers are working
on several other backup
plans in case the top kill
doesn't work, including
injecting assorted junk
into the well to clog it up.
and lowering a new
blowout preventer on top
of the one that failed.
The only certain pennanent solution is a pair of
relief wells crews have
already started drilling,
but the task could take at
least two months.
In another source Of
tension between BP and
the government, the l:Ompany was still using a certain chemical dispcrsant
Monday to tight the oil
despite orders from the
Environment!) Protection
Agency to employ something Jess toxic.
''If we can find an alternative that is less toxic
and available. we will
switch to that proc. UL ..
Suttles said. ''To date.
we· ve struggled to find an
alternative either that had
less risk to the environ
ment or that was rea&lt;.lily
available."

KABUL, Afghanistan - Afghan authorities
Monday announced the a1Tcsts of seven people in
Jast .. week's suicide car bombing that killed six
NATO solchcrs including four colonels - three of
them American and one Canadian.
The blast was the first in a series of major
Taliban attacks a!!ainst NATO targets - the insurgents' apparent ~response to a~ planned NATO
offensive in the south and peace overtures by the
Af!!han go"vernment.
1\Itogether, I 8 people \\'ere killed in the blast
Tuc-;day near the destroyed Afghan royal palace.
the deadliest attack against coalition forces in the
Afghan capital in eight months. The car bombing
wa:-. followed a day later by a ground assault
against the U.S.-run Bagram Air Field north of
Kabul. and Saturday's attack on the giant
Kandahar Air Field. the biggest NATO base in
southern Afghanistan.
The spokesman for Afghanistan's intelligence
service. Saeed Ansari. told reporters that the
se' en. who included one schoolteacher, were.
taken into custody separately over the last week.
He did not say what specific roles the seven
played in the attack and it was unclear what
impact the arrests would have on Taliban operations in the capital, which is far more peaceful
than rnany other pmts of the country.
Ansari said the seven were under the command
of the Taliban's "shadow governor" of Kabul,
Daoud Surkha. who the Afghans allege is hiding
in Pakistan. He said the cell was responsible for at
least seven other attacks in the capital since last
year. including the February assault against guesthouses frequented by foreigners in which six
Indians were killed.
Pre\iously Ansari said the February attack was
catTied out by the Pakistan-based insurgent group
Lashkar-e-Taiba. which India blames for the 2008
- attacks in Mumbai that claimed 166lives.
"We are saying that they have been trained on
the other side of the border, so it is clear that the
intelligence service of our neighboring country
has its role in the training and supporting of this
ten·orist group." he said in a clear reference to
Pakistan's Inter-Services Intelligence Agency.
which maintained close ties to the Taliban years
ago.
Taliban fighters stilltt"e the lawless areas along
Pakistan's border with Afghanistan as a "a
despite Pakistani military operations and U
drone attacks.
In Islamabad. Pakistan's Foreign Ministry
spokesman Abdul Basit called the allegation of
involvement by his country's intelligence service
"all baseless and groundless."
"We are committed that our soil is not used for
terrorist actions anywhere in the ~orld and we
hope others are committed to that also," Basit told
The Associated Press.
The recent attacks in Kabul and against the
bases appeared to be the Tali ban's re~ponse to
NATO's plans for a major operation in the coming
\\ec~s in the Taliban southern stronghold of
Kandahar -- and an attempt at demonstrating that
the insurgents are capable of pressuring the coalition in several patts of the country.
Sixteen insurgents and one U.S. contractor were
killed in the Bagram attack. NATO says a number
or coalition soldiers were wounded in the
Kandahar attack but gave no precise figures .·
In the latest fighting. the Canadian Ministry. of
Defense announced that a 26-year-old. Canad1an
:-.oldier \Vas killed Monday by a roadside bomb in
southern Afghanistan.
Recent insurgent assaults also seemed to be a
rebuff to President Hamid Karzai's plans to offer
peace to militants willing to give up the fight.
Karzai plans ro roll out a program of jobs. training.
and financial help to insurgents willing to give up
during a national conference, or peace jirga. set
for June 2.
The Obama administration supports economic
and other incentives to individual insurgents willing to end the struggle and abandon al-Qaida. But
Washington is skeptical of peace talks with the
Taliban leadership, hoping first to weaken the militants on the battlefield.
The jirga was originally set for early May but
was postponed until after Karzai 's visit earlier this
month to Washington. where he discussed his
plans with President Barack Obama and other top
U.S. officials. The conference was rescheduled for
this coming Saturday but slipped four days to
allow delegates from remote areas to reach Kabul.
No Talib:1n figures are expected to attend but the
1,600 cklegates are expected to include some
insurgent sympathizers.
On Monday. the secretary of parliament.
Mohammad Saleh Suljoqi. said 4.S. of the 249
lawmakers threatened to boycott the jirga unless
Karzai responds to their demands. including
submitting names of ne'v\ Cabinet members to
replace those rejected b} the assembl} last
Januarv.
Parliament refused to confirm II of the 25 nominees. but they ha\ e been serving ever since in Jln
acting capacity. The jirga could proceed without.
the parliament members. but a boycott could call
into question the degree of nationwide suppott for
an) decisions made during the conference.
Also Monday. officials in northern Afghanistan
said insurgent~ on motorbikes shot and killed a
tnbal elder\\ ho planned to attend the June 2 conference. rrib&lt;tl elder Horal Mohammad Zabet was
ktlln i S ml \\ hile t e ndin~ his sheep in f'ar)ab
p1m mcc ofttt al~ s,tid.
In the west. meanwhile, five Afghan civilians
died Monday when their minivan hit a roadside
bomb in Farah province. the Interior Ministr}
said. bight people were also wounded. many in
serious condition. ·

'

...

�-~~-------~---

·~ -·-

----- -----~ -----

---------·-- - -----------""""":"'-------------~

PageA3

The Daily Sentinel

Tu esd ay, May 25,

ASK DR.

2 010

BROTHEJ~S

To hook up or date?

Connor Swartz, .Kasey Roush, Brandy Bissell and Shannon Mclaughlin
Meigs High School

Meigs County students
•named Regional Scholars
POMEROY - Eight
students from Meigs
County were chosen to
attend the Regional
Scholars
Leadership
Conference held recently
at Camp Akita in Logan.
Attending were Devon
Baum
and
Megan
Carnahan from Eastern
Local; Flint Trevor and
Zachary Manual from
Southern Local, and
Brandy BisselL Shannon
McLaughlin.
Connor
Swartz and Kasey Roush
from Meigs High School.
Each year. the conference
participants vote for an
outstanding leader. This
year's honoree was
Devon Baum of Eastern
al.
he conferen·ce is
igned to challenge
gh school juniors.
Participants study personality types and communication styles and
perform team building
exercises.
Students have the
opportunity to participate
in drama skits. a stock
market simulation, the art
of mask making and a
hike that teaches the history of Ohio's plant life.
Favorite
activities
included a 50 foot Alpine
Climbing Tower and
archery lessons provid d
by Jeff Jones of the
Meigs Loeal Archery
Program.
The 2010 Leadership
Conference IS organiLed
by gifted coordinators in
10 southeastern Ohio
counties and Kim Allen.

C

Flint Trevor and Zachary Manual
Southern High School

vices of the Athens
igs
Educational
vice Center.

Devon Baum and Megan Carnahan
Eastern High School

Monsanto mobile technology unit coming to Marietta
MARIETTA - The
Monsanto
Mobile
Technology Unit will be
on
the
Washington
Count)
Fairg:0unl!..,
Tuesday. (1c.:!J:·~ noon to
8 p.m .. and Wednesday
and Thursda), May 26
and 27, 10 a.m. to 6 p.m.
Monsanto
Ag

Educators will provide
tours that include high
definition theatre displays
and interactive learning
s&lt;&lt;ttions. This event is free
and opl.:n tO th~ public
Monsanto is committe&lt;..
to educating ag youth.
actively recruiting the
best students for intern-

ships and careers opportunities within the company,
while helping America\
farmers be more efficient,
productive and profitable
on the farm. The emphasis will be on teaching
more about Monsanto's
advancements in breeding. biotechnology and

new Genuityn' trait innovations in com. soybean.
cotton and specialty
crops.

about noon for a covered dish dinner and
social time. Everyone is
welcome.

meeting,
Syracuse
Center.

For questions, or to
schedule a group tour,
comact Tammv Johnson
at 314-213-1517 or
email
tarnmy.rjohnson@ monsanto .com.

Community Calendar
Public

meetings
Thursday, May 27

POMEROY - Meigs
and
Water
servation
District
rd of Supervisors
11:30 a.m. at the district
office at 33101 Hiland
Road, Pomeroy.

!

~

Other events
Saturday, May 29

RACINE - Southern
High School Class of
1980 reunion, 6-10 p.m.,
Racine American Legion.

seemed so interesting and
intelligent when I sat next
to her during our bookclub meeting; I really
enjoyed having lunch with
her. But now that we have
known each other for
about five months. 1t
seems the only topic on
the menu is her. She really
talks about nothing except
herself! I really do like
her, but 1don't know how
much I can stand! - R.K.
Dear R .K.: It is interesting that we get to know
,aPCOple in fits and starts,
and after a while we can
see them as they really are
- and that may be a totally different reality from
what we tirst encountered.
It is always great to meet
new people who we feel
might be just like us intelligent, interesting and
worth our while when it
comes to building a friendship. But after we spend a
lot of time finding out all
about them - and we
want to know absolutely
everything - there comes
a point at which we want
to have the new friend ask
about us. After all. aren't
we just as worthwhile and
complex as she is?
But when the questions
about us. the probing into
our past or the teasing out
of our dreams. ambitions.
opinions and plans just
doesn ·t happen, it can be a
huge disappointment. It
hurts our feelings that she
doesn't want to invest as
much in knowing who we
are a-; we have in"discovering her. Then we start to
carefully observe - is it
just that she doesn't like us
that much, or is it that we
are dull? Or does she treat
everyone, even her closest
friends, the same way? It
mie:ht be a little comforting~ to know that you aie
not the only one being
slighted. So. now you
must decide if this version
of your friend is really one
you want to pursue. She's
•••
probably just not going to
Dear Dr. Br others: give you back very much,
Please help. I recently and 'if you are OK with
made a new friend, who at that, then carry on.
(c) 2010 by King
first I thought was the
greatest person. She Features Syndicate

Meigs County Forecast

lht:: Dirt::&lt;.:tor of Gifted

•

Dear Dr. Brothers: I
was hoping you could settle an ongoing argument
between me and the girls
who live in mv dorm.
They refuse to bel1eve that
a "hook up'' - a casual
sexual encounter between
two consenting adults can be a girl thing. too.
They just completely disregard the idea that a girl
might initiate a hook-up
and would be more into
long-term dating. I am of
the opposite view. that a
woman can get her groove
on just as well as a man.
Who's right?- S.M.
Dear S.M.: I think you
arc right. Although your
particular dorm mates
might not want to admit
it, girls can be the aggressors when it comes to
hooking up - although
they still may be reluctant to take the first step
when it comes to asking a
guy out and dating. Did
you know that women
have been working on
that for at least a generation now? Old rules die
hard. and while there
always have been women
who aren't afraid to
acknowledge their sexuality or sexual appetites,
thosF who made their
feehngs public usually
were paid to play. "Nice''
girls didn't admit to liking or wanting sex; it was
just something they did
to make their man happy
or to prove their love.
In hooking up. there is
much less emphasis on
who asks whom to do
what. It's not about holding open the car door or
paying for dinner and a
movie. It is more likely
that a young woman is
out drinking with f:iends
and meets a guy she finds
attractive. She flirts with
him. and then one thing
leads to another. In this
case, who is the aggressor? It just as well might
be the girl as the guy.
What matters is that in
the end, expectations for
another meeting may be
low. and one or the other
of them might call each
other again. Or not. But
while women generally
seek dating relationships
over hook-ups, they definitely can be the ones to
go after a night of fun.
They also may be invested in denying that this b
what they do - but I
think you win the bet.

MIDDLEPORT- The
Middleport High School
Class of 1960 will have a
reunion at the Depot in
Dave Diles Park, from 1
toi 3 p.m. Any former
Middleport alumni are
welcome to stop by and
visit.
RACINE
The
Racine-Southern Class
of 1975 will meet from 11
a.m. to 3 p.m. at the
Middle School. Alumni
visitors are invited to stop
by and visit.
Sunday, May 30
SALEM CENTER Rutland High School
'class of 1960 will meet
at the Star Grange

'v

Clubs and

organizations
Tuesday, May 25

POMEROY - Meigs
County Tea Party meeting at the Mulberry
Community Center, 7
p.m. Petitions on constitutional amendment will
be available.
SYRACUSE
Syracuse
Community
Crime Watch, regular

7
p.m.,
Community

Thursday, May 27

Alpha Iota Masters
Chapter of Beta Sigma
Phi Sorority will meet
Thursday, May 27, at
11:30 a.m., at the
Mexican Restaurant in
Mason, w_. Va.

Tues d ay ... Most I y
sunny. Highs in the mid
80s. East winds around 5
mph.
Thesday night ...Pa1tly
cloudy
in
the
evening ...Then becoming
mostly clear. Lows
around 60. Northeast
winds around 5 mph in
the evening ... Becoming

light and variable_

Wed n esd ay ...Sunny.
Highs in the upper 80s.
Wednesday night...
Partly cloudy in the
evening ...Then becoming
mostly clear. Lows in the
lower 60s. Not'theast
\\ inds around 5 mph in
the e\ening ...Becoming
light and variable.

Local Stocks
AEP (NVSE)- 31.19
Akzo (NASDAQ) - 49.95
Ashland Inc. (NVSE) - 51.98
Big Lots (NVSE) - 35.99
Bob Evans (NASDAQ) - 27.93
BorgWarner (NVSE) - 36.20
Century Aluminum (NASDAQ)
-9.80
Champion (NASDAQ) - 1.90
Charming Shops (NASDAQ) 4.77
City Holding (NASDAQ) 31.96
Collins (NVSE) - 57.97
DuPont (NVSE) - 35.40
US Bank (NYSE) - 23.59
General Electric (NVSE) 16.01
Harley-Davidson (NYSE) 30-43
JP Morgan (NVSE) - 38.62
Kroger (NVSE) - 20.67
Limited Brands (NVSE) - 24.75
Norfolk Southern (NVSE) 54.37

Ohio Valley Bane Corp. (NASDAQ) - 19.81
BBT (NVSE) -30.10
Peo ples (NASDAQ)- 14.54
Pepsico (NVSE) - 63.32
Premier (NASDAQ) - 8.70
Rockwell (NVSE) - 52.82
Rocky Boots (NASDAQ) 7.92
Royal Dutch Shell - 51.09
Sears Holding (NASDAQ) 87.11
•
Wai•Mart (NVSE}- 51.00
Wendy's (NVSE) - 4.37
WesBanco (NVSE)- 18.23
Worthington (NVSE)- 14.15
Daily stock reports are the 4
p.m. ET closing quotes of
transactions for May 24. 201 0,
provided by Edward Jones
financial advisors Isaac Mills in
Gallipolis at (740) 441-9441 and
Lesley Marrero in Point
Pleasant at (304) 674·0174.
Member SIPC.

To see more newsphotos
from our photographers go to
-.Nw-w .my dailysen t ine l. c o m
You can o r der reprints and
photo gifts of" your 'favorite
photos there too.

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PageA4

The Daily Sentinel

Tuesday, May

The Daily Sentinel
111 Court Street • Pomeroy, Ohio

(740) 992-2156 ·FAX (740) 992-2157
www.mydailysentinel.com

Ohio Valley Publis.hing Co.

25, 2010

~y) ~E t:tN'T ~POJT
frlE ACTUAL PIPlaM"'BUi WE

~\~~ ~ IT TO YOOR FACE~,

Sammy M. Lopez
Publisher
Charlene Hoeflich
General Manager-News Editor
Pam Caldwell
Advertising Director
Congress shall make no law respecting an
establishment of religion, OJ' prohiMtitrg the free
exercise tlrereo,.t; or abridging the freedom of
spaclr, or of the press; or the right of the people
. peaceabl}' to assemble, and to petition tire
Got1erument for a redress of griet'atzces.
The First Amendment to the

U.S. Constitution

TOI)AY IN HISTORY
Today is Tuesday, May 25, the 145th day of 2010.
There are 220 days left in the year.
Today's Highlight in History:
On May 25th, 1810, Argentina began its revolt
against Spanish rule, with the forming of the
Primera Junta in Buenos Aires.
On this date:
In 1787, the Constitutional Convention began
meeting in Philadelphia after enough delegates
had shown up for a quorum.
·
In 1895, playwright Oscar Wilde was convicted of
a morals charge in London; he was sentenced to
two years in prison.
•
In 1916, the Chicago Tribune published an interview with Henry Ford in which the American industrialist was quoted as saying, "History is more or
less bunk.''
In 1935, Babe Ruth hit the ?14th and final home
run of his career. for the Boston Braves, in a game
against the Pittsburgh Pirates.
In 1946; Transjordan (now Jordan) became a
kingdom as it proclaimed its new monarch,
AbduUah I.
.
In 1961, President John F. Kennedy, addressing
Congress. called on the nation to work toward
putting a man on the moon by the end of the
decade.
In 1963, the Organization of African Unity was
founded, in Addis Ababa, Ethiopia. (The OAU was
disbanded in 2002 in favor of the African Union.)
In 1968, the Gateway Arch in St. Louis was dedicated by Vice President Hubert Humphrey and
Interior Secretary Stewart UdaU.
In 1979, 273 people died when an American
Airlines DC-1 0 crashed on takeoff from Chicago's·
O'Hare airport.
In 1985, more than t1 ,000 people were killed as
a cyclone and tidal surge devastated Bangladesh.
Today's Birthdays: Lyricist Hal David is 89.
Former White House news secretary Ron Nessen
1s 76. Country singer-songwriter Tom T. Hall is 74.
Actor Sir lan McKellen is 71. Country singer Jessi
Colter is 67. Actress-singer Leslie Uggams is 67.
Movie director and Muppeteer Frank Oz is 66.
Actress Karen Valentine is 63. Rock singer Klaus
Meine (The Scorpions) is 62. Actress Patti
D'Arbanville is 59. Actress Connie Sellecca is 55.
Rock singer-musician Paul Weller is 52. Actorcomedian Mike Myers is 47. Actor Matt Borlenghi is
43. Actor Joseph Reitman is 42. Rock musician
Glen Drover is 41. Actress Anne Heche (haych) is
41. Actresses Sidney and Lindsay Greenbush
("Little House on the Prairie") are 40. Actor-comedian Jamie Kennedy is 40. Actor Justin Henry is 39.
Rapper Daz Dillinger is 37. Actress Molly Sims is
37. Singer Lauryn Hill is 35. Actor Gillian Murphy is
34. Actor Ethan Suplee (soo-PLEE') is 34. Rock
musician Todd Whitener is 32. Actor Corbin Allred
is 31 . Actress-singer Lauren Frost is 25.

Thought for Today: ''There is nothing final
about a mistake, except its being taken as final."
-Phyllis Bottome, English author (1884-1963). .

Bringing home the medal
Bv SIMON CHO
AMERICAN FORUM

· Five years after leaving my
hometown of Upper Marlboro,
Md., I returned to my elementary
school to speak about being an
Olympian.
·
Everyone knew I'd helped the
United States speed skating team
win a bronze medal in the 500
meter relay. But there's another
important part of my story I
don't always talk about: I'm a
Korean immigrant who grew up
in the U.S. without immigration
documents.
I was 4 when, clutching my
mother's hand. we crossed into
the U.S. from Canada. My father
secured my U.S. citizenship and
passport when I was 11 , but I
remember little of the process.
When I was a child, my parents
ran a small seafood take-out shop,
worked 365 days a year, and came
horne late each night. Even with
all their hard work. we barely
scraped by. Growing up. I was the
only child I knew who never had
a family vacation, even on
Christmas, Thanksgiving, L abor
Day or New Year's. On days I
helped my parei1ts at the shop I
came home exhausted, and I
couldn't believe they worked this
hard every day.
Then my parents made an even
bigger sacrifice for me.

I'd started speed skating as a
child and showed a particular
aptitude for it. Later. to support
m) skating. my parents depleted
the family resources and we
moved to Salt Lake City for my
training. Without any job waiting
for them. they risked everything
so I could skate and dream big.
There aren't a lot of people of
color in speed skating, which in
the U.S. tends to be a white sport.
When I came to skating. I came
not just as a kid who wanted to
compete. but also as a Korean
American who knew how challenging it could be to live as an
immigrant. with all the hard work
and insecurity, especially given
that we still weren't citizens.
At times, seeing all the sacrifices and risks, I wanted to give
up. I even took a break from
skating. But my friends and
schoolmates encouraged me to
return, and I also got lots of support from older skaters of color.
people like Apolo Ohno and
Shani D avis, who told me I
should cherish the journey.
This winter, I was a member of
the U.S. Olympic short track
speed skating team, ahd I brought
home a medal. I reached my
dreams. And driving me on was
the sacrifice my parents had
made.
America ·s always been my
home. Yet returning from the

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Correction Polley
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to be accurate. If you know of an
error in a story, call the newsroom
at (740) 992-2156.

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I

"

Olympics was v.hen I first realized I was truly an American and
felt accepted. We flew from
Vancouver to San Francisco.
v. here we had a layo\'er. and
when our team got off the plane
a bunch of passengers gave us an
O\ ation.
It's been an amazing journey. I
\'&gt;as thrilled to be able to return as
an Olympian to Stone Mill
Elementary School. 1 spoke with
all the children at the school. f'·
kindergmtener-. to fifth grad
and saw the teachers who
helped build my character. It \\ s
great to share my story, which is
unique but also typical. We all
have dreams and hopes.
As important as .skating continues to be for me. it's not the only·
area in which I want to succeed
and make a difference. I want to
help remove some of the challenges immi!!fant families face.
because I know that our immigration system doesn't reflect the
best that we can be.
This year. President Obama has
an opportunity to reform our
immigration laws. I hope my
story will inspire him and countless others to go full force and
have no regrets. It's 'time to bring
that medal home.

(Simon Cho is an Olympic short
track speed skarer. On the
lmemet: American Forum, mediafonan.mg.)

�Tuesday, May 25,

2010

Obituaries
Paul Lee Thomas
• Paul Lee Thomas, 94. Long Bottom, passed away
on May 23, 2010.
He was born on No"vember 11. 1915, in Minersville,
Ohio, son of the late Royal and Ural (Cooper)
Thomas. He was formerly employed as manager of a
grocery store. He was a member of the Point Pleasant
yal Order of Moose.
·
e is survived by his wife of 71 years, Gamet May
bcock Thomas. Long Bottom: a son, James R.
Thomas, Long Bottom: grandchildren: James Shackle,
Jodie Shackle, Atlanta. Ga.: a sister: Margaret Miller,
Columbus: and several nieces and nephews.
Services will be held at 2 p.m. on Wednesday, May
26, 2010, at Anderson McDaniel Funeral Home in
Pomeroy. Burial will be in Chester Cemetery. Friends
may call on Wednesday from I p.m. until the time of
.service at the funeral home. An online registry is
available at www.andersonmcdaniel.com

Lester R. Seaman
Lester R . Seaman. 94. of Sarlo\\&lt;, died at home on
May 23, 20 I 0 while sutTotmded by loving family
members.
Son of the late William F. and Ethel (Reed) Seaman,
he was also preceded in death by wife Clara Yost
Seaman, sister Mary Ollom. brother, Harold Seaman
and a step-daughter.
He later married Wilma Ginter Seaman who survives him. Also surviving are: children, Charles
(Kara) Seaman, Carol (Dan) Zimmer, Janet Seaman,
Judy (Bunk Ray) Waller, Joyce (Ed) Holzapfel:
grandchildren, Bryan (Caroline) Waller, Jennifer
(Ben) Carpenter, Kathy (Terry) Horner, Danielle,
Kenny and Rusty (fiancee Abby Mercer) Zimmer:
en great grandchildren: numerous n,ieces and
hews: a sister, Reda (Clarence) Nichols; and five
s ep-children and their families.
Following his proud service as a front-line medic in
WWII, he and his brother-in-law James Yost pur' chased and operated Seaman and Yost for over 37
years. He then learned to bud and graft fruit trees,
developed and maintained a 90-tree orchard and started bowling. which he continued through December
2009. He was a faithful member of Barlow
Presbyterian Church. the Parkersburg Bowling
Association and VFW Post 5018 and was a life member of the National Rifle Association.
A service will be held at 11 a.m., Wednesday, May
26 at Leavitt Funeral Home. Belpre. Visitation will be
from 5-9 p.m., Tuesday. May 25 and up to service
time on Wednesday at the funeral home. Military
graveside rites will be conducted at Barlow Central
Cemetery by Parkersburg American Legion Post 15.
At his request, memorial contributions may be
made to Barlow Presbyterian Church. PO Box ·146,
Barlow, 45712 or Barlow Central Cemetery
Association, c/o 525 Brackenridge Road, Vincent,
45784. Online condolences may be sent to the family
at www.LeavittFuneralHome.com.

Louise L. McCarty
uise L. McCarty, 78, Gallipolis, passed aw~y
ay. May 23,2010. She was born March 29, 1932
allipolis, to the late James and Elpha Steele Irion.
She was a 1950 graduate of Cheshire High School,
- a member of the Cheshire Baptist Church and a former member of the Cheshire Garden Club.
Louise is survived by her husband , Homer Lee
McCarty, Gallipolis. whom she married July 28.
1950 in Northup. Ohio. In addition. she is sunived
by her daughter, Pamela (David) Bryan, Gallipolis~
son, Gregory (Judy) McCarty, Clarksville,
Tennessee; grandchildren , Tyler Burnett, Columbus,
Chri stopher (Courtney) Burnett, Gallipolis,
Matthew McCarty, Lawrenceville, Ga. and Jamie
McCarty, Clarksville. Tenn.; an'd one great grandson, Cash Burnett, Gallipolis.
Services will be held 1 p.m. on Wednesday, May 26,
2010, at the McCoy-Moore Funeral Home,
Wetherholt Chapel, Gallipolis with Rev. Harold
Tracewell officiating.
Burial will follow at Gravel Hill Cemetery.
Friends may call from 5-8 p.m. on Tuesday, May
25,2010 at the funeral home.
to
sent
Condolences
may
be •
www.mccoymoore.com.

~Briefs
Memorial Day social
CHESTER The Chester Volunteer Fire
Department will hold its annual Memmial Day chicken and ribs barbecue and homemade ice cream.
Serving will begin at 11:30 a.m. A chain saw race will
be held at I p.m.

Putting out flags
POMEROY - Members of Drew Webster Post 39
will meet at 6 p.m. Thursday at Beech Grove
Cemetery to place flags on the grave sites of
deceased veterans. Lenny Jewell is the service officer
in charge of the detail.

S.ketching class offered
MJDDLEPORT - Caitlin Nease, a 2006 graduate
of Southern High School and now a junior at Marshall
University majoring in art education, will offer a four
week class in basic sketching at the Riverbend Arts
Council in Middleport.
The classes will be held Wednesdays. June 9, 16.
23, and 30 at the Riverbend Arts Council in
leport. Those planning to attend are asked to call
eat
416-5505 or Mary Wise at 992-2675 to reg•
tsrer. The cost is $25. Those enrolling are to take a
sketch pad and a #2 pencil.

Correction
COLUMB US
In a release submitted hy the Ohio
Department ot Aging about the selection of Mel
Simon for the Ohio Senior Citizens Hall of Fame, it
was stated that he is president of the medical staff at
Pleasant Valley Hospital in Point Pleasant, W.Va. A
hospital spokesman reports that he is a past president
having served 2008-09 and that Dr. Stephen K.
Rerych is the cun·ent president.

www.mydailysentinel.com

The Daily Sentinel • Page As

Swim lessons for toddlers get doctors' approval
CH ICAGO (AP) The nation's largest pediatricians group i'S relaxing its stance against
swimming lessons for
children younger than 4.
In
the past, the
American Academy of
Pediatrics has said swim
classes might give tod-

dlers and parents a false
sense of security. Now
the group says it's fine to
enroll children as young
as I.
A few small studies
suggest toddlers may be
less likely to drown if
they've
had
swim
lessons. The doctors

aren't
recommending
lessons for every young
child. Some parents may
feel their little ones aren't
ready and that's OK.
Parents should choose
classes that emphasize
water safety and require a
parent or other adult to be
in the water with the

child,
said
Connie
Harvey who heads aquatics development for the
American Red Cross and
wasn't involved in the
doctors' policy update.
Classes should have at
least one instructor for
every 10 students, she
said.

EHS from Page Al
look forward to our memories, some good,
futures. Life is bound to some bad," said Buckley.
take twists and turns but
She concluded her
just remember that things comments by making
happen for a reason.
reference to words in a
''We are bound to ' Dr, Seuss book. "You
make mistakes along the have brains in your head.
way .... don't dwell on You have feet in your
them,
and
always shoes. You can steer
remember what 'The yourself in any direction
Road Not Taken' by you choose. You're on
Robert Frost taught us. your own. And you know
Near the end it says to what you know. You are
'choose the road less the guy who' 11 decide
traveled.'
Don't
be where to go."
afraid to be yourself and
The graduating class in
stand out from the green and white robes
crowd, because really. entered the auditorium to
true success comes not "P~mp
and
from fitting in but from Circumstance" played by
standing out," Hysell the Eastern High School
concluded.
Concert
Band. The
Salutatorian
Breea pledge was led by
Buckley talked about the Amanda Roush, class
realization of graduation vice president, Darci Ann
finally being here, and Bissell, class chaplain
the appreciation she feels gave the invocation and
for the support of rela- benediction,
and
tives, friends, and teach- Samantha
Cummins
ers, all of whom helped extended the welcome.
make it happen,
After a number by the
"Graduation is not the concert band and one by
end, it's the beginning. the
handbell
choir,
To reach this new begin- Andrea Buckley, class
ning it seems like we secretary,
introduced
have experienced a lot. Scott Gheen, principal,
Together we have grown who recognized the ten
and overcome some diffi- top scholars. The class
culties. We'll
leave was then presented to
Eastern with a ton of Rick Edwards, superin-

tendent of the Eastern Jones. Michael Dennis
Local School District. Jones, Chelsi Nicole
John Rice, {?resident of Kearns, Ashley Rae
the Board ot Education. Laudermilt,
Joseph
handed out the diplomas Richard Levacy, Jake
to the graduating seniors, Allen Lynch, Patricia
and the class officers led Lynn McCloud, Gasey
in the changing of the Dean McKnight, Jeffery
William Milhoan.
tassels.
The 2010 Eastern High
Kimberly
Marie
School graduates were Minear, Billy Jo Edward
Shawn Wayne Bailey, Moore, Phillip Thomas
Mariah
Lynn
Hill- Morehead,
Haley
Barringer,
Andrew LaDonna Perdas, Enoch
Michael Benedum, Darci Titus Pierce, Bryan
Ann Bissell, Victoria Thomas
Proffitt,
Edith Boso, Jacob Dane Audrionna
Renae
Boston, James Nikolaous Pullins, Whitney Marie
Levi Brannon, Andrea Putman, Cody Lance
Marie Buckley, Breea Ridgway, Joseph David
Nicole Buckley. Judd Riffle, Samantha Hope
Arthur Burke.
Robinson.
Marcus Tyler Carroll,
Amanda
Michelle
Lawrence
Dakota Roush, Chelse Elaine
Collins, Wade Edward Roush, Jerry Samuel
Collins, Karissa Jean Rucker. Tyler Richard
Connolly, Lauren Paige Sanders, Deeanna Rose
Cummings, Samantha Sebo,
Alisa
Maria
Larie Cummins, Brandon Sham~,
Stephanie
Leon Davis, Robert Christme Shuler. Nathan
Tiomo Russell Dorst, Cole Smith, Tara Renee
Erin Machelle Dunn, Smith,
'
Scott
Amanda Sue Durham, Alan Trussell,
Kasey
Travis Justin Edwards, Alexis Turley, Hannah
Jayne West, Heather
Samuel Ray Evans.
Matthew
Clayton Michele White, Michael
Friend, Kimberly Louise Scott Whitlock, Kelly
Hawthorne, Hannah Jean Clark
Winebrenner,
Hysell, Michael Sage Amanda Carol Wolfe,
Johnson, Craig Anthony and Jordan Keith Wood.

SHS from Page Al
The graduates entered
the
gymnasium
to
"Elgar" performed by the
Southern Band under the
direction
of
Chad
Dodson. Lynzee Carole
Tucker, class president.
then gave the welcome
followed by Victoria
Leigh Freeman, class
vice-president giving the
invocation.
Breanna
Marie Taylor, president
of Southern Student
Council, led the Pledge
of Allegiance while
Steve Hodges and the
Southern Band performed
"Alpine
Meadows.''
Taylor then delivered a
salutatorian address to
her fellow classmates. In
addition to the traditional
"thank yous" to parents,
teachers and friends,
Taylor's address noted
memories which tie the
Class of 2010 together.
These memories ranged
from pep rallies, to
dances with Taylor saying: ''I'm very proud to
be part of this class.
because not only did we
know how to let the good
times roll but we were
also there for each other
during the hard times."
Taylor reminded: ''I'm
sad to say it but this will
be the last time we are
all together. After this
moment some of us will
stay in touch and some
we may never see again.
But no matter what happens. we will always
have the memories of
our past."
Though Taylor began
her speech dwelling on
the past . she ended it by
explaining the word
"commencement" was
meant to define a
"beginning to the next
chapter in our life."
Keeping on the theme of
beginnings, Taylor asked
her classmates to "fear
not for the future, weep
not for the past" and to
"embrace the future''
while remembering "we
all make mistakes. It's
part of life. But instead
of dwelling on the past
learn from it." Finally.
Taylor closed by looking
forward: ''Instead of a
final farewell to my
Class of 2010. 1 want to
be the first to wish you
all the best of luck in
your future."
Next. Tucker stepped
to the podium to deltver
her valedictorian address.
Tucker spoke about the

days leading up to graduation and how, "I was so
excited for this day to
come but it will be the
saddest happy day of my
life. It binds up all of our
accomplishments into
one short night of recognitions, then we say
goodbye."
Tucker's speech also
contained the traditional
"thank yous" to parents,
friends, families and
teachers whom she said
were "special people"
who
don't
receive
enough credit for what
they do. Tucker spoke
about the Class of 20 10
entering Southern High
School as freshmen who
believed they were "awesome" but were "probably just annoying" to
some of the faculty .. .faculty that Tucker said
"stuck with us." She then
quoted Galileo: "You
cannot teach people anything. You can only help
them discover it within
themselves.~·

Tucker added: "That's
what the faculty of
Southern High School
does every day. They
look at us all more than
just students. They see
what most can't and
that's our potential."
Tucker then asked her
classmates to "cherish
this moment" of togetherness. She echoed fond
memories of a tight-knit
group, many of whom
met in kindergarten, and
how Sunday's commencement could be the
last time that group is all
together, saying: "We
started together. and
we'll finish together. And
I have to say it was a fun
ride.
Congratulations
Class of 2010, let's show
the world who we are!"
SHS Principal Daniel
Otto then made special
recognitions in the Class
of 2010. In addition to
Tucker and Taylor, academic honorarians (the
class' top 10) include
Bradley
Vincent
Coppick, Michael Brewer
Manuel,
Catherine
Elizabeth Woods, Dustin
Mark Salser. Cyle Virgil
James Rees, James Dale
Evans,
Kristopher
Addison Kleski, Jonathan
Douglas Powell.
Receiving
honors
diplomas are Coppick,
Evans, Kleski, Salser,
Taylor, Tucker, Woods.
Receiving awards of
merit are Coppick, Taylor

Wayne Deem, Kleksi,
Manuel, Powell, Rees,
Salser, Taylor, Tucker,
Woods. Members of the
National Honor Society
are Coppick, Cheyene
Nicole Dunn, Manuel,
Salser, Taylor, Tucker,
Woods.
Superintendent Tony
Deem then presented the
Class of 2010 followed
by Dennie Hill, president
of the Southern Local
Board of Education, presenting diplomas to the
graduates.
A complete list of the
graduating Class of 20 10
is: Dylan Nash Boso,
Brooke Kailyn Chadwell,
Bradley
Vincent
Coppick, Sean Nathaniel
Coppick, Isaac Lee
Cummins, Kyle Robert
Cunningham,
Taylor
Wayne Deem, Cheyene
Nicole Dunn, Justin Ira
Eblin, James Dale Evans,
Victoria Leigh Freeman,
Megan Rachelle Gray.
K.ayla Brianne Greenleaf,
Garry Logan Huddleston,
Savannah Renee Hunt,
Shawn Carson Imboden,
Douglas
Gregory
Jenkins, Jr., Gabrielle
Elizabeth Johnson, Justin
Ryan Kimes, Kristopher
Addison Kleski, Taylor
Jordan Lemley, Amanda
Leigh Linkous, Michael
Brewer ManueL Justin
Wayne McNabb, Joseph
Cody Neal, Jonathan
Douglas Powell, Cyle
Virgil James Rees, Corey
Joseph Reitmirc, Cody

Lawrence
Richards,
Bobbi Lea Riffle, Chelsi
Diane Ritchie, Jesse
Dylan Ritchie, Colby
McKenzie Roseberry,
Dylan James Roush,
Nathan Winnet Roush,
Dustin Mark Salser,
Stephanie
Lynn
Shamblin, Dustin Lee
Smeck, Ariel Ren'ee
Smith,
Kayle
Sue
Stevens, Breanna Marie
Taylor, Jordon Lewis
Taylor, Lindsay Desirae
Teaford, Lynzee Carole
Tucker, Ashley Morgan
Walker, Jacob Edward
Wilson,
Catherine
Elizabeth
Woods,
Brandon Michael Yates,
Andrew Tyler Young,
Tucker then instructed
the class change of tassels as the Southern
Band played the "Alma
Mater." Woods gave the
benediction and the
Southern Band performed "Pomp and
Circumstance'' as graduates exited the gymnasium.

Legal Notice
The Public Utilities Commission of Ohio (PUCO)
has scheduled a hearing m Case No. 09 756 ELESS, In the Matter of the Applicauons of Columbus
Southem Power Company and Oluo Power Com
pany for Establishing New Reliability Standards.
The application was filed pursuant to Section
4928 .11 of the Ohio Revised Code and Rule 4901: l 10 10 of the Ohio Administrative Code. Columbus
Southern Power Company and Oluo Power Company are seeking PUCO approval of their minimwn
perfonnance standards for the reliability of t11eir
distribution systems. The PUCO has scheduled a
hearing to consider the matters raised m the
Companies' application. The heanng will commence
on June 28, 2010, at 10:00 a.m., at the offices of the
PUCO, 180 East Broad Street, 11th Floor, Hearing
Room 11 D, Columbus, Ohio. Any person seeking
to participate in the hearing should file a motion to
intervene with the PUCO by June 2, 2010. FUrther
infonnat10n may be obtained by contacting the
Public Utilities Commission of Ohio, 180 East
Broad Street, Columbus, Ohio 43215 3793. b)
calling the PUCO hot line at 1 800 686-782o; or by
going to the PUCO website at www puco oluo gov,
selecting DIS, and inserting the case number
referenced above.

�~PageA6

I

The Daily Sentinel

'

Tuesday, May 25,

2010

;

Online job search tools
For those reentering the
job market after decades
of employment, you
should know that the rules
have changed considerably since you were last
looking for a job.
.
Fifteen years ago, onhne
Job sites were in their
mfancy; now thousands of
sites post millions of jobs
every year and they're the
most widely used and
Jason Alderman
practical job-hunting tool - - - -- - - - - available.
,
If online job searching is
new to you, here are few hints for navigating the
process:
Most large employers- and many smaller companies as well - post job opportunities on their own
websites. Typically, you either submit your resume ~r
flll out an online application and the company Will
reach out if you meet their qualifications. Many sites
ask you to open an account so you can be contacted
when appropriate jobs become available.
To broaden your search beyond individual companies, there are many job search sites from w~ic~ to
choose. Some target particular career specialties,
while others post listings from broader categories.
Some list jobs for which employers ha~e paid a posting fee - much as they us~d to do w1th n~w spaper
classified ads. Others are JOb search engmes that
aggregate job postings from company websites, other
job sites, newspapers, recruiters, etc.
Features vary widely from site to site and may
·
include allowing you to:
• Search positions by job title, career level. job type
(full-time, part-time, etc.), industry, location, pay
range, relevance, key words and age of posting.
• Post your resume or create a profile outlining what
you're looking for.
• Create and save custom searches.
• Set up alerts so you'll be contacted when new jobs
meeting your criteria are posted.
Some robust, job sites include services such as
resume and cover letter writing assistance, tips for
conducting a job search, interview pr~~aration and
follow-up advice, salary and cost-of-hvmg calculators and articles by career professionals. There may
be fees for some services such as resume assistance.
Most job sites don't charge to access job. listings
since fees are paid by employers or advertisers although some highly specialized sites !!lay c~arge a
fee. Before paying such fees, read the fme pnnt and
make sure you fully understand the services provi~ed,
since most listings are available free ~n .other st.tes.
Also beware of sites that make unrealistic promtses
or th~t lock you into a service agreement that's difficult to cancel.
Some of the more popular and user-friendly job
search sites include:
•
Monster.com
(www.monster.com).
Careerbuilder.com (www.careerbuilder.com) and
YahooHotJobs .com ( www .hotjobs .yahoo .com) three of the largest and most comprehensive sites.
Note: YahooHotJobs.com was recently purchased
by Monster.com, but for now, it still operates independently.
• USAJOBS.com (www.usajobs.com) - the U.S.
Government's official job site.
.
• Linkedln (www.linkedin.com) - a professt~nal
networking site that also incl~de~ a job search ~ngt'!e.
• Craigslist.org (www.cratgshst.org) - pnmanly
local listings.
• TweetMyJOBS (www.tweetmyjobs.com) - a site
for Twitter members.
• Hound.com (www.hound.com) - shows jobs
from employer websites only.
• Indeed.com (www.indeed.com) - posts jobs from
thousands of company career sites and job boards.
• Dice.com (www.dice.com) - targets technology
jobs.
Finally, be cautious when posting contact infon~a­
tion on job sites because spammers and aggress1ve
marketers have been known to troll these sites for
leads. You may want to set up a dedicated email
account to help weed out spam.
(Jason Alderman directs Visa 's financial educCflion
programs. To Follow Jason Alderman on Tv.·ttter:
www.twitter.com/Practica/Mone)'.)

Plans announced,for Lake Erie wind farm
B Y M EGHAN B ARR
ASSOCIATED PRESS

CLEVELAND
General Electric Co.
announced Monday that
it plans to harness the
power of winds blowing
across Lake Erie by
developing the world's
first freshwater wind
farm several miles offshore from downtown
Cleveland.
G~ and the nonprofit
Lake
Erie
Energy
Development Corp., or
LEEDCo, announced a
partnership to develop
five wind turbines about
6
miles
north of
Cleveland Bi·owns stadium. The turbines, which
would stand about 200
feet tall, would aim to
20
generate
about
megawatts of power by
2012
and
Jnoo
megawatts by 2020.
The
announcement
came weeks after the
Obama administratit&gt;n
cleared . the way for
AmeJica ·s first offshore
in
wind
farm
Massachusetts. In late
April. U.S. Interior

Secretary Ken Salazar
approved a $2 billion
Cape Wind project off
the shores of Cape Cod
after more than eight
years of lawsuits and
government reviews.
America
has
the
world's largest onshore
wind industry but Jags
behind other countries in
offshore electric generation because of high
upfront costs, heavy regulation, local opposition
and technological challenges.
In Cleveland, the wind
will turn blades up to 150
feet long, producing
enough electricity to
power up to 7,000
homes, said Cuyahoga
County Prosecutor Bill
Mason, who chaired a
loc;:al task force that
established LEEDCo.
"Obviously, the wind is
free. there's no emissions," Mason said. "So
it also helps clean up the
environment."
Fairfield, Conn.-based
GE will build and maintain the turbines, the partners said in a statement
released from the annual

or
the
conference
American Wind Energy
Association in Dallas. In
2009, GE had 44 percent
of the U.S. wind turbine
manufacturipg market.
The initial phase will
cost $80 million to $100
million, with at least 60
percent of that paid for·
by the sale of the electricity generated, Mason
said. Government loans
will also help cover
building costs.
In Ohio, state officials
are jockeying to put Lake
Erie at the foreqont of
offshore wind power
development through a
combination of tax-cuts
and regulatory measures.
Lake Erie is the shallowest of the Great Lakes, a
factor seen as an advantage for anchoring turbines on the lake bottom.
In December, New
York state officials were
scouting for developers
of similar wind turbine
projects in Lake Erie and
Lake Ontario. Canada
also has considered wind
farm development in i.ts
Great Lakes waters.
Opponents of the Lake

Erie project say tpe tur- .
hines would have implicadons for commercial
and r~creational navigation, water quality, fish
habitat and even flight
patterns for birds and
aircraft.
The Massachusetts
ject faced intense oppos
tion from two Native
American tribes and
some environmentalists
and residents, including
the late Sen. Edward M.
Kennedy, who warned
that the windmills could
mar the ocean view.
Although wind power
accounts for less than 1
percent of the nation's
energy consumption, it is
gaining ground among
utilities companies and
local governments as
stiffer government regulations for carbon emissions loom.
Denmark installed the
world's first offshore
wind turbine 20 years
ago, and there are offshore wind farms around
Europe. China has built a
commercial wind farm
off Shanghai and plans
several other projects . •

Around Ohio
Top lawyer at
public safety
office demoted
COLUMBUS (AP) The top lawyer at the
Ohio Department of
Public Safety has been
demoted over allegations
that he wanted to set up
the state watchdog for
possible criminal charges.
Chief Legal Counsel
Joshua Engel will be suspended for five days and
demoted to a staff attorney.
The decision announced
Monday by Public Safety
Director Cathy CollinsTaylor comes after an
internal investigation into
whether Engel discussed a
scheme to set up Inspector
General Tom Charles over
leaked security assessments of the governor's
mansion.
The
investigation
couldn't verify the allegations, but Collins-Taylor
said Engel discredited the
agency by having a conversation with another
official about the possibility of a leak.
Charles had been
investigating an aborted
sting of inmates working
at the mansion to funnel
tobacco into prison

2nd teen faces
adult charges
in alpaca death

Bills stuck in Legislature
foreclosures rise

HAMILTON (AP) - A
judge has ruled that a second teen accused m the
theft and fatal beating of a
3-month-old alpaca from
DAYTON (AP) - About 90,000 foreclosures have an Ohio farm should be
been filed in Ohio in the past year while bills intend- tried as an adult.
ed to stabilize the housing market remain stalled in
The Butler County
the state Legislature, a newspaper reported Sunday.
Juvenile Court judge
Foreclosures across Ohio totaled 24,711 in the first ruled Monday that 17quarter of 20 l 0, a 9 p~rcent increase over _the same year-old
Nicholas
period last year, accordmg to the Dayton Datly News. Reynolds • case should go
State Rep. Mike Foley, a Democrat from Cleveland. to a grand jury. Reynolds
said he is frustrated that two of his bills to address the is charged with breaking
problem are going nowhere with the Repu_bli~an_-con­ and entering, grand theft,
trolled Senate. Democrats who have a maJonty m the vandalism and tampering
House passed his bills last May.
.
with evidence.
One of the bills would impose a $750 fee for filmg
The judge ruled earlier
a residential foreclosure action and declares a six- that 17-year-old Marcus
month moratorium on residential mortgage foreclo- Miller's case also go to
sure judgments.
adult court. Miller is
Sen. John Carey, chairman o~ the Senate ~inance charged with breaking
Committee, said he has been talkmg w1th off1c1als and and entering, grand theft,
legislators about the various bills and has not gotten complicity to vandalism
sufficient agreement to move forward.
.
and tampering with eviCarey said his committee will work on the 1ssues dence.
this summer.
Animal cruelty charges
Bill Faith, executive director of the Coalition on against both teens remain
Homelessness and Housing in Ohio. has been work- in juvenile court.
ing with the committee on wording in the pending
The alpaca named
bills that Republicans and Democrats can agree on.
Masterpiece was valued
He said the two partieS aren't too far apart on mea- at $8,000.
sures to regulate the servicing companies and give
A message was left for
timely notice to tenants whose landlords face fore- Reynolds' attorney.
closure.
"It's very frustrating that it's taken this long to
come to any kind of agreement." h~ ~aid .. "And. the
thought of it taking months longer ts JUSt mcred1bly
frustrating."
s~at
The Ohio Bankers League is opposed to a mor~to­
rium and fees charged to lenders that foreclose agamst
COLUMBUS (AP) properties, said Mike Adelman, the league's vice
Ohio sheriffs want to
president of government relations.
Adelman said the league does back increased regu- change state law so they
lation of mortgage servicers. the companies that col- can move offices or -other
lect mortgage payments - and fees
and order facilities outside the
county seat of justice.
foreclosure fllings.

as

The Buckeye State
Sheriffs' Association said
Monday the change is
needed to update antiquated laws dealing with
sheriffs' operations.
The issue arose after
Athens County Sheriff
Patrick Kelly asked the
Ohio attorney general if
it was possible to build a
new set of offices outside
Athens city limits.
The opinion by Attorney
General Richard Cordray
released last week says
Ohio Jaw prevents a sheriff from having offices
outside the county justice
seat, typically the county
courthouse.
Kelly says his office
long ago outgrew its
downtown Athens location
and there aren't city lots
big enough for a new operations and offices facility.

FBI: Violent
crime down in
Ohio big cities
COLUMBUS (AP)' New FBI figures show
violent crime declined
last year in Ohio's largest
cities. as it did in the U.S.
overall.
The FBI says the total
number of murders, robberies, forcible rapes and
other violent crimes
reported to law enforcement went down during
2009 in Akron, Cincinnati,
Cleveland,
Columbus,
Dayton and Toledo.
They're the six Ohio cities
with populations of more
than I 00,000.
Fewer robberies were
reported ·in all the cities,
but the results were mixed
for other crime categories.
For example, murders rose
in Akron, Cleveland,
Dayton and Toledo but
were down considerably in
Cincinnati and Columbus.
The FBI says violent
crimes
nationwide
declined 5.5 percent last
year. in the third straight
annual drop.

Report: State
forced to
waste swine
flu vaccine
COLUMBUS (AP)
Remember last fall's long
lines for swine flu shots in
Ohio? Now, the state has
so much vaccine that a
newspaper
concludes
much will be wasted.

The
Columbus
Dispatch reports Monday
that Ohio Department of
Health data show almost
1.5 million doses of vaccine statewide hit their
expiration dates before
they were 1used. Officials
say demand died off
when flu season turned
out relatively mild.
The state is sitting on
about another 1 million
unused doses that are still
good.
Department spokeswoman Jen House cautions that the information
is incomplete because
hundreds of vaccine
providers have not turned
in reports on usage, as
requested.
In Columbus, Franklin
County
Health
Susan
Commissioner
Tilgner says her department has disposed of
9,200 expired doses.

AAA: Gas
down 12 cents
from last week

video VlSlts will help
inmates maintain family
ties and save family
members travel costs and
time if they live far from
state prisons.
A test involving four
prisons will begin June
15. Video stations for
inmates will ·connect to
video booths at Ohio
Adult Parole Authority
offices in Cleveland and
Cincinnati. At those locations, up to two adults
and two children who can
sit on their laps .will see
and talk to an inmate for
up to a half-hour for a
prepaid $25 fee.
Officials intend to
expand the program to all
state prisons and regia'
parole
offices,
they're not sure when.

Ex-astronauts
want Ohio
museum to
get shuttle

DAYTON (AP)
More than a dozen former astronauts want
COLUMBUS (AP) Ohio gasoline prices have NASA to send one of its
slid another 12 cents in space shuttles into retirethe last week thanks to ment at an Air Force
museum m Ohio.
falling oil prices.
In a letter to NASA
According to a survey
from auto club AAA, the Administrator Charles
Oil Price Information Bolden Jr., 18 ex-astroService and Wright nauts say Air Force work
Express, Ohio's current was instrumental to makaverage price for regular- ing the shuttle program
grade gasoline is $2.61 possible. They're urging
per gallon, down from that one of the spacecraft
be placed on permanent
$2.73 last Monday.
Ohio gas is 18 cents display at the National
cheaper than the current Museum of the U.S. Air
national average for regu- Force in D ayton w.
lar, $2.79 a gallon. And, the shuttle program e
the state's gas prices are this year.
Signers of the May 11
now within 20 cents of the
lower levels from a year letter include Kathryn
ago, when Ohio motorists Sullivan, America's first
woman to walk in space,
paid $2.42, on average.
The cost of crude oil and Charles Duke Jr., a
has dropped about 20 member of the Apollo 16
percent since early May mission to the moon.
The Smithsonian in
amid declines in global
stock prices and the euro . Washington is getting the
shuttle Discovery. NASA
is still deciding where to
send its two others.
Endeavour and Atlantis.

Ohio to
try inmate
video visits
with family

COLUMBUS (AP)
Ohio's prison system is
about to allow loved ones
to spend time with
inmates through a video
hookup from a specially
equipped parole office.
Prisons spokeswoman
Julie Walburn says the

Ohio sheriffs
told to stay in
county

We' re so proud of you
Love, Mom &amp; Dad

1-877-267-3266
www.core.com

�Bl

The Daily Sentinel

Inside
PPHS competes at W.Va. State Meet, Page B2
Blue Angels nin district title, Page 86

Thesday, May 25,2010

Lady Eagles·fall
to Clay, 3·2

. ~~ SCHEDULE

EROY- A schedule ot upcom1ng
school vars1ly sporting evenll
lnvolv1ng teams from Molgs, Mason, and
Gallla countlas

Iu.w1.D.Y. May 25
Baseball
Class A regtonal semt!tnal
Charleston CatholiC vs Wahama at
• Trrana Fteld, 6:30p.m

BY BRYAN WALTERS
IWAL-eRS@MYOAILYTRIBUNECOM

Wednesday. May 26
Baseball
Class AA Rog10nal Ftnal
• Magnolia at Point Pleasant, 6 30
• p.m
Track and Field
Reg10nal D-3 Meet at Fa rftcld
un on HS, 4 p m. .

~fl~FORD. Ohio Oh those dreaded ducks
on the pond.
Eastern softball had
pknty of opportunities
to pick up the program's first d1strict title
~ince 2003 on Saturdav
at
t-.tinford
High
School. but the Lady
~agles
ultimately
stranded II baserunners
in a heartbreaking 3-2
setback to Portsmouth
Clay in a Division IV
district final in Scioto
County.
The second-seeded
Lady Eagles (22-5) led
and trailed after one
complete inning against

tbumda.Y..MI¥ 21
Bas6ball
OMstOn IV reg1onal semrhnal
Southern vs. Tuscarawas Contra!
Cathohc at Farrf1eld Untan HS 5
p.m.
Softball
Drv1ston II regtonal semtftnal
Galha Academy vs. Dover at
Pickerington Central HS, 5 p.m.
Track and Field
Regional 0·2 Meet at
Meadowbrook HS, 4 p.m.

Ohio district
tack stories
Full details of the
Division II and Division
III district track and field
championships held at
Oak Hill High School
will be available in the
sports editions of the
Gallipolis Daily Tribune.
The Daily Sentinel and
Point Pleasant Register
on Wednesday.

Turley

Cummins

the top-seeded Lad)
Panthers (22-7), as I!HS
took a 1-0 lead after a
half inning and then
trailed 2-1 after one full
frame.
The Lady Eagles rallied to knot the game up
at two apiece in the top
of the third. but Clay

Please see Eastern, 86

Sarah Hawley/file photo

Eastern's ~llie Rawson hits a pitch during Thursday evening's district semifinal
game agatnst Leesburg Fairfield. Rawson had two hits in Saturday's district final
game against Portsmouth Clay.

I

Point baseball
advances to
regional finals
B Y BRYAN WALTERS
BWALTERS@MYOAILYTRIBUNE COM

POINT PLEASAN'I.
W.Va. - Familiar faces
. a very familiar place.
or the fourth consecupostseason. the Point
asant baseball team
finds itself one "in away
from advancing to the
' Class AA state tournament following: Monday
night's 13-10 v1ctory O\ er
visiting Roane County in
a Region I semifinal
matchup
in
Mason
County.
PPHS
(14-14)
improved to .500 overall
this season while making
school history, as Point
baseball will be playin~
in its fourth straight
regional title - a first for
the
pro~ram.
Point
Pleasant w1ll also be hosting the regional final on
Wednesday against the
winner of the WeirMagnolia contest played
. on Monday night.
Both the hosts and the
Ra1ders ( 19-1 0) produced
12 hits apiece in the con~Fat. but it was Point
~asant that made the
ost of their dozen hits.
After falling behind 1-0
after an inning and a half
·of play. PPHS countered
with two runs in the bottom half of the frame to
take a 2-1 lead after two
complete. And the hosts
would never look back.
Point Pleasant sent 13
· batters to the plate in the
bottom of the third.
which resulted in six hits
and eight runs for a commanding 10-1 edge after
three full frames.
Roane County. however. retaliated with a I0batter inning in the
fourth. which resulted in
four hits. t\\O \\alks and
six runs to pull the contest back to v.. ithin striking distance at I0-7.
Both teams went scoreJess until the bottom of
the sixth. when Point
added three insurance
s to extend its lead to
-7
after six complete.
•
RCHS produced four
hits and benefited from
two P~int errors to score
three times in the top of
the seventh, but the
Raiders never came closer than the 13-10 tinale.
Point Pleasant committed four errors in the triumph. twice as OHIO) as
the Raiders· final tally.
PPHS also left five on

·

Please see Point 82

,

Sarah Hawley/photos

The Southern baseball team won its fourth straight district title on Saturday with an 8-5 win over Portsmouth Notre Dame. The team is pictured here after accepting the championship trophy.

Tornadoes win fourth straight district title
BY SARAH HAWLEY
SHAWLEY@MYOAILYTRIBUNE.COM

LUCASVILLE. Ohio
- "Consistenc)"
That is the \vord
Southern head coach
Ryan Lemley used to
describe his team's
fourth district title in as
many
seasons
on
Saturday afternoon as the
Southern baseball team
\\~n i~ fuurth con~c~
tivc district championship with an 8-5 victory over Portsmouth Notre
Dame.
For the fourth time in
as many year the
Tornadoes will be making the trip to Lancaster
for the regional semifinals with one difference
this year. This time
around the Purple and
Gold '"ill not have to
face Nev,:ark Catholic.
the team that has ended
their tournament run the
past three seasons. The
Tornadoes will face
Tuscarawas
Central
Catholic on Thursday at
5 p.m. at Beaver's Field
in Lancaster. Ohio.
''We've got a couple
guys that have been on
all four of them," Lemley
stated. ''It goes back to
some of those guys earlier on. a few years ago,
doing things the right
way and these guys
learned to do it the right
WH)"

In Saturday's district
linal. the Tornadoes. the
visitors in the game. took
a 1-0 lead in the top of
the first inning with lead
off batter Taylor Deem
hitting a single. Deem
scored following a single
by Michael Manuel and

Southern head coach Ryan Lemley, left, goes onto the field to congratulate his players following the team's district championship win on Saturday in Lucasville, Ohio. Pictured are Southern pitcher Kyle Cunningham (16}
and third baseman 'Jesse Ritchie (5), who made the final out of the game, along with other members of the
team.

an RBI sacrifice by
Jordon 1 aylor.
Notre Dame battled
back in the bottom of the
first to take the 2-1 lead.
Singles by Tyler ~oel.
Alex Glockner. and Jeff
Judy allowed .Noel and

Michael Mator to score.
Southern regained the
lead in the second.
adding
three
runs
Dustin Salser lead off
with a double and
advanced to third on a
sacrifice bunt b) Kyle

t

Cunningham. An RBI
double by Greg Jenkins
scored Salser. Deem hit
an RBI single. Eric
Buuard singled. while
Michael Manuel hit an
RBJ single to· score
Deem.

~otre
Dame was
retired m order in the second b) Southern pitcher
Cunningham.
Cunningham hit a two
out single for the

Please see ntle, 82

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The Daily Sentinel

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--.-

•• =

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Point
from Page 81
base. while RCHS stranded seven on the bacrs.
Ju-.tin Cavcndar icd the
hosts \\ ith fou r hits, followed by Titus Russell
and Derek Rodgers with
two safeties each. D.W.
Herdman. Brandon Toler.
Clay Krebs and Steven
Porter all added a hit
apiece to the winning
cause.
Cavendar and Rodgers
both led the offe nse with
three RBis. follo\'.cd bv
Porter and Rm.sell wi ti1
two each.
Brock McCi uno was
the winning pitcher of
record, allowmg se' en
hits and ·ix runs over 3.1
innings
of
work.
~1cCiung also allowed
three \\alb and struck
out t\'.o in the decision.
Eric Roberts worked
the final 32 innings of
relief, aiiO\\ ing live hits
and four runs \\hilc walk~
ing zero and fanning four.
Josh Jones took the loss

Sarah Hawleyfphoto

Point Pleasant's Chauncey McClanahan competes in
the 110m hurdles at the W.Va. State Meet on Friday in
Charleston, W.Va.

Point boys finish
sixth at state; Lady
Knight~ tie for 23rd
BWALTERS MYDAJLYTRIBUNE COM

C H ARLESTON,
W.Va.
The Point
Pleasant track and field
teams capped a banner
year in grand style this
past "cekend at the 20 I0
WVSSAC state meet
held at Laidle) Field on
tne campus of the
University of Charleston.
PPHS didn't have a
state champion come
away from the two·day
event. but it landed four
state runners-up in Cbss
AA competition as the
boys team placed sixth
with 41 points while the
girls tied with Braxton
County for 23rd overall
""1th nine points.
Senior
Chauncey
McClanahan Jinished a
brilliant career on a bril~
liant note. finishing ~cc~
ond in both the IIO·meter
high hurdles (15.6 second~) and 300m hurdles
(40.08).
McClanahan - who
also competed in t\1. o
relay events - finished
the day with I~ individual points. highest of any
Point competitor at the
event.
One of those relays was
the 4x200m, which PPHS
also placing second in
with a time uf 1.33.51.

McClanahan.
Zach
Canterbury.
JeWaan
Williams and Nathan
Roberts were th(. four
members of that state
runner-up squad.
Brady Reymond ""as
third in the long jump
\Vith a dbtance of 20 feet.
1 inch. McClanahan.
Williams. Qrrin Chason
and Anthony Darst finished fourth in the
4x I IOm shuttle hurdles
with a time of I :01.07 ..
The Point boys had
three fifth-place efforts,
two of which carne in
relay events. The 4x IOOm
sqvad of Williams. Darst.
Roberts and Preston
Rairdcn posted a time of
45.55 second-., while the
4x400m
team
of
Canterbury. Williams.
Darst and John Kinnaird
had a mark of 3:34.67.
Canterbury was also
fifth in the 400m dash
with a time of 51.82 seconds. Matt McCom1ick
rounded out the bo) s
scoring with a sixth-place
finish in the pole vault.
clearing a height of I0
feet even.
Kinnaird v.::l'.. Sl.'\ enth
800m
run
in
the
(2:04 .79). Roberts \\as
IOth in the IOOm dash
(1 I .93 seconds), and
Canterbury was also II th
in the 200m dash with a
mark or 24.21 seconds.
On the girls side. only
two Lady Knights scored
points in competition
both of which happen~.:d
to be seniors.
Alea Hipcs paced second in the shot put \\ ith a
heave of36 feet, 1.5 inches to come away as the
high-point scorer for the
Point girls with eight
markers.
Sarah Wamslc) scored

the other team point with
a sixth-place· finish in the
long jump. cleanng a distance of 15 feet even.
Hipes \\as also se\enth
in the dbcus event \\. ith a
throw of90 feet. 9 inches.
""hile Wamsley w~ 13th
in the 200m dash with a
time of 28 · 16 seconds.
Wamsle)
joined
Chelsea Keefer. ~organ
Pethel and Amanda Kin!!
in a pair of relay events as
well. the 4x lOOm and
4 X200111 competitions.
The 4x I00 squad finished 8th overall with a
time of 53.96 seconds.
while the 4x200 team
placed ninth with a mark
of I :56.05.
The girls 4x I02.5m
shuttle hurdles squad which con~ists of Pethel.
Marice Ha11ley, Darian
MorrO\\ and Amanda
~eal _ placed 13th overall \'.ith a time of 1:20.67.
Ritchie Countv won the
boy" crown with a tallv of
62 points in the 23·team
ficld, while Oak Hill
defeated 25 other squads
for the girls title with 62
points. ~
Brandon Franklin of
Liberty-Harri~on
(36
points) and Bria Welker
of Frankfort (38 points)
were the top-point scorers
in the Class AA competition.

The top-six finishers
score points for their
respective teams under a
10-8-6-4-2-1 format.
Complete results of the
20 I0 Class AA state track
and field meet are avail·
ahle on the web at
W\\ \\ .11ln\'. v.com

a

Tuesday, May 25,2010

for RCHS. allow~ng nine
runs and fi,e h1ts mer
two·plus innings of work
while walkin!! one and
fanning
t\\O.
Cody
Starcher allowed two hib
and a run 0\er one inning
of relief. then Qucnton
Corbitt closed the ga!11e
on the mound by \\Orkmg
three innings of five-hit.
four- run relief while
walking. and striking out
three ap1ece.
PPHS - \vhich has
been to the Class AA state
tournament in each of the
previous three seasons wi ll now set its sights on
Magnolia on Wednesday
1n the regional championship. Magnolia defeated Weir by a 4-2 margin.
The contest will bc!.!in
at Point Pleasant at 6:30
p.m.
POINT PLEASANT 13,
ROANE COUNTY 1 0
Roane
Po1nt

010 600 3 028 003 x -

10 12 2
'3 12 4

ROANE COUNTY (19·10): Josr
Jones. COdy Starcher (3), Ouentoo
Corbitt (4) and Alex Mace.
POINT PLEASANT (14-14): Brock
McClung, Eric Roberts (4) and O.W
Herdman.
WP - McClung; LP - Jones.

Bryan Walters/photo

Point Pleasant's Eric Roberts pitches in relief of Brock
McClung during Monday's regional semifinal game at
Point Pleasant High School.

Title

PPHS has four runners-up, but
zero state champions
B y BRYAN W ALTERS

;a a

from PageBl

I

Tornadoe" in the third
but was left on second.
The Titan~ tied the
!!ame at four in the bot~
tom of the third \\ ith a
· f · 1 l "1
pa•r 0 :-.mg cs )) n ator
and Matthew ~1alonc. a
hit batter, and a sacrifil·e
bunt.
A three run third
allowed the Tornadoes to
k h 1 d ·
d
reta ·e t e ea tor goo ·
Greg Jenkins hit a lead
off single· Deem hit an
RB I single. Buzzard
reached on a dropped
third strike. with Manuel
T
·
and aylor each reachmg
on W&lt;llks.
Jenkins.
Deem, and Bunard each
scored in the inning.
Notre Dame's Noel hit
a double in the fourth but
did not sc~l_r:·... ,TI~e
T~rn~~oes \'.~:I~: ldlr~.:d Ill
otd,e• 111 ~he fifth.
. 1 he T1tan~ scored one
m the_ fifth to cut th~ lead
to 7-':1. i\1ator. ~cored on
an RBI smgle by
Stevens.
Southern took a~van­
t~ge of three \\ al.~ m t~e
SIXt~ and a l1elder s
chotce to. ~core Deem.
Two ~ddltiOn~l \\alks
and a h1t batter m the scventh loaded the bas~s for
Sout_her~, but they could
not score.
.
.
A tly ~ali t~&gt; th!rd baseman Jesse R1tch1e ended
the contest and. gave
Souther!1 the 8 ·5 v1_ctory.
Cunn!ng~am P•_~c~cd
seven mnmgs .. st11kmg
out three: walkmg ~me.
and allowmg seven h1ts;
"Kyle stei?ped up b1g
today. h~ d1d \\hat ""~e
needed h1m to do. That s

Sarah Hawley/photo

Southern seniors (from left) Jesse Ritchie, Dustin Salser, Kyle Cunningham. Taylor
Deem, Jordon Taylor, and Michael Manuel accept the Division IV District
Championship trophy on Saturday afternoon at Valley High School in Lucasville,
Ohio.
what seniors do. He won single.
what we do and won the
Deem and Manuel game:· added Lemle).
two district games last
year:· said Lemley.
dre\\ two walks a piece.
Noel lead Notre Dame
Three Notre Dame with Bui.Zard. Taylor. \\ lth two hits.
pitchers combined to and Daniel Jenkins each
Southern will face
gi,ve up 10 hits. walk walking once.
Central
Tuscarawas
s~en, and strike out five.
"Our approach at the Catholic on Thursday at
Southern was lead at plate is to be disciplined 5 p.m. at Beaver's Field
the plate by Deem ""ith and take those walks. in Lancaster.
three singles.
Greg We're not going to hit
SOUTHERN 8,
Jenkins had a double and your p1tch. we're going
single. Manuel hit two to hit our pitch. We stuck PORTS. NOTRE DAME 5
singles. Salser had a dou- with that and got a lot of Soulhern 130 301 0 - 8 10 0
Notre Oame202 010 o - 57 1
ble, and Buzzard and gu\ s on and bunted the WP
Kyle Cunmngham: LP Cunningham each hit a bail. stole hascs, and did MIChael Mator

TUESDAY TELEVISION GUIDE

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Tuesday, May 25, 2010

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The Daily Sentinel • Page 63

-----------------------------\lrrtbune - Sentinel - l\egi~ter

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{)earllitu
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POLICIES. Ohio \IIIIey PubU.nlng retflf~•1111 rtgtrt to edll. rejeCt or a~ncelany ad e1111yllme. ErrOtt muG1 be reported onthefltal day of p1Ali1CIIIon ell(! the
Triblll&amp;Sef'Cinef..R~IMer wllt be tetj)Onlltble for no mCft than the COli of the apace occupied by the error and only the fttallneertiOn. Weehlll not be liable for
any lOSt or tXpe!*t thll resun. !rom the publkatiOn or omlniOn of an adve"IMment. Correction WtHbe made In the f1ta1 ava!labt. t&lt;llllon · Box numb« Ids
are alway• COIIfldentlaL • C~rreot rtte cerd eppllea. • All real estate ldvertfaemeow are eubject to 1he Fednl Fair Housing Act of 1968. • Tills new1p1per
accepts only heip wanted a~ metllng EOE stand111d8. VIe wtll not ~noNingly accept any advertising In viOlation of the law WI» not be re8f)Oilelble tor any

• Start Your Ads With A Keyword • Include Complete
De$Cript10n • I nclude A Price • Avoid AbbreYietions
• I nclude Phone Number And Address When Needed
• Ads Should Run 7 Days

Business &amp; Trade
School
Gallipolis Career
College
(Careers Close To
Home)
Calf Today' 740·4464367
1-800-214-0452
gaJiipol•scareercollege.edu
Aocred•led Member
Accred1bng Counc~ for
Independent Colleges and
Schools 12748

700

Agriculture

EBY,
INTEGRITY,
KIEFER BUILT,
VALLEY
HORSE/LIVESTOCK
TRAILERS,
LOAD
MAX
EQUIPMENT
TRAILERS,
CARGO
EXPRESS
&amp;
HOMESTEADER
•
CARGO/CONCESSIO
N TRAILERS. B+W
GOOSENECK
FLATBED
$3999,
VIEW OUR ENTIRE
TRAILER INVENTORY
AT
WWW.CARMICHAELT
RAILERS.COM
740446-3825

900

Merchandise

Farm Equipment
WantTo Buy
Have you priced a John
Deere lately? You'll be
surprised! Check out
our used inventory at
www.CAREQ.com.
Carmichael Equtpment
740-446-2412

SELL YOUR
EXCESS
ITEMS
WITH A
CLASSIFIED
AD

Campers/ RVs &amp;
Trailers

Farm Equipment

Absolute Top Dollar silver/gold coins. any
1OK/14K/18K
gold
jewelry. dental gold, pre
1935 US currency.
proof/mint
sets,
diamonds. MTS Coin
Shop. 151 2nd Avenue.
Gallipolis. 446-2842
1000

4000

·

Manufactu~ed

700

Housrng

RV
Service
at
Carmichael
Trailers
Sales
740-446-3825
=~~==="The Proctorville
Difference•
RV
Service at Carmichael
$1 and a deed is all
Trailers
you need to own your
740-446-3825
dream home. Call Now!
Freedom Homes
Real Estate
888-565-0167
3500
Rentals

~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;
~

STIHL Sales &amp; Service
Now
Available
at
Carmichael Equipment
740·446·2412

Lost &amp; Found

Second floor 1 B.A.
apartment over1ooking
Gallipolis City Park
L. R..Kitchen/dinning
area, bath, washer &amp;
dryer $400.00 mo. call
740-446-4425 or 740·
446·2325.
Gracious Living 1 and 2
Bedroom
Apts.
at
Village Manor and
Riverside
Apts~
in
Middleport.
740-9925064. Equal Housing
Oppor1unity
This
institution ts an equal
opportunity
provider
and employer.

New
Hollland
3
beater silage wagon.
good
condition
$3500. Call 740·6432285

200 Announcements

Apartments/
Townhouses

Hay, Feed, Seed,
Grain

FOUND Male Dog,
long
black
hair,
Sandhill Rd. Call
304·674-3085.

Seasoned
cow
manure dirt for sale,
ground ear corn. $7
a hundred. 740·9922623. 740·992-2783

Notices

Miscellaneous
Jet Aeration Motors
repaired, new &amp;
rebuilt In stock. Call
Ron Evans 1-800·
537-9528

Recreational
Vehicles

Other Services

1ctures t at
have been
placed in ads at
the Gallipolis
Daily Tribune
must be picked
w ithin 30 days.
Any pictures
that are not
picked up will
be
discarded.

Pnme nver lot for rent.
beautiful beach, plenty
of shade, for info. call
740·992-5782

GREEN
LAWN
Mowing
304-6751610 or 304-5931960 No job too big
or small!

ClassI fieds

300

Services

Home Improvements

JJe~!N
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Save time and money. Go to www.mydailysentinel.com
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Basement
Waterproofing
Unconditional lifetime
guarantee. Local
references furnished.
Established 1975. Call
24 Hr~. 740-446-()870.
Rogers Basement
Waterproofing
Patterson
Construction FOR
ALL
CONSTRUCTION/A
EMODELING needs,
free estimates call
740-245·9626
or
740-853-1024

rusti
NETWORK
Save up to 40% off
your cable bill! Call
dish Network
todayl1-877· 2742471

Lifelock
Are You Protected?
An identity is stolen
every 3 seconds.
Call Lifelock now to
protect your family
free for 30-days! 1877-481-4882
Promocode:
10
______'"'!"".....-

VONAGE
Unlimited local
and long
distance
calling for only
$24.99 per
month.
Get reliable phone
service from
Vonage.
Call Today!
1-877-673-3136
Zirkle Storage, units
available
immediately.
Call
or
304-882-2314
304-67 4·3559.
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Merchandise

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NOT to send money
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(7 40) 446-2342 (7 40) 992-2156 (304) 675-1333

Monday thru Friday

~?.~

Meigs County, OH

In One Week With Us
REACH OVER 285,090 PROSPECTS
PLUS YOUR AD NOW ONLINE

To Place

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lawn Service
Will
repair
?will
lawnmowers
pay up to $200 for
junk cars. Call 740·
441-1306 or 740645-1794

TURNeD DOWN ON
SOCIAL SECURITY
SSI
No Fee Unless We
Win!
1-888·582·3345

Tax/ Accounting

Repo'd

Steel

Arch

AMERICAN TAX Buildings. 16 X 24,
20 X 26, and 25 x
BELIEF
34.
Going
to

Settle IRS Taxes for
a fraction of what
you owe. If you owe
over $15,000 in
back taxes call now
for a free
consultation. 1-8n258-5142

DEALER AUCTION!
Selling
for
the
balance owed. Ask
about our Display
Program! 1·866-3520469.

400

Oiler's Towing. Now
buying junk cars
w/motors or w/out.
740·388-0011
or
740-441-7870.

Financial

Financial Services

Want To Buy

CREDIT CARE
BELIEF
Buried In Credit
Card Debt?
Call Credit Card
Relief for your free
consultations.
1-877-264-8031
Money To lend
NOTICE Borrow Smart.
Contact
the
Ohio
Division of Financial
Institutions Office of
Consumer
Affairs
BEFORE you refinance
your home or obtain a
loan.
BEWARE
of
requests for any large
advance payments of
fees or rnsurance. Calf
the Office of Consumer
Affiars toll free at 1866-278-0003 to learn
if the mortgage broker
or lender ts property
licensed. (This is a
public
service
announcement from the
Ohio Valley Publishing
Company)

600

Animals

Uvestock
SEPTIC
PUMPING
Best Lawn Care now Gallia Co OH and
accepting ne~ lawns. Mason Co. WV Ron Registered Charolais
Call740·645-1488.
Evans Jackson, OH Yearling Bull born
800·537-952 8
Med.
10/27/08
Other Services
Framed Polled &amp;
well muscled animal.
Pet Cremations. Call
Securily
(good temperment)
740·446-37 45
$1200.00 Call Tony
Leport 304-675-3105
DIRECTV
AOI
leave a message
For the best TV
Free Home
experience,
Security
upgrade from cable
$850 Value
Polled Hereford Bulls
to
with purchase of
DlrecTV today!
alarm monitoring 2 yrs. old $1500 Taylor
&amp;
Packages start at
services from ADT $1800.
$29.99
Security Services. Taylor Farm 7401-866-541-0834
Call1-888-274-3888 643-2285

======-

Yard Sale
6th ann. CVS pharm.
yard sale bring your
stuff SAT. June 5th 8
til ??Accepting items
to sell for relay for
Life
~-~~
Recreati.onal
1000
Vehtcles

.......

Motorcycles
;;::;;;;==;;;;;;;i;==~
2002
Honda XR
runs
great,
1

oo.

5

ready to ride, $? 0 ·
Call 740·256· 9291
2003 HONDA XR
400R. $1,700 OBO.
Call 304-675-0034 or
304-675-7515.
2000

Automotive

Autos
06 PT Cruiser 25,000
miles new tires exc.
cond. 304·675-3476
2000 Ltncoln LS,
Loaded--Low Miles.
Call 304-895-3378.

~
For--S
~a~le-~1~
99~
9
Concorde Chrysler
$2000.00
phone
304-675-5077
~~~~~~!!!!!!

Commercial I
Industrial
1996 Volvo Road
Tractor. stngle axle.
10 SPD Cumm1ngs
M-11 engine, tires
80%, 674,000 miles,
very good truck. no
smoke.
ready to
work, ,$5,900, 740843·1072

J

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Page 84 • The Daily Sentinel
Commercial /
lndu1trial

Apartments/

2003 Fre1ghthner box
truck under C 0 L
18 box s d ng 15
amp Cat eng1ne
model3126 250 HP
3 slid ng stde door
ndo
275 K miles
front &amp; r ar 8lr sc:~t
9 speed S10 900.
740-843-1072

n RIVers Tower IS
coept ng apphcatJons
for wa t fog 1St for HUD
ubsld zad
1·BR
apanment
for the
e derty d sabled
cal
675 6679

Townhou~es

BR a~d bath. first

Trucks
1984 Chevy 10 ton
Dump Tr.Jck very
good condition 740·
388·9011
3000

'

~·

Real Estate
,Sales

months
rent
&amp;
deposit. references
reqUired, No Pets
and clean 740·441·
0245

bedroom
apt,
newly remodeled, al
uttlihe'S pa1d, $750.00
For Sale By Owner per
rnonth + secunty
740 "446•
12
Unit
Apt. depoSit
Complex. $316,000. 4652
446-0390.
New 2BR apt W D
r:ar:1 ~ f'"'Real Estate"
3500 ..•.
INC.
Hookup APP
l..,.-'1! _ "·_:_'Rental~ Rto/Jackson
area
S525!mo +dep Cal
740-645-1286
Apartments/
Townhouses
1 BR uti pd d1rect

tv w H1-def . qutet
w deck look~ng over

Eff1c1ency apt, all
uhllleS patd, S325 per
month + secunty
deposrt
740·4464652

OH. 1st+ last mo.,+
dep Ref a must
RIVEABEND PLACE
Call 304·675·4532.
APTS
1 br, Hud
2BR APT Close to subsidised, elderly &amp;
Holzer Hospttal on SA disabled
complex,
160 C A (740) 441· accepting
0194
aaplications,
304·
2BR apls 6 m1 from 882-3121
Holzer. some ut1hties ~-~---~
pd
or appliances New Haven 1 br.
avail
$450/mo +- fur•ushed apt , dep.
dep
740-418 5288 &amp; ref, No pets, 740or 988·6130
992·0165
CONVEN ENTLY
LOCATED
&amp;
AFFORDABLE'
Townhor.se
apartments
an&lt;Vor
sma houses for rent
Cal 740-44t·1111 for
appl cat1on
&amp;
nformatlon

Houses For Rent
2 BR Duplex-644
2nd Ave $450 mo
plus
depostt
&amp;
u! 1t1es. Stove and
refng. W d hookup
no pets. One year
lease. References.
446-0332 9am to
5pm Mon-Sat.

3 br tn New Haven WV
$400 00 a mon +
$400 oo dep. no pets
304· 882•3652

Help Wanted

Help Wanted

LICENSED PRACTICAL NURSE AND/OR
MEDICAL ASSISTANT

Pleasant Valley Hospital is currently
accepting applicatiOns for a licensed
practical nurse and/or medical assistant.
previous med1cal office experience or
hosp1tal related expenence preferred, but
not required.
Send resumes to:
Pleasant Valley Hospital
c/o Human Resources
2520 Valley Drive
Pt Pleasant, WV 25550
Or fax. 304-675-6975, or apply on-line
at www.pval~or1
AA/EOE
Help Wanted

Help Wanted

part-time customer service
position in our Gallipolis
location. Successful
applicant must be people
oriented. pleasant telephone
etiquette. professional and
dependable. Must ha\e
experience in computers, and
enjoy working with numbers
and work well in a fast paced
atmosphere.
For employment
consideration,
send resume to:
Pam Caldwell
c/o Gallipolis Daily Tribune
825 Third Ave.
Gallipolis, OH 45631

Medical

Position Opening
TASC of Southeast
Oh10 (TSO), a pnvato
not-for-profit
substance
abuse
agency, IS seek1ng a
full
ttme
Case
Manager to work Wilh
substance
abuSeHouse for rent 3br. related offenders
$450 00 and month
Job
dut1es
and
rent + Dep. no pets
and need ref. near responsibilities
Locks on Rt. 2 304· include, but are not
_
limited
to
576 2642
...,,...,.......,..........,....,. assessment, referral,
Manufactu~ed
monitoring,
case
4000
Housmg management
and
drug
testing.
Successful candidate
Rentals
must possess at a
minimum one year of
2 BR Mobile Home,
m
Addiville
School experience
treatment,
soctal
District $350.00
related
+ dep.
740·367- work,or
selling,
Bachelors
0632
degree tn behavioral
sctence or related
N1ce 3 BR, 2 BA, NO
field
preferred,
pets Call 740-256·
Chem1cal
1417.
Dependency
Counselor Ass1staut
RENTERS WANTED preferred,
or
Let Clayton Homes
L1censed
Soc1al
tum you from renter Worker
(LSW)
to owner CALL 1·
preferred.
866-338-3201.

========

~~~~~~

RENTERS WANTED
Let Clayton Homes
turn you from renter
to owner, CALL 1·

~86~6~-3~3~8-~32~0~1·~~
Sales

;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;=====
Beautiful
x o
16 8
mobile
home
in
Bradbury.
Country
living &amp; only 5
monutes from town.
Close to 1 acre, 1 car
garage, 2 covered
decks, ramp on back
deck. central air, heat
pump, new. shmgled
roof.
Move
10
COndition. PhOtOS at
www.2487Now.lnfo
or call 740-367-0577,
Price $50.000
;..;.;,-..,;.;,;;;,;.;~-­

BEAUTIFUL 1 &amp; 2
BR APTS., Jackson
Estates
52
Westwood Dr· 740·
446-2568
Equal
Housmg Opportumty
ThiS tnStiiUtiOn IS an
equal
opportunity
Free Rent Special provider
and
I! I
employer.
2&amp;3BR apts $395 and - - - - - - up. Central Air WID Modern 1BR apt.
6000
Employment
hooKup, tenant pays Call 740·446·0390
electnc Call between
Spring Valley Green
the hours of 8A·8P
Administrative/
EHO
Apartments 1 BR at
Professional
Ellm VIew Apts.
$395+2 BR at $470
(304)882·3017
Month. 446·1599.
Wanted
Hotel
Middleport, 1 &amp; 2 br.
Executive
Townhouse
apts. dep. &amp; ref., No Tara
Housekeeper, some
Apts • 2BR, 1 5 BA,
pets, 740-992-0165
hotel
experience
back pat1o, pool,
required.
playground,
(trash,
Card of Thanks
Responsibilities
sewage, water pd.).
include
laundry,
No pets allowed,
rooms. supervis1on of
Thank' to '&lt;:I) one
$450 rent S450 dep.
room
attendants,
'' ho ' there for
Call 740-645-8599
scheduling
&amp;
Houses For Rent
ordering
supplies,
etc. Send Resume
88 to: CLA 518, PO Box
2BR
1 BA
Gart1eld, $425 mo. 469. Gallipolis, OH
$400 dep., + ut1l. 45631
HUD ok, 740·645·
1646
Clerical
1 he family lif
/1'(1 l Jlltlll

Help Wanted·
General

TEAM
MEMBER·
Homeless
Shelter
seeking candidates
to
provide
supervision of shelter
residents'
daily
chores and assist
w/training
Independent
skills.
Clerical duties as
required. Min HS
diploma/GED. Must
have valid drivers
licen~e. Send cover
letter resume and 3
ltrs. of reference
to:SCAC,Inc.,HRD,
5th
Ave.
540
Huntington.WV
25701.
Reply by
5'28/10.EOE.

Please
resume and. cover
letter via mail to
Stephen K. Thomas,
Executive Director,
PO
Box
88,
Gallipolis,
Ohio
45631 or fax to 740·
441·2970 or e:mail
to ~ljtQvJm..Qrg.
Deadline
for
submiSSIOn IS May
24 2010
•
TSO 1s an aqual
opportunity employe•
that offers excellent
compel111ve salanes
and benef1ts.

STNA's You II love
our
factlityl
Rockspnngs
Care
Center,
an
Extendtcare facility
located 1n Pomeroy.
IS currently ~ee1&lt;1ng
full and part-time
STNA's for second
(2p-10p) and th1rd
sh1fts (10p-6a)l We
are searching for
canng
individuals
who
enJOY
JOb
satisfaclionl Contact
us today to learn
about
our
competitive
wages
1nclud1ng
a
shift
differential for 2nd
sh1ft, benefit package
and
our
tUitiorf
assistance program
If you are Interested
in becom1ng a STNA,
contact us about our
tra1n1ng
program.Contact me
today!And1
Ayres,
Area
RecruiterE-

Ma,i:
aayres@extendlcare.

comFax:
414·908·
7204Extendicare
Health Services, Inc.
1S
an
equal
opportunity employer
that
encourages
workplace diversity.
..-.........- - -....-.
11ELP WANTED
$500.00 SIGN ON
BONUS
WEEKEND AND
HOLIDAY
DIFFERENTIALS
&amp; VERY
COMPETITIVE
HOURLY RATE
OF PAY
WE ARE
SEEKlNG
COMPETENT,
EXPERIENCED &amp;
COMPASSIONAT

0

CAREGIVERS
IN CABELL
COUNTY
(LESAGE AREA)
&amp; MASON
COUNTY
JOB
REQUIREMENTS:
CURRENT CPR &amp;
FIRST AID
CERTIFICATION
OR AGREE TO
OBTAIN
VALID WV
DRIVER'S
LICENSE AND
RELIABLE
VEHICLE
CRIMINAL
HISTORY
BACKGROUND
CHECK

The Village of Rio
Grande is taking
applications for the
position of Fiscal
Officer/
Tax
Administrator.
The
will
be
hours
between 30 to 34
hours each week
An
accounting
background
is
preferred.
Applications may be
picked up at the
Village
Mun1c1pal
Build1ng, 174 East
College Street, R1o
Grande,
MondayFnday dunng regular
buss1ness hours o•
9:00
AM
to
5:00PM.The
applicatiOn deadline
is Friday, May 28
2010 at noon

CALL 304965-9081 OR
1-877-3467595 TO
OBTAIN
APPLICATION
OR FOR
ADDITIONAL
INFORMATIO
N
"Offer effective
5/25/1 0 &amp; For
a Limited Time

Medical

A

9000

304-8S2-.'~0SO

304-8H2·.'H6H
Fax

Ripley Auto Glass
Hart(ora:1 Inc.
• UoUM' \\- iudcm Rt•pl&lt;u·Nil&lt;'lll
• :\lioTot·~ ( 111 I o Onll-1 • \lohoh• ..,,.,'I&lt;~

• Room addition\ • Roofing •
• &lt;:cncral Remodeling • Pole &amp;
Barn' • \in) I &amp; \\ood Fencing
Foundations

MIKE W. MARCUM, OWNER
47239 Riebel Rd.,
740·985-4141

• \II \\ nrl( C;11:11 .mlu·d
011111~1

&amp; Opt·nJit'tl

YOUNG'S

SUNSET CONSTRUOlON

• :'\e\\ Garages • .Electrical &amp;
Plmnhing • Roofing &amp; Gutters
•\

in~ I Siding

&amp; Painting • Patio and
Porch Decks wv 036725

740-742-3411
PSI CONSTRUCTION
Room Additions. RemodeliM. Metal &amp;
Shingle Roofs. New Home,, Sid mg. Decb,
Bathroom Remodeling, l.1censed &amp; Insured
Rick Price· 17; r~. Experience
WV#040954 Cell740·416·2960 740·992-0730

V.C. YOUNG Ill

_

992-6215 740-591-0195
Pomeroy, Ohio
36 Years Local Experience

oJ

I!OBfi!T BISSfLL
CO~STI!UCTIO~

• New Homes • Garages
• Complete Remodeling

740-992-1671
Stop &amp; Compare
aoou•

.c8:7

HO DA

CHEVROLET

250 Columbus Rd.
Athens, Ohio

BEST DEAlS IN NEW &amp;USED

LEWIS
CONCRETE CONSTRUCTION

RIVERSIDE
SEAMLESS GUITERS
CONTINUOUS GUTTERS

Vin) I siding, Home
::vtaintenance, Power
\V h' - &amp; G tt Cl
Bonded &amp; Insured
I

All Types Of Concrete \\ork

30 Years Experience

David Lewis
740-992-6971
Insured
Free Estimate"

\W042182

lawn Care
For
Sale
Rid1ng
Lawn mower, like
new,740-256-1102.

TrY the
Classifieds!!

FIND A JOB
OR ANEW
CAREER
IN THE
CLASSIFIED$

Servic.e I Bus.
Directory

Concrete
All types Masonry,
bnck, block, stone
concrete,
Free
Eshmate. 304-593·
6421, 304-773-9550

E""
'fPLOYM E
.n'.

rI~:;=:;::~=:=~;:~;~Sf~;:::::~==~:;;:r~f;.;:;=;:~:;::;~:;~:;~

I
Ei

Pomeroy, Ohio 740-992·7696

'Ql:IJ.r &lt;B5(1llipolts IDnil}' tt:ribunc
{EIJ.r l9oint ~~lensnnt ~cgastcr

E

The Daily Sentinel

E
II 111 1 II lll i II

Il l II 111 1 II 111 1 II

Stay Informed ...

~

~

r'

I

~LQOking For~
ANew Home?

Hubbards Greenhouse ~
E
Close-Out Sale
All Flats &amp; Baskets $4.00 ea. ~
4 inch pots 50¢ ea.

~

-

Free Estimates
304-812-4795

Concrete Removal and Replacement

BULLETINBOARD DEADLINE:
9:00AM DAY BEFORE PUBLICATION!

~

.

/

• Rnum \ddition'&gt; &amp; Remodeling

CALL OUR OFFICE AT 992-2155

E

,~

CARPENTER SERVICE
Roofs, Remodeling, Garages,
Pole Buildings, Siding,
Decks, Drywall, Additions
and New Homes.
Insured- Free Estimates

BULLETIN BOARD

Back to Back
Trollbead Trunkshows
May 26-29 I June 3-5
Hartwell House

740·416-1834

(:\ui affihatrd ~tith \likt \ l arrUDI Roolin~ &amp; Romuddill):l

Get Your Message Across
With A Daily Sentinel

Open M-Sat 10·5 Closed Sunday

Long Bottom, OH

Full} insured
Fnoc estimates· 25+ }cars e\pcricncc

• ,\ct·t•ph·d h) 'II hi Sill aJII't'S

•l.&lt;x-ull)

E

Me1gs Co. factlity
looking for wate•
aerobiCS &amp; Zumba
instructor, 740·992·
6488

Celebration 0 1
Ute ...Overbrook
Center, Located at
333 Page Street
Middleport, Ohio 1s
Pleased to Announce
We Are Accepling
Applications for Ful
lime and Part lime
AN's, LPN's ano
State Tested Nursing
Ass1stants to Jo1r
Our Fnendly and
Dedicated
Staff
Applicant's Must be
Dependable, Tearr
Drivers &amp; Delivery
Players w1th PoSitive
Domino's Pizza Now Att1tudes to Jo1n Us
Provtding
hmng safe drivers for in
Pomeroy, Gallipolis Outstanding, Qualit~
to
Our
and Pt. Pleasant Care
apply in person.
ResirlP.nts.
stoJ') an
Ry
and Fill Out
Application M·F 9am·
Drivers
COL-A:
5pm or Contact Lucy
Sign-On Bonus PAID
Staf1
at Orientation! Teams Goff.
Development
make
.46
upto
Coordinator @ 740·
.82cpm split! 0/0's
992·6472 EOE &amp; A
make Top Industry
Part1c1pant of the
Pay!
Call
R&amp;R
Drug-Free
Trucking Today' 866·
Workplace Program
204-8006

~(. . J?
. . ;(_ ~

�---------~

Tuesday, May 25, 2010

www.mydailysentinel.com

BLOND IE

Dean Young/Denis Lebrun

The Daily Sentinel • Page BS

CROSSWORD
By THOMAS
ACROSS
1 Incurred,
as debt
6 Bungle
11 Not
napping
12 Honolulu
hello
13 One
of the
"Shrek"
voices
15 Iris setting
16 Closest

JOSEPH
DOWN
1 Track
event
2 Not at
home
3 Handle
4 Luau
instrument
5 Human
being
6 Flag
Todav's Answers - 7 Ancient
22 Sound of 34 Natural
8 Work hard
a comics
fuel
9 Spiced
punch
35 Not busy
star
tea
24 Guy's
36 Advan17 Whopper 1 0 Visibility
date ·
tage
18 Exercised
lessener 25 Crumb
38 Rotate
one's
14 Ump's call
carrier
39 Speedright
18 Man's
26 Golf's
skater
20 "Shogun"
manTrevino
Apolo
setting
servant
30 Indian
40 Fabric
23 Fit for a
19 Room
money
worker
king
design
31 "Take your 42 McKellen
27 Fan's
20 ''The
time!"
of "X-Men"
favorite
Office" role 33 River
43 Letter
28 Walking
21 Brouhaha
stopper
after pi
aid
NEW CROSSWORD BOOK! Send $4 75 (checklm.o.) to
29 Grass
ThornHs Joseph Book 2 PO Box 536415, Orlando, FL32853-6475
10
cutter
31 Nick of
"48 HAS"
32 Henry
VIII's
house
34 Diner
dessert
37Golf goal
38 Lawn
material
41 One of the
"Shrek''
voices
44 Pond life
45 Glisten
46 Prom
goers
47 Accolade

. FUNKY WINKERBEAN
HOW ABOO'T If WG

'f'AK€ A ~AII\1 OIE.CK
MOVI€
f\lt&amp;H1 ... okftl ~

0~ 00~

SURE.

HAGAR THE HORRIBLE

Chris Browne
~.Tu~TUK/3

THE
~JJIIP OF
IIWJlAP*I

'.

'll~ ~
A

-"1

P., ·
•

::\)

HI &amp; LOIS

Brian and Greg Walker

THELOCKHORNS

MUTTS

William Hoest

Patrick McDonnell

''I'D SELL LEROY ON EBAY, BOT I'D LIKELY GET
SOME NEGATIVE FEEDBACK ON MY PROFILE."

ZITS

THE FAMILY CIRCUS
Bil Keane

Jerry Scott and Jim Borgman

CONCEPTIS SODOKU

•

3

4 8

7
2

2
Oilhcull) I c•el

..6' v

****

8
1-

9
2

2 6 5

1

:Hank Ketchum

-

'

4 9

"G randma, I'll keep It a secret If you
want to tell me I' m your favorite."

: oENNIS THE MENACE

The Stars Show the Kmd of Day You'll
Have: 5-Dynamic; 4-Posrlivc; 3-Avcrage;
2-So-so; 1-Difficull
ARIES (March 21-April19)

by Dave Green

5

' .M

6

'
~

9 ·-~fi
..
2 - ,!;'"'
B

9 7
4
6

·a

.!

f

5 6
2 4

**

3

9

i
u

'

8 9 ~
~ 9 L v G
G 9 s 6 8
v 8 ~ 9 L
9 -G 9 8 v
,_
- L 6 9 9 t9
9 ~ G -L - 9
--·
8 9 6- ~ 9
9 L v G 6

HAPPY BIRTHDAY for Tuesda},
May 25, 2010:
This year, open up to new possibilities. Others often challenge your thinking, like it or not. Focus on one effort
at a time, refusing to S('atter your
attention in the rustom.uy Gemini
style. '(ou will notice lhal many people
come toward you, but usually for a
purpose other than socializing. Gel to
know people better, on a more
grounded level. If you are single, you
could meet someone out of the blue.
This person could be quite different
and very exciting. If you are att.lched,
by taking up a mutual hobby or interest together, you will bond even more
closely. SCORPIO knows how to push
you.
.

9 L 9 G
9 9 6 8
L v 9 ~
6 9 G -9
~ 9 L 6
G ~ 8 v
8 6 v 9·v G 9- - L
9 8 ~ 9

Deal directly with others on
a one-on-one level. You'll discover the
effects of the inten&lt;&gt;ity of a professional
relationship on a partner. You cannot
interfere with thi.-; tie. You express
your caring and feeling.'&gt; in a most
dynamic war Tonight: Go along with
another's plans.
TAURUS (April 2Q-May 20)
Others seem poised and
in control. You might want to shake up
the status quo, but to what avail?
Instead, approach a situation with gentleness, remembering the power of
sugar over vinegar. Respect differences. Tonight: Say "yes."
GEMINI (May 2l·June 20)
You are mellow, while others
seem to have fried nerves. You are able
t.o mellow out and get to the bottom of
a problem. Excitement surrounds what
is happening. You don't need to agree
with everyone. Respect your ctifferences. Tonight: Know when to call it~
night.
CANCER Oune 2l·July 22)
You could be unusually
creative and dynamir OhP,... oftpn
want to tap into your thoughts and
brainstorm. Though some of your
ideas might be incorporated, others
won't be 100 percent. Tonight: Let go
of work, and say hello to living.
LEO Quly 23-Aug. 22)
Stay focused on your priorilies. You might need a timeout from
work and the dally grind. Perhaps taking some time off from work could
add to your creati\ 1ty and dynamic
energy. Know that anything is possible. Tonight: Go for the moment.

* *** *

***

*****

****

I

vmGO (Aug. 2&gt;.-Sept. 22)

***** Communication
is
starred. You will
what you think
~}'

and in a manner that could touch
someone you really care about. Be
careful and confirm meetings and
messages. By all means, don't stand on
ceremony with another. There probably is a miscommunication. Tonight
Hang out with your buddies.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-0cl. 22)
Your ability to make money
could be gre,,tly enhanced if you are
willing to revisit a work-related project
of prominence. You might have been
more gruff than you were aware.
Discussions can mcorporate different
opinions. Tonight: Your treat.
SCORPIO (Oct 23-1'\ov. 21)
Your popularity peaks
simply by sharing more of what is on
your mind. Your ,,bility to juggle different people and various concerns
comes to the forefront. Check in with a
partner, and Jet him or her know that
you are OK with ,, disagreement.
Tonight: All smiles.
SAGITIARIUS (1\ov. 22-Dec. 21)
You might h.we a lot on your
mind but choose to say little. You
could be weighing the pros and cons
of a situation. Quite possibly, you
might be thinking that your feelings
could swing. Holding back is the
smart thing to do. Tonight Get some
extra Rand R
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19)
Of all signs, you know
when to jump on opportunities and
when to lie b,,ck. You could become
inordinately frisky and assertive to
some, but timing is with you.
Confusion surrounds a situation.
Tonight: 'A'here the gang is.
AQUARIUS Q,m. 20-Feb. 18)
Others frequently demand
a lot from you. Don't hesit.lte to return
the favor. You .ue in the dri,·er's seat
and can have far more impact than
you realize. Work through a ~abble
with .l filmily mt&gt;mhPr Tnnight: It
could be very, very late.
PISCES (feb. 19-March 20)
You keep reaching out for
new things and different styles. You
easily could feel hemmed in by a set of
rircumslclJlCe!;. Rather than feeling
locked, look at ways you can have
what you want and meet another's
requirement. Tonight. Break past a
seli·impo~d b.\rrier.

****

*****

**

*****

****

*****

facquclmc Brgar IS on tire Jnlemct
111 Jrltp://urwrnjtrcquclirrrbigar.com.

�Page B6 • The Daily Sentinel

www.mydailyse~tinel.com

Tu esday, May 2 5, 2010

Cavaliers fire Mike
Brown after 5 seasons
• CLEVELAND (AP) Of the many reasons the
Cleveland Cavaliers had
for firing coach Mike
Brown after five seasons
without an NBA title, one
mattered most.
They can't lose LeBron
James.
Less than two weeks
after their stunning, second-round loss to Boston
in the playoffs, the
Cavaliers fired Brown on
Monday, an expected
move that perhaps indicates the team believes it
can re-s1gn James, the
two-time MVP and free
agent· in-waiting.
Brown was the most
successful coach in franchise history. In five seasons. he led the Cavs to
the playoffs every year, to
the finals in 2007 and to
Sarah Hawley/photos
The Gallia Academy Blue Angels won the Division II District Championship on Saturday at Unioto High School 127 wins in the past two
seasons. But Brown failed
in Chillicothe, Ohio. The team is pictured here after accepting the championship trophy.
to win a championship,
and after Cleveland's sec
ond straight early exodus
from the postseason
a
collapse that included two
BY SARAH HAWLEY
blowout losses at home
SHAWlEY@MYDAILYTAIBUNE.COM
and dissension in the
Cavs' locker room - and
CHILLICOTHE. Ohio
with James about to
-Finally!
explore free agency,
The Gallta Academy
owner Dan Gilbert decidBlue Angels softball
ed to make a change.
team won its first district
"After a long and deep
championship is school
analysis of all of the fachistory on Saturday with
tors that led to the disapa 9-7 victory over No. I
pomtmg early ends to our
seeded Sheridan.
playoff runs over the past
With the win. the Blue
two seasons. we concludAngels became the first
ed that it was time for the
softball or baseball team
Cavaliers to move in a
in Gallia Academy histodifferent
direction,"
ry to win a district tourGilbert said in a statenament title and advance
ment. "The expectations
to the regional tournaof this organization are
ment. Gallia Academy
very high and. although
will face Dover on
change always carries an
Thursday evening at
element of nsk, there are
Pickerington
Central
times when that risk must
be taken in an attempt to
Hi~h School at 5 p.m.
• It is our first one and
break through to new,
we're goin? to have fun
higher levels of accomplishment.
with it, we re just going
to soak it up and enjoy it
"This is one of those
and get back to work
times."
Monday,"
Gallia
The Cavs did not hold a
Academy head coach Jim
news conference to
Niday said following the Gallia Academy pitcher Amy Noe hits a double in the second inning of the Blue exJ?lain their decision to
win.
Angels game against Sheridan on Saturday. Noe hit two doubles in the inning and relieve Brown, who went
The Blue Angels were had five RBis in the game.
314-177 and was the
retired in order in the fiN
league's coach of the year
inning, before the Lady Holbrook reached on a Cunmngham drew a Cunningham,
Leslie, in 2009.
Generals took over in the dropped third strike. walk. Saunders hit a sin- Ward.
Brown was not immeFarney,
and
bottom of the first. Clare Clouse hit an RBI gle and Shriver reached McGhee each hit a sin- diately available for comSheridan earned a lead single, followed by an on a fielder's choice. gle.
ment. No one an!-.wered
off single by pitcher Kira RBI single by Wilson and "'oe hit a two RBI single
"Really can't say the door at his home in
Wilson, followed by a a walk to Mautz i11 the to score Cunningham and enough about clutch hit- Westlake, Ohio.
fence clearing homerun second. Holbrook and Saunders. Sheridan had tmg that our senior Amy
A James family publioff the bat of Courtney Clouse each scored.
a single off the bat of Noc had. She had, I cist said the superstar is
Mautz. Sheridan lead 2The BIue Angels and Clou~;e i-n the bottom of don't know how many out of town on vacation
0 after one inning.
Sheridan were each the inning, but did not RBis she had, but she and would not be avail
Gallia Academy came retired in order in the score.
had quite a few," Niday able to comment on
Brown's dismissal.
to life at the plate in the third inning. Hannah
The Blue Angels had added.
second inning to score Cunningham hit a single two reach base in the sevBoston's Doc Rivers
For the Lady Generals,
seven runs. Amy Noe in the fourth, with enth, with Ward earning a
and
Orlando's Stan Van
lead off with a double Saunders and Shriver lead off walk and Farney Wilson hit three singles, Gundy, the coaches who
and Morgan Leslie hit an each reaching on a field- reaching on a fielder's Rhodes and Clouse each knocked Brown and the
RBI single, before a walk er's choice. Noe set choice. but could not add hit two singles, and Cavs from the playoffs
Mautz hit a homerun.
the past two years.
and hit batter loaded the
to the lead.
down
the
Lady
Generals
"It was a good game, a expressed disappointment
bases.
Singles by
The Lady Generals little sloppy at times, a in Cleveland's decision.
Claudia Farney. Amanda in order in the bottom comeback
attempt in the lot of girls getting hurt
half
of
the
foUtth.
McGhee,
and
Alii
"Obviously, I was not
of
the seventh but our girls are happy thrilled to see it," Rivers
bottom
Heather
Ward
hit
a
two
Saunders each scored a
run, with · Courtney out single in the top of came up short. Gaskins and we take 'em any way said before Game 4 m
Shriver reaching on a the fifth but was left on hit a two out double, with we can get 'em.'' said Boston. "I wonder what
Rhodes hitting an RBI N1day.
fielder's choice. Noe hit base.
you have to do to keep
Sheridan cut the Gallia single. before GAHS first
The Blue Angels will your job - back-to-back
a bases loaded double in
her second plate appear- Academy lead to one in baseman Leslie caught a face Dover on Thursday 60-wm seasons. Our proance of the inning to the bottom of the fifth fly ball in foul territory to evenmg in the team's fession is tough."
inning. Wilson hit at lead end the game.
first regional semifinal
drive in three runs
Said Van Gundy:
Noe pitched a complete game in program history. "Franchises have the right
off
single in the inning
"We had that one big
inning where we scored and scored on an RBI game, striking out six. The game will be held at to make any decisions
by
Ashley walking one. and allow
seven runs and come double
Pickerington
Central they want. You can't do a
For High School at 5 p.m.
hell of a lot better. There's
back after they scored Pallone. Pallone came ing 10 hits.
not a coach in the league
two and that was huge around to score on an Sheridan, Wilson struck
that has done better than
G ALLI A A CADEMY 9,
because we held on for RBI single by Kelly out five, walked two. and
Mike Brown."
allowed 10 hits.
dear life after that," com Rhodes.
S HERIDAN 7
Noe also lead the team Gallla 070 002 0- 9 10 4
The Cavaliers were
Gallia Academy added
mented Niday.
220 020 1 - 7 1o 2 under a deadline to dis
Sheridan rallied back two runs in the top of the at the plate with five Sheridan
(3) GALLIA ACADEMY (20-7): Amy
miss Brown. If they had
in the bottom of the six to regain its three run RBfs. two doubles, und a Noe and Matt1e Lanham.
(1 ) SHERIDAN (16·12): Kira Wilson waited beyond I 0 days
inning, adding two addi- lead . Farney reached on single. Saunders had a and
Kalie Gask1ns.
after the season, they
tional runs.
Maria an
error,
while pair of singles. while WP - Noe; LP- W1lson.
would have had to pay the
40-year-old coach h1s
Johnson sacrificed the singles by Marissa Gillian and Holter with salary for next season.
Cleveland's
assistant
runners O\ er. then Allie Messer and
Holly one each.
coaches
remam
under
Osborne.
Messer,
Rawson delivered a Hemphill gave the hosts
from PageBl
runners at the corners Craft. Hemphill and contract for 20 I 0- 11.
sacrifice fly to le ft The team now faces an
aiiO\•.:ing Gillian to with one awa). Osborne Mariah Tackett each
even
more pressing deadhad
a
hit
apiece
for
the
retaliated with a run in score for a 1-0 EHS added her third RBI of
line.
James
can become a
victors.
the day after a sacrifice
the third that resulted in lead.
free
agent
on
July I. when
Eastern captured the
In the bottom of the fly to right. allowing
a 3-2 contest after three
he' II head a free-agent
20
I
0
TVC
Hocking
title
first, Clay responded Messer to score the
complete.
with a 9- 1 record and class unlike &lt;iny other in
EHS went on to leave with a one-our single by eventual game-winning also won its second league history. He will hit
the market with fellow
five of its II runners Keely Craft. Then with run.
Lyndsey Mader was straight TVC Hocking superstars Dwyane Wade.
stranded after the third. two away and Craft at
crown outright. It was
which
ultimately second. Tori Osborne the winning pitcher of the final game for Chris Bosh and others,
allowed PCHS to cap hit a two-run homer to record, allowing eight seniors Kasey Turley and while the expected
bidding wars are weeks
ture its fourth consecu- give the hosts a 2-1 hits and two walks over and Sami Cummins.
away. the speculation and
tive D-4 district crown. edge after one com - seven innings while
suspense are hanging over
striking out three.
The Lady Panthers left plete
P ORTSMOUTH CLAY 3,
the NBA playoffs.
Turley
took
the
Kasey
Johnson
led
off
the
only two on the bags in
E
AS
TERN
2
James has said winning
third by reaching on an Joss for EHS. surrenthe triumph.
Eastern
_
will
be the most impo1tant
101 0000
28 0
Hayley Gillian Jed the error, then Britney dering five hits and one
P
.
Clay
2ot
ooox
3
53
factor
in choosing a team.
inning.;
walk
over
six
game off by reaching on Morrison delivered a
(2) EASTERN (22·5): Kasey ln building around him.
while
fanning
three
.
two·out
single
to
plate
an error, than Brenna
Turley and Allie Rawson.
the Cavs hav~ already
Rawson. Turley anti {1 ) PORTSMOUTH CLAY (22·7)
' ·
·
Holter followed with a Johnson - knotting the
Lyndsey
Mader
and
A
.
Caslle.
sho~n. their COmmitment
Morrison each led the
single to put runners at game at two apiece.
WP
Mader;
LPTurley
to
g1vmg
the
25-year-old
PCHS recaptured the Lady Eagles with two HR - PC· Tori Osborne (f11st James the tools he needs
first and second with
to win multiple titles.
nobody out. Brooke lead in the third after hits apiece. followed by ann1ng. one on. lwo out).

Blue Angels win first district title

Eastern

I

/

Now, by firing Brown,
who won more than 66
percent of his ~ames. the
Cavs have agam demonstrated a willingness to go
beyond the norm to make
James happy. While the
All-Star forward did
call for Brown's
was clear during
Boston series that James
and his coach were not on
the same page.
The Cavs, though. are
in a bind as complex as
any defense they saw in
the playoffs.
James will likely keep
his options open until free
agency begins. and without an agreement from •
him, it will be almost
impossible for the team to
land a high-profile coach
since any prospecti\ e
coach can't be assured
he 'II have James.
Beyond that, general
manager Danny Ferry's
contract expires next
month and there's no
guarantee he wants to stay
around.
.
If Ferry isn't re-signed,
the Cavs face the prospect
of prepruing for the NBA
college draft and free
agency without a coach.
GM - hardly the po
tion they thou~ht they· d
be in after v. mning 61
regular-season games and
dispatching Chicago in
the first playoff round.
It gets even trickier.
Gilbert \\ill undoubtedly
try to make a big splash to
convince James to stay.
but to do so he'll likely
have to land a high-profile coach. There's no
indication Gilbert has
reached out to anyone yet
but the top-tier candidate
list would include people
like Phil Jackson of the
Los Ang~les Lakers,
Duke's Mike Krzyzewski,
.Michigan State's Tom
Izzo or Kentucky's John
Calipari. a close friend of
James, whose seat near
Cleveland's bench added
awkward drama to the
Cavs' loss in Game 5 to
the Celhcs.
,
Jackson's contract wi
the Laker~ expires af
this season. The 10-tim
ei:hampJOn has talked
about retirement and
recently said he can't
imagine himself coaching
anywhere else, but that
may not stop Gilbert from
making him a strong pitch
- especially if James is
part of the package.
Krzyzewski and James
formed a strong bond in
three seasons together on
the U.S. Olympic team.
winning a gold medal in
Beijing two years ago. :
Krzyzewski came close to •
leaving Duke for the
Lakers in 2004, and if
he's ever going to test his
mettle in the pro game.
the opportunity to coach
James could be enough to
pry h1m from campus.
Also, assuming he •
stays, Ferry is close with
Krzyzewski. v.hom he
played for in college anA
still calls "coach."
W
"The NBA rumors ha\e
been addressed several
times in recent years b) ·
coach Krzyzewski," Duke
spokesman Jon Jackson
said in an e-mail to The
Associated Press. "He has
reP.eatedly stated that he
will be the Duke head
coach for the remainder
of his career."
Gilbert hali always been
impressed with Izzo. v.ho
fits the tough-minded
defensive profile the
ov.ner v.as looking for
\\hen he hired Brown in
2005. Also. Gilbert is a
\1ichigan State graduate.
Iuo has turned down pre\ ious NBA overtures. but
maybe none as big as
what Gilbert might offer.
And
then
there's
Calipari, who has insisted
he'll stay at Kentucky.
But that's not likely to
stop the Cavs from reac.
ing out to Calipari
~auge his interest m com·
mg to Cleveland. a move
that could keep James
home.
Brown. meanwhile. did
everything in his five seasons with the Cavs everything but wm a t1tle.
In the end. that meant
Gilbert had little choice
but to let him go.
The Ca\ s owner can't
let James walk awa) as
easil).

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