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                  <text>Racine class
observes
soth,A6

Fishing derby
winners,A2

OBITUARIES
Page AS

·Charles M. Snyder

Stimulus grant offsets growing
county maintenance costs
•

Accidents,
theft reported
BY BETH SERGENT
BSERGENT@MYOAILYSENTINELCOM '

A')MEROY
A
e-car accident and
theft are all being investigated by the Pomeroy
Police
Department,
according t() Chief Mark
E. Proffitt.
Phillip Russell, who
works for Pleasant Valley
Hospital Continuity of
Care in Middleport.
recently reported a compan) vehicle had been
broken into. The business
is in Middleport near the
corporation limit but the
vehicle was parked in
Pomeroy.
Russell advised the
vehicle was locked when
he left work but \vhen
returning the next day he
discovered tools missing.
including
\vrenches.
screwdrivers,
~len
wrenches, etc. The tools
are used to repair oxygen
machines. These items
e not labeled with
.hing to identify them
elonging to the busi~
ness. No damage w•as
done to the vehicle.
Patrolman
John
Kulchar recently investigated a three-car accident
at the intersection of Nye

BY BRIAN

J.

REED

BREEO@MYOAILYSENTINEL.COM

POMEROY - Maintenance on
the county's aging properties is
becoming an increasing problem for
county commissioners. President
Tom Anderson said Thursday, particularly because repairs to old
buildings are expensive.
Commissioners announced they
have received a quarter-million
dollars in funding through the fed-

I

eral stimulus program to upgrade
heating and air conditioning systems in the county· annex and
health department headquarters.
both located on Mulben-y Heights.
At the annex. the former county
home, commissioners will replace
the heating system boiler with a
95-percent efficient modeL clean
duct work and other equipment
and add insulation. Window air
conditioners will be replaced.
The health department headquar-

ters will also receive a new boiler
and other heating upgrades. and a
ne~· rooftop chiller for the air conditioning system. The upgrades are
expected to save the commissioners as much as $14.000 per year
once they are completed.
In addition to the century and a
half-old county courthouse. the
annex and the multipurpose building which houses the health

Please see Grant, AS

A place
in tbe.Jun
Emi's Place, at the Pomeroy Ball Fields, is the
place to be on warm, summer evenings. Pictured
is Kelly Shaver of Racine building a purple sand
castle and Mackenzi Hunter (left) and Makayla
Dexter (right), both of Middleport, catching
some air time on one of the swing sets.
Beth Sergent/photos

l

.....

Middleport to
crack down
on income
tax collection
RITA to issue subpoenm·
to delinquelll jile1:fi
BY BRIAN

J.

REED

BREEO@MYOAILYSENTINELCOM

MIDDLEPORT
Middlepo11
Vi!'lage
Council will pursue
unfiled
income
tax
returns and unpaid ~taxes
through a subpoena program approved Monday
evening.
Over 500 current: apd
former Middleport residents will receive letters
from Regional Income
Tax Administration. the
agency the village contracts with for administration of its incom6 tax
program. Those letters
will go to those who have
either worked or lived in
Middleport and not. ftle:d
tax returns as required b)
village ordinance.
The letter wili be ttie
first step in attempting:to
clear up outstanding
income tax cases. according to the Village Fiscal
Officer, Susan Baker.
The; will give the recipient an opportunity to provide a reason for not filing a return or paying
taxes, as well as an
opportunity to pay up if
they owe. T~ose who fail

Please see Tax. AS

Pomeroy
discusses EPA .
improvements

·Please see Reports, AS

WEATHER

BY BETH SERGENT
BSERGENT@MYOAILYSENTINELCOM

•

Vision insurance with
Vision Plus was renewed
with no employee month
increase from last year.
and a master district
software service agreement were approved, as
were budgets for principals' and district manager and student activity
funds.

POMEROY The
Village of Pomeroy continues to look for money.
and a solution, to bri'ng
its wastewater treatment
plant and lift station back
into compliance with the
Ohio
Environme11tal
Protection Agency.
By July 15, the Ohio
EPA has said Pomeroy
must complete modifications to a) the main lift
station and b) the wastewater treatment plant in
order to allow back-up,
generators to power both
facilities in the event of a
prolonged power outage.
When the power goes
out. in the absence of a
generator, raw sewage is
being dumped into the
Ohio River.
At. this week's meeting
of Pomeroy Village
Council.
Village
Administrator
Paul
Hellman said he'd gouen
estimates for electrical
work at the plant and lift
stations. as well as eStimates on generators. In

Please' see Meigs. AS

Please see Pomeroy, AS

High: Upper 70s.
Low: Lower 50s.

INDEX
2 SECTIONS- 12 PAGES

Calendars

Meigs gives approval to funding appropriation's

Classifieds
Comics

BY CHARLENE HOEFLICH

Editorials

POMEROY - A final
revised permanent appropriations figure for the
Meigs Local School
District's
operational
expenses in fiscal year
2009-20 I 0 in the amount
of $28,616.757 was
approved at Tuesday
night's meeting of the

Sports

HOEFLICHtmMYOAILYSENTINEL.COM

B Section

'!:J 2010 Ohio VII ill')' Publishing Co.

li.I.IJ ,I !1!1.!1!

I.

Meigs Local Board of
Education.
In the same meeting
approval was given to a
temporary appropriations
for fiscal year 20 I 0-20 ll
in
the
amout
of
$25,669,665. Additional
adjustments based on
funds
received
and
accountable for by the
Board .will come in
October.

Contact one of our lenders today!

--

Farmers
Bank

Pomeroy- 992·2136
Tuppers Plains- 667-3161
Gallipolis - 446-2265
Mason 773·6400
Point Pleasant· 674·8200

•

Actions to adjust fund
deficits and negative
fund balances at the end
of June on recommendation from Treasurer/CFO
Mark Rhonemus were
approved and he was
authoriLed to move forward on obtaining quotes
for
bread/baker;.
milk/dairy. and gas/fuel
products for the coming
school year.

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PageA2

The .Daily Sentinel

Thursday, July 1, 2010

Fishing derby winners

Submitted photo

Lol&lt;! tJubbard presents a plaque to Phyllis Hudnall,
Honorary Mother of the Year.

Hudnall
honoran1
:.
•L
mother
...
of the Year I

~1LDDLEPORT
Pl1\ llis Hudnall was named '
HonQr::Jr): Mother of the \'ear at the recent motherdaughter- banquet held at the Victor) Baptist Ladies
.Missionary Fellowship.
S~e. ~·a~ _presented a gift from the group. Linda
Ke~~Je .• w1fe of the church pastor \Vas given a hanginghasRe(. •
~
~
llte)l'IJ! \\ t)s .. Footprints in the Sand." Dinner "as
sef\ed b5 the men of the church. Bessie Darst on the
doorprize.
Tina Frans was speaker talking on how God
brought her through the sudden death of her husband.
Readings were by Suzie Adkins "Footprints ir. the
Sand'' Chris Atkins. "A Ntother's Prayer· and Lola
Hubbard, a different version of "Footprints in the
Sand.'' Nmhes were drawn for gifts and hanging baskets. Each of the children were presented a gift.

Herbalist awarded health
education
certification ·
.
BY CHARLENE HOEFLICH
HOEFUCk MYDAILYSENTIN!;L COM

·

submittedphoto

Winners 1n the first children's fish derby held at Fort Meigs campgrounds near Rutland were Aubrey Hart, the
most fish, the biggest fish, and th~ first girl to catch a fish; Timmy Lavender the first boy to catch a fish; an.
Steven Parsons, Jr., the smallest f1sh.
I

t

·

"

I

I

'·

Lauren Barnes

Dustin Eads

Samuel Evans

Veronica Grimm

Steffany Hiett

Tanner Hysell

Scott Kennedy

Rutland
Alumni present
scholarships
RUTLA~D
Ten
scholarships
totaling
$5,000 were ~1\\ ardcd to
graduating seniors relat
ed to Rutland alumni at
the
recent
Rutland
Alumni reunion.
The committee making
the selection \\as composed of alumni Janet
Bolin. AYanel George,
and Latischm Graham.
The scholarships \\ent to
the following students:
Lauren Barnes. Meigs
graduate, granddaughter
of July Snowden ( 1953)
\\ho will be uttending the
Universit) of Rio Gt::lndc
in the intenention specialist program;
Dustin Eads, Meigs
graduate, grandson of
Lou be Eads ( 1959) who
\\ill be attending Ohio
Uni\ersit) to stud) music
"ith the goal of becomin!.! a band director:
Samuel Evans. Eastern,
grandson of Charlotte
Grant (1958) '"ho has
enrolled in the Hocking
College Em ironmental
Restoration Program:
Veronica
Gnmm,
~leigs graduate. daughter
of Herbert
Stephen
Grimm (1966), \\ho has
enrolled at Mt. Vernon
Nazarene
University
with plans to major in
music:

RUTLAND- Maureen.------------..
Bums-Hooker, owner and
CEO of The Herbal Sage
Tea Company. has been
certified as a Health
Education Specialist by
The National Commis-.ion
for Health Education
Credentialing (CilES).
Maureen. an herbal
educator and a firm
believer in the medicinal
benefits of natural herbs:
is a former resident of
!vteigs
County
and Maureen Burns-Hooker
remains
active
with
United
Plant
Sa\ers
located in the Rutland area. She moved to Athens
County several ) cars ago to pursue a degree at Ohio
Uni\ersity in Specialized Studies focusing on
Health and Heahng.
She started her work in mixing teas in 1995 and
~ince that time has expanded her business to include
d1stritmtion to multiple stores around Ohio and more
recently into Whole Foods Stores m the Mid-Atlantic
region.
Accordi11g to CI-IES being credentialed signifies
that an individual has met eligibility requirements for.
and has successfully pa-.sed a competency-based
examination demonstrating skill and •knowledge of
the seven areas of re.sponsibilit) of health educators
upon \\ hich the credential is based.
Being certified as a Health Education Spec:alist
means· Maureen is spcci fica !I) trained to be effective
in assessing individual. org&lt;tnizational and community health education needs. She is· also trained to plan.
develop. implement. manage and evaluate health education programs. to bu i lcl coal it ion and to act as an
advocate for health issues. Her craft as a blender of
t~as is grounded in her studies with nationally recogn11.cd herbal authorities, including Rosemary
Gladstar, Paul Strauss, James Green. Susun Weed.
and Cindy Parker.
.Maureen's blending philosophy takes a healthbas'ed approach to tea de\dopment, creating herbal
ATHENS
tea blends for specific uses: cough teas for respirato- Workshops on rainwater
ry aid. women's teas for bone health. blood building. catchment and jam and
night s\\ eat rehef, menopause and many more appli- jelly making \\ill be held
cation . Skillfully combining medicinal art \\ ith in Jut) b) ACE:-\et, hostgreat taste, the Herbal Sage Tea Companv has ed by the Community
thrived O\er the years and now promotes o,;cr 16 Food Initiatives.
signature blends.
The first one" ill be at
Teaching has always been a mission of the compa- 7 p.m. Thursday at the
ny, ·and over the year~ Maureen has taught classes and Green fire and Sassafras
workshops focusing on herbal medicine. many of Farms
in
New
.which were held in Meigs County. Sheba member of ' Marshfield \\ ith Dick
The Amencan Herbalists Guild, Athens Conservancy. Hogan and Ed Perkins
CFI and United Plant Savers.
teaching
raim' ater

Brianna Zdanciewicz

Olivia Magnotta
Stcffany Hjcu. Hilliard
graduate, the granddaughter of Ph) lh"
Simpkins, (1953) \\hO
has enrolled in the Ohio
Uni\ er-.it) School of
Joumah.sm and seeks a
career in broadca~t journalism;
Tanner Hysell, 'Meigs
graduate. great-grandson
of Betty Biggs (1941)
\\ ho has enrolled in
Wittcnl"h.-:rg lJnh·ersity
and plans to play sports
and major in business:

Scott Ken ned). Meigs
graduate. gr.mdson of
Bill \\ illiamson (1954)
'"ho has enrolled in the
Ohio lnhcr~it) School
of Engmeering;
·
Oh\ ia
Magnotta,
W)oming (Ohio), granddaughter of Wanda
Williams ( 1952) \\ r.o has
been accepted at l\1iami
L nh ers1ty and wil pursue a car:cer nn ;~mlug)
and ph) s1c,li therapy;
Matthew K. Stc\\art.
Stafford High School,

Falmouth. Va .. gr&amp;ndson
of Thomas J. Stewart
( 1958) who has enrolled
in
George
Mason
~nh ers_it~ r:airfax. ~ •
tor tramm!! 111 mu~I
computer securit) and
network securit\ :
Brianna Zdanciewicz.
0\ 1cdo. Fla.. granddaughter of Mickie
llawkins ( 1958) who has
enrolled m Valencia
Community College to
pursue a career in the
film production program.

.·:· E-mail your
: cQinmunity news
. :~ . ="and ·photos!
:'..nid~news @mydailysentinel.com
"

catchment techniques
for home and garden
use. Those interested in
carpooling rna~ meet at
ACEl\'et. 94 Columbu~
Road, Athens. at 6:30
p.m.

The second se~sion
will be a jelly and jam
"orkshop to be held at
Shew's Orchard. 7 p.m.
on J\,11) 8. Marjorie
Shew \\ill teach how to
turn summer fruit into

Marine Services
Wf'Rf BACK. ..
AND READY TO SERVICE YeUR BOAT!
I ull ~ro /; of parfl • ( crtificcl met'11011tt 011 dut)
• 30+ )elln cxpcmmcc

2131 Knrr Street • S) racuse, OH
Call our nc" number 740-992-0280

jam or jell) to be
enjo) ed ) ear round.
The third "orhhop
\\ill be on fcrmentJtion.
hosted b) Jackie O's
Pub and Bre\\er) at 6
p.m. on \\cdnesda). at
ACENet. In ~OnJuncllon
with Ohio Brew Fel&gt;t
Week. Brad Clark will
di~cuss ) casts used in
brc\~; ing
and .. ,pentgrams" used as an ingrc
client in bre.td" and pian

•

in

Community Food Initiatives announces workshops

..

:

crusts. Se' eral brew
samples \\ill be available.
All \\ orkshops are free
to· CFI members and
onl) $5 for non-members.
Work/trade
arrangements can abo
be made to CO\'er the
cost of the workshop.
for info cficomnumitygardens@frogner.ner or
II.

ll'li.COII/11/llllit)fOOdin .

Tlatn·o .org.

More Deere.
Less Dou. h.

.
·

•

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PageA3

The Daily Sentinel

Abbott birth
Darin and Amanda
Abbott of South Point.
announce the bitth of a
daughter, Emily Kate
Abbott.
e was born May 29,
,
at
Cabell
tington
Hospital,
weighed 6 pounds. 6
ounces and was 20 .5
inches long.
Paternal grandparents
are Dan and Sherry Abbott
of Newark. Patemal greatgrandparents are Gene and
Ann Lambert. Grace
Abbott and the late Bud
Abbott all of Pomeroy.
Maternal grandparents
are Steve and Kathy
Thompson of Ironton
Maternal great-grandpar-

Thursday,Julyt,20to
'

MAPLES SUMMER CAMP
Residents of The Maples recently
enjoyed the inaugural Resident Summer
Day Camp which took place at the senior
and handicap housing complex.
Residents gathered for fun, games, crafts
and snacks. The program was under the
direction of their resident manager and
former youth camp director, Jean Triplett.
Pictured making fabric marker T-shirts
are Jimmie Cummins, Betty Crites, Jean
Triplett, Nondus Hendricks, Marilyn
Akins, Steve Tatterson, Michelle Glick
who is an aide for resident Larry Powell,
Carol Hall, Pat Morgan. Other crafts completed were sun catchers and wooden
painted medallion necklaces and key
chains. Also pictured is a group photo of
residents and volunteers who attended
day camp.

f.

ent!i are George and
Helen Williams. Faye
Thompson and the late
Homer Thompson all of
Ironton. Emily brother.
Reece Michael Abbott.

Submitted photos

.Lee birth
Amber Nicole Lee
recently announced the
birth of her third son,
Brayden Michael Lee,
born May 24 at Holzer
Medical
Center,
Gallipolis.
Brayden
. bed seven pounds.
ounce. Brayden has
•
two brothers, Isaiah and
Hunter Day.
Maternal grandparents
are
Trina
Lee
of
Middleport
and
Lawrence Lee, Jr. of
Sandusky. Grant grandparents are Sid and Carol
Hayman of Rutland and

Lawrence and Cora Lee
of Pomeroy.

Barnes receives
Taylor scholarship
RUTLAND The
Linnie
B.
Taylor
Scholarshif
in
the
amount o $2,000 has
been awarded to Lauren
Barnes, 2010 Meigs High
School graduate.
Barnes is the daughter
of Lorri Lightle and
d Barnes. She will
d the University of
•
Grande where she
plans to major in special
education.
The scholarship fund
was created in 1974
under the will of the late
Linnie B. Taylor to
assist children who live

Guilt given along with gift
Dear Dr. Brothers:

Lauren Barnes
in the village of Rutland
in attaining a college
education.

Hemlock Grange
inspection held
POMEROY - Patty
Dyer, Meigs County
deputy, was at the recent
Hemlock Grove Grange
meeting
to
inspect
grange work. She gave
the Grange a very good
evaluation.
During the meeting
bcrs were reminded
he various contests
•
g held. Rosalie Story
conducted the meeting
with Roy Grueser, legislative chairman, noting
the overabundance of
cranberries in Wisconsin
this year Kim Romine
reminded members that
HSUS is not affiliated
with the local Humane
Society and described it
as a "very rich group of
people wanting evt.:yonL'
to become "cget~::ians."
The Grange is still selling cookbooks. As for
fund raisers, Hemlock
turned in 4.S pounds of
pop tabs, 182 soup bar
codes, 15 pair of glasses,
and about 400 water caps.
Coupons or card fronts
are no longer being collected. Thank you cards
were sent to the Pickett
and Lambert families.
Grange sent a resoluon "The Phasing Out

ASK DR. BROTHERS

of Plastic Bags" to the
state conventiOn, it was
reported. Reported ill
were Pearl Smith and
Mary Gilmore.
Romine. lecturer. used
"Iris Day'' as her topic.
She said they have been
around for many centuries. that the word
means rainbow since they
come in many colors. Iris
is the flower of Greek
Goddess Iris who is the
messenger of love. Purple
denotes wisdom and
compliments: blue, faith
and hope; yellow, passion; and white, purity."
She said there are
bearded and beardless
iris, parts are standards
and falls, and the old
fashioned ones are beautiful, blOoming flowers
needing little or no care.
She said the new varieties require much more
care.
Other uses for iris are
for water purification. the
root for perfume and
medicine, and in essential oils in aromatherapy.
The rhizomes are very
toxic, she said. To conclude her program she
passed out pictures of
various kinds of iris.

My wife always seems to
get me the right things
for my birthday. But this
time, I don't know what
happened. Even though
we've been married for
17 years and she's never
seen me wear anything
light-colored. she bought
me a yellow shirt. I honestly told her my feelings
about it, but now she is
guilting me into weanng
it. Is there any way I can
wear what I choose and
not hurt her feelings at
the same time? - J .T.
Dear J.T.: It seems a
little odd that you have to
walk on eggshells with
your wife after 17 years
of marriage, but I
applaud your intentions
-that is, you're looking
to avoid hurting her feelings. That shows that you
are a thoughtful and caring husb.and. but perhaps
you could work toward
having a little more intimacy with your wife.
You should be able to
frankly let her know that
there are some things you
won't do or won't wear,
for whatever reasons. See
if you can name some of
the colors she doesn't
like to wear. or things she
won't eat. etc. Make it
into a game if you must
- at the finish. you can

there to keep life interesting for those who will be
flexible. And you do
have to be careful not to
seem unreasonable next year, you may just
get a gift card.

Or. Joyce Brothers
be sure she will know not
to buy you a light-colored shirt again!
On the other hand. you
could try wearing the
shirt and see how it
makes you feel. Chances
are, you will get some
unexpected compliments
from people who are
tired of seeing you in the
same old dark colors.
This might make you
change your mind about
what you are willing to
wear, and you would
please your wife at the
same time. It would be
interesting to know if she
bought the shirt because
she didn't realize you
don't wear light colors,
or because she ljkes yellow, or because it seemed
so "you." In any case, try
not to give up on trying
new things. There are a
whole lot of options out

Proud to be apart of your life.
Subscribe today • 992-2155

so

Community Calendar
Public
meetings
Friday, July 2
LETART FALLS
Letart Township Trustees,
5 p.m., at office building.
Monday, July 5
SYRACUSE - Sutton
Township Trustees, 7
p.m. at Syracuse Village
Hall.
Tuesday, July 6
TUPPERS PLAINSEastern Local Board of
Education, special ses-

sion, 6:30 p.m., approve
annual appropriations
and any other business
to come before the
board.
Wednesday, July 7
PAGEVILLE - Scipio
Township Trustees, 6:30
p.m., Pageville Town Hall.
MIDDLEPORT
Special
meeting
of
Village
Middleport
Council, 7 p.m., to
approve 2011 budget.
POMEROY - Meigs
County Board of Health,
regular meeting, 5 p.m.,

Joins Guard
POMEROY - Michael James Evans, son of Mary
Quillen of Pomeroy and Robert Lee Evans III of
Dunas, had joined the National Guard and reported to
Fort Knox, Ky., on June 7.

does the right thing and
sends back the second
watch. And all the while,
your son is watching
see what will happen aad
how he should oena\·e
when someone makes a
mistake in his favor. So
•••
Dear Dr. Brothers: it's a delicate path that
My father ordered this you must v. alk. ·
very expensive watch
But this ab'O ma) be an
online. and two were opportunity to help your
shipped to our house by father with some of the
mistake. Since his credit issues he must be facing
card hasn't been charged that are making him angry
twice. he said he ·s keep- and wanting to ·get even
ing it! He's always raised v. ith somebody - even
me to do the right thing, though the watch compabut he just seems to be ny is an innocent party!
getting angrier as he Why don ·t YO\f have a
grows older. My son talk with him about how
asked me if what his he feels? Are there physigrandfather did was cal complaints that are
wrong. and I really don't making it difficult for him
know what to say. What to be a happy person? Is
he lonely, feeling useless
do I do?- M.P.
Dear M.P.: This is a or missing his work'?
difficult moral dilemma. Sometimes clearing · the
especially because a life mr this way cm1 take away
lesson for .your young some of the free-floating
and impressionable son anger out there. Just
hangs in the balance. You knowing that you and
love your father and your son care so much
seem to have some con- about him may help as
cerns ::~bout his emotional well. Then you can gently
health as he ages. and yet suggest that you are woryou have the moral com- ried about the example it
pass to tell you that what sets for his grandson if he
he is doing is wrong. were to keep the w·atch.
Confronting him could Then sit back and see if he
set off a firestorm, or deals with it on hi~ own.
make your relationship
(c) 2010 b_y ; Kh.zg
uncomfortable even if he Fearures Syndicate

Exavation work includes: Driveways, Land
Cleaning, Ponds, Trenches, Reclamation
&amp; Much More

Call today for a free estimate!
Manuel (740)590~3700
Danny (740)590-9255
Mike (740)590·3701

conference room, Meigs
County
Health
Department.

~

Clubs and
organizations
Thursday, July 1
CHESTER
Chester/Shade Historical
Associa\ion, 7 p.m.,
Chester Courthouse.
Tuesday, July 6
POMEROY - Meigs
Band Boosters, 6 p.m,
Tuesday, in the band

room at the high school.
.
MIDDLEPORT
Regular stated meeting
of Middleport Lodge 363,
7:.30 p.m. Refreshments
6:30. Bring non-perishable item for food bank.
Thursday, July .8
CHESTER - Regular
stated meeting of Shade
River Lodge 453, 7:30
p.m., to conduct business and confer 'Master
Mason degree on one
candidate. All Master
Masons
invLted.
Refreshments follow,

�PageA4

The Daily Sentinel

Thursday, July 1,

U.S. SUPREME COURT

The Daily Sentinel

Gun rights, campaign
spending top high court ter~

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

BY MARK SHERMAN

Pam Caldwell
Advertising Director

and Block Ia\\ firm in
Washington. "The conservative
majority is going to continue to
Two
conservative-driven feel a need 'to push back in a lot
decisions \\ ith potentially of areas," Smith said.
broad consequences will likely
The ~redit, or cnt1cism. for
define the just-completed many of the court's high-proSupreme Court term: freeing file decisions goes variously to
corporations and unions to Chief Justice John Roberts. the
spend as much as they like in putative leader of the court's
campaigns for Congres" and conservatives,
or
Justice
president. and ruling that Anthony Kennedy , who disAmericans have a right to a gun likes the label "swing justice.''
for self-defense wherever they but is always in the majority
live.
when the other eight justices
1\ key member of the five- ~plit along ~iberal and conscnjustice majorities in both cases. ative lines.
and the author of the guns
Their influence certainly wa-.,
opinion, was Justice Samuel in evidence this term. Roberts
/\lito. Though he has been on was in the majority more than
the court less than five years, any other JUstice - 92 percent
/\lito ha~ had an outc;ize influ- of the time - and Kennedy
ence _in firming up the court's wrote the campaign finance
conservati\e bloc.
decision as well as one in
His apptlintment to replace which the liberal justices prethe more moderate Sandra Day vailed. ruling out life prison
O'Connor. more than any other terms with no prospect of
choice in the last decade shows parole for juvenile offenders in
the importance of Supreme other than murder cn'f''Court nominations. It also
Yet the 60-year-old Alito has
points up that Elena Kagan's been a far more reliable consernomination to take the place of vative vote than O'Connor ever
the like·minded John Paul was. Al!to also was in the
Stevens almost certainly \Viii majority in 5-4 rulings that
not have the same short-term supported police officers 111
impact as Alito has had.
interrogation of criminal sus"Of all the changes in per- pects. prevented the televising
sonnel during this time of rapid of the trial O\er California's
chang~ at the court, the Alitoban on gay marriage and probfor-O'Connor switch has clear- ably will allow a war memorial
ly been the most consequen- cross to remain in the Mojave
tial,.. said Pa11 Clement. who de~ert.
was top Supreme Court lawyer
Con-.,umer and liberal interest
for then-President George W. groups. as well as some
Bush.
Democrats. have complained
Indeed. nothing is likely to that the Roberts-Jed court tilted
alter the court's current path m more than C\ er toward busincs~
either
direction
unless interests. Obama made the
Pn:sident Barack Obama has point himself with unusually
the chance to replace a right- critical remarks about the
leaning justice. or a future court's campaign finance deci·
Republican president gets to sion in his State of the Cnion
add another solid conservative speech in January.
Lisa Blatt, a former Justice
vote.
The conservative trend on the Department lawyer \vith the
court might be even stronger as Arnold and Porter law firm.
long as Democrats hold agreed that the court is favorCongress and the White House. able to business interests.' "As
said Paul Smith of the Jenner long as the business communiASSOCIATED PRESS

Co11gress slwl/ makt• tw law rt'SJH'ctit~g an
establisllme11t of religion, M prolli/Jititr.~ the free
. e:-.:crdse there'!{; or al1ridgi "J~ tlte .freedom of
speech, or of tile press; or the r(l!llt of tile people
peticeably to t~ssemblt·, atrd to petition tlu
Gol'ertrmetrt.for a redress of.'.!.riel'mrces.
The First Amendment to the U.S. Constitution

TODAY IN HISTOizY
Today 1s Thursday, July 1, the 182nd day of 201 0.
There are 183 days left in the year. this is Canada
Day
T6day's Highlight in History:
On July 1, 1910, the original Comiskey Park,
home of the Ch1cago White Sox for eight decades,
held. its opening day under the name White Sox
Park. (The home team lost to the St. louis Browns,
2·0.)
On th1s date:
·In f860, Charles Goodyear. the inventor of vulcan'IZed rubber, died in New York at age 59.
In 1863, the C1vil War Battle of Gettysburg,
resulting in a Unton v1ctory, began 1n Pennsylvania.
_In; 1867, Canada became a self-governing
i:lorrunion of Great Britain as the British· North
Amenca Act took effect.
:1111943, "pay-as-you-go" income tax withholding
began.
In 1946, the United States exploded a 20-kiloton
atomic bomb near Bikint Atoll in the Pacific.
In 1960. the rndependent Republ c of Somalia
was created from the merger of former British and
Italian colonies.
In 1968, the United States, Britain, the Soviet
Union and nearly 60 other nations signed the
Nuclear Nonproliferation Treaty.
In 1980, President Jimmy Carter signed the
Motor Carrier Act of 1980, which considerably
deregulated the U.S. trucking industry. "0 Canada"
was proclaimed the national anthem of Canada.
In 1997, Hong Kong reverted to Chinese rule
after 156 years as a British colony.
In 2004, actor Marlon Brande d1ed in Los
A11geles pt age 80.
Ten years ago: Vermont's civil unrons law, wh1ch
granted gay couples most of the nghts, benefits
and feSponsibllities of marriage, went into effect.
The Confederate flag was removed from atop
South Carolina's Statehouse. Academy Award-winning actor Walter Matthau d1ed in Santa Monica.
Calif. at age 79.
Five years ago: Justice Sandra Day O'Connor
unexpectedly announced her retirement from the
Supreme Court (she was succeeded by Samuel
Alito). Rhythm-and-blues singer Luther Vandross
died in Edison, N.J. at age 54.
One year ago: President Barack Obama held an
hour-long town hall forum on health care reform 1n
Annandale, Va., where, in an emotional moment,
he hugged cancer patient Debby Sm1th, a volunteer for Obama's political operation, Organizing for
America. Academy Award-winning actor Karl
Malden d1ed in Brentwood. Calif. at 97. ·

1

I

Thought for Today: "Competition brings out
the best in products and the worst in people."
- David Sarnoff, American broadcasting pioneer (1891-1971).

Letters to the editor should be lim1ted to 300 words. All letters
are sUbject to editing. must be s1gned and include address and
telephone number. No unsigned lette·s w1ll be published
Letter:; sj1ould be an good taste, addressing Issues. not personalities "Thank You" letters wall not be accepted lor publication

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.

Laycffs of census workers
_will distort jobs data
•
firino reflects the short-term
natu:e of census jobs. ~1ost are
part time and last ix to eight
Por the first time in six month-.. week-..
the federal unemployment report
The decline in census workers
to be released Friday will likely 1sn't expected to h.ave much
show a net los-. of jobs.
effect on the jobless rate.
But hold off ~m the panic but· Analy~ls predict the rate \\ill
ton.
edge up to 9.8 per&lt;.l:nt in June
It's true that employers arc from 9.7 percent 111 l\.1ay. In part,
expected to have cut more than that's because Ph: !J 1ps estimates
100.000 jobs in June . But that that about half the temporary
figure. if accurate. will be decep- census hin.•s also held other jobs.
tive. It will reflect the end of up So they won't be counted as
to 250.000 temporary census unemplO) cd once their census
jobs. The real focus Frida) will job ends.
be on how man) net jobs private
The elimination of 250.000
employers created.
census jobs could lmwr personal
"People arc looking past the income slightly m June. accordcensus effect." said Alec Phillips. ing to Nigel Gault, chief U.S.
an economi~t at Goldman Sachs. cconombt at IHS Global Insight.
Analysts predict private busi- But "it's minor relative to a lot of
nesses added 112.000 jobs in other things going on," he smtl.
June. according to a ~un·ey b)
Employers boo ted pay in
Thomson Reuters. That would be May. Employees also '' orkcd
a healthy rebound from May's more hours. Togctlt\.·1. that lifted
41.000 gain. But it's far from income b) a healthy 0.5 pert'ent
enough t~l signal a roaring rec&lt;.w- last month. the Commerce
ery or rapidly reduce the unem- Department said earlier this
ployment rate, 110\\ at 9.7 per- week.
But otlll'r recent reports haH'
cent. It would take a net gain of
around 200.000 jobs a mon.th to mised Iears that the econo1 nic
reco\ er) is -.tailing.
quickly reduce that rate.
A sharp drop in consumer conThe plunge in census jobs
comes just a month after the gov- fidence s~.Jnt stocks tumbling
ernment added nearly a half-mil- Tuesduv - and the -.,elling conhon people to conduct door-to- tinued \Vcdne~day. Lcs-.:Confidoor vi sirs and other ta-.ks. The dent consumer-., could rein in
census began hiring more work- their spentling. already at modest
ers last ycur. It added about levels.
Other factors hm e al o rattled
500,000 thi spring.
The rapid switch from hiring to nerves. Chinn's economy is
RUGABER

ASSOCIATED PRESS

· LETTERS TO THE EDITOR

ty is not making a silly argu-.
ment. they're going to win.''
Blatt ~aid.
But the voting pattern in
bu~mess cases often is not ideological. When the court called
into question the &lt;.:onviction of
former Enron CEO Jeffrey
Skilling and limited the reach
of a fraud Ia\\ used to pursue
business and public corruption.
the outcome was unanimous.
The Robert:-. court pbo ha~
sho\\ n less openness to the
power of states in relation to
government.
the
federal
Roberts and Alito both ~pent
large portions of their professional careers working for the
federal government. "They
don't come to the table with~
same view of -.,rates· concer
as the late Chief Justt ,
William
Rchnquist
and
O'Connor. said Carter Phillips
of the Sidley Austin law firm,
who argues frequently before
the Supreme Court.
Alito. a former federal prosecutor. was a lone dissenter in
one case in which the court
struck down a federal ban on
videos that show graphic violence agaimt animals. That ruling cheered free speech advocates.
Two months later, Alito was
iu the majority in rejecting a
free speech challenge to the
federal law that prohibits ass is-·
tance of any sort - including'
advice about entirely legal
actJvitJe.., - to designated terronst groups. Justice John Paul
Stevens. whose retirement led
to Kagan~s nomination, joined
the conservatives in uphold'
the la\\.
Obama 's first high
nominee.
Justice
Sonia·
Sotomayor. wa-. among the dissenters in that case and generally f1t in comfortably this term
among the liberal justice-.. She
voted most often \\ith JusticesStephen Breyer and Ruth Bader~
Ginsburg and lca-.t often with-,
Justices Antonin Scalia and
Clarence Thomas.

EMPLOYMENT

Bv CHRISTOPHER S.

Correction Policy
Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
Our ma1n concern 1n all stones 15 PubliShed Tuesday through Fr day
to be accurate 11 you know 01 an 111 CQurt Street. Pomeroy. Ohao
arrQr in a story. call the newsroom Second-class postage paid a~
at (740) 992-2156
Pomeroy.
.
Member: The Assoc1ated Press
and t!le Oh10
Newspaper
Our main number is
Assocaation
(740) 992-2156.
Postmaster: Send address corrocDep'artment extensions are: t1ons to The Daaly Sent1no1. P.O
Box 729, Pomeroy. Ohio 45769

2010

slowing. the U.S. housing ma.
is sputtering and leaders of
world\ richer nations ha\'e
pledged sharp cut' in their
deficits.
Gi\'en the sour outlook, a June
emplo) ment report that showed a
ner gain of 112.000 private-sector jobs would be "greeted with a
mild sigh of relief,'' Gault said ..
Such a gain \\Oulcl sugge-.t the
recovery is still on track. he -.,aid.
and ClHIId help restore consumer
confidence and spending.
On the other hand. Friday's.
jobs report might deliver a disap-.
pointing surprise. One hint that if
might : Payroll company ,\DP
said Wednesdav that its tally of
private sec' ,,r emplo) mcnt
shO\\eJ a gain of onh 13.000
jobs in Jun;. That was below the.
60.000 that economists had
expected. And it compared with again of 57.000 the previous
month.
Another dose of l'oncern cu'
from the Conference Boat
report Wednesday that online JO
po~ting ·. which had risen at a
health) clip earlier this year.
were flat in ~hl) and June.
The ADP figure is consistent·
with a "sub-par recover)." said
Jay Feldman. an t•conomist at
Credit Suisse.
Still. putting thing~ in per~pec-.
the. he added, "Slow gro\\th·
may not be satisfying, but it is
emphatically not - and emphaticall) better than - a ne\\ recession.''

�·---~-...---- ··~ - ------~-

Thursday, July 1, 2010

-~- -----

----·--- · --~--· -·--~---------------

The Daily Sentinel • Page As

www.mydailysentinel.com

'

Deaths

Bloodmobile coming to Middleport Saturday
Special treat
for donors

Charles Milton Snyder
Charles ~ t ilton Snyder. 62. Gallipolis. died
Wednesday, June 30, 20 I0. at Pleasant Valley
Hospital. Point Pleasant. West Virginia. Friends rna)·
call from 6-8 p.m .. Friday. July 2, 2010. at the
eens Funeral Chapel in Gallipolis where the
al service wi II be conducted at I 0 a.m .. Saturday,
J
3. 20 10, with Rev. Roy Oldaker officiating.
Gallia Countv Veterans Service Funeral Detail Team
will conduct military service in the chapel. In keeping Charles wishes cremation will follow the funeral
sen ice. Expressions or sympathy may be sent to the
family by vbiting www.crcmeensfuneralhomes.com.

MIDDLEPORT
Area re~id~nts can celebrate life, liberty and the
pursuit of happiness this
Fourth of July weekend
when they report to
donate blood at one of
four locations in the
Greater
Alleghenies
Region.
The Saturday blood
drive
locations
are
Middleport,
9
a.m.
to
I
1
f pm. at the ~1iddleport
------------------~ Church of Christ. Family
Life Center, 437 Main
Oa C OSUre
Street; and Scott Depot.
I&gt;.
C
.
.
. 1 W.Va .. 8 am to noon, TriS ALEn1 El\'TER - A portion of Oh10 124 m County YMCA G m
S~lem Towns~ip between Jacks and Legion Roads 200 Carl's Lane.· y ·
w11l be closed.trom 7:30a.m.- 3 p.m .. today for culvert
The l\tonday blood
replacement. fhc. s~_ggestcd detour ts SR 124 to SR drive
locations
are
160 to the tO\\n ot \ tnton and SR 325 back to SR 124. Parkersburg. W.Va., 9 am
to 3 pm. Keystone Red
Cross Donor Center.
3210 Dudley Ave.; and
SYRACUSE - Syracuse Board of Public Affairs' Williamson. W.Va .. II
regular meeting has been changed to July 12.
am to 4 pm. Williamson
Memorial
Hospital.

l

a

Local Briefs

R d I

Meeting changed
TB Clinic closed

ATHENS - . Local
businesses and musicians
are gettin9 ready for one
of Athens favorite street
festi\ als, Boogie on the
Bricks.
Saturday, July 17,
Court Street will be humming \\ ith a beer garden,
food vendors. local artwork and children's
acttvlttes.
Festivities
begin at noon and con-

For the Record
911
POMEROY
l\;lcigs County 91 I and
Emergency Services responded to the follov. ing
calls for assistance:

Tuewlav

8:47a.m .. Ohio 7. Pomer~y.chcst pain; 10:22 a.m ..
Pleasant Ridge. nausea: 12:48 p.m .. Long Run Road.
chest pain; I :23 p.m .. Beech Street, stroke/CVA; 2:06
p.m .. Railroad Street. laceration; 3:19p.m .. Pomeroy.
syncope; II :21 p.m.. South Second Avenue,
Middleport. chest pain.

department. the commissioners own and arc
responsible for several
other buildings~ a building on Second Street
which houses the prosecuting attorney's office.
Veterans
l\lemorial
Hospital and med1cal
office
complex
on
Mulberry Hetghts, and
the Department of Job
and Family Services
building in l\tiddlcport.
Recent!), commissioners recch ed another
building. the former

POMEROY - Actions journalized in Meigs
County Common Pleas Com1:

Domestic
issolution granted to John W. Tillis. Jr.. Sara
llis.

Reports rroin Page At
Ave. and East Main Street. Dencil R. Hudson.
Syracuse was cited for assured clear distance when a
1998 Ford he was dri,ing struck a 2006 Ford Driven
by Delilah J. Ritchie. Pomeroy.
Ritchie wa~ stopped in traffic at the ~ye Ave. traffic light behind a 200!) Kia driven by Cassandra .M.
Patterson. Long Bottom. When Hudson struck
Ritchie's vehicle, this caused a chain reaction, pushing Ritchie into Patterson's vehicle. There were no
·
mjuries involved.
Shaun N . \ttcCoy. Mason, W.Va. was cited for
improper backing when he backed a 2007 Ford into
an unoccupied 2005 Toyota parked on Court Street
O\vned by Sarah L. Hixson. Athens. There were no
injuries reported. Kulchar is also itwestigating.
I

1

l

,

elude at I 0:30 pm.
At I p.m .. local bands
will take to the stage.
Whatever your musical
ta. tes - country. bluegrass. folk, or rock and
roll the festival's
seven bands v. ill get you
moving. The Royales.
Coolville
Hotclub.
Rattletrap Stringband.
Broken Ring. Duke Jr.
and the Smokey Boots.

Any Colour You Like and
Flyaway Satum will provide the boogie inspiration. Athens Independent
Restaurants· members
will be selling food. with
a convenient dining area
nearb). Children can take
part in water balloon tossing. face painting or do
their own boogieing in a
bouncy house.
The event is free; as is

Bric~s _

parking in the city garage
on West Wa&amp;hington
Street. Boogte ·on ·the
Bricks is seeking volunteers. Vendor space is still
available. as are sponsorship options. For more
information.
visit
www.boogieonthebricks.c
om. Organizers remind
you that. "summer's here
and the time is right for
dancing in the streets."

Holzer Clinic office on
Mill
Street
in
Middleport. That building will be used soon to
house the DJFS's onestop employment center.
Anderson said commissioners recently spent
O\er :54.000 to replace
the air conditioner in the
Medical Arts building.
which
houses
the
O'Bleness
l\leigs
Medical Center. earlier
this
month.
Commissioners also just
spent $16.000 on a new

'

air conditioner at the Mill
Street building.
The courthouse will
soon need a new roof.
Anderson said. and that
will cost around $60.000.
The 19th-century sheriff's office has a nev.
roof. but needs interior
repair of water damage.
"All of our buildings
need \vork," Anderson
said. "They are old buildings and they arc expensive to repair...
During their regular
business meeting. com-

.'

missioners:
• Approved a contract
between the DJFS and
Family Healthcare, Inc.,
to
provide
medical
assessments for clients.
• Recessed thejr meeting until 2 p.m. on
Thursday for payment of
bills.
Also attending "were
Commissioners
.Mick
Davenport and Michael
Bartrum and Clerk Gloria
Kloes, who opened the
1 meeting with the Pledge
of Allegiance.

Tax from Page At

.---------------------------------------order to upgrade electrical \\iring to allow for backup
rators. it would cost roughly $7.000 to upgrade
lift station near the Pomeroy Ball Fields and
$ .000 for the wastev. ater treatment plant.
Hellman said estimates for generators were running
between $25.000 - $50.000. Hellman recommended
purchasing a 100-amp generator \Vhich was estimated
to cost $38.000. Clerk-Treasurer Kathy Hyseli said
anything over $25.000 would have to be advertised
for bid. Council President George Stewart said the
village needed to do what it could to comply with
Ohio EPA regulations. Unfortunately. at this time.
Hysell said the village doesn't have $38.000 to purchase a generator.
Hellman also brought up possibly amending the
ordinance on fines for tall grass by placing wording in
the ordinance which \Vould allow the \illage to charge
absent and non-compliant homeo\\ ners for cutting the
grass. if the village cut it. Hellman said the issue was
brought up to him by Code Enforcement Officer
Homer Mills \\ ho said some absentee homeov. nen are
not heeding citations is~ucd for tall grass which continues to grow in their absence. Hellman said in these
situations where citations are ignored, he wondered if
it would be possible to have village workers cut the
grass and then bill the homeov. ner's tax ticket'?
Stewart said he wasn't sure about that and as of
now. the ordinance for tall grass only allows for a fine
to be issued. Ste\\art also questioned whether the village could afford to pay workers to cut the grass of
. te homeowners. even if it was recovered later on
bill. Councilman Jim Sbson agreed and sugd the mutter be tabled until Mayor John Musser
•
and absent Councilmen Jackie Welker and Vic Young
could be present to also be in on the discussion.
Hellman and Pomeroy F'ire Chief Rick Blaettnar
also reported the fire hydrants in town which hav~
been painted green were done so to denote the fact
they need repaired or replaced.
Councilwoman Ruth Spaun brought up the issue of
the billboards in Pomero). saying she felt council
failed to stay on top of the bsuc and stop it before it
happened. Spaun ask~:d wh) Village Solicitor Chris
Tenoglia wasn't contacted earlier for his legal opinion
on the matter?
Stewart aid council didn't have a sav on the matter. that it was up to the \ ariance committee to make
the final decision, which is what happened.

form of positive ID when
you come to donate.
For donor appointment
v. here available. call
(800) RED CROSS or
visit redcrossblood.6rg.
Those with specific eligibility questions should
call the Red Cross Donor
Client Support Center at
I 866-236-3276. Many.
donors are eligible to
give blood every 56
days. Individuals may
also follow the Red
Cross
on
Twitter:
www.twitter.com/redcro
ssGAR.
The
Greater
Alleghenies
Region
directly serves hospitals.
patients and donors in a
I00-county
area
in
Ma(yland.
Kentucky.
Ohio.
Pennsylvania.
Virginia
and
West
Virginia, with more than
five-dozen blood products and related services.
and also supports blood
needs experienced by
patients elsewhere in
hospitals served through
Red
Cross
B lood
Services.

Grantrro~ Page At

Common Pleas

Pomeroy from Page At

average donor m the I 00countv
Greater
Alleghenies
Region
donates les~ than twice a
year. although many indiJ.•iduals can donate every
56 days. "Donors of all
blood types are needed
daily. and supplie~ of
Type 0 negative blood
are critically low at this
time." she said. .
In addition, all presenting blood donors age I 8
or older during June. July
and August are entered in
that month's drawing for
a dream $5.000 vacation
package of their choice.
For additional information. vtslt redcros blood.org/greateralleghenies.
Individuals who are 17
years of age ( 16 with
parental permission in
Ohio and West Virginia).
meet height and weight
requirements (at least
110 pounds based on
height) and are in generally good health may be
eligible to donate blood.
Bring your Red Cross
blood donor card or other

Athens hosts Boogie on the

.
MEROY - The Meigs County TB Clinic will
be closed July 5. 1'\o skin tests will be given Friday.
July 2 Normal hours resume July 6.

•

Education Room. 859
Alderson Street.
In return for donating
blood the American Red
Cross ' ' ill donors a $2
coupon for a free ice
cream treat (while supplies last).
"Far away from picnics, fireworks. concerts
and parades. seriously ill
and critically injured
patients continue to
receiv~:
blood. These
needs continue day and
night. every day of the
year.'' commented Lisa
Hart, Senior Director.
Donor
Recruitment.
Greater
A lleghenies
Region, Red Cross Blood
Sen ices.
"When you donate
blood, you celebrate life
by doing ~vhat you can to
help obtam a happy outcome for patients and
their families. For those
who take time from their
holiday celebrations to
donate blood. we want to
provide a special sweet
treat to kick off National
Ice Cream Month.''
Hart added that the

1

to respond to the courtesy
letter will then be issued
a subpoena to appear
before RITA tax attorneys. Baker said.
Those letters could go
to taxpayers who have
delinquent for the past
five to six vcars. Baker
said.
•
The lettcr-writmg campaign will cost the \ illage
nothing beyond ig usual
percentage fcc for RITA's
sen·ice. The village will
pay $8 per subpoena
issued under the agreement approved at council's Monday evening
meeting. and those fees
will be directly deducted
from the village's semimonthly disbursement
from RITA.

Baker said RITA has
access to both the state's
and the Internal Revenue
Service's taxpayer database. and can therefore
determine who is workor
h\ ing
in
ing
Middleport but not fihng
their tax retums as the
hm requires. According
to R ITA. 552 names are
on the list.
"These are people
v. ho have not filed
returns for multiple
years or JUSt one year.
and in some cases. there
may be a reason why a
return was not filed.''
Baker satd. " In many
cases.
residents
of
Middleport work· in
Pomeroy or other towns
with an income tax. and

have just not filed a
retum to indicate that.''
"There is no guarantee
of how much revenue
could
be
realited
through the program.
but the return of delinquent income tax has
alwa) s covered the costs
of the program (in other
towns and villages),"
Baker said.
The village's cor:tract
'' ith RITA was controversial two years ago
when
council
first
approved it. but it has
proven to be a tremendous money saver for
the village. Turning over
collections to the nonprofit agency allowed
the village to eliminate a
position and a depart-

ment, saving tens of
thousands of dollars. As
an added benefit. the village has seen an increase
in collections throu~h
RITA as well.
In 2005. the village
paid 545.138 in operating
expenses for its administrator and other expenses.
but collected just over
$200.000. Last year. the
villa!!e
collected
S277~ I 05 .53 in income
tax last year. at a cost to
the village of $8,240.40.
In January, Baker said
the contract with RITA
and the savings it has
presented to the village
has allowed payraises for
pol ice officers and other
services provided direct-.
ly to village residents.

Meigs from Page At
In personnel matters.
Christopher Saber \\as
hired as a social studies
teacher at !\1eigs ~fiddle
school on a one-year contract, the superintendent
was authorized to employ
temporat') employees on
an
as-needed
basis,
Michael Kennedy v. as
hired as high school
cross-country and head
track coach and Carson
Crow as Middle School
football l'oach.
The Board voted to
apply to the Ohio
Department of Educat ion
for a district operational
waiver to allo\\ for up to
four days or 24 hours of
professional
development for school employ-

ees to implement the district's
improvement
plans. and the student
handbooks for all three
schools were approved.
n other action. it ''as
'oted to apply to th~ Ohio
Department of Educaton
for a Credit Flexibilitv
Full
Implementation
Waiver for the coming
school year citing the district\ need for additooal
time to develop assessment
strategies
and
instntments to be utilized
in what was tem1ed the
"testing out" option.
Suerintendent Will iam
Buckley explained that
the credit flexibility program pertains to awarding
credit for out-of-school

activities which arc rele\'ant to course work in a
regular classroom.
MeiJ!bcrs adjourned
and mo,·ed into executive session for the purpose of hiring and compensation of personnel.
negotiations
and
saietleasc of property.
.Moving back into open
session, the Board voted to
split the maintenance and
transportation
position
held by Paul McElroy. into

two postttons due to the
quanity of work' required.
McElro\ will be retained
in the transportation position with someone to be
hired for maintenance~
As for the saleilease of
property no action wall
taken. Superintendent
Buckley reported. Board
members at the meeting
were Ryan Mahr. Ron
Logan. Roger Abbott.
Larry
Tucker.. . ~and
Barbara Musser.

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The Daily Sentinel

Thursday, July 1, 2010

Land transfers
POMEROY - Meigs
County Recorder Kay
Hill reported the following transfers of real
estate:
Bruce
McKelvey.
Teresa McKelvey, to
River Rcsourcs, LLC.
deed, Lebanon.
Kenneth Lee Slone,
Wanda Lee Lone, to
Clyde Slone. Jr., Monna
J. Slone, deed, Columbia.
J.
Mayer.
John
deceased, to Rebecca C.
Mayer, certificate of
transfer. Lebanon.
Doris S. Keenan to
Samantha Keenan. deed.
Ohve.
Juanita S. Coleman.
Stewart Coleman. to
Jeffrey S. Belcher. deed.
Salem.
Jeremy A. Strahler.
Megan D Strahler, to
Jason R Grooms. Emily
W.
Grooms.
deed.
Columbia.
Naomi Jean Durst to
Leroy Paul Hendrix, Lois
L.
Hendrix.
deed,
Salisbury.
Susan Welsh. James
Welsh. to Kenneth R.
Welsh, Connie M. Welsh,
deed; Scipio.
Pamela L. Graham to
Charlee
Deborah
Graham. deed. Lcanon.
AClam B. Sanders.
Sanders. to
Ashtey
Tuppers Plains-Chester
Water District, right of
wa), OliYe.
Meigs County District
Public Library to Village
of Racine. right of way.
Sutton.
Meigs County District
Public Library to Village
of Racine. right of way.
Sutton.
Millard Burke, Richard
Burke, to Eagle Rose
Corp., right of way,
Columbia.
·
Dolphus Burke. Jr.,
Wanda Burke, Audra C.
Burke. to Eagle Rose
Corp ..right
of way.
Columbia.
L.
Price,
Samuel
Carmen L. Prke, Larry
R. Price. Deborah V.
Price,
Bever! y
J.
Brougher. to Samuel L.
Price, Carmen L. Price,
deed. Lebanon.
Kenna Howard Bush,
Jr.. deceased, to Kathy
Bush, affidavit. Bedford.
Six River Partners to
Dennis Lee Richards. Jr..
Christina Lynn Wood.
deed, Letart.
Charles R. Delay,
Pamela P. Delay, to
Chelsea B. Roush, Ryan
H. Roush. deed, Rutland.
Leonard A. Myers,
Mary B. Myers. to Sally
Thacker Gonzales, Susan
Randy
L.
Watson,
Watson,
deed.
Chester/Oranee.
ChristopherAlan Perry
to Jessica L. Fox. deed.
Columbia.
Charles Whittington,
Lola Whittington. to
Cheryl Bobo. deed,
Chester.

Norman
Douglas
Staats. Douglas Staats. to
JeffreyS. Darnell. Tonya
deed,
R.
Darnell.
Chester.
Daniel Earl Cremeans,
deceased. to Barbara J.
Cremeans,
affidavit.
Salisbury.
Reid . A.
Young,
deceased, to Randy Alan
Young, certificate of
transfer, Chester.
Reid
A.
Young,
deceased. to Sheri Lynn
Young Dunbar. certificate of transfer. Chester.
Reid
A.
Young.
deceased. to Nola C.
Young O'Bnen. certificate of transfer. Chester.
Daniel
0. Toban,
Valerie A. Toban. to
Toban Recovable Living
Trust. deed. Bedford.
0. Toban,
Daniel
Valerie A. Toban. to
Toban Recovable Living
Trust. deed. Bedford.
Daniel 0. Toban,
Valerie A. Toban, to
Recovable
Toban
Living Trust, deed,
Bedford.
Robin D. Tocton to
Timothy H. Parsons,
deed, Scipio.
Suzanne M. Greif to
Richard P. Buckley, Mary
Jo Buckley. Richard P.
Buckley Trust. Mary Jo
Bucklev Trust, deed,
Bedford.
Edward L. Murphy,
deceased. to Loretta
Murphy, affidavit. Olive.
Keith 0. Wood. Julia
Wood. James Bing,
Bonnie S. Warner, Gary
Warner, to Rodney L.
Wood. deed, Chester.
John
Redovian,
deceased. to Rosetta
Redovian, certificate of
transfer, Chester.
Carol Hess to Michael
J. Niekamp, Isaac G.
Niekamp. deed, Bedford.
Alice
Lieving
to
Lorena Donofrio. deed,
Columbia.
Urban L. Graf, Judith
A. Graf. Joseph L. Graf,
ShaHHUII
M.
Graf.
Charles P. Lyons. Eva
Lyons. to Andy Turner.
Khristine Turner: deed.
Lebanon.
Urban L. Graf. Judith
A. Graf, Joseph L. Graf.
M.
Graf.
Shannon
Charles P. Lyons. Eva
Lyons, to Andy Turner.
Khristine Turner, deed,
Lebanon.
Urban L. Graf, Judith
A. Graf, Joseph L. Graf,
Shannon
M.
Graf,
Charles P. Lyons, Eva
Lyons. to Andy Turner,
Khristine Turner, deed,
Lebanon.
John Weeks. Barbara
Weeks, to Steven D.
Pullins. easement.
Brenda K. Darst. Rex
Darst. to Bernice L.
s,.,·an. release of easement. Salisbury.
Scott R. Napper, Pam
Napper.
to
Mary
Gertrude Napper, deed.
Salem.

Meigs County Forecast
Thursday ... Patchy
dense fog in the morning.
Sunny. Highs in the
upper 70s. Northeast
winds around 5 mph.
Thursday
night. .•
Clear. Lows in the lower
50s. North winds 5 to 10
mph.
Friday...Sunny. Highs
around 80. Northeast
winds around 5 mph.
Friday night. ..Clear.
Lows in the mid 50s.
East . winds around 5
mph.

Saturday
and
Saturday night. ..Clear.
Highs in the upper 80s.
Lows in the lower 60s.
Independence Day and
Sunday night ...Mostly
clear. Highs in the upper
80s. Lows in the mid 60s.
~londay
through
Tuesday night. •.Partly
cloudy.
Hot.
Highs
around 90. Lows in the
upper 60s.
Wednesday ... Partly
sunny. Highs in the mid
80s.

Submitted photo

Class of 1960 members attending the recent 50th reunion were left to right, front, Alfred (Buddy) Toney. Donna
Neville Fiske, Marilyn Rice Johansen, Margie Stobart Wolfe, Mary Grace Stobart Cowdery, Willadene
Randolph Medley, Joyce Carson Rice, Mary Euler Hill; middle, Don Beegle and Sue Ann Buck Beegle, Karen
Holter Werry, Racine; Dorothy Circle Harden, Sheila Young Lott, Karen Roush Connolly, Becky Ward Wolfe,
Lois Graham Allen, Louise Fisher Smith, Carol Deem Willman, Patty Roush ~ape, Racine; Saradelle Rees
Mack, Circleville; Barbara Grimm Gasser, Maineville; and back, Jack Wigal, Carl Wolfe, George Connolly, Jerry
Daily, Ted Hayman, Richard Shuler, Charles Shain, Robert Lewis; Jack Proffitt, Tom Chapman. Other members
include Carol Bachtel and Donna Henry Coffman.

Racine class observes SOthl
RACINE - Thirty.three members of the
Racine High School
Class of 1960 receiUly
celebrated their 50th high
school reunion.
The group gathered for
lunch at the Syracuse
Community Center. a give
toi the village of Syracuse
from their deceased classmate, Robert Wingett. The
afternoon was spent visiting, reviewing school
mementos and taking pictures. The class published
a memory book with info
about what they had been
doing for the past fifty
years.
They attended the
alumni dinner at Southern
High School the same
evening where-their vale-

dictorian, Sheila Young
Lott. gave the alumni
speech. During the program. the class awarded
two $750 scholarships to
graduating
seniors
Michael Manuel and
Katie Woods.
The class has faithfully
held a reunion every five
years since graduating in
1960. Now that many of
them are retired. they
meet in small groups several times a y~ar at various locations.
Alumni attending were
Alfred (Buddy) Toney,
Moneta, Va.; Donna
Neville Fiske, Columbus;
Marilyn Rice Johansen,
Las Vegas, NV; Margie
Stobart Wolfe. Racine;
Mary Grace Stobart

Cowdery. Long Bottom:
Willadene
Randolph
Medley. Newark; Joyce
Carson Rice. Roanoke.
Va.:. Mary Euler Hill.
Racine.
Don Beegle and Sue
Ann
Buck
Beegle.
Homosassa. Fla.; Karen
Holter Werry. Racine;
Dorothy Circle Harden,
Racine; Sheila Young
Lott, Carlsbad, N.M.:
Karen Roush Connolly,
Syracuse; Becky Ward
Wolfe, Buckeye Lake;
Lois Graham Allen,
Pomeroy; Louise Fisher
Smith, Baltimore; Carol
Deem Willman. Bethel
Park. Pa; Patty Roush
Pape. Racine; Saradelle
Rees Mack, Circleville;
Barbara Grimm Gasser.

Maineville. Back row.
left to right: Jack Wigal.
Goodyear. Ariz.: Carl
Wolfe.
Middleport:
Connoll).
George
S) racuse: Jerry Dail).
Reynoldsburg:
Ted
Havman.
Columbus:
Richard Shuler. Tuppers
Plains: Charles Sha~n.
Pomerov: Robert Lewis.
Jack
Venetia:
Pa.:
Proffitt. East Wentchec.
Wash.; Tom Chapman.
Nev. Haven. W.Va.
Deceased members of
the class are Franklin
Brinker, John Cleland.
Harold McClaskey. John
Motley. Chris Pickens.
Robert Smith. Robert
Theiss. Robert Weddle.
Don Weese, Robert
Wingett.

•

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The Daily S.entinel

Inside
Rhers returning to Celtics. Page B2

Gamecocks win CWS, Page B6

Thursday, July 1, 2010

L sCHEDULE Stone wins first half of Riverside Senior League
Wedrul.sday. .JUM...J.O

Ashland at Posl27, 6 p.m.
Post 39 at Logan. 6 p.m

Jbur&amp;.O.ay•.JUlll Llo Sundav. J.ulll-.4
Post 27 at July 4 Tournament
(Ashland)
Post 39 at Athens Tournament
Monday, Jul.y..S
Post 27 at Logan, 6 p.m.
Tuesday, .J.u.IY...§
Hillsboro.at Post 27, 6 p.m.
Beverly Lowell at Post 39. 6 p.m.

Judge issue~
warrant for
Cavs Hickson
CHARDON.
Ohio
\AP) - An Ohio judge
has issued a warrant tor
Cleveland Cavaliers forward J .J. Hie kson after
he failed to show up for
two hearings about a
speeding ticket.
dge Mark H&lt;lssett
ed a warrant on
onday after Hickson
did not appear in
Chardon
Municipal
Court for hearings on
June 7 and June 14. A
clerk savs Hickson had
not sho\vn up in court by
Wednesday. just minutes
before the office closed.
Police cited Hickson
on May 27 for allegedly
driving 61 mph in a 25
mph zone in a central
Ohio township.
Hickson's
lawyer,
Henry Hilow. said he was
unaware of the warrant
on Wednesday afternoon.
He did not return a message seeking further
comment.
Hickson faces another
speedino
charge
in
Rock} River Municipal
Court from June 23. He's
been convicted on four
other s~eding charges in

!

£n~;Ieague

baseball team
courting LeBron

OKLAHOMA CITY
(AP) - LeBron James
has plenty of opportuni. ties 111 front of hun as the
&lt;NBA's top free agent.
·How about playing baseball?
The Oklahoma City
RedHawks
on
Wednesday offered the
reigning NBA MVP the
chance to play for the
minor-league baseball
club. along with some
benefits.
Instead of offering millions of dollars, the
RedHawks are attempting to entice James with a
rental home with • free
lawn
care,
a
"LeBratwurst" named
after him and four tickets
the "All You Can Eat"
on at the ballpark.
•
e tongue-in-cheek
offer even includes an
opportunity for James to
win a long-desired championship.~ The Triple-A
affiliate of the Texas
Rangers had a 3 I /2game lead in its division
1n the Pacific Coast
League
entering
• Wednesday night.
The RedHawks say
they· re also considering
similar
offers
for
Dwyane Wade, Chris
Bosh
and
Brian
Seal abri ne.

Jackets claim
Ethan Moreau
off waivers
COLUMBUS, Ohio
(AP) - The Columbus
Blue
Jackets
have
claimed
former
Edmonton Oilers left
. g Ethan Moreau
1h-ROH') off waivers.
he
34-year-old
•
Moreau. who has a yea;·
left on a contract that
pays him $1.75 million,
had nine goals and nine
assists last season. The
Oilers could have bought
out his contract had
Moreau cleared waivers
on Wednesday. but now
the Blue Jackets will
assume his contract.
Moreau had a careerbest 20 goals during the
2003-04 season. He has
145 O'Oals and 132 assists
in 14NHL seasons.
~

points. The second half of
the 2010 Rrverside Senior
season will begin next
Tw!sday at 9 a.m.
W.Va.
MASON.
A total . of 84 players
Carl Stone of Ripley has
were
on hand for
comfortabl1· 'won the first
half of the 010 Riverside Tuesday's first-half finale
Senior season. Stone and the field was divided
four
posted a winning total of into 21 teams
185 points. t1nishing well players.
The lo~ score for the
ahead of runner-up Clyde
Jar:v1s (163.5) b~~ 21.5 day was an 11-under par
59, tumed in by the team
pomts.
There was a two-way of Pat Harbour, Bobby
tie for third place Oliver, Earl Johnson and
between Bub Stivers and Kenny Greene.
The second place team
Bob Humphrey. both of
whom posted first-half of Carl Stone, Jim
season totals of 162.5 Mitchell, Bob Hysell and
SENTINEL STAFF

MDSSPORTS@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

of

Jim Cunningham tumed
in a I 0-under par round
of60.
Two teams finished tied
for third with 'identical
rounds of 9-under par 61.
Ken
Whited~1 Graio
Barnes, Bob Avecy ana
Ed Debalski maqe up one
of the thirQ-place finishers. while the other consisted of Steve Safford.
Tony Folden,
Buzz
Faudree
and
Bill
Winebrenner.
The closest to the pin
winners were Butch
Bookman on No. 9 and
Craig Barnes on No. 14.

2010 ·Riverside Senior League
First-Half Standings
Carl Stone
Clyde Jarvis
Bub Stivers
Bob Humphrey
Don Corbin
Ed Debalski
Bob Oliver
Bobby Joe Roush
Ken Whited
Mick Winebrenner
Cuzz Laudermilt
Ralph Sayre
Frank Brown
Kenny Greene
Richard Mabe
Curtis Grubb
Dick Dugan
~

185.0
163.5
162.5
162.5
159.0
151.0
148.0
147.0
146.0
143.5
140.0
136.5
134.0
131.0
129.0
128.0
127.5

127.0
125.0
123.0
1
22.5
119.0
117.5
117.5
117.0
1155
115.0
114.0
113.5
113.6
112.5
111.0
110.5
109.5

Federer
upset at
Wimbledon

Cleveland
Cavaliers'
LeBron
James dunks
the ball in the
third quarter Ci:,..;.'l&lt;:~:c•::...:.'·•
against the
Philadelphia
76ers on
Wednesday,
December 16,
2009, at
Wachovia
Center in
Philadelphia,
Pennsylvania.
The NBA free
agency period
officially
began at
12:01 a.m. on
Thursday, July
1, with allstars such as
James,
Dwyane
Wade, Chris
Bosh, Dirk
Nowitzki,
Am are
Stoudemire
and Joe
Johnson
available to
sign with
new team.

a

Ron Cortes/
Philadelphia

lnqulrer/MCT

With LeBron the big prize, free agency set to open
. NEW YORK (AP) The date has been circled
on calendars around the
NBA for years.
July 1, 2010: The day
LeBron James becomes a
free agent.
The day the league
might begin to cl)ange
forever.
"I think the landscape
could really shift," former Phoenix general
manager Steve Kerr said.
Shopping season starts
at 12:01 a.m. EDT
Thursday with James as
the biggest prize, a two-

Jtm Lawrence
BiiiYoho
Willis Dudding
Gary Minton
Catbird Roush
Rick Northup
Steve Safford
Cuck Butterworth
Craig Barnes
Bill Pethtel
Haske! Jones
Bob Hill
Russ Wood
Bob Hysell.
Bill Winebrenner
Jerry Dean
Dave Seamon

time MVP just reaching
his ptime and one of the
most sought-after players
ever to hit the free agent
market in any sport.
There's so· much more.
Dwyane Wade and
Chris Bosh, James' classmates from the 2003
draft - and future teammates in Miami if they
choose. Perennial AllStars such as Dirk
Nowitzki.
Amare
Stoudemire and Joe
Johnson.
NBA champions and
Olympic gold medalists.

'

now in search of something else for their collections: a maximum-salary
contract. And teams are
positioned at the starting
line, just waiting for the
race to start.
"We've never had anything like this in my time
that I can I'emember,''
New Jersey Nets president Rocl Thorn said.
"There have been bigtim'e free agents before.
but never this many
teams that are trying to
woo them. So it's
unprecedented."

Thorn is headed to
Ohio, where James will
welcome suitors to his
home state Thursday.
He' 11 be joined by new
owner
Mikhail
Prokhorov, coach Avery
Johnson and hip-hop
superstar Jay-Z, a partowner and James' longtime friend.
Then it's back home to
make pitches the next
day in Ne\A. York to Wade
and Bosh though
minus Jay-Z. (Sorry

Please see Prize, 86

WIMBLEDON.
England (AP) - Roger
Federer covered his ·face
with both hands, no doubt
wishing he were doing
anything at that moment
other than dissecting his
latest earlier-than-expected Grand Slam e~it . .
This one came at
Wimbledon, no less - the
tournament that he loves
more than any other. that
he ruled for so long: .
After all the victories,
all the championships, all
the records, Federer .now
must deal with a new
streak: The owner of 16
major titles, the man
widely considered the best
player in tennis history,
has lost two consecutive
Grand Slam quarterfinals
in the span of a month.
both against opponents
who have yet to win a single such trophy.
Federer arrived at the~
All England Club aiming
to t'each the final for the
eighth year in a row and
win a record-tying seventh title. Instead, he
leaves before the semifinals, beaten 6-4, 3-6, 6-1,
6-4 Wednesday by No. 12
Tomas Berdych of the
C:.cech Republic.
On June I. Federer lost
in the French Open quarterfinals as the defending
champion there. too.
putting an end to his
unprecedented 23 consecutive appearances in
major semifinals.
.
"God. I can't wait for
Paris and Wimbledon to
come around next year
again. that's for sure,
because they've been
frustrating tournaments
for me. even though it
wasn't too bad. Quarters
is a decent result," Federer
said. as if trying to convince himself along with
everyone else.
"Obviously.
people
think quarters is shocking,
but people would die to
play in quarterfinal· stages
of Grand Slam play." he

Please see Upset,

8l

'

Bruce's HR sends
Reds over Phillies
CINCINNATI (AP) Jay Bruce provided a perfect send-off.
Bruce hit a two-run
homer in the eighth
inning off Roy Halladay,
who has been anything
but flawless since his
perfect game, and the
Cincinnati Reds rallied
for yet another victory in
their
final
at-bat
Wednesday, 4-3 over the
Philadelphia Phillies.
The Reds lead the
majors with 25 comeback wins, including 14
in their final at-bat 'tied for most in the
majors.
"When you win a game
like this, it's a surprise
but not a shock anymore
because we've been
doing it from day one:·
Bmce said. "I think this
is one of our best wins
today."

•

I

3

4

This one felt especially
good under the circumstances. The Reds won't
play at home again until
July 16. playing 11 in a
row on the road before
the All-Star break. It's
their longest stretch away
from home since 200 I.
"You want
leave on
a high note:· manager
Dusty Baker said. "This
was a very well-played
game in all respects.''
Joey Votto also homered off Halladay (9-7),
who fell to 2-4 since his
perfect game on May 29.

to

Please see Reds, 86

Harry E. Walker/MCT

Cincinnati Reds Laynce Nix (17) congratulates teammate Jay Bruce (32), right,
after Bruce hit a two-run homer against the Washington Nationals during the 2nd
inning at Nationals Park in Washington, D.C. Wednesday, June 10, 2009.

�Page B2 • lhe Daily Sentinel

Upset
from Page Bl
added. fidgeting during
his news confcrcnl:e. "It's
not something I'm used to
doing - losing in ttuarterfinals - because tt's not
something I\e done in
the l,tf&gt;t six years:'
Indeed. ho pantcipatcd
in 18 of 19 major finals
from-2005-10. His dominance at' Wimbledon is
even_ more pronounced:
l 'ntil Wednesday. Federer
was 51-1 at the tournament f&gt;ince the stan of the
2003 edition.
Federer placed at k·ast
somC:of the blame for this
loss :Ou lwo pr~.!viously
undiScl_bsed health issues:
a botoersome hack and
right tlngh_. "I eouldn't play the
w~!) I \l.'anted to pia)."
satd · :f=ederer. whose
dcle:\t guarantees he will
droplo~i'Jo. 3 in the rankings for the first time
since November 2003.
accorditJg to the ATP.
"You: just don't feel as
comfortable. You can't
concentnite~ on each &lt;md
e\ cry point. because you
do feel the pain sometimes."
·
He s~id his leg and
back haYe bothered him
:-.ince the grass-court tournament ~ in
Halle.
Germany. \vhcre Federer
lost to Llevton He\\ itt in
the final
week before
Wimbledon
started.
Before
that
match,
redercr had won 76 of his
la&lt;ot 7.7 matches on grass.
1\'ow h~!'s lost two of six.
Bcrdych.
Agamst
Federer whiffed on a
forehand in the fourth
game .. but othcrwbe gave
no ob\ ious indication he
was troubled. Berdych
didn). n.otice anything
wrong:
''I mean. I don't know
if he Ju~t !is) looking for
some excuses after the
match or something hke
that." said Berdych. \\ho
also beat Federer at Key
Biscayne-, Fla .. in March.
&lt;~fter !?sing to him eight
tunes 111 a fO\V.
,Since "'inning his only
2010
title
at
the
in
Australian Open
Januaf). Federer has been
to the ,;,eJlufinals at only
three of eight tournaments. So cue all the
questions about the 28year-old's future.
Not surprisingly, he
quickly dismissed a query
about whether he believes
he can return to dominance, saying: ''Yeah. I
do think that. That's why
I'm here.''
Sunilar chatter arose
when
Federer went
through - gasp! - three
Grand Slam tournaments
in 2008 without taking a
title, losing to Novak
Djokovic
in
the
A'ustralian Open semifi-.
nals and Rafael Nadal in
the rrench Open and
Wimbledon finals. But
F-ederer won the U.S.
Open that year. then won
his first Prench Open title
in .2009 to complete a
career Grand Slam and tie
Pete Sampras · mark of 14
major titles. A month
later, Federer regained his
Wimbledon
champi'to
surpass
onship
Sampras.
"When you get older
and you've accomplished
what Ro!!er has. at some
point _: the guy' a
human being - he's
going to have to sort of
face the fact that he's not
gottlg to win thesl! things
and that he may never
win another thing So
everyone·, 'iOrt of \l.aiting. and predicting. when
th.tfs gomg to happen."
said seven-time major
J&lt;)hn
title
winner
:'\1cEnroe. a TV analyst
for NBC. "(But) let's not
forget .. that was a couple
of\ ears a!!o. when he lost
to N!!ctaHit the final here:
It was over. He was done.
He~" a bum."
Betdych tle\er had
been past the quarterfinals at a Grand Slam until
Paris. ·a: he's going to
reach his fir:-.t major final.
he'll need to eliminate
r\o. 3 Djokovic on
Frii1ay.'
Djokovic advanced to
his second Wimbledon
semifinal with a 6-3, 6-2.
6-2 victory over 82ndranked Yen-hsun Lu of

a

www.mydai lysentinel.com

Thursday, July 1 ,

2010

Taiwan, who upset Andy
Roddick in the fourth
round.
One \l.Ollld assume
Djoko' ic was counting
on facing Pedercr next
even if the Serb wouldn't
say so.
"It's normal for him to
lose," Djokov ic said. "I
mean. you think he
~houldn 't lose at all?"
Also Friday. ~adal ranked No. I, seeded No.
2 - wtll meet No. 4
Andy Murray, who is trying to beeorne the first
British man to "m
Wimbledon since 1936.
Britain hasn't even put
a man in the final since
193g,
"A huge, huge wait for
us.'' Murray said after
getting past No. 10 JoWilfried Tsonga 6-7 (S),
7-6 (5). 6-2, 6-2 to reach
the ...,emifinals for the second stratght year.
Murray has played in
Corinne DubreuiVCameleon/Abaca Press/MCT
Gary W. Green/Orlando SentineVMCT
two · previous major Switzerland's Roger Federer hit s shot against Boston Celtics head coach Doc Rivers reacts to a call
finals, losing each time to Colombia's AleJandro Falla during first-round action at against the Orlando Magic at the TD Banknorth Garden
- who else? - Federer. the 2010 Tennis Wimbledon Championships at the All in Boston, Massachusetts, ~unday, May 17, 2009. '
··winnmg a Grand England Lawn Tennis Club, Wtmbledon, 1n London
Slam IS obviousiV whv England, Monday, June 21
you play the ·game
Obviously, if rt was here, common thread th10ugh love-40. But Berdych
WI"
to win the first one would the Swiss star's three saved all three of those
make it. you know. extra most recent losses at break points ~ with a
BOSTON (t\P)'
remains there.
special," Murra) said. major
tournaments, serv1ce \\inner at 135
Rh er ' decision does
mph.
a
forehand.
and
n
Boston
Celtics
coach
"But I'm a long. long mcluding to Juan Mat1in
not
mean that the nuclcu·
volle)
_
plus
a
fourth
Doc
Riv
ere,
will
return
way from domg that.''
del Potro in the U.S.
\\lth an ace ,11 for another sea..,on. stay- of the Celtics team th&lt;,
He's on I) 3-7 against Open final in September. later
with the team he led won the franchise's
Nadal. who quit \\ hilc
Berdych. Sodcrling and 13 1 mp h - to h0 ld &amp;10r 3- mg
to the ~BA finals t\1. ice unprecedented 17th ~BA
.
trailing against Mmny in del Potro are all imposing all.
In the •next game. m t1uee years for a nlll at title in 2008 will be back
the Australian Open quar- gu) s \\ ho • absolutely
for a run in 2010-11. Paul
terfinal&lt;; in Januar\&lt; pound the ball nn setves Berdych went ahead 4-3 another championship.
Pierce has reportedly
with
the
Ja&lt;;t
'&gt;en
icc
"Doc
is
a
fantastic
becau&lt;;e of a nght knee and drive fiat forehands
injUf)'.
through the coun. At 6- break he would need. All coach and leader and 1 said he will opt out of his
1'\adal\ knees prevent foot-5, Berd)ch is an inch that v\ as left for the am thrilled he is com in~ contract and become a
ed him from defending taller than Soderling. an underdog was to serve 1t back for the upcomm~ free agent. and Rav Allen
his Wunbledon title lust inch shorter than del out. and he wobbled only season:· Celtics owner is abo due to become a
year. and his nght one Potro - and 4 inche" briefly, blo\\mg his first Ste\C Pa!Zliuca said free agent on Thursday.
\Vithout them, the
match point, then facinn Wednesda) ~in an e-mail
flared up earlier in this taller than Federer.
Celtic..., would need to
"It I'm ·healthy. I can a nenc-rattling break 1o The Associated Press.
tournament. He looked
Rivers' decision was make a big splash in free
fine Wcdnc&lt;;da). beating handle those guys. ) ou point.
On the latter. Federer first reported in the agenc) to contend.
l\o. 6 Robin Soderling 1- knO\\ ." Federer said.
Ke\ in Garnett is under
6, 6-3, 7-6 (4), 6-1 m a
Still. the 24-)ear-old dumped a second-serve Boston Herald. Four
contract
for t\\ o more
net.
then
hours
later,
the
Celtics
retum
mto
the
rematch of the French Berd) ch de sen es credit
his
head. released a statement con- ) ears and point guard
Open final, which also for sticking to his high- dropped
was won by the Spaniard ..••:i"k. hi.gh-reward style. Another missed return firming Rivers \\Ould Rajon Rondo signed an
extension last fall that
The only real blip for for stayn;g focused when ga\'e Hctdych a second rctum.
"Doc is !·c-encrgized would keep him in
Nadal came at the outset, the going got tough. and match point. and \\hile
someho\1. and enthusiaStiC about Boston through the 2014when he fell behind 5-0 for delhering more "'m- Federer
returned
the
138 mph commg back to make 15 sea::.on .- Kendrick
in 18 minute .
ners than Federer. 51-44.
''You can say that he sene, he could do noth- another nm at \\inning a Perkjn~. '' ho could miss
In the first game of the
second &lt;&gt;ct. with Nadal was unlucky,'' Berd)Ch ing about the forehand champtonship '' ith the six months or more with
Celtics," general manag- tom knee ligaments. has
sen·in~
at
30-all, said. repeating a \\Ord winner that follov.ed.
.Fedcrer gathered his er Vanny Amgc said in one year left on his deal .
Soderl111g hit a shot called Federer used. "or you can
Rivers has a c
long. Soderling chal- s;ty that ma)be the oppo- things. including that , the two-sentence statelong
ment.
coaching record of 45
Jengcd the call. and the nent was a little bit brtter. cream-colored.
Riven. did not immcdt 380. with a 46-40 p
replay &lt;;bowed the ball and he juf&gt;t won the big sleeve, zip-up s\l.eater
\\1th hts mrtials 'tenciled atel) return .t mes ag~ mark. With the Ce tics.
good. The chair umpire points."
on the che'&gt;t. Berd) ch. left at h1s hotel m San he ts 280-212 v\ith a 41ga\e him the point. and
Berdych's serve
plopped Antomo. where he "'a' .30 postsehson record.
Nadal argued at length consistently In the l30s meanwhile.
that the lineman's call mph (above 210 kph) - down in his changeo,er v.atching his son, Austin.
He guided Bq~ton to a
distracted him from hit- got him out of trouble chatr, stretched out hb play in an international 66-16 record and the
Celtics' record 17th ;-.lBA
ting the ball hack in play. repeatedly. not only legs. ~rosscd his arms 1 under-18 tournament.
fhe inability to \',. atch title two years ago. This
The dispute seemed to because it produced I Q an~ smil.cd, the picture of
spur the five-time French aces and &lt;;everal service sattsfactJOn.
hts four children play in season.
the Celtics
Open champion. v. ho' hit wmners, but al&lt;&gt;o becau e
A-.ked moments later sports v\ as one of the returned to the i':BA
a big forehand to erase a it put htm m early control to ~ook ahead to t.he major things pulling finals before losing in
break point. the'n leaped, .of exchanges when semtfinals. Berdych satd· Rtvers tO\\ ard takino seven games to the~Los
yelled and punched the Federer managed to "tt's realiS tough to think time off from coaching: .\ngeles Lakers.
air. That hcgan a stretch make a return.
... about tlw next match. I lie said at last '' ed:'s
Rl\ ers said last week
in which Nadal won 9 of
One ke)
stat :-tic: jt!st want to enjo)
NJ3A draft that he wa~ that it was a difficult
10 points. and he was on Berdych sav-ed 7 of the 8 (tor) a eoup_Je of mi~~tes. hopmg there \HHtld be· dectston bet\\ een two
his \\ay.
break points he faced: hours - thts t'esult.
ome compromise' that families: While he has
...1'\0\\ that Roger lost.'' Federer saved 2 of 6.
As. for Federer. he \\OUid allov.. him to oive inissed the opponunity to
Soderling said. ''I'd pick
The outcome pretty w~n t even v\ atch th1s both hi.; per.,onul ~nd w.ttch his four children
him as the fa\orite.''
much was settled with \\ unbledon final on TY, professional lives proper - all athletes - comIt was Soderling who Berdych serving while ~e :-.t!mmed up h1s dttention.
pete. he has grown close
knocked off Federer in down 3-2 in the fout1h nnmed;atc plans this
Rivers li,es in the to the Celtics' players.
the Roland Gan'OS quar- set. Helped b) two dou
'~·ay .. .'' f\\o weeks' vaca-. Orlando area m the off- He catted Ainge ''one of
terfinals, and there is a ble-faultc;. Federer got to tton.
season, and his famil) 111) best friend~ ...

,.

.

•
·,
~

Celtics coach Doc Rivers
II return for 201 0-11

THURSDJ).Y·TELEVISIQN
GUIDE
.
.

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:
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~

~

•
:
~

.:

;
:
•:
r

;
,.

1.

t

•
,

•
•
•

~

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·
:

�1
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740·645·1286.

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only $500/month (inc.
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July 1st. 740·446·4234
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4000

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3BR mobile home in
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have
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certification.
send
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Company)

3 Family yard sale
July 2nd 19329 St.
Rt. 141.

Otfter Services

900

Merchandise

Furniture
For Sale office desk,
cherry
finish
excellent
condition
$250. call 740·441·
8299 or 7 40·441·
5472

2 Family Yard Sale
July 1 &amp;2 , Bucke9e
Hills Rd Thurman
Exit.
Furniture,
Glassware. Teen Girt
Clothing. tools.
Yard Sale July 1 &amp; 2,
9 to ?. 2.2 miles
Cherry Ridge. Wide
Varity.

July 1·3, 9·3 Cedar
Knoll
Cabin
747
Cadmus .
.Rd
Miscellaneous
Weekend giveaway
Jet Aeration Motors 740·379·2524 for dir.
repaired, new &amp;
3 family yard sale
rebuilt In stock. Call Saturday only. July
Ron Evans 1-800·
3rd, 43190 Smith
537-9528
Goeglein
• Road,
Pomeroy. • off
of
Yard Sale
Flatwoods
Road.
Yard Sale Ja'y Drive minutes from Route
7. some furniture,
lot 28 Fri &amp; Sat
clothes &amp; toys. • .

Pet Cremations. Call 2021 Chatham Ave. Fri·Sat. 9·5 at 35670
St. Rt. 7
740·446-3745
Sat. 3,5,6 9am-6pm

�~a~~ ~4 • The
Yard Sale

1000

Recreat~onal

Truclcs

Vehrcles

=;;;;;;;;;;;;; 2000
1500

Garage sale- 806
Pickens St. Racine, ~
July. 1-2, antiques,
ATVs
craf(s. clqthi,ng misc. ;;;Ta••n•.=G;;;;S;;;;R~=
15~

10

0

Carter
Go
Cart,
918:
S.
3rd, asking $975 $3500
Middleport,
Thurs new 740-379-9515,
July 1st-Sat. July .:..74~0~-3!!!3~9~-2~0~43!!!.~~
3rd, 9am:'4pm. rain
or shine
Campers/ RVs &amp;
·Trailers

=

Carfo)ort sale, July 2005 Jayco Eagle
Hitch,
2nd: 1/2 mile past Gooseneck
Alligator Jacks on sleeps six. Excellent
condition.
Asking
Laurel Cliff
$19,900.
See
photos
at
Down sizing sale, '!M..WSatmichaelt~
books, some tools ~
740-446,many misc. items, 8- 2412
4, :164 N. Main,
2006 Jayco Eagle,
Rut~nd. July 1-2
28' ex. con., slide_.....______ out, $16,500 OBO,
Fa.;nily yard sale- 740-992·0707, 416July 3 Saturday only, 557~
Texas Rd. Pomeroy,
3rd :house on left off
WantTo 8uy
of : Flatwoods. xsmall/small women's Oilers now buying
scrubs, boys sz. 12- junk vehicles 740·
388-00 11 or 74014: gii'IS.st;.. 4, misc.
441-7870
•

GMC Seirra
Ext cab 4x4
Loaded looks good
insrde and out, has
some rust, 170,000
.
highway
mrl e s~
wellmaintarned
wheels &amp; tires, looks
and runs great 740256-6160.

20

3000

Apartments/
Townhouses

Apartments/
Townhouses

Services Offered

Twin Rivers Tower is
accepting applications
for waiting list for HUD
subsidiZed.
1-BR
apartment
for
the
elderly/drsabled.
call
.
675 6679

Middleport
Beech
St., 2 br. furnished
apt., utilities paid, No
pets, dep &amp; ref, 740992-0165

To place an ad
Call 740-992-2155

Real Estate
Sales

Spring Valley Green
Apartments 1 BR at
$395+2 BR at $470
Month. 446-1599.
Commercial

BR and bath. first For rent- Approx.
&amp; 2000
months
rent
sq.
ft.
Houses For Sale
deposit. references retail/office
space
FOR SALE 2 BR required. No Pets facing Ohio River in
house newly painted and clean 740-441- downtown Pomeroy·
and carpeted w/small 0245
store-front &amp; private
apartment 304-675- BR Upstairs apt. back
entrances;
1
5596
restrooms;
720 Second Ave. private
New public
parking;;
3 bedroom, 2 bath, Gallipolis,
immediate
located on the corner carpet &amp; parnt AIC
of
Second
&amp; Water, sewer &amp; trash occupancy; must be
No willing to sign 1-year
Worchester St near pd. WID inc.
lease. Contact 740t
Hubbard's
pets/no
smok1ng
greenhouse
in $375 dep/$375 _mo 992-6624 for more
i'lfO.
Syracuse. All major single.
$395 ~~~~~~~
appliances included. dep/$395mo couple.
Houses For Rent
Newly
installed Ref, Day 740-645heating &amp; cooling 2192. After 6 740- 2BR, nice,PP area
S465-Homestead
unrt.
Contains
a 446-0101
Reality Ask for Nancy
recently constructed
304-675-0799or 67520x24 single vehicle Attractive,
July 2-3, 9am, 2191 2000
Automotive garage.
one 5540
Interested unfurnished,
Karr, Syracuse, toys,
2nd
buyers may contact bedroom apt.
Home for Lease in
brk~ 1999 Camara.
floor, corner Second
us at 740-992-1820
Autos
Rio Gande city limits.
mi~c._ Rq~s_ehold
and Pine. No pets,
=;;;;;;;;;;;;====• Small
Farm
8.2 References required . 2 story, 3200 sq ft.
Rent $1500. Call
. . . . . - - - - - - - - 05 Ford Freestyle acres.
Located
deposit,
Ga.·rag· e_ ••
sale, Limited AWD Blk 18982 St. Rt 141. Security
740-645-3980 for an
Saturday only July 3, Ext/Bik Lea. rnt/1 ow beatiful 3 BR. 2 BA $325 per month, !ippointment
&amp;
water
included.
call
riding lawn mower &amp; mr·1 eage
Exce 11en t home
applicatipns.
2
1/2
7
40-446-4425
or
lots: of misc. last Condition/Loaded
cedarvalleyestates.n
oversized
Garage
7 40-446-3936.
hoti'Se·
on ·Lee Rd. w1th
·
options 304- Most
furniture,
•
et
Pomeroy. Oh
675-0180 after 6pm equipment, and tools 2br
apt.
$450 Taking applications 7
....,._ _,__ _ _ for pricing
stay.
Asking mo.+dep. Kanauga
miles out Lincoln
Hl.(gE( ~l}lti Famrly -19-9""'9~L-in-co...ln~T~-~Ca-r $105,000. Call 740- total elec. 7 40-339- Pike, 2 story, 3 BR,
gara§e ~a+e. clothes. Runs
excellant 379-2726 after 8pm 3224
1BA, utility room,
furniture, • tools &amp; $3595 or trade. 740- or keep tryrng.
1br apt. total ele. kitchen,
DR,
2
mote, Saturday only 446·4190
For Sale or Rent $350mo.+dep. Porter porches, nice yard,
8a~-4prn Old Crew
OH 740-339-3224
freshly
painted,
2009 Lincoln T-Car 3BR, 2BA. DoubleRd•
heat,
Signature
Series. wide,
in
Green - - - - - - - propane
Immaculate 2 BR apt includes trash &amp;
Books $29.455 Price Township, close to
in country. · New water.
No indoor
6 fa.mr!Y _Yard Sale. Neg. 22 Kmiles 740- schools.
740-446Across from TNT 446-1759
7209,740-645-7113. carpet and cabniets. pets. month to month
Freshly
painted. s500 _ 1 yr lease
Pitstop .
Chester. ~..,......,......,..~-...,.
WID $475. +$500. dep.
Real Estate appliances.
Children
Clothing, FOR SALE OS KIA 3500
AMANT!
SEDAN
Rentals hookups water/trash call740-256-1106.
9
5
paid.
·
Beautiful
toys, Misc. ' Fn &amp; 4D,V6 3.51iter Auto ; ; ; ; ; ; ; ; ; ; ; ; ; ;
SAt Rarn· cancels
country setting, only
65,000 miles New
Apartments/
10 minutes from
battery
&amp;
Tires
Townhouses
town. Must see to
Yard: Sale August 1, $8500.00 304-593appreciate. $425/mo ~
PLEASE
2 &amp;• 3, 10am-6pm. 0237
2BR APT.Ciose to
or ~~-S;o:a;o:le-=s=~~
177S: George Rd .. LEAVE NAME &amp; Holzer Hospital on SR 614-595-7773
740-645-5953.
NEED
A
NEW
NUMBER
BidW!lll, OH
160 CIA (740) 441·
0194
New 2 BR 1BA HOME? we help with
Help Wanted
apartment for rent in financing
many
Help Wanted
CONVENIENTLY
&amp; Porter.
Heatpump, programs for most
LOCATED
$500.mo+dep. Must credit situations Call
AFFORDABLE'
Townhouse
have excellent ref. for appt. (888)736'apartments,
and/or
.
3332.MODULAR
_ _
740 446 2801
small houses for rent.
HOME with 2-car
Ertgineer- Learn skills foi· the field Call 740·44 1-11 11 for Middleport 1 &amp; 2 br. garage will custom
appl1cat1on
&amp;
d
1
11
furnished apt., No buil on your ost ca
of engineering through service in information
pets,
dep.
&amp;
ref.,
Clayton
Homes
the i\ational Guard. A parl tinlL'
Free Rent Special 740-992·0165
B'ville
304-733career \\ ith full time re" ards. Call
!!1
-------HOME
2&amp;3BR apts $39S and Middleport 1 &amp; 2 br.
today for details.
up, Central AJr. WID furnished apts, no
nookup. tenant pays pets, dep. &amp; ref.,
SGT CHASE GARRETT
electric. Call between 740-992-0165
the hours of 8A-8P.
30..J.932.2529
EHO
Middleport,
Beech
charles.garrett2@us.army.mil
Ellm VIew Apts.
St.. 2 br. furnished
(304)882-3017
To learn more, \isit
apt., util. pd, no pets,
NationalGuard.com
Modern 1 BR apt. deposit/references,
740-992-0165
7 40·446-0390.

~~ _

__

.PLOYMENT
EM

FAMilY OWNED AND OPERATED

WV#040954 Cell 740-416-2960
740-992-0730

Owner: Sam Smith, Mason, WV

HRS Repa;.. t-740-992-3061
20+ yrs exp

YOUNG'S

. Formerly Robies Construction

, 33 Years Experience

304-773-5441
or 304-593-8458

CARPENTER SERVICE

..

• Room Additions &amp; Remodeling
• ~e" Garages • Electrical &amp;
Plumbing • Roofing &amp; Gutters
• Vinyl Siding &amp; Painting • Patio and
Porch Decks wv 036725 •

V.C. YOUNG Ill
992-6215 740-591 -11195

Pomeroy, Ohio

• 36 Years Local Experience

Stanlev Tree
Trimming &amp; Removal

1!08[1!1 BISS[LL
CONSTI!UCTION

* Prompt and Quality Work
* Reasonable Rates
* Insured * Experienced

• New Homes • Garages
• Complete Remodeling

References Available!
Call Gary Stanley

740-992-1671

Cen740-591-8044

Stop &amp; Compare

Please leave message
---------------.

LEWIS

RAVENSWOOD

CHIROPRACTIC CENTER

l'"
. I I
W ·u
J we can t 1e p you
e wt
find you tire help you need
Auto Accidents • Work
Injuries • Neck &amp; Back Pain•
Shoulder. Arm, Hip &amp; Leg
Pain • Headaches • Massage
Therap)' • Acupuncture
New £.\ll'llded hours: M-F.
Dr, Kell) K.
Sat. &amp; e1·ciungs emergencieJ Jonc;,, D.C.
M tI
A
t d

CONCRETE CONSTRUCTION
Concrete Removal and ReplacemeQt

All Types Of Concrete Work

30 Years Experience

David Lewis

.

740-992-6971

304-273-5321
316 Washington St. ·Ravenswood
- - - - - - - - ~~~~~~~
Help Wanted6000
Employment
General

wv

421 2

Insured
Free Estimates

(3al.£ Marcum Construction
Commercial &amp; Resideutial

Clerical
======•
Local
. taking

____,

II
~AS'
SIFIED
.
.
s·
.
C

Concrete Services

Flat 45.00 hrly Rate+ I0.00 Trip Chrg.

.

~~~~~================;;;;;;.;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;iiiiiiiiiiiiiiii
~

SMITH

Specializing in Insurance Jobs including,
storm, wind &amp; water damage.
Room Additions, Remodeling, Metal &amp;
Shingle Roofs, New Homes, Siding,
Decks, Bathroom Remodeling.
Licensed &amp; Insured
~ck Price : 17 yrs. Experience

Services Mo~t Heating &amp;
Cooling System (including
Heatpumps) and Controls
Tankless Hot Water Heater
Change-outs/ Replacements.
Whole House Water Purifiers
(helps against C8 intake)

"ATIONAl GUARD!aS.

FIND A JOB
OR ANEW
CAREER
·IN THE
CLASSIFIEDS

PSI CONSTRUCTION

11

=;;;;;;;;;;;

_

Thursday, July 1, 2010

www.mydailysentinel.com

Daily Sentinel

dental office
applications
for clerical dental
staff.
Must hi_Ve
computer knowleage.
Send resumes to
P.O.
Box
704,
Pomeroy,
Ohio
45769
!!!!!!!!!!~~~~~~

Drivers &amp; Delivery

~;~~~~A

Drivers$$
Company
Drivers
Avg.
$1000-$1200
PNV
Owner
Operators
Avg. $3500 + PNV
·Dedicated Out &amp;
Back Lanes

A Celebration Of
• Room additions • Roofing •
Life ... .. Overbrook
• Gc!neral Remodeling • Pole &amp; Hor~
Center, Located At
Barns • \'inyl &amp; Wood Fencing
333 Page Street.
Middleport. Ohio Is
Currently Accepting
Applications
For
Dietetic Technician.
Registered.
Responsibilities
Include: Maintaining
Optimal
Nutritional
Status Of Residents..:-----===~~--~-----,
Throuigh
Resident
And
Interaction.

Family

~~=~E2F~~%p
And

Fill

Out

A::
An

Application.
M-F
9am- 5pm EOE &amp; A
Participant Of The
Drug-Free
Workplace Program

r-LOoking For,
ANew Home?

TrY the
ClassifiedsU

· lmmedrate Hiring
·Paid orientation
888-855-3469
www.Work$0C.com

~

Stay Informed ...

\!rlre ~allipoli~ llnilp ijtrfbune
{[JJe ~oint ~1c,1~ant ~egister
The Daily Sentinel

Gallia
Meigs
Community Action is
seeking laborers tor
the Weatherization
Program. Applicants
have
Truck
Driver/Part- should
time, class B. COL experience and a
send resumes To: general knowledge of
P.O.
Box
43 insulationg weatherGallipolis Ferry WV stripping and home
repair. MUST be
25515
capable of working rn
high places, crawl
Help WantedHelp Wanted •
spaces,
closed-rn
1
General
General
all
places
and
is now weather conditions.
pr
deliver Gallia-Meigs
hiring 75 associates! Send
Action
In the Jackson OH. resume/references to Communrty
Attn· seeks
area. 75 Production GMCAA.
laborers
needed Sandra
Edwards. Transportation Driver
must be able to 8010 N. SR 7, for
the
Noncommunicate
Cheshire,
Ohro EmergencyTransport
effectively, work in a 45620 by 7-9-10. ation
program.
safe manner, be a . GMCAA rs an EOE.
Willingness to travel
team player and Gallia-Meigs
in and out of the _area
have
good community Action is transporttng clients
attendance and work seeking a full-time tomedtcal
~:-~~~J history. Must be able Intake Clerk for the appointments. Must
to
lift
351bs. EmergencyHeating/C have valid dr~v~rs
sometimes
ooling
Assistance license. good dnvtng
MUST record,
and
repetively. Also able program.
to
reach,
stoop, have
excellent beinsurable.
Send
kneel or stand and computer skills, good r~sume with work
other such positions mathskills.
h1story
ann
i.e. push,pull. Have organizational skills, background
to
dexterous use of able to work with GMCAA. Atl},t:t. S.
both hands, good persons of all socio- Edwards,Box
272,
vision, able to work economic
• Cheshire,
Ohio
with min. supervision backgroundsand
45620. Applitlatrons
and perform required capable of working acce1fud f through
physical
duties. under stress. tv'Just 7/09 0.
~CAA
Adecco is an EOE be a h1gh school EOE 1
and drug free work graduate
or !!!!!!!!!!~~~~~~
place if interested equivalent andhave
Management 1
Supervisory
please call (304)522- valid drivers license.
6623 speak with Excellent
benefits.
Mike or Lrsa.
Send resume with Managing
work
history Cosmetologist, full or
to part time, insurance
andbackground
GMCAA, Attn. S. paid, commission &amp;
pay,
free
Edwards, Box 272, hourly
Cheshire,
Ohio tannrng training &amp;
10% commission on
45620
Applicattonsaccepted all· retarl &amp; tanning,
through
7/09/10. local shop. 740-992GMCAAEOE
2200

Public Notice
PUBLIC HEARING

The
VIllage
of
Middleport
will
hold
a
public
hearing on July 2,
2010 on the 2011
budget.
The
budget can
be
viewed at the o· ·
of
the
F'
Officer, 237
'
St, Middleport
(7) 1
-------

Public Notice
PUBLIC NOTICE

The Orange Town- •
ship Trustees will
hold a public hearIng on the proposed budget for
2011 on July 6,
2010. 7:30 at the
home of the Fiscal
Officer, Osle Foilrod.
(7) 1

�www.mydailysentinel.com

Dean Young!Denis Lebrun
~~--~----~~~

The Daily Sentinel • Page BS·

CROSSWORD
By THOMAS JOSEPH
ACROSS
DOWN
1 "Stand"
1 River
vessels
band
2 As done
6 Caruso,
e.g.
by
3 Whiskey,
11 "Cats"
in s lang
creator
12 Cuprite or 4 Drudgery
5 Woodzincite
worker, at
13 Singer
times
Callas
6 Namely
14 Used a
7 H 1ghway
sponge
ramp
15 Draw
8 Tiny taste
out
9 Poet's
17 Punch
product
sound
10 Wine
19 Squirrel
choice
snack
2 0 Chestnut 16 "Raise the
Titanic I"
2 3 Lets up
author
25 Old Italian
17 Handle
coin
clumsily
26 Summer
18 44th
park
attractions
2 8 Flock
response
29 Hidden
30 Salt
31 Apiece
32 Method
33 Book
blunders
35 Rive r
crosser
38 Words to
live by
41 Baja
buddy
4 2 Lethargic
43 Grapevine
item
44 White
wader

president
20 It laps the
shore
21 Game
setting
22 M eanspirited
24 Half a
score
25 Ignited
27 Wyoming

Ctty
31 Wilder's
frequent

co-star
33 Therefore ·
34 C h inese
secret
society
35 Distant
36 Flightless
b ird
37 Crater
feature
39 Three, in
Ton no
40 Baseball's
M el

Brian and Greg Walker

THELOCKHORNS

W illiam Hoest

Patrick McDonnell

,.HERE, LEROY WAS TRYING TO GET THE HANG
OF O UR NEW CAMER A PHONE."

.

Jerry Scott and Jim Borgman

Z ITS

TH E FAMILY CIRCUS

CONCEPTlS SODOKU

Bil Keane

by Dave Green

4 8
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6
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4

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" I h ope m y dream tonig h t doesn't
t u rn o ut to be a rerun."

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HAPPY BIRTIIDAY for Thursday,
July 1, 2010:
This year, you often diSCO\ er a lot
more by detaching c111d putting yourself in someone else's "hoes.
Instincti\'ely we fight for ide,1s and
what we think is right. You discover
there could be m.my solutions to the
same problem. Travel, further educ,1lion and/ or perhaps someone quite
different could color your life. You
might like breaking past former
restrictions. If you are single, ,m exotic
personality could intrigue you. If you
are attached, you both gain through
taking a workshop in a new hobby
together or l?lc111ning a trip. A fellow
PISCES might be very different but
intuitive.
17~e Stars SlroiC the Kind of Day Yo1111

Have: 5-Dynamic; 4-Po~rtWc; 3-Average;
2-So-so; 1-DijfiClllt

ARIES (March 21-April19)
*** A great idea could jolt you out
of bed. Reception to your ideas could
be better later, though you might try
out this conrept on one person whom
you trust. Family takes the highest priority. Use care hpres..,ing aggravation.
Tonight: Vanbh while you can.
TAURUS (April20-May 20)
***** Knowing wh,lt you w,mt
is the first step in getting it. ~hould th1s
desire &lt;~ppear. A brainslom'ling session
provides many newJ'aths to the same
end resull,. You caul ),1ugh at a siluil·
lion and be far mort" open. Tonight:
Where people are.
GEMIN I {May 21-June 20)
***Your inclination to understand might der,lil certain key leadership traits you ha,e. Sometimes the
hows and whys simply don't make
c111y difference, no ll\dtter how you
look at a situation. Tonight Avoid a
disagreement with a family member
or a roommate.
CA..,.CER Oune 21-July 22)
*** *Your 'mile draws others.
Yqu could defuse a' olatile situation H
you so choose. Still, stay focused and
tuned in. as you are accident prone in
some w&lt;~y. Strh e for understandmg
through identifying. Tonight Li-.ten to
a fil\ orite type of music.
LEO Oulv 23-Aug. 22)
**** Ap.utner. or asSOCiates m
general. dttempts to make inl\1illh.
Po'&gt;sibl)&gt;. someone f~ls ,~.,if you ~il\'e
closed h1m or her ott. Th1s peNon s
ilttempt to open up l't)mmunit'&lt;1tion
could cause a lot of anger if 1t b,,ck·
fires. Tonight: 1alk.s 0\·er dinnt'r.
VlRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22)

HOROSCOPE

***** Often 1 s di~.tul.l
understand whilt mot vates oJ\ers.
Know that you are not rolling the
shots. You could find a Situation complex ,\t best, .md at other times clear as
a bell. Le,\m to use your frustration
and anger to resolve problems rather
thnn c.1use a greater problem. Tonight
Listen to the other perspective.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 22)
*** Keep your eye on the 'Pig piclure ,md what you want to accomplish. Could you be just plain exhausted or too tired to deal with a situation?
'lJnderst,mdi.ng will evolve if you lis[en .md don't judge. Still. express disll\d)' rather than swallow it. Tonight
Try a new fonn of exercise.
SCORPIO (Oct. 23-!\:o,·. 21)
***** )our creativity emerges
when you are open to new ideas A
fnend or associate could come barreling in \\ith ideas th.1t might be overwhelming. \ \'ork with these concepts.
Follow xour intuition. Tonight: lime to
let your hair down.
SAGITIARIUS (1'\ov. 22-Dec. 21)
*** Don't venture out too far. You
disco\ er that many. people are in what
one might call "a !'OUT mood." You
might have an cln!&gt;Wer to a situation.
or feel pu~hed to the max. It would be
best to work from home Tonight:
Order in.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22~Jan. 19)
* **** Your ideas, words and
ewn calb could be met with strange
re,Ktions. It is s if people out there are
itching for,, f1!7ht or a discu~sion. By
,1]] means, ii\Oid a problem and stay
et&gt;ntert"d. \\'ork within a dosed framework. Toru~ht: Swap war storie.;; wi¢ •
friends.
AQUARIUS Q&lt;111. 20-Feb. 18)
* * * SOmetim~ others simply
don't want to hear an alternate point
o{ v1ew. Work c1s much on your own
as pos,ible in order to llvoid an un.n~
essary conflict. It appears that someone in your inunediate em·ironment b
baiting you for a fight. Tonight-Buy a
tre.1t QI\ the ·way home.
• •
•
PISCES (Feb 19-March 20)
* * *** Oearly, you know what
you are domg, but one might be .;ub-. _
stantially less sure about those in your •
immediate environment You could~ •
questioning someone ,,s to hi.s or her
logk when this p~rson goes "poof." - ·
up m -.moke. Tomght Only whpt ~o)..i ,
want.
jacq~telt/U' Btgar rs on tlr,• lntenu:t
at lr ttp://www.jacqrtrlim·bigm:aml.

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

�Page B6 • The Daily Sentinel

OVP Sports Briels
~BYFL signups
MIDDI .EPORT, Ohio - . The Big Bend Youth
Football League will be holdmg signups for the 20 lO
football season every Saturday in July from 11 a.m. to l
p.~. at th~ Veterans Memorial Stadium in Middleport.
Ohto. All mterested players and cheerleaders are encouraged .to sign up. Players will be fitted for equipment at
that tune.
·
Football and Cheerleading Camp will begin Atig~st 2.
For more infonnation 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
recei~·e prizes.

SHS Volleyball Camp
. RACINE. Ohio - Southern High School will be offermg a volley~all camp for girls going into grades 3-8 from
~ugust 2~5. m the h1gh school gym. This learning ex~­

..

nence will be a chance for gtrls to interact with high
school coaches and players and.develop an understanding of volleyball mechanics and fundamentals through
dnll~. ma~ches. g~es, and contests. Eac~ camper will
rece1ve a tre~ T-shtrt and have the opportumty to win several other pnzes.
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 1 to 4 p.m. There is a fee of $35 per camper
or $60 for a family of two. Campers are asked to bnncr
knee pad&lt;; and a water bottle, and are asked to arrive early
on the tirst day for registration.
To preregister call Coach Dickson at 740-525-2500.

Freedom Fest 5K Run
JACKSON. Ohio- The 14th annual Jackson County
Freedom Fest 5K ·Run And Walk will be held on
Saturday, July 3 and will be run through the business district and western residential section of Jackson.
The,race will begin at 9 a.m. at Manpower Park on East.
Main Street, a(..TOss from the Jackson Square Shopping
Center and Krogers.
Entry fee is $12 and proceeds will go toward the sponsoring of community events by the Jackson Area
'
Chamber Of Commerce.
All participating runners will receive newly-designed
Spo~s;Festival T-shirts.
·
Plaques will be awarded to the top three male aud
fe~ale finishers and-medals will be given to the top three
firushers in all age divisions, outside of those winning
plaques, in both the male and female categories.
No pre-registration is required and registration may be
made the day of the race.
There will also be a one-mile walk starting simultaneously with the 5K Run. Those wbhing to participate in
the ~alk, which has no registr:Hion fee, may purchase a
.
T-shut for $10.
For more information on the 5K Run, please contact
the Jackson Area Chamber Of Commerce at 740-286.2722.

I

~s

fromP~eBl
He lost his touch while
trying to hold a 3-2 lead
in the eighth.
Jonny Gomes opened
the inning with a single
off a hanging curve.
Bruce then connected on
a fastball that wandered
to the middle of the plate
instead of staying on the
outside corner.
'
"I beat myself with two
bad pitches in the
eighth,'' Halladay said. "I
really didn't think they
were hitting the ball all
that hard until then."
Arthur Rhodes (3-2)
pitched a perfect inning,
recovering from his lOthinning loss a few hours
earlier.
Francisco
Cordero pitched the ninth
for his 21st save in 26
tries.
It was a lousy series for
the Phillies. who lost two
key players to injuries
and two of the three
games.
Philadelphia
manager Charlie Manuel
also was ejected from a
garrie for arguing balls
and strikes.
The defending NL
champs put second baseman Chase Utley and
third baseman Placido
Polanco on the disabled
list Tuesday. Utley has a
sprained right thumb,
Polanco a chronically
sore: left elbow. Both
were
back
m
Philadelphia
getting
more tests.
The Phillies' fill-ins
have kept them in games.
Brian Schneider and
Wilson Valdez hit threerun homers during a 9-6,
10-inning
win
on
Tuesday night, when
Philadelphia
ended
Rhodes·
record-tying
streak at 33 scoreless
appearances.
They were in posjtion
for another improbable
win after reserve catcher
Dane Sardinha hit a
three-run homer - only
the second of his career
-off Aaron Harang.

Thursday, JulJ 1, 2010

www.mydailysentinel.com

Merrifield's single in 11th gives Gamecocks title
OMAHA, Neb. (AP)
- Whit Merrifield's RBI
single with one out in the
bottom of the 11th inning
gave South Carolina its
first baseball national
championship with a 2-1
victory over UCLA in the
College World Series on
Tuesday night.
The Gamecocks (5416) won six straight
games after losing their
CWS opener against
Oklahoma. They. also
won the last championship
played
at
Rosenblatt Stadium, the
home since 1950.
"I don't know how I
feel," coach Ray Tanner
said. "I've never been in
this situation. I know one
thing, I'm extremely
proud of these guys and
my coaches. It's unbelievable.
"I'm off the ground
right now."
It was the fifth championship decided in an
extra-inning final, and
first since Southern
California topped Florida
State- also 2-1 -in 15
innings in 1970.
Scott Wingo drew a .
leadoff walk and· took
second when catcher
Steve Rodriguez, perhaps
distracted when Evan
Marzilli squared to buntt
let an inside 1-0 pitch ge
past him. Wingo moved
to third when Marzilli got
a bunt down, and scored
when Merrifield drilled.~
2-0 pitch by Dan Klein
past the pulled-in outfield
of the Bruins (51- 17) and
into right field. •
Matt Price (5-1) &amp;ot the
win, allowing otle hit
-over 2 2-3 inning~ for the
Gamecocks, who also
w~nt to the CWS fmals in
975, '77 and 2002, but
came up sh9rt.
"I could have gone
another t\Vo innings if I
had to," Price said. "The
adrenaline kicked in."
Klein (6-1) took the
loss after working 3 1-3
innings for the Bruins
(51-17) - "the greatest
club we played the entire
year," Tanner said.
Each team had plenty
of scoring chances but
had difficulty converting
in Rosenblatt's finale

cws·

Gerry Melendez/1 he State/MCT

South Carolina's Scott Wingo, right, tags out UCLA'~ Brett Krill on a P.ick-off play
in the first inning during Game 2 of the 2010 College World Series finals at
Rosenblatt Stadium in Omaha, Nebraska, on Tuesday.
·

before the event moves to moments later when
a new downtown stadium Haney hit a chopper to
next year. A video tribute the right side. The ball
to the stadium, fireworks glanced off 8CLA first
and a trumpeter playing a baseman Dean Espy's
slow version of·'Take Me glove, and Regis tried to
Out to the Ballgame" fin- grab it with his bare hand.
ished Rosenblatt's run as Bl,l{ Regis couldn't get it.
and Beary rounded third
the CWS home.
"To be the last team to for home as the ball u·ickwin it here, that's amaz- Jed into right field.
The Bruins loaded the
ing," Price said.
Price worked out of a bases in the' top of the
bases-loaded jam in the ninth against Price. Chris
ninth, then allowed only Giovinazzo reached on
one baserunner the rest of his chopper to third when
Adrian Morales' throw
the way.
South Carolina had pulled first baseman
Christian Walker off the
runne~ in scoring position in four of the first six bag. and Walker was late
innings. including load- with the sweep tag.
ing the bases in the sec- ifrevor Brown blooped
ond, but could push noth- one into center. and Price
ing across until the walked Rodriguez, the
No. 9 batter, on four
eighth.
Pinch-hitter
Brady pitches.
But Price struck out
Thomas reached on a
sharply hit ball up the Niko Gallego to get out
middle to start the inning, of trouble.
chasing reliever Erik
UCLA had to reset its
Goeddel. Klein came on, infield for the bottom of
and pinch-runner Robert the ninth. Espy punched a
Beary moved to second dugout wall with his right
on
Kyle
Enders' - throwing - hand after
committing the erro that
grounder.
Klein tried to trick led to toe tying run. and
Beary with a fake pickoff that left him icing his
to second, with second hand. Brown moved from
baseman Cody Regis act- third base to first, Regis
ing a::. if he were giving went from second to third
chase to a bad throw into and Adrian Williams took
center field. Beary wasn't over at second.
fooled,
but
South
The moves never hurt
Carolina fans didn't the Bruins. Brown made
appreciate the shenani- three terrific pla\ sat first.
making a scoop on
gans and booed loudly.
They were cheering Gallego's throw fro n

short to get Adrian
Morales 'leacijng off the
lOth. fieldirlg Haney's
roller and flilping to the
c_overing Kl m just in
t1me to get the runner.
and later h· uling in a
throw in th di1t from
Klein on a b nt.
Michael
th. the situational rel ever who
pitched a t ee-hit complete game ·iday in a 5I win over Clemson •
his first · art in
months. got the ball again
on three d~) s · rest. He
went fiye innings and
allowed a run on ~ix hits.
walked two and struck
out three.
Like the Gamecocks.
UCLA missed out on
early sc9ring chances.
Roth pid!ed off a runner
at second in the first
inning. got a double-play
ball in the second and a
groundout and strikeout
to end the thjrd after Beau
Amaral doupled.
The
Bruins
broke
through in the fifth when
Brov.·n hit a leadoff single. moved over on a sacrifice and scored on
Gallego's tv. o-out single
to left.
~
Rob Rasmussen started
for th ~ Bruins and went
ix innings. allo\\ ing no
runs and six hits
wal~ing four.
'·It feels like I'm in ....
dream,'' Ilnders said.
"Now th8t it's o\'er. I can
rdax.''

R

a.

.------------------------j___l_______-+-----

Halladay gave up a
season-high 13 hits and
because their teams can
struck out l 0 in eight
offer them more money.
innings, throwing 119
(James would give up
pitches. Manuel didn't
about $30 million if he
hesitate to send him back
fromPageBl
out for another inning
bolts Cleveland).
after he escaped a threat guys, the day job calls.
The Knicks traded
in the seventh. ·
away
Jamal Crawford
He's touring in Europe).
"In the eighth, that's
The Knicks plan to and Zach Randolph his game," Manuel said.
drop in on LeBron, too. the NBA's top sixth man
''He was fine."
They can afford James and a first-time All-Star,
Sardinha
connected
and another max player, respectively - to get
with two outs in the
which might be what their $34 million in
fourth and Halladay on
roorrf.
New
Jersey
deck. hitting the first . they need to finally get shipped out Jason Kidd,
pitch several rows deep going again after a fran- Richard Jefferson and
into the seats in left field. chise-worst nine straight Vince Carter in recent
Sardinha, a .137 career losing seasons.
"We've had to live years, resulting in a 12hitter, hit his,. first career
70 record but hope for a
homer last week in an through some tough quick turnaround. Miami
interleague game against times in order to get essentially left Wade to
Cleveland Ohio's where you think you start play by himself this seaother major league team. rebuilding the franchise." son in exchange for the
Sardinha has three hits team president Donnie chance to get him more
since his June 19 promo- Walsh said. "We have help then he could ever
tion. two of them that opportunity now. want starting Thursday.
homers. He was a sec- How well, how fast we
"It is an 'ali-in' strateond-round draft pick by can rebuild the team can gy, in that even when it
the Reds in 2000 and be shortcut by getting works, you're going to
appeared in two career great players."
have to operate with a
games for Cincinnati,
They'll have plenty of very
low
payroll,''
going 0 for 5. Hitting a competition. The Heat,
Rockets general manager
homer against the Reds Nets, Chicago Bulls and
Daryl Morey said. ''If it
had extra significance.
Los Angeles Clippers can doesn't work, it can be
"A little bit," Sardinha offer max deals to James'
said. "Any hit 1 get class. which would pay catastrophic in terms of if
means a lot to me at this about $16.6 million next you strike out. it's going
to be very difficult to be
stage of my career.''
season. Chicago and competitive. But every
NOTES: The Reds New Jersey made trades
optioned LH reliever in recent days to push team is doing the best
Daniel Ray Herrera to them closer to joining the they can. That may be the
best path they have availTdple-A Louisville after
Knicks with enough to able."
·the game. They plan to
offer two max deals, and
The potential crop
call up LHP Travis Wood
from Triple-A Louisville the Heat can keep Wade, made it too hard for
for his big-league debut give an additional max some teams not to try.
The clock started tickon Thursday at the contract and have enough
left
over
for
another
four summers ago,
ing
Chicago Cubs. Wood lost
when James, Wade and
quality
player.
the competition for the
So much for the theory Bosh passed on maxififth starter's spot to RHP
that
free agency isn't the mum-length extensions
Mike
Leake
during
route
to building a win- on their rookie contracts
spring training .... LHP
ner
in
the NBA, where in favor: of sho11er deals
Aroldis Chapman gave
top
players
rarely leave that allowed them to opt
up four runs, hit two batters and threw two wild
WHEN'S THE LAST TIME
pitches in l 2-3 innings
in relief for Louisville on
A CHECK-UP
Tuesday night. The Reds
want to see whether the
YOU MONEY
Cuban defector could
help them as a reliever
'R.R2?AN
-wa-RNER
after the All-Star break.
... Votto has reached base
INSURANCE
safely in 38 consecutive
SERVICES INC.
Insurance'~&gt;~
games, the longest streak
Dave White &amp; Michael Warner: Agents
by a Red sinc"e Pete Rose
CALL 740·992·6688 OR VISili
did it in 48 straight
brogan·warner.webagebt4u.com
games in 1978.

Prize

SAVED

"/
Grange

for free agency this summer.
Momentum kept building as fears grew that
owners will seek radical
changes in length and
value of contracts next
summer
when
the
league's collective bargaining
agreement
expires. That made it
wise for a player like
Nowitzki. even if he has
no intention of leaving
Dallas. to exercise his
early termination option
now and sign a new deal
under the current mles.
Raptors general manager Bryan Colangelo
called it all "unprecedented" and a "unique
set of circumstances
that's got everyone into a
frenzy" Monday during a
radio interview with the
Fan590 in Toronto. when
he said it was likely
Bosh would leave.
If the All-Star forward
joins James, or Wade. or
both, that team figure{to
become an immediate
championship contender.
Boston won the title the
year after assembling its
Big Three which
could now be broken up
with Ray Allen on the
market - and the Lakers
have· reached the finals
every year since acquiring Pau Gasol to pomplement Kobe Brvant.
Numerous teams are
now dreaming of similar
pairings.
.
"You look at the teamsthat have an awful lot of
cap space. there could be
a lot of power shift in it'l
this league," Minq otli

I

coach Kurt Rambi!-- said .
Deals can be agreed to
but can't tje si~med until
July 8. The process often
goes &lt;.fuidkly but this
year that's probabl) up
to James and his ad\ isers. because teams in the
running for him probably
won't move on to Plan B
until thev khow his
intentions:With so man)
potential good options .
he might want to take his
time.
''I thin~-! the free agents
are cor~orations ~and
there's a rrocess that all
of ther have to co
thrOll!!h ;)\'hO are men1bcrs 'Of ihc ~orporation.
Mom. Jgent. lawy.
doctor. Haughter. s
husband. all these people
are part f it, so I don't
think i t' ~ an individual
decision an\'more .'' Hall
of Farner Julius Erving
said.
"1 think the stakes are
so high, contracts are so
big. it's 1 ot an indi\ idual
decision and it's not a
decision you just let an
agent mr ·e anymore."
. With free agency turnmg intq must-see TV,
l\BA TV will air a live
special ·tarting at midnight. and the Knicks'
tvlSG netr.ork will debut
a show the same time.
After ) ears of jockeying by teams. anticipation by the players and
speculation
by
the
media. it~ time to get
~
Hcuted.
"It's wh t i\'C liw for:·
Dalla s ,\11 vericks pr· ·
~ft:ni Dq nnlc ~ebun s&lt;
,
Jit'::. fun.''

a\

of Prescriptions Available
Limited

Area

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