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intimate meeting of
land and sea, Bt

Printed on 100%
Newsprint

Rec~cled

Middleport • Po111eroy, Ohio
r-~--------------~----~-------------------

OBITUARIES..
Page AS
• Leroy Loudner

• Lakers, Celtics
shrug weight of
history in Game 7.
See Page 81

BSERGENT@MYOAILYSENTINELCOM

POMEROY - Meigs County
Commissioners Tom Anderson,
Mike Bartrum and Mick Davenport
discu'Ssed
the
breakdown
Community Development Block
Grant fonnula funding they awarded
to six projects earlier this month during Wednesday's regular meeting.
The breakdown was presented by
Meigs County Grants Administrator
Jean Trussell as follows:
Racine Village received $20,000
from the county for its $50,000 sidewalk improvements project. Racine

will make up the difference with
$30,000
from
its
CDBG
Neighborhood Revitalization Grant.
The Tuppers Plains Fire
Department received $21500 from
the county for its $36,300 fire
house rehabilitation project. The
TPFD will make up the difference
by contributing $14,700 to complete the project.
Scipio
Township
received
$18,500 from the county· for ball
field improvements to bring the
concession stand up to code. The
total cost for this project is $18,500.
Chester Township/Chester Ball
Association asked for and received

$20,000 from the county 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 locati(')n of the
fields. The total project cost is
$49,500 with $25,000 being contributed from the Angela Eason
Foundation and $4,500 from the
Chester Ball Association to complete funding for the project.
Salem
Township
Trustees
received $22.000 from the county
Please see Funds, AS

.

Make 'e
lau
.

SIDE

'I'Ala. prof charged
• in brother's 1986
shooting death.
See Page A2
• Harrisonville
alumni hold reunion.
See Page A3
• Poston Lake
Bluegrass Festival
set for this weekend.
See Page A3
• Tea Party
continues petition
work. See Page A3
• For the Record.
See Page AS
• Guard changes air
zone after near miss.
See Page A6

•

Laughter is the best medicine, at least
according to these young folks who participate in the Children's Summer
Reading Program sponsored by the
Meigs County District Public Library and
Grange Insurance, Downing, Childs &amp;
Musser. Yesterday, young readers packed
the Pomeroy Library to.experience the
Robert Post Comedy Theatre. Next up is
Tom Sparough at 2 p.m., Wednesday,
June 23 at the Pomeroy Library.
Sparough will entertain with juggling, storytelling and more. The summer reading
program is free.
Beth SergenVphotos

HOEFUCH®MYOAILYSENTINELCOM

assistant varsitv valleyball
coach;Tom
Cremeans. high school
and middle school golf
coach; Ben Ewing, head
boys basketball coach;
Tim Simpson. junior varsity boys basketball
coach: Carl Wolfe. head
girls basktball coach;
Della Wolfe. volunteer
varsity assistanr girls
basketball coach: Amber
Baker, junior varisty girls
basketball coach; Steven
Wood. head softball
coach.
Matt Simpson. \\eb
designer; Linda Lear.
Middle School newspaper advJsor; Jennifer

MIDDLEPORT
Middleport voters will
decide on the rene\val of
a one mill levy for genecal operating expenses of
the village
in
the
November election.
A resolution to proceed
with the renewal request
. by
was
passed
Middleport
Village
Council at this week's
meeting.
The
levy,
according
to
Susan
Baker, fiscal officer. generates
approximately
$18.000 111 revenue.
As for the appointment
of ·a new Council member to fill the unexpired
term of Jean Craig who
resigned last month, no
decision has been made.
Council had decided in
special
sessions
to
appoint Matt Lyons to
the position. However, it
was then discovered he
does not quality in that he
is not a registered voter
in 1\1iddleport. The family moved to Middleport
earlier this year.
RlTA':; collection of
income ta.\es due the v itluge and the number of
non-filers was discussed
by Council. lt was reported bv Baker that there are
552 'residents of the \ illage delinquent in filing
villa!!e income tax forms.
Thos~e residents who are
delinquent. according to

Please see Meigs, AS

Please see Levy, AS

Meigs Board hires 201 0-11 personnel
HOEFLICH@MYOAILYSENTINEL.COM

Comics
~Editorials

Sports

B Section

© 2010 Ohio \'alley Publishing Co.

l.ll !I!IJI!I

POMEROY The
Village of Pomeroy was
visited by the Ohio
Environmental Protection
Agency last week and
didn't exactly come out
smelling like a rose.
Mayor John Musser
spoke about the visit to
members of Pomeroy
Village Council this
week during council's
regular meeting. Musser
said the EPA expects the
viJlage to make improvements to its sewage treatment plant and a lift station in the next 30 days
or v.. ill likely face serious
fines.
Musser said a major
problem is when the electricity goes off at the
waste water treatment
plant. there is no generator. Therefore. the pumps
go off and dump sewage
into the Ohio River.
"We're going to have
to put in a generator to
run the sewage plant and
lift station at the ball
fields," Musser said.
Water
and
Sewer
Operator Paul Hellman
said he estimated just the
electrical hookups would
cost $10.000 at the lift
station and $17,000 at the
waste water treatment
plant. The generators are
another
story
with ·
Hellman saying a generator for the plant could run

B Y C HARLENE HOEFLICH

BY C HARLENE H OEFLICH

2 SEC'JlONS- 12 PAGES

B Y B ETH S ERGENT
BSERGENT@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

Voters to decide
renewal
. of .
operating levy

WEATIIER

INDEX

of fines
fronn EPA

Please see Sewer, AS

•~=======

High: Mid 80s.
Low: Upper 50s.

aD.,

hear
.
Somethingstinks
Co mmissioners
·
P9nneroy
breakdown Of grant funds in danger
BY BETH SERGENT.

SPORTS

~------

Big Ten must
tackle divisions,
schedt1ling, Bt

Pebble now an

-·

....

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· ' .. !

-....-~ -

POMEROY - Action
to fill positions, both certified and uncertified, for
the upcoming . school
year was taken at a meeting of the Meigs Local
Board of Education
Tuesday night.
Lisa Carey and Nancy
Baur were hired as special education teachers at
the Meigs Middle School
on one year contracts,
and Dan E. Schultz was
employed as a teaching
assistant to students in
the autism program at
Meigs High School.
Also employed was
Donna E. Corsi as food

".

sen ice coordinator on a
two year contract at a
salary as determined on
the administrative salary
schedule. Co'rsi will
replace Marilyn Meier,
retired, who has been
food service supervisor
for several years.
Also hired at $10 an
hour were Brent Bissell
and Aaron Oliphant as
supervisors for the summer
youth
being
employed through the
Meigs County Jobs and
Family Services for community work at $8 an
hour.
The resignation of
Jennifer Tesar as Meigs
Middle School seventh
grade social studies

teacher on Aug. 20 was
accepted by the Board.
Hired oil supplemental
contracts by a 4 to I vote.
with Ryan Mahr casting
the dissenting vote, v.·ere:
Mike Chancey, head
football coach and summer field care; Rid.
Chancey. Derek Miller,
Edie Fife and Eric
Cullums. \arsity assistant
football coaches; Eric
Cullums
and
Mike
Bartrum. volunteer varsity assistant football
coaches; Bryan Zirkle,
seventh grade football
coach; Ralph Werry and
Debbie Evans, co-cheerleading advisors; Rick.
Ash, head volleyball
coach; Dale Harrison.

�PageA2

The Daily Sentinel

Thu rsday, June 17,

~Ia. prof charged
1n brother's 1986
shooting death
CANTON, Mass. (AP)
- It was "obviously" a
homicide case, a fonner
prosecutor says, but
authorities didn't have
the evidence to pxesent it
to a grand jury at the
time. Twenty-four-years
lapsed and three other
killings occurred before
another prosecutor did.
Amy Bishop, the biology professor charged
with killing three of her
colleagues at an Alabama
university, has been
indicted on a first-degree
murder charge in the
1986 shooting death of
her
brother
in
Massachusetts, prosecutors
announced
Wednesday.
Prosecutors who originally concluded that
Bishop
accidentally
killed her 18-year-old
brother, Seth, now say
police failed to share
Important
evidence,
including an alleged carjacking attempt by Amy
Bishop after the shooting. They reopened the
case after Bishop was
charged in February with
gunning down six of her
colleagues
at
the
University of AlabamaHuntsville, killing three.
Norfolk
District
Attorney
William
Keating said he did not
understand why charges
were never brought
against Bishop.
"I can't give you any
explanations, I can't give
you excuses. because
there are none," he said.
"Jobs weren't done,
responsibilities weren't
met and justice wasn't
served."
Bishop had told police
who investigated her
brother's death that she
accidentally shot him
while trying to unload
her father's 12-gauge
shotgun in the family's
Braintree home. Her
mother, Judith, the only
witness (o the shooting,
confirmed her daughter's
account to police.
U.S. Rep. William
Delahunt, who was then
the Norfolk County district attorney, said that
Braintree police never
told anyone in his office
that after Bishop shot her
brother. she tried to commandeer a getaway car at
gunpoint at a local car
dealership, then refused
to drop her gun until officers ordered her to do so
repeatedly. Those events
were
described
in
Braintree police reports
but not in a report written
by a state police detective
assigned to the district
attorney's office.
The police chief of
Braintree at the time of
the shooting did not
immediately return a
phone call Wednesday
seeking comment.
Investigators looking
at an old crime scene
photo from her brother's
shooting discovered a
newspaper article about
the 1986 killings of actor
Patrick Duffy's parents.
The clipping, which was
in Amy Bishop's bedroom, described how a

teenager
shot
the
"Dallas" star's parents
with a 12-gauge shotgun
and stole a getaway car
from an auto dealership.
Keating ordered an
inquest, which was held
in April. Nineteen witnesses, including the
Bishops' parents, testified
before Quincy
District Court Judge
Mark Coven during the
closed-door inquest. A
grand jury heard evidence this month.
Delahunt's first assistant district attorney,
John Kivlan, said the
inquest was important to
consider
evidence,
including the newspaper
clipping, that he did not
have in 1986.
"Had this and other
evidence been reported
to the District Attorney's
Office at the time, it
would obviously have
been presented to a
Grand Jury and an indictment for intentional
homicide, or murder,
could have resulted at
that time," Kivlan said in
a statement released
Wednesday
by
Delahunt's congressional
office.
Keating said the indictment, brought 24 years
after Seth Bishop's death,
brought little comfort.
"You're never satisfied
when a young boy, a
young man, has lost his
life,'' he said. "You're
never satisfied when justice isn't served. You're
never satisfied, when
using your common
sense, in all likelihood,
three individuals in
Alabama that were killed
might not have been
because the defendant
wouldn't have been in
that room."
It did not seem likely
that Amy Bishop would
return to Massachusetts
to face the new charges
anytime soon, if at all.
Keating indicated that
Bishop would first have
to stand trial in Alabama
for the university shootings before she could be
tried in Massachusetts,
and there would be no
chance of her returning if
she was convicted and
sentenced to the death
penalty in Alabama.
Keating also said it
would be up to Coven to
decide if transcripts of
the inquest would be
released.
An attorney representing Amy Bishop in the
Alabama shootings. Roy
Miller, didn't immediately return a telephone call
seeking comment on the
Massachusetts charges,
nor did her husband.
Miller has indicated he is
considering an· insanity
defense for Bishop.
The chief prosecutor in
Huntsville,
Madison
County District Attorney
Robert Broussard, didn't
immediately return a
telephone call seeking
comment. He has said an
Alabama grand jury
would likely consider
charges against Bishop in
the university shooting
by late summer.

2010

BP says it's sorry - and
$
guarantees 208 for Gulf
Bv JENNIFER

LOVEN

ASSOCIATED PRESS

WASHINGTON
President Barack Obama
wrested a $20 billion
compensation guarantee
and an apology to the
nation from British oil
giant BP Wednesday,
announcing the company
would set up a major
claims
fund
for
shrimpers, restaurateurs
and others whose lives
and livelihoods are being
wrecked by the oil flooding into the Gulf of
Mexico.
Applause broke out
during a community
meeting
in
Orange
Beach, Ala., on the news.
"We asked for that two
weeks ago and they
laughed at us," Mayor
Tony
Kennon
said.
"Thank you, President
Obama, for taking a bunch
of rednecks' suggestion
and making it happen."
Obama had said he
would "make BP pay,"
and the company's
chairman said after four
hours of intense White
House negotiations that
BP was ready.
The unending oil spill
saga had yielded almost
no good news before this.
Creation of the fund- to
be run by an adrninistrator with a proven track
record - is the first big
success Obama has been
able to give to Gulf residents and the nation in
the cight weeks since the
explosion, a period during which the spill has
taken ever more of the
public's attention, threatening anything else the
president hoped to focus
on or accomplish.
Huge as the $20 billion seems, both Obama
and London-based BP
PLC said it was by no
means a cap.
The deal also adhered
to what Obama had said
was his non-negotiable
demand: that the fund
and the claims process
be administered inde~ndently from BP. It won't
be a government fund,
either, but, will be led by
the administration's "pay
czar." Kenneth Feinberg,
better known as the man
who oversaw the $7 billion government fund for
families of victims of the
Sept. 11. 2001, terrorist
attacks.
The April 20 explosion
of an offshore oil rig
killed 11 workers and
sent millions of gallons
of crude spewing into the
water from the broken
well a mile below the
ocean's surface - as
much as 118 million galIons so far and still flowing. More wildlife,
beaches and marshlands

are fouled every day,
jeopardizing not just the
region's fragile ecology
but a prized Gulf way of
life that is built on fishing
and tourism.
On We._dnesday, BP
began
burning
oil
siphoned from the ruptured well as part of its
plans to more than triple
the amount of crude it can
stop from reaching the
sea by the end of the
month, the company said.
It's the first time this particular burner has been
deployed in the Gulf.
Though the company
hopes to install equipment soon to capture as
much as 90 percent of the
escaping oil, the leak is
expected to continue at
least until relief wells are
finished in August.
The use of the BP
escrow fund is intended
to avoid a repeat of the
painful aftennath of 1989
Exxon Valdez oil disaster
in Alaska, when the fight
over money dragged out
in courts over roughly
two decades.
"What this is about is
accountability,"
said
Obama in brief remarks
in the State Dining Room
after a four-hour, onagain, off-again White
House negotiation session with BP executives.
"For the small-business
owners, for the fishermen , for the shrimpers,
this is not just a matter of
dollars and cents .... A lot
of these folks don't have
a cushion."
· On the driveway outside, BP Chainnan CarlHenrie Svanberg apologized for "this tragic
accident that should
never have happened."
"We care about the
small people," he said.
That comment wasn't
as well-received as the
promise of compensation.
"We're not small people," said Justin Taffinder
of New Orleans. "We're
human beings. They're
no greater than us. We
don't bow down to
them.''
Added Terry Hanners.
who has a small construction company in
Gulf
Shores,
Ala.:
"These BP people I've
met are good folks. I've
got a good rapport with
them. But BP does not
care about us. They are
so tar above us. We are
the
nickel-and-dime
folks of this world."
By evening Svanberg
was apologizing again. ''I
spoke clumsily this afternoon, and for that. I am
very sorry," he said in a
statement. "What I was
tryin$ to say - that BP
understands how deeply
this affects the lives of

people who live along the $3 billion this summer
Gulf and depend on it for and $2 billion in the fall, &lt;
their livelihood - will followed by $1.25 billio.
best be conveyed not by per quarter until the $2
any words but by the billion figure is reached. .
work we do to put things
Aware that a healthy
right for the families and BP is in everyone's interbusinesses who've been est, Obama gave a plug
hurt."
for what he called "a
The apologetic talk strong and viable compawas expected to continue ny" - a day after he bad
Thursday when company accused it of recklessCEO Tony Hayward will ness. The viability of the
face sharp questions compensation fund could
from lawmakers on be 6n shaky ground if BP
Capitol Hill.
eventually were forced to
In preparea testimony file for bankruptcy as
obtained
by
The some fear.
Press,
BP shares gyrated as
Associated
Hayward expressed con- the events unfolded. They
trition for the spill and its rose more than 5 percent
effects and said he was to $33 after Obama 's
"personally devastated" words of support. But
by ''these tragic events." they slipped back as
He pledged. "We will not investors digested the full
rest until the well is extent of BP's commitunder control, and we ments. ending the day
will meet all our obliga- with a gain of 45 cents to
tions to clean up the spill close at $31.85 per share.
and address its environThe company's patenmental and economic tial liabilities, including
impacts."
cleanup costs, victim~
In creating a victims' compensation and civW
compensation fund, BP fines , are breathtaking to .
will use noncore U.S. consider - stretching
assets as security for its far beyond the $20 bil$20 billion obligation. lion fund.
Chief Financial Officer
For example, civil
Byron Grote stopped penalties can be levied
short of calling it a lien, under a variety of envibut he said the assets will ronmental
protection
be used as security.
laws, including fines of •
If BP had to borrow up to $1,100 for each
money in the future to barrel of oil· spilled.
pay any of its obliga- That alone could transtions, that might prove late to as much as $3 bitdifficult because rising lion. If BP were found to
investor concerns could have committed gross
raise the company's bor- negligence or willful
rowing costs. As of the misconduct, the civil
end of March, BP report- fine could be • up to
ed only $6.8 billion in $4,300
per
barrel,
cash and cash equiva- approaching $12 billion.
lents. Grote said the
So far, 66,000 claims
amount has not changed have been filed, $81 mil"materially" since then.
lion awarded and 26,000
Svanberg announced checks cut, said Coast '
the company would not Guard Adm. Thad Allen.
pay dividends to shareThe $20 billion escrow
holders for the rest of the fund can be used to pi
year, including one all claims. includi
scheduled for June 21 environmental damag
totaling about $2.6 bil- and state and loca
lion. The company will response costs, with the
make initial payments exception of fines and
into the escrow fund of penalties.

OFf'q.tNG.c
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.PageA3

The Daily Sentinel
AS K 1)

I~

Th ursday, June

. B I~ 0 T HE R S

Harrisonville alumni hold reunion

New mom feels
overwhelmed

HARRISO~VILLE Sixty alumni and guests
attended the 80th annual
of
the
banquet
Harrison,. iII c-Sctpi o
Alumni Association May
29 at the Alumni Center
on the Harold Graham
Farm near llarrisonville.
President Gary Gibson
welcomed the grOLtJ). and
Rev. Joy Wiseman Clark
gave the invm:ation.
Harold and .Janl!t Graham
and famil) prepared and
served the food.
Lennie Jewell ( 1940)
was recognized for
being the oldest male
present. and ~lary Welsh
Woodyard (1933) for the
oldest female. The cla:-.s
of 1960 was rccognitcd

ear Dr. Brothers:
been a mom for
a year nO\\. and I
fed completely overwhel med. Don't get me
wrong - l lnvt' my littlt•
boy and husband. an·d
wouldn't trade them for
anything in the world.
It 's j ust that often I feel
there's just too much
going on at one time.
I'm not used to this juggling act. I sec other
moms take in stride the
things that bother me.
and I can't for the life of
me figure out how thev
do it. How do the) do it.?

- L.C.
Dear L.C.: You arc not

alone, and de~pite what
appears to be a \\Orld of
mommies functioning
::,moothly while you arc
struggling. I guarantee
you that 'such is not the
case. Most new mothers
fee l the same sense of
overwhelmed that
, and it is perfectly
. Of course, if this
fee ling results in a kind
of paralysis or the inability to take care of your
baby and function as
needed. you ma) ''ant to
seek some professional
help with your feelings
~ or at least with the
housework! Don't be
afraid to ask Dad for a
hand or a temporar)
. helper around the house.
You need your friend!-&gt;hips now more than ever
~ and other moms in
your same circumstance
would be a boon. After
marriage, some women
tend to forget about their
female friends, preferring
to hang out mostly with
their husband as they
build their life together.
But now is the t~ne to
renev. those friendships
some ne\\ ones.
)Ou'll soon find
If sharing and
ing problems together that you thought were
vours alone. And don't
fon!et about \our chi Idles~ friends ...:. ma) be it
would be refreshing to
take a little time off now
and then to go to a movie
or shopping '" ith some(¥1e ,.,·hose world doesn't
stop at the nursery door.
In any casl!, soon you
will get your perspective
back and realize that the
~upermom is just a myth.

•••

Dear Dr. Brothers: I
recently. got a call at
work from my son ·s
school. The principal
was very adamant. that I
come down there Jmmediatelv; he said there
was a· problem with my
son. Whe., I arrived, he
showed me a picture that
7-year-old
had

drawn of the school on
fire - and said my son
''as exhibiting terrorist
t\!ndcncies! I told him
that mv husbcmd is a
firefighter. but he insisted I get my son counseling! 1t all seems nuts to
Youth events
m~. but what if the principal is seeing someFriday, June 18
thing I'm not? - J.F.
POMEROY Dear J .F.: I suppose church interested Any
in
you are lucky that the
in
a
fall
co-ed
playing
school didn't kick your
leagues, contact
son out. or suspend him softball
Stewart
at 992Mike
or call the cops. It seems
or
Bryan
and
7196,
that almost every school
system has enacted new Melissa Colwell, 992rules to make sure there 0565. League play will
in
August.
is no hint of violence or begin
even politically incorrect Deadline to sign up is
speech in school. Our Wednesday, June 30.
fear since 9. II has driven
Birthdays ·
us to sometimes ridiculous heights of safety and
Saturday, June 19
security obsessiOn. r Ill
TUPPERS PLAINS sure there 1s some good
to have come out of all of Donna Watson Brooks,
this concern for what formerly of Tuppers
might happen. Some Plains, will observe her
schools actually do need 80th birthday on June 19.
metal detectors and secu- Cards may be sent to her
rity people patrolling the at
2203
Hill
St.,
hallways, unfortunately.
And it's not cool for little
kids to bring to school
knives, guns and other
objects their parents have
allowed them access to.
But for the most part, little kids are not terrorists
Ill trammg. and it's a
shame they are being
looked at that way. I urge
)OU to talk to the princiGUYSVILLE - The
pal to tf) to put things in Poston Lake Bluegrass
perspective.
Festival v. ill mark 25
You should talk to your ) ears of pr&lt;n iding great
son abQut the meaning of music and family entcrhb drawing. Children in tainment June 18-19.
clementar§. school are
The bluegrass fe::.tival.
just learning hO\\' to act. which
is
held
in
They are. for the most GU)S\ ille. Ohio. is hostpart, being themselves. ed by the Idletymc::.
and it is the school's job Bluegrass Band from
to direct that thirst for Point Pleasant. W.Va.
learning and to civilize
"This is a wonderful
the kids to some .extent festival and a place
no food fights. where you can bring the
tantrums
or
hitting entire family and have a
should be allowed. But great time" says Ronnie
when thcv oet dov. n to Seebaugh, banjo player
interpreting o innocent for the ldletymcs band.
childhood free speech - • "We ha\ c played the
which includes drawing. 1 festival for many years
playacting, experiment-~ and when we "~re
ing with language and offered the opportuntt)
personas - that's when to take 0\ er the fc.,th al
political corrcctne!:'s gets a couple years ago, we
felt it wa~ the natural
out of hand.
(cJ 2010 by King thing fo.r us to .do:· .
FeaTure.\ Syndicate
At th1s )Cars fe~tl\al

Subscribe:
992-2155

for 50 years and having
six present. Walter and
Bonnie Edmonds traveled the farthest. Former
bus drivers, cheerleaders, basketball players.
valedictorians, salutorians. class presidents.
youngest graduate, and
the one with the most
children were recognized.
A scholarship was
awarded to Dean Hively.
grandson of Harold and
Janet
Graham.
was
Entertainment
"Thinking About School
Days," Donna Burbridge
Wilson told a stor-v and
Graham talked abo"ut his
book titled "Mother.
Please, Let Me Go" relat-

~Jason.

ing to his career in the
Air Force which is on
sale nov..
attending
Graduates
t\1m)
Wclo;h
were:
Woodyard. 1933: Virgmia
Hull
Gibson,
1938;
Lennie Jev.ell, 1940;
Frances Gilkey Alkire.
Robert Alkire, Gladyo.;
Hull Cumings. 1942; Don
Gibson.
Garnet
Hen&lt;:lerson
Swisher,
1946: Delores Wood
King. 1947; Be1t Douglas
Gibson. 194X: Rosella
Burchlield
Borgan,
[a, erne Chase, ~lei\ in
Morrb, 1950: Gertrude
Mc.Murra) Monroe, Dale
Haning. Flora Douglas
Osborne. 1951 ; Paul
Cotterill. 1952; Russell

Fred Stanlc),
1953: Hallie Ross. Grac1e
Forbes \\ ilson, Don
Wihmn. Walter Edmond-;.
1955: LaiT) Clark. 1956;
Garey Burgan. Rachacl
Burbridge Lefebre. Allen
McMurray, I 957: Dan
Arnold. llJ58: Virgil
Reeves,
1959:
Joy
Wiseman Clark. Harold
Graham, ,v1artha Arnold
Cunningham. Dorothy
Arnold
Undemood.
~lary Wyant
Haning.
G~u') Gibson. 1960.
Officers elected for
2010-20 II are Vir!!il
Ree\es.
president.
Harold Graham. vice
president; Jo) Wisem,m
Clark. secretan: and .
L.11T) Clark. trea~urer.

services,
Syracuse
Community
Church,
Second
Street,
Syracuse,
through
Saturday, 7 p.m. each
even ing. Rev. Markco
Pritt preaching. Special
music will be held as follows: Monday, Proclaim;
Tuesday, Church youth
choir; Wednesday, Truly
Saved;
Thursday,
Delores Long; Friday,
Light of Hope; Saturday,
Debbie Powell.
POMEROY Open
Concert at the riverfront
stage on the Pomeroy
parking lot featuring

"Truly Saved'' and 'The
Sundermans" 7:30 p.m.
Free hotdogs and pop.
lawn
chair.
Take
Sponsored by the New
Beginnings U.M. Church.
In the event of rain the
concert will be moved to
the church.
Monday, June 21
MIDDLEPORT- "Sea
Quest" vacation Bible
school, 6-8:30 p.m.,
today - Friday, June 25,
Victory Baptist Church,
classes for ages twothree, kindergarten-sixth
grade and an adult class
is also offered.

Community Calendar
Apartment E, Belpre,
Ohio 45741.
POMEROY Ziba
Midkiff of Pomeroy will
observe his 90th birthday
with an open house from
2-4 p.m. today in the dining hall of Rocksprings
Rehabilitation Center, rw
gifts but cards appreciated.

Church events
Thursday, June 17
MIDDLEPORT - Free
community dinner sponsored by Heath United
Methodist Church, 4:30-6
p.m., Dave Diles Park,
beef barbecue, cole slaw,
baked beans, drinks and
dessert.
Friday, June 18
SYRACUSE - Revival

Poston Lake .
Bluegrass Festival
set for this weekend
some of the headliners
include former Doyle
Lawson and Quicksilver
member Barr) Scott and
hi" band Second Wind.
Junior
Sisk
and
Rambler'&lt;, Choice. Gold
Wing Express. The Hart
Brothers. and of course
the ldletymes Band.
The festival is located
off U.S. 50 about 10
miles cast of Athens.
Ohio. on Ohio 329.
For information. ~·isit
WH'w.idlen·mesband.com
m· call (30-1) 422-6956.

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Danny (740)590·9255
Mike (740)590-3701

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Tea Party
continues
petition work
POMEROY
Victor
Smith. Southeast Ohio's
regional coordinator for
the OhJO Proic:t. commended Mctgs County
Tea Partv members for
their success in fi IIi ng
health care petitions
when he attended a recent
meeting. Furthermore. he
called for their hl•lp in
gathering signatures in
other counties.
The Ohio Project aiml&gt;
to place "The Health Care
Freedom Amendment'' to
the Ohio Constitution on
the Nv,ember ballot. 'Ibis
amendment would "pre·
the freedom of
to choose their
care and health care
coverage .'' as stated on ,
The Ohio Projcct website.
The next Tl!a Party
meeting wi ll take place at
the Mulberry Community
Center 7 p.m. Tuesday.
June 22.

17, 2010

Look Up ·
Before you work,
make sure no lines are above.

11111aows

740-667-0J06
....-.
Fm;: 740-667-0~\29
~ ....., Tull hee: S77-l28-SI96

-

�The Daily' Sentinel

The Daily Sentinel
.

111 Court Street • Pomeroy, Ohio

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

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
Sammy M. Lopez
Publisher
Charlene Hoeflich
General Manager-News Editor
Pam Caldwell
Advertising Director
Cottgress shalf make tro law respectittg an
establishment of religion, or prohibiting the free
exercise thereof; o·r abridging thefreedom of
speech, or of the press; or the right of the people
peaceably to assemble, attd to petition the
Got,emment for a redress of grievances.
The First Amendment to the u.'s. Constitution

TODAY IN HISTORY
Today is Thursday, June 17, the 168th day of
2010. There are 197 days left in the year.
·
Today's Highlight in History:
On June 17, 1775, the Revolutionary War Battle
of Bunker Hill took place near Boston. The battle
(which actually occurred on Breed's Hill) was a
costly victory for the British, who suffered heavy
losses while dislodging the rebels.
On this date:
In 1885, the Statue of Liberty arrived in New York
Harbor aboard the French ship lsere.
In 1928, Amelia Earhart embarked on a transAtlantic flight from Newfoundland to Wales with
pilot~ Wilmer Stultz and Louis Gordon, becoming
the f1rst woman t_o make the trip as a passenger.
In 1930, President Herbert Hoover signed the
Smoot-Hawley Tariff Act, which boosted U.S. tariffs
t? historically high levels, prompting foreign retaliation.
In 1940, France asked Germany for terms of surrender in World War II.
In 1944, the republic of Iceland was established.
In 1957, mob underboss Frank Scalice was shot
to death at a produce market in the Bronx, N.Y.
In 1961, Soviet ballet dancer Rudolf Nureyev
defected to the West while his troupe was in Paris.
In 1971, the United States and Japan signed a
treaty under which Okinawa would revert from
A~erican to Japanese control the following year,
w1th the U.S. allowed to maintain military bases
there.
In 1972, President Richard M. Nixon's eventual
~o~nfall began ~ith the arrest of five burglars
10s1de Democratic national headquarters in
Washington D.C.'s Watergate complex.
In 1~86, Pr{:!sident Ronald Reagan announced
the ret1rement of Chief Justice Warren Burger, who
was succeeded by William Rehnquist.
Ten years ago: In Cuba, more than ·300,000 people turned out to protest the continued stay of Elian
Gonzalez in the United States; it was the largest
such demonstration since the previous December,
when Cuba launched a national campaign of mass
gatherings demanding the boy's return.
Five years ago: The nation's Roman Catholic
bishops agreed to a five-year extension on their
unprecedented policy of permanently barring sexually abusive clergy from church work. Marcus
Wesson, the domineering patriarch of a large clan
he'd bred through incest, wa.s convicted in Fresno,
Calif. of murdering nine of his children. (Wesson
was later sentenced to death.) Iran's presidential
election was thrown into a run-off after no candidate won over 50 percent of the vote. (T.ehran's
conservative mayor, Mahmoud Ahmedinejad
(mahk-MOOD'
ah-muh-DEE'-neh-zhadh),
emerged the winner.)

Thought tor Today: "A consensus means that
everyone agrees to say collectively what no
one believes individually." - Abba Eban, Israeli
statesman (1915-2002).

'

LETTERS TO THE EDITOR
Letters to the editor should be limited to 300 words. All letters
are subject to editing. must be signed and include address and
telephone number. No unsigned letters will be published.
Letters should be 1n good taste, address1ng issues, not personalities. ''Thank You" letters will not be accepted lor pub!ICatlon.

c:.

Firing
Bv JENNIFER r.
ASSOCIATED P

A condemned l
decision to die in a b
lets fired by five unr ·
men has been vililil;
an archaic fom1 of&lt;
justice. ·
But som~ e:-.:pe1 t
more humane than
cution methods. \v•t•
challenges of crue
plagued lethal in jec
"Lethal injection
veneer of medical
has far greater risk" ll
condemned
pet
Fordham Universit
profe~sor Deborah
has written c.xte1
constitutional qu
round execution m~
Ronnie Lee Gl1
death by firing squ,
believes it is a mor
to die - not bt·~
drama or centro' ~;..
told The Associat d
"It's not about tl
just prefers it ," \
said.
Late Tuesda\. P !lt
Gardner's case to b
U.S. Circuit Coutt r •
Denver and the L '
Court. hoping to blo
tion. It \vas the same
ate what may be hi" I
steak.lobster tail. apn•
Ia ice cream and 7( P
Prison officials said
intends to fast unti
set for early Frid.t).
Gardner. 49. \\as
death for a 1985 c
conviction stcinn••n
fatal courthouse -;hoot
ney Michael' Bmd I
escape attempt. &lt;.i·11
the court because he
der charge in the '&gt;I
of barten~der Mel\)
Baning any last ,.
Gardner will be the I
die by firing squaci
States in 14 year" I
third man ki lied b
method in Utah
Supreme Court 1'\11·
capital punishment 1 I
Gilmore on Jan . 17. I
famously utte·rill'' t

.

'

NI

.e optiori
Gillespie'
"The·
·-·"- 1, · which chronicles
y o cdpital punishment
CIUCh),''

lw,

n

book

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Reader Services

(usPs 213-9so&gt;

Correction Policy

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.

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

Our main number is
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Department extensions are:

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�Deaths

Kasich campaign rep gave pension fund Lehman input
party has made Kasich 's
time as a managing director at the now-defunct
investment bank a central
theme in Ohio's fall campaign for governor.
Kasich is challenging
Democratic Gov. Ted
Strickland in one of 37
governor's races nationwide.
In his May 3 e-mail.
Kasich spokesman Scott
Milburn advised Ohio
Public
Employees
Retirement System executive Carol Drake that it
would be "valuable to
explain" that Lehman
investments included not
only Lehman stock and
securities but money the
firm invested in other
companies. such
as
McDonald's.
"The media will not get
the full picture unless

The pension fund's calyou explain it: not all of
this money was lossed as culation put actual losses
a result of the Lehman at Sill million - a frac·
bankruptcy,"
Milburn tion of the $23.7 billion
wrote. Milburn and the public employee
Drake are both alums of retirement system had
the administration of for- lost overall during the
mer GOP Gov. Bob Taft. economic downturn.
Lehman's bankruptcy
Milburn told the AP he
was pushmg the fund to in October 2008 was the
release accurate informa- · largest in U.S. history.
The e-mail surfaced at
tiOn to the public.
"Our position is sun- pens•on fund where
pie: we want all the par- Democrats already have
cried foul over their abilities, including the pen
sion funds. to get all the ty to get Lehman-related
facts out without information. The party
omissions and without provided the AP with a
December letter from a
spin." he said
In April. Democratic pension fund attorney
State Treasurer Kevin rejecting its earlier public
Boyce released his calcu- records request seeking
lation on the pension an accounting of the
fund's Lehman invest- Lehman losses. The attorments: a $368 mi11ion loss ney contended that the
of market value from June information fell under
attorney-client privilege.
2007 to December 2008.

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Sears Holding (NASDAQ) 80.00
Wai·Mart (NYSE) - 50.98

COLUMBUS (AP) A campaign operative .of
Republican gubernatonal
candidate John Kasich
L~roy Loudner. 68. died Wednesday, June 16,2010. gavl.! a state pension fund
at h1s residence. Arrangements arc by the Warren- advice on how to explain
Brown Funeral Home. 80 E. Washington St .. its Lehman Brothers
Nelsonville, Ohio .
losses to reporters, e-mail
obtained
by
The
Associated Press shows.
The communication
raises questions about the
cozmcss between a politjcal organization anti a
non partisan agency that
manages billions of dol~IDDLEPORT - The First Baptist Church of lars tor hundreds of thouM 1ddleport \\ill be ha\ ing a "Wet and Wild" Vacation sands of Ohioans.
The $59 billion penBible School June 28-July 2 at the church on the corsion fund. one of the
ncr of South Sixth Avenue and Palmer Street.
There will be classes from 6 to 8:45 p.m. for chil- largest in the state and
dren. kindergarten through sixth grade and all chil- nation. was preparing to
answer questions about
dren in this age range are welcome to attend.
All lessons \\ill revolve around water stories in the losses as Democrats
in
Washington
::;nd
the Bible.
Columbus were drawing
attention to the issue. The

Leroy Loudner

Briefs

Baptists plan Bible school

For the Record

Local Stocks

Sheriff reports
POMEROY - Me1gs County Sheriff Robert Beegle
reports the following investigations and updates:
William D. Reed, 19. Columbus, was arrested in
Licking County and signed a waiver for return to
Meigs County to face a five-count indictment
rned in November of last year. The indictment
s possession of crack cocaine. possessiOn to
rack cocaine. tampering with evidence. having
a weapon while under disability and permitting his
vehicle to be used in a felony drug offense. Reed
was returned to Meigs County yesterday by Sgt.
Scott Trussell.
Robert Thorla was arrested on a bench warrant
from Meigs County Common Pleas Court charging
violation of probation. Thorla has a pending domestic violence charge in Meigs County Court. He is
being held pending a hearing in Meigs County
Common Pleas Court.
Sheriff Beegle also reports the investigation of an
alleged break-in of a home on Ohio 124 in the
Rutland area. Copper was reported missing with the
owner reported!) in a nursing home.
Tuesday mornmg. officials with the sheriff's office
received a call from Amy Young, Vine Street. Racine.
who said a digital camera and change were stolen
from the family's vehicles.
Anyone with any information on these cases is
asked to contact the Meigs County Sheriff's Office
at 992-3371.

1

The Daily Sentinel • Page As

www.mydailysentinel.com

Thursday,June17,20to

Sewer from Page AI

),000 and a mobile
around $50,000.
re are seven lift stations total in Pomeroy
with tentative plans to
take the guts out of the
lift station at the ball
fields and plumb on the
outside of the station.
Musser told council at
this point there was no
figure on what would
have to be spent but "we
have to take action
immediately"
which
would require spending
some "serious money in
the next 30 days."
Spending money nO\V
could save the village
major fines that could
run from $10,000 from
the
Ohio
EPA to
$1 00,000 from the US
EPA. As Musser and
Hellman discussed the
fines. it was mentioned

•

Seelig. junor clas~ advisui. Suzanne Bentz. high
school hewspaper advisor; Denise Arnold, high
school yearbook advisor;
Donna Wolf, high school
student council advisor;
Judy McCarthy. semor
class advisor: and Amy
Perrin, high
school
drama advisor.
Others hired were Ron
Hill. Meigs athletic director and assistant track
coach; Justine Dov. ler.
Meigs Middle Sch&lt;X?l volleyball: Brenda B1ssell.
MHS head baseball coach;
Mike Kloes and Brcnd
Bissell, Meigs Middle
School eighth grade football coach; David Deem,
ao;sistant band director.
and Samantha
. Meigs Middle
volleyball.
board approved
updated and . r~vised by
Jaws and pohc1es as presented at an earlier meet
ing. Also approved was a
12-month contract renewal with Sabo!Limbach for
utility audit services at a
cost of $542.The treasurer
and superintendent were
authorited to enter into
Jnsurance coverage policic~ at an annual permium
of $38.479.

..

the state threatened to
call the US EPA if the
problems
were
not
addressed and soon.
"Wh) are we just nO\\
hearing about this?"
Councilwoman
Ruth
Spaun asked Hellman.
Hellman, who has only
recently taken over the
position. said he didn't
know and that question
would have to be directed
to the previous village
administrator.
Councilman Vic Young
asked if financing these
mandatory
improvements would result in
another rate hike to customers?
"I don't know how it
will affect us ... if it means
down the road there has
to be a rate increase.
that's what we 'II have to
do." Musser said~

Action on a cost proposal of $189.186 for the
replacement of the existing chiller at Meigs
Elementary School from
Elitaire was postponed.
Board members attending were Ryan Mahr.
Ron
Logan.
Roger
Abbott. Larrv Tucker.
and Barbara Musser.

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FundS from Page At

)

for construction of a helipad ·estimated to cost
$37.600. Trustees are
contributing $15,600 to
complete funding for the
project.
The
Rutland
Fire
Department
received
S 18.000 from the cm:nt)
for improvements at fire·
man's park and an elec·
trical upgrade to the p.uk.
The entire project is estimated to cost $18.000.
In all. Commissioners
a v,:arded $120 .000 in
CDBG formula funding
and in addition to this
$7.300 is going to Fa1r
Housing and $19,700 is
going to administration
of the CDBG grant for a
total
of
S 147,000.
according to Trussell.
Trussell reported all projects resulted in a grand

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f~nancial advisors Isaac Mills In
Gallipolis at '740) 441-9441 and
Lesley Marrero In Point
Pleasant at (304) 674-0174.
Member SIPC.

total of $236.800 with
$89,800 of that total
being provided by other
entities to complete funding for the various projects.
Commissioners then
signed a resolution making the application for the
allocations official and
attesting to holding two
public hearings on the
awards. In addition to
applying for the CDBG
formula money for the six
projects. Commissioners
approved Racine ·s application for a $300,000
CDBG
Neighbo,hood
Revitalization Grant.
Commissioners also
signed a resolution certifying the county's compliance with the antidisplacement and relocation
assistance plan for pur-

poses of applying for the
CDBG formula allocation. This resolution basically says any homes
which are slated for
demolition
that
are
appraised at more than
$25 ,000 have to be
replaced in three years.
Commissioners then
approved the second half
appropriation for the
Meigs County Council
on Aging for $4,000.
Davenport
abstained
from the vote because of
his posit10n as president
of the MCCoA.
Commissioners also
approved a resolution
declaring July 18 "Meigs
County Day" at the Great
American
Ballpark.
home of the .CincinnatJ
Reds. Rick ~sh presented.
the resolutwn on behalf

of
W.MPO.
sa)ing
"Meigs County Day'' at •
the park would allow
local residents to purchase a variety of tickets
at half price which would
allow residents to get into
the park for as lo\s, as $5
each. Also the first
I 0,000 fans under the age
of 14 entering the gates
will receive a replica batting helmet. Gates open
at 11:40 a.m. and the
game
against
the
Colorado Rockies is at
1:10 p.m. Call 513-7657600
or
\isit
reds.com/middleport to
find out information or
purchase tickets.
Commissioners
recessed until 11 a.m.
today. Also present at
Wednesday·~
meeting
\\as Clerk Gloria Kloes.

Levy from Page At
the Council discussion:
...., ill nov.: be "pursued'' by
RITA.
Mayor
Michael
Gerlach reported that hiring of five young people
through a Meigs Countv
Jobs and Family Scrvice~s
summer
employment
program to work in the
village is in progress. He
noted that the young people will be working u1der
supervision doing such
jobs as mowing. weeding. and watering.
As for the Pearl Street
project (renovation of the
old school building into
village and jail headquarters) Gerlach reported on
the need for some
nppraisal work prior to
applying for a loan to do
the work. He ~aid estimated cost of the apprai~al is
$2.000. Council approved
the expenditure in anticipation of moving the project fomard.
A discussion on grinding out 27 stump~ on

Powell Street at a cpst of • payment of bills and two Department presented at
$900 on a b1d from the for installation of m the mectmg showed five
calls an~wered in May. two
Jones Tree Service, was ground ~hutoff valves.)
The May report from the of which were for mutual
tabled. Julia Huston,
Fire aid, and three for rescue.
Council member, dis- Middleport
cussed additional plantings of trees and shrubs in
MCGRATH TRUCK &amp; TRACTOR
that area \\'here the trees
were earlier removed.
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�-- --·

--~-- ~----...-. ---- ---- - - - -. -- ~

PageA6

The Daily Sentinel

Thursd ay, June 17 ,

Ohio Guard changes air zone after near miss

LAW YOU CAN USE

Ohioans can app~al
health insurance decisions
The passagc of the 20 I 0
federal health care bi II has
prompted many que ... tions.
For ans\\.Cr:--, Ohioans can
contact
the
Ohio
Department of ln... urancc
consumer hotline at ~00686 1526
or
VIS it
v. wv..insurance.ohio.gov/
company/insprptS .htm.
Q: If my insurer has
denied a claim or
reduced my coverage. is
ther e anything I ca n
do'?
A : If you have coverage through a major medical health insurance
plan. including an FJ\.10
or PPO, or through a
public cmplo) cc benefit
plan. Ohio law may
allow you to appeal the
decision . Thi.., right of
appeal doc.., not apply if
you have a private, selfinsured plan.

Q : If I decide to
a ppeal, what should I
do first?
A: Your insurancc! plan
will have its own internal '
appeal process. and the
Q: How long will the
first step you should take IRO revie\\ take, and
if you disagree with a do I have to pay for it?
decision your insurance
A: The fR O must make
company has made. You its decision within 30
should rc\ iew your poli- days, but if the health
cy or benefits booklet for cond1tion require~ it.
infom1ation about fi ling decisions ma) be expea complaint and/or an dited and made within
appeal. You can also con- seven da) s. An) decision
tact the company's cus- the IR0 makes in ) our
tomer service oftice. favor is binding on the
Af1er a review, the com- insurance
company.
pan) ''ill send you a let- while you keep the right
ter explaining if your to file a pri\ ate lawsuit.
appeal has bcen' rever:--ed even if the IRO decision
or denied. and then will is not in your favor. You
outline the next steps you do not have to pay for the
shou ld take.
IRO review.
Q: What if my insurer says that my policy
doesn't cover a ser vice
I've asked them to
cover?
A: lf the service is not
a question of medical
necessity. you C3n con
tact the Ohio Department
of Insurance's Con:--umer
Affairs Division to initiate another appeal. The
Department ''ill re' icw
the matter. working with
you and the insurer to
re:--olve the issue. You
will not have to pay for
this review. A review
generally takes 30 days,
but each case is different.
For more information,
contact the Department
at 800 686 1526 or visit
www.insurance .ohio .gov.

Q: Wha t if my insu ~­
er denies coverage for a
treatment because it
decides the treatment is
not medically necessaQ?
.
A : If \our msurcr
denies. reduces or lenninates a service or treatment because it determines that the service or
treatment is not medical!) necessar), your case
could be eligible for an
external review with an
independent
review
organization (IRO). The
IRO employs physician
experts knowledgeable
on the specific medical
condition to review such
cases . In order to get an
external review from an
IRO , you must contact

B Y L ISA C ORNWELL
ASSOCIATED PRESS

your insurer and request
it. If you should be in a
terminal condition. the
revie\\ "''&lt;mid be expedited.
Q: Under what cir cumstances might my
case qualify for a n
external r eview with a n
IRO'?
A: Appeals denied
through a health plan's
internal process generally may qualify for external review with an IRO
"hen:
• The insurance compan) has determined the
sc!rvice b not medicall)
necessarv.
• The tending ph) sic ian
document... that the ser\'ice (and all related care)
will cost more than $500
if not covered by insurance.
• The consumer has
requested an external
review withi n 60 days of
being ·notified about the
insurance
company's
internal decision.

Q: How does my doctor get imolved in the
appeal process?
A: Your physician can
appe"l the insurer's decision on ) our behalf. but
only with your consent.
Ir-yt&gt;u decidt: tu file an
appeal, ) our phy ... ician
mt~sl J2rO\ ide yop with
any neccssal)' supporting
documenratkm. In the
case of a non-terminal
condition or are\ iew that
does not need to be expedited. your physician
must certify that the procedure. technology or
service. including follow-up case. would cost
at least $500. In the case
of an expedited revie\\.,
your physician must
identify your needs and
certify that your health
could be in serious jeopardy. If your condition
were terminal. your doctor would have to certify
that you would likely to
die within two years ana
that more than standard
therapy is needed.
This ''Law You Can
Use" column was prorided bv the Ohio State Bar
A.uociation. It H·as prepared by the Ohio
Department
of
Insurance. The column
offc!n general information about the laH. Seek
an attorney :5 adrice
hefore applying this
information to a legal
problem.

CINCINNATI - The
Ohio Air National Gunrd
is increasing the buffer
zone bct\\Cen militar')
and commercial air space
after two F-16 fighter jets
new ncar the path of' a
commuter jet over south·
west Ohi() in Apri l, a
official
:-aid
Guard
Wednesday.
I he executive officer
of the guard's Toledobasc!d !80th Fightcr
Wing :-.aid that the military pilots irnol\ed in the
flight also hme becn

assigned extra training.
Safct) procedure-. were
re-emphasi.t.cd to all
pilots \\ ithin the 180rh
wing. Maj. Gary Bentley
said.
The Federal Aviation
Administration reported
a "ncar-miss incident" on
April H. when authorities
said the two fighter jets
came close enough to
trigger a cockpit alarm in
the Atlantic Southeast
Airlines commuter jet.
The !80th said in a
news rclea..,c this v.eek
that its investigation
found weather \\as~a factor v. hen the lead F-16

pilot unintentional!) new
ubO\e the maxinn.m altitude of 28,000 feet.
Radar shov. ed the F-16s
"'ere !lying at 30,000
feet, \\ hich was ''here
the cortHllercial plane
was flying a~ planned.
the FAA had said.
The pilot "lm.t situational awareness" as ht.:
was nying at tht• cciling
of the authori;e&lt;.! military
air space- \\.hilc trying to
get above rougher a1r at
lower altitude..... the statement ..,aid.
A second pi lot folio\\in!.! his lead a! o flew
above 28.000 feet but

informed the lead pilot
that the) ''ere too high.
and both planes descended back into the &lt;..afet)
;one. Bentle) said.
Bentlc) ~ays the . . afcty
Lone betv.een military
and other air space h&lt;.l ·
been ~ouhlcd to 5 nau1
cal miles.
Atlantic
Southeast
Airlines said in April that
the
commuter
jet
remained on its fli~ht
path from Cleveland~to
Atlanta after seein~ the
P- 16s. The commercial
flight carr) ing 58 passengers and four crew members landed safely.

Feds: Woman took 506 pounds of pot to Ohio on jet
I

Bv

J EANNIE

Nuss

ASSOCIATED PRESS

COLUMBUS ' A
California "oman traveling with a bod) guard on
a private jet was arrested
at an Ohio airport with
506 pounds of marijuana
stashed in 13 qJitcascs.
federal authorities said.
Lisette l.ce. the bodyguard and two personal
assistants were arre~tcd
Monday night after the
Drug
Enforcement
Administration got a tip
that the 28-&gt; car-old
woman v. as tnn c Iing
'' ith a suspicious amount
of luggage.
After the chartered

plane
landed
in
Columbus. one of Lee's
a. . si..,tants and her bodyguard helped baggage_
workers unload some of
the luggage. authorities
said. It took two men to
carry some of the large
stutcases. which were
packed With bricks of
pot. and three vehicles to
carry all the luggage.
authorities said.
Authoritie.., also Confi~­
cated from Lee's bag three
cell phones. cocaine. marijuana. drug paraphernalia
... u. . pected
drug
and
ledgers that sMwed some
$300,000 in transactions.
Lee was chamed ,., ith
conspirac) and~ posses-

Ohio: Chasing coyotes

off airport runways OK
DAYTON (AP)
State wildlife authnritics
say employees at an Ohio
airport did not break laws
by using motor \chicle:-.
to chase l'O) otcs off the
runways
Di' i~ion
of
State
Wildlife off1cial Da\C
Kohler smd 1 uesda) that
investigators found no
e\·idcnce that Dayton
International
Airport
emplo) ecs tried to run
over the animals m April.
T he state sa) s the
employee... nul) hunt or
trap CO)OtCs \\ith \Chi-

clcs but says new perimeter fences at the airport
probably will keep the
animals out.
Pederal
regulators
require airports to keep
run\\avs free of animals
for tlie safetv of aircraft.
Airport offici:tls ~a)
c!mplo) ees drive along
run\\. a's and honk horns
to scare awa\' linimals
spotted b) air traffic
controllers. The airport
says it oocs not allO\\
inhumane treatment of
animals.

sion of drugs With the
intent to distribute. Her
attorney:-, Hill ~leek:. and
Da\ c Thomas, did not
immediately ret,lrn a
message left Wednesday.
She was being held without bail pending a Friday
hearing.
Her bodyguard and t\\.0
personal assi..,tanh were
released pending JX)ssiblc
indictments, DEA agent
Anthony .Marotta said.,
Lee told invcsti~ators
that she chartered thc!
plane from Van .1'\u) ~.
Calif.. to Columi)us to·
\ isit a boyfricnJ and
transport equ1pment to a
hor~c farm. She said it
was her fourth such trip.

She said· a friend paid
her $60.000 to take more
than a dozen :--uitca~es
from Lo:-. Angeles to an
unattended hotel room in
Columbus. sta) for a fC\\
days and then bring back
fewer pieces of luggage.
authoritie.., said.
Lee later told im C!-&gt;tigators that she and her
entourage knew the ho. s'
story was phon) and t
the\ \Verc likelv involve
'' ith "weapons and
monc" launderin~ or
something." authorities
\\fote in court paper~.
If con' icted. Lee could
face up to 40 year~ in
pri...,on and a fine of up to
S2 million.

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Meigs Co.
Forecast
Thursda y . .. 1\1 ost I)
sunny. Highs in the mid
80s. Nm1hwcst v. inds 5
to 10 mph.
Thursday
night .. ,
!\lostly dear. Lows in the
upper 50s. Nm1h winds
around
5
mph ...Becom ing
cast
around 5 mph after midnight.
Friday...Putchy dense
fo n in the morning .
St~my. High~ in the upper
80s. East wind.;; around 5
mph ... Becomi ng south
around 5 mph in the afternoon.
Friday night ...r-.tostly
clear
in
the
c \·ening ...Then becoming
partly cloudy. Lows in
the mid 60s. Southeast
winds around 5 mph.

2010

All 8/ACC/ WAllfTS $5.00
Wing Boots on Sale

8"- 15% off
6"- JOo/o off

Route 2 Bypass

Point Pleasant, WV

(304) 675-7870
Mon-Sat. 9·7, Sun 12 Noon·S

�The Daily Sentinel

Inside

..

Bl

Local Sports Briefs, Page B2
World Cup Soccer, Page B6

Thursday, June 17,2010
l!QcAL Sc
•

TLE

.IERICAN LEGION BASEBALL
Ihursd~~Y&gt; June l7

Post 27 (Gallipolis) at ~~cArthur. 6
p.m.
Post 39 (Pomeroy) at Portsmouth
(DH). 6 p.m.

.

.s~~
Post 39 at Lancaster (DH) 1 p.m.

Parkersb~~~~·~~';;~';U:~H). 1 p.m.
M.o.D.d.ay,~

Marietta at Post 27, 6 p.m.
~_JJJile....22

Post 39 at Athens, 6 p.m.
.Ed.cl.a.Y.~

Post 39 at Chillicothe. 6 p.m.

•
rl•
li

county

Point Pleasant lands four on all-state team
Herdman named first team allstate for second straight season
B Y S ARAH H AWLEY
SHAWLEY@MYDAILYTAIBUNE.::OM

Following a season
which ended in a fourth
consecutive trip to the
Class AA State Baseball
Tournament. the Point
Pleasant baseball team
has landed four players
on the Class AA AllState baseball team,
including one first team
selection.
Point Pleasant senior
D.W. Herdman was the

team's first team honoree
as
an
outfielder.
Herdman is a repeat
selection to the first
team, making the team
for the 2009 season, also
as an outfielder.
Point Pleasant pitcher
Brock McClung was
named special honorable
mention for his efforts on
the mound this season.
McClung
was
also
named to the special
honorable mention list in
2009 as an outfielder.

CON

Herdman

Herbert
Hoover's
Patrick Ryan was named
captain of the first team,
with Braxton County's
Kenton Morlan being
named captain of the
second team.

Junior Golf
Tour gets Lakers, Celtics shrug weight of history in Game 7
~ nderway -

•

B Y F RANK CAPEHART
SPECIAL TO THE SENTINEL

POINT PLEASANT,
W.Va. - Overcast skies
and early light rain may
have held down the overa.ll. number of young partiCipants. but didn't
dampen the spirits of
those present for the
opening round of TriCounty Junior Golf at
Hidden Valley Golf
Course in Point Pleasant,
W.Va.
A few holes into the
round. bright sunshine
popped out. and the
whole day turned out to
be a first class beginning
of this 28th year.
fn the premier 15-17
age
group.
Justin
Cavendar
of
Point
a. sant. W.Va. captured
, place with a 43, the
score of the day. The
ond place finisher,
v.tth a 52. was Dakota
Si~k of New Haven,
W.Va. and third went to
Seth Jan·ell of Gallipolis,
Ohio.
The'largest group of the
opener was the 13-14
brJcket. Gus Slone of
Crown City. Ohio. fashtoned a 51 to win top
honors. Runner-up was
f\ ick Taylor of Point
Pleasant as he posted a
61,
while
Ryan
Schenkelberg
of
Middleport. Ohio was
one stroke off that at 62
for third place.
Four young swingers
tied for foUtth in the 13. 14 group. Casin Roush
and Ethan Swain, both of
Crown City, Ohio, ~long
with Pomeroy. Ohio,
'players Trenton Cook and
Josh Parker formed that
dlocked group. just
•
ad of Brandon Meyer
of Crown City, Ohio.
Jacob
Hoback of
Racine. Ohio shot a 54 to
win first place in the 1112 age group, while
Addison
Stanley
of
Gallipolis. Ohio garnered
second place with a 64.
In the youngest divi• sion. 10 and under, Jonah
Hoback of Racine, Ohio.
put together a good round
of 53 to grab first place,
while Jasiah Brewer of
Pomeroy, Ohio, carried
off the runner-up honors
· \.\ith a 57. Five year old
Maddux Camden of Rio
Grande, Ohio. posted a
67 for third place.
The junior golfers
reconvene next Monday
at Riverside in Mason,
-W.Va .. , for the second
round of the 20 I 0 Tour.
Registration
begins
around 8:30 a.m. with a
A t_gun tee-off scheduled
·~ a.m. All area young
lurksters are eligible and
urged to join the field
each week to grow golf
.skills and enjoy the fellowship.
Cost is $10 per player,
which covers green fees,
prizes,
and
lunch.
Directors Jeff Slone, Jan
·Haddox,
and
Bob
:Blessing will be on hand
•to oversee. instruct, and
welcome youth and par
ents.

I

NC

Big Ten
must tackle
divisions,
scheduling

McCl ung

Infielder Cl~y Krebs
and utility player Titus
Russell were honorable
mention selections for
Point Pleasant. Russell
was a repeat selection
from 2009.

R

LOS ANGELES (AP) '
Even when Lamar
Odom was a kid with
limitless
imagination
growing up on New
York's
playground
courts, he thinks he
might have dismissed
Thursday's season finale
as a bit too extravagant.
When the Los Angeles
Lakers take on the
Boston Celtics in Game 7
of the NBA finals, Odom
realizes it's a fantasy
come true for any basketball player with the
audacity to dream this
big.
''It's historic, especially when you talk about
these teams and what
they stand for. the pride,"
the Lakers forward said
Wednesday. ''This is
what you envision when
you're a kid in your
backyard.
Counting
down, 5, 4, 3, 2, 1..."
Another memorable
chapter in the NBA's best
rivalry will end with a
coronation at Staples
Center.
where
the
defending
champion
Lakers will try to earn
their I 6th banner while
denying
Boston
its
unprecedented 18th title
in the clubs' second
finals meeting in three
years.
For the fifth time in
their 12 finals meetmgs,
Boston and Los Angeles
need all seven games to
Wally Skatij/Los Angeles Times/MCT
decide it. Each previous The Boston Celtics' Kevin Garnett reacts to Tony Allen being called for a foul durtime it went to Game 7. ing the fourth quarter against the Los Angeles Lakers in Game 6 of the NBA Finals
the Celtics won - but at Staples Center in Los Angeles, California, on Tuesday.
when the current Lakers with 29.5 points per Tuesday night. Most for
Perkins'
inside
and Celtics take the court game. "(When) I look g laringly. Boston won't defense and rebounding.
for the NBA finals· first back, years from now, or have starting center
No visiting team has
Game 7 since 2005 and even when I was a kid, Kendrick Perkins. who won an NBA champijust its second in the past (if) you'd talk about sprained multiple liga- onship in Game 7 since
16 years, most wili try being in this situation. I'd ments in his right knee in the Washington Bullets
av. fully hard not to think be really excited. But · the first quarter. .
did it m 1978. yer the
about the history and when I'm in the moment
The Celtics' starting Ce1tics are a whole lot
pressure heaped on their right now. I've got to five has never lost a play- more woiTied about the
shoulders.
play. I've got to focus on off series, but that five Lakers
than
the
It's fine for kids and that. I can't focus on the must change for Game 7. Hollywood crowd.
historians to savor this hype about it."
''I just love the presAlthough Perkins is a
scenario,
but
Kobe
Although Boston has role player next to sure," said Paul Pierce.
Bryant knows it's not a the rivalry's Game 7 his- Boston's Big Three and who leads the Celtics
good idea for players to tory on its side, the point
guard
Rajon with 18 points per game.
get caught up in it.
Celtics have plenty Rondo . the Celtics must ·'I love the fact that 1 get
"It's got nothing to do stacked against them hope veteran Rasheed to play against the Los
with me," said Bryant. after an embarrassing 89- Wallace and youngster
the series' leading scorer 67 loss in Game 6 Glen Davis can make up
Please see Finals, 86

COLUMBUS, Ohio
(AP) - The Big Ten had
neatly drawn up its football schedules for the
next three seasons before
Nebraska joined the conference.
Now those dates and
travel plans have all been
tossed to the wind.
When conference officials and member athletic
directors meet in late July
or early August, they'll
face a thicket of questions in a brave, new
world for the Big Ten.
With Nebraska on
board as the Big Ten's
12th member. most likely
starting in 2011. what
will be the divisions in
football? How should the
· conference schedule be
set up? Where will the
football championship
game be played? Will
there be different divisional alignments to balance other sports?
"We'll meet, talk about
divisions. try to figure
that piece out and talk
about a process for a
championship game and
a location process," Ohio
State athletic director
Gene
Smith
said
Wednesday.
"There '11
probably be other opinions in the room."
No doubt. Some will
want the divisions based
on geography. Others
favor a balance of power.
"I honestly think it will
be amenable," Minnesota
AD Joel Maturi said .
·'We have a great group
of AD's who see the big
picture and get along. It
may not be easx but that
is only because it is difficult and challenging. I
really have no strong
preference except the
hope to continue some of
our
strong
relationships/rivalries."
Even once a consensus
is reached on a divisional
setup. there are a multitude of other considerations.
Commissioner
Jim
Delany acknowledged
that
just
bringing
Nebraska into the fold
vvas only the first step.
"Making the integration successful. smooth
and quick is the second,''
he smd in announcing the
~
expansion.
Conference officials
and ADs are trying to set
up a v. orkable date to
meet and discuss the concerns.
For instance, how

Please see Big Ten, 86

Pebble now an intimate
meeting of land and sea
PEBBLE
BEACH ,
Calif. (AP) - One shot
that stands o ut from the
last U.S . Open at Pebble
Beach was the 7-iron
that Tiger Woods gouged
out of the right rough on
the par-5 sixth, a blind
shot over the hill and
onto the green to tum
trouble into birdie.
He might not get so
lucky if it happens this
year.
That famous meeting
of land and sea is a lot
more intimate at this
U.S. Open.
In a subtle change that
could put even t;nore fear
into Pebble Beach, the
USGA opted to elimtnate
the rough on six holes
along the Pacific coastli ne, allowing errant
shots to go over the cliff
and into the biggest

water hazard in golf.
"If the wind is into us
on those holes. you 're
going to see a lot of fun
and games," Ernie Els
said. "I actually hit one
onto the beach the other
day on the lOth hole. If
you just leak it there.
there's no way. The cliff
comes into the fairway a
little bit and from the tee.
you might think you can
fly it over that side. But
you can't. Or at least I
can't."
Els d idn't go down to
the beach to play his next
shot. I ~ was a practice
round. Besides. "I don't
know if I wou ld have
come back up.''
Padraig
Harri ngton
knows where not to hit
his tee shot on the stxth

Please see Ciolf, Bl

Orville Myers/Monterey County Heratd/MCT

Caddy Steve Williams hands Tiger Wooos a putter on the second green during a
practice round for the U.S. Open at Pebble Beach Golf Course in Pebble Beach,
California, on Sunday.

�Page B2 • The Daily Sentinel

W.Va. Class AA all-state baseball team
WAYNE, W.Va (AP)- The Class AA All-State baseball team announced
Wednesday by the West Virginia Sports Writers Association:
FIRST TEAM

P - Jameson Landers, Sissonville, sr.
P- Nick Mayle, Grafton, sr.
P - Justin Fox, Magnolia, jr.
P - Kendrick Epling, Independence, sr.
C Aaron Pertee, Wyoming East, sr.
IF - Luke Corley, Ravenswood, jr.
IF- Patrick Ryan, Herbert Hoover, sr. (capt.)
IF - Jeff Conley, Frankfort, sr.
IF - Jeremy Chinn, Wayne, sr.
OF - Tyler Burdette, Sissonville, sr.
OF- D.W. Herdman, Point Pleasant, sr
OF- Caleb Toparls. Chapmanville, sr.
UTL - Caleb Ballard, James Monroe. sr.
UTL - Josh Harlow, Lincoln, sr.
UTL - Jamie Hurd, Herbert Hoover, sr
UTL - Josh Jones, Roane County, sr.
SECOND TEAM

P - Chris Bittenger, Weir, sr.
P- Travis McKinney, Wyoming East. soph.
P - tan Dransfield, James Monroe, sr.
P - Marcus Weaver, Frankfort, sr.
C - Jerad Wolfe, Oak Hill, jr.
IF- Kenton Morlan. Braxton County, sr. (capt.)
IF - Daniel Eisenberg, Roane County, sr.
IF - Mason Rine, Magnolia. sr.
IF - Kenny Harper, Sissonville. sr.
OF - Chase Feaster, Petersburg. sr.
OF - Austin Mills. Wayne. Jr.
OF- DeAndre Leonard. Oak Hill. jr.
UTL - Justin Kelly, Philip Barbour. sr.
UTL - McKinley Morgan, James Monroe. sr.
UTL - Aaron Conant, Braxton County, jr.
UTL - Colby Vanoy, Ritchie County, jr.
SPECIAL HONORABLE MENDON

P - Dylan Clay, Liberty Raleigh; ~uinn Gray, Shady Spring; Trevor Smith.
James Monroe; Brock McClung, Pomt Pleasant.
C - Alex Mace. Roane County; Jordan Kirk, Chapmanville; Brad Fox,
Bluefield.
IF- Jeremiah Ramsey, Braxton County; Aaron Cantrell, Wyoming East;
Teran McKinney, Summers County; Michael Muovich. Liberty Raleigh; Corey
Lilly, Shady Spring; Michael Harless, Westside; Tyler Rogers. Philip Barbour;
Shay Noss, Liberty Harrison; Jason Wagner, Grafton; Derrick White. Wayne;
John Morgan, Sissonville; Josh O'Dell, Petersburg.
OF - Lance Casto. Ravenswood; Seth Pay, Magnolia; Justin Frame,
Braxton County; Trevor Mouser. Philip Barbour; Brandon Davis, Lincoln; Cory
Bird, Herbert Hoover; Stephen Perdue, Clay County; Jake Halstead,
Sherman.
UTL - Zack Minger, Tyler Consolidated; Garrett Lemasters, Weir; Trevor
Gray, Independence; Chase Fitzwater, Greenbrier West; Kenny Healey,
Lincoln; Shea Davis, Liberty Harrison; Danny Cole, Wayne; Jordan Banks,
Chapmarwllle; David Beaver, Poca; Sammy Mosley, Tolsia; Jared Spielman,
Berkeley Springs; Tyler Cox, Chapmanville; Matt Hatfield, PikeView.
HONORABLE MENTION

P- Derek Thornton, Wyoming East; Jordan Massey, Sherman.
C - Clayton Shaver, Braxton County; Chase Alonso. Liberty Harrison;
Darryl Deliere, Herbert Hoover.
IF - Nick Varney, Clay County; Kyle Hurley. Wyoming East; Jacob Shea,
Liberty Raleigh; Willy Lilly, Shady Spring; Shawn McKinney, Independence;
Cameron Brown. Westside; Tanner Lilly. Summers County; Cody Winter,
Lincoln; J.C. Musgrove, Grafton; Tyler Thompson, Scott; Jordan Chevalier.
Sissonville; Clay Krebs, Point Pleasant; Ethan Landis, Frankfort; Lucas
Redick, Berkeley Springs; Josh Evans, Petersburg.
1
OF - Josh Wine, Roane County; Steven Barr. Oak Glen; Justin Harvey,
James Monroe; Tyler Adkins Wayne; Grayson Hamrick, Clay County; Jonas
Jelich. Ravenswood; Marcus Constantino, Bluefield.
UTL - Chuck McEianey, Magnolia; Dustin Nuckels, Oak Hill; Justin
Clemins, Mount View; Cody Duvall, Tolsia; Cody Varney, Tug Valley; Craig
Johnson, Chapmanville; Grant Perrine, Webster County; Titus Russell, Point
Pleasant; Taylor Humphrey. Poca.

COLUMBUS, Ohio
(AP) - Ohio State is
close to filling several
non-conference openings on the football
team's future schedules.
Athletic director Gene
Smith said Wednesday
that he expected to fill
an Oct. 15, 2011, hole
on the schedule and
some other non-Big Ten
games soon. The opening next year falls
between games at Penn
State and at home with
Minnesota.
"We're still working
em a game in 20 11,"
Smith said. "So hopefully we'll have an
announcement
about
that in the next month or
so."
That won't be all the
changes taking place on
Ohio State's upcoming
schedules. Big Ten athletic
directors
and
league officials will be
meeting later this summer to hash out the conference schedules starting in 2011, when
Nebraska is expected to
begin play as the conference's 12th team.
Most likely, the conference will go to a twodivision setup with a
postseason
championship game.
The only non-conference game scheduled in
2013 is at California on
Sept. 14, leaving three
openings that Smith
said he hoped to also fill
soon.
The 2014 season will
open with a game on
Aug. 30 against Navy at
M&amp;T Bank Stadium in
Baltimore, home of the
Ravens. Home games
against Cincinnati, Kent
State and Virginia Tech
follow on the next three
Saturdays before conference play begins.
There are several
open dates starting with
the 2015 season, with
only five games set. The
Buckeyes
play
at
Virginia Tech on Sept.
19, 2015, and play
games away and then at

Thursday,Junet7,2010

www.mydailysentinel.com

home against Oklahoma
20 16-17
and
in
Tennessee in 2018-19.
The non-conference
schedule for 2012 is set,
with Miami (Ohio),
Cincinnati, California
and UAB all at Ohio
Stadium to begin the
season. The bye week is
Oct. 13, but that likely
will change when the
Big Ten reworks its
slate of conference
games.
The Buckeyes play
four home games out of
league
this
fall:
Marshall on Sept. 2,
Miami (Fla.) on Sept.
11 , Ohio on Sept. 18
and Eastern Michigan
on Sept. 25.

•

Local Sports Briefs

BBYFL signups
MIDDLEPORT, Ohio - The Big Bend Youth
Football League will be holding sign ups for the 20 tO
football season every Saturday in July from 11 a.m. to 1
p.m. at the Veterans Memorial Stadium in Middleport,
Ohio. All interested players and cheerleaders are
encouraged to sign up. Players will be fitted for equipment at that time.
Football and Cheerleading Camp will begin August 2.
For more information contact Dave at 304-674-5178,
Sarah at 740-698-4054, or Regina at 740-698-2804.

Co-Ed Softball Tournament
SYRACUSE, Ohio - A co-ed softball tournament
will be held to benefit the BBYFL on July 17 and 18 at
the Syracuse Ball Fields. Teams will be five and five
with a $150 entry fee. To register a team or for more
information contact Regina at 740-698-2804 or Sarah at
740-698-4054. The top two teams will receive prizes.

RVHS Basketball Camp
BIDWELL, Ohio - The River Valley Basketball
Program will be holding a basketball camp for boys
entering ~ades 6-9 from June 21-24. The camp will be
held at River Valley High School and will run from 8:30
a.m. to Noon each day.
The Camp will be conducted by Head Coach Jordan
Hill along with assistant coaches and current and former
players. Fundamentals, team concepts. and effort necessary for becoming a varsity basketball player will be
taught. Camp features will include station work, skills
games, and cqmpetitive team play. Each camper will
receive a River Valley Basketball T-shirt.
Cost for the camp is $40 per camper or $35 per
camper for two or more from the same household.
Camp brochures can be picked up in the high school
office. Payment must be received on or before the frrst
day of camp. Checks can be made payable to the RVHS
Boosters. Registration will be held on the ftrst day of

Golf
from Page Bl ·
hole. He pushed it a little
bit to the right during the
Pebble Beach National
Pro-Am in February and
watched it tumble over
the bluffs and onto the
rocks at Stillwater Cove.
''l"in not sure if it's
playable to the right," he
said. "It certainly wasn't
playable then.''
That's just one more
element for Woods, Phil
Mickelson,
Lee
Westwood and the rest of
the J56-man field to contend with when the I lOth
U.S. Open gets under
way on Thursday.
Pebble Beach already
is a severe test with its
tiny greens. already so
firm that the USGA put
water on them before the
final practice round
Wednesday to keep them
from dying by the weekend. The forecast is for
cool temperatures and no
rain all week, although
there is no predicting
whether a marine layer
will keep the sun off the
Monterey Peninsula.
"Fog will be the players' friend," said Roger
Maltbie, a Pebble regular
who now works for NBC
Sports. "If we get sunny
conditions with a bit of
breeze, this will be a

great championship. And
I'd be very surprised if
anyone breaks par."
Only one player broke
par the last time Woods with an unfathomable 12-under 272 to
win by 15 shots.
Woods played only the
back nine Wednesday,
finishing with a tee shot
into the bunker on the
18th, blasting out to the
fairway, then ripping a 2iron onto the green.
Asked what club he
used, Woods laughed and
said, "None of your business."
That was a reference to
his terse reply when
someone asked about the
state of his marriage in
his press conference
Tuesday. With so much
chaos in his personal life,
Woods has enough to get
his attention at Pebble
Beach.
Pebble is as beautiful
as ever this week. It figures to be as brutal a test
at the U.S. Open.
"It's a course where
you need to bring your
complete game," Geoff
Ogilvy said. "Of all the
venues, when Pebble is
set up like this, it's the
one that separates a guy
who is on top of his
game. That was definitely true in 2000. And I
think it will be this
time."
Pebble Beach is only
7 ,040 yards, the shortest

1
camp.
Early registration and payment can be mailed to River
Valley High School Jordan Hill Head basketball coach,
8785 St. Rt. 160, Bidwell, Ohio, 45614.
For questions contact Coach Hill at 740-416-0728.

Southern basketball camps
RACINE, Ohio - The Southern basketball program
will be ho&amp;ting a basketball camp this summer. The
camp is for boys and girls entering the second throu.
sixth grades. The camp will run from June 21-24 fro
9 a.m. to Noon daily. The camp will be conducted by
head coach Jeff Caldwell with help from assist coaches,
as well as, current and former varsity players.
Fundamentals will be stressed and awards presented for
3 on 3, "HORSE", and free throw competitions.
Cost is $40 for one camper or $65 for two campers
from the same family. Each camper will receive a camp
T-shirt. Registration is from 8:30a.m. to 9 a.m. on the
first day of camp.
For further infotmation about the camp contact coach
Jeff Caldwell at 740-949-3129. •

-

SHS Volleyball Camp
RACINE. Ohio - Southem High School will be
offering a volleyball camp for girls going into grades 38 from August 2-5. in the high school gym. This learning experience will be a chance for girls to interact with
high school coaches and players and develop an understanding of volleyball mechanics and fundamentals
through drills. matches. games, and contests. Each
camper will receive a free T-shirt and have the opportunity to win several other prizes.
.
The camp will by split in to two groups. with girls
from 3rd to 5th grades from 9 to 11:30 a.m. and girls 6th
to 8th grades from I to 4 p.m. There is a fee of $35 per
camper or $60 for a family of two. Campers are asked
to bring knee pads and a water bottle, and are asked .
arrive early on the ftrst day for registration.
To preregister call Coach Dickson at 740-525-2500.
track for a U.S. Open in
seven years, yet it tests
so much of the game off the tee, from the fairway, around the green,
and the patience requir~d
at what is billed the
"toughest test in golf.''
Shaving down the
rough along the ocean,
and around the edges of
fairway bunkers, could
make it even tougher. It's
not a links course,
although the strategy
might be similar this
week.
"You're trying to avoid
the bunkers, you're trying to avoid the ocean,"
said Mike Davis. the
senior director of rules
and competition who set
up the course. "The
ground matters. We're
really accentuating gravity this week. Where is
gravity taking the golf
ball? We don't get that
lucky very often.''
It was a swamp at
Bethpage Black last
year, when Lucas Glover
outlasted the field in a
rain-delayed
Monday
finish. Even at Torrey
Pines two years ago in
San Diego, another
coastal Open, the sticky,
kikuyu grass keeps the
fairways from running
fast.
Pebble is a treat in so
many ways.
"You have to be in
control,"
complete
Ogilvy said. ''Whether

the winning score is 12
over or 12 under, if the
guy with every aspect of
his game wins, there's
nothing more you can
ask of a golf course."
Mickelson has one
request - anything but
a silver medal.
He has a record five of ·
them already from being ·
the runner-up at the U.S.
Open, all in the past 11
years. Mickelson celebrated his 40th birthday
on Wednesday by playing golf at Cypress
Point. considered the
finest coastal course in
America. ·
Mickelson, who could
become No. 1 in the
world this week with
least a third-place finis
played Pebble Beach la
week and knows it as
well as anyone. He is a
three-time winner of the
PGA Tour stop, and he
opened the 1992 U.S.
Open with a 68 in· his
first round as a pro. He
shot 81 the next day and
missed the cut.
The par-3 seventh at
Shinnecock in 2004 where Mickelson was
the runner-up - became
so dead that balls no
longer stayed on the
green and it had to be
watered in the middle of
the wund.
Otherwise. he thinks
it's about perfect. And so
do many others.

I

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Rent Drop resume off at d~rector. The qualified 61151201 0
About
• Billy G.
DirecTV today!
or lender is properly
SetVice at Carmtchael Spectals • call tor Gallipolis AAA office or applicant wtll possess
following ~C~om~bs~===~
Trailers
licensed. {Th1s is a
Packages start at
details 304·674·0023 lax attn· AI 740·351- the
740·446·3825
reqUirement~:
Must
Wanted
publiC
SeiVtCe
or 304·610·0776
$29.99
0537
have strong written and ;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;;;:;;;;;:~;;;;;:=
announcement from the
1·866-541·0834
oral
communication J
&amp; J Patnting
Oh1o Valley Publishing
Company)
skills,
must
have lntenor/exterior
excellent organizational
. ,,..,. •. -,., 1
QLSJ:i
skills, knowledge of power
washtng
~. :o.-,.:1 .......... f
f
, ,
• =Ammals ,.
MDS and State/Federal homes garages bam.
NETWQB....K

CLASSIFIED

••

600

regulattons. must be
creative
and
have
experience working tn
an actiVIty program or
have
an
activity
certtf1C8tion.
Please
send
resumes
to
Overbrook
Rehabi itahon Center,
Attn. Charla Brown·
McGwe, 333 Page
Street, Middleport, Oh
45760.
Overbrook
Rehabllitalton Center is
an
EOE
and
a
partictpant m the Drug
Workplace
Free
grogram.

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1\ Do-it-yourself classified ads
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NOW

f1ll' prtvata
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Runs 30 de~yo; lllllrcllllndln, 1 mlll'dlllntlhlt, 1
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The Daily Sentinel
www. mydai lysenti nel. com

Found- sm. biJwh,
collie/spaniel
mix.
near
A-spring
Nursing,
740-4162863

Free Est. have ref.
304·812-7689

Save up to 40~o off
your cable bill I Call
~~~-~~~
dish Network
GREEN
LAWN
today! 1·8n·274Mowtng
304·675·
2471
1610 or 304·593·
1960 No job too btg
or small•

Lif~

300

Servlces

General Repairs
SUMMER SPECIAL
1. Driveway Seal,
Coating &amp; Repair.
2. Gutter's cleaned,
repaired &amp; installed
3. Painttng &amp; yard
work &amp; misc. odd
jobs.
Senior discount,
licensed &amp; bonded.
Home ph. 304·882·
3959
Cell ph. 304-812:
3004

Notices
NOTICE
OHIO
VALLEY PUBLISHING
CO. recommends that
you do busmess with
people you know. and
NOT to send money
through the mail unttl
you have investigating
the oHering.

Pictures that
have been
placed in ads at
the Gallipolis
Daily Tribune
must be picked
within 30 days.
Any pictures
that are not
picked up will
be
discarded.

Home Improvements
Basement
Waterproofing
Uncond tiOna I tot me
guarantee LCC&lt;~I
references •umtshed
Established 1975. Call
24 Hrs 740-446-0870,
Rogers BaseMent
Wa.terprooltng

Are You Protected?
An identity Is stolen
every 3 seconds.
Call Llfelock now to
protect your family
free for 30-days! 1·
877· 481·4882
Promocode:

10

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Unlimited local
and long
distance
calling for only
$24.99 per
month.
Get reliable phone
servtce from
Vonago
Call Todayl
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Profeuional Services
TUr:lNED DOWN ON
SOCIAL SECURITY
SSI
No Foo Unless We
Win'
1 ·888·582·3345

. •.

, 1

·.1.-ul\11~-..·

Pets
Cocker
Spamel
Pupptes lor sale S75
Full Blooded. buff
color 7 40-388·0401.
Free
kittens,
all
colors call 740-9493408 leave message
tf no answer
PLEASE
HELP'
found 13 abandon
kittens. all colors.
healthy, wtll pay to
have
spayed
or
neutered
7 40-416·
0799
AKC Boston Terrier
pups,
M'F
9wks
old,shots &amp; woiTT'ed
$425.00
304-4192504 Before 1Op m
Gtve away-Reg 6y'
German
Shep.needs fenced
yard 304-593-2101

F

700 -

AgrJculture

Farm Equipment

STIHL Sales &amp; SetVtce
SEPTIC
PUMPING Now
Avatfable
at
Galha Co. OH and Carmichael EqUipment
Best Lawn Care 740- Milson Co. WV Ron· 140-446·2412
Evans Jackson, OH
645-1488
800·537·9528
lawn Service

'·'

Yard work, mowing,
tree work, will haul
off unwanted items,
740-367·7550
or
740.367..0291

Security

900

....

Merchandise

AOT

Free Home
Security
S850 Value
with purchase of
For Sale·Cuno Cab.
Other Services
alarm monitoring
solid oak 4 shell 2
services from ADT door c-all 304-675Pet CremaliOns C&amp;ll Security Services. 1687 or 304-674·
74()..446-3745
Coll1-888·274·3888 3882

�r

•

I

~

•,

. .

. ...

..

~P~a~ge~8;4;·;T;h;e~D~at~·ly~Se~n;ti;n;el;;~;;;;;;;;~;;;;;;;;ww~w.my
Miscellaneous

Yard Sale

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

3000

Real Estate
Sales

Apartments/
Townhouses

Large, someh1ng for
Modern 1 BR apt.
everyone. St.. At.
588, Rio Grande,
Houses For Sale
740-446-0390.
June 18 &amp; 19.
;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;o -~~---14x60 Mobile home :good shape central Middleport 1 &amp; 2 br.
3 family yard sale air reasonable offer furnished apt.· No
Savage Model 220-B
pets. dep. &amp; ref.,
40720 Laurel Cliff 304-675-7070
740-992-0165
shotgun.
12 Ga.
Rd.,
Friday
&amp;
hammerless
looks
g •
Saturday.
9-?, 3 bedroom, 2 bath, Middleport
Beech b •I
unfired $200 740located
01 the corner
somethmg
for
533-3870.
of
Second
&amp; St., 2 br. furnished C..ILyt
everyone,
WorchestAr St near apt.. utilities paid No B'vll
pets, dep &amp; ref, 740- HO'
Complete set "24
Hubbard's
coins" Peace type -C-AR.,.P_,O.,R""'T-""'S_A.,LE-- greenhouse
in 992-0165
silver dollars nice 1917 Maxwell Ave. Syracuse. All major
Valley
ones $950. 740- Fri June 18 &amp; Sat appliances included. Pleasant
Apartments is now
533-3870.
19th 9:00-?
Newly
installed
taking
applications :;;;;;;::;;;;;==heating &amp; cooling
for 2, 3, &amp; 4 br HUD
Recreati.onal unit.
WantTo Buy
C:lntains
a
1000
Vehicles recently constructed Subsidized
Oiler's Towing, Now
Apartments.
20x24 single vehicle
buymg Junk cars
Applications
are
garage.
Interested
ATVs
wlmotors or wlout.
taken Monday thru
buyers may contact
740-388-0011
Thrusday
9:00am- exp
or Talon
GSA
150 us at 740-992-1820
740-441-7870.
1:OOpm. Office is . Cal•
Carter
Go
Cart. ~~~~.....- at
1151 Reo
Real Estate located
asking $975, $3500 3500
Yard Sale
Dnve, Pnet..
Rentals Evergreen
new 740-379-9515,
Buckeye Vine &amp; Co. 740-339-2043.
Point Pleasant. WV. Dnv
(304) 675-5806
Go
Community
Apartments/
Consignment Shop
Campers/ RVs &amp;
Spring Valley Green
Townhouses
241 3rd. Ave. 446Trailers
Apartments 1 BR at
0214.'
Dutchman 1Brlbath apartment $395+2 BR at $470
Over 400 Qonsi~ 2006
Bunkhouse, Slideout. nice across Post Month. 446-1599
Clothing,
like
new, ct.air!heat Office No pets No
housewares.
smoking
Deposit
Houses For Rent
antiques,
baskets, sleeps 10, 740-339304-675-3788 After
2697
bears.
purses.
Nice 1BR house in
5P.M.
books, corn hole
Gallipolis. Walk to
bags.
babyitems. 2005 Jayco Eagle 28R APT.Ciose to everything you need.
collectables &amp; more. Gooseneck
Hitch, Holzer Hospital on SR Very clean unit, with
Open mon thru Thur sleeps six. Excellent 160 CIA. (740) 441- new paint, $275 per
0194
11-6 Sat 11-4
mol$100 sec. dep.
condition.
Asking
Come On ln.
Sorry no pets. Call Wf'
$19,900.
See CONVENIENTLY
&amp; Wayne
for ben
photos
at LOCATED
5
Family
,177 www.carmichaeltrajle AFFORDABLE!
information 404-456- va~
Ke
LeGrande
3802.
Blv. ~
740-446- Townhouse
apartments,
and/or
9 !f
furniture,
clothing, 2412
small houses for rent. ~B~R-,-R~o-d-n-ey--ar-e-a, to
misc. Thurs 17- Fri
Call 740-441-1111 for WID. ref, stove inc. www
18
2000 Sandpiper. 33 application
&amp; NO pets. dep &amp; ref, ror
fee t Iong, ex. con.. information
req'd. Call 740-446Announcements asking $11,000 or -F~r-e-e~R-e-nt~S~p-e-ci_a_1' ·1271 or 740-709Fo
080, 740-992-1424
I!!
1657.
A' of Monda). June 7.
t&amp;38R ap~ $395 and
William Ham10n is no
Ht&gt;l
2000
Automotive up. Central Air, WID Home for Lease in Exp r
longer 3S\&lt;&gt;&lt;:tal~d wilh
hookup,
tenant
pays
Rio Gande city limits.
Harmon Healing and
electric. Call between 2 story, 3200 sq ft. Dec
Cooling. I am no longer
lhe hours o' 8A-8P.
an officer with thts
Rent $1500. Call App
Autos
EHO
company and will nm
740-645-3980 for an
Ellm View Apts.
be held re,ponsible
1995 Nissan Sentra.
appointment
&amp;
finaneiall) . lcgall). or good work car. 20K
(304)882-3017
applications.
for the craft&gt;manship.
H
miles
left
on ~Tw~i-n-R~iv_e_rs....,To_w_e_r-is cedarvalleyestates.n
I currently hold the W\'
transferable engine accepting applications et
Contr~-tctor'\ l1ccn~c and
$1500 for waiting list for HUD
EPA certitication so'" I warranty,
step down. tho"~ 080; 1988 Chevy subsidized,
1-BR 2 BR Duplex-644 Plea
certifications "ill no Caprice. new tires, apartment
for
lhe 2nd Ave $4501mo Apa
longer be \alid for the $500 OBO, 740-949- elderly/disabled.
call plus
deposit
&amp;
company.
2727
675-6679
utilities. Stove and
refrig. Wid hookup
no pets. One year
Help Wanted
Help Wanted
lease.
Ref~rences.
446-0332 9am to
WANTED:
5pm Mon-Sat.
Part-time position available to ass1st 1 BR and bath. first - - - - - - rent
&amp; New 2 br. 1 112 bt
individuals
with
developmental months
deposit. references washer &amp; dryer Town
disabilities in Middleport: 8a-3p required, No Pets house . 1 mile from ger
lr.Jir
Sat/Sun. Must have high. school and clean 740-441- siver bridge Rent
exp
$575. Call for an •nd
diploma or GED. valid driver's 0245
license, three years good driving New 2br. apt. WID application 740-645- ap~
5785
are:
experience and adequate automobile Hookup. app inc.
Rio/Jackscn
area
Manufactured Pie
insurance. $8.97/hr. after training.
$525.mo +dep. call 4000
Housing Ap·
Eve
740-645-1286_
Pc1nl
Send resume to:
BR.
Cabin.
2550
Rentals
Buckeye Community Services
appliance furnished,
E'O
P.O. Box 604, Jackson, OH 45640. utilities pd. Thurman 2BR Mobile Home,
area, also 2BR apt. Water, sewer. trash
No
pets. Now
7
40-286-5789
or pd.
Deadline for applicants: 6117 II 0.
Johnson's
Mobile
740-441-3702
Pre-employment drug testing.
f!tome Park. 446·
Attractive.
Equal Opportunity Employer
3160
unfurnished,
one
bedroom apt.
Sales
2nd
floor, corner Second
Help Wanted
Help Wanted
and Pine. No pets, BEAT THE WINTER
NOWI
References required. BUY
BEAUTIFUL
Security
deposit,
$325 per month, HOMES/ALL
water included. call AMERICAN
304740-446-4425 ·
or MODULARS
674-8022
740-446-3936.
Responsibilities include recruiting and
training carriers, cuslomer service and
meeting sales goals. If you have a positive
attitude. are self-starter. and a team player we
would like to talk to you. Must be dependable
and have reliable tmnsportation. Position
offers all compan) benefit~ including health.
dental. vision and life insurance.
40 I K. paid vacation, and per~onal day'.

' Homes • Garages
Complete Remodeling

992.. 1671
Stlp &amp; Compare

3 Yeat-s EXIJericncc

David Lewis
7-10-992-697 1
Insured
f&lt;ree Estimates

-

LOoking For-,
'\New Home?

TrY the
ssifieds!!

IMMEDIATE OPENING
District Circulation
Sales Manager

Please send resume to:
PAM CALDWELL
Gallipolis Dail) Thibune
825 Third Ave. • Gallipolis, OH 45631
Or email to
pcaldwell@'heartlandpublications.com

Get Your Message Across
With A Daily Sentinel

BULLETIN BOARD
CALL OUR OFFICE AT 992-2155
BULLETIN BOARD DEADLINE:
9·00 AM DAY BEFORE PUBLICATION!

Atlantic City Getaway
July 22-24, 2010
$280/person
(double occupancy)
Includes airfare &amp; hotel
accommodations at your
choice of·Bally's or
Harrah's Private jet from
Charleston, WV
To make reservations
please call
PVH Community
Relations, (304) 675-4340,
Ext. 1326
LIMITED SEATS!
111111 111 1 IJ, 111 1 IIi II ' llllllllllllll

~aUipolis !llailp

tnbu

~oint ,l@leasant l\rgis

The Daily Sen tine 1
~unb«J' uti mrs -~rntuu
"'

..

Sharon
Green,
Hearing Administrator, Ohio DepartOP- ment of Insurance,
FOR 50 W. Town St.. 3rd
Floor, Suite 300,
Columbus,
OH
43215.
COLLINS, JESSICA
11113/1977
DOB:
P.O.
BOX
141
ATHENS, OH 45701
AI the hearing, the
individual may ap·
pear In person, by
his or her attorney,
or by such other
representative as is
permitted to practice ·before the
agency, or the lndl·
vidu al may present
his or her position,
arguments or con·
tentl ons In
and. at the
he orshemay
ent evidence
examine witnesses
appearmg for an9'
galnst him or her.
Han individual does
not timely request a
heorlng, no hearing
will be held and an
order revoking his
or her insurance II·
cense shall be Is·
sued.
Stephen C. Hom·
bach
Staff Counsel
(6) 3, 10, 17

�PQ

Thursday, June 17, 2010

www.mydailysentinel.com

BLONDIE

Dean Young/Denis Lebrun

-

FUNKY WINKERBEAN

Tom Batiuk

HAGAR THE HORRIBLE
~~·I'V'IV

Chris Browne

Yz WANTA f7~NI&lt; IN
MY /WJ'fJ )iiJ(7
M'( FOot:' Ofo/ 7;J5
1A5Lt/iOW.-'

w

-

The Daily Sentinel • Page 85

CROSSWORD
By THOMAS JOSEPH
ACROSS
2 Entice
1 lmperfec- 3 "In your
dreams!"
tio n
5 Ugly
4 Cajole
monster
5 Conical
1 0 Haste
home
11 Hall of
6 Oboe
Farner
parts
7 Hold
R eese
12 N iagara's 8 Chkrter
Todav's Allswers
source
9 Summer
sign
20 A frican
3 3 Horn
13 Interested
in trying
11 A bit
nation
output
14 C ha nged
2 1 Aspiration 34 Financier
crazy
sides
15 Con
22 Article
Cornell
16 Abhorred
quarters 25 Grove
35 Ruby
20 U nfriend ly 17 Race
growth
and
23 Pad dle's
tipster
26 Symbol
Sand ra
kin
18 Singly
of
36 High
24 T ravel
19 DeM atteo
love
card
stop
of "Des28 Sailing
37 M yth ical
25 Pact
pe rate
30 Painter
p iper
27Zoo
House Degas
38 Toronto's
creature
wives"
31 Poor
pro~ _
28 Singer
NEW CROSSWORD BOOK! Send $4.75 (checklm.o.) to
Book 2. PO Box 536475, Orlando, Fl 3:&gt;853·6475
Thomas
Franklin
29 1nsan e
32 Abandoned
36 Orbital
point
39 Seep
40 4 0% of
North
America
41 Angry
42 Ledger
jotting
43 Greek
vowels
DOWN
1 W ilma's

hubby

HI &amp; LOIS

Brian and Greg Walker

THELOCKHORNS

MUTTS

William Hoest

Patrick McDonnell

"MY DRAGONSL..AYER WON'T EVEN OSE THE
ROACH BOMB FOR ME ANYMORE."

ZITS

Jerry Scott and Jim Borgman

THE FAMILY CIRCUS

CONCEPTIS SUDOKU

Bil Keane

by Dave Green

2

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Hank Ket chum

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HAPPY BIRTHDAY for Thursday,
June 17, 2010:
This year, you might have your
hands full, as often people are reactive
and your message gets lost. Your ability to center yourse!I and understand
will become much more important.
Often, you will have to begin at square
one in your interpersonal discussions.
Intensity surrounds a key business or
personal partnership. This person is
Changing in front of your very eyes. If
you are single, do take youf time getting to know someone new. A move,
remodeling your home or some change
on the home front is likely. VIRGO
knows how to pressure you.
l1te Stars 5/uno the Ki11d of Day )1m 'II
Have: 5-Dynamic; 4-Positivc; 3-Avemgc;
2-Scrso; 1-Difficult
ARIES (March 21-Aprill9)
* ***Once you get going,. others
might think of you as the Energizer
Ram. You clear out an enormous
amount of work, errands and whatever
is needed. Don't allow a last-minute
snafu to stop you. Tonight Slow down
and relax.
TAURUS (April20-May 20)
***** You could toss a situation
up in the air over and over until you
get a winning solution. Detach, and
you'll see a path that up till now has
not even been discussed. Though others n:Ught be confused, you decide to
test this route. Tonight: Careful with
funds.
GEMINI (May 21-June 20)
*** In the morning. avoid a fight
al any cost. focus on clearing. A key
associate uses money feU" differently
from you. Let this person explain why
and how. Gain through new knowledge. Tohight: Oear out stress before
silting down for dinner.
CANCER Oune 21-July 22)
***** State what you feel, and
pursue a decision you see as impor·
tant. A partner might want to intervene
and tries to distract you. Perhaps a discuSSion is needed. Tonight: Don't read
too much into another's comment,
LEO Ou!y 23-Aug. 22)
*** Underst.mding eman,,tes,
especially oonceming fund!', expenditures and your efforts. Know how to
Sc\} "no," and be vvilling to stand your
ground. Revise your workload and
plans lo deal with a prime i&lt;:sue. A
meeting only adds to the confusion.
Tonight: Do what you need to do.
VffiGO (Aug. 23-Sepl. 22)
***** Others might react to the
Virgo comellhat goes by their desk.

You will move and act quickly. If you
are frustrated, your words could be
unduly sharp, reflecting this frustration. Intensity marks creative thinking
and romanL-oe. Tonight Clear out a misunderstanding. (It wiii take patiencel)
LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 22)
*** Suppre!&gt;sed anger could come
out in many strange ways. You could
snap at someone who doesn't deserve
it. You could react physically as weii. .
Intensity surrounds a domestic iss"Ue.
Taking off is not the answer. Process
and find a solution. Tonight You might
be unaware of how you are distorting
a situation.
SCORPIO (Oct. 23-1'\ov. 21)
***** You drive a hard bargain,
but also run into someone who might
be as determined as you. Discussions
need to occur on a on~on-one le,·el in
order to find a solution. Persistence
counts, and you ha\·e just that. Tonight:
Start sorting through a misunderstand·
in g.
SAGilTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21)
· *** 'lake the lead, especially with
a financial matter that could impact
you. Realize what is going on behind
the scenes. You hear so much that you
could be overwhelmed. In this case, listen, sort and ask questions rather than
act. Tonight Could be late.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19)
*** *Pressure builds. You ha,·e a
choice to continue demanding or to
process your thinking. Though the
path of transfom1ation might seem
invisible or difficult, ultimately that is
the right way to go. A partner points
the way. Tonight: DetaCh from a situation. Go lo the movies or listen to some
great Ja2Z or blues.
AQUARIUS Oan. 20-Feb. 18)
***** A partner keeps homing
in on one issue ,\fter another. You wonder if this will end and if you can get
your two cents in. An innovath·e idea
could fail on deaf ears, as others are
acting out their roles rather than thinking and listenin~. Know that this too
Y.rill pass. Tonight: VIsit \vith a dear
friend.
PISCES (Feb. 19-~!arch 20)
* *** 'tou juggle different concerns, cre,lting a stronger ~nc;e of wellbeing and happiness. Others demand a
lot of attention. though your major
concern could invoke home or a family member. You have your hands full.
Tonight: Try to make it an early night
facqtteline Brgnr i:: on tire Internet
at lrttp://a"'.!'l!'.jncquclinelngar.rom.

.

•mv ai vsentini .c·om
----------------~-

- -- -- --- - --

�Page B6 • The Daily Sentinel

Thursday, June 17, 2010

www.mydailysentinel.com

Onyewu: Tower\ing presence Promise of bigger TV d~llars
drove Big 12 survival
for US soccer team
IRENE. South Africa
(AP) - As far as the staff
~t the Irene Country Lodge
IS concerned the real star
of the U.S. soccer team,
bunkin~ there
during
World cup. isn't Landon.
Clint or Tim. It's Oguchi
Onyewu.
"Ma,Ybe because my
name 1s not as normal as
everybody else's. or they
can identify with my name
more so because it's
authentically African." he
said. "People that work at
the hotels or whatever
seem to smile whenever I
walk around. Maybe
they're scared of me. 1
don't know. But I know
it's a good feeling."
Well. he does sort of
tower over everyone.
The 6-foot-4 defender
was born in Washington,
D.C.. to parents who
moved to the United States
from Nigeria to attend
Howard University. H is
family includes brothers
Uche and Nonye. and sisters Chi-Chi and Ogechi.
While he feels an affinity
with the African nation
because of his ancestry. he
grew up in suburban
Maryland.
More than any other
longtime regular on the
U.S.
national
team.
Onyewu's World Cup participation was in doubt
after he tore the patellar
tendon in his left knee during the final World Cup
qualifier on Oct. 14. He
didn't make it back onto
the field for AC Milan. his
Italian club, and he played
in only parts of the three
warmup matches.
Yet, there he was
Saturday night against
England.
outrunning
Wayne Rooney and battling Emile Heskey on
headers. While the U.S.
defense was shaky entering the World Cup. the
play of Onyewu and Jay
DeMerit was perhaps the

Finals
fromPageBl
Angeles Lakers in a
Game 7 on the road. I
love the fact that if I
don't win multiple championships that I probably
won't be mentioned
a1hongst the other guys
in Celtic history that
have done it before. That
type of stuff motivates
me . That's what the challenge is for me. every
time I put on this Celtic
uniform.''
P ierce is usually the
only player in this series
who embraces its history.
yet it's too soon to say
where these finals will fit
in the rivalry's annals.
Although the games had
been uniformly competitive before the Lakers'
blowout win in Game 6.
they haven't been spectacu larly played, with
gritty defense trumping
offense in most of the
major moments.
Ray Allen's historic 3point shooting barrage in
Game 2, the Celtics' gritty victories in games 4
and 5, the Lakers'
blowout win in Game 6
- all will be dwrufed by
what happens in the
deciding game.
"I guess it's going to be
another decade that people look back and sec the
formation of this rivalry

positive responses from
AUSTIN.Texas(AP)- execute future agreements should bring in "millions"
•
that."
Looking for the savior of that will put our member to the schooL
Some of the lea~ue 's
Teammates depend on the Big 12? Follow the institutions on J?ru· with any
in the country. · He did not smaller schools are gtving
the 28-ycar-old center money.
back to anchor the
Assurru1ces that the big provide any nuillbcrs dur- up cash for the promise of
defense. He started during television money will soon mg a conference call with keeping the league together and more n.1oney later.
the 2006 World Cup _:: be coming to the leaner repo1ters.
'The Big 12 approached
and still gripes that Big 12 pulled the league
Kansas, Kansas S
German referee Markus back from the dead. offi- us asking if we would Baylor. Iowa State
Merk unfairly awarded cials with schools and the maintain our cutTent agree- Missouri - who were
ment through its tenn of danger of being left homeGhana a decisive penalty league said Tuesday.
kick when Onyewu jostled
With Colorado (Pac-1 0) 2015-16 and we agreed." less if the conference diswith 5-foot-8 Razak and Nebraska (Big Ten) said Josh Krulewitl. vice solved - agreed to gtve
Pinipong for a header at leaving in the next two president for communica- up their share in buyout
the edge of the penalty years and the Pac-1 0 mak- tions for ESPN.
penalties to be paid by
A Fox Sport~ Net Nebraska ru1d Colorado for
mg a hard sell to Texas and
area four years ago.
All through his long four other school!&gt; tb join spokesman sa1d that no leaving the •teague. Beebe
injury
rehab.
other them. the promises - not new deal had been reached said.
American
players guarantees - of bigoer but there would be ongoThe idea is to have that
expressed confidence that checks in the future fin~ly ing discussions.
money go to Texas. lexas
The Big
12 has A&amp;M and Oklahoma, the
the teammate they call ,persuaded the Longhorns
increased the financial schools the Big 12 needed
"Gooch" would make it and the others to stay put.
"This is a long-term and reward for every one of its to 'itay to remain viable. to
back in time for the World
commit- members since it began make up for the difference
Cup. He didn't leave much unequivocal
time to spare. Last ment." Texas president play in 1996. It distributed in revenue those three
Saturday was his first full Willirun Powers Jr., ~aid $139 million to its mem- might have made going
game since Oct. 10. in the Tuesday. "We· ve decided bers this past fi~cal year, elsewhere.
clinching · qualifier at the Big 12 provides the more than ever.
The amount of the
Texas. already the rich- penalties has not been disbest long-term opr,ortunity
Honduras.
est and most powerful of closed. the Colorado ath"Gooch is a confident for our university. ·
According IRS tax the Big 12 schools. is con- letic director Mike Bohn
player.'' forward Jozy
"He records examined by •The vinced it can make even confirmed his school's
Altidore
said.
believes in himself 100 Associated Press. the Bi~ more money in a I 0-team penalty for leaving the Bi~
billion percent. If there's 12 paid out between $8.1 league. '
'The Big 12 (television) 12 "could be" ru·mmd S':J
anybody you'd expect to million to $15.4 million
in
2008-09,
packag~
is going to be million.
per
school
get stronger over the
Late Tuesday. MissoUJi
course of a game like that. with Kansas State getting every b1t as good as any officials said they have not
conference."
Texas
other
·
smallest
payout
and
the
against a team like that,
agreed .to give up th • .
just says a lot about the Oklal1oma the biggest. The athletic director DeLoss s.hare of the buyout pen
Big
12's
televisiOn
deal
"We
are
in
Dodds
said.
guy and his character and
ttes.
what he's all about as a with Fox expires in 2012 good shape on thl:! televiBig
12
Assistant
sion
side.·
and
a
more
lucrative
conperson. So I'm not surConunissioner Bob Burda
tract
with
ESPN
runs
And
by
stayino
in
the
ptised."
responded that the 10
Neither was Landon through the 2015-2016 Big 12. Texas emf explore schools will share "all
academic
yeru·.
statt
its
whether
it
should
Donovan.
Big 12 commissioner own Longhorns TV net- withdrawal fees withheld
Now that Onyewu has
Colorado
and
Dan
Beebe said no new work. If the} had moved to from
played ~ full game fol' the
Nebraska:· calling the earPac-10.
Texas
would
the
TV
deals
have
been
struck.
first tune smce knee
lier talks about uneven dissurgery. some are wonder- but he has "extremely have had to sun-ender its tribution of the penalty a
media
rights.
strong
verification.
based
ing whether he can do it
Texas women's athletic "good-faith offer."
tw1ce within a week. The on our analysis with our
Beebe insisted the Big
consultants
and
others,
and
director
Chris Plonsky said
skeptics spur him on.
media companies them- the network, which would 12's deciston to stick
He and the rest of the selves. that we are in a broadca&lt;&gt;t Texas sp01ts and together was about more
team know the huge stakes tremendous position to other university events. th&lt;m money.
Friday. The loss to Ghana
in .2006. which meant
elimination. still stings.
onl) played each other
and Osborne?
·'The . game against
four times in the last 25
No
matter
how
the
Slovenia is going to deterschedules are drawn up. years Of SO, SO there isn't
mine if we ~et out of the
some schools will likely quite the history. but
fromPageBl
group or not.· he said. "It's
grumble quietly. The \ve're looking forward to
a must-win situation."
conference will try to playing them. and there
many games will teams preserve old rivalries. but will be a lot of interest in
play within and outside
there are no guarantees those games."
again," Lakers coach Phil
. "I think about how bad of their divisions?
Detroit, Chicago and
that
all will be played
Jackson said. "The '90s and how much it would
"Really, it's probably
annually.
There's
no
Indianapolis
~ hal
was missed. and the '70s hurt if we don't come out our major focus," Smith
question that new ones already expressed int
was missed. but the '60s as winners." Gasol said. said.
est in hosting the Big 'f,
and the '80s were big "1 keep that thought in
The general assump- will be created.
''Rivalries
gro~
up
football championship.
decades. It seems to skip my mind sometimes. just tion is that the Big Ten
After all of the probtime,"
said
a decade, doesn't it?"
to understand that I have will follow other confer- over
lems
m football have
1\lebraska
's
AD
and
the
The Celtics have more to do everything possible ence models. splitting
experience in seventh out there to help my team into two six-team divi- former coach of the foot- been resolved. the ADs
games than the Lakers in any way I can. You sions. with teams playing ball Cornhuskers. Tom will address what to do
\\ ith the other 24 Big Ten
over the past three years. want to leave everything each of the other five Osborne.
sports.
The divisions set
Because
they
are
in
difteams
in
their
division
playjng in two deciding you have out there. and
games in 2008 and two compete -as hard as and then three teams in ferent conference~ now. up for football might not
the other division on a the enmity between work for women's volmore last year. Boston you ' ve ever competed."
Nebraska and Oklahoma leyball or baseball.
Los Angeles has won rotating basis.
coach Doc Rivers thinks
"Just because it works
There is also some talk may dim. Perhaps neighhis club's big-game three more titles since
for
football doesn't mean
boring
Iowa
will
offer
a
that
football
teams
might
toughness mostly grew Bryant and Shaquille
it's
going to work that
bit
nineof
bad
blood
for
the
eventually
play
a
O'Neal
returned
the
club
from those high stakes.
v. ay for;, cry body else."
"It's the ultimate play- to NBA prominence by ~ame Big Ten schedule. Huskers.
''As time goes forward. Smith said.
ers' game," said Rivers, a winning the 2000 cham- five in the division and
And there's always the
because
of proximity.
four
out.
New York guard when pionship. but the Lakers
E-..en
arri\
ing
at
names
they·
re
a
very
possibility
the conferbecause
clinched
all
three
of
the Knicks lost Game 7
for
the
divisions
could
be
fine
program.
I
would
ence
could
expand
to 14.
of the 1994 finals in those crowns on the road.
contentious - North and imagine it could grow 16 or ewn more schools.
The}
haven't
celebrated
Houston. ''Unfottunately.
Soutn? East and West? into a rivalry of some creating a whole ne\\ staI've coached in a lot of at home since beating the
Bo and Woody'7 Paterno kind.'' he said. '"We've dium full of questions.
them over the last few Indiana Pacers a decade
years - or fortunately. ago.
The Lakers weren't
All the things you've
r. Private
worked on all year. you discussing the prospect
have to do it. and execute of a party on Figueroa
;'' · lessons
Street during their light
. it. and trust and play.''
~ i- available 1
Los Angeles is in just workout Wednesday. and
its second Game 7 of the the Celtics weren't mak~~-June 22-24-b
KICKBOARD
past three seasons. but ing plans for a raucous
1
July 1st
REQlJIRED
that's because the Lakers plane ride back to
Ages 5 and Up $10.00 per day
Boston.
Given
the
weight
have been better at
Cull quickly- limit of 8 per class
avoiding trouble while of history and the intensiwinning I 0 playoff series ty of this ri-.. airy. both
since Pau Gasol joined teams thought it best not
think
beyond
them in 2008. When to
faced with elimination Thursday night.
" It's all-out.'' Boston's
Tuesday for the first time
in these playoffs. the Kevin Garnett said. "It's
7 40-992-6488
~ ,
Lakers responded with for the marbles, it's for
44705 Resort Road, Racine, OH.....
determination at least everything. all-out. You
partially bom from fear, save nothing. You leave
nothing."
according to Gasol.
biggest reason the United
States tied England l I .
putttng the Americans in
pr~me position going into
Fnday s
match with
Slovenia.
He had read all 1k ruticles questioning his titness. and found them
amusing.
. "I s~id ~t fro~1 the beginmng. m mtervtews weeks
ag~, that I'd be ready," he
smd
Wednesday.
"Everyo~e is like. 'Oh. he
says ~e 11 be ready, but
th~(s JUSt his competitive
spmt t~ere talk i n~. · To
finally. m a sense. ~lienee
the naysayers . it feels
good. It gets them off my
back - for at least one
game."
While I 7 of the 23
American players are with
~uropean teams, Onyewu
IS the only one with a bioname club. He signed la~t
summer with AC Milan. a
seven-time
European
cham{'ion. And while 'he
~as ~1ven pr:ominent playmg time dunng the team's
preseason U.S. tour. he
appeared in only one of I0
competitive
matches
before getting hurt. entering as a 60th-minute substitute
in
the
l-0
Champions League loss to ·
Zurich on Sept. 30.
He drew intemational
attention just before the
start of World Cup training
camp last month when he
extended his contract bY.
one season for·free, until
June 2013. He said he felt
he owed it to the club which is owned by Italian
Prime Minister Silvio
Berlusconi - because he
~~~ly played during his
mttml season.
··r didn't make my decision to look for responses
from the public. That's a
personal decision l decided to make,'' he said.
"How the public perceives
it or takes it, that's great.
l'm glad that I got a lot of

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