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Obamasigns
financial overhaul
intolaw,A2

--:-~-~--------.,_.

_____

MHS class of'52
holds :veunion, A3

a
Printed on 100%
Rec) cled Newspr int

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio

-a
D.,-

.

OBITUARIES
Page AS

• Cherole A. Burdette

Actor Paul
Robeson
featured at
. Chautauqua
.

SENTINEL STAFF
SNEWS@MYDAILYSENTINELCOM •

GALLIPOLIS - Ohio
Chautauqua continues its
run today in Gallipolis
with actor Paul Robeson
the featured.character.
Robeson (1898-1976)
was
a
criticallyacclaimed actor whose
career began in the
1920s and reached its
zenith in the 1930s and
'40s. One of his best. known roles is the title
character of William
Shakespeare's Othello,
which Robeson first
played in 1930 in
London and reprised in
1943 on Broadway.
Actor and living history performer Marvin
Jefferson will portray
Robeson at 7:30 p.m.
today
under
the
Chautauqua
tent
in
ipolis City Park.
day's Chautauqua
•
vities begin at 10:30
a.m. with the youth
workshop "Kids Stuff
from the 1930s'' at
Bossard
Memorial
Library.
Michael
Hughes. who portrayed
actor Orson Welles on
Tuesday, will be the presenter.
Susan
Marie
Frontczak, who performed as former First
Lady Eleanor Roosevelt
on Wednesday evening.
will present the adult
workshop at 2:30 p.m.
today at Bossard Library.
Her presentation is ''Dear
Mr. President
A
humorous look at letters
and packages sent to the
White House throughout
the Roosevelt administration."
There is no admission
fee for any Chautauqua
.
nts.

High : 88.

Low: 72.

INDEX
2 S ECTIONS -

endars

12 PAGES

A3'
B3-4

Comics

Bs

Editorials

A4

Sports

B Section

© 2010 Ohio Valley Publishing Co.

~ .I!IJI,I !1!.!1,11 .

ODOT updates 'Capital Corridor' project
S ENTINEL STAFF
MDSNEWS@ MYDAILYSENTINELCOM

NELSONVILLE Since
breaking ground in October,
workers have logged more than
70.000 hours building the new
8 .5-mile reallignment of U.S. 33
at Nelsonville. The project,
funded by the federal stimulus
program, has employed 250
Ohio workers.
The Nelsonville Bypass is the
final upgrade of the U.S. 33 corridor in southeast Ohio, which in
planning also included the

Ravenswood Connector and
Lancaster Bypass.
Phase II and III of the U.S. 33
Nelsonville Bypass have been
American
funded
from
Recovery and Reinvestment
Act, allowing the project to be
completed nearly six years
ahead of Ohio Department of
Transportation's construction
schedule. It will likely be completed and open to traffic in
2013.
"This historic investment has
been decades in the making."
said ODOT District 10 Deputy

Director. Karen Pawloski. "Not
only is this project going to
make travel safer for motorists,
but has already put more than
two hundred fifty Ohioans to
work in only nine months."
As of Jan. I. 2010. contractors
have paid out more than $2.1
million dollars in paycbecks.

· Phase II
To
date.
Kokosing
Construction Compan) has
excavated more than 1.1 million
cubic yards of dirt and embankment. In addition, the new alignment requires two valleys to be

filled with more than three million cubic yards of dirt.
"We have three crews aggressively excavating dirt." said
ODOT Project Engineer Cary
Betzing. Pomeroy. ~In a tenhour shift we can excavate up to
twenty four thousand cubic
yards of dirt."
With millions of yards of dirt
left to excavate. soil stability is
an important factor when building a new four-lane highv.·ay. To
mitigate settling and increase

Please see ODOT, A3

Commission
to oversee
courthouse
·facelift
B v B RIAN

J . REED

BREED@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

POMEROY - Meigs
County Commissioners
plan to spruce up the street
level public areas of the
county courthouse. using
their summer labor crew to
perform most of the work.
Workers assigned to. the
courthouse through the
Summer Youth Program
have begun to prepare the
East Second Street courthouse facade for a fresh
coat of paint. President
Tom Anderson said the
project will be limited in
, scope. with a primary
goal of improving the
courthouse's curb appeal.
ln addition to painting
the areas along the street
\&gt;.here paint is peeling. a
Beth Sergent/photo
fevv other areas in need of
The Meigs Local Enrichment Foundation's Inaugural Summer Softball Slam tournament will be held Aug. 7-8 touching up will be painton the MLEF's new ball diamond just off Pomeroy Pike. Pictured are MLEF supporters, front row (from left) ed on the side of the
Jake Andrus, Hunter Clary; second row (from left) Susie and Jim Soulsby, Sandy lannarelli, Tammy Andrus; courthouse. and improvethird row (from left) MHS Baseball Coach Brent Bissell, Bob Williams, Mike Bartrum, Randy Butcher.
ments will be made to the
street-level public elevator entrance.
Commissioners said
the project will be completed using the seasonal
work force and existing
courthouse maintenance
mond. MLEF's diamond. ing Bob Williams at 992B v B ETH SERGENT
• Hit your own soft- \\'Orkers.
BSERGENT'&lt;i'MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM
complete with new artifi- 3049 or Randy Butcher at balls. Softballs must be Please see Facelift. AS
cial turf. is part of the 742-2302. Registration stamped and 44-core. no
POMEROY The foundation's "community will also be h~eld at 7 more than 375 compresupcoming Meigs Local phase" which includes a p.m., Thursday. Aug. 5 at sion. ·
Enrichment Foundation's park/playground. cross- the l'vlLEF ball diamond
There will be commemSummer Softball Slam country
track.
etc. where the brackets for orative T-shitts presented
tournament will raise MLEF's
community the tournament will also to the teams which come
funds to benefit the foun- phase makes the founda- be chosen.
in first-fourth places.
dation and showcase its tion "more than a football
Mike
Bartrum.
• Teams must be co-ed.
new ball diamond meant field" for Meigs High with five male and five spokesperson for MLEF.
to be enjoyed by the School.
female players each. said he hopes the tournaentire community.
Rules for the inaugural Those under 18 must ment can become an
The co-ed. round robin MLEF Summer Softball have a parent's permis- annual event. Bartrum
tournament will be held Slam are as follows:
guessed it would be B Y CHARLENE HOEFLICH
sion to play. •
HOEFLICH@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM
Saturday, Aug. 7 and
• Games began at 8 spring before all the work
• Registration is $50
Sunday. Aug. 8 at the per team with all pro- a.m. and continue all day. is completed on the ball
PO~lEROY
In
MLEF's new ball dia- ceeds benefiting the Admission is free to diamond but for now, it
watch the tournament can be enjoyed next preparation for the openmond off of Pomeroy foundation.
Pike, as well as the Meigs
• Pre-registration can and concessions will be month during the inaugur- ing of .Meigs Local
al summer softball slam.
schools on Aug. 24. the
High School ball dia- be done by phone by call- available.
Board of Education at
Tuesday night's meeting
hired some new staff.
renewed contracts for
others. and reassigned
B Y CHARLENE H OEFLICH
ly had recurrent opera
another.
HOEFLICH@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM
tiona! problems since its
Hired were Denise M.
· installation at the time
Russo
as a cosmetology
POMEROY - A deci- the school was built.
teacher at Meigs High
sion on installation of a
One of the four comSchool. Julie Zirkle as a
new chiller system at the pressors is now inoperasecretary at the Middle
Metgs
Elementary ble. according to Paul
School. and
Nicole
School was discussed at McElroy, the district's
Honaker and Travis
length and then post- director of operations.
Abbott
as
summer
poned pending further who also questioned the
school in~tructors at
information at Tuesday reliability of the other
Meigs High retroactive
night's meeting of the units. and suggested
to June 1. B.J. Nicholson
Meigs Local of Board of probable need for replac\.\as approved as a volunEducation ..
ing the entire system.
teer a~si:;tant middle
Matt Beecroft. a repreBoard member Ryan
. school football coach for
sentative of ElitAire. Mahr questioned the wisupcoming season.
Inc .. was at the meeting dom of doing a replaceMcEiro) resigned for
with a proposal for instal- ment
with
another
retirement purposes as
lation of a nev. McGuay McGuay. even though it
Charlene Hoeflich/photo director of maintenance
unit. an updated version would be updated. in
and transportation for the
of what is currently in view of the current prob- Barbara Musser, Meigs Local Board of Education district dfecti\'e Juh 31.
place. at a cost of lems. He suggested that president, presents pins to Layne Acree and Katie and was hired as director
$187.000. The current air perhaps just replacement Thomas, national award winners at the Archery in the of operations effective
Schools national contest. Jacob Riffle, also a national
cooling system. which is
Please see Hires, AS
·P lease see Meigs, AS
winner, was not present.
a McGuay, has reported-

Summer Soft

lam

Tourney to benefit. shf!wcase 'lvlLEF progress

Meigs hires
personnel
for new
school year

t'r'ansd

MOOG

1

••• J

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PageA2

The Daily Sentinel

Thursday, July 22,

2010

White House apologizes
to o~sted Ag worker
B Y BEN EVANS AND
MARY CLARE JALONICK
ASSOCIATED PRESS

WASHINGTON -An
embarrassed White House
apologized on Wednesday
to a black Agriculture
Department
employee
who was ousted for her
remarks about race. saying the administration did
not kno\\ all the facts
when she was fired.
White House spokesman
Robert Gibbs called the
dismissal
of Shirley
Sherrod an injustice and a
mistake and said he was
apologizing for tpe ·'entire
administration." He said
Agriculture Secretary Tom
¥ilsack was trying to reach
her to extend an apology.
··r accept the apology,"
Sherrod said on CNN
Win McNamee/Abaca Press/MOT after watching Gibbs talk
U.S. President Barack Obama signs the Dodd-Frank Wall Street Reform and Consumer Protection Act at the to reporters at a televised
Ronald Reagan Building in Washington. D.C.~ Wednesday. Also pictured, from left, Vice President Joe Biden, briefing. But she said the
Speaker of the House Nancy Pelosi (D-Calif.), Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid (D-Nev.), Rep. Maxine apology took too long
Waters (D-Calif.), Sen. Chris Dodd (D-Conn.) and Rep. Barney Frank (D-Mass.).
and she wasn't sure if she
wanted her job back.
"I just don't know at this
point, I don't know,'' she
said. adding that she would
be surprised if Vilsack
offered her the job.
Shen-od has said she
submitted her resignation
growth. Republican Rep. er scrutiny of the sophisti- director for the indepen- under pressure from the
BY JIM KUHNHENN
House.
The
ASSOCIATED PRESS
Darrell Issa of California cated financial transac- dent consumer protection White
Agriculture
Department
bureau, an agency that
called Obama's bill-sign- tions on Wall Street.
WASHINGTON
ing a "charade·· that
The law also assembles became one of the bill's says it was Vilsack's
Reveling in victory, ignored the root causes of a powerful council of flashpoints and was decision alone.
SherTod was asked by
President Barack Obama the financial crisis.
regulators to be on the attacked by Republicans
department
officials to
on Wednesday signed into
The president said oth- lookout for risks across as a broad expan::.ion of
law the most sweeping erwise. He argued that a the finance system. government power over resign on Monday after
conservative bloggers postoverhaul of financial reg- crippling recession was Large. failing financial private business.
ulations since the Great primarily caused by a institutions will now be
Elizabeth Warren. a ed a video of her saying she
Depression. a package breakdown in the finan- liquidated and the costs Harvard law professor, is didn't initially give a white
that aims to protect con- cial system that cannot assessed on their surviv- considered a leading can- farmer as much help as she
sumers and ensure eco- happen again.
ing peers. Borrowers will didate for the job. As could have 24 years ago.
nomtc stability from Main
"I proposed a set of be protected from hidden head
of
the when she was working for '
Street to Wall Street.
reforms to empower con- fees and abusive terms. Congressional Oversight a farmers' aid group.
The
Jaw,
pushed 'sumers and investors. to but also will have to pro- Panel for the govern- Shenod says she used the
through
mainly
by bring the shadowy deals vide evidence· that they ment's $700 billion story in her speech to the
Democrats
in thar caused this crisis into can repay thetr ·oans: Troubled Asset Relief NAACP to promote racial
Washington's deeply par- the light of day. and to put The Federal Reserve wi II Program, the bank rescue r~oncili~tion ~d that the
tisan environment, comes a stop to taxpayer bailouts get new powers while at fund known as TARP. she edtted vrdeo dtstorted her
almost two years after the once and for all," Obama the same time coming has periodically clashed remarks.
After a video of her full
infamous near financial said
to
supporters. under expanded congres- with Treasury Secretary
speech
was posted online
meltdown in 2008 in the "Today. thartks to a lot of sional oversight.
Timothy Geithner.
by
the
NAACP. the
United States that was felt people in this room. those
Liberals and unions
"While
President
around the globe. The leg- reforms will become the Obama pats himself on have been aggressively Whi_te House called the
islation gives the govern- law of the land.''
the back today. fa-nilies pressing for her appoint- Agnculture Department
ment new povvers to break
In a note of irony. and small businesses are ment. AFL-CIO President about the case Tuesday
up companies that threat- Obama signed the bill bracing for yet another Richard Trumka was night and it was agreed
en the economy. creates a with great fanfare in the big-government over- among the latest to voice that her ouster should be
new agency to guard con- massive Ronald Reagan reach that will make it suppOit for of Warren. reviewed.
The White House is
sumers and puts more Building, named after a harder to create new saying Tuesday she is the
facing
strong criticism
light on the financial mar- president who champi- jobs," said the House only candidate "uniquely
over
the
case, which
kets that escaped the oned deregulation.
Republican leader. John qualified and equipped to
marks
a
stumble
for both
oversight of regulators.
head this new agency."
The president was Boehner of Ohio.
the
Obama
administration
Obama described them joined by scores of conThough Obama and his
But opposition in the
all as commonsense sumer advocates, state top
could
make and the NAACP. Both
officials
urged Senate
reforms that will help and local government Congress to pass the law Wan·en 's confirmation reversed their positions
people in their daily life officials. business own- while the memory of the difficult. a point Dodd after initially condemning
signing contracts, ers and executives. and 2008 financial crisis was made in a radio interview Sherrod's remarks based
understanding fees, being members of Congress still fresh. many of the on NPR Monda;. White on the video first released
spokeswoman Monday night.
aware of risks.
who supported the bill. la.,v·s provisions won't House
Black leaders piled on
He went so far as to call Obama singled out for take effect for at least a Amy Brundage said that
Wednesday.
The Rev.
the reforms "the strongest praise Sen. Chris Dodd. 1 year. as regulators scram- while the administration
Jesse Jackson already
consumer · protections in D-Conn..
and
Rep. ble to write new rules and has additional candtdates
1n mind, "We are confi- had called on the adminhistory.'' The president Barney Frank, D-Mass., implement them.
Large Wall Street dent she is confirmable." istration to apologize and
added to a burst of who shepherded the bill
banks
have welcomed
through
Congress.
Also under serious con- reinstate Sherrod to her
applause: "Because of
ln the midst of a heated some provisions in the sideration is assistant job, if she wanted it. The
this Jaw. the American
Black
secretary Congressional
people will never again be midterm election season bill. but have fiercely Treasury
Caucus. which includes
Michael
Barr.
one
opposed
.
others
that
of
the
asked to foot the bill for for manv lawmakers.
42
members
of
Wall Street's mistakes ...
Obama sought to put the would limit their banking architects of the financial
Congress,
called
for
Republicans p01tray the complex Jaw in con- business and cut into regulation bill and a close
ally of some White House Sherrod to be reinstated
bill as a burden on small sumer-oriented, terms for their profitability.
immediately.
saying
banks and the businesses the nation. He said it
Obama has at least one officials. Deputy assistant
Vilsack
overreacted.
remnant attorney general Eugene
that rely on them and would help root out fine conten"tious
Soon after. the Rev. AI
argue it will cost con- print and hidden fees for from the bill to address. Kimmelman is also in.the Sharpton said black leadsumers and impede job people. and provide deep- He must still nominate a running for the slot.
ers should refrain from
calling on the administration to apologize. saying
t~at creates the impresston that black leadership
is fractured. "We are only
In
states
like greasing the rails for the
WASHINGTON (AP) been out of work for six ing $309 a week for
- State unemployment months or more have almost 5 million people Penns) lvania and New right wing to run a train
whose 26 weeks of state York. the back payments through our ambitions
agencies are gearing up to seen their benefits lapse.
Under best-case scenar- benefits have run out. should go out next week. and goals for having civil
resume sending unemployment payments to millions ios. unemployed people Those people are enrolled official; said. In others, and human rights in this
of people as Congress who have been denied io a federally financed like Nevada, it may take country," Sharpton said.
moves to ship President jobless benefits because · program providing up to a fe"' weeks for all of
The incident comes as
Barack Obama a measw-e of a partisan Senate 73 additional weeks of those eligtble to recei\'e the NAACP and the conbenefits.
said
Mae servative tea party movestandoff over renewing unemployment benefits.
to restore lapsed benefits.
About half of tho&lt;&gt;e eli- Worthe). a spokesman ment have been trading
After
months
of them can expect retroacincreasingly bitter stale- tive payments as early as gible have had their ben- for the Department of charges of racism.
mate, the Senate passed next week in some states. efits cut off since funding Employment. Training
The two-minute, 38the measure Wednesday In other states. it will take expired June 2. They are and Rehabilitation.
second
clip
posted
In North Carolina, Monday
eligible! for lump sum
by
by a 59-39 vote. Obama longer.
is poised to sign the meaState unemployment retroactive payments that Employment and Income Biggovernment.com was
sure into law after a final and labor agencies have are typically delivered Department spoke-;man presented as evidence that
House vote on Thursday. been prcpa,ring for weeks dtrectly to their bank Andrew James says to the NAACP was hypoIt\ a welcome relief to for Congress to restore accounts or credited to expect a wait of two to critical in its recent resolution condemning what it
six weeks.
2 1/2 million people who jobless payments averag- state-issued debit cards.

Obama signs sweeping
financial overhaul into law

Senate approves jobless payments to millions

calls racist elements of
the tea party movement.
The website's owner.
Andrew Breitbart, s-a
the video shows the ci
rights group condoni
the same kind of racism it
says it wants to erase.
Biggovernment.com is
the same site that gained
notice last year after airing video of workers for
the community group
ACORN
counseling
actors posing as a prostitute and her boyfriend.
Reacting to the video
on Monday, the NAACP
issued a statement disavowing her comments,
which were made at a
local NAACP event.
Sherrod then took to the
media airwaves Tuesday,
saying she was unfairly ·
attacke~ and that the
entirety of her remarks,
delivered in March in
Georgia, were not about
racism. but part of a larger story about racial reconciliation and learning
from her mistakes.
People who kn.
Sherrod were quick
defend her, including the
wife of the white farmer
discussed in the speech .
"We probably wouldn't
have (our farm) today if
it hadn't been for her
leading us in the right
direction." said Eloise
Spooner of Iron City, Ga.
"I wish she could get her
job back because she was
good to us, I tell you."
In the clip posted on
B iggovernment .com,
Sherrod described the frrst
time a white farmer came
to her for help. It was
1986, and she worked for a
nonprofit rural farm aid
group. She said the farmer
came in acting "superior"
to her and she debated how
much help to give him.
" I was struggling with
the fact that so many
black people had lost
their farmland, and her~
was faced with helpin
white person save the
land,'' Sherrod said.
Initially, she said. "I
didn't give him the full
force of what I could do"
and gave him only enough
help to keep his case progressing. Eventually, she
said. his situation ''opened
my eyes" that whites were
struggling just like blacks .
and helping farmers wasn 't so much about race but
was "about the poor versus those who have."
In the full 43-minute
video, Sherrod tells the
story ofherfather's death
in 1965, saying he was
killed by white men who
were never charged. She
says she made a commitment to stay in the South
the night of her father's
death. despite the dreams
she had always had of
leaYing her rural town.
"When I made that commitment I was making th.
commitment to black peo
pie and to black people
only," she said. "But you
know God will show you
things and he'll put things
in your path so that you
realize that the struggle is
really about poor people."
Sherrod said officials
showed no interest in her
explanation when she
was asked to resign. She
said she was on the road
Monday when USDA
deputy undersecretary
Cheryl Cook called her
and told her to pull over
and submit her resignation on her Blackberry
because the White House
wanted her out.
"It hurts me that they
didn't even try to attempt
to see what is happening
here, they didn't care."
Sherrod said. 'T m not a
rC)cist. .. . Anyone who
knows me knows tha.t
I'm for fairness:·

147th Meigs County Fair
GOOD FAMILY ENTERTAINMENT
~ugust
Edward latta Pharmacist
Ke1111eth .l1cCuflough, R. Ph.
Charles Riffle, R. Ph.
It R

112 J:'ast /\Jaiu Street,
Pomero}', OH
Prescriptiou Ph. 99i-2955

16-21

Amusement Rides

,,

•

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PageA3

The Daily Sentinel

Thursday, .July 22,

2010

Memorial s£holarship
applications available
SYRACUSE
Applications for Robert
Wingett l\lemorial Trust
Scholarship are now
available from Cathy
Crow.
Smith
&amp;
Associate:-. Accounting.
Second Street. Porn~roy.
This is the firs t year for
the scholarship program
and applications mu~t h~.:
filed with Crow by not
later than Septemhcr I .
Only
residents
of
Svracuse qualify to ::pply.
·criteria calls for the

applicant to have a high
school
diploma.
Scholarships can be used
for any accredited in~ti­
tution where bachelor or
associate degrees are
awarded and are available to both undergraduate::. as well a~ those
doing post graduate
work.
Ruth Strode, Rod
Gilkev and Cathy Crow
are ·trustees of the
Robert
Wingett
Memorial Trust Fund.

ASK DR.. B R.OT H ER.. S
Submitted photo
The MHS class of 1952 had a reunion over the weekend at the Radford farm. Attendmg were graduates, Carl
Glaze, Longv1ew, Texas, front, and left to right, Nola Knopp Swisher, GladdJe DeVol Stewart. June Smart Klees,
Shirley Coleman, Ruth Chase Jenkms, Franklin '"Bub" Clark. and Peggy Herman Thomas, all local.

Don Jt mess. around
•
MHS class of '52 holds reumon with your playtime

POl\1EROY
A
reunion
of
the
lltgh
Middleport
School graduating cia~~
of 1952 \\as hl'ld as a
of the annual Glaze
·1ion at the home of
and Louise Glaze
Radford
on

I

Rocksprings Road over Shirley Coleman. Ruth
the wcl'kcnd.
Chase Jenkins. l·wnklin
The class reunion, a '·Bub" Clark .•md Peggy
first for Carl Gla.r.e of Herman ·'l'honuls, all
Long' kw. Texas. \Va~ local.
attended by classmates.
Others joining the
Nola Knopp Swi~her. rcumon classmate~ for
Gladdie DeVol Stewart. the gathering were Jay
June
Smart
Kloes. Jenkm~. Dale Walburn.

~and)

Clark. Manning
Klocs, and Betty Ashley
Roser.
Corning for the Glaze
rcumon were relatives
from Florida. Tennessee,
lnchana, Texas, Arkansas,
~orth
Carolina and
Virgmia. a total of 112.

M ason County author to sign first book
Bv D ELYSSA HUFFMAN

DHUFFMAN MYDAILYREGISTERCO~

POINT PLEASANT.
W.Va. - Author Paula
Dean Young, a 1961
of
Point
graduate
Pleasant High School,
wtll be ~igning her first
book at the class's nlumni banquet on Saturda).
July .31.
Her hook. l.akora
Gold., was an inspiration
from a .trip &lt;;he took in
2001 to Rapid Cit). S.D.
'"I fell in love with the
Black Hills. Dead\\ ood.
the Badland~. Cu~ter
State Park, as well as
'owstone and 1-'he
•

Grand Tetons.'" Young Together. the) ha\e four
said. "When I returned children. eight g.randchil
home. the stor) for my dren and fi, c great.
book just came to me and grandchildren. Gary's
I began to write:·
brother. Pete and his
Lakota Gold is a fit.:tion ''ife. Ph) II is li\ c in Point
story. but all comes true Pleasant and have all
as you begin to read their li\es.
about the lives of the
"We have many \\Onmain characters. Emma derful friends around
Ruth and Lone Wolf The this are.t, and we \\ould
story take:; place in the love to '&gt;ce any ,md all
l~WOs and begins in the
come to the han4uet.''
Black Hills of South Young said. '"It \\ill he
Dakota. It i~ published by great to remember old
Tate
Publishing
&amp; time&lt;; and learn what old
Enterpnses.
friends h:n e done 111
Young married her thetr li\ e~."
high school sv.eetheart.
Young \\ill aJ:...o be
Gar) Young and nO\\ stgnins- books betorc the
_JJ\es in Albettville. Ala. alumm banquet.
~--- - -

On Thursday. July 29.
she will be at Emma's
Galler) from I I :30 a.m.
to 1:30 p.m. She nlso will
make an .appearance at
Village PiZLa on Friday.
July 30 at 6:30. and on
Saturday. July 31 at the
Point Pleasant River
t-.luseum at noon. The
PPHS Alumni Class of
1961 Reunion will take
place on Saturday. July
31 at 6:30p.m.
To order a book. you
ma) call 888-361-9473
or purchase it online at
WW\\ .tatepublishing.com.
Young also ''ill have her
book on sale with her at
each signing.

Community Calendar
Public
meetings
Thursday, July 22
POMEROY - Me1gs
Soil
and
Water
Conservation
District
Board of Supervisors.
regular sess1on, 11 :30
a.m. at the district office
at 33101 Hiland Road.
Friday, July 23
RUTLAND - Rutland
Township Trustees Will
hold their August meeting
on July 23 at 5 p.m. at the
Rutland F1re Station.
Monday, July 26
RACINE - Southern
Local Board of Education,
regular meeting, 8 p.m.,
~ ~hern H1gh School,
~1acenter.

Chnst, 237 Main St.,
POMEROY
Monday, July 26
RACINE - Southern Middleport, through July
Veterans
Service
Campa1gn 23, 6 to 8;03 p.m. Classes
Commission, 9 a.m , 117 Local
. Committee. 6 p.m., ele-. for 3 years through high
Memonal Drive.
mentary school cafeteria, school. Theme, "No
discuss Aug 3 levy. all Ordinary Man:•
Clubs and
POMEROY- Calvary
residents encouraged to
P1lgrim Chapel, Ohio
organizations attend.
143, VBS through Friday,
Wednesday, July 28
RACINE - Southern 6-8 p.m. Rev. Charles
Thursday, July 22
High School Athletic McKenzie, 992-2952.
MIDDLEPORT
Rescheduled meeting of Boosters, regular meetAlpha Iota Masters. 6 ing, 6 p.m , Southern
Other events
Fttness
p m., at the home Julia Commumty
Houston, on Second Center at SHS, all parMonday, July 26
ents of athletes encourAvenue.
POMEROY- Rally for
aged
to
attend.
REEDSVILLE
Life. sponsored by Meigs
R1verv1ew Garden Club,
County Right to Life, 8:30
family picnic. 6:30 p.m. at Church events p.m.,
Riverfront
the Reedsville Church of
Amphitheater. Collection
Christ.
Friday, July 23
of baby supplies for
TUPPERS PLAINS MIDDLEPORT - Bible infants to three months,
VFW Post 9053, 7 p m., School w111 be held at the presentations, candleMiddleport Church of light prayer service.
at the hall.

ODQT from Page AI
soil stability, 01)0 I' and
Kokosing arc w.. ing n
wick drain apparatus to
quick!) rt'move water 10
feet
below ga 'HIIld
Throughout t l~o: !)rojcct.
ODOT will uo;;e more
than 200,000 feet of wick
drain.
Phase II of the
Nel&lt;,&lt;mville
B) pas
includes more than three
miles of highwa) ca11h
work and 4.56 miles of
four-lane pa\ ing
Phase II also constsh
of construction of the
west interchange as \\ell
as the con..,truction of
four bndges.
Phase Ill
The larger of the t\\O
1

phases.

.

Beaver

bxca\ ating has excavated more than 3.2 million
cuhic yards of dirl and

emh.tnkment
,incc
Och)bcr, 2\)09.
A unique construction
feature of Phase Ill
mcludes mme grouting.
Ill
\\ hich
Phase HI
requires an e-;timated
500.000 cubtc yards of
grout to fill old abandoned mine votds.
"At
one
ume
'\lelsonvillc had a huge
coal mining tndustr) ,"
explained
Daniel
ODOT
\1cDonald,
Project Engineer
"Ho,.,e, er. there ''ere
minimal mining regula-

Exavatlon 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
\

tions m the carl} 1900's
and man) of the mines
''ere ju!-.t abandoned.
The&lt;.e ·old mine void'&gt;
need to be filled to pre' ent an) ~lippage along
the h1ghway."
Phase lll ic;; most vis1
blc lrom existing. l S
Route 33, where on the
eastside of Neb..otl\ 1lle
motonsts c.HJ see l-'0115truct 1011 of the.: t\\ 111
bndre" o\er lim Rock
Road. A5 \\ell \\Orkcrs
arc fini.-..hmg up paving
on the new Ohto 78 and
mstallation of v.~rious
'' ildl ife cut' ells \\ htch
arc u~ed to allow wildlife
to safel\ trdvcl hom one
s1de ofihe"higlmay to the

other
Phase lil will begin
near Doanville and focus
on constructing 3.87
miles of four-lane high'' ay. Abo included~ in
Pha5e three i~ the construction of the es 33 I
SR 78 I SR 691 interchange. The project ''ill
reroute SR 78 1.63 miles
through
the
Happ)
Hollov. Area to fonn the
mterchange.
1 he Ohio Department
of Transportation is
tmesting up to $150 milhon m funds from the
Amcncan Recovery and
Relll\Cstment Act for
umncdiate ~onstruction
ot the final t\\O phases.

WHEN'S THE LAST TIME
A CHECK ...UP
SAVED YOU MONEY
B.Ri&gt;GAN
-w'ARN:E'R

INSURANC
SERVICES INC

.

Dear Dr. Brothers :

.:vty wife and I agree on

nearly everything, hut
there's one point of contention that alway:- gets
us arguing. I say that
man was not made to be
a machine. and requires
an ample ammuu ol time
to just kick back and
ha\ c fun. She looks at
plavtime as a wa~te of
1

~~~~·-~~
i~"~~~d ~:d~ ~;~
play makes Jack a \cry

l

Dr. Joyce Brothers

rich and happy boy." It
dri\es me crazy! Please
give me ~ome ammo to
help me win m) ongoing
battle to make her sec
the
benefits of having
1
fun! - D.B.
Dear D.B.: You don't
~ay whether your wife
takes some playtime for
herself and just want~
you to work all the time.
or whether she is driven
to keep her own nose to
the grindstone as welL If
all this work is just her
prescription for you
while she relaxes at the
~pa. I \\OUid urge you to
call her on it and go
ahead and take )OUr o\vn
form of recreation. be it
golf or boating or whate\ er it is you enjo) in
)OUr free time.But if she
is all tied up v. ith \\ orking con:-.tantly hecau:.e
she rcallv believes that
leisure activities are a
'' aste of time . it could be
that she is feeling n little
overwhelmed by all her
responsibilities
and
wants to make sure thcv
arc taken care of first. Some people who arc
extremely conscicntiou~
find it hard to relax
without feeling guilty or
negligent. They honestf ly ma) feel that playtime i~ '' astcful or fri\olous ''hen there are
other things to do that
"ill be left undone if
they fritter awa) their
time on fun. So make
sure vou are there for
vour \vife when it comes
time for household
duties as \\ell a~ planning for having fun. and
vou mav find her in a
in ore pia) fu I frame of
mind once the chores
arc done. Human beings
really arc made to enjoy
fun as well as work. and
if vour wife docsn 't
kno\..• about all the benefits to her mental and
physical health from
taking time to relax. you
can start down thnt path
together.

which is great (I· m really sort of bad with making plans). Anyway. thi~
woman. her friend. is a
recovcrin!! alcoholic.
1'\ow. I knov. our friends
would definitely expect
liquor at my wife's
party. but would it be
wrong to have e\'eryone
8 YOB'? I guess what
I'm asking is. would it
be
psychologically
harmful to our host if we
brought booze to the
party? - V.A.
Dear V.A.: It is great
that this friend is
thoughtful enough to
throw a party for your
\\ ife ·::. birthda\. If it were
not a surprise. 1 would
advise you to just ask
your wife how her friend
feels about other people
drinking in front of ncr.
or in ~her O\\ n home.
Does she ha\c a significant other who drinks?
Ha\ e you or your wife
ever been to dinner with
the friend. or to a party
where there ''as drinking. and if so, how does
she react?
I believe that in normal circumstances. if
vou were out somewhere
i1eutral and there was
alcohol im ol ved. vour
wife's friend probably
\\ ould adjust and folio''
her normal routine of
havin!! something nonalcoholic. She \\ ould not
expect others to tiptoe
around her problem.
With the party being
held in her own home.
though, the situation is a
bit ~nore delicate. It
\\ould be ven rude to
just tell C\ e·ryone to
brin!! their own beer or
''inc without first discussing it \\ ith the hostess. So. one wa\' to
approach this v.:ouid be
to simply ask her if
shc·d like some help
handling the be\ crages.
and what she has 111
mind. If she make~ no
mention of alcohol. I
would not ask anyone to
bring their own. "rd put
•••
Dear Dr. Brothers: the fnend"s feelin!!s
.M) "ife · best friend first. if I ''ere vou.
~
(c}
2010 ·by King
\\ant::.. to thro'' her a surFeawres Syndicate
pri'e birthda) part)

.qclark's Jetuelrp

Grange
ln"&gt;Ur nee,.

Dave White &amp; M ichael Warner: Agents
CA L 7 0 92
8 0 VISIT
b gebt4u com

.
I

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PageA4

The Daily Sentinel

Thursday, July 22,

2010

The DailY Sentinel
111 Court Street • Pomeroy, Ohio

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

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
Sammy M. Lopez
Publisher

Charlene Hoeflich
General Manager-News Editor

Pam Caldwell
Advertising Director
Cot~gress shall make tto law respecting atl
establishment of religiott, or proltibititzg the free
exercise thereof; &lt;&gt;r abridJ?itl,f! the freedom of
speech, or of the press; or the right of the people
peaceably to assemble, and to petitio11 the
GoveJ'ttmet~tfor a redress ofgrietJattces.
The First Amendment to the U.S. Constitution

____ -

,___

-

TODAY IN HISTORY
Today is Thursday, July 22, the 203rd day of
201 0. There are 162 days left in the year.
Today's Highlight in History:
On July 22, 1934, bank robber John Dillinger was
shot to death by federal agents outside Chicago's
Biograph Theater, where he had just seen the
Clark Gable movie "Manhattan Melodrama."
On this date:
In 1587, an English colony fated to.vanish under
mysterious circumstances was established on
Roanoke Island off North Carolina.
In 1796, Cleveland, Ohio, was founded by
General Moses Cleaveland (correct).
In 1916, a bomb ·went off during a Preparedness
Day parade in San Francisco, killing ten people.
In 1933, American aviator Wiley Post completed
the first solo flight around the world as he returned
to New York's Floyd Bennett Field after traveling for
seven days, 18 and 3/4 hours.
In 1937, the Senate rejected President Franklin
D. Roosevelt's proposal to add more justices to the
Supreme Court.
·
In 1942, the Nazis began transporting Jews from
the Warsaw Ghetto to the Treblinka concentration
camp.
In 1943, American forces led by General George
S. Patton captured Palermo, Sicily, during World
War II.
In 1946, Jewish extremists blew up a wing of the
King David Hotel in Jerusalem, killing 90 people.
In 1975, the House of Representatives joined the
Senate in voting to restore the American citizenship of Confederate General Robert E. Lee.
In 1995, Susan Smith was convicted by a jury in
Union, S.C. of first-degree murder for drowning her
two sons. (She was later sentenced to life in prison,
and will not be eligible for parole until 2024.)
Ten years ago: President Bill Clinton, in Japan for
a Group of Eight summit, addressed U.S. troops on
Okinawa, where he said they "need to be good
neighbors" with the island's residents.
Five years ago: Jean Charles de Menezes, a
Brazilian electrician, was shot to death by London
police who'd mistaken him for a terrorist. A labor
agreement ended an NHL lockout that canceled
the previous hockey season.
One year ago: President Barack Obama told a
prime-time press conference that Cambridge,
Mass. police had acted "stupidly" in the arrest of
prominent black scholar Henry Louis Gates Jr.. and
that despite racial progress, blacks and Hispanics
were still singled out unfairly for arrest. Earlier, the
president met at the White House with Iraqi Prime
Minister Nouri ai-Maliki. Millions of Asians witnessed the longest solar eclipse of this century; in
some areas, totality lasted as long as six minutes
and 39 seconds.
Thought for Today: "I hold that man is in the
right who is most cfo$efy in league with the
future. " - Henrik Ibsen, Norwegian dramatist
(1828-1906).

Restoring a vibrant
middle class in America
BY BRIAN MILLER

Imagine . joining friends for a
late-night game of Monopoly. but
in this game. there's a twist: At
the start of the game, one player
gets an entire side of the game
board. from Pacific Ave. to
Boardwalk. including the Short
Line railroad. In,tead of pondering easy questions like \vhether to
be the shoe or the thimble, you're
now grappling Vv ith a more
important question: Do you even
stand a chance in such a lopsided
game?
As you ponder the fairness of
this board game. Congress is
debating the ver) real future of
our federal estate tax. a tax on
mherited wealth designed in part
to prevent one player from owning most of the board before the
game even begins.
Recently, a new proposal was
introduced in an effort to . break
through the stalemate that has led
to the current tax holiday for the
super wealthy. Because of the
inability of Congress to reach
agreement back in December. the
year 20 lO is slowly passing as the
first since 1916 with no estate tax.
Billions of dollars are now being
tramferred tax-free. \\hile our
• national deficit grows. The heirs
of the late Texas billionaire Dan
Duncan stand to inherit, free of
any estate tax. more than the average American earns in 4.000 lifetimes. No one questions the right
of parents to pass on a legacy to
their children. but how much is
. enough?
Despite its kitchen table status
toda). the Monopoly board game
can trac\! its roots to Lizzie

LETTERS TO THE EDITOR
Letters to the editor should be limited to 300 words. All letters
are subject to editing, must be signed and include address and
telephone number. No unsigned letters will be published.
Letters should be in good taste, addressing issues, not personalities. ''Thank You" letters wi!l not be accepted for publication.

The Daily Sentinel
Reader Services

(usPs 213-9so&gt;

Correction Policy

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
Published Tuesday through Friday,
111 Court Street. Pomeroy. Ohio.
Second-class postage paid at
Pomeroy.
Member: The Assoctated Press
and
the
Ohio
Newspaper
Association.
Postmaster: Send address corrections to The Dally Sentinel, P.O.
Box 729. Pomeroy, Ohto 45769.

Our main concern in all stories is
to be accurate. If you know of an
error in a story, call the newsroom
at (740) 992-2156.

·

Our main number is
(740) 992-2156.

Department extensions are:

News
Editor: Charlene Hoeflich. Ext. 12
Reporter: Brian Reed, Ext. 14
Reporter: Beth Sergent, Ext. 13

Subscription Rates
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I

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Circulation Manager: 740-4462342, Ext.11

General Manager
Charlene Hoeflich Ext. 12
E-mail:
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\

Mail Subscription
Inside
12 Weeks
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52 Weeks

Meigs County
.. - ..•....'35.26
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Outside Meigs County
12 Weeks
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I
1

•

Magie. who created the game in Ci\ il Rights victories. the gap in
1903 as an educational tool to actual wealth is much harder to
help people understand that free shake because wealth transfers
market economies. absent rules to fon' ard. E'en toda), Africanensure otherwise. naturally move Americans h&lt;t' e only I 0 cents of
tov.:ard monopoly control as net \Vealth for C\ cry Sl of net
\vealth is increasingly concentrat- wealth that whites have. Latinoo;,
ed into the hands of the fe''· It haw 12 cents. Without a strong
takes public poli.cies. from anti- estate ta'\, the inequalitte' of the
monopoly rules to progressive tax past will foreve1· haunt nur nation.
systems. to protect free markets bt' ing the Monopol) ho.trd perfrom this self-destructive tenden- manent!) tilted.
cy. The fact is: any economic sysSen. Jon K) I. R-Ariz .• Sen.
tem is effective only to the extent Blane he Lincoln. D- \rk .. and
that ih more extreme aspects are other estate tax opponents are
reined in.
wrong in tr) ing to \\ eaken the
Our progressive ~ax system. estate tax. Congress '&gt;hou'.
including the estate tax, helped instead work to prc..,en~ a stron
guide our econom) and fuel the est,tte tax for tne benetit ut al1
broadly shared prosperity our
Amencan~. Thts e"tatc tax pronation experienced during the
posal represents the kind of wm
post-war period. However. that
monsense solution that b.1lance..,
progressive tax system came
the desire to protect small bust~
under a 30-year assault which
nesses and farms with generous
began in the early 1980s. We·\ e
deductions. while ensunng th.tt
seen the consequences of this
the super-wealthy g;, e back to
backsliding and the misguided tax
the country that made
support
cuts for the wealthy. Instead of the
prospcrit)
pnssiblc.
thcll'
promised trickle-down. we got
Even
in
a
game
like
stagnant
wages
for
moo;t
.\lonopol)
--·
\\e
c.tn
see
the
need
Americans and the widest disparity of income our nation has seen for rules to cnsurl! thut oppor1uni
since 1928. just before the Great I) continu&lt;1lly cirLLllates throughDepression. It's time to recapture out our econom) to crc.tte a
the core values that made our broadly shared prosperit~ for all.
economy \vork. beginning with ·not just a ~elect fe\\. Pre sen mg a
the preservation of a strong estate strong estate tax is e-.sential to
ensunng that c.1ch suhsequent
tax.
The importance of this proposal generation has a chance to
cannot be overstated. Transfers of achie\ e the Amencan dream.
wealth from generation ~o genera- Without it, we ha\e to ask ourtion impact e\'ery aspect of our seh es, is the· game hopelessl)
economic landscape, ,e\ en the stacked? Should ''e e'en bother
persistent racial wealth divide. pla)ing'?
•
(Brian Miller is e.w.'CIIItre direc
While we've made -;ignificant
strides at closmg the income gap lOr of Unaedf(Jr a F({ir f.'conomy.
in the half-.ccntury since the great on/in£ at 1\'II'I V,{oin'Cmtom.Y.or~.)

�~--- -

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~- -- --------.....-------- ----· ---~- -_,...._,..--

Thursd ay, July 22, 2010

Obituaries

Agathering storm halts Gulf oil well work

Cherole Ann (Blake) Burdette
Cherole Ann (Blake) Burdette, 7 J. passed away on
July 18, 2010 at her home in Rancho Cucamonga,
California.
She was born on Dec. I 7. 1938 in Mason. W.Va .. to
Edward Marion Blake and Ruth (Tracy) Blake.
~role graduated from Middleport High school in

'

e received a four year scholarship to the
Cincinnati Conservatory of Music. however Cherole
decided to attend Holzer School of Nursing.
She met her husband. Newman Burdette, while
attending nursing school. They wed in 1958.
Together they had 4 children: Kellee (Dan) Nease,
Tracy Woods, Chris (Kim) Burdette. and Luke
(Jeannette) Burdette.
They have 9 grandchildren: Jake. Caitlin and Ben
Nease. Robbie and Jeremy Woods. Lindsey and Tyler
Burdette, and Blake and Cole Burdette.
Cherole worked for the CETA Tax Map program in
Pomeroy, Ohio in 1919. then later worked for the
Meigs County Prosecuting Attorney's Office until her
family moved to California in 1985.
At that time, she worked for the citY' of La Verne
until her retirement in 200 I .
She was a member of the Heath United Methodist
Church in Middlepmt, Ohio. and also the United
Methodist Church in La Verne, Calif. She enjoyed
cooking for her family, singing in the choir. Eleanor
Circle, cooking for homeless shelters. and volunteering in the neonatal unit at Pomona Valley Hospital.
We will remember her for her sense of humor. her
wonderful laugh. and the undying love she had for
her family.
Cherole is survived by her children. grandchil, her brother John (Margie) Blake and many
es and nephews. She is preceeded in death by
husband Newman, her parents Edward and Ruth
Blake, her brother Edward Blake. Jr.. and a special
niece, Kathy Blake.
' A memorial service will be held at the United
Methodist Church of La Verne on Saturday at 10 a.m .. ·
July 24, 2010. A reception will follo\v in the church
social room. In lieu of flowers donations can be made
to a memorial fund at the United Methodist Church of
La Verne, 3205 D Street, La Verne, CA 91750. The
money will then be distributed to charities near and
dear to Cherole 's heart.
She will be greatly missed by her family and everyone who knew her.

For the Record
911
POMEROY - Meigs County 911 dispatched these
calls:
Thesday
8:38 a.m., East Memorial Drive, chest pain; 9:49
a.m., Minersville Road. chest pain; I :54 p.m ..
sville. stroke/CVA; 3:03p.m., unknown address,
ure; 5:05 p.m .. Hooker Street, Middleport.
•
45 p.m .. Ohio 124, Long Bottom, swelling; 2:50
p.m., Liberty Lane, abdominal pain: 3:22 p.m .. East
Memorial Drive. abdominal pain; 5:46 p.m., Bailey
Run Road, weakness.

Recorder
POMEROY - Recorder Kay Hill reported these
transactions:
Chelsie D. Ritchie to Danny D. Brown, Bonnie G.
Brown. deed, Sutton; Carmelita I. Rhodes to David
VanKirk, Janet VanKirk, Sandy Burnside, Steve
Burnside, Alfred Lee Rhodes II, deed, Olive; Mark A.
Bass, Tari M. Bass, to Natasha A. Stewart, sheriff's
deed, Rutland.
Michael Roush to Linda L. Roberts, Joseph
Roherts, rleerl, T.etart; Linda L Roberts. Herman
Robetts, Joseph Roberts, to Joann Smith. Richard
Smith, deed, Letart: Marjorie Doreen Stone to
Vincent K. Stone, deed, Village of Midcllepoit: Kelly
Leann Fitch, Donald Scott Fitch. to Donald Scott
Fitch, deed. Orange.
Ocwen Loan Servicing, LLC, Saxon Mortgage
Services, to Rachel A. Taylor, deed, Salem: Gordon J.
McCarthy to William H. Putnam, deed, 1/3 interest
minerals, Olive; Benjamin H. Putnam Family.
Dorothy E. Putnam. Jeffrey L. Hollister, to William
utnam, deed, Olive; David Lee Cole, deceased, to
mi J. Cole, affidavit of transfer, Village of
tddleport; Barbara L. Hanners, William H. Hanners.
to Stephanie Stewart, Paul David Stewart. deed,
Salem.

Common Pleas
POMEROY - The following proceedings were
filed in the public records of Clerk of Courts Diane
Lynch:
Criminal
• Robert Keaton arraigned on indictment charging
aggravated possession of drugs. posting own recognizance bond, and trial set Oct. 5. Counsel retained.
• Rodney Crites arraigned on indictment charging
receiving st?len property, posting own recognizance
bond, and tnal set Oct. 5.
• John Sellers arraigned on indictment charging
possession of drugs and aggravated trafficking in
drugs, posting own recognizance bond, and trial set
Oct. 5. David Baer appointed counsel.
• Adam Carter anaigned on indictment charging
two cqunts non-support of dependents. posting own
recognizance bond, and trial set Oct. 5. Trenton
Cleland appointed counsel.
Domestic
• Divorce granted to Shcny A. Sands from' DarreH
A. Sands.
.
Civil
Foreclosure action filed by Welb Fargo Bank,
•
N .A., against Elmer E. Rodehaver, South Point. and
others.

\.

The Daily Sentinel • Page As

www.mydailysentinel.com

NEW ORLEANS (AP)
- A storm brewing m
the Caribbean brought
the deep-sea effort to
plug the ruptured oi l well
to a near standstill
Wednesday just as BP
was getting tantalizingly
close to going in for the
kill.
Work on the relief well
- now just days from
completion - was suspended. and the cap that
has been keeping the oil
bottled up since last week
may have to be reopened,
allowing crude to gush
into the sea again for
days. said retired Coast
Guard Adm. Thad Allen,
the government's point
man on the crisis.

"This is necessarily
Crews had planned to
going to be a judgment spend Wednesday and
call,'' said Allen, who Thursday
reinforcing
was waiting to see how . with cement the last few
the storm developed feet of the relief tunnel
before deciding whether that will be used to pump
to order any of the ships mud into the gusher and
and crews stationed some kill it once and for all.
50 miles out in the Gulf But BP put the task on
of Mexico to head for hold and instead placed a
safety.
temporary plug called a
The cluster of thunder- storm packer deep inside
storms passed over Haiti the tunnel, in case it has
and
the
Dominican to be abandoned until the
Republic on Wednesday, storm passes.
and forecasters said the
"What we didn't want
system would probably to do is be in the middle of
move into the Gulf over an operation and potenthe weekend. They gave tially put the relief well at
it a 50 percent chance of some risk," BP vice presibecoming a tropical dent Kent Wells said.
depression or a tropical
If the work crews are
storm by Friday.
evacuated, it could be

two weeks before they
can resume the effort to
kill the well. That would
upset BP's timetable.
which called for finishing the relief tunnel by
the end of July and plugging the blown out well
by early August.
Scientists have been
scrutinizing underwater
video and pressure data
for days. trying to determine if the capped well is
holding tight or in danger
of rupturing and causing
an even bigger disaster. If
the storm prevents BP
from monitoring the
well. the cap may simply
be reopened. allowing oil
to spill into the water,
Allen said.

Facelift from Page Al
During their regular
meeting
Wednesday.
commissioners voted to
re-advertise for bids for
the installation of fencing
at the London Pool in
Syracuse. No bids were
received for the project.
The bids were to have
been opened yesterday
for the Con1munity
Development
Block
Grant formula program.
Commissioners dis-

cussed a complaint · ter is open to the public office
through
the
regarding conditions at only during the daytime. CDBG
fund
and
the county dog shelter at and that the animals $443.95 and $2,622.22
Rocksprings. A citizen housed there can be seen in the housing income
said the shelter is too then.
fund for the housing
dark, making it difficult
Anderson also noted office.
to select a dog for possi- that commissioners can- ' • Approved payment of
ble adoption. and that not spend as much as bills in the amount of
conditions are generally they would like to $189,018.79.
poor. Anderson said improve the conditions at
Also present were
commissioners will fol- the pound.
Commissioners
Mick
low up with the county
Commissioners also:
Davenport and Michael
dog warden, but also
• Approved transfers Bartrum
Clerk
and
noted that the dog she!- of $12.000 for the grants Gloria Kloes.

Meigs from Page At
of the defective compressor might be considered
at this time. The cost of
that it was noted would
be about $40,000.
After a lengthy discussion it was decided that
Beecroft would confer
with McGuay on the feasibility of removing the
defective compressor and
having it checked to
determine the cause of
the defective operation
before any decision is
made by the board.
Installation of a new
chiller system· at the
school was a part of an
overall proposal for use
of money obtained in a
$656.550
settle:nent
the
district
which
received as a result of a
law suit on a masonry
contract default when
the school was built six
years ago.
During the meeting the
Board
acknowledged
federal and state grant
awards for fiscal ~year
20 I I as follows: State

Education fiscal stabilization. $986,609: Title
1 $971,702; Special
Education,
$481 .1"30:
Stimulus money in the
amounts of $278,133 and
$187,430:
Title
II
improving teacher quality,
$218.156:
21st
Community
Century
Learning ,
Center.
D.
$150.000;
Carl
Perkins $76.782; Rural
Low
Income,
and
$43.626; Technology,
$3.337; Early Childhood
Education (Preschool)
$1280.000 and ONENet
Ohio Program, $8.000.
A slide presentation on
the Meigs Intermediate
School science camp
held in June was presented by Heika Perko,
talented and gifted
teacher. Highlight for
the 46 third, fourth and
fifth graders was an
overnight trip to the
Cincinnati Zoo.
Recognition was given
at the meeting to Meigs
archery students who

1

I

Charlene Hoeflich/photo

Retiring Meigs Local Superintendent William L.
Buckley receives an ebony stone and crystal Career
in Education award from the Meigs Local Board of
Education. Presentation of the award was by Roger
Abbott, a board member serving all 17 years of
Buckley's time as superintendent.

were national winners in
the Archery in the
Schools program competition held in the spring.
They were Layne Acree,
third for fifth grade boys:
Katie Thomas, fourth for
high school females, and
Jacob Riffle, fourth for
high school males.
Special
recognition

was also given to
Superintendent William
L. Buckley who is retiring next week. He was
presented with an ebony
stone and crystal Career
in Education award by
the Board in appreciation
of his 17 years of service
to the Meigs Local
School District.

ffires from Page AI
Aug. I. Following an
executive session the
Board hired Dean Harris
as the new transportation
coordinator
replacing
McElroy by a vote of 4 to
1 with Larry Tucker casting the d_issenting vote.
Substitutes hired for
the 2010-11. school year
were:
Bus drivers: Wetzel
Bailey, Darla Boggs.
Bobbi Erwin. Linda
Fillinger, Danny Grueser.
Penny Hysell, Shane
Milhoan. Charles Perry.
Carolyn Searles and Bill
Taylor.
Cooks: Grace Abbott.
Linda Edmonds. Melanie
King, Carlie Lemaster.
Cathy Pickens, Marlene
Pierce. Bethany Rizer.
Narsa
Tcrzopptous,
Davina Willis, Peggy
Wood.- Rebekah Yost,
and Fhonda Young.
Secretaries: Stephanie
Allen. Sandra Butcher.
Koletta Fridley. Francis
Rainy Harrison. Angela
Hoalcraft. Linda Jones.
Dawn Kipec. Tamara
Marshall.
Carolyn
Nicholson, Bethany Rizer,
Sheila Roush. Connie
Soulsby, Yvonee Young.
and Tammy Zirkle.
Custodians:
Robert
Ball. Lee Boggs, Danny

,

Davis, Michael Dill.
James Johnson. Sr., Gary
Kauff, George H. Kent,
Jr., Edward Lampton,
Tamara Marshall, Roger
Mowery, Oliver Norris.
Joseph Parker, Donovan
Richmond.
Gregory

Satterfield, Kyle Sinclair,
David Staats, Jr., Timmy
Tillis, and Michael Yost.
Employed on supplemental contracts were Phil
Hof'f'lvan and Mike Kloes:
Tim Dunn and Jo Dunn,
Middle school track coach-

es; Karen Walker, archery
coordinator:
Toney
Dingess, high school band
director; Mike Wilfong,
Cliff Kennedy. and Stacie
Roach. guidance; Linda
Lear, lead mentor, and
Karen Walker, mentor.

�.....,.

..................................~

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

IE

The Daily Sentinel

All creatures small.are great
4-H small qnimal judging results
BY BETH SERGENT
BSERGENTC! MYDAILYSEN~INELCOM

POMEROY
For
seYc.!ral 4-H members,
taking on a small animal
project is a good wuy to
learn that all creatures
small are great.
Beside-. testing their
knowledge about an animal and how to care for
it. 4-H members are better prepared to take on a
larger project, such as
livestock . This year. 4-H
members took on e\enthing from guinea pigs.
to cats. to rabbits. to
chinchillas to dogs as
projects. There \\ere abo
-.pecial categories in dog
obc.!dience and shm\ manship wrth this judging
taking place at the Meigs
Count) Fair Grounds.
Results from the recc.!nt
4-H small animal judging
are us follows: Olivia
Davi'S. grand champion.
guinea pig category:
Peyton
Humphreys.
grand champion, Katlin
Fick. reserve champion,
cat-. I category: Kchcy
Krmes. grand champion,
Kaylee Goff, resene
champion. cats II categor"); Jamie Card, grand
champion, cats Ill categor).
Sarah Turner. grand
champiOn, Kelsey K~ime-..
resene
champion.
l'\icholas Roush, Breanna
Smith. honor&lt;tble mention-.. small anirnab category: Katlyn Barber,
grand champion. Kelsc.!y
Kime-;. reserve champion. Lcl)eana Sinclair.
Hunter Randolph, honor
able mentions, pet rabhit
category.
Sarah Turner. grand

•

Beth SergenVphoto

Kelsey Kimes of Reedsville and the Fur and Feathers 4-H group, poses with pet
Bugaboo the cat. K:mes is one of many 4-H members who took on a small animal
project this year.

ch,unpion. dog showmanship and clog obedience categories: Sophia
Carleton, grand charnpi-

on, .l&lt;unie Card. reserve
champion,
• Bnanna
LeDeana
Bolten.
Sinclmr,
Dominike

Lyons. Breanna Smith,
Haley Hill . honorable
mentions. you and your
dog category.

Around Ohio
Woman swept
away in flood

O'Connor
candidate
announces
budget plan

cutors say Homeland
Security offici,lls deported the wllne!&gt;!'. on April
13 "ithout lettiiH! the
attornejs knO\\ . ~
Prosecutors haYe dasmissed 20-year-old Jaime
Gallegoo;· charges of
aggra\ &lt;tted murder and
tampering v. ith evidence.
Gallegos was relea ... ecl
from the Frank 1m Countv
•
jail Monday night.
Gallegos was one.! of
two detcndants indicted
in the Christmas E' e
shooting death of 22ycar-old
Miguel
;\1artinez- Vargas, "hose
body "as found in a car
outside a bar.
The other defendant m
the shooting still faces
charges because prosecutors arc rei) rng on c1 different wrtne ~~Homeland
Securit)
officials d1d not Jmmeqiatelj respond to a me&lt;;sage for comment.

FRANKl IN
FUR(AP)
NACE
Authorities in Scioto
Count) '&gt;a) n woman
COLUMBUS (AP) dro'' ned after being s\\Cpt Ohio Supreme Court
away hj flood \Vaters.
Justice
Maureen
The body of 53-year- O'Connorha~announced
old Barbara Botkins of a plan to reduce the court
Franklin Furnace was budget by I 0 percent to
recovered just before 4 help solve an a looming
a.m .. after· a search of hudget hole.
some three hours early
0 'Connor discussed
Wedncsda). Authorities her plan at a news confersay several other family ence Wcdnesdav.
members. including some
Her proposai includes
small children, sun hed cuts to the Oh10 Court-.
the rushing waters b) ~em ork and the ~tate
reaching higher ground or hm library and a twoclinging to tree .
) ear ::_..alar) freeze for perThe death came as sonnel. She also plans to
hea' i rains caused flood- fom1 an ad\ r&lt;&gt;ory commg in the rcg1on. mittee to identif) further
Authont1es c;;ay they spending cuts in the court
stayed busy overnight S) !'.tern to address the
making rescues
budget deficit. which
could range from $4 bJlhon to $8~bilhon.
Ohio, N.Y.
Jury: Life for
O'Conno~
a
pension plans Republican.
is running double murder
for chief justice and
join suit
would guide the court
AKRON (AP) - A
against BP
budget if elected. She jUI) ha::. recommended a
faces sitting Chief Justice
NEW ORLEANS (APl Eric Brown, recently life sentence lor a man
- Puhlic pension funds appointl.!d after the death com Jcted nf aggravated
murder in the bludgeonin New York and Ohio of Thomas !\-toyer.
ing deaths of ctn 85 -yL·ar
want to be the lead plainold
\\oman and her 43
tiffs in suit!&gt; alleging BP
year-old
o;on.
Murd~r
charge
PLC intlated its stock
The
Summit
Count)
price b) hiding informadropped after Common Pleas jur)
in
tion about its safet) pracAkron
recommended
witness ·
tices before the Gulf of
Tuesda) that 32-year-,old
Mexico oil spill.
deported
Johnnie Cook. of Akron,
Several l&lt;t\\ suits have
be sentenced to life in
been filed in t: .S. District
COLUMBL:S (API
prison without· parole in
Court in New Orleans Prosecutors
ha\ e the July 2009 killings ol
against the oil company dropped an aggrm ated- Juliann.t Gma and Alan
by individual im estors murder charge agamst a Gma. The) rejected rec
and the Oklahoma police Columbus man becau.-.e ommending a death sen
pensiOn system. On the ke) \Yitnes~ against tence.
Wcdnesdaj. the ~ew him has been deported to
Prosecutors ~.t) Cook
York and Ohio pension Mexico.
heat the \\oman and her
funds joined in.
Franklm Count) prose- son on the he.td '' llh a
The suits, seeking
class-action status. also
allege BP falselv told
investor" it could control
the oil spill.
Since the BP-leased rig
NATIONAL BANK
llori1.0n
Deepwater
RACINE &amp; SYRACUSE
exploded on April 20. BP
share&lt;&gt; hme shed about
40 percent of their value
and the company has sus
pended its dividend.
BP did not ammcdaatc1) respond to a request
_
www.homenatlbank.coml.iH'DO
for comment.

HOME

hammer-like object and
stole personal proper!)
including a car. jewelry
and cell phone-,.
Judge ~arv Mar!!aret
RO\\)and" is s'cheduled to
sentence Cook Aug. 9.
Defense attomevs had
sugge-.tcd that ·others
ma) have committed the
murders and tried to
frame Cook.

Crews find
body of
missing boater

PageA6
Thursday, July 22,

Elephant trainer OKs
release of attack video
TOLEDO (AP) - An
elephant that knocked
down and injured hi) trainer at an Ohio mo charged
the keeper twice and
pinned him in the corner
after being stmtkd by his
arrival in the enclosure, a
security video released
Wcdnesdny shmvs.
The
frrgh tening
encounter show~ the
keeper trying to protect
himself as the elephant
10\vered its head, its tusks
narro\\ ly mis~ing the
man's head and chest.
The elephant then
backed
away as the keep1
er stumbled out.
The
keeper.
Don
Redfox, has been hospitalized \\ ith life-threatening injuries since the
attack three \\ eck~ ago.
Doctor-. h&lt;n e upgraded
his condition and expect
him to recover from two
punctured lung" Hlhl ...everal fractured ribs.
Redfox and his family
initiall)
fought
the
video's
release
but
changed their minds to
show that the animal
wasn't mistreated.
The family '&gt;aid it continues to believe that
··releasing the se~urity
tape does nothing more
than prO\ ide an opportunit\ to sensationalize a
tragic accident.''
Anne Baker. the zoo's
director. said it's not
clear \\ hy the elephant.
named Louie, turned on
the keeper. The elephant
and Redfox had been
together nearly e\ el) da)
smce the animal's birth
· seven years ago.
It looks as if Lollle was
startled and then started
play-fighting. as elephants do in the wild,
Baker said.
Redfox makes it a habit
to talk to· the animal::.
before he approaches -.o
he doesn't surpnse them,

Baker said. She thinks he
didn't do it thb tune
becau~e he didn't know
Louie wa~ around
corner when he wal
into the enclosure can
ing a bag of carTots. •
".Neither expected the
other to be there." Baker
said.
They both backed away.
Louie flared his ears and
mo,·ed toward the keeper,
pushing toward Redfox
before the keeper stepped
safely behind a gate and
closed it.
Redfox returned and
tried to move the elephant awa) with a pole
"ith a hook on the end.
l11at's. when the elephant
charged. pinning him in
the corner and knockmg
him to his knees.
Louie
backed
up.
dropped to his knees. and
then charged again . at
Redfox. who curled up
and tried to shield himself.
After that. the elephant
backed away again and
Redfox stumbled to safe• .
Baker said the eleph·
could have killed Redt
at anv time. and that is whv
~h~ imd another elephant
expc11 who re\ iewed the
video think that Louie was
play-fighting.
"The problem is Louie
'' eighs
O\ er
4.000
pounds." she said.
Zoo officials have not
been able to talk with
Redfox. who faces a Ion!!
reco' ery. according to
his doctors.
Baker praised Redfox's
knowledge of elephants
and wouldn't criticize his
decision to go into enclosure after he first sta1tled
the elephant.
''I'm not going to speculate on that because we
don't know the why." she
said. ·The keeper has to
do a good job of reading
the animal and determine
what ·s !Safe:·

I

Meigs County Forecast
Thursday: A slight
chance of ~hm\ers after
II a.m . Most!) doudy,
with a high near gg
Calm '' ind becoming
southwest between 4 and
7 mph. Chance of precipitation is 20 p~:rcent.
· Thursda)· Night: A
chance or shm' er:-. and
thunderstorms. mainl)
before midnight. Mostly
clouclv, with a low
around 72. Calm "ind
becoming
~outhwe-.t
around 5 mph. Chance of
precipitation IS 40. per1 cent.
~e\\
ramfall
1 amounts of _less th?n a
tenth of an mch, except
higher amounts pos&lt;&gt;1ble
1 in thunderstonn!'&gt; .

Friday:
A
~right
chance of '&gt;hO\\ er::. and
thunder:-.torm:-. after I
p.m. Part!) cloudy.'' ith a
high near 93. Southwest
wind bet\\een 6 and 13
mph. Chance of precipitation is 20 percent.
Friday Night: . Part!y
cloudy, '" ith a low
around 72. West wind
bet\veen 6 and 8 mph.
Saturday:
Mostlv
Sllnn), \\ ith a high near

92.

Saturday ~ight: A
RLSSELLS POINT
chance of showers and
(AP) - Re:-.cue teams
thunderstorm~ after 7
ha\e found the bodv of a
p.m. ~fostl) cloudy. with
boater who \\ent missing
a lo\\ around 70. Chance
on a \\estern Ohio lake
of precipitation is 50 perafter climbin!! off a boat.
cent.
Auth'o ritie; sa\ 38year Dannette Hicks of
ncarb) Lakev ie" was
one of five people on an
18-foot pleasure craft
that was operating in a ' ----------------------------------ski zone in the center of . AEP (NYSE)- 35.26
DAQ)- 17.30
Indian Lake around sun- Akzo (NASDAQ)- 54.75
BBT (NYSE) - 25.91
Peoples (NASDAQ)- 14.76
set Tuesday.
Ashland Inc. (NYSE) - 47.41
Pepsico (NYSE) - 63.95
liJ ,
h b
d Big Lots (NYSE) - 33.75
\ ., 1cn t e . oat stoppe ·
Bob Evans (NASDAQ) Premier (NASDAQ)- 7.79
Hicks
and
another 24.20
Rockwell (NYSE) - 51.45
woman climbed off. BorgWarner (NYSE)- 40.45 Rocky Boots (NASDAQ) •
6.72
II icks went under the Century Aluminum (NAS.
d
Royal Dutch Shell - 53.87
DAQ)- 9.57
"ater anli d rsappeare .
Champion (NASDAQ) - 1.54
Sears Holding (NASDAQ) John
Wrsse.
a Charming Shops (NASDAQ)
63.19
I
Wai·Mart (NYSE) - 50.35
spokesman for the Oh10 - 3.96
Wendy's (NYSE) - 4.10
Department of "'a!ura! ~~~1Holding (NASDAQ)WesBanco (NYS.E) - 14.83
Resource~. sa) s H1cb
Collins (NYSE) - 54.25
Worthington (NYSE) - 13.27
bod) was found at about DuPont (NYSE) - 36.56
Daily stock reports are the 4
p.m. ET closing quotes of
3 p.m. Wednesday and us Bank (NYSE)- 23.07
\\iII be taken to th, Gen Electric (NYSE) - 14.84 transactions for July 21 ,
• '
.~:
Harley-Davidson (NYSE) 2010, provided by Edward
Logan County coroner " 26.68
•
Jones financial advisors
office. He says she was- JP Morgan (NYSE) - 38.42
Isaac Mills in Gallipolis at
(740) 441·9441 and Lesley
n 't wearing ·a lifejacket Kroger (NYSE) - 2Q.62
.
.
Ltd Brands (NYSE) - 24.27
Marrero In Point Pleasant at
an d aIco hol1:-. be he\ ed to Norfolk so (NYSE) _ 53.15
(304) 674·0174. Member
be a contributing factor. I Ohio Valley Bane Corp (NAS· SIPC.

Local Stocks

Visit us

www.wcavingslitchcsgiftshop.com
&amp; on facchook
~----'. /

~

@

STOP IN AND Sff THf

(j~ 100 f!etl/WI

-

1:5)

2 010

Opeii during the Friday 11/ues Concerts until 7:00pm
fqr yaur shopping COill'enience

•

�Inside

Bl

The Daily Sentinel

Injured Reds, Page 86

Thursday, July 22, 2010

3rdAnnual
Southern
Basketball Golf
Scramble
RACINE, Ohio
Southern Basketball will
host a four-man fcrolf
scramble on Aug.
at
Riverside Golf Club in
Mason, W.Va. The scramble will be an 8:30 a.m.
shotgun strut. The format
is bring your own team,
with on1y one player under
8 handicap with a total
team handicap of 40 or
above.
The cost is $60 per person ($240 per team) with
optional cash pot, skins,
and mulligan purchase.
Prizes of first, second, and
third finishes will be
awarded.
Additional
prizes for longest putt.
lon~est drive, and closest
:ne pin will be presentBeverages and food
I be provided.
To enter please contact
head coach Jeff Caldwell
at 740-949-3129.

Strasburg, Nationals beat Reds in front of sell-out crowd
CINCINNATI (AP) For his latest feat.
Stephen Strasburg tamed
the NL's top offense on
its own turf.
Washington ·s
hardthrowing rookie contained the Cincinnati
Reds' high-scoring lineup Wednesday night, and
a slumping Nationals
offense finally came
around behind Cristian
Guzman's
homer,
pulling away to an 8-5
victory.
A day after he turned
22, Strasburg (5-2)
pitched be~ond his years

again, passing one of his
toughest tests.
The Reds lead the
league in batting average, hits and RBls. They
can manhandle pitchers
at homer-friendly Great
American Ball Park,
where even a tiny mistake often ends up in the
seats.
Strasburg struck out
seven and gave up three
runs and seven hits in 5
1-3 innings. outdoing the
Reds' top pitcher.
Bronson Arroyo (10-5)
had allowed only three
runs in his last three

8

5

starts. winning them all.
Registering more typical
numbers on the radar
gun - 69 to 89 mph Arroyo couldn't keep up
with Straburg. Guzman's
two-run homer put the
Nationals up 3-1 in the
fifth, and Nyjer Morgan
added a two-run single
for a 7-1 lead.

Arroyo went 5 2-3
innings, allowing seven
runs. six hits and three
walks.
All-Star closer Matt
Capps got the la~t four
outs in front of a capacity crowd for his 24th
save.
Wherever he goes,
Strasburg draws a crowd.
The Reds sold our his
Cincinnati debut, the
first time in four years
they had a capacity
crowd for a weeknight
game. In 2006, they had
to give away half-price
tickets and $1 hot dogs

to pack the house for a
game against the St.
Louis Cardinals.'
This time, it was as
easy as picking up the
phone. Reds manager
Dusty Baker had to function like a ticket broker
for Strasburg's appearance, getting &lt;;eats for his
acquaintances.
'·Everybody in the
world is calling for tickets," Baker said before
the game.
Even the all-time hits
king showed up to get a
Please see Reds, Bl

l

Cubs look
ahead after
Piniella says
he wi II retire

:MilS Golf

Signups
ROCKSPRINGS, Ohio
- Players who wish to
sign up for the Meigs High
School golf team can contact coach Tom Cremeans
at 304-675-0091 or attend
the ftrst team meeting at 3
p.m. on July 26, at Meigs
High School. Emergency
and physical forms will be
available at the meeting.

SHS Volleyball
Camp
RACINE, Ohio
Southern High School will
be offering a volleyball
for girls going into
es 3-8 from Au ust 2, the hi~h schooY gym.
This learnmg experience
will be a chance for girls to
interact with high school
coaches and players and
develop an understanding
of volleyball mechanics
and fundamentals through
drills, matches, !!ames, and
contests. Each camper will
receive a free T-shirt and
have the opportunity to
win several other ptizes. ·
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 bring
knee pads and a water bottle, and are asked to anive
early on the first day for
registration.
To preregister call Coach
Dickson at 740-525-2500.

e 3rdannual
Eagle 5k road
race to be held
Aug. 7
TUPPERS
PLAINS,
Ohio - The third annual
Eagle 5k Road Race and
Walk and the one mile fun
run will be held on
Saturday, Aug. 7, beginning at 8:30 a.m. at the St.
Paul United Methodist
Church in Tuppers Plains,
Ohio.
The run is sponsored by
the
Eastern
Athletic
Boosters, with registration
beginning at 7 a.m. at the
Tuppers Plains ball ftelds.
The entty fee is $12 before
Aug:4 or $15 on the day of
the race.
The race will begin at
the St. Paul United
Methodist Church and will
be run in the surrounding
ets and roads. Awards
be given to the top
ee male and female
overall finishers and the
top three male and female
finishers in the one mile
fun run. T-shirts will be
given to the first 75 registrants.
Divisions for both male
and female runners will be
by age, 14 and under, 1518, 19-25, 26-35, 36-49.
and 50 and over.
For more information or
to register contact Josh
Fogle at 740-667-9730.

l

f

Elizabeth Floras/Minneapolis Star tribune/MCT

Cleveland Indians pitcher Jake Westbrook cools off with a wet towel during a MLB game against the Minnesota
Twins at Target Field in Minneapolis, Minnesota, Wednesday.

Liriano stops Indians streak, lifts Twins to win
MINNEAPOLIS (AP)
- Francisco Liriano is
staying positive while
most of the Minnesota
Twins' rotation continues
to struggle.
He just wants to keep
going.
"We've been struggling a little bit, but we
have to keep playing,'' he
said. ''We can pitch a little bit better, but I think
we're going to be all
right."
Liriano was more than
all right on Wednesday,
pitching seven innings as
the Twins snapped the
Cleveland Indians' sixgame winning streak
with a 6-0 victory.
Liriano (8-7) allowed
I0
baserunners
but
stayed poised and bene-

6

0

fited from three double
plays, like in the fifth
when · Jayson
Nix's
bouncer back to the
mound with the bases
loaded led to a rare l-2-3
inning-ender. The leftbander struck out eight.
including rookie Carlos
Santana with runners at
the corners to finish the
third inning.
"He took care of business with runners on, and
that's what good pitchers
do.''
said
Shelley
Duncan, who grounded

into a 4-6-3 double play
with two on and none out
in the second.
With three switch-hitters and six righties in the
lineup, the young Indians
were ready for Liriano,
who has not allowed a
home run to a left-handed
hitter since April 6, 2009.
He also has walked only
one lefty all season.
After a cou'ple of long
high foul balls to left that
hooked away from the
pole, Cleveland's Matt
LaPorta whiffed at a high
fastball to strike out in
the fourth.
"Back in 2006 he
looked like a freak to
evetybody. He was just
flat-out overpowering,"
Indians manager Mann}
Acta said. "But he looks

good. He looks like a top
of the rotation type of
guy right now to me."
Delmon Young had
three hits and three RBls.
making up for a baserunning blunder during
Minnesota's
four-run
third. He was thrown out
at the plate by a few
yards trying to score
from second on Michael
Cuddyer's RBI single.
J .J. Hardy picked him
up with a two-nm double
later in the inning against
Jake Westbrook (6-6).
who struggled v.·ith his
control in what could be
one of his final starts
with Cleveland.
Westbrook is one of
several starting pitchers
Please see Indians, Bl

NHL says Kovalchuk deal circumvented salary cap
NEWARK, N.J. (AP)
- Ilya Kovalchuk is no
closer to figuring out his
future than he was when
NHL free agency opened
three weeks ago.
Kovalchuk's landmark
17-year, $102 million
contract with the New
Jersey Devils was rejected by the NHL, which
ruled that the l.ongest deal
in league history violated
tts salary cap.
Where the high-scoring forward
the
biggest prize on the free
agent market- will land
now is anyone's guess.
NHL deputy commissioner Bill Daly said in a
statement
Wednesday
that · the
Devils.
Kovalchuk and the players' association still have
several options 1f they
choose to restructure the
deal.
Until then, Daly said
"the player is not entitled
to play under the contract."
The union has a few
days to decide if it will
file a grievance to try to
have
this
contract
Please see N H L, Bl

Joe Rimkus JrJMiaml Heralci/MCT

The Florida Panthers' Radek Dvorak and New Jersey Devils' llya Kovalchuk battle
in the third period at the Bank Atlantic Center in Sunrise, Florida, Thursday, April 8.

CHICAGO (AP) Just like a long line of
predecessors,
Lou
Piniella thought he could
lead the Chicago Cubs to
that elusive championship and end a drought
that dates to 1908.
Barring an epic turnaround, he can forget
about that.
General manager Jim
Hendry will get another
shot, though.
owner
Tom
New
Ricketts made that clear
Tuesda), saying there
won't be a change at the
Piniella
top
after
announced he's retiring
at the end of the season
and ending a long, colorful career.
"Jim is our general
manager, full stock,"
Ricketts said. "He will
be leading the effort to •
find our nev.· manager for
next year and 'will be our
general manager going
into next year.''
Hendry. the GM since
2002, has come under
•
scrutiny amid mounting
losses the past two seasons Big contracts to
players such as Alfonso
Soriano, A ram is Ramirez
and Carlos Zambrano not to mention signing
Milton Bradley. who got
banished late last season
and ultimately traded to
Seattle have on!}
added to the criticism.
Even so. Ricketts is
counting on Hendry to
lead the team out of the
wilderness.
"I said at our opening
press conference that
Day 1 was Square I for
everyone in the organization," Ricketts said. "I
think from that. day
going forward. we had a
~ery~ good offseason. I
think Jim delivered on
.bringing in some players
v. ho contributed a lot
this season. And we had
a good offseason, no
question.
"I think the second
thing that I've seen the
last .... eight months that
gives me I 00 percent
confidence in Jim is that
we have a good organization:· he~ conti;ued.
'The way that you win
wnststently in baseball
is to draft well, to develop players well and to
bring those players up to
the maJOr leagues to give
you flexibility in your
payroll and trades. I
think we have the organization in place. I l1ave
the highest confidence in
everyone in our organiPiease see Cubs, Bl

�Page B2 • The Daily Sentinel

www.mydailysentinel.com

Thursday, July 22, 2010

Reds

Cubs

from PageBl

from PageBl

peak. Pete Rose took in a
few innings from the
third row behind home
plate. attending his sec~
ond straight game in his
hometown. This one had
an unmistakeable energy
to it.
There \\as a buzz in
the
stands
when
Strasburg warmed up
and started pumping 98
mph fastballs into I van
Rodrigue.l's well-padded
mitt. The Reds hoped to
get to him early - the
rookie sometimes has
problems getting going
- but that plan shattered
like a broken bat.
No. 2 batter Orlando
Cabrera hit the ground
when Strasburg threw an
81 mph breakG1g ball up
and in. He then lined out.
breaking his bat on contact.
On second glance. the
Red1; did a little better.
Phillips
Brandon
tripled to center in the

zation, and 1 think that
speaks well of Jim.''
Piniella sees hope for
an organization that's
gone more than a century
without winning it all.
"Sooner or later,
they'll break that barn
door down and win a
world championship," he
said.
That was the plan
when Chicago hired
Piniella after the 2006
season. The Cubs won
the NL Central in 2007
and 2008 before things
fell apart. but without a
title. Ricketts said no era
could be viewed as a
success.
"Our goal is to win a
World Series," he said.
"Our goal is to put a
team on the field that can
win the World Series
every year. I can't envision an era without that
and still calling it a success."
Now, they're trying to
pick themselves up while
Piniella plans to move on
after 18 years in the
majors as a player and
another 22 as a manager.
Yankees 111anager Joe
Girardi. the man Piniella
beat for this job, has an
expiring contract. So
does the Los Angeles
Dodgers· Joe Torre.
Bob Brenly. who managed Arizona to a championship in 4001 and
interviewed with the
Cubs four years ago, is in
the team's broadcast
booth.
Bench coach Alan
Trammell and pitching
coach Larry Rothschild
have both· managed in
the majors.
There's a popular
choice at Triple-A Iowa.
where Cubs Hall of
Famer Ryne Sandberg is
managing. and Hendry
said the former MVP is
in the running.
"He's done a very
good job in the system
the last four years:·
Hendry said. "I have a
lot of respect for the way
he's handled himself. A
Hall of Fame player ·
working in the minor
leagues, he deserves to
be a candidate."
Sandberg is interested.
"I need to focus on
what I'm doing here in
Des Moines with these
players and what my job
is right now... he said. "If
the time came. if I was
considered for that job in
Chicago. I think that'd
be a terrific thing just to

thin.l inning. ami Cabrera

lined a single to left on
an 80 mph breaking ball
for a 1-0 lead. The Reds
did better at fouling off
good pitches to extend
at-bats
Strasburg
needed 48 pitches to get
Joe Rimkus JrJMiami Herald/MCT
through the first three
Washington
Nationals
pitcher
Stephen
Strasburg
works
in the first inning against
innings.
By the time the Reds the Florida Marlins at Sunlife Stadium in Miami, Florida, on Friday, July 16.
without a problem. He'll and start him at lB. givgot to him again. the left the mound.
NOTES: Cubs MGR start a rehab assignment ing Joey Votto a day off.
Nationals had taken control. Miguel Cairo ·s two- Jim Riggleman said RHP on Monday. Bailey has Hernandez has been on
out. two-run single in the Luis Atilano had a sore been on the DL since the DL since July 9 with
sixth cut it to 7-3 and arm after his outing on May 24 with an inflamed a sore left knee .... Home
ended Strasburg's outing Tuesday night. jeopar- pitching shoulder. ... The run fireworks incoiTectly
at 97 pitches. He dizing his next start. ... Reds expect to activate C went off after Ryan
received a mixture of Reds RHP Homer Bailey Ramon Hernandez off Hanigan's fly ball went
applause and boos as he threw a simulated game the DL on Wednesday barely foul in the eighth.
er Lou Lamoriello said in
a statement. "The contract complies with the
terms of the collective
fromPageBl
bargaining agreement.
We will have no further
approved:
Ko'valchuk
until
the
and the Devils could comment
proces~ outlined in the
retum to the bargaining CBA is complete."
table to work out a new
Kovalchuk's agent. Jay
deal: or the All-Star for- Grossman.
said
ward could go back into Wednesday also
·that he
free agency and find a \\'Ouldn't comment until
new home in the NHL or the matter is resolved.
in his native Russia with
Before the deal was
the rival KHL.
prohibited. Lamoriello
Red flags were raised believed it would meet
even before the Devils NHL approval.
held a news conference
''There is nothing that
on Tuesday to formally we have done wrong:· he
announce what appeared said Tuesday. "This is
to be Kovalchuk's final within the rules. This is
NHL contract.
in the CBA. There are
By tacking on years of precedents that have
low salary at the end of been set. But I would
the deal when Kovakhuk agree we shouldn't have
would be well past his these. I'm also saying
prime - if he was even that because it's legal and
still playing
the this is something that
Devils lowered their ownership felt comfoitsalary-cap hit to $6 mil- able doing for the right
lion per season.
reasons.''
The NHL wants to
Based on provisions in
eliminate such "retire- the collective bargaining
ment contracts" and chal- agreement between the
lenged this one after players· association and
allowing others to stand. the league, the union has
Kovalchuk 's deal was five business days to file
likdy rejt::cteu because a grievance on behalf of
he was slated to earn Kovalchuk. The deal
only $550,000 in each.of would remain voided if
the last five seasons of no grie\'ance is filed or if
the contract that was to an arbitrator agrees that
run through the 2026~27 the contract is illegal.
season, when he would
The arbitrator would
be 44. Kovalchuk was to have 48 hours to decide
earn $98.5 million in the if 'the league was right to
first II years of the deal. reject the contract. If the
''We are extremely dis- arbitrator agrees. the conappointed that the NHL tract would be voided.
has decided to reject the and Kovalchuk would
of
Ilya again be an unrestricted
contract
Kovalchuk,'' Devils pres- free agent.
"The NHLPA is curident and general manag-

contract
the
rently analyzing the basis when
upon which the NHL expires.
Kovalchuk dismissed
rejected the contract
between the New Jersey money as a main factor
and
Ilya in his decision to stay
De vi Is
Kovalchuk."
union with New Jersey. He
spokesman . Jonathan instead cited long-term
Weatherdon said in a security for him and his
statement. "We are eval- family and the opportuniuating the options avail- ty to win the Stanley Cup
able to us under the terms with an organization that
established in the CBA." boasts three titles in 15
Such long-term deals seasons.
that have become popuKovalchuk's contract
lar for star players since would have topped the
the salary-cap era began
following the NHL lock- 15-year deal goalie Rick
out in 2005 could DiPietro got from the
become a thing of the New York ~Islanders. and
past \\hen the next CBA two-time NHL MVP
Alex Ovechkin 's 13-year
is negotiated.
Deals given last year pact with Washington.
Kovalchuk was to earn
by Chicago to free agent
$6
million each of the
forward Marian Hossa.
and by Philadelphia to next two seasons. $11.5
35-year-old defenseman million for the following
Chris Pranger were five seasons. $10.5 milreviewed by tj:le NHL lion in the 2017-18 season. $8.5 million for the
and approved.
Pranger's seven-year 2018-19 season. S6.5
extension begins next million in 2019-20. $3.5
season. He will earn $7.6 million in 2020-21.
million for two years. $750.000 the follO\ving
$7.2 million in 2012-13, season. and $550.000 for
$7 million in 2013-14 the final five years of the
and $5.5 million over the unprecedented deal.
last three seasons of the
Kovalchuk 's time with
deal.
the Atlanta Thrashers
Hossa signed a 12- ended when he rejected a
year. $62.8 million con- 12-year, $101 million
tract that leaves the extension. He totaled 41
Blackhawks an annual goals and 44 assists last
salary cap hit of $5.23 season when he earned
million. He will earn
$7.9 million per year $7.5 million. but posted
through the 2015-16 sea- only 10 goals and 17
son before his salary assists with the Devils
drops. Hossa is set to be after being traded in
paid $4 million in 2016- February. Kovalchuk had
17. $1 million the follow- two goals and four assi&lt;&gt;ts
ing two seasons. and duri~g New Jersey's
'ii750.000 in each of the five-game. first-round
loss
to
final two years of the playoff
deal. Hossa would be 42 Philadelphia.

least served to solidify
the front of the rotation.
"To me it's another
game. I'm not trying to
put pressure on myself,''
Liriano said. ·Tm just
trying to go out there &lt;ind
do my job. lt's a great
feeling."
Perhaps most importantly. both performances
followed Twins losses .
Of their six shutouts this
season. Liriano has started four.
"This team can do a lot
of things if we get pitching like that." said third
base coach Scott· Ullger.
who ran the team while
manager Ron Gardenhire
tcmkcl to a persona matter.
This series against the
Indians stmted~a stretch
of 13 straight games
against losing teams. but
that doesn't matter as

much as the Twins redis- was on the bench to rest.
covering their swagger the day after his botched.
and refocusing on funda- widely panned bunt
mentals - like baserun- attempt. "I really can't
ning - that have previ- recall a No.3 hitter doing
ously made them so suc- that. but stranger things
cessful.
have happened." Ullger
Startino
Thursday. said. "Whether that was
they 'II play 17 of their the right thing or the
next 20 games on the wrong thing. he's just
road, where they're 20- trying to help us win." ...
25.
The Twins have yet to be
"It was a good win. swept in 16 series at
especially with how hot Tai'get Field. ... Jim
they're playing right Thome \.Valkcd four
now:· Young said.
times for the Twins ....
NOTES: Indians LHP Anthony Slama made his
Aaron Laffey will have major league debut for
an MRI on Thursday. He the Tv.-ins in the ninth.
has been fighting arm striking out two. He has a
fatigue .... Indians OF mustache he's been
Austin Kearns sat out for grow111g since April.
the second straight game before Carl Pavano made
bei•1g
pulled the look popular in
after
Monday because of right Minnesota. "It's good to
knee
soreness.
sec some real men in
Minnesota's Joe Mauer here." Slama said.

NHL

Indians
from PageBl
around the majors who
could be fetched in a
trade, a market the Twins
might need to tap into to
defend their division
title. But the right-hander
allowed four runs and o,;ix
hits with five walks in six
innings in this one. not
exactly enhancing his
value.
''Have to do a little better job there minimizing
the damage," Westbrook
said. adding: "I felt great
today. That was the frustrating part."
Though the 1\vms still
have plenty of pitching
problems
to
solve.
Liriano 's first two turn~
of the second half have at

be considered. The
whole goal of any minor
leaguer is to get to the
major leagues, and I
think that includes
coaches and managers
like myself."
The
66-year-old
Piniella, who made five
trips to the World Series
in his career and has
three
championsh•.
rings, is 1,827-1,6
overall and 308-271 wit
the Cubs after Tuesday's
14-7 win over Houston.
He trailed only Tony La
Russa, Bobby Cox and
Torre in victories among
active managers·.
"Lou is an emotional
guy and I know he's
been frustrated because
they reached the postsea~
son and it looked like
they were going to do it
on a regular basis,'' Torre
said.
Known for his dirtkicking tirades, Piniella
had mellowed with
Chicago. He made it
clear Tuesday he was
tired of the daily grind
but didn't rule out consulting for the Cubs or
another team.

Piniella began managing in 1986 with the
Yankees and lasted three
years, including a stint.
general manager.
managed the Reds from
l990-92,leading them to
a World Series championship in his first season.
He also got national
attention during his time
there for a clubhouse
wrestling match with
reliever Rob Dibble ,
who downplayed the
incident and said "we've
been family ever since."
After
Cincinnati,
Piniella had a long run in
Seattle, where his teams
won at least 90 games
four times and 116 in
2001.
Yankees slugger Alex
Rodriguez, who played
for Piniella with the
Mariners, called him "a
Hall of Fame manager
and a great player."
Woody
Woodward,
who hired Piniella wh.
he was Seattle's G
said, "He carne out her
and made believers out
of the Northwest."
Now. after three tough
years in Tampa Bay and
two in Chicago after a
good start. Piniella 's
career will likely end on
a disappointing note.
"Everybody
knows
he's not going to let up,"
outfielder
All-Star
Marlon Byrd said. "It's
Lou Piniella. Have you
seen one year where he's
let up in his playing
career or his managing
career?"

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Thursday, July 22, 2010

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The Daily Sentinel • Page 83

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people you know, and
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Service at Carmichael NOT to send money
through the mall until
Trailers 1
you have Investigating
74()..446·3825
the offering

Agriculture

EBY,
INTEGRITY,
KIEFER BUILT,
VALLEY
HORSE/LIVESTOCK
TRAILERS,
LOAD
MAX
EQUIPMENT
TRAILERS;
CARGO
EXPRESS
&amp;
HOMESTEADER
CARGO/CONCESSIO
N TRAILERS. B+W
GOOSENECK
FLATBED
$3999.
VIEW OUR ENTIRE
TRAILER lNVENTORY
AT
WWW.CARMICHAELT
RAILERS.COM
740·
446-3825

Help Wanted·
General

GET YOUR CLASSIFIED LINE AD NOTICED

Display Ads

errct~ln an ed ta~en (¥ff11 the

200 · Announcements

Ot Fax To (304) 675-5234

DIRECTV

For the best TV
WANTED:
Part-time
experience,
posihons available to upgrade from cable
assist 1nd1v1dua1s with
to
mental retardation at a
DirecT V today!
group home m Bidwell:
1) 21 hrs. 8:30a·3:30p Packages start at
$29.99
Tu/Wrrh. 2) 27.5 hrs
1·866·541·0834
3:30·11p Fn: 10a·8p
Sat 1·9p Sun. High
school diploma/GED
Q1ID:f
valid dnver's license
NETWORK
and three years good
el&lt;perience Best Offer Ever! Over
dnving
120 Top Channels
required.
$8.97/hr
only $24.99/mo. for
Pre·
after tra1n1ng,
employment
Drug
one year. Call Now
Testing. Send resume
1-888-688-5943
to: Buckeye Commun1ty
Dish Network

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

Security

AOI

400

Pets

Miscellaneous

G1ve away a flame
pont himalayan male
cat nuetured indoors
on:y 740-245-5986 or
74J-274-5121

Ladies
diamond
dinner ring with 36
diamonds
TW
2.50/100 cts. retails
asking
$3500.
$1500.
740·612·
2161

Financial

Financial Services

c..amliABD
BELIEF

3500

Real Estate
Rentals

Apartments/
Townhouses
2BR
APT.Ciose
to
Holzer Hosp1tal on SR
160 CIA. (740) 441·
0194

SEPTIC
PUMPING
Galha Co. OH and
Mason Co. WV. Ron
Evans Jackson, OH
800-537-9528

Free Home
Security
S850 Value
with purchase of
alarm monitoring
services from ADT
Security Services.
Call1·888·274·3888

Houses For Sale
For
Sale
12x60
mobile home. very
good cond. 2Br 1BA
new roof.
siding,
kitchen
cabinets.
capet, front porch &amp;
carport. 3/4 acre Hill
St. Hartford WV 7 40416-6951 or 304882-3761

full-blooded
Free
chocolate Lab. 2yrs
old, Dalmation 1Yf
old Lovable. 740386·9839

Buried in Credit
Card Debt?
Call Credit Card
Relief for your free
consultation.
1-8n·264-8031

Campers/ RVs
Trailers

&amp;

07
Breckenridge
Park mobile camper,
3 slide outs. full size
bath, kitchen, sliding
doors,
2
sitting
&amp;
rooms,
phone
cable
setup.
24'
anwning country blue
Yard Sale
&amp; cream color, extra
3 Family Yard Sale clean, extra nice,
7/23 &amp; • 7/24 9-? $25,900,
740-247shop on 2475
Medical
Jackson Pike

Free pupp1es. they
wil be small
7 40· Garage Sale 1165 At
Motorcycles
256-1233
588 July 22,23.24
Goldwing
1996
8am·3pm ping pong
Aspencade.
low
table,
fooseball
table.
8 week old F. Jack
miles,
excellent
Russell
Terriers. floor trampoline
condition
$7800.
Money To l end
parents on Premises, 40944 Laurel Cliff call740·441·5582.
NOTICE Borrow Smart vetlck
$150 each Rd. July 23 &amp; 24. lots
Contact
the
Oh1o 7 40-446·4 706.
WantTo Buy
of .50 items, rain or
DIVISIOn Of Fna'lCial
shine
Oilers now buying
Institutions Off•ce of
Consumer
Affairs Free
puppies. Yard sale 822 Johns junk vehicles 740·
BEFORE you refinaPce Boxer/Lab mix, 7 wks Rd. (Phyllis Glasgo 388-0011 or 740your home or obta11' a old, m/f, 2 Brindle. residence)
Racine, 441·7870
loaf'.
BEWARE
of
304-675-4156
July 23, 24, 9·4
requests for any la11Je
Automotive
2000
advance payments of
Recreati_onal
fees or 1nsurance. Cali 700
Agriculture
1 000
Vehicles
the Off1ce of ConsuMer
Autos
Aff1ars toll free at 1·
866-278-0003 to lee n
Farm Equipment
if the mortgage broker
Boats / Accessories 1992 Dodge Sealth
or lender is properly Dr Power wagon.
AT red 5 speed
licensed (Pus 1s a 6.75 pro package 24" Pontoon Boat
40,000 miles like
serv1ce electric start, battery
public
with raise-up top 50 new $4500 obo 1985
annollncement from the charger, wood bed &amp;
HP Yamaha Engine Mazda RX7 GLSE 5
Ohio Valley Publishing
poly bed, auto dump, with trailer $4,000. speed collector like
Companvl
1 'lr old, $1800; 20+ or trade 740-446- new $4500 obo 2002
.
! ,, \ .·
Rhode Island Red 7327 740-256-1270. Jaguar
S
type
.590
Education
lay1ng chickens. $50,
68.000 miles V6 auto
740·742-3109
like new $7950 obo
Campers / RVs &amp;
call 7 40-388·0332
Trailers
600
Animals
STIHL Sales &amp; Service
Trucks
Now
Available
Fit 2002 Hornet
32D
Carm1c1Jacl Equipment superslide, oversized
Horses
740-446-2412
Quad
Bunkhouse, 1991 Ford F150 4x4
sleeps
10,
great for sale. 302 motor
2 Horses for sale
min.stud, red, older Garden &amp; Produce condition 446-4473 $1600 OBO 740·
441 -0918
red mare. 740·256·
645·0623 after 4
Black-barnes
1336
$20/gallon 740-446·
1998 Ford F·150 Ext
4824
Pets
2005 Jayco Eagle cab, 4.6 Triton V-8,
.
Gooseneck
Hitch, blue, 2 wheel drive,
2 English Bulldog 900'
Merchandise sleeps six. Excellent cloth interior, very
puppies for adoption,
ex.
cond.,
condition.
Asking clean,
current in a.l shots,
$19,900.
See 740·247-2475,
male/female,
AKC.
Miscellaneous
photos
at asking $5.500 OBO
for more info contact
www.carmichaeltraile
Jet
Aeration
Motors
john731 @live com
~
740-446repaired, new &amp;
Real Estate
3000
Found young female, rebuilt In stock. Call 2412
Sales
Ron Evans 1·800·
looks like Rotwiller,
537·9528
around
Dickie
Chapel.
740-256·
For Sale By Owner
1336
diamond
Ladies •
Free 10 Austrian/ cluster ring with 7
6 apts $158.090
Blue Heeler and 4 diamonds. TW 1ct.
rent $2030 mo, 740full blooded rabbit· •eta11s $895. asking
446·0390
$i50. 740-612-2161
beagle puppies.

.

Apartments/
Townhouses
BR. stove &amp; ret .
furn.
2nd fl., A/C,
258
State
St.
$400/mo $400 dep.
740-446·3667
1 BR
effc.
apt.
$375./mo wale/trash
included.
credit
740-709check,
1690
Attractive,
unfurnished,
one
bedroom apt.
2nd
floor, corner Second
and Pine. No pets. •
References required.
Security
deposit,
per month,
$325
water included. call
7 40-446·4425
or
740-446-3936.

CONVENIENTLY
&amp;
LOCATED
AFFORDABLE!
Townhouse
apartments.
andlor
small houses for rent. 2BR
apt
Clean
Call 740-441-1111 for renovated downtown,
application
&amp; new
appt.
lam
Information.
flooring,
Free Rent Special water/sewer/trash
!!!
1ncl. $475/mo
740·
2&amp;3BR apts $395 and 709-1690
up, Central Air, WID
hookup, tenant pays
Renova1ed spacious
electric. Call bel\veen
2 BR apt overlooking
the hours of 8A-8P.
city park. $575/mo
EHO
water/sewer/trash
Ellm View Apts.
incl.
complete
(304)882-301 7
kitchen, stove. frig,
Twin Rivers Tower is
accepting applications micorwave, disposer,
for wailing list for HUD 7 40-709·1890
1-BR
subsidized.
apartment
for
the Apartment for rent 1
elderlyldisabled,
call BR 1 BA furnished
675-6679
W/D AC $500/mon +
dep. All utlitiSS pd.
call 7 40-446-9595

SHOP
CLASSIFIEDS

Racine area, 2 br,
bath
apartment..
$400
mo..
$200
deposit.
7 40-416·
3036 .

Need a
lob Done?

Shop
fhe
Classilieds ~
"~

�.----- - - --- -- --~

~

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

--~----~-=---~--:-~-----~------~-

~~

Page 84 • The Daily Sentinel
Apartments/
Townhouses
Efficiency apartment
for rent
1624
Chatham Ave. (rear)
no pets, no stairs. 1
or 2 people only
$500/mo
(inc.
water,sewer,
garbage,
gas
&amp;
electric)
740-4464234 or 740"208 •
7861
FIRST MONTH
FREE
2 &amp; 3 BR APTS.
$385 &amp;
UP, Sec. Dep $300
&amp; up.
A/C, WID hook-up,
tenant pays electric,
EHO.
Ellm View Apts.
304-882-3017
Immaculate 2 BR
apt. in country. new
carpet and cabniets.
Freshly
painted.
appliances.
WID
hook-ups.
wa!erltrash
paid.
Beautiful
country
setting,
only
10
minutes from town.
Must
see
to
appreciate $4251mo
614-595-7773
or? 40-645-5953

Houses For Rent
2-BR house in New
Haven $325 mo.
$325 deposit No
pets. 304-674-5525
4000

Manufactured
Housing

Help Wanted

Help Wanted

Help Wanted

Want Htra Cash???
Newspaper Routes
Available Gallipolis,
Meigs and Mason Areas
Must be reliable and
have own
•
transportation.

Nice 16x80, for rent,
3 Bedroom 2 bath,
Country
setting.
740-339-3366 740·
367-0266.
2 br. mobile home in
Racine. $325 a mo.,
$325 dep., 1 yr
lease, No pets. No
calls after 9pm 740992-5097

l5ailtpolls Daii~ ~ribune

5000 Resort Property

~oint

lOlrasant !\egister
The Daily Sentinel

Accounting/
Financial
Experienced
Tax
Professional needed
in Meigs County.
Extra income. flexible

associate. We will
train. Send resume
of
or indications
interest to:
Daily
Sentinel, PO Box
729-5. Pomeroy, Oh
45769

Spring Valley Area.
3BR, 11/2 SA, no Child/Elderly Care
pets, no smoking,
Needed male care
$650/mo +dep. 740giver
to
provide
645-3836
personal care &amp; light
2BR 886 Garfield housework for elderly
$425/mo $400. dep. couple 3 or 5 hrs per
day, $8 hr 740-256740·645-1646
6738 if no answer
H
&amp; mob1le leave message
ouse
home
for
rent,
Racine area, 740- Full-time
non
949-2237
smoking babysitter
needed in my Mason
Nice 2 bd house, Co. home 304-633nice quite area, but 3682
close to town, nice
yard, available Aug.
Help Wanted1, rent $400 you pay
General
utilities, No inside ;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;
pets. 740·444-3134 Operations Manager
for appt.
wanted to supervise
.....- - - - - - all aspects of an
Pomeroy- 3 br. near industrial processing
Super
Value, facility located in
stove/ref furnished, New Haven. WV
w/d
hookl-up, Plase respond to
$500/mo, 740-992- Green Global, 1050
6886
Ohio
Avenue,
PA
Glasssport,
House tor rent in
15045. Attn: Human
New
Haven.
1
Salary
Resources,
possible 2 BR. $300 co~mensurate
with
rent &amp; $300 dep. No
experience.
pets. 304-674-3181

=======

Services Offered
To place an ad.
Call 740.:992-2155
PSI CONSTRUCTION
Specializing in Insurance Jobs including,
storm, wind &amp; water damage.
Room Additions, Remodeling, Metal &amp;
Shingle Roofs, New Homes, Siding,
Decks, Bathroom'Remodeling.
License,d &amp; Insured

Rick Price • 17 yrs. Experience

Employment

hours,
helping
others, .possible fulltime,
ongoing
training.
Send
Spring Valley Green resumes
or
Apartments 1 BR at indications of 1nterest
$395+2 BR at $470 to:
Daily Sentinel,
Month 446·1599.
PO Box 729-17,
Pomeroy, Oh 45769
Houses For Rent
Seasonal
Tax
2BR, nice.PP area Professional needed
$465-Homestead
in Meigs County.
Reality Ask for Nancy
Earn extra income,
304-675-0(99or 675find a new career,
5540
full-time
become
Newly
remodeled,
4BR, 80 Locust St.
Gallipolis. no pets.
Kim
740-441-1202
or June 304·6743170

Thursday, July 22, 2010

;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;R;;;;e;;;;nt;;;;o;;;;ls;;;;;;-=

6000

Please pick up application at
~alltpolis1!lailp

UL:ribune

740-446-2342

ext. 11

Lb=============~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~

=======

======~

Help WantedGeneral

Medical

Grand Opening needed

=======
Medical

--=====LPNIMedical
Assistant Leon WV
fax resume 304586-9312
- - .-~-R--t-.
-.-t
MesJICa ecep 1001s
Leon wv. tax 304_
586 9312

for

SAVINGS

Sen ices i\Iost Heating &amp;
Cooling System (including
Heatpump~) and Controls
Tank less Hot· Water Heater
Change-outs/ Replacements.
Whole House Water Puritiers
(helps against C8 intake)

* Insured * Experienced
References A\'ailable!
Call Gar) Stanley

STYlE. ..

'rll

~

... THE
NEWSPAPER
HAS
SOMETHING
FOR YOU!!

Formerly Robies Construction

FAMILY OWNED AND OPERATED
33 Years Experience

304-773-5441
or 304-593-8458
Onner: Sam Smith, :\Jason,\\ V

• Room Additions &amp; Remodeling

• 1\ie\1 Garages • Elel'trkal &amp;
Plumhing • Roofing &amp; Gutll•J·o;
• \in) I Siding &amp; Painting • Patin and
Pot·ch l&gt;ecl.;s
WV 036725

V.C. YOUNG Ill
992-6215 740-591-0195
Pomeroy, Ohio
36 Vea~s LC?faJ.Experience

Plat 45.00 hrl) Rate+ 10.00 lnp Chrg..

* Prompt and Qualit) Work
* Reasonable Rates

NO MATTER
WHAT YOUR

Concr~'e Services ,~

HRS Repair. 1-740-992-3061
20+ yrs-exp

Stanlev Tree ·
Trimming &amp; Removal

Social

worker
Point
dialysis
J &amp; J Industries is Pleasant
Master's
relocating it major facility.
medical
device degree required. Fax
resume to 304-675facility to Gallia Co.
1505.
1
15
0
•
to
lull time
positions
.4 day work week
9000 Servic~ I Bus.
•6 hr shifts
01rectory
.$ 14_25 to start
Customer
Clerical,
Home Improvement
service. Repair
Must be neat in
Tankless Hotwater
appearance. Must be Heaters, For 3BR. 1
over 18 yrs o d. Call
_ _
or or 2 SA. Hms.
740 446 3057
starting @ $300.
_ _
304 709 0016
HAS REPAIR 740S350 sign on bonus 992-3061
Dont
miss
Misellaneous
opportunity! I
- - - - - - - =;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;,;;;;;;;;;;;;==
Representative
for Jones Tree Service
charity.
Operate complete tree care,
scheduled
stump grind1ng, bucket
!ruck &amp; crane Insfund raising events at
Worker Comp. 740grocery/department
367-0266,
740·339stores outside their
3366
exits greetin~ the .....-----~
.
R
h d Remodel work, small
public.
eps
an
f
·
out heIP 1n o an d jobs. fence painting,
odd jobs, concrete.
offer
patriotic 304-593-6569. ask for
merchandise for a Matthew.
donation. Msl have - - - - - - car. Be willing to If anyone can provide
information about the
travel..
.
shooting of cats on
CompiExpenses
Greer Rd. in Point
paid.
Seniors Pleasant, call 304-675weclcomed! .. email
6083.
resume
to . . . - - - - - - - - .
jely@ veteransoutrea
Get A Jump
ch.com or call 866on
212-5592
~--=~--~-

WV#040954 Cell740·416·2960 '
740-992-0730

SMITH

ten740-591-8044

·uOB[RT BISS[LL
CONSTRUCTION
• New Homes • Garages
• Complete Remodeling

740-992-1671
Stop &amp; Compare ·

Please leave message

. LE\Vis .

RAVENSWOOD
CHIROPRACTIC CENTER
If we um't help you ll'e will
find you the help you need
Auto Accidents • Work
Injuries • ~eck &amp; Back Pain•
Shoulder. Arm. Hip &amp; Leg
Pain • Headaches • '\lassa)le
Therap) • Acupuncture
Ve&gt;t' F.xtended lwun.· \f-F;
Or. Kelt~ K.
Sat. &amp; nem11g' eme(~cncie.\
Jones. O.C.
M tl
A
td

... ·~ !o•.)'f •

(740) 446-2342'

The Daily Sentinel
(740) 992-2155

lDoint ~lrasant l\egistrr
(304) 675-1333

·. '

'

'

. - - - ..."1'""'-

4

Concrete Removal and Replacement

All T) pes Of Concrete Work

30 Years. Experience

David Lewis

.

740-992-6971

304-273-5321
316 Washington St. ·Ravenswood

~

CONCRETE CONSTRUCTION

Insured
WII:J42182

hce

E~timatcs

eatt Ma~cum Construction
Commercial &amp; Residemial

• Room additions • Roulin!j •
~ General Remodeling • Pole &amp;. HoP.c
Raro' • Yin~ I&amp;. \\oocl fencing
Foundations

MIKE W. MARCUM, OWNER
47239 Riebel Rd., Long Botlom, OH
740-985-4141
740-416-1834
FuRy ilt~un.od · 'Free estimates · 25+ years experience
C\&lt;•1 affiliatrd with \like ,\larcu~•Jitooling &amp; Hcmooclln~)
t ··~t~-J·l-·."._\;~ ·--~

t=l N D lT ALL
in the

@allipolis 1JBailp ~ribunr

~--~

•• •

~~

�-----------

.........--~·---------~-~--

Thursday, July 22, 2010

www.mydailysentinel.com

BLONDIE

Dean Young!Denis Lebrun

FUNKY WINKERBEAN

Tom Batiuk

Chris Browne

HI &amp; LOIS

CROSSWORD
By THOMAS
ACROSS
1 Humorist
Mort
5 Worry
100il
container
12 Fake
gems
· 13 Famed
lover
14 Rocker
John
15 Simile
center
16 Twister
18 Threat
20 Tennis
d iv ider
21 Breathe
loudly
23 Auditing
org.
24 "Troy"
star
26 Lukas
of
"Witness"
28 Game for
two
29 With 32Across,
"Jeopardy!" star
31 Broad
st.
32 See 29Across
36 Twister
39 Sought a
SEi!at
40 Playful
mammal
41 Pal, to
Pedro

JOSEPH
43 Job
reward
44 Gave out
hands
45 Louver
parts
46 " bienl''
DOWN
1 "Beat it!"
2 Stood
3 Earthling
4 Director
Spike
5 Blueprint
number
6 Mural
spot
7 Latvta
neighbor
8 Pemtent
people
9 Beliefs

11 Musical
composition
17 Longing
19 Fitting
22 Cormac
McCarthy
book
24Crucial
25 Reststance to
change
27 Chopper
28 Crocs' ktn

30 Brit. co.
abbr.
33 Prickly
shrub
34 Golf
feat
35 Shoelace
problems
37 Htgh
home
38 God of
war
42 Got
together

Brian and Greg Walker

THELOCKHORNS

ONE GOOD THIN6
ABOI.li" TH15 JCa-

William H oest

We L.l.. CAICH GOME'
RAY'~-

MUTTS

Patrick McDonnell

"THE DIFFERENCE BETWEEN A CAPPUCCINO
AND A LATTE? ABOUT A DOLLAR ..."

ZITS

Jerry Scott and Jim Borgman

THE FAMILY CIRCUS

CONCEPTIS SUDOKU

Bil Keane

by Dave Green

7 9
2 .3
1 :8
8 4
5 7
3 6
4 1
6 2
9 5

"Where can I ride my skateboard?"

DENNIS THE MENACE
Hank Ketchum

l&gt;lfl•cult) l.e,el

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HAPPY BIRTIIDAY for Thursday,
July 22. 2010:
This year, you have spark and getup-and-go. Once you are committed,
you can ciE&gt;ar out nearly any project or
task. U not properly funneled your
energy could cause a problem. Be mre. ful - when you sit on ilnger, you
could become more accident-prone. H
)'OU are single, you drav. m,my people,
espedally through public commit
menl&lt;;. Take your lime getting lo know
a potential sweetie in thi-; busy year. If
you are attached, the two of you need
to Jearn new ways of expressing frustration. Learn lobe le&lt;&gt;s judgment,\]
";lh your sweetie. \Valk in his or her
shoeS'. He or she will start extending
the same caring to you. SAGITTARIUS
1dl pick up any slack al work.
T1~e Stars Show IIJC Kmd of Day Yo1111
HarJC: 5-Dvnamu:; 4-Poo:itive; 3-AVt'mgc;
2 So-so; 1:Difficult
ARIES ~1arch 21-April19)
***** Seek out new ways of
thinking and better ideas. For some of
)OU, thiS search entaib finding exrert"
For others, surfing the =--:et might work.
Creativity .::tarts to tlow. and) ou cannot cap it! Tonight: Let the fun begm.
TAURUS (April 20...May 21)
**** A partner or ,,s~,1te gt\ es
vou his or her opinion. like it or not. A
boss al~ might dominate more th,ln in
the recent past. Don't person,llize who.1t
is happening; simply adjust to chang
ing limes. Tonight: Con.,ider longrange options.
GEMINI (May 22-June 20)
***** Others want your feed·
back and your attention. You might feel
as if they want a lot, con-;idering wh,\t
is on your plate. Your crealh ity might
flatline as vou seek solutions.
Communication flourishe;, in .my case.
Others listen to your idea.'&gt;, as well i\5
honor your boundaries. Tonight
Squee-Le in as much a-; possihle
CA.'iCER Qune 21-July 22)
***Go through e,'ldi part of a
plan careful!) A partner nught seem
i.ru.-pired; a bas." appt&gt;ars to be unpredictable. At the moment, your only feJ
'ible option i.. to interact \\1thout cre.:~t­
ing too much flak. Give \ourself ,md
others time to rethink your positions.
fonight: Make doing nothing OK.
LEO Quly 23-Aug. 22)
***** Your natural joie de \1\'TC
comes out no matter what you do.
Your commitment to living inspires
many. but none clS much ilS you. Dtm't
push beyond your natural limits, t'\'en
if you want to accomplish cl lot mo~.

Tonight: Add .:1 much desired item to
your \\Jfl.irobe
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22)
*** * Your style of presentation
makes ,, difference, and others
respond. You might be wondering
.1bout ,, partner or .1ssoci.1te who, at
best, h.1s been difficult. MobiliLe your
unu,u,11 energ). '!(might: Clear out a
prqeli.
LIBRA (Sept. 2.1-0cl. 22)
*****Keep ctmvers.ltions t1owing. even if you feel •l" if you want to
dtl!oe down. Your sen«e of direction
emerge-; in a c,mn~rs.llion. Many
,\ruund \'tJU demon-.;tr,lle an unu;..ual
ability ti&gt; acrept ,, new 1dea or technology. Tonight: Out and about.
SCORPIO (Oct. 23-r\ov. 21)
**** Be aware of the cosl-. of rontinuing on the present path. You might
be O\ erwhclmed by \ arious options,
and cannot see each one's limitations
and benefits. Brainstorm .,.,;th a triend
who ah' ays gh es) ou FV'' erful feedback. lbnight: Your treat Make it OK
to tre.1t yourself too.
SAGIITARIUS (:-\0\. 22-[kc. 21)
***** Tap into your fiery energ:;
\\ hich m1ght look l1ke impubh eness to
m.my. Pre.~~ build&lt;&gt; at work with a
lx&gt;ss or supen 1sor If thi.., N!rson blows
his or her cool. don't react. Give him or
her "PJl't&gt;. "Jhis perl'i&lt;m's tune could
t'h&lt;lnge. 'fonight: Only what )OU want.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-J,m. 19)
*** Gin~ your.;elf pem1is~ion not
to rt?,ll'llo •' situ,Jhon. Someone rould
be .U1l,lgonized and lose his or her tempt&gt;r. Dt&gt;tarh, ,md don't get personally
involwd. You &lt;~bo muld find alternate
ide\~. A partnt'r or a"sodale has strong
opmion~. Tonight: A quiet dinner.
AQUARIUS Q,m. 20-Feb. 18)
***** \-\'illingly walk into a
met-tmg Though 'ou rpight f..el briefly
discouraged when others start opening up, sh.uing tde:~;; and support, you
fa-1 cncuumged You in.-.pire others as
we:I. Sometimes being le"" spt.&gt;cific
lea\ es spaC'I? !or other 1deas. Tonight.
Ac.:tmg as if the weekend is here.
PISCES (Feb. 19-1\lc"'rch 20)
*'*"*'* ~tav on top of 1\ ork,. and
resp11nd to c1 bos~. Yottr mstincb point
to the correct d1rection or the way to
phrase an lffiportant pn&gt;sentJtion. A
p.utnrr or S&lt;&gt;meone you rould be tied
tu financially closes do\m c1gain.
Tonight: Burning tht&gt; .·andle ,1t bolh
t&gt;nd;;.

/•lCIJlldmt• Blgar lS tlJr/ilc lnlemct
nlltltp://u~l'lni•rcquclinrl,igar.rom.

,I

�Page B6 • The Daily Sentinel

www.mydailysentinel.com

Thursday, July 22,

Harry E. WalkerJ'Mi

Hector Gabino/EI Nuevo Herald/MCT

In this April 14, file photo, the Cincinnati Reds' Homer Bailey delivers a pitch
against the Florida Marlins at Sun Life Stadium in Miami, Plorida. Bailey is currently recovering from a shoulder injury

2010

In this June 4, file photo, Cincinnati Reds' piticher Aaron Harang (39) de
pitch against the Washington Nationals during the 2nd inning at Nationals Park in
Washington, D.C. Harang is currently recovering from back spasms.

Injured Reds: Bailey doing better, Harang still sore
inflamed pttchmg shoulCINCINNATI (AP) Homer Bailey took an der that has disabled
important step in his him since Ma\ 24. a far
comeback
from
an longer recovet:y than ini
inflamed
shoulder. tially expected.
Unless he develops an
throwing about 50 pitches to Cincinnati team- unexpected
problem.
mates during a simulat- Bailey\\ ill begin a rehaed game without a prob- bilitation assignment on
Mondav at Class A
lem.
Aaron Harang wasn't Dayton·. He'll need a
few starts in the minors
nearly so good.
The Reds got contrast- lO get back into shape.
"ft was pretty good."
ing updates- on two of
their disabled starting Bailey said. "l\1) curve
pitchers
Wednesday. and fastball were good.
Bailey appears to be but the slider wa.., a-little
· reco\ ered from the off. That's the wa) it

usually 1s. It's usually
the last to come.''
Manager Du:-.ty Baker
watched from behind
the batting cage while
Bailev (1-2. 5.51 E:.RA)
thre\\~ all of his pitches
without pain.
··He looked pretty
good.'' Baker said. ''His
command was above
a' erage. but still not
where you want it to be.
His arm speed \\as
good. hts curvcball '"''as
good."
~ Haran!!. their opening
da) starter. has beer. dis-

abled since July· 6 b) back felt worse afterspasms in his lower ward.
back. He's gotten treat"Standing around at
ments at a chiropractor the Hall of Fame the
all week, and felt better other night - mv back
after his session on didn't like that.'' he said.
"I was a. little stiff the
Wednesday.
"I !!Ot a definite relief other day."
today." Harang said.
Harang is limited to
Harang threw last working out on a treadweek but didn't feel mill and other condicomfortable because of tioning equipment. He
the back. prompting the won't be allO\\ ed to
Reds to keep him off the throw until he's gone a
mound. He attended a couple of days with no
team function at the stiffness or pain. Once
Reds Hall of Fame on the back is fine. he's
Sunday night. and the likely to go on a medical

rehabilitation assignment to the minors as
well.
The Reds have stayed
in the ~L Central race
with St. Louis by getting
superb fill-in performances. Rookies Matt
Maloney and Travis
Wood kept the rotation
together after Baile) and
Harang got hurt. Righthander Edinson Yolquez
returned from reconstructive elbow surgery
after the All-Star break.
giving Cincinnati plenty
of starters.

•

SPorts Sho.rts
Point Pleasant to host
semi-pro football game
POINT PLEASANT. \V.Va. - On Saturday. July
24. the West Virginia Black Bears v. ill host the
Kentuckey Warriors in a semi-pro football conlest at
7 p.m. at the Point Pleasant High School Athletic
Complex.
The t\\ o teams are members of the Heartland
Football League. Thi-; is the second year the Black
Bears have held a game in Point Pleasant.

Ohio high school football
finals to move in 2014
COLUtvlBUS. Ohio (AP)- The board of the Ohio
High School Athletic Association has voted to move
the state championship football games to Ohio State
in 2014 and 2015.
The decision reached Wednesday keeps the timlls in
Stark County through 2013. at Canton Fawcett
Stadium and Massillon Paul Brown Tiger Stadium.
The association had received proposals from six
areas. Commissioner Dan Ross says Stark County's
hospitality and experience. as well as tradition, factored into the decision. Ross says new traditions will
be created in central Ohio. which he says has
"tremendous qualities of its own."
Ohio State hosted the finals from 1982 to 1989.
· They were first held. in pat1, in Stark County in 1990.
Since 1991. Stark has hosted all games.
This year's six -game finals are~Dec. 3-4.

Ohio Baseball to hold
prospect camps
ATHENS. Ohio
The Ohio University baseball
program will be holdmg two prospect camps on Aug.
21 and Oct. 2.
The camps offer rising sophomore, junior, and
senior high school student athletes a chance to show
case their skills in front of both professional scouts
and college coaches.
Both c&lt;\mps begin with registration at R a m. at Bob
Wren Stadium and last until approximately 6:30p.m.
Included in the days' activities arc a workout session
in the morning and games in the afternoon. as well as
strength training and NCAA compliance instruction
sessions.
The cost of the camp is $215 and includes lunch and
aT-shirt. Pre-registration is encouraged. Information
and registration forms are available at http://ohiobobcatbaseballcamps.com/ For more information on tlK·
camps. contact Scott Malinowski at 740-593-1207 or
malinows@ohio.cdu

Rio Basketball to host
Golf Scramble

"A'' Flight \\ill "have cash prizes for I st and 2nd
place\\ hile "B" Flight will have gifts a~ arded for I st
and 2nd place.
The cost of the four-person scramble is $40 per person for 300 Club members and $60 per person for
those ,·.,.ho are not 300 Club members.
For reservations or more infonnation contact: Rio
Grande head men's basketball coach Ken French at
740-245-7294.
Online re£!istration is also available at www.rioredstorm.com on the men's basketball page.

Kang hangs on in opener
PINEHURST. N.C. (AP) - Stroke-pia) medalist
Damelle .Kang trailed after 15 holes in the opening
round of match play in the L.:.S. Girls Junior
Championship before prevailing on the final hole
against Colomhia's Alejandra Cangrejo on
Wednesday.
Kang, from Thousand Oaks. Calif.. tied the match
on the ~16th hole and then used a par on No. 18 to pull
ou.t a 1-up \ ictory at The Country Club of North
Carolina.
She'll be among 32 players in Thursday's second
round. Those winners will play another round
Thursday to cut the field to eight.
Megan Khang. a 12-year-old from Rockland.
;\lass .. advanced by winning her first-round match 2up against Emily Wnght of Mason. Ohio. 2007 champion KristL'n Park of Buena Park. Calif.. was a 4 and
3 winner against Alexandra Newell of Tampa. Fla.

Astros claim
Hernandez, Figueroa
CHIC1\GO (AP)
The Houston Astros have
claimed infielder Anderson HernandC? and right-hander Nelson Figueror. off waivers.
·~
Left-bander Polin Trinidad and right-hander Gary
:Vlaje\\ ski were designated for assignment
Wedne:sday to make room-on the roster.
Hernandez batted .246 in 22 games for Cleveland
this season. Figueroa \Vas 2-1 \\ ith a 3.46 ERA in 13
appearances for Philadelphia.
Hernandez and Figueroa are expected to join the
team on rriday.
Majewski.just called up from Triple-A Round Rock
on Monday. lmtl no record and a 22.50 ERA in two
£!ame:. '' ith Houston. Trinidad was 3-6 \\ ith a 4.55
l!RA at Round Rock.
The Astros also announced that right-hander Casey
Daigle had deared waivers and accepted an assignment to Round Rock.

Reds swap RHP Fisher
for RHP Owings

CINCINNATI (AP) - The Reds haYe made a
change in their bullpen. calling up right-hander
Carlos Fisher from Triple-A Louis\ ille and sending
down seldom-used right-hander Mtcah Ov.ings.
Wednesday's mo\e- came one da) after O~vings
had trouble throwing strikes during an 8-7 win over
the Washington Nationals. Pitching for the first
time since July 4. o,, ing:-. gave up four runs while
retiring only two batters in relief. Owings. the' long
reliever. ha~ pitched only 33 1-3 innings this season.
Fi,her is in his second stint with Cincinnati. He
made II appearances from April 22 to May 32.
putting up a 10.80 ERA.

Twins summon Slama for pen
help, send down Burnett
(

Ml;-...NEAPOLIS (AP) - The Minnesota Twins
have optiOned right-hander Alex Burnett to Trip.
A Rochester. and right-hander Anthon) Slama \\
take his place in the bullpen.
The move was made after Monday night's 10-4
loss to the Clevclancl Indians.
Slama \\as added to the 40-man roster. and righthander Cia) Condrey was transferred to the 60-day
disabled list to make room. Slama was expected to
join the T\\ ins in time for Tuesday's game. after
posting a I 71 ERA in 43 appearances for
Rochester. He has .33 strikeouts in 52 2-3 innings.
with a .164 opponent batting a\ erage.
The Twins used five relievers tn Mondav's game.
and closer Jon Rauch wa-. hit on the ankie'bv batted ball in the ninth inning. He will be una{.ailable
for a day or two \\ hilc the S\\ elling subsides.

a

99

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RIO GRANDE. Ohio - The University or Rio
Grande men's and women's basketball programs will
be hostmg a golf scramble on Saturday . .lttl) 31 at
Franklin Yallcv Golf Course in Jackson. Ohio. The
four-pci·son sc~·amble will begin with a shotgun start
at 8:30a.m.
\I

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