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Seniors learn
about Civil W
medicine, A

Gold Wings &amp; Ribs
Festival 2010
Inside Today's Sentinel

Printed on 100%
Recycled Newsprint

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio

OBITUARIES
Page AS
• Ralph 'Pops' Jay Day

SPORTS
• Eagles prepped
for state meet.

See Page 81

Commissioners award funding to six·projects
B Y BETH SERGENT
BSERGENT@MYDAILYSENTINELCOM

POMEROY - It's that time
of year, time when vru·ious public entities and community organizations throw their hat into the
ring to receive county formula
money to complete proposed
projects.
Meigs County Commissioners
Tom Anderson. Mike Bartrum
and Mkk Davenport had
$120,000
in
Community
Development Block Grant fund-

ing to award at yesterday's regular meeting. There were 12
applicants for the money though
only six were awarded.
The lucky winners are:
Tuppers Plains Fire Department
for fire house rehabilitation. The
TPFD requested $36,200 but
commissioners
awarded
$21,500. Racine Village asked
for and received $20,000 for
sjdewalk replacement. Racine
will use this money as a match
for
its
Neighborhood
Revitalization grant.

Salem Township Trustees
asked for $30,500 but received
$20,000 for the construction of a
helipad. The Rutland Fire
Department asked for and
received $18,000 for fireman's
park improvements and an electrical upgrade to the park. Scipio
Township Trustees asked for
and received $18,500 for ball
field improvements to bring the
concession stand, which helps
fund the league, up to code. The
Chester Ball Fields asked for
and received $20,000 to move

the ball fields along Ohio 248
near the old golf course. The
ball fields and concession stand
were heavily damaged during
recent flooding along the Shade
River which is near the current
location of the fields.
.Other entities which applied
for the funding, but did not
receive an award, were: Chester
Shade Association, $20,000 for
parking lot paving; Middleport
Village, $25 ,000 for community

Please see Funding, AS

'Ahoy .R{!ad{!H!!

1

Summer reading program begins
Bv BETH SERGENT
BSEAGENT@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

~SIDE
• BP faces another
setback; oil slick
threatens Fla.

See Page A2
• Wayne National
Forest offers free
trail use weekend.

See Page A3
• Local Briefs.

See Page AS
• Around Ohio.

See Page AS
• Understanding
Roth 401 (k) plans.

See Page A6
• Ohio roller derby
woman admits
defrauding airline.
See Page A6

•

WEATHER

High: Mid 80s.
Low: Mid 60s.

INDEX
2 SECTIONS -12 PAGES

Calendars
· ~as~ifieds
,

~OffilCS

Editorials
Sports

B Section

© 2010 Ohio Valley Publishing Co.

l JJI,I

!1!1.!1!11 .

D.,.

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POMEROY _:_ One
of Meigs County's most
popular summer-long
events for children is
about to begin and it's
still free.
The Meigs County
District Public Library's
Summer
Reading
Program begins June 7
and ends July 23. From
7:30-9:30 p.m. on July
22 a free pool patty at the
London Pool in Syracuse
will help \x.rrap up the
program with door prizes
and refreshments. ThJ!'I
vear·s theme 1:-i nautical
and children participating may create a sea serpent. attend shark school,
design a boat or discover
an ocean of books as
well as enjoy programs
meant to engage readers.
This year's Jist of free
programs are as follows:
Nancy the Turtle Lady
will appear at 2 p.m.,
June 9 at the Pomeroy
Library bringing many
turtles and special reptile friends. At 2 p.m ..
June J6 at the Pomeroy
Library the Robe1t Post
Comedy Theatre will
make a visit. Join the
library for this laughout-loud performance
where Post uses a combination of body language. props and music
to create an unforgettable cast of characters
that will dazzle children
and adults alike.
Then at 2 p.m .. June 23
at the Pomeroy Library,
Tom Sparough will entertain with juggling, storytelling
and
more.
Cartoonist Jeff Nicholas
will present "That's
Cartooning" \vith a '·sea"
which is a creative cartooning program at 2
p.m.. June 30 at the
Pomeroy Library. This
program wi 11 be filled

ODNR
reminds
hunters to
get fall
permits
SENTINEL STAFF
MDSNEWS@MYDAILYSENTINELCOM

File photo

On June 9, Nancy the Turtle Lady and her reptilian friends will present the first
of several special programs meant to engage young readers enrolled in the
Meigs County District Public Library's Summer Reading Program for children.
with original illustrations,
stories and fun drawalong cartoon characters.
The Columbus Zoo
will
bring
their
Zoomobile
Outreach
Program to young readers at 2 p.m., July 7 at the
Pomeroy Library. Then
come join the library for
fun outdoor activities and
games with Dee Kimes.
naturalist with Forked
Run State Park M? Jenny

Ridenour with Meigs
County Soil &amp; Water at 2
p.m., July 14th at the
Racine Library.
The summer reading
program is open to young
people, preschool age
through young adult.
with programs, prize
drawings, story hours, a
reading club and more. A
variety of programs will
be offered for all ages.
Visit any library branch,

or call the Pomeroy
Library at 992-5813, to
register your child for the
free program which is in
part sponsored by Grange
Insurance,
Downing,
Childs &amp; Musser.
Also, summer story
time is now ongoing at 2
p.m. on Mondays at the.
Racine Library. 2 p.m.
on Tuesday!:&gt; at the
Eastem Library. A free
craft is included.

Sign me up!
Several young people,
ages 14-24, arrived
Wednesday at the Meigs
County Department of
Job and Family Services
to apply for summer jobs
funded by $238,000 in
state and federal funds
received by the department for a summer youth
employment program.
The program will reimburse employers in the
public sector (villages,
school districts, county
offices, etc.) for 100 percent of wages and
fringes the young
employees earn, making
it a win-win for both
employee and employer.
Beth SergenVphoto

COLUMBUS
Hunters wanting to participate in Ohio's fall
controlled deer and
waterfowl hunts have
until July 31 to submit
permit applications for a
random drawing according
to
the
Ohio
Department of Natural
Resources
(ODNR),
Division of Wildlife.
These special hunts are
held on selected public
areas to provide additional hunting opportunities.
Hunters can save time
and money by submitting
their applications online
at wildohio.com. The
online application fee is
$3 per hunt. Mail-in
applications are $5 per
hunt. Application fees are
non-refundable. Since
the online application
process became available, more hunters have
taken advantage of the
option. Last year, 94 percent of applicants applied
online.
In addition to online
submissions, paper applications can be obtruned
by
calling
1-800WILDLIFE ( 1-800-9453543). Hunters will be
selected at random from
submitted applications
and notified by U.S. mail
in September. Only those
selected will be notified.
Special deer hunts are
alsQ.slated for the Ottawa
National Wildlife Refuge
(Lucas
County).
NASA/Plumbrook
Station (Erie County),
Ravenna Training &amp;
Logistics Site (Portage
County). as well as
Mosquito
Creek
(Trumbull
County),
Killdeer Plains (Wyandot
County) and Old Woman
Creek (Erie County) state
wildlife areas.
Waterfowl hunts will
be conducted at Ottawa
National Wildlife Refuge
(Lucas County), Magee
Marsh (Ottawa County),
Mosquito
Creek
(Trumbull County) and
Mercer (Mercer County)
state wildlife areas.
More specific information about hunt dates and
locations,
including
opportunities dedicated
to youth. women and
mobility-impaired
hunters. can be found at
wildohio.com.
The Ohio Department
of Natural Resources
ensures
a
balance
between wise use and
protection of our natural
resources for the benefit
of all. Visit the ODNR
Web site at www.ohiodnr.com.

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PageM
Thursday, June 3,
.

The Daily Sentinel

Brooklyn
Bridge getting
$500 million
makeover

2010

BP faces another setback; oil slick threatens Fla.;
Bv MELISSA NELSON
AND A DAM GELLER
ASSOCIATEDPREss

PENSACOLA, Fla. NEW YORK (AP)
The BP oil slick drifted
The Brooklyn Bridge has perilously close to the
been through a lot in its Florida
Panhandle's
127 years, and now the famous
sugar-white
New York icon needs a beaches Wednesday as a
face lift.
risky gambit to contain
The famous 1.1-mile the leak by shearing off
suspension bridge is get- the well pipe ran into
ting a $500 million trouble a mile under the
makeover, a project that sea when the diamondincludes
a complete tipped saw became stuck.
repainting and the repair
The saw had sliced
of elements that were part through about half of the
of its original construction. pipe when it snagged,
Vice President Joe Biden and it took BP 12 hours
joined Mayor Michael to free it. The company
Bloomberg Wednesday to said preparations were
mark the beginning of the being made to resume
rehab, which is set to be cutting, but didn't give a
completed in four years.
timetable on when it
The federal economic might start.
recovery act provided
The plan is to fit a cap
$30 million for the effort; on the blown-out well at
the rest of the funding the bottom of the Gulf of
comes from the city and Me.,dco to capture most
other federal sources.
of the spewing oil; the
Standing in front of an twisted, broken pipe
access ramp where huge must be sliced first to
swaths of peeling paint allow a snug fit.
exposed patches of rust"I don't think the issue
ed steel, Biden said the is whether or not we can
makeover was a "badly make the second cut. It's
needed" upgrade f.or the about how fine we can
beloved bridge.
make it, how smooth we
''This bridge is an can make it," said Coast
emblem of what this Guard Adm. Thad Allen,
great country repre- the government's point
sents,'' he said.
man for the crisis.
The bridge, with its two
As the edge of the stick
neo-Gothic towers and
elegant steel cables, is one
of New York City's most
revered pieces of architecture. Designed by engineer
John Augustus Roebling,
B Y LOLITA C. BALDOR
it opened May 24, 1883,
AND FRANK JORDANS
after 13 years of building
ASSOCIATED PRESS
at a cost of $15 million.
The East River spanWASHINGTON
the subject of several The U.S. government's
books, a Ken Bums docu- covert program using
mentary and countless unmanned drones to
songs - helped spur the strike at terrorists inside
growth of the city's outer Pakistan is not likely to
boroughs. It also has stop or change, despite
played an important role new criticism from a
in major events through- U.N.
human
rights
out city history. including expert.
on Sept. 11 , 2001. when a
U.S. officials insist the
flood of people fled lower CIA program has been an
Manhattan by walking effective tool to take out
across the bridge.
insurgents along the
The structure has been Afghanistan-Pakistan
spruced up many times border, patticularly those
over the years. but not hidden beyond the reach
recently.
of the military. The
"It is the first major stepped-up use of drones
work on the bridge in 10 over the past year has
years,'' Bloomberg said.
shown no signs of slowThe landmark, tra- ing down and was creditversed by 120,000 cars ed earlier this week with
and thousands of pedes- the
kill ing
inside
trians and cyclists each Pakistan of al-Qaida 's
day, was last painted in third in command.
1991 . The repainting is
The Obama adminisexpected to take the tration does not acknowlentire four years.
edge the secret program,
The existing coat must but one senior U.S. offifirst be blasted off. To cial defended its use
mmumze air quality Wednesday, saying a
issues, the blasting and careful and rigorous tarrepainting will be done in geting process is used to
enclosed units that travel avoid civilian casualties.
along the structure, above The official. who is
traffic, and equipment familiar with the operaplaced on barges anchored tion, spoke on condition
to the bridge above.
of anonymity because the
The new coat will be in program is classified.
the same sandy-colored
T he program, which
hue seen on the bridge officials say has killed
now, a shade approved by hundreds of insurgents in
the
city
Landmarks dozens of strikes over the
Preservation Commission past year, has been conand called "Brook-lyn demned by critics who
Bridge tan."
say it may constitute illeThe other major update gal assassinations and
will be to the roadways violate· international law.
that approach the bridge in They argue that intelliManhattan and Brooklyn. gence officers conducting
Ramps will be expanded the strikes could be at risk
from one to two lanes.
. ?f pros.ecution fo~ murder
The city said slabs of m foreign countnes.
In a 29-page report
pavement
will
be
Wednesday,
installed in segments, and released
the steel decks on the Philip Alston, the indeapproach ramps will also pendent U.N. investigator
be removed in sections on extrajudicial killings,
and replaced panel by called on countries to lay
panel with precast con- out rules and safeguards
crete-filled steel, to for carrying out the
reduce noise from drilling strikes, publish figures on
civilian casualties and
and jackhammers.
Rusted railings in some prove they have. attemp~­
areas of the approach ed to capture or mcapaciramps - some that were tate suspects without
part of the original bridge kiUing them.
"Unlike a state's armed
construction - will be
refurbished and reinstalled. forces, its intelligence

drifted within seven
miles of Pensacola's
beaches,
emerge~cy
workers rushed to lmk
the last in a miles-long
chain of booms designed
to fend off the oil. They
were stymied by thunderstorms and wind before
the weather cleared in the
..afternoon .
Forecasters said the oil
would probably wash up
by Friday, threatening a
delicate network of
islands, bays and whitesand beaches that are a
ha~en for ~ildlife. an~ a
maJor tounst destmat10n
dubbed the Redneck
Riviera.
"We are doing what we
can do, but we cannot
change what has happened," said John Dosh,
emergency director for
Escambia County, which
includes Pensacola.
Since the biggest oil
spill in U.S. history
began to unfold April 20
with an explosion that
killed 11 workers aboard
an offshore drilling rig,
crude has fouled some
125 miles of Louisiana
coastline and washed up
in
Alabama
and
Mississippi as well. Over
the past six weeks, the
well has leaked any, where from 21 million to
45 million gallons by the
government's estimate.

The latest attempt to
control the leak is consid~red risky bec~use slicmg away a sectJon of the
20-inch-wide riser could
remove kinks. in ~he pipe
and temporarlly mcrease
the flow of oil by as
much as 20 percent. The
cap could be placed over
the spill as early as
Wednesday.
If the strategy fails like every other at~empt
to control the leak 5,000
feet underwater - the
best hop~ is probably a
relief well, which is at
least two months from
completion.
As the oil drifted closer
to Florida, beachgoers in
Pensacola waded into the
gentle waves, cast fishing
lines and sunbathed, even
as a two-man crew took
water samples. One of
the men said they were
hired by BP to collect
samples to be analyzed
for tar and other pollutants.
A few feet .away,
Martha Feinstein, 65, of
Milton, Fla., pondered
\he fate of the beach she
has been visiting for
years. "You sit on the
edge of your seat and you
wonder
where
it's
going," she said. "It's the
saddest thing."
Officials said the slick
sighted offshore consist-

ed in part of "tar mats"
about 500 feet by 2.000
feet in size. . .
County offlcJals set up
the booms to block oil
from reaching inland
waterways but planned to
leave beaches unprotected because they are too
difficult to defend against
the action of the waves
and because they are easier to clean up.
"It's inevitable that we
will see it on the beaches," said Keith Wilkins,
deputy chief of neighborh?od and community se~v1ces
for
Escamb1a
County.
Florida's beaches play
a crucial role. in the
state's tourism industry.
At least 60 percent of
vacation spending in the
state during 2008 was in
beachfront
cities.
WoiTied that reports of
oil would scare tourists
away, state officials are
promoting
interac~ive
Web maps and Tw1tter
feeds to show travelers
particularly those
from overseas - how
large the state is and how
distant their destinations
may be from the spill.
In other developments:
• Investors ran from
BP's stock for a second
day, featful of the potential cleanup costs, lawsuits, penalties and dam-

age to the company's reputation.
I
• Pres!de:'1t. ~arac~
Obama sa1d 1t 1s t1me tq
roll back billions of doH
Iars in tax breaks for -o·
compames and use tl
money for clean ener
research and develo
ment.
• A pair of Democratiq
senators pressed BP t~
delay plans to pay share!
holder dividends worth
$10 bil lion or more. The~
called it "unfathomable
that BP would pay out
dividend before the tot~
cost of the cleanup 1
known. BP had no com·
ment.
1
• More fishing ground~
were closed. More thari
one-third of federal
waters in the Gulf an~
now off-limits to fishing,
along with hundreds of
square miles of stati
waters.
''I'm going to be bank
rupt very soon," said
fisherman Hong Le, wh&lt;)
came to the U.S. front
Vietnam and rebuilt h~
·
.
home and business aJte
Hurricane Katrina. ·
2005 wiped him ou
"Everything is financed.
How can I pay? No fishing, no welding. l weld
on commercial fishina
boats and they aren't
going out now, so noth!
ing breaks."

i

UN criticism not likely to stop CIA drone strike~

Sign Up For Our Swisher Rewards Program
Free of charge

SWISHER
&amp; LOHSE

u;,

tinely refuse to talk openly or release data about
the program, but as criticism has heightened they
have slowly begun to
respond quietly to the
complaints.
"Without discussing or
confirming any specific
action or program, this
agency's
operations
unfold within a framework of law and close
government oversight,''
said CIA spokesman
George Little. "The
accountability's real, and
it would be wrong for
anyone to suggest otherwise."
Administration officials have pointed to a
carefully worded speech
in March by State
Department legal adviser
Harold Koh, who said
that "U.S. targeting practices, including lethal
operations
conducted
with the use of unmanned
aerial vehicles, comply
with all applicable law,
including the laws of
war.'' The Obama administration, he said, is committed to following the
law in its operations
against teiTorists.
T he senior U.S. official
said Thursday that the
drones use precision targeting, and that civilian
casualties have been
overstated.
In describing the decision-making process, the
official said the strikes
are launched only when a
vetted target comes into
clear view, and that much like the military intelligence officers take
into account the principles of necessity, the
need for a carefully
weighed response and
the obligation to minimize innocent civ il ian
casualties .

,

Let

all manner of secret
counterteiTor operations .
The report also warns
that CIA personnel could
be extradited to those
countries where the targeted killing takes place
and wouldn't have the
same immunity from
prosecution as regul.ar
soldiers .
t
Alston claims more
than 40 countries now
have drone technology.
with ::.t::venil ~t::t::king '
equip them with let
weapons.

1

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visit dcmusser.com

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Prescri lion Ph. 992·2955

The U.S. official cited
Pakistan, where he said
there was no evidence to
prove large numbers of
innocent lives have been
lost due to drone strikes.
This view has been
challenged by human
rights groups and independent observers, who
say remotely operated
drones risk ingraining a
video game mentality
about war and can never
be as accurate as eyewitness confirmation of targets from the ground.
"The point is that innocent people have been
killed. this has been
proved over and over
again,'' said Louise
Doswald-Beck, a professor of international law at
the Geneva Graduate
Institute in Switzerland.
"If you don't have
enough personnel on the
ground, the chances of
your having false information is actually quite
huge," she told The
Associated Press.
Among the most sensitive recommendations in
Alston's report is that
governments should disclose ''the measures in
place to provide prompt,
thorough, effective, independent
and
public
investigations of alleged
violations of law." Doing
so would almost certainly blow open the lid on

Commercial &amp; R esidential

NATIONAL BANK

www.ThePharmacy4U.c om
Edward latta Pharmacist
Kenneth McCullough, R. Pll.
Charles Ri e, R. Ph.

agents. do not generally
operate within a framework
which
places
appropriate
emphasis
upon ensuring compliance with internarional
humanitarian law, rendering violations more
likely and causing a higher risk of prosecution
both for war crimes and
for violations of the laws
of the state in which any
killi11g occurs," wrote
Abtun, a New Yurk
University professor.
The report to the U .N'.
Human Rights Council
puts unwanted scrutiny
on the intelligence operations of the C nited
States, Israel and Russia,
who Alston says are all
credibly reported to have
used drones to kill
alleged terrorists and
insurgents.
He said the drone
strikes by intelligence
agencies launched in
Afghanistan, Pakistan
and elsewhere are particularly fraught because of
the secrecy suiTounding
them.
Other experts disagree.
"Drone operations are
essential," said Bruce
Riedel, a former CIA
officer and a senior fellow at the Brookings
Institution Saban Center.
"The drones are part of a
much broader effort to
put pressure on al-Qaida
through the war in
Afghanistan. They're the
cutting edge of the pressure, but they're not the
only pressure."
Earlier this week, alQaida leaders conftrmed
that a drone strike in
Pakistan had killed the
terror group's No. 3 officer and top commander
in Afghanistan, Mustafa
al-Yazid.
U.S. authorities rou-

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PageA3

The Daily Sentinel

Thursday, June 3,

2010

ASK DR.. B l{..OTHERS
Wayne National
Forest offers free Parents must decide on sleepover rules
trail use weekendj

Dear· Dr. Brothers:
So much has changed
THENS
Jn obser- with the USDA Forest since I was a kid. My
of Nm unal ft·ails ')ervic:e .lnd other agcn- husband and I are in our
on Sat.u1 ht). June 5. ci " (:--/,ttional
Park early 30s. not overly
Wayne f\ational s~ 'cc, U.~. Fish and strict. bu• \\ ith &lt;&gt;oO&lt;l ''ll
orest in -..uuthea..,tern \\ Jllllil'e Service. and ucs. Ott ti ) ~··· Oll1
Ohio invites the puhlic to Bureau
of
Land daughter wants to have a
a free use weekend (June Management) under the slumber party and invite
5 and 6) on its designated Federal Lands Recreation girls and boys! This was
tratl system.
Enhancement Act (REA). unheard of in 111) day,
No Wayne National
Since 1993, National which \vasn 't all that
forest trail permits ,are Trails Day has inspired long ago. We are Jeamng
Dr. Joyce Brothers
required to ride off-high- thousands of people to against it, but we don't
way vehicle (OHV). enjoy trails on the same want to invent somehorse, and mountain bike day nationwide. taking thing evil where none tense or if there are so
trails on that weekend. part in hikes. bike and extsts. Is there a way to many rules that the kids
Developed fee camp- horse rides. trail mainte- compromise that would won't enjoy themselves.
Explain to your daughg_rounds and da) -use nance, paddle trips and be responsible yet get us
sttes are not included in other activities. Event off the hook'! - C.K.
ter that she can have a
Dear C.K.: Tt seems much better time with
this free use offer.
hosts include local hiking
your
daughter
has just her little girlfriends.
Motorized trail riders clubs. federal agencies,
are still required to pur- municipal parks. retail- already passed - or has- and you'll be giving her a
chase their state all pur- ers. land trusts and many n't yet encountered (and lesson in valuing her
pose vehicle (APV) reg- other businesses and. maybe never will) - the female friends - which
stage in which !&gt;he feels some people simply
Istration st1cker from the organizations.
Ohio Bureau 'of Motor
For more information all ~boys are '·icky" and never learn. I don't think
Vehicles (BMV).
about National Trails wants nothing to do with anything "evil" would
The Wayne NatiOnal Day.
\'lstt them. But that doesn't occur or that you are
Forest offers the public WW\\&lt; .A mcricanH iking. mean she should have \'(rong to think in those
them over for a slumber terms. but you do want to
several tratl opportunt- org.
The Forest has
For
more
Wayne party. no matter how protect your reputation
roximately 79 miles National Forest informa- many other kid:- are today. Kids younger than
horse trails. 121 miles tion,
v1s1t
us
at doing it - and yes, I'm yours often enjoy playing
of all-terrain vehicle http://www.fs .fed .us/r9/w sure there will be some "doctor," and you surely
trails. 209 miles of ayne/ or contact a local whose parents think it is don't want to be respon-.
mountain bike trails, and Wayne National Forest cute or harmless or \\o hat• sible for any such activi347 miles of hiking trails. office in Nelsonvi,lle, ever. But you sound so ties on your watch. So.
The fee waiver week- (740) 753-0101: Pedro. worried already that I girls only - and a word
end is being offered (740) 534-6500: Marietta. wouldn't want to encour- to the wise: Take a few
age you to take on th1s naps the 'day of the party.
nationally in cooperation (740) 373-9055
challenge. After all, there You'll need ro be rested.
is. no point in ha\ing a Engage your daughter in
party if the atmospl:lere is cooking up some ideas

..
1

0

Meigs woman named
human resources director Meigs County Forecast

•

NELSONVILLE Suzanne
Durst
of
Tuppers Plains is the new
assistant director of
human resources at
Hocking College.
Durst is a graduate of
Ohio University and a certified Human Resources
Professional . She was
employed for 14-year at
ElectroCraft in Gallipolis
her most recent posiwas human resources
ager.
urst is part of the
human resources team
which includes managing
the college's employment
and performance man-

agement processes and
assisting with all emplo)ee programs/activities.
According to Durst.
"Everyone has welcomed
me to the team which has
meant a lot to me and my
family. I am very excited
about pa1tnering with all
the employees at the
College and being of
assistance to them. This
tmly is a unique hands on
technical college that I
am proud to have joined."
Durst
resides
in
Tuppers Plains with her
husband Bryan Durst and
their daughters Ally and
Juli.

Community Calendar
Public
meetings

Star Grange #778 and
Star Junior Grange #878
will meet at the hall for a
potluck supper at 6:30
p.m. followed by a meeting at 7:30 p.m. All members are urged to attend.
Monday, June 7
POMEROY - Meigs
County Cancer Initiative,
regular meeting, noon,
conference room Meigs
County
Health
Department.

Thursday ... Mostly
cloudy. A chance of
showers with a slight
chance of thunderstorms
in the moming ...Then
shower:. likely with a
chance of thunderstorms
in the afternoon. Highs in
the mid 80s. South winds
5 to 10 mph ...Becoming
southwest in the afternoon. Chance of rain 70
percent.
Thursday
n ight ...
t:vtostly cloudy. Showers
and thunderstorm~ likely in the evening .. Then
chance of showers
with a slight chance of
thunderst()rms
after
midnight. Lows in the
mid 60s. Northwest
winds 5 to 10 mph.
Chance of rain 70 percent.
Friday ...Partly sunny
with a chance of ~bow­
ers. A chance of thunderstorms ... Mainly in the
afternoon. Highs ill the
mid 80s. Southwest
winds around 5 mph.
Chance of rain 40 percent.

a

Frida) night ...Mostly
cloudy. A slight chance
of showers and thunderstorms in the evening.
Lows in the mid 60s.
Southwest winds around
5 mph. Chance of rain 20
percent.
Saturday
throu gh
Sunday...Mostl) cloudy
with a chance of showers
and
thunderstorms.
Highs in the lower 80s.
Lows in the mid 60s.
Chance of rain 50 percent.
Sunday night ...Mostly
cloudy. A chance of
showers and thunderstorms in the evemng.
Lows in the upper 50s.
Chance of rain 30 percent.
Mo nda y ..• Partly
sunn). Highs in the upper
70s.
Monday
night
through
Tuesday
cloudi
night ...Partly
Lows in the upper 50s.
Highs in the upper 70s.
Wed n esday ... Partly
sunny. Highs in the
upper 70s.

Thursday, June 3
CHESTER
The
Chester Shade Historical
Association will meet 7
p.m. at the Chester
Courthouse.
Monday, June 7
RUTLAND
The
Rutland
Township
The Vaughan Agency
Trustees wi ll meet on
Providing a world of choice in insurance.
Monday June 7 at 5 p.m.
at the Rutland Fire
Birthday
Station.
• Home•Auto
YRACUSE - Sutton
Sunday, June 6
•
nship Trustees, 7
POMEROY -Wanda
• Health &amp; more
p.m. Syracuse Village Neigler will observe her
Hall.
Donald \'augh an, Jr.
90th birthda' on June 6.
Tuesday, June 8
She originally lived in
7 40-992-9784 or 877-992-9784
POMEROY
Syracuse but is now a
505 Mulbe
OH 45769
Township patient at Darst's Private
Salisbury
Trustees, regular meet- Care, 33164 Children's
ing, 6:30 p.m., home of Home ·Road, Pomeroy,
MCGRATH TRUCK &amp; TRACTOR
Manning Roush.
Ohio, 45760.
TUPPERS PL.AINS SPECIALIZING I ~
Tuppers Plains Regiona:
Other
events
. Sewe r DistricL Board,
FORD • MASSY • LONG
regular meeting, 8 a.m.,
PARTS AVAILABLE MOST MAKES &amp; MODLES
Sunday,
June
6
TPRSD office. ·
RACI NE
28th
SALES &amp; SERVICE
Annual George Holter,
Clubs and
Jr. Family Reunion, 1
3'H70 STATE ROUTE 681 ALBANY, OHJ045710
p.m., home of Karen
organizations Werry,
bring ·covered
dish and fam ily photos,
Thursday, J une 3
MCGARTH696@YABOO.COM
chicken provided.
TUPPERS PLAINS Tuppers Plains VFW Post
9053 Ladies Auxiliary,
regular meeting, 7 p.m.
Friday, June 4
POMEROY - Meigs
:PERl 74,
1
p.m.,
berry
Community
ter. Kim Thompson to
MONDAY-WEDNESDAY-FRID11Y
ak.
Beginning June 7th 5:30- 6:30
·
Saturday, June 5
SALEM CENTER
Chris Poe- Instructor • $5.00 pe{ person

(740)696-0358

~

Visit us
online at
www.mydallysentinel.com

Your online
source f or news

· BECOME AOUA-FIT.1
WATER AEROBICS

Kountrv Resort · ~
campground

7 40-992-6488
44705 Resort Road, Racine, OH

www.krccampi

m

for the evening. and
assume she and her
friends \\&lt;ill have a blast
- even without the innocent young men.

•••
Dear Dr. Brothers: 1
ha\'e always been a quiet
person who enjoys being
alone. I like to read and
draw, and no\\

I am

such acttvities ttre not
your cup of tea. Buf you
might actually enjoy
meetin!! and exchanl!in!!
\'iews ~and ideas \\ ith
other ne\\ parents. as v.ell
as hm ing the pleasures of
watching your child gro\\
and learn, and interact
with little friends.
There really i:-. uu
going back nov. ... your
daughter is going to be a
social being, and you will
be interacting '' ith other
parents. careghen. and
teachers for the forseeable future. :'\1ay be you
would be more comfort
.tblc if you just picked
one mother and child
4·ight nm\ to do thing~
\\ ith. You probabl} \\ill
find that a lot les~; O\'erwhelmin!! than the 1dea
of a ""hole group of
moms and babies. I knm\
) ou '' ill v. ant to try to do
what is best for your
child. and perhap.., ) ou
also are open to this period of your life as one that
will bring about changes
to the way you ..,ee yourself and your role. Try to
culti\ate an interest in
others. and you probabh
\\'ill feel les~ like a lonei·.
And save the boob for a
few minutes before bedtime. Ym1'vc got a lot of
living to do.

enjoying raising a sweet
baby girl. My husband
has a similar temperament. and J don't doubt
that our chikl will folio'"
in our footsteps. But I
find [ am gcttinn a lot of•
pressure ~ fron~ other
mothers in the aren to
ha\'e baby groups and
playdates and mother's
mornings out. that kind
of thing. Will my bab)
suffer if I turn down
these opportunities to use
social skills?- j .S.
Dear J .S.: Your bah\
will not suffer. as long a~s
she has exposure to~ all
the enriching experiences
that all of us need in order
to become well-rounded
and functioning human
beings. But I don't think
that because you arc a bit
wary of all this groupmommy stuff that you
need to decide to cut your
child off from a richer
social life than she would
have alone at home \~ ith
you. I understand that
(c) 2010 hr
you are a quiet loner. and Feawre~ Syndic(ue

Km~

Local Stocks
AEP (NYSE) - 31.85
Akzo (NASDAQ) - 52.10
Ashland Inc. (NYSE) ~ 52.47
Big Lots (NYSE) - 35.25
Bob Evans (NASDAQ) - 28.29
BorgWarner (NYSE) - 38.95
Century Aluminum (NASDAQ)
- 10.31
Champion (N ASDAQ) - 1.80
Charming Shops (NASDAQ) 4.45
City Holding (NASDAQ) 32.23
Collins (NYSE) - 58.63
DuPont (NYSE) - 36.19
US Bank (NYSE) - 23.99
General Electric (NYSE) - 16.35
Harley-Davidson (NYSE) 29.41
J P Morgan (NYSE) - 39.55
Kroger (NYSE) - 20.06
Limited Brands (NYSE) - 25.95
Norfolk Southern (NYSE) 56.69

Ohio Valley Bane Corp. (NASDAQ)- 20.07
BBT (NYSE) -30.73
Peoples (NASDAQ)- 14.49
Pepsico (NYSE) - 63.46
Premier (NASDAQ)- 8.75
Rockwell (NYSE)- 54.10
Rocky Boots (NASDAQ) - 8.27
Royal Dutch Shell - 53.81
Sears Holding (NASDAQ) 84.36
Wal-Mart (NYSE)- 51.72
Wendy's (NYSE) - 4.51
WesBanco (NYSE) - 18.69
Worthington (NYSE)- 14.31
Daily stock reports are the 4
p.m. ET closing quotes of
transactions for June 2, 201 o.
provided by Edward Jones
financial advisors Isaac Milts
in Gallipolis at (740) 441-9441
and Lesley Marrero in Point
Pleasant at (304) 674·0174.
Member SlPC.

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PageA4

The Daily Sentinel

Thursday, June 3,

The Daily Sentinel

2010

CON,G~1lli.ATloNS-- Wl1H

OU~ ~eLt~Vet&gt; &amp;eST Wt6He~J

111 Court Street • Pomeroy, Ohio

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

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
Sammy M. Lopez
Publisher

Charlene Hoeflich
General Manager-News Editor

Pam Caldwell
Advertising Director
Coll,l!res.s slw~l make 110 law respectiil,{! au
cstaMisllmc•ut c!f rel(f!iou, or prc,hiMtin,l! tlzefree
. e~ercise tltert&gt;Of; or abrjdgirr.l! tltc•freeclom of
spet•clr, or of tire press; or tlrt' r~{!llt '!f tire people
pcace(IM)' to assemblt•, .wd to ]Jetition tlze
Go!'ermueut fe~r a rc•drc•ss t?fgriet•cmces.
The First Amendment" to the 1 J.S. Constitution

TOI)AY IN HISTORY
Today rs Thursday June 3, the 154th day of
2010. There are 211 days left rn the year.
Today's Highlight m Hrstory:
On June 3, 1808 Confederate President
Jefferson Davis was born 1n Christian County, Ky.
On this date:
In 1621, the Dutch West India Company received
its charter for a trade monopoly in parts of the
Americas and Afnca.
In 1888, the poem "Casey at the Bat," by Ernest
Lawrence Thayer, was first published, in the San
Francrsco Daily Examrner.
In 1935, the French lrner Normandie set a record
on rts marden voyage arrivrng 1n New York after
crossrng the Atlantrc rn just four days.
In 1937, the Duke of Wrndsor, who had abdicated the Bntrsh throne, marrred Wallis Warfield
Simpson rn Monts, France.
In 1948, the 200-rnch reflectrng Hale Telescope
at the Palomar Mountain Observatory in California
was dedrcated
In 1963, Pope John XXIII died at age 81; he was
succeeded by Pope Paul VI.
In 1965, astronaut Edward Wh1te became the
frrst AMerican to "walk" rll space, during the flight of
Gemrnr 4.
In 1968, pop artrst Andy Warhol was shot and
cntrcally wounded in his New York film studio,
known as ''The Factory," by Valerie Solanas, an
actress and self-styled militant feminist.
In 1983, Gordon Kahl, a militant tax protester
wanted rn the slayings of two U.S. marshals in
North DaKota was killed rn a gun battle with lawenforcement officrals near Smithvrlle, Ark.
In 1989 I ran s sprrrtual leader, Ayatollah
Ruhollah Khomernr died Ch:nese army troops
began therr sweep of BeiJrng to crush student-led
pro-democracy demonstrations SkyDome (now
called Rogers Centre) opened in Toronto, Ontano,
Canada
Ten years ago. Presrdent Brll Cl.nton held talks in
Moscow wrth Russran President Vladimir Putrn on
topics rncludrng missile defense. Former Treasury
Secretary and onetime ·:energy czar" William
Simon died in Santa Barbara, Calif. at age 72.
Frve years ago: U.S. military officials said no
guard at the Guantanamo Bay prison for terror suspects had flushed a detarnee's Quran down the toilet, but disc,osed there were instances rn which
OvraPs were abused by guards, rntentionally or
accidentally
One year ago: New Hampshire became the sixth
state to legalize same-sex marr!age.. The
Organrzatron of Amencan States cleared the way
for Cuba's possible return to the group by lifting a
47-year ban O'"l the country.
Thought for Today: "Money can 't buy happiness, but it can make you awfully comfortable
while you're being miserable.'' - Clare Boothe
Luce, American author, politician and diplomat
(1903-1987).

LETTERS TO THE .£D ITOR
Letters to the od tor should be hm1ted to 300 words All letters
are sub eel to editing must be stgned and tnclude address and
IE eptoone nurrtber No uns,gned letters will be published.
letters hould be n good taste address1ng 1ssues, not persorrnrrt,es. rh ..nk Vou lettorc WI. nor bo Gccoptod for publicotron.

Effect of illegal immigration healthcare costs
.

.

Bv ELIZABETH Lee VLIET, MD
The national spotlrgh4 is on
Arizonu for doing what the
federal go' crn:ncnt and previous
Governor Napolitano refused to
do: rein in an :nvasion of illegal
aliens bankrupting our state
(Ari:tOna). At an August 2009
healthcare Town Hall in Phoenix.
legislators said that more than
half of Arizona's 4 billion dollar
budget deficit was the result of
paying for three areas of services
to illegal immi$rants: education.
healthcarc. and rncarccration.
Whut docs illegal immigration
hu' c to do with vour costs and
your acccs-, to medical care when
you need it'!
Estimates are that 20-40 pcrccnt
of uncompensated ("free") medical services arc provided to people in the U.S. illegally. The actual number may be much higher.
Shockingly, hospitals and ciTnic~
don't ask about citizenship ... a
medical version of "Don't Ask.
Don't Tell."
In both Tucson and Dallas
where I ha\ c pract1ced medicine.
hospital&lt;; arc struggling under
massi\e eo:.ts of uncompensated
medical services for uninsured
people who. by federal law. cannot be turned awa) for lack of
insumncc or ability to pay.
How much does this uncompensated care &lt;tctuall) cost taxpayers'! The incredible answer:
no one knows.
We only have "estimates" of the
costs to taxpayers to treat illegal
immigrants because hospitals and
public health clinks do not ask for
proof of cititenship before providing care.
What are consclJucnccs to taxpaying citizens'?
I. Increased cost nnd reduced
access to trauma &lt;.'arc. Tucson has
lost all but one Level I Trauma
Center to serve all of southern
Aritona. in large part due to ma-,sive, unsu'&gt;tainable lossc... from
uncompensated care. Auto accidents involving O\Crloadcd vans
of illegal aliens happen regularly
in 'southern AritOJW. Injured are
tlown bv arr ambulance to
Universit\· ~1edical Center's
Trauma Center and treated with
state of the art' care .... all at taxpayer expensc.
2. A registered nurse involved

with the· Pima County health system since the 1970\ \\ ho must
remain anonymous because of her
role. said she has never seen any
staff member at either El Rio
Clinic or Pima County Health
Department ask for proof of citizenship before prO\ iding free
medical services (immunizations.
Well Bab) checks. food stamps.
WIC sernces. birth control. and
even elective abortions). Costs
are paid b) taxpayer~. When
funds arc depleted. IO\\ income
American citizens have fev.. er services and longer waits as a result.
3. This same R;-\ also said: "I
personally knO\\' Mexican men
who married 16 year old girls. got
them pregnant. brought them to
Tucson for the baby to become a
US citizen. They live in Mexico
but come here for their health
care. Taxpayers pay for this medical care many ways. at the Public
Health Department. and with
school nurses '' ho provide care...
4. Uncompensated medical "crvices for illegal irmmgrants mean
higher premiums for all of us due
to cost shifting among all third
party payers. To CO\ cr the deficits
from "free" medical ser. ices they
pro, ide. the administration at
Unh·ersity Physicians Health
System Kino campus is anal) zing
how much to increase employee
health insurance premiums as of
Julv I.
Obamacare cuts bcnetits to
American citizens: $500 billion in
\1edicare cuts and slashing thl!
Medicare Advantage program.
Medicare Advantage. chosen by
one in five seniors, is the most
popular plan for lo"' and moderate income seniors. and rovers
about half of our Hispanic or
African-American elderly. My
patients on Medicare have
worked and paid into the system
0\er their working careers, )Ct
thcse cuts mean less health care
available to them now. We certainly cannot afford to cover tho..,e
here illcgall).
6. Hospitals in Tucson and
Dallas al~? prO\idc.uncom~cnsated ("'free ) matemlt) sen 1ces to
pregnant women here illegal!).
Their babies then become US cit-·
izens entitled to all of the sen ices
a\ ailable
for
lov..
income
Amcncan tamrlies
food
stamps, WIC. immunizations.

s·.

--

office visits. medications. etc.
This drives up costs to all of us:
higher premiums for private
insurance companies . and higher
taxes for government insurance
like Ari~;ona 's Medicaid (AB CCCS).
7. Professional estimates are
that over half of the pregnant
\\omen served at Parkland
Hospital in Dalla~ are in this.
country illegally. With over.
16.000 deliveries a year, Parkland
is one of the nation's busiest
maternity sen ices with prenatal
clinics for IO\\ mcome women to
receive free prenatal care, nutrition. medication. birthing classes.
child care classes. and free supplies (formula, diapers. bottles,
car scats). Taxpayers pay the
bills.
I low many of these women are
legal citizens and how many are
not? No one knO\\·s. No one asks
about citizenship.
It is significant that the four
states with the highest numbe.
uninsured patients are the so
ern Border States that also h
the highest burden of illeg
immigrants: Catifornia. Arizona.
Ne\\ ~lexico and Texas.
The bottom line 1s that working.
taxpa) ing. legal citizens are bearing the brunt of the failure of our
govcmment officials to document
citizenship before prO\ iding rnedical services.
How long before your medical
care is delayed or denied because·
our health systems have collapsed
from deficits due to uncornpensat- ·
ed medical care?
Arizona's massi ve deficits .
greatly increased b) healthcare
services for illegals. is the canary
in the mine. warning of a potential :
explosion that may collapse the
system for all.
·
It's straight out of the Cloward-·
Pi\en playbook: destroy the systern bv oven\ helming it. Your
state ..::_ and vour healthcare may be next •
( Eliz.abNh Lee Vliet. MD. is a

women j health .\pecialist. Dr.
Vliet~ bvok.\. includt: l(s
01'lme.\, Sruptd.': Screammg

J·l·

Be

Heard:

Hvrmm

Connec riom mnnen Suspect And Doctors STILL Ignore;
\\'tnll '/1, n~·igh ' and Hormones;.
The ~CI\TV mmwn :~ Guide to
PCo~·.) ·

The Daily Sentinel
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Thursday, June 3,

www.mydailysentinel.com

2010

Obituaries
6

Ralph "Pops" Jay Day of Pomero}. passed away on
May 31. 20 I 0 after an extended illness. He was born
on Feb. 14. 1956 in Logan to Rhea and Marvin Bean
of Minersville. who survive him.
He is also survived b) wife, Retta Day of Pomeroy;
Angel Day of Pomeroy: sons, Jay Day of
. Jack and Bc.!thany Day of Gallipolis; daugh-law. Tatum Day of New Haven. W.Va.: grandchildren, Dakota Day of Athens, Nathan and Cole
Day of New Ha\'en. W.Va., Braxton. Trey, and
Trenton Day of Gallipolis, Adrianna. Alexandra and
Ashton Day of Gallipolis: brothers, Keith and Tammy
Da}. Robert and Wilma Boling, all of Pomeroy; sisters. Cheryl and John Stumbo of Middlepo1t, Sandra
and George Hockenberry of Minersville; sisters-inlaw, Kathy Day of Middleport, Debbie Monson of Pt.
Pleasant, W.Va .. Shelia Dickens of Middleport. Faith
nnd Charlie Pennington of Pomeroy, and Shelly and
Danin Warth: brothers-in-law, Chuck Smith, Pt.
Pleasant W.Va .. Joshua and Lacy Dickens. Frank and
Missy Dickens, all of Pomeroy. Jonathon and Tina
Dickens of Gallipolis: several nieces and nephews.
He is preceded in death by son, Shane Day; grandson. Caden Day; father. Jack Day; brothers Jack and
Teny Day; father-in-law, Franklin Dickens; motherin-law. Betty Dickens; sister-in-law. Frannie Dickens:
nephews, Terry Day Jr. and Keithie Landers.
Services will be held at 2 p.m .. Saturday, June 5,
2010 at the Anderson \ric Daniel Funeral Home in
Pomeroy with the Rev. Greg Collin officiating.
Burial will follow in the Carleton Cemetery.
Visitation will be held from 6-9 p.m .. Friday. June 4,
2010 at the funeral home.
An online registry is available by logging onto
.
v.andersonmcdaniel.com.

Local Briefs
Chicken, ribs barbecue set,
POMEROY
The Pomeroy Fireman's
Association will have a chicken and ribs barbecue
beginning at II a.m .. Sunday. June 6 at the fire station. The menu will consist of chicken half or ribs.
cole slaw, baked beans and dinner roll. Orders may be
placed on the day of the barbecue or by calling 9922663 after 9 a.m. Proceeds go toward equipment and
training purposes.

Report available
MIDDLEPORT - The Village of Middleport
Public Works Department has mailed its yearly
Consumer Confidence Rep01t. If you did not receive
on and would like one, it can be picked up at the
Middleport Public Works Office at 237 Race Street.

Road closed

l

tDDLEPORT - Meigs County Engineer Eugene
plett announces that beginning at 8:30 a.m.,
day. June 8 through 4 p.m .. Wednesday Jllne 9,
(Bradbury Road) and Salisbury Township Road
174 (Noble-Summit Road) \Viii be closed at the intersection of the two roads to allow installation of a culvert under both of the roads.

School bus
crash kills
kindergartner
DRESDEN (AP) - A
school bus carrying
seven young children
went off a highway, hit a
utility pole and flipped
onto its roof, killing a
kindergarten student in
what authorities say is
Ohio's first school bus
fatality in 22 years. ·
The crash Wednesday
morning near Dresden
left the driver, 47-yearold Carol Oler, with serious injuries. Six students
had minor injuries.
Authorities said 6year-old Kasey King of
Frazeysburg was killed.
The cause of the crash
remains under investigation.
The bus was on its way
to Nashport Elementary
School, about 45 miles
east of Columbus.
Mark Neal, superintendent at the Tri-Valley
school district. called the
accident a terrible tragedy
for the community.
The State Highway
Patrol says the last school
bus crash that killed a
child passenger was in
Wood County in 1988.

Officer
estimates
enough for
speeding
convictions

CLEVELAND ·(AP) - A Toledo businessman has
Acted guilty to charges he stole $154.400 from the
eland city school district.
Prosecutors say 56-year-old John Briggle participated in a scheme to pocket money from printing
equipment purchases that were never provided.
Cuyahoga County Prosecutor Bill Mason said
Wednesday that as part of a plea agreement. Brig~le
will testify against Daniel Burns. a former school district business manager who also is charged in the
case. His trial is scheduled to begin Monday.
Brigglc pleaded guilty to a felony charge of theft,
tampering with evidence and other charges. He was
ordered to repay the money and faces up to 25 years
in prison when sentenced:

Remnants of
explosive
found in Ohio
home; 3 dead
FRANKLIN (AP) Authorities in Ohio say
components of a military
explosive were found at a
home destroyed by fire.
Three people died in the
blaze.
Investigators are trying
to determine if the home
in Fran.klin was being
used as a methamphetamine lab. The cause of
Wednesday's
fire
remained under investigation, and a coroner's
office hadn't released the
victims' identities.
A bomb squad was at
the scene, along with a
meth lab team from the
Warren County Drug
Task Force. Franklin is
about 30 miles northeast
of Cincinnati.

Ohio expands
use of Twitter
for traffic
updates

In other business:
Commissioners
approved an appropriation for $289.1 16 for the
highway
department

which will purchase two,
2011 International tmcks
for the garage.
Also approved was a
contract with the Meigs
County Department of
Job and Family Services
and
Meigs
County
Common Pleas Court in
regard to the parenting
education program. The
contract amount
is
$3.000' for July 1-June
30. 20 I 1. A contract with
MCDJFS and Chris
Enos for mandated monitoring services regarding agency contracts for
$8.320 was approved for
June 2-June 30, 2011.
Commissioners
also
approved Lee Powell
and Cass Cleland as

~lark's Jetutlrp
Rernem.ber Dad on Father•s Day
with a gift from. Clark's Jewelry.

Q
Rings, Chains and Bracelets.

~j_'j 1ounce Siver Eagle coins.

DAD

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423'77 Charles Chancey Drive • Pomeroy. OH
740-992-1880

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A CHECK-UP
SAVED YOU M NEY
RR~AN

Grange
lnsuranceT.,

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brogan·warner.we~agebt4u.com

Man in arson
case gets
3 years for
burglary
CLEVELAND (AP)
- A Cleveland man
acquitted of arson in a
house blast that damaged
dozens of homes has
been sentenced to three
years in prison for burglary at the location.
Judge
Bridget
McCafferty sentenced 57year-old
William
Calderwood
on
Wednesday in Cuyahoga
County Common Pleas
Comt on his conviction on
one count of burglary. The
same jury that convicted
him Friday also acquitted
him on 53 arson counts.
Prosecutors
said
Calderwood stole appliances, furniture and pipes
from a vacant house and
tampered with its gas line
before the Jan. 25 blast
damaged 72 homes on
Cleveland's west side.
The defense said the
conviction would be
appealed.

Dairy's plan
to add 2,500
cows raises
worries
McGUFFEY (AP)
Operators of a big dairy
in Ohio want to add
another 2,500 cows.

which would make it the
largest milking farm in
the state.
The plan first needs
approval from the Ohio
Department
of
Agriculture.
The farm is in northcentral Ohio's Hardin
County.
It • began operating
about three years ago
with around 4,500 cows.
Some of the farm's
neighbors say they're
concerned that additional
cows would bring more
traffic and be harder on
roads. Some also are
wo1Tied about odors.
The farm's owners say
they have plenty of room
to expand and won't need
any new manure storage
facilities.

Fire endS
year early for
high school
STREETSBORO (AP)
- A ftre that broke out in
the gymnasium and caused
an estimated $2 million in
damage has forced an
Ohio high school to close
for what would have been
the last two days of the
school year.
There were no injuries
in the fire a janitor
reported at Streetsboro
High School just after
5:30 p.m. Tuesday, long
after the school day was
over.
Officials are concerned
about structural damage
at the school, about 25
miles
southeast
of
Cleveland. The building
also sustained smoke and
water damage.
Seniors have already
finished for the year, but
underclassmen were to
take final exams on
Wednesday. and Thursday
was supposed to be the
last day of school.
Administrators are trying
to figure out what to do
about the finals.
The fire's cause is
under investigation.

appointments to the
MCDJFS
Workforce
Investment Board.
Commission President
Anderson announced the
repairs on the Meigs
County Sheriff's Office
to stop leaks and replace
gutters has been completed for $28.075.
Also. Anderson said the
count) will be purchasing a new motor for the
air conditioning una at
the
Meigs
County
Health Department. The
unit went out this week.
and should cost in

excess of $700.
Also present at the
meeting
was
Clerk
Gloria Kloes.

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afternoon updates on
rush-hour traffic problems, including construction delays and major
accidents, for Akron,
Cincinnati, Cleveland,
Columbus, Dayton and
Toledo.
Ohio began using
Twitter iJJ December to
post updates on winter..
related travel problems.
Officials strongly discourage motorists from
attempting to read the
messages while driving.

Funding from Page At

Appearance on 'Wheel'

Man pleads guilty in theft
from Cleveland schools

and experienced in watching for speeders. The
court's 5-J decision says
independent verification
of
a driver's speed is not
I
necessary.
The court upheld a
lower court's ruling
against a driver who challenged a speeding conviction that had been based
on testimony from police
officer in Copley, 25
miles south of Cleveland.
The officer said it
appeared to him that the
man was driving too fast.

COLUMBUS (AP) Ohio's highest court has
ruled that a person may
be convicted of speeding
purely if it looked to a
police officer that the
motorist was going too
COLUMBUS (AP)
Ohio is expanding its use
fast.
The Ohio Supreme of Twitter to update
Court ruled Wednesday motorists about traffic
that an officer's visual esti- delays.
mation of speed is enough ' State
transportation
to support a conviction if officials said Wednesday
the officer is trained, certi- the Twitter feeds will
fied by a training academy. provide morning and

center rehab, demolition
and waste removal-first
phase; Meigs County
Council
on
Aging.
$15,000
for medical
LOS ANGELES. Calif. - The granddaughter of
local resident Dolores Hartness will appear as a con- transportation vehicle;
Fire
testant on "Wheel of Fortune" at 7 p.m., Wed. June 9. Syracuse
Tara Pohlman of Florida said the show was taped Department, $19, I 00 for
three months in advance in Los Angeles, Calif. after ·garage doors, auto cribs.
several interviews and a tryout in Florida. She is the gear racks, hose dryer
daughter of Diane (Root) Hutchins, a 1976 graduate tower, mobile hose carts;
of Eastern High School. Tara's cousin Tessa of Los Portland
Community
Angeles. the daughter of Melanie (Root) Gregg, also Center, $18.750 for gym
a graduate of Eastern. along with their respective hus- portion of roof replacebands. will be introduced at the end of the show. Tara m~nt. Middleport Youth
also said the rules of the show prohibited her from League, $20,000 for
revealing if she won or how much money she won.
Middleport ball field
improvements.

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Page_A6

The Daily Sentinel

Thursday, June 3, 2010

Seniors learn about Civil War medicine Understanding
Roth 40l(k) plans
BY KATHLEEN

VANDERVAAR~STUDENT
OH 0 UNIVERSITY SCR PPS
COLLEGE OF COt." UN CATIONS

•

ATHENS
t\kmber~
of O'Bkne~s Memorial
Hospital's SeniorBEAT
Histor) Group to&lt;Jk a
step back in time recently
to learn about Civil War
medici nc from history
enthusia~t John .Mmray.·
'Murray has talked to
the hi..,tor~~ group before,
and I \\a.., told by a member of the Ci\ il War
Roundtable of Athens
that he had a 'Ct)' interesting program on Ch il
War medicine," :-.aid
Pegg) Irwin, Coordinator
for SeniorBEAT. "John
does a lot of research on
the Cfvil War '0 \\e can
count on what he has to
say:·
.
.
In ht.., presentatton.
Murray covered the
Submitted photos
manv medical i... sue:-. :-.nldier; and medical profes- O'Bieness SeniorBEAT History Group Members Janet Earich. left, and Mary
sionals faced during the Stump examine a piece of hardtack, a staple of soldiers' diets. during a_ recent preCivil War. One of sentation by John Murray about Civil War Medicine. An inadequate d1et was one
Murray\ main points of the contributions to the prevalence of disease during the Civil War.
was that more soldiers
died from illness than
from battle.
"Soldiers were unsuspecting of all this disease. What the) were
afraid of wa ... going into
battle.'' ~luml) ~atd.
i\lurray also discussed
causes of disease and
infection. the triage S) stem .....urgery tools and
techniques and how the
development of new
mcrea~ed
weaponry
injuries and casualtie~.
'There's nothing more
intcrestmg than what
people actually did."
I\fumt) :-.aid. "You can
·watch lhistotical liction I
mm ics. but people actually did the thing~ I
shared today."
Murrav can't recall
exactly ,\•hen his passion
for history began. but he
has always been interest- O'Bieness SeniorBEAT History Group members Larry Snyder and Janet Eari?h
ed in the past and he examine a handout about a Civil War med1cal kit. Presenter John Murray disenjoys sharing his pas- cussed Civil War medicine with the group at a recent meeting.
sion \\ ith other~.
On
Thursda.&gt;.
he
SeniorBEAT is a free man) mterest ~roups .
But hbtorv b not all
demonstrated h1s dedica- serious busines:-. for this program. -.pon'&gt;ored h) These groups m~ludc
tion to histol) by don- crowd. The) \\ere quick O'Bienes , a\mlable to Book Club. the Htstol)
nin!! authentic eh il \\ ar to lnngh at .Murray'-: joJ...-es an) one who is 60 )Cars or Group. c~~ir Volleyb:Ul.
attire from a top hat on and not afraitl to joke older. E'en member \\ill the A_rthntts FoundatiOn
hb head to uncomfort- right hack. Thi:-. is what receh e benefits ~uch as E?'er~tsc Program. the
able shoes constructed ScniorBEAT is all about a"sistance "ith ho~pitnl or Smgmg Group and the
with wooden pegs on his - sharin!! in fun. fe low- insurance forms. social Lu~ch Progr~.
.
feet.
'&gt;Cn ice counseling and
ship and education.
for 1~10r~· ll!{ormatwn
His pa~~ion for hi:-.tory
--The BEAT stands for 'olunteer opportunities. about SemorBEAT prowas equall) matched ~) 'BI.! Educated and Active Members arc also mailed ~rams or to become a
the 16 group members Ill 'l&lt;.l!!ether" and so all of us a monthly newsletter and m~mber,
call
t{le
attendance.•The) listened on the advis01y bmu·d keep calendar that include all 0 Bl~ness Commwllfy
attentiYely. asked many that in mind when we are the program\ activities Relatwns Department at ·
questions and sl_1ared_ de\cloping programs." and events.
( 7-+0)
.
592-9300.
knowledge and stones ol lrw·in said. ''I'm much
The group meets at l!!formatwn can_ also be
their own. Following the more active than I would O'Bieness at 2 p.m.- cwry jound ~It the SemorBEAT
presentation, members have been and I've met third Thursdav of the \~'l'b ?le at oblet!ess.org,
thanked .Murray and stat- people that I'm almost cer- month for scn;inars that Sentces,
0 Bleness
geared
~\\~~s
SeniorBHAT. The monthed thut thev were tain I would have ne\er are
impres:-.cd '' ith ·his abili- met. Socialization is the scntor. . ~ In addition to f) newsletter aJUI calenmajor component of the group-w1de progmmming. dar of e1•ents can be
t\ to recall minute details
program."
ScniorBEAT also offers 1·ieu·ed 011 the Ht&gt;b site.
of his tOr).

.

Ohio roller derby woman admits defrauding airli_ne
Cll\:CI:\NATI (AP) An Ohio roller dcrb)
skater who u:-.cd the team
name "Sadistic Sadie''
has admitted in federal
court to i liegaily obtainIll" more than $400,000
in° airline tickets while
working for United
Airlines.
Mercedes Stafford. 34.
of Cinctnnati plcadl.!d
guilty to wire fraud
Tuesda) in U.S. District
Court in Covington. K) .•
according to court documents.
Fede.~·t~l prosecutors say
Stafford created fake
numbers for tickets rhat
are issued to passcn~crs
when a United Airlines
flight is canceled m:
· delayed, to alltl\\ passen!!Cr" to travel on another
flight. The Cincinnati
Rollerguls team member
then used the fuke tickets
to obtain real tickets that

she u~cd for herself or
prO\ ided to
famil),
friends, teammates and
others associated \~ ith
roller derb' events. coutt
records state. L nited honored the tickets. whether
they were used on its
planes or other airlines.
Stafford booked more
than 500 plane tickets
between May 6. 2007. to
Oct. 22. 2009. through an
online ticketing s\stem
while working for United
at the Cincinnati/~ol1hem
Kentucky Internal onal
Airport in Hebron, K) ..
prosecutl,rs sav.
Stafford al~o admitted
reccl\ ing payments totaling more than $50,000
from individuals and
organizations that benefited from the tickets.
prosecutors said.
Stafford could be sentenced to up to 20 yca~s
in prison. lmed a max1-

mum $250.000 and put
on supen ised release for
up to three ) ear~. She
agreed to make re~titu­
tion to United Airlines in
an amount the court will
determine, prosecutors
said. Her scnten&lt;:ing was
scheduled for Sept. 27.
No Cincinnati phone
nu mbcr wa:-. Ii 'h'd l'nr

Stafford. A me..,sage
seeking comml..'nt was
left \Vednestht) at the

office of her attorney. W.
Kelh Johnson.
Stafford is a former
president of the Cincinnati
Roller!!irls. an amateur
team of about 50 \\Omen
that competes at the
Cincinnati Gardens and
other sp011s and entertainment arenas around the
country The team is a
member of the Women ·s
Flat
Track
Derb)
Asso~iation (WFTDA).

EYer since lndh idual
Retireml.!nt
Accounts
were introduced in the
1970s. the numbers of
tax-advantaged rettremcnt savings options and participants - hml.!
continued to grow. One
relatively new alternative
that's gaining popularity
is the Roth -!.Ol(k) plan.
40 I (k)s arc rl.!tiremcnt
savings plans set up by
Jason Alderman
emplo)ers that allo\\
employees to sa\e for
their retirement through
With either type of
automatic payroll deduc- 401 (k). )OU must begin
tions. As it name :-.ug- taking mandatory minigesh, the Roth 40 I(k) mum distributions from
combines feature of a your account after )OU
traditional 40 I(k) with tum 70 1/2, just as you
those of a Roth IRA. must with a regular IRA.
Employers increa~ingly Howe' er. you ~can avoid
have begun offering Roth mandaton \\ ithdra\\ ah
alternatives. so it's "ise b) con\et~ting your Roth
to understand hov. they 401 (k) into a Roth IRA,
\\Ork in case you are \\hich has no such
given the option.
rc4uirement. You can
In a traditional 401(k) also convert a pretax ,
plan. employee contribu- 401 (k) into a regular IRA
tions arc usually mad!.! on and then into a Roth IRA:
a pretax ~asis: that is. but you must pay taxA
deducted from your pa) the converted amotW
before federal and state , ju~t as you would '" ith
incom~ taxes are calculat- an) regular 40 I (k) withed. Thts lowl!rs )Ollr tax- dnm al.
able income and therdore.
~1an) people wrestle
\OUr ta:x.es. You don't pa)
het\\l!en Roth and reeuiaxes on these s~l'· ing or tar 40 I (k) contributio~ns.
their, investment earnings A few considerations:
• \\'ill vour tax rate be
until the\ ·re withdrawn usual!) after retirement.
higher ncl\\ or at retireWith a Roth 40 I(k) you ment? Those in their
contribute after-tax dol- peak earning years ma)
Iars. Althou1!h vou don't ha\c a hi!!her mar£?:inal
get an upfl"l)nt iax break. tax rate currently than at
your account gro\\-. tax- retirement. \\hereas those
free and withdra\~als ju-.t beginning the~r
aren't later taxed. pro\ tded . careers may see thetr
you've had the acc&lt;1unt at rates rise 0\ er time.
• ,\1any financial experts
least fivt' years and arl.! age
59 1;2 or oldl.!r - or haw think future income tax
rates will likely climb due
become disabled or die.
A few things to rcmem- to ll:dcral budget deficits
bcr:
and increasing demands
• The combined 20 I 0 on Social Security and
annual limit for employee ~kdicare.
40 I (k) contributions • The longer you
\\ hether regular and/or remain mvcsted in a Roth
Roth is $16.500 40l(k). the more li
()22.000 if over 50) .
'ou are to benefit
Roth 40 I(k) contribu- tax-free account
tion:-. &lt;..'annot later be con• Consider
, erted moved into a regu- ) ou ·11 retire. as m
Jar40J(k). or \ice \'Crsa.
tate:-. ha'e IO\\ or non• Before age 59 112. all exJ:-.tent income tax.
401(k)
\\ithdra\\ab.
When it\ not clear
v. hether Roth or regular. \\ hich type of 40 l (k) mav be subject to a I 0 or IRA - is be"t for their
percent earl) \\ ithur~m al particular situation. :-.ome
p!.!nalty on the taxable people diversif) their
amount. Exception~ may retirement savin!!s bv
be made for death or dis- COlllributing tO. both
ability. catastroplik med- Roth and a ,:e1!ular 40 l (k).
ical expenses. tirst-time
(Jason Aldennan directs
homebuyer loans and Visa:~ .financial education
being 55 or older at retire- programs. To Folloll' Jason
ment or job termination. Alderman on Tll'itter:
See IRS Publication 575 1\'ll'll'.tll'itrer.com!Practical
for details (v.·ww.irs.gov). Monev.)

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Thursday, June 3, 2010

.

f

•

- 20.1 0 Gold Wings &amp; Ribs Festival

• Page 2

•

SCHEDULE OF EVENTS
Friday .June 4
11 :00 AM Food Vendors open for lunch
5:00 PM_ Entertainment- Plan B Band
7:30 PM "BBQ Hog" Calling Co~test
8:00PM Entertainment- Mixx
(Riverfront Amphitheatre)
9:00 P.M Motorcycle Light Parade
Saturday .June 5
9:00AM DJ Rockin Reggie
"Spinnin tunes on the main stage"
10:00 AM Food Vendors open ·
Art in the Park- Court Street
11 :30 AM ·Guided Motorcycle.Tour
1:00 PM 3SavileRow Band
1:00 PM Cookie Stacking contest
1:30 PM Pickle Spittin contest
3:00PM ·P arade- General parade
Line up 2:00 pm Condor Street off Mechanic
Guided Motorcycle Tour- includes
historic .sites- leaving from Parade
4:10PM . "Ohio's BeslRibs" &amp;

•
S~.

-

Art in the Park contest winners ·
4:20 PM "Ohio's Best Wings" winner announced
5:00PM .Audio Outlaws Band(Riverfront Amphitheater)
8:00PM Direct EnergyRiverfront Amphitheater
9:00 PM Motorcycle Light Parade .

'

.

'

.-

•

�Thursday,June3,20lO

2010 Gold Wings &amp; Ribs Festival

•Page3

·• Festivallineup includes 'something for everyone'
Bv

CHARLENE HOEFLICH

HOEFLICH@MYDAILYSENTINEl.COM

POMEROY- Something for everyone about describes the 2010 Gold
Wings and Ribs Festival to take place in
downtown Pomeroy . Friday and
Saturday.
Hundreds of motorcycles are expected to roll into Pomeroy Friday and
stay for the weekend of events which
will be highlighted by fine entertainment, a variety of activities for both
the young and old, plenty of good
food, and the always popular motorcycle light parades at 9 p.m. on both
nights.
Again this year The Ohio's Best
Ribs" plaque will be awarded at the festival along with one for "Ohio's Best
Wings." There is always plenty of competition for the awards which means
"good eatin" for festivalgoers , many of
whom come early and stay late . The
winners will be announced and the
plaques awarded at about 4 p.m . on
Saturday.
Food vendors will be open for business at 11 a.m. on Friday, and 10 a.m.
on_ Saturday.
Contests will again this year be
included in the lineup of weekend
activities with the hog callin' event to
be held at 7:30 p.m . on Friday.
Saturday's contests will be the cookie
stacking contest at 1 p.m. follow by a
new one, the pickle spittin' contest, at
l :30 p.m. Always popular with locals
is Rockin' Reggie who again this year
will spin tunes from the main stage on
the parking lot.
Diana Johnson is again handling the
traditional "Art in the Park" disp1ay
and contest which will be held in the
Court Street mini-park ·on Saturday
from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. Local artists
will be showcasing about 30 pie&lt;:es of
their work and competing for severar
prizes.
Again this year there will be categories for oils, acrylics, watercolor and
-~ketchings in pencil, charcoal and colwured pencil with cash prizes to be
awarded in each category. The entry
selected as "best of show" will be given
an additional cash prize.
Those visiting the show will be asked
to vote for the one they like best in each
category and also to vote for their

Hundreds
of motorcycles are
expected
to be in
Pomeroy
for this
weekend's
Gold
Wings &amp;
Ribs
Festival.
This was
the picture
of Court
Street at
last year's
event.

The Pomeroy Merchants
invite you to shop .historic, beautiful
Downtown Pome !
Gina Pines did face painting in the park
at last year's event.
choice of best painting overall. Winners
will be announced from the stage at 4
p.m. on Saturday.
Again this year there will be a parade
through town at 3 p.m. The line-up will
begin at 2 p.m . on Condor Street.
Motorcyclists will leave from the
parade for a guided tour which will
include stops at several of the county's
historical sites.
Entertainment in the amphitheater on
Friday with feature the Plan B band at 5
p.m. followed by Mixx at 8 p.m.
Saturday's schedule includes 3 Savile
Row at 1 p.m., Audio Outlaws at 5 p.m.
and Direct Energy at 8 p.m., all in the
Riverfront Amphitheater.

Po1neroy~s

downton'n is an interestmg coUection
of buildings with a Victorian t1a vor.
Our variety of specialty s_hops and personal service
makes for an exciting _shopping experience
along the Ohio River.

�'I'

Thursday, June 3, 2010

t.

2010 Gold _Wings &amp; Ribs Festival

• Page 4

PlanB
offers
classic
rock·
Plan B is a classic rock band that has
played throughout the Mid-Ohio Valley
for over 10 years. You can hear them at
the Gold Wings &amp; Ribs Festival at 5
p.m. Friday night in _the riverfront
amphitheater.
The b;md is composed of four musicians with over a hundred years of combined performing experience. They
excel in classic rock and roll and also
Plan B
play many, many country songs, some
5
p.m.
Friday,
Riverfront
Amphitheater
blues, and even an occasional bluegras _
number.
band. He also does lead and backIt's not unusual to hear back to ground vocals. John has been playing
back songs by Johnny Cash, The in bands for over 40 years. He has
Beatles, Lynyrd Skynyrd, The Beach played in more bands as a kill time
Boys and Bill Monroe, all performed member or hired gun than probably
with the high energy that they are anyone in the area. John has played
known for.
more songs than most people hav€
With over 200 songs in their reper- heard and he has never met a song he
toire, there is something for everyone wouldn't try.
Mike Buell is the drummer for the
when Plan B takes the stage.
band. Mike has over 35 years of playThe membersuf Plan Bare:
Preston (P.T.) Dabbs has been ing experience. He also sings lead
playing music for over 25 years and is and background vocals_ He is the
a founding member of the band. He is blues man in the group but loves to
the lead vocalist and rhythm guitarist play western swing, classic rock; any
for the band. His vast knowledge of kind of shuffle, and golf. His years of
classic country music and eagerness experience means when the beat is
NATIONAL BANK
to please a crowd means you never thrown down, you know its in the
RACINE &amp; SYRACUSE
know what song he may pull out of groove.
his hat and have the band follow
Plan B has opened up for .38 Special,
along.
The Temptations, Tanya Tucker, ·
Go1: It!
Mike Cain is the other founding Sammy Kershaw, and other national
~.member of the band. Mike has played
acts.
music for over 35 years and has toured
They have played the Marietta
the eastern part of the United States - Sternwheel
Festival
and
the
with various bands. He is the bass play- Petersburg Homecoming numerous
er for the band and also sings lead and times and have played.many other airs
backing vocals. Mike is an expert at and festivals throug~out West Virginia
singing harmony and is a ballads best and Ohio. They entertain at local clubs
friend.
and events and also perform at private
John Gallagher is the lead gui- parties, weddings, and corporate functarist and keyboard player for the tions.

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THE GOLD WINGS AND
,RIBS FESTIVAL

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�Thursday, June 3, 2010

2010 Gold Wings &amp; Ribs Festival

• Page 5

3 Savile Row, a tribute act
3 Savile Row is an eclectic group of musicians that come together for
one reason - to pay tribute to the most influential band of all time, The
Beatles. They will be playing at the Gold Wings and Ribs Festival at 1
p.m. Saturday in the Riverfront Amphitheater
The band is made up of Meigs County's own Nick Michael and Sean
Walton, local singer/songwriter Nathan Wood, and bass guitar guru and
Texas native Jay Godeaux.
Playing venues as close as Court Street Grill to as far away as
London, England, 3 Savile Row performs a well rounded mix ofBeatles
classics ranging from the touring days of Beatlemania all the way to the .
studio masterpieces of Abbey Road.
.
While paying attention to detail of the originals, 3 Savile Row adds
their own sound and flair to the music of The Beatles setting them apart
from an other tribute acts.

SO MANY
MIXX
8 p.m. Friday, Riverfront Amphitheater

MIXX to perfonn
MIXX will be appearing at the Gold
Wings &amp; Ribs Festival at 8 p.m. Friday
in the riverfront amphitheater.
The group features music for all ages
and appears widely in the Ohio and
~st Virginia arena.
Continuing with a streak of popularity that continues to rise, the band has
opened for national acts at fairs and
homecomings, as well as wowing audiences at clubs and private parties.
The MIXX style is to "mix it up" with
rock, pop, oldies and country offering
something for everyone.
Casey Powell fronts the group with
dynamic lead vocals and high-energy
performance. She is a born entertainer,
and made the finals on the 2002
Idol show.
Peggy Re_ad provides lead and
backup vocals and percussion. Born
into a musical family, she has performed in rock, country and show
bands for a large part of her life. Her
soulful vocals and dynamic har-

monies contribute greatly to the Mixx
sound.
Rocky Leonhart is the bassist, adding
lead and backup vocals. He is · the
group's. sound and lighting technician,
too. He has entertained crowds not o.nly
in the mid-Ohio Valley, but across the
United States, working with a·variety of
show groups.
Rodger Unger is the drummer and
business manager. He was over 25 years
experience entertaining people in the
region and in Myrtle Beach, S.C. He
has shared his talents with some of the
top bands in the-area, and is a valuable
addition to MIXX.
Charlie Read has played in bands in
Australia and the U.S., touring extensively across the midwest. One of the
Mid-Ohio Valley's premier guitar
instructors, he al$0 sings lead and backup vocals.
Mike Schmidt is the group's righthand man, doing most work behind the
scenes before and after each show.

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Thursday, June 3, 2010

20 l 0 Gold ·w ings &amp;

~s

Festival

• Page 6

Audio Outl~ws, a progressive country ban~
.
H
A6

Sure to be a hit with the Gold Wings &amp; Ribs Festival are
the Audio Outlaws, a progressive country band from central West Virginia with rock and blues influences. They
will appear in the riverfront amphitheater in Pomeroy at 5
p.m. on Saturday.
They have been described as one of the country music's
rare finds, truly a quality act ..
The Audio Outlaws are known for their powerful
vocals, and backed by some of country music's most talented musicians. The Audio Outlaws have received positive responses from major venues, promoters and sponors regarding the level of entertainment .they provide.
Here is what one of the many sponsors had to say, '·I
continue to marvel at the level of entertainment we have ...
The Audio Outlaws featured two of the finest vocalists
that I've heard here, or at any venue. I was also impressed
with the variety of their song selection, and would not hesitate to recommend them to anyone looking for quality
entertainment." Joe Haynes (Community Relations
Manager for AEP.)
After a year on the road, the Audio Outlaws are in the
studio working on their upcoming CD. The CD is scheduled for a July,2010 release and features all original songs
written, composed and recorded by the Audio Outlaws.
When not in the studio, they hit the road and tour all over
the East Coast. This summer's tour covers Virginia Beach
to Daytona Beach, as well as local venues.
Over the years, members collectively and individually
have had the opportunity to share the stage with some of
Nashville's biggest stars such as: Brad Paisley, Tanya
Tucker, Linda Davis, Trace Adkins, Little Big Town,
Miranda Lambert, Ricky Skaggs, Andy Griggs, Pirates of
4!1e Mississippi, T. Graham Brown, Patty Loveless, Jo Dee
Messina, Chris. Young, John Anderson, and Darryl Worley
just to name a few.
Always looking to improve, the band continues to strive
for perfection, bringing the same dynamic energy to every
show whether there are 10 or 10,000 audience members .
The Audio Outlaws love to bring a level of entertainment that everyone in attendance can enjoy. You'll like
·
what you hear.

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• Page 7

Thursday, June 3, 2010

Festival to feature fun contests

Direct Energy
8 p.m. Saturday, Riverfront Amphitheater

Direct Energy offering a
journey down memory lane
Direct Energy, Ohio's premier, hom driven, rock, funk and soul band will be
appearing at 8 p.m. Saturday in the riverfront amphitheater at the 2010 Gold Wings
&amp; Ribs Festival.
Formed in 2000, Direct Energy set out to re-create the music of such legendary
horn rock bands, such as Chicago_, Blood, Sweat &amp; Tears and the Blues Brothers.
With their love for this music, the band puts their heart and soul into every performance, living up to their name - Direct Energy. The nine-piece band will take
the audience on a musical journey through the sixties, seventies, and eighties.
So, whether you're in the·mood to get up and.dance to the music, or just sit back
and enjoy a great show, you're sure to enjoy the music of Direct Energy and go
away tapping your feet, or humming one of your favorite tunes 'cause you probably haven't heard them in a while.

Three contests are on the agenda for the weekend Gold Wing.s
&amp; Ribs Festival
They are cookie stacking contest, the hog calling contest, and
new this year, the pickle spittin'
contest, details of which have
not been released.
Contestants for the cookie
stacking contest must register to
participate. Prizes
will
be
awarded to the winner.
The cookie stacking contest
will get underway at 1 p.m. on
Saturday, followed by the pickle
spittin contest at 1:30 p.m. The
hog calling event is held at 7:30
p.m. on Friday on the parking
lot stage.
· Registrati.on sheets to partiCIpate in the contests will be·
available at the festival. Since
there are a particular number of
slots to be filled for the competitions, early registration is suggested.
The rules for the cookie stacking contest are as are follows:
COOKIE STACKING
1. Contest is limited to first 10
people to sign the registration
sheet with five alternate positions
in each age group. Age groups are
4-6 and 7-11. If signed-up contestant is late or unable to appear,
those .on alternate list will be
called to fill the opening.
2. Contest will last two minutes.
At first whistle, begin stacking. If
stack falls, you may continue or
restart your stack. At second
whistle, remove hands immedi-

Stacking c_ookies is no easy task.

ately and step back from table.
3. Di_squal ification from contest
will result from the following
infractions:
a. in.terference with another person, their stack or their cookies;
b. bumping the table with intent
of dislodging competitors' stacks;
c. licking cookies to make them
sticky;
d. including foreign objects in
your stack;
e. _using partial or separated
cookies;
f. base building - a single, vertical stack only
In the event of a tie, a one
minute stack-off will take place.
If still tied, a coin toss will m.
used to determine winner.
4. All decis_ions of judge are
final . .
Participants must read and
agree to above rules before signing to participate in the contest.

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AT THE

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�2010 Gold Wings &amp; Ribs Festival

Thursday, June 3, 2010

Howard's Concession wins the 2009 Ohio's Best .Ribs award, presented by Bill
Quickel, festival chairman.

• Page 8

J. T. Stovetop Barbecue takes the 2009 title for Ohio Best Wings presented by Bill
Quickel, festival chairman.

Vendors to vie for awards
Again this year winners of the Ohio's
Best Ribs and Ohio's Best Wings will
be presented plaques at this weekend's
Gold Wings &amp; Ribs Festival to be held
on the Pomeroy parking lot.
The winner will be selected on a point

system by vote of the festival go~rs and
a panel of three judges. The decision
will be made on the basis of appearance,
taste, tt;ndemess and texture with the
people's· choice ballots counting for 25
percent of the total score and the vote of

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handed down to the festival committee representative. That committee
will then collect all the people's
choice ballot boxes and count them to
determine the winners to be
announced about 4 p.m.

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each of three judges counvng for 25
points each to come up with a total
score.
The judges will be served samples
of ribs at the judge's table on the park~
ing lot stage and the results will be

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I

•

�Bl

The Daily Sentinel

Inside
Blown call cost perfect game, Page B2

~

Ken Griffey Jr. retires, Page B6

. Thursday, June 3, 2010

. rOCAL SCHEDULE
POMEROY - A schedule of upcom1ng
h1gh school varsity sportmg events
1nvolvmg teams from Mason , Meigs and
Gallia counhes.

.
RVHS Track and Field -

Eastern Track and Field
D-3 Stat e Previ ew

D-2 State Preview

tllursda¥,..J.u.ne....3
Baseball - Class AA state semis
Point Pleasant versus Braxton
County at Appalachian Power Park
in Charleston, 4:30p.m
E.Wlay,~

Track and Field - State meet
Gallia Academy, Eastern. River
Valley at Jesse Owens Stadium in
Columbus, 9 a.m.
SBtl.u:d.ay,~

Track and Field - State meet
Gallia Academy, Eastern. River
Valley at Jesse Owens Stadium in
C':olumbus. 9 a.m.

Point Pleasant
making 4th
straight trip to
state tourney

Bryan Walters/photos

River Valley's Jessica Hager is consulted by an event official afte r falling in the
1OOm hurdles regional final on Saturday in Byesville.

BY S ARAH H AWLEY

Hager ready for historic weekend

.H~WLFY@MYDAILYTRIBUNE.COM

•

POINT PLEASANT.
W.Va. - For the fourth
consecutive year. the
Point Pleasant baseball
team will be making the
trip to Charleston for the
W.Va. Class AA State
Baseball Tournament.
Point Pleasant will face
Braxton County in the
opening game of the
~umameru
M
Appalachian Power Park
in Charleston. W.Va .. at
4:30 p.m. on Thursday.
Point Pleasant will be the
home team in the contest.
''Any time you make it
to the state baseball
championship it's special
because they only take
four teams." Coach
James
Higginbotham
sa1d of the accomplishment. ·'You've got to
enjoy it while you can.
vou don't know when
- u'll get back, but four
.es is an accomplishanl.-

..... _

t.:.•~

~-~

•J...~

Point Pleasant enters
the game with a record of
• 15-14 on the season.
' while Braxton County
posts a record of 22-6.
Point Pleasant defeated
Ravenswood in the Class
AA Region I Section IV
tournament. winning the
best of three series 2-0.
Pomt defeated Roane
County in the regional
semis by a score of 1310, and beat Magnolia
. 11-3 in the regional final.
Bra"ton Count) 's road
to the state tournament
' included a sectional tournament sweep over
Webster
County.
a
regional semifinal win
versus Liberty Harrison,
and a regional final victocry against Grafton.
In regards to the oppo: nent. Higginbotham said.
ey've got a real good
ting team and a few
od pitchers. Of course.
they've won 22 ball
games so they've got to
be a pretty good team.
Especially to come
through the region they
came
through
with
Grafton and the team we
played last year Lincoln.
the defending state
champion::..
in
that
region."
Point Pleasant will
send
senior
Brock

Please see Point, Bl

CORRECTIONS
In the Tuesday, June I,
sports editions of the
Gallipolis Daily Tribune
and The Daily Sentinel, it
wa::. erroneously reported
that
Jessica
Hager
became the first Lady
'der in school history
qualif) for two state
ents in track in the
same year. Ashly Roberts
qualified for both the
shot put and discus in
I 999 for RVHS. Also, It
was rep01ted that Peyton
Adkins finished 15th in
the 1600m run. Adkins
v.as scratched from the
event and did not compete. although an official
time was listed for
Adkins in the event.

BY QRYAN WALTERS
Submitted photo

The Eastern quartet of Mike Johnson, Klint Connery,
Kelly Winebrenner and Kyle Connery, from left, pose for a
picture after qualifying for state in the Division Ill 4x400m
relay event last Friday at Fairfield Union High School.

Eagles send four
to D-3 State Meet
B Y S ARAH H AWLEY
SHAWLEY@MYDAILYTRIBUNECOM

TUPPERS PLAINS,
Ohio - The Eastern
Eagles track team wiJl
send four athletes to
compete at the OHSAA
Division III Track and
Field Championships at
Jesse Owens Stadium in
Columbus, Ohio, on
Friday.

Seniors Mike Johnson
and Kelly Winebrenner,
along with juniors Klint
Connery
and
Kyle
Connery. will compete in
the 4x400m relay, while
Johnson will also compete in the high jump.
"We knew we would
have a good team this
year, we didn't know

Please see Eagles, Bl

r- ~ I I i :;1

1\.cnrlr\t"Y"V

BWALTERS@MYOAILYTRIBUNE.COM

BIDWELL, Ohio Trip over a hurdle. Tear
down a wall.
It was definitely an
interesting afternoon for
River Valley's Jessica
Hager on Saturday, as the
junior had an up-anddown finals debut at the
20 lO
Division
II
Southeast
Regional
Track
and
Field
Championships
at
Meadowbrook
High
School in Byesville.
Hager - who qualified
for three events last
Saturday, the first regional finals of her prep
career - didn't exactly
start the day well. Hager
- in her first regional

Please see Hager, Bl

;r.,.,...,.. J,

""nd l:'iold

River Valley's Jessica Hager, left, is focused out of the
starting blocks in the 200m dash regional final held
Saturday in Byesville .

D 2 State f"lre v iew

Gallia Academy sending 11 to D-2 state meet
B Y BRYAN W ALTERS
BWALTERS~MYDAILYTRIBUNE.COM

CENTENARY, Ohio
- For the first time since
the turn of the millennium, the 20 I 0 Gallia
Academy track and field
program will have double-digit cornpe~itors at
Jesse Owens Stadium for
the Division II Track and
Field Championships at
Ohio State University in
Columbus.
Both the Blue Devils
and Blue Angels combined to advance 11 athletes out in eight different
events. with five of those
eight contests being in
finals. The Blue Angels
will have .six competitors
in four events, while the
Blue Devils will have
five kids in four events.
This year's squad
eclipsed the individual
mark ~et last &lt;&gt;eason by
the Blue Angels, who
sent nine participants· to
state in 10 different
events. The Blue Devils
will also be making their
first appearance at state
since Luke Watts competed in the pole vault in
2008.
The five Blue Devil
qualifiers
Austin
Wilson, Tyler Campbell,
Ethan Moore, Seth Amos
and Joe Jenkins - will
all be first-time competitors at Jesse Owens
Stadium. All will also be
competing on Friday.
of
The
foursome
Wilson. Amos. Moore
and Jenkins will be competing in the 4x200m
relay semifinal on Friday.
which will be the first
time a Blue Devil relay
team has competed at
state since 2002.
That group will have
some work to do in
advancing to Saturday's
final, as the quartet enters
Friday with the slowest
time of the 16 teams slated to compete. It will
also be the seventh
straight year that GAHS
will be represented at

'

Loveday

Wiseman

Baker

Campbell

state in the 4x200m relay
event.
Wilson will also be
competing individually
in both the I OOm and
200m dash semifinals on
Friday. Wilson - who
matched Ty Simmons in
2003 for last qualfiying
twice in the same meet
- enters Friday with
13th fastest time in the
1OOm dash and 13th
fastest time in the 200m
dash.
Wilson will also be the
seventh fastest time in
each of his semifinal
races, with the top four
advancing from each
heat.
Campbell will be competing in the long jump
final on Friday, entering
the event tied for the
15th-best distance. The
top eight advance to the
finals later on Friday.
Campbell will also be the
sixth straight representative
from
Gallia
Academy to compete in
the D-2 long jump.
Amos is the lone senior
in the group. while
Wilson, Moore and
Jenkins are all members
of the junior class.
Campbell is the lone
sophomore
for
the
Devils.
For a tean1 that had

Bryan Walters/photos

Members of the 4x200m relay team pose with GAHS boys coach Paul Close, middle, after qualifying for the 0 -2 state meet Saturday at Byesville. Members of the
team, from left, are Seth Amos, Austin Wilson, Ethan Moore and Joe J enkins.
failed to score at regionals two of the last three
years, sending a program-best number of participants to state this
decade is definitely a step
in the right direction .
That is, according to
GAHS boys coach Paul
Close.
"First, we have to give
honor to God. Without
him, none of this would
be possible," Close said.
"These guys have put in
the work this year and
they have paid their dues.
I told them two years ago
when they were freshmen that if they stayed
with the program, they'd
start seeing the fruits of
their labor.
"I couldn't be any
prouder of these guys as
a coach because they
have a great work ethic.
They put their hard hats
on when they come to
practice, from start to finISh. That's what has gotten us to this point right
here and I cannot think of Gallia Academy semor Allie Troester releases a throw
any better way to cap of during the regional discus final held Saturday at
Byesville. Troester will be making her second state
Please see GAHS, Bl
appearance in the discus event on Friday.

•

�t

Page B2 • The Daily Sentinel

Eagles

www .myda ilysentinel.com

Thursday. June 3,

2010

and jump high."
The 4x40Um relav
team of \Vinebrenner,
from Page Bl
Klint Connery. Johnson.
DETROIT (APJ argued the call and \\a' back to work a-&gt; the crn\\d wa... traded Tuellday. and
and Kyle Connery tm
Arm&lt;l!l~o Galamtga ?~' IIJC join~d by several of his started to boo. Cabrera i':atc Robc11son. who wa4
1shed
first
at
the
TVC
how good. They've met
DetrOJ£ figcrs lost h1~ b1d players after the final out. continued to argue the call dealt to Florida towanf
every expectation we've Championships and took •for a p.:~fect . game qalarraga wa~ trying to as. Galarraga quickly before th~.: team hrok~
had an even ran faster second at the district and Wed'!Csday ~1ght. wt~ two p1tch .the thtrd . perfc~t retired T~vor Crowe lor camp.
1
The out&lt;.. m the mnth mnmg on game m the ma.~ors th1~ the onc-h1t shutout.
and jumped higher than regional meets.
The 28-)Car-old natiHS
!earn's best time heading a. call that first ba.o.;e ~mpire season.
\VC thought they would,''
Joyce faced a group of of Venezuela had succcs~
E~1stcrn Track Coach
mto the state meet was J1m Joyce later admtttcd he
Galanaga (2-1) was in hostile 'Tigers - led by in 2008, going 13-7. but hq
Josh Fogle said about the 3:26.90 at the Division ble~··
•
.
complete con!rol through- Leyland - between the had done nothing quite likt.•
tt·am.
III Regional Meet on
Fm,t ha~eman ~1JoucJ out the mght. Then pitching mound and home the masterful perfonmmr.
Johnson and Klint Friday at Fairfield Union Cabrera cleanly fleided Donald's
ground ball plate after the final out and he had ngain!lt the lndirutc;
Connery ''ill be make a High School.
Jaso!l f?onald'!) grounder becai!Je the fla...,h point of v:as booc.d Ju..,lily by the
He starred with a 2-&lt;J
return trip to the state
The 4x400m relay to hts nght and made an the mght. and perhaps the· crowd of 17.738 as he count against Cnme. then
meet, while Winebrenner team is the first team accurate
to season.
walked off the field.
attacked the '&gt;trike zone
throw
and Kyle Connery \\ill from
Eastern
High Galarraga covering tl~e
Af~er center fielder
"I don't blame them a bit and kept most of the weak..
be competing at the state School to qualify for the ~ag. TI1e ball wac; there. 111 Austm Jackson made a or anything that wa.-; said." ly hit balls on the in.ficld. 1
len~! for the fir~t time. state meet.·
!I~~· a~d all.of.Comcnca specta~ular C&lt;~tch on Mark Joyc7 said.
would'Ye
Cabrera . hit his. 15tH
John..,on competed in the
Recent graduate Kelly Park \\ a!l re.1d~ !O cele- 9rudZJelru:ek s leadoff fly smd 1t myself 1f I had been homer to gl\ e Detroit a 1-CI
high jump in 2009. while Winebrenner said. ''I'm brate the 3-0 ~·m over m the nmth and .Mike Galarraga. I would'\t~ lead in the '&gt;econd inniny
Klint Connel)' ran in rhe really glad that we made Clevel~nd, t~ntll Joy~e Redmond ground~d out, been the lir:-.t person in my and ~tae:,slio Ordone1. had
400m dash.
it this year because this is emphatically s1gnaled sale. Donald came up w1th two face. and he ne\'cr . . aid a an RBI \mglc in the t\\o~e veteran ump regret- outs.
\\ord to me.''
run eighth.
1
Johnson ilni..,hed ninth my last go round. I ne\ cr
•
Galar~agn
ca~ght . Colorado's
Ubaldo
Fau ... to Carmona (4-4j
in the high jump in the thought that I could make te~. n_. .
2009 trnck and field it in track but we did this . I JUst cc~~t that ktd ~per- Cabre.ra.., to~s &lt;md s1mled, Junenez ptlched a no-htt- pitched \\ell. He oavc uJt
teet game, Joyce satd. "I h:nowmg what h~'d just ter, too. at Atlanta on April three runs - tw;' eamed
. champion..,hips with final year."
thought h~ beat the throw. .I done. He held up h1s glm·e 17.
- on nine hits and nn
height of 6 foot. 2 inches.
First-time
qualifier was convm~ed he beat the hand and stat1ed to make
Galarraga
struck
out
walks.
Klint Connerv finished Kyle Connery ~aid. "It
The Indian~ came close
15th in the 400'm dash at feeb great to go to state. throw•.. unul I sa\\ the an out call with his right three and walked none.
rcr.Ja~.
.
.
hand.
.
and
was
a
mo~t
unhkel)
to
getung a hit twice before
the 2009 :.tate meet with This b what e\·en·one
, It \\as the.. b1~gest call
And then Joyce made h1s star. He \\a.., recalled from their di~putcd sin!!le.
I
a time of 53.43 seconds wants when they ~tart. ot my career. satd Jo~·ce, call. Galarraga loo~ed Triple-A 'Joledo. on ~1ay
Galarraga
~ almost
in the preliminaries.
where everyone wants to wh~ became a ful.l-tm~e stunned m~d &lt;:;om~nca 16 after pitrhing poorly be~ame the first Tieer tQ
"At the beginning of be at. This is our final maJOr league ump1re m ~ark went s1lent m d1sbc- during spnng training.Jo~- throw a perfect game.
the year you ..,et the goal goal. to make it to state, 1989.
.
he~. A couple of'figen. put ing out in a competition for Justin Verlander lhre\\ the
to make it to the state. I and hopefully make the
the fmal spot in the rotation sixth no-hitter in franchiS&lt;f
Tigers m~nager. Jtm thetr hands to th~1r heads.
made it last year so if I finab."
Leyland
1mmedmtely
Galarraga qmetly we.nt to Dontrelle Willis. who histOI) on .June 12.2007. 1
didn't make it to the state
Johnson becomes the
I wouldn't achieve my first Eagle to qualify in
goal." Klint Connery said two events since 2004
he can keep it going:·
Higginbotham, having have. the kids won·t he i.
of the return trip to state. when Ross Holter qualiJunior Ju:.tin Frame j, heen a part of the 2007. awe of the park and the
"To make it here with the fied in the ..,hot put and
the pitching ace for 2008. and 2009 tourna- will pJay well in th9
from Page ~1
4x4 team is even better." discus.
Braxton County, pitching ment teams. In addition game. both games hopeJohnson and
Johnson enters the Klint Connery are the
to a 6-0 mark with a 0.14 to \1cCiung, Herdman, fully...
I
2010 meet with a mark of first repeat qualifiers for McClung to the mound ERA for the season. with and Krebs. sqnior memPoint
has
finished
as
6 foot. 6 inches. Johnson Eastern since Michael for the state semifinal more than 70 innings bers of the Pomt Pleasant the state runner-up tht!
along
with
Greg Owen took part in the contest on Thursday. pitched. Aaron Conant baseball team are Derek pre,·ious two season",
Schwieteman of Maria 3200m run in 2006 and .\fcCiung has earned also bring a 6-0 record Rodgers
and
Cody falling to Logan in the:;
Stein ~1arion Local and 2007.
postseason wms m the into the state toumament. Greathouse. "All the .2008 state champion:-.hip
of
Travis
Eickholt
Eastern has not scored first game of the section- Braxton County is aver- seniors have lead our by a score of 13-3 and t(j
Ottoville have the top a point in any of the al tournament and both aging 10 runs per game. team this year and have Lincoln in the 2009 titlt&lt;
mark entering Frida\ 's school's previous state regional
tournament while allowing 4-9 per done a great job:· said !!arne h\' a score of 6-2.
Higginbotham.
•
competition.
~ The ·\\inner of the'
contest.
meet
appearances. games.
Johnson took first Johnson spoke about his
Higginbotham said, game bet\\ een Poinl
"Brock will be pitching
Seniors
D.W.
place at the TVC chances to score the first for us tomorro\\ night.'' Herdman and Clay Krebs ··you set the goal to go up Pleasant and Braxtot
Championships. district point. saying. "if I get Higgmbotham said. "He will be playing in their there to win it. but you County will fuce the\\ in
meet. and regional meet over 6 foot, 6 inches the has pitched three big sixth state to...urnament also want to make a good ncr of the James Monroe
to ad' ance to the ~tate first time we have a game the past couple of contest. accordine to showing.
Hope(ull), and Sissonville contest
championship . chance to win."
weeks for us so hopefully Coach
lames with the experience we on Saturday at II a.m.
Johnson's best height to
Fogle concluded by
date ''a-; at the Division saying. "this is when you
Lady Raiders to score he able to make it in the time overall in the .200m
Ill Regional .Meet on want to be running and
their first points (14) at a other two races. but I dash.
Fridav at Fairfield Union we're still competing liO
Hi!!h ·school.
regional meet since 2004. wanted it real bad.
it's exciting.''
The top four finisher~
from Page Bl
which is the same year Setting sch,ool records tn
Of the return trip to the
Johnson jumps at Noon
each
o.;emifinal
that RVHS last sent a and qual if) ing for state advance to the state finaf
state meet. Johnson said, in the high jump, with the
track
competitor m those last two races on Saturday.
"it's really exciting to go 4x400m relay team set to final competition ever I
again, for the second run in the preliminaries tripped over the fifth (Harmony Phillips) to the was a pretty cool way to
Fridav
will
be
Ha!!er'.-1
time. and just go up there at 12: 10 p.m. on Friday.
rebound."
obstacle in the I OOm . state level.
first trip to Jc~se 0~\'el.
Hager also joined
dash finals. \\ hich re~ultHager ''iII enter the Stadium for the S'!l,
Ashlv
Roherts
rt
999i
&lt;Pd. : - _h.o..., - - • ........... :-o .-.
Ullu 7'\llilH a'Sav\or,, \-v"-~
300m ,JlJy-lfJmal'llfHifirm to 'be mere 'On ';)aturday 1
seeing three newcomers final time or advancinl! a.., the on!\ R\ HS ath- fastest time in her hear too.
,
to
state
in
that
event.
perform at the state meet,
'Tm pumped:; Hagen
Hager. who laid on the letes to ever qualif) for and the ninth-fastest
also have
but we
t\VO state events in the overall out of the said. ''I'' c had a fev,t
three slate veterans to track ~for a IC\\ moments same year, with Hager remammg J6 Hager davs to rest and I ani
from Page Bl
before
being
helped
up
help lead Ull this weekby tournament officials. being the second Lady also ov.rl'&gt; the second ready to put in some
end.
this season than going to
have easily had Raider to accompli~h the ~lowest t1me in her ~emi­ more hard \\ark at
could
"They arc ready to go that mistake
:-.tate:·
final and 14th fastest stare:·
haunt her one-year feat.
to
do
the
and
they
want
It wasn't a perfect day
Of the six Blue Angel
the rest of the day.
qualifiers
Allie best thev can. This will
Instead. like a champi- by any stretch of the
Samantha be a goOd experience lor on. she used her earl\' imagination, but Ha!!er
Troester.
Barnes.
Hannah our younger kids and the misfortunes as mori\·a- was~ still pretty pleased
Loveday. Peyton Adkins, returnees will know what tion for her later events. \\ ith the \\ ay things
Genna Baker and Abby is expected. Now it just And the extra incentive went.
"1
really
wasn't
Wi~crnan - exactly half comes down to performreally paid off.
will be making their first ing.'·
Hager went on to qual- thrilled about how the
Troe~ter and Baker arc
trip to Jesse Owens
ify for :.tate in both the I 00 hurdle~ went. but I
Stadium for competition. seniors. Barnes is a 300m hurdles and 200m knew the only way to let
Two of the repeat qual- junior, Adkins is a sopho- clash. setting school that go was to do well in
ifiers - Troester and more, and both Loveday record in both e\ents the other two events,"
Barnes- will be making and Wiseman are fresh- along the wav. Hager's Hager said. "1 didn't
extra effort ailowed~ the know if I was going to
their second consecutive men.
appearance at state in the
same event. Troester
comes into the shot put
final on Friday with the
fifth-best distance. while
Barnes ha.., the 15th
fastest time headed into
the 800m run final on
Saturda).
Adkins - who qualified last year in the
3200m run - wtll join
Barnes and newcomers
• Baker and Wiseman in
the 4x800m relay final
on Friday. The 4x800m
:.quad enters the final
wtth the :.lowest time of
the J6 team competing.
Lovedav, the other
newcomer to Jesse
Owens. will compete in
the shot put final on
Saturday. Loveday has
the -.e,·enth-best distance
of the 16 ath Jeres in the
event.
GAHS girls coach
Rick Howell admits that
this i:-. not the typical
Gallia Academy girls
team at state. I Ic. ho\\ C\cr. is still very excited
about what this halfdozen can accomplish
over the weekend.
"We )mew at the beginning of the year that this
was going to be a
rebuilding year. . and
that's exactlv what 1t has
been. We have had a lot
of success this year. but
we had a lot of younger
kids step up throughout
the course of the season
for those things to
occur." &lt;:;aid Howell.
"We·re CXL'itcd about

BlOwn call costs Galarraga perfect game in 9th ;

·:r

Point

Hager

GAHS

'"ill

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have
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Please
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Attn: Charla Brown·
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$50, Craftsman lawn
mower, $125. call
740-992-6282

Garage sale· 17280
St. At. 143, Pomeroy,
June 4th &amp; 5th, Mull!
fam1ly
sz
8/1 o
wedd1ng gown, boy
clothes sz. 4-12. men
sz. lg., &amp; suits sz 38,
women clothes, sz
4, gtrls sz. 3T-5T,
Nascar tackot, golf
clubs. 16' pool like
new tools, Harley
Dav1dson parts, a
little bit of everylh1ng
must see,

The ong1nal garagea-pallooza- Sat. only
blowout, Smith's at
1691 L1ncoln Hts.,
exercize
equ1p.,
b1kes, Longaberger.
lg dog pen, crafty
stuff tons of girls
cloth1ng

3 family garage saleFnday &amp; Saturday, 8_
WantTo Buy
5 , 112 mtle off At 33
E CR 34 to Vtnegar
0 iter's Towtng, Now St
Ad
Ral·n or
b uy1ng junk cars
w/motors or w/out. Sh1ne. watch for
740-388-0011
or s1gns
740-441-7870.
5 family, 703 Vine St
Racine,
June
4
Yard Sale

~======2010, 9-?, too much
Staffhouse Ad. Pt. to list

Pfeasant
near
fatrgroun ds Sat. 5th
1970 Georges Crk
Ad,
Comer
res;dc'1ce. pool table,
lg Arcade game,
9 r1s clothes, lots of
mtsc.
5 family yard sale,
1/4 m. e out 218,
baby ttems
baby
gtrUwomen{jr.
clothes TV's, kitchen
1tems.
sheets.
comforters, drapes.
purses, Wed-Sat.

Fnday-Saturday,
V1ctor Wolfe's SA
124, Rac1ne, baby
ttems, antiques.

:-H~ur·e--3.;..._
fa_m_1·t-y

"'
basement s&lt;~tea...
5pm, 48040 Adams
Ad, Letart Falls, Oh
Thurs. June 3, One
Day Only, Rain or
Shlne! adult &amp; teen
clothes, housewares.
Home
Interiors.
Avon. baby stroller
toys, games, fawn
fum"•ture · tw1n bed·
Christmas 1tems &amp;
much more

Huge 5 family, 8-4.
June 3rd &amp; 4th 9080
June 4-5th, 9-3pm
St.
At.
218,
Stapleton Body Shop 38970 Bradbury Rd.
Middleport,
tnfant,
Huge yard sale, Sat. toddler,
children
June 5th 7-5. 3679 clothing toys, cribs,
St At 325 . 3 miles stroller,
crafts,
south of Rio
Longaberger, grills,
Yard sale- June 4 &amp; mise
5 , Rodney Vi 'age II
Thtrd
St•eet
last
house on nght, 8-5
Large
mulh-fam•ly,
Fn &amp; Sat. 4th &amp; 5th,
res1dence,.
Wood
33441 Bashan Ad,
Long Bottome, 3 mi
from CR28 extt off
US33
towards
Ravenswood. Follow
s1gns or cnll 740·
949-8224
Boys
toddler to size 12,
baby g1n ladies smlg, house:'lold glass
toys way too much
to hst Ra1r or Shrne!

Jeremy
Rose
res1dence. CR 28, 1
m· from Racine, June
3-4, 9·4, name brand
chr dren's
clothes
,tams,
Pnmttives,
deco.,
holiday
housewares, lot of
m1sc. ra•nlsh1ne, No
3 Famtly. June 4-5, early arrivals please
8arn-4prn.
3687 Multi fam11y, June 4St.At. 850
' 5.
Art
Lewis,
Yard Sale, June 4th Middleport look for
&amp; 5th Baby clotl"o"),:: sign across from
Books, N1ck Knacks, Park
etc.. 305 AIT'ble;;.de Pomeroy, June 5,
Dr. Kerr OH
clothes
dryer,
-G-a-ra_g_
e _ s_a-le---F-ry- pnnters. many other
res1dence next to Items. 2 mi on
former
Salisury Flatwoods Ad turn L
Elementary School on Smith Goeglein,
PiKe watch for s1gns, samPorreroy
Pomeroy, Thursaay. 3pm
Fnday &amp; Saturday, 9- 5 Family Garage
4, lots of tools, Sate, Fri, 6·4, , off At
booKS,
v1deos, 7, 1/2 m1 e out
baseball
cards. Add1son Pike. Baby
glassware. mise
Bed. &amp; various 1tems.

BJ:ltttnltnltllltmmri:tmmmWJrmtna

Get Your Message Across
With A Daily Sentinel

BULLETIN BOARD
CALL OUR OFFICE AT 992-21 55

.-. ~ BULLETiN BOARD DEADLINE:
~~ 9:00AM DAY,BEFORE PUBLICATION!

. 1..

. -:.:

-

Dave's
American Grill
Wednesday's 1Oct Wings
and
Announcing Thursday's
25~ Ribs
with 99~ Sides •·
Open Daily at 4

Auction

Auction

Apartments/
Townhouses

5000 Resort Property

Tw1n Rivers Tower tS
accept1ng applications 6000
Employment
for watlmg list for HUD
subsidized,
1-BR
apartment
for
the
Accounting /
elderly/disabled,
call
Financial
675-6679

Benefit
yard/Bake
sate Sat 8-? brand
name •
clothes
household 1tems new 1 BR and bath. first
toys 0-teens Dr. W1ltz months
rent
&amp;
clinic
deposit. references
required. No Pets
Clay Townhouse on
and clean. 740-441Lover Ln. June 3,4,5
0245
9
G'?
lassware,toys,ect.
2 "br, washer/dryer
Communtty
Yard hook up, Thurman
Sale, Ann Dr.. 6-4 &amp; area, 740-441·3702
6·5, 9 - 5, ~urn right or 740-286·5789.
on Raccoon Rd. off
At 7 S
RIVERBEND PLACE
· - - - - APTS.
-· - 1 br, Hud
HughJune 3,4,and subsidised. elderly &amp;
h
51
2321234 dtsabled. complex,
Honeysuckl e
Dr. accepting
Addison
aaplications,
304Movtng out sale, 882-3121
dining room table &amp;
h · d" h
·1 1 New Haven, 1 br.
csetatrs. 1IS es,
h. gn I,
furnished apt., dep.
0
c •naware, &amp; ref., No pets, 740·
I
t
I
0
PIC uces.
ots
_
1776 992 0165
evrything.
Centenary Rd 3 rd &amp; BEAUTIFUL 1 &amp; 2
4_th_ _ _ _ _ _ BR APTS., Jackson
_
Yard sale, 52 &amp; 48 Estates,
52
Spruce St. Friday &amp; Westwood Dr.. 740Saturday, 9am
446-2568.
Equal
Yard Sale, 4th Ave &amp; Houstng Opportunity.
This 1nstitut1·on 1·s an
Olive, 6-3 • 6·5,
clothes.
camping equal
opportunity
provider
and
equip., small app.,
turn dishes, linens, employer.
Clean 1 br. !urn.
misc. 8 • 5
Yard Sale, 6-4 &amp; 6-5 apartment. Dep &amp;
@
the
Rodney Ref req. no smok1ng,
304-593-5125
Communtty Center, 8 call
after
4pm
-?,Baby items, Boys

&amp; womens clolh•ng, New 2 BR apt. WID
Christmas
Hookup, app. inc.
decorattons. etc.
Rio/Jackson
area.
Yard Sale, Hot dogs, $525/mo + dep. Call
baked goods, 6-3 &amp; 740-645·1286
6-4, 10- 4, @ Trinity
Spring Valley Green
UM Church, At. 160.
Apartments 1 BR at
Porter.
$395+2 BR at $470
Recreational Month. 446·1599.
1000
Vehicles ~
Ta
_r_
a _ _1i_o_
w_nh
- o_u_s_e

=;;;;;;;~;
~

Apts. - 2BA, 1.5 BA,
back patio, pool,
playground.
(trash.
2004 Yamaha YZ450 sewage, water pd.).
$2500.00 OBO 304- No pets allowed,
6"15·0034 or 304· $450/rent $450/dep.
675· 751 5
Call 740-645·8599
Motorcycles

Our company needs
male and femqle
representative to act
as
our
opened
pos1tion
bookkeeper. Contact
asap for more details
about this job send
your
resume
to
btll.h211 @gmail.com

JO-l-882-.~11611

Fa:-.. 304-SMl-30~0

Drivers &amp; Delivery
Dom1no's Pizza Now
hiring safe dnvers for
Pomeroy, Gallipolis
and Pt. Pleasant
apply in person.
_
_ _Needed-_ _ __..
Drivers
Professional
Transportation, Inc.
1s seeking local
drivers for 7_
passenger mini-vans
in the Hobson area.
Drug screen, dnving
record and crim1nal
background check
required. 1-800-4712440, Reference 178
Reg1onal Dump and
Pneumatic
Tanker
Drivers R&amp;J Trucking
Co. 1n Manetta,OH is
searching
for
COL-A
qualified
drivers lor reg1onal
dump and pneumatic
tanker
positions.
Qualifieq applicants
must be at least
23yrs have a min. of
1 year of safe
commercial driving
experience in a truck.
HazMat cert. clean
MVR &amp; good stability.
We offer competitive
benefits &amp; 401 K &amp;
vac. pay. Contact
Kent AT 8M-4629365 to apply or go
to
www.rjtrucking.com

• llut"&lt;" \\ imhm "c•plat'&lt;·m&lt;·lll
• .\lit not., Cut ·1 o Onh-r • \lohill' Sl'l·, ;..,..,
• o\\'l'l'llh~l h) Alt lrl\11 1':111("(''
• \ II W urk c;uamnkc~l
• 1.&lt;)("1111) 0\\111"&lt;1 &amp; O pc·ralt·&lt;l

(\nl amliah·d 11ilh \like \larcu!nllcK&gt;Iin~ &amp; R&lt;·mnddin~l

SUNSET CONSTRUCTION

YOUNG'S

Full) in~urcd
Free estimates - 25+ years cxpcricncr

CARPENTER SERVICE
Roofs, Remodeling, Garages 1
Pole Buildings, Siding,
Decks, Drywall, Additions
and New Homes.
Insured· Free Estimates

740-742-3411

• Room Addition s &amp; Remodclin~
• :"\e\\ Garages • Electrical &amp;
Plumbing • Roofin~ &amp; Gutters
• Vinyl Siding &amp; Painting • Patio and
Porch Decks WV 036725

V.C. YOUNG Ill
992-6215 740-59 1-0195
Pomeroy, Ohio
36 Years Local Experience

PSI CONSTRUCTION
Room AddtttOn&gt;.Remodehn!! ..\letal &amp;

Shingk Roof,. :\e\\ Homes. Sidinl!. Dech.
Bathroom Remodeling. Licensed &amp;Insured
Riel. Price · 17 yrs. Experience
WV#040954 Cell 740-416-2960 740·992-0730

ROBrRT BISSrLL
CONSTRUCTION
• New Homes • Garages
• Complete Remodeling

740-992-1671
HOl\iDA

...c8:T
. . ......

Stop &amp; Compare

CHEVROLET

RIVERSIDE

250 Columbus Rd.
Athens, Ohio

BEST DEAlS INNEW &amp;USED

EO~E~~~~
_
=
Help Wanted ·
General

SMITH
Concrete Services

EXPERIENCED
Former(v R abies Construction
MAINTENANCE
TECH:Local
manufacturing
33 Years Experience
2000
Houses For Rent
organ1zation seeking
Automotive
experienced
an
1 BR, nice, PP area. maintenance tech to
$325Homestead provide mechanical
Autos
or
Realty, Ask for Nancy and electrical support
Owner: Sam Smith, Mason, WY
98' Nissan Maxium 675-5540, 675-0799.
for a continuous
car 4-dr. 304-675~
6132 or 304 .. 01!:&gt;· ICJIC@ ISH iiUUSG iii
Position
is
Medical
Management /
Gallipolis. Walk to
6963
responsible
for
Supervisory
everylhing you need.
Application M·F 9am·
Real Estate Very clean unit. with installation.maintena
3000
5pm or Contact Lucy
Sales new paint 5275 p~r nee and repair of Managing
Staff
facility
equipment Cosmetologist, full or Goff.
mo/5100 sec. dep.
and physical facility. part time, tnsurance Development
Sorry no pets. Call
Houses For Sale
Experienced
paid, comm1ssion &amp; Coordinator @ 740Wayne
for individual with strong hourly
pay,
free 992-6472 EOE &amp; A
Pnce
reduced, information 404-456background
in tanning training &amp; Participant of the
MUST SELL, 3 BR, 3802.
welding
and 10% commission on Drug-Free
2.5 BA, Paxton Rd.,
3 5 car attached 2 BR Ouplex-644 fabrication preferred. all retail &amp; tanning, Workplace Program
garage w/2 38 acres. 2nd Ave S450tmo Extended education local shop, 740-992also
preferred. 2200
deposit
&amp;
$148,900, 740-339- plus
Servic~ /Sus.
9000
2780.
NO
Land utilities. Stove and Willing to consider
D1rectory
Medical
lime,
and
part
Contracts
relrig. W/d hookup
weekend
and
.;;.;;.;..;.;;,;;;.;,;;;..___ no pets. One year
A Celebration Of
sh1ft Lile....Overbrook
Real Estate lease.
References. evening
3500
Firearms
Rentals 446-0332 9am to assignments.Compet Center, Located at
itive
salary
and 333 Page Street.
~~~~~~~ 5pm Mon-Sat.
benefits
package, Middleport, Ohio is Guns
1100
Apartments/
3
Br.,
2
bath, including
health Pleased to Announce Remington
20ga;
Townhouses
doublewtde
in insurance.401 K plan,
We Are Accepting 12ga Remington &amp;
country w/3 porches, and
educational Applications for Full gun cab. 304·6752BR APT.Ciose
to
fenced-In yard on as~istance. Submit
Holzer Hospital on SR
Time and Part Time 6132
Rd.
off cover
letter
and AN's, LPN's and
160 CIA. (740) 441· Baker
Kingsbury, Pomeroy resume to STAR
0194
State Tested Nursing
·
coN-v EN
"'- t"E" N"'
TL_Y_ _ area, $650 a mo., PLASTICS·
Assistants' to Join
LOCATED
&amp; $650 dep., 1 yr RAVENSWOOD P.O. Our Friendly and
249
AFFORDABLE'
lease, No Pets, 740- Box
Dedicated
Staff.
wv Applicant's Must be
Ravenswood,
Townhouse
4 16·29 60
261
64
EOE
MIF/DN
apartments.
and/or
Dependable, Team
Manufactu~ed
small hOuses for rent. 4000
Players with Positive
Houstng
Call 740-441-1111 for
Now Hiring Prep Attitudes to Join Us
applicatton
&amp; ;;;;;;;;;;;;;
Cook &amp; Service. 10
Providing
1nformat10n.
Rentals
A pp1Y tn
·
person Outstanding, Quality
Free Rent Special 3 bedroom trailer, Jimanetti's
Pizza, Care
to
Our
!!!
Clay Chapel Rd. , Buckeye Hills Rd., Residents. Stop By
2&amp;3BR apts $395 and
and Fill Out an
up, Central A1r, WID Gallipolis, $450 rent, Rio Grande.
!lookup, tenant pays $450 deposit, 740electric. Call between 256-6408' 740-441the hours o1 8A·8~.
0583. NO Pets
EHO
Ellm View Apts.
3 BR. 2 BA. Includes
(304)882-3017
yard, carport, storage
facility, front deck,
Auction
Bidwell area $600 +
dep. Call 615-8304499

FAMILY OWNED AND OPERATED

SEAMLESS GUTTERS
CONTINUOUS GUTTERS

Vinyl siding, Home
~Iaintenance, Power
\Vashin &amp; G tt Cl
Bonded &amp; Insured
I

I

-

Free Estimates
304-812-4795

304-773-5441
304-593-8458

'1'111'1'1'..,...""'_"""__ ---

=.=====-

Consignment Auction
Saturday, June 5, 20 10 10:00 am
Loop Road , Rutla nd. OH
Din•ctions from ~ lari ctta &amp; Gallipolis

rul-.l' St. H.l. 7 to St. Rt. 143then K+ mile' to Uar ri somille. Then
turn left on :\c\\ I.ima Road. atJJoro:.imatcl) 2 mile.-. to Loop Road.

Watch for signs.
ll'ANTED- CLEAN CONSIGNMENTS
Q uilts. crafts, furniture, tack. f'm·m animals,

--======

RENTERS WANTED
Let Clayton Homes
turn you from renter
to owner, CALL 1866-338-3201.
RENTERS WANTED
Let Clayton Homes
turn you from renter
to owner CALL 1-'
866-338-3201.

m achine r y, misc. and other fa rm r«.&gt;lated items.

Sales

No .Junk!!! Sale personnel have the right to
reject items of little or no value.

Beautiful
16x80
mobile
home
1n
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 shingled
roof.
Move
in
condition. Photos at
www.2487Now.info
or call 740-367·0577,
Price $50,000

Con-;ignments accepted }'rida) &amp; Saturday
mornings until sale times
To consign items contact:

Joe Zook
36103 B Loop Road - Rutland, OH 457JS
Lunch sen ed h y the C ommunil)
Rakl! Sale
Procct&gt;ds bcnl!tit the Ha rrisom ille S&lt;.·hool Funds
Auctioneer: akc Schlabach 330-763-0889

SELL YOUR
EXCESS
ITEMS
WITH A
CLASSIFIED
AD

• Hometown News
• Area Shopping
• Local Sports
• Community
Calendar
... and much more.

~alltpolis
~)oint

iaatlv '&lt;.Cribunc
~alcnsnnt i\cutstrr

The Daily Sentinel
sunbnv "Urimcs -ii&gt;rntmd

30 Years ·Experience

David Lewis
740-992-6971

wPuaLic

NOTICES
OHIO
DEPART- he or she may presMENT OF INSUR· ent evidence and
examine witnesses
ANCE
NOTICE OF OP- appearing tor and
PORTUNITY FOR against him or her.
If an Individual does
HEARING
According
to not timely request a
records on file with hearing. no hearing
the Ohio Depart- will be held and an
ment of Insurance, order revoking his
each of the Individ- or her Insurance liuals listed below cense shall be Iscurrently holds an sued.
insurance agent's li- Stephen C. Homcense In the state of bach
Ohio and each has Staff Counsel
failed to meet the (6) 3, 10,16
continuing education requirements
Public Notice
of Section 3905.481
of the Revised Code
for the 2007/2008 PUBLIC NOTICE
compliance period. NOTICE: Is hereby
Pursuant to Section given that on Satur·
3905.482 and Chap- day June 5 at 10:00
ter 119 of the Re- a.m., a public sale
vised Code, each will be held at 211
Second
,
i ndividual
listed W.
below is hereby no· Pomeroy, Ohio. The
tlfied that the Su· Farmers Bank and
perlntendent Savings Company
intends to revoke is selling for cash in
his or her Insurance hand or certified
licenses. He or she check the following
may request a hear- collateral:
ing pursuant to 2003 Kia Sedona
a
. n
Ohio Revised Code V
Chapter 119. The KNDUP131 X364284
request must be 11
made on or before The Farmers Bank
July 17, 2010. Such and Savings ComPomeroy,
request should be pany,
addressed
to: Ohio, reserves the
Sharon
Green, right to bid at this
Hearing Administra- sale, and to withtor. Ohio Depart- draw the above colment of Insurance, lateral prior to sale.
50 W. Town St., 3rd Further, The FarmFloor, Suite 300, ers Bank and SavCompany
Columbus.
OH ings
reserves the right to
43215.
COLLINS. JESSICA reject any or all b.
OOB:
11 113/1977 submitted
above
P.O.
BOX
141 The
ATHENS. OH 45701 scribed collateral
At the hearing. the will be sold " as is·
Individual may ap- where Is", with no
pear In person, by expressed or Imwarranty
his or her attorney, plied
or by such other given.
representative as is For further Informapermitted to prac· tion, or for an apto
tice before
the pointment
agency, or the lndi· Inspect collateral,
vidual may present prior to sale date
his or her position, contact Cyndie or
arguments or con- Ken at 992-2136.
tentions In writing (6) 2. 3, 4 •
and, at the hearing,

A

�The Daily Sentinel • Page 85

www.mydailysentirel.com

• Thursday, June 3, 201 0

BLONDIE

CROSSWORD

Dean Young/Denis Lebrun
~--~~~-r--~~~~

By THOMAS JOSEPH
ACROSS
DOWN
1 Voice, in
1 Buddy
slang
2 Mamie's
6 Singer
man
Paula
3 Stubb orn
11 Di rector
4 American
Kurosawa
lake
12 B lizzard
5 Fill up
bit
6 Following
13 Authentic
7 P hoto
14 Fixed the
problem
piano
8 Quarter- 18 Director
34 Un cool
15 Young cow
back
A lmodovar
fellow
17 M imic
Marino
20 Like Lucy 35 Slugger's
19 Vacuum
9 Strummed 2 1 Sung
need
lack
instrustory
36 Swelled
20 Bleachers
ment
22 H igh boot
head
part
1 0 Went
24 Shrewd
37 Finger
23 W ild ones
ahead
25 Ocean
count
25 M usic's
16 Business
off Cal.
39 G rassSalt-n- with net
27 Turkey's
hopper 's
26 Foolish
gains?
region
pal
28 Deu ce
17 Take 31 Bounces 40 "T he
beater
(lose
33 Hood's
M atrix"
29 Trick-takbig)
g roup
hero
ing card
NEW C ROSSWORD BOOK! Send S4 75 (Chcck/m.o.) to
game
Thomas
Book?, PO Box 536475, Orlando, Ft 32853-6475
30 B rick
bearer
31 Bruins
legen d
32 Corn unit
33 Neighbor
of Venezuela
35 Test
programs
38 F amily car
41 Bond, for
one
42 Peace
goddess
4 3 Salad
server
44 Supplement

Tom Batiuk

FUNKY WINKERBEAN
NGX"f L.JEAR UJ£'U.. a-llY 13€.

SOP~Om:)R£6. • · -roo 0..00€.
-ro ~1-lM€1-J "1b Ruh-G

OV6R'fi-16Nl ... Bo'fF'AR
6NOL61-l FWM S£NIORS

-rb $111..1..- Be PICJ(€D 01\1.

Chris Browne

H AGAR THE HORRIBLE

Brian and Greg Walker

H I &amp; LOIS
DAP, 1"r!eRe WAG A
wooi?PECt&lt;eR PeCt&lt;tNG
A'f otJR J.lOVS€. !3u"f' 1
C~A&lt;SE&gt;t:::' HIM AWAY.

W illiam Hoest

THELOCKHORNS

1 'C? e~:tfeR CHECK
-rHA1". MA"/!36 we
HAVe ev&amp;.;; ,,._,~e.
GIDII-lG.
~---1

•
.

...

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Patrick McDonnel l

H

Jerry Scott and Jim Borgman

'THE FAMILY CIRCUS

CONCEPTIS SUDOKU

Bil Keane

7
6 2
1

4&gt;·'!&gt;
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....... .......

_ ,.....)O((IUIIIOO"'

" I' m a lot better at skatin' when
I stay on the grass."

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HAPPY BlRTI IDAY for Thursday,
june 3, 2010:
This year, you c.tiscovcr the power
of imagination; luck and a \villlngness
to transform. This is a powerful mix,
allowing you to live out some of your
dreams. You also might be drawn to a
cause of some sort. A key wlationship
or partnership play~ an instrumental
role in your year. This person expects
a lot. and you are willing to meet his
or her standards. If you are single, this
person could be a new sweetie. If you
are attached, the two of you become
an even stronger team. A special event
or trip bonds you even closer. PISCES
demands a lot from you.
Tite Stnrs Show the Kind of Dm; You'll

Hml?: 5-Dyn'!mic; 4-Posith'f; 3-Aroernge;
2-»so; 1-Difficrtlt

by Dave Green

9 3
4
2

MY ~EADAC~ES STARTED W~EN I ~I NED MY ~MO."

"

ARIES (March 21-April19)
***Get started early, as you are a
veritable whirlwind in the a.m. Use
the afternoon for work or a responsibility that demands reflection.
Someone is changing in front of your
very eyes. Make a needed adjustment.
lbnight: Get some ):&gt;cauty sleep. {We
all need it.)
TAURUS (April20-May 20)
* *** A plan or project comes to
fruition, and you greet success. A
meeting carries more significance than
you are aware of. A partner has a similar perspective to yours. You c.m disruss a problem openly. lonight
Where the action is.
GEMINI (May 21-June 20)
**** Thought and needed
research come together in a projecl
Step up to the plate in the p.m.
Understanding will evolve to a new
level if you work •Nith a key person.
This person is more expressive than he
or she has bt.&gt;en in a while. You could
be ex~mely relieved. Tonight Could
be late.
CANCER Qune 21-July 22)
*** * A discussion sinks in, and
!&gt;"'.tddenly you realize the dynmni~ a
good deal later. You ~ new potential
that you haven't been witness to for a
substantial time. Imagine the pt~sibili­
ties. Make calls. lc&gt;night: rollow the
mu.&lt;&gt;ic..
LEO Oulr 23-Aug. 22)
* * * * Someone proves to be
iru;pirational, even if you completely
disagree with him or her. You could be
questioning the hmvs and whys of a
problem. Work with a key individual,
and re;olve what could be a major

hassle. lbnight Togetherness works.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22)
Remain mellow and centered
in your dealings. You might wonder
why you are doing certain things or
acting oul Stay on top of a problem.
and refuse to let it get to you. l'vfidday,
people pop up with great ideas. Make
it OK to have your sd1edule waylaid.
Tonight Say "yes" to c;omeone you
care about.
LffiRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 22)
****You might be slightly
amused by a diliicult situation. What
you decide to do with it is, of course,
your call. You might not be sure what
to do, and are unlikely to do anything.
Still, enjoy the interaction. Tonight
Getting extra work or errands done.
SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21)
*** If you can, get a clean start.
You might need to handle a personal
matter din.&gt;ctlr Your choices here are
reflective of who you are. Don't worry
so much. Your sense of ftm stimulates
creativity later today. 1bnight
Consider starting the weekend early.
SAG ITIARIUS (Nov. 22-Dcc 21)
HHHH You might want to attempt
a conversation with a sometimes-difficult associate this moming. Let it go
too late, and you might not have the
'iilme ~mergy on the matter. 1onight
Be spontaneous while heading home.
CAPRICORN (l)cc. 22-Jan. 19)
Deal ""ith a financial matter
first thing in the morning. You might
feel as if you cannot clear up a misunderstanding. A discussion in the afternoon could be more important than
you realize. Tonight ),.rJSit with a
friend or loved one.
AQ UARTIJS Oan. 20-Feb. 18)
* ***Your best time is in the
a.m., when the winds blow in vour
direction. Don't postpone anything;
get as much accomplished as you can.
This afternoon, give serious thought to
your budget. !(might: Your treat. (Give
yourself J.'Crmbsion to treat just vourself.)
PISCES (1 eb. 19-March 20)
You bloom midda\·. What
):Otl might ha\·e associated the V&gt;Ord
"impossible" \dth, you di-;cover is
quite doable. A friend helps you
revamp your thinking. Listen to his or
her impresstons. 1bnight: Zero in on
what you want.
'

***

***

***

jncqudine Bigrrr i~ mt tlrt Intt•met
nt lrttp://1t'll'lt'.jacq,lt'linrbigm:com.

�Page B6 • The Daily Sentinel

www.mydailysentinel.com

~~!E~\~~'~e ~~~,.~~!~~! Jr.' retiring at age 40

Thursday, June 3, 2010

Nicklaus enjoys another ·
walk in the sun

Kid has called it quits.
to the World Series.
Just the way Ken
"It's a sad day for the
Gnffey Jr. wanted, there Mariners, our fans. for all
DUBU'\1. Ohio (AP) partners relished the
will be no farewell tour t~e people in the commu- At least tv. ice the age chance to tee it up with
for one. of the greatest n Jty that hm·e loved Ken,
of some of his fello\v him again.
players 111 baseball histo- admired him as a tremenplayers, nobody let 70"It's been a fu n day," ·
ry. Instead, Griffey sim- dous baseball player and
year-old Jack Nicklaus Mickelson said. 'To be
ply
informed
the
Seattle
a
o-reat
hun
b
·
..
1an emg,
play from the senior tees. able to play nine ho.
M ·
&lt;
o.
anners on Wednesday Manners CEO Howard
After all, it was his with Jack !'Jicklaus i
night his career was over. Lincoln said. "It's always
course and his home- great feeling. 1 think
The
40-year-old tough for great superstars
town.
He designed cool. watching him on
Griffey
unexpectedly like Ken or anyone else
Muirfield Village Golf the last putt. grinding the
announced his retirement to make a dec 1s 1on to
Club, home of the way he has in the past.
bef&lt;:&gt;re Seattle's game retire. This has been his
Tournament, after he has made so
Memorial
agamst Minnesota on life for so many years.
in
suburban
Columbus. many putts on the final
Wednesday after 22 sea- but he has made his deci
not
far
from
v;?here he hole. It's just fun watchsons, 13 all-star appear- c;;ion and will support it.
grew
up.
ing him.''
ance~ and widespread We wtll honor him in
Nicklaus still had a
acclatm as one of the every way possible."
The skins game also
gr~at time in a charity marked the first time that
greatest players of his
A star from the time he
skms
game
on Woods and Mcilroy. the
generation.
was the overall No. 1
Wednesday. Everywhere emerging 2 1-year-old
Stuck in a limited role pick in the J987 draft
he went, he wa~ greeted phenorn, played together.
a~ a backup designated 9riffey played 22 year~
by loud, prolonged
httter and spot pinch-hit- 111 the majors with
" I didn't expect anyapplause.
Griffey
called Seattle. his hometown
ter,
thing different. I' ve been
He didn't win a skin Mariners' team president Cincinnati Reds and the
around him for the last
Phil Mickelson (9). Tiger couple
Chuck Armstrono- and Chicago White Sox. He
of
years:·
Woods (6) and Zach Mcilroy said. "I have
said .he was done playing. hit .284 with 1,836 RBis.
Johnson (3) won all of
Manners manager Don
But his greatest seathem - but no one was had lunch with him and
Wakamatsu called his sons. by far, came in
players together before Seattle.
having much more fun hit balls beside him on
t!1e start. of batting pracGriffey played in 1.685
than the guy who found- the range, chatted and
t1ce to mform them of games with Seattle and
ed the Memorial, won it stuff. It was good. He's a
normal guy. He just hits
Griffey'.s decision.
hit .292 with 417 homers.
twice and now hosts it.
pretty good and
the
"While I feel I am :-.till most corning in the
Before he even teed off ' puthbalI
pretty
good and we
able to make a contribu- h o in e r - f r i e n d 1y
at the long, uphill I Oth
he usuget
it
all
together.
tion on the field and Kingdome, and 1.216
hole. Nicklau~ was ally wins."
nobody in the Mariners RBis. He won the AL
Jim Bates/Seattle Times/MCT already expecting the
On the 15th gre.
front office has asked me MVP in 1997 and practi- Seattle Mariners' Ken Griffey Jr. delivers a walk-off worst.
Woods
sid led up
to retire. I told the cally saved a franchise game-winning hit in the bottom the ninth inning to give
'Tm absolutely worn
Mariners when I met that was in danger of the Mariner~ a 4.-3 victory over the Toronto Blue Jays out by three practice Mcilroy. grabbed his
with them prior to the relocating when he first at Safeco Fteld tn Seattle, Washington, on Thursday swings.'' he said with a putter and took a couple
2009 season and was came up.
of pretend whacks at an
May 20.
•
chuckle.
invited back that I will
Griffey returned to the
Then he tumea to his imaginary ball.
never allow myself to Manners in 2009 and hing third and slidinob is the greatest player to
Woods, return ing to
ome safe on Edoar ever live and to get a caddie and said. "Give
become a distraction .. almost single-handedly
action
after three weeks
Gtiffey said in a '&gt;tat;- transformed what had Martinez's double to b~at chance to play with him me a long ball. I've got off due to a neck injury,
to get the ball to the fairment.
been a fractured. bicker- the New York Yankees in and to get to sit next to way."
said he felt fine and was
the
AL
Division
Series
in
is
pretty
spehis
locker
" ! feel that without ing clubhouse with his
The Golden Bear re~dy to return to compeenough occasional starts leadership, energy and 1995. His first major cial."
tition.
league at-bat was a douGriffey also is regarded acquitted himself quite
to be sharper coming off constant pranks.
"It v.as a good time,"
ble
and
Griffey
homered
as the player who helped well, even though he was
Griffey signed a onethe bench. my continued
said
Woods, a four-time
he
stepped
the
first
time
of
the
playing
with
four
presence as a player year deal last November
keep the Mariners in
Memorial
winner. "I
the
plate
at
home.
to
in
the
world:
best
players
Seattle,
a
point
would be an unfair dis- for one more season in
haven't
played
with Rory
A year after makino- his Arn~strong noted during Mickelson, Ernie Els.
traction to my teammates Seattle after he v.·as carv.
as
fun
to
see him
yet.
It
bi~
league
debJt.
Griffey
Kenny Peny and Sean
and their success as a ried off the field by his
~n tmpromptu gathering
play
in
person."
enJoyed
one
of
his
!!reatO'Hair.
They
were
comteam is what the ultunate teammates after the final
JUSt a few steps from the
Mickelson ranked No .
goal should be." he said. game of 2009. Griffey hit est highlights. Playino- batter's box at Safeco peting for $25,000 to
Gri ftey was not in the .214 last season with 19 v. ith his All-Star dad~ Field. It was Seattle ·s benefit The First Tee. as 2 in the world behind
clubhouse before the homers as a part-time Ken Griffey, they hit unlikely late ~eason play- was the star-studded Woods. was asked if he
game. and the team said DH. He was limited by a back-to-back ·home runs off run in 1995. spuned fivesorne a hole behind: thinks about taking over
he would not be at Safeco swollen left knee that in a o-ame for the by the return of Gtiffey Woods. Rory Mcilroy. the top spot.
"It would be cool." he
r~qui~·ed a second opera Mariner;
Field.
from injury. that led to Steve Stricker, Jim
For a time in the J990s, the construction
said. ··1 don't want to disMilton
Bradley. tJOn 111 as many offseaof Furyk and Johnson.
Griffey's teammate for sons.
he \\as considered the Safeco Field and the . It was a day for catch- count it. Right nov. my
"Of course it surprised be')t player in baseball. future security of a fran- mg up as much as tuning goal is to play well here
only a ft:w rnomhs.
tur~ed to Mike Sweeney us. You never know what And during the Steroids chise rumored for years up. All the players wore and get ready for •
durmg battmg practice is in a players mind. They Era. his name was never to be on the move.
~
portable microphones, Open."
and said. "un a day fil-.c:- Lld•ah. thin.:;" J ....... uu..J linL·prJ tf'l nl"rfArrY&gt;&lt;&gt;nf'P
n.,.c-..,
h,. J,.ft c;:.,,ttJ.., £,_,.
l'Jicklaus,
y.oi
nner
_
of
.f
iWJL~
tiJ.ejr
u.t'S..&lt;&gt;.mm~nts
this. it should rain in there and in this particu- enhancing drugs. a rarity the Keds, 111JUnes oegan
Walking up the first sort of an authority on
Jar case Ken made his · among his contempo- to take their toll and his
Seattle.''
fairway.
Nicklaus asked who the best player on
raries
such
as
Barry
production
started
to
Griffey was hitting decision and there wasn't
only .184 with no homers anything anybody could · Bonds. Sammv Sosa and decline. Griffey's final Mickelson about his the planet is. since he
hit, during his lackluster wife. Amy. who is bat- was for so many ) ears.
and seven RBis this year say.'' Seattle general Mark McGwi1~e.
After
watchin g
"I
think
it's
pretty
ea~y
final
season, was fittingly tling breast cancer. Lefty
and recently went a week manager Jack Zduriencik
without playing. There said. "You support him, for me to personally say a game-winning pinch- replied that she was at Mickelson shoot an
was a report earlier this you're behind him and he's the greatest player to hit single against Toronto home. but that he hoped effortless 6-under 30 that
she could make it to the included an eagle and
·
season - which Griffey again. he's a legacy in ever play this game:· on May 20.
denied- that he'd fallen this community and cer said Seattle catcher Rob
Colorado manager Jim U.S. Open in two weeks four birdies. Nicklaus
declared said he belieYed •
asleep in the clubhouse tainly in the game of Johnson, whose locker Tracy and others were at Pebble Beach.
during a game.
baseball."
v. as just a few feet from surprised as the news of
Late in the day, at the the No. 1 ranking meant
He ends his career fifth
His career is littered Gnffey's. "He did every- Griffey's decision began 18th hole, Mickelson a lot more to Mickelson
on the aU-time home run with highlights. from thing. He wa~n't just a to make its way around kidded Nicklaus about than he might let on .
in
eight home run hitter. The guy baseball.
list with 630. He won an homering
being outdriven by him.
" I f I \~ere Phil. it
MVP award and was an straight games to tie a played outfield as good
"Did he really? Wow,''
"Yeah, I outdrove your wouid mean a lot to me,"
l !-time Gold Glover. major league record in or better than anyone Tracy said before facing 4 iron with my driver,'' Nicklaus said. "He ·s
The only thing missing 1993, to furiously round- ever played .... To me he the San Francisco Giants. Nicklaus said with a been No. 2 for a long
laugh.
time. Of course it means
Nicklaus remains a a lot to him:·
proud man who shuns
Nicklaus then turned
ceremonial golf. It both- and was greeted b) a
ers him that he can't play mob of eager autograph. - - - - -- -. h i s ors
SENTINEL STAFF
in
1986 and also is the assistant the way he used to when seekers as he made his
MOSSPORTS@ MYOAILYSENTINEL.COM
sop ho- received the GSC's track coach. Versatile in he dominated the game way back to the clubm o r e prestigious
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Montrose
in Darst also served as a '80s. But his playing bod).
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David L.
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Looking f or quality vitamins to
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