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                  <text>Holzer profiles
patient's pr gress, A3

Iraq far behind in
m · e clearance, A6

Printed on 100%
Reqcled New~print

Middle}lort • Pomeroy, Ohio

a
D.,

Meigs local discusses

SPORTS
• Cueto, Reds blank
slumping 0-Backs.
. See Page Bl

More than $1 million corning in

by handtcapped students. providing
..stair"' chairs, and purcha.'&gt;lll£ a nC\\
handicapped-eqUipped school bus .
BY CHARLENE HOEFLICH
The funding can be used for· The current bus transporting handiHOEFUCHC MYDAILYSENTINE;L.COM
instruction, equipment or facility capped student!) 1~ a 1995 model
improvements to benefit studenb and needs replacing, the superintenPOMEROY - With S1 million m falling under Title One or ~pecial dent noted.
federal stimulus money coming to education including those who are
As for the Title I stimulus money,
the Meigs Local School District. handicapped.
he said the reading and math as ... isSuperintendent William Buckley at
Buckley listed programs and prc:&gt;- tanc~ program io,; only in the eleTuesday night's meeting detaileJ je~.:ts which qualify for special e~u­ menrary school and :;poke of the
for the Board of Education the areas cation stimulus money as includmg need for adding the program to both
in which it can be spent.
assisting students in achieving test the middle and high schools. This
f lc explained ·that it is a one-time requirements through special tutor- will require hiring additional teachallocation to be spent over a two-year ing programs. and improving tech- ers and aides. Buckle\ noted that
period and emphasized that "when it\ nology equipment for students with preliminary re~ult:s of. the rccc!H
gone it's gone." The break-do\\ n for special needs.
state test -;how a ·•senous gap m
use of the monev is $602,000 for Titk
He ubo indicated a portion of it math test scores in the Middle
One (remedial reading and math) and Will go toward upgrading the eleva- School.'' and described it as being
$529.000 for special education.
tor at the high school which is used an ''area of concern"\\ hich needs to

I

be addressed with some of the stimulus monev.
It was reP,orted by the superintendent that .Marilm l\.leier. food director for the district. had applied for
and received stimulus grant money
for a new steamer for the high
school and point of sale machines
(record-keeping equipment used in
the nutrition program) for the elementary' and high school.
She was also successful in retaining money for the fruit and vegetable program in the elementary
school for ~the third year. The food
is purchased through the grant
money and provided at no cost to
the students.
Please see Meigs, AS

Williams murder
trial continued;
DNA testing
procedure finalized
Bv BRIAN

J.

REED

BREEDCMYDAILYSENTINELCOM

not-so-secret
Capitol Hill sanctuary.
See Page A2
• Bob Evans Farm
features new exhibits.
See Page A3
• 4-H club plans
fun and service events.
See Page AS
• Ohio House
approves second
7-day budget.
Page AS

WEATHER

Details on Page AS

I NDEX
2

SH:noss -12 PAGK'i

Annie's Mailbox
Calendars
jis~ifieds

" imcs
Editorials
Sports
Weather

B Section

As

© 2009 Ohio \'alley Publishing Co.

. Ill.I!IJI,I !1!1.!1!11
...

Beth sergent!photos :

Over 100 parents and children gathered yesterday at the Pomeroy Library to be entertained by comedian Robert Post (pictured below). Post's appearance was part of the Meigs County District Public
Library's Summer Reading Program.

Getting ereadve

• prom.ot es rmagma
•
• ti•on
Sununer read mg
BY BETH SERGENT
BSERGENTCMYDAILYSENTINELCOM

PO:VtEROY - Every child
seems blessed with an imagination but at some point life shoves
it aside (for some sooner than
others) and delaymg the onset of
real life us long as possible is the
Meigs County District Pu~lic
Library's Summer Readmg
Program which encourages children to consider their imagination a commodity.
Emily Sanders. children's services coordinator at the libnuy,
said this year 200 children ha\·e
already enrolled in the free prl)~
gram.
Grange
Insurance.
Downino Childs &amp; Musser has
also mad~ it possible to gi\e out
free T-shirts and book bags to
children who ·attend at least
three programs. giving the kids
even more incentive to show up
every week at the library.
At yesterday's program featuring comedian Robert Post. over
I00 parento,; and children showed
up at the Pomeroy LibraI). The
theme to this year's program is
''Be Creative @. Your Library."
"The summer reading program
is a great way. to make. reading.
fun and appealing to chtldren of
all ages." Sanders said. "This
program provides free summer
cnt~:rtainment for the children in
our area while helping to maintain readmg skills during the
stJmmer months.'"
~ext children will l!Ct into the
rhythm' of a program called "Bill
Pate's Dntmtrail'' at 2 p.m. on
July 18 at the Pomeroy Libmry.
The "dntmtrail" is described as
an interactive journey through

POMEROY - The murder trial of a
Parkersburg, W.Va. man has been continued
until Sl.!ptembcr.
~teanwhile, Judge Fred W. Crow III has
denied Charles Williams' request for independent testing of a D;:'\A sample found on a pair
of hoots.
Williams. 39, was scheduled to face a jury on
July 7. to ans\\er charges he robbed and murdered Doris Jackson, 83,ofTuppers Plains. His
trial has been continued until Sept. 28. according to Prosecuting Attorney Colleen Williams.
Williams is chan!ed with a I 0-count indictment. includin!! i\vo counts of aggravated
murder. He 1s Tn the Southeastern Regional
Jail in ~elsom ille awaiting trial.
A co-defendant in the case. James Lee
Games, is expected to appear in Common Pleas
Colllt next \\eek to enter into a plea agreement
in exchange for testimony in the Williams trial.
Williams' defense team. Charles Knight and
William Eachus. had initially asked that their
own forensic scientist be petmitted to pert'orn1
DNA testing on the blood sample found on a
pair of hoots. Then. because the prosecution said
testing \vould consume the entire sample. the
parties agreed that a defense DNA expert would
be present at the Ohio Bureau of Criminal
Identification and Investigation testing.
Bccau~c no laboratory is willing to allow
the defendant's expert to attend the testing,
Crow denied the motion, but said in an entry
filed th1&lt;.. week he \\ ould require the state to
make all infonnation from the testing, including the chain of custod) of the evidence. testing protocols. credentials of the person testing
and records relating to the equipm!.!nt used. to
the defendant.
Crow also stipulated that any remaining
:-ample be made available to the defendant for
independent testing.

Opponents of AMP call
amendment 'unfair perk'
Bv BETH SERGENT
BSERGENT@ MYOAILYSENTINEL.COM

15 billion years of noise. rhythm
and music.
Dan Daily then &lt;1ppcars as
"The Mu~ic Man'' at 2 p.m ..
July 15 at the Pomeroy Library.
pre~cnting an interactive program about acoustic string
instnunents.
"Be Creative C!1 Your Libra!)'"
is meant to expose the worlds of
muc;ic, dance, art, books and
more to young people enrolled

in the free summer reading program. The program is open to
voung people preschool age
through young adult. In addition
to the programs there \\ iII he
prize drawings, ~tory hour!;, a
reading club und more. To register a child, visit one of the
MCDPL branches or contact the
Pomeroy Library at 992-5813.
Registration JS not required to
attend the free programs.

C'OI UMHUS -·An amendment to the
state worker"s compensation budget which
could ...ignificantly reduce construction ~osts
for the proposed American Municipal Power
Generating Station is being call "another
unfair Ohio perk for coal" by the Sierra Club.
In a statement released yesterday afternoon,
the Sierra Club ca.led the amendment a setback for Go\. Tee Strickland's vision for
clean energy in Oh10 The amendment. supported by Ohio Sen. Jimmy Stewart (RAlbany). is said to save Ai\1P-Ohio $20-25
million on construction costs b) allowing the
company to apply for self-i~sured status \~'ith
the Oh10 Bureau of Worker s Compensation.
What supporters call "sa\ ing" opponents like
the Sicmt Club call ··avoiding'' $20-25 million in \\orkcr\ compensation costs.
"There is no reason why a coal-burning
company should pay less in workers· compensation costs than a clean energy company
or any other company - especially given
Gtncmor Strickland's strong support for
clean energy.'' said Nachy Kanfer, with Sierra
Club's 'Beyond Coal Campaign' in Ohio.
"The Governor should use a line-item \'Cto on
this short-sighted subsidy. This is a perk for a
di11y coal plant, nothing more.''
In the statement released yesterday. the
Sierra Club claims self-insured status
through the OBWC is "t) pically allowed

Please see AMP. AS

�PageA2

lhe Daily Sentinel

Thursday. July 2,

ta•akers' not-so-secret Capitol Hill sancruarv
B Y L AURIE K ELLMAN
)'\SSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

WASHINGTON - For
years. the brick facade of a
thrcc-sLOry hou~e ncar the
Capitol has functioned a~ a
shield for the lawmakers
who liH' ami pray there.
offering sanctuary from the
temptations of political life
- and discretion for those
who succumbed.
South Carolina Gov.
~lark Sanford blew away
much of the privacy of the
place over the past week.
revealing he had conllded in
his "C Street" friends, a collection of current and former Ia\\ makers. about the
cross-continental affair he
had hidden from his wife.
Their universal response:
Break up with the mistress.
according to several knowledgeable-people who spoke
on condition of anonymity.
That these details and
more have been connected
with the red brick house at
133 C Street SE defies the
secrecy that those associat
ed with the Christian facility have long sought to
maintain.
The building. registered in
Distnct of Columbia tax
records as a religious .and
commercial building, is
affiliated with a Christian
group of man) names.
including the "Fellow!-thip
Foundation." The group
spom.ors the annual National
Prayer Breakfast attended by
the president. members of
Congress and dignitaries
around the world.
It also host!'&gt; luncheons
and pra)er groups on the
first two noors. The top
floor of bedrooms is occupied by both Democratic
and Republican members of
Congress, alJ Christians,
who pay rent that, in the
past has been partially subsidized by the fellowship.
Those who have lived
:and prayed there have
described the building as a
'home away from home for
lawmakers. a space for
them to socialize. live a
Christian lifestyle and confide in each other while
they're away from their
families.
Some of those private
subjects have become
embarrassingly public. Two
lawmakers connected to the
so-called "C Street community'' have revealed they
had had extramarital affairs.
Sanford, who apparently
has never lived there.
nonetheless said he turned to
"C Street" for counsel and
'solace while in the throes of
extramruital romance with a
·woman named Maria from
Argentina. His spiritual
'adviser. Warren "Cubb) ·•

2009

New Dem health plan has
public option, lower cost
WASJIING rON (AP)

Democrats on a key Senate

Committe~ omlined a revised and far kss costly health care

133 C Street
S.E., a redbrick structure
registered as
a church and
affiliated with
a secretive
Christian
group known
by many
names, one of
them the
Fellowship
Foundation,
is seen
Wednesday in
Washington.
AP photo

their support for an) thin~:·
It b not the only Captto!
and Ensign. according to Hill home away from home
information provided by run b) a religious group for
knowledgeable Republican. lawmakers.
Democratic and nonpartisan
The United Methodist
officials who demanded Building. at 100 Maryland
anonymity because the Avenue across from the
information was not public. CapitoL has for 75 years
Reprcsentati\'cs for the been the church's office in
Fellowship arc hard to find. Washington. It also has
No spokc~man could ,be been•home to members of
reached directly or had Congress and even the Rev.
responded by Wedne!-&gt;day to Martin Luther King Jr.'s
requests for comment sub- ecumenical offices. from
mitred through members of which the march on
the C Street community. Washington was planned.
The building itself is owned according to it!'&gt; Web site.
by a group called Youth
There's a diffefence.
With
A
Mission according to one who has
Washington DC Inc. C St. worked in the Methodist
Center, according to city Building. Bany Lynn. execrecord~. An e-mail to the utive director of Americans
founder!S of Youth With A United for Separation of
WASHINGTO:-.; (AP)- Thou...ands of U.S. ~1arines and
Mission ~eeking comment Church and State. says the hundreds of Afghan troops moved in:o Taliban-infested viiwent unan wered.
secrecy surrounding the C ' !ages with armor and helicopters Wedne~da~ evening in the
In a 2003 AP story. Street house makes it possi- first major operation under President Barack Obama's
Richard Car\'cr. then a ble for the Fellowship to revamped strategy to stabilize Afghanh.tan.
member of the group's influence lawmakers who
The offensive was launched shortly after 1 a.m. Thursday
board of directors, said that live and pray there beyond local time in Helmand province. a Tali ban stronghold in the
the group's goal with mem- the public eye.
southern part of the country. The goal is to clear insurgents
bers of Congress was "to
They have said communi- from the hotly contested Helmand River Valley before the
hope that we can assist them ty members ''sit down every nation's Aug. 20 presidential election.
in better understandings of week at a specific time and
Dubbed Operation Khanjar, or "Strike of the Sword," the
the teachings of Christ, and talk about religion in our military push was described by officials as the largest and
applying it to their jobs."
Jives. WelL these are mcm- fastest-moving of the war's new phase. British forces last
Jim Winkler. then a lob- bers of Congress," Lynn week led similar mi:-.sions to fight and clear out insurgents
byist for the church, said of said. ··part of their life is in HelmanJ and neighboring Kandahar provmces.
lawmakers, ''We don't what they're voting on in
"Where we go we will stay. and where we stay, we \\ill
approach them and ask for Congress."
hold. build and work tO\\ ard transition of all security
------------------------------------~---------- re:-.ponsibilities to Afghan forc\!s," Marine Corps Brig. Qen.
Larn· Nichobon said in a statement.
S&lt;)uthern Afghanb.tan is a Taliban stronghold but also a
region where Afghan President Hamid Karzai is seeking
\ otes from fellO\\ Pashtun tribesmen.
with federal F~sh and would not be rcver:-.ible and swimming upstream are
BOISE. Idaho (AP) The Pentagon is deploying ~ 1.000 addit1onal troop:-. to
Federal officials have told Wildlife officials later in it could take years for the particular!) vulnerable.
Afghanistan in time for the elections and expects the total
They also said Idaho's number of U.S. forces there to reach 68.000 by )ear' end.
the Idaho fish and game July to discuss their ques- local population to recovplan failed to take into That is double the number of troops in Afghanistan in
officials that their plan to tions about Idaho·~ plan. as er." he wrote.
Federal managers sug- account how historic water but :-.till half of much as arc no\\ in Iraq.
halve the number of peli- well as what additional scicans nesting in southern and entific justification will be gested Idaho instead con- levels in the Blackfoot
While Marine troops were the bulk of the force, recen
eastern Idaho by 20 13 to needed to obtain permits to struct in-stream structures, Reservoir played a role in arrived U.S . Am1y helicopter:-~ were also taking part 111 the
boost fisheries is an "eradi- proceed with management permanent wire arrays and reducing Yellowstone cut- operation in Helmand province.
~
cation program" that needs of the big birds.
plant streamside vegetation throat trout numbers. More
In March. Obama ull\eiled his strategy for Afghanistan,
Pelicans at the Blackfoot to discourage pelicans that than 4.700 spawning cut- seeking to ucfeat al-Qaida terrorists there and in Pakistan
more work.
The Idaho Fish and Game Reservoir colony have prey on Yellowstone cut- throats were counted in with a bigger force and a new commander. Taliban and other
in
May increased from 1.400 breed- throat trout, especially in 200 I ; the number dropped extremists. including those allied with al-Qaida. routinely
Commission
approved a tive-year plan to ing birds in 2002 to 2,400 low water years when those to just 14 in 2005.
cross the two nations' border in Afghanistan's remote south.
ki11 and haze American breeding birds in 2008, while
white pelicans in southeast- a colony·on Lake Walcott on
em Idaho to protect sport the Snake River increased
fish and Yellowstone cut- from about 400 breeding
throat trout populations. birds in 2002 to more than
The plan calls for shooting 4.000 breeding birds.
The agency's plan calls
some pelicans and applying
oil to eggs to suffocate the for reducing bird numbers
embryos.
by more than half. while
Pelicans are protected still maintaining a viable
under federal law, so any- population: 700 breeding
thing to cut their numbers birds at the Blackfoot
requires t; .S. Fish and Reservoir and 2,100 in Lake
Walcott.
Wildlife Service approval.
Two Fish and Wildlife
''We didn't fl.!el the rnanin
,agement plan had enough Service offices
data in it right now to issue Oregon and in Utah the permits required," said panned Idaho's plan. sa) ing
Brad Bortner, the Pish and that implementing the proWildlife Service's migrato- posal would undo pelican
,ry birds chief in Po11land, conservation accomplishments from the last 25 years
·Ore. on Wednesday.
' Idaho wildlife officials and any damage could be
took exception to charac- irreversible.
"Given the conservation
terizations of their proposal
as a ''pelican eradication status a!-t:-.igned b) Idaho
program" by wildlife offi- and other western states.
and given the threats to the
cials in Utah
•
"Absolutely not," said :-.pecies. we belie\ e it is
Jeft Gould, chief of Idaho's unv. ise to begin a pelican
(304)
Bureau of Wildlife. ''It's a eradication program.'' wrote
management plan for peli- Larry Crist. Fish and
cans. with the primary goal Wildlife Service's Utah
of reducing impacts to fish." field supervi~or.
"Lethal take of pelicans
Gould expects to meet
Culbertson. in an interview
with The Associated Press,
described the C Street cro,,d
as "the guys Mark hung out
with in Washington."
One
of group on
Wednesday
confirmed
counseling Sanford about
the governor's affa1r.
"Former Rep. Steve
Largent, a member of the C
Street community. said he
had discussions with both
Mark and Jenny Sanford
this year. regarding their
marriage," Largent said in a
statement to the AP.
Sanford wasn't a unique
case. Sen. John Ensign, who
has li,·ed at the C Street
address. is reported to have
been confronted about his
recently disclosed affair
with a female campaign
staffer v. ho was married to
one of his top Senate aides.
The woman's husband,
Douglas Hampton, wrote in
a letter to Fox News that
another resident of the
house. Sen Tom Coburn, ROkla .. did the confronting.
All the recent talk has
made for a convulsiOn of
publicity, tinged with scandal. for a house and a community of the devout who
have labored for years to
avoid it.
At least six lawmakers

li\'ed at the house a~ of
Januar~. including Coburn

plan Wednesday night that inc}u~e~ a gm ernment-run
insurant\.' opt ion and an annual tel' on employer~ who do
not offer coverage 10 their '''?rkers.
.
•
The plan carries a I0-year pncc tag. of ~ltghtly owr $600.
lion, and would lead toward an est~matl'd 97 percent &lt;!f all
Americans having coverage. acconlmg to the C&lt;.mgresston~l
Budget Office. Sens. I!&lt;.Iward M. Kennedy and Chns Dodd ~ard
in a letter to other members of the Senate H~alth. Educatron,
Labor and Pensions Committee. The AP obtamcd a copy:
By contrast, an earlie.r,. incomplete proposal car:1~d a
price tag of roughly S1 tnllt?n and ~ould ha\ e left m!lltons
uninsured. CBO anal)St~ ::.atd m m1d-June. .
The letter indicated the co:-.t and covemge ImprovementS
resulted from two changes. The first ~ails for a go\'emment-nm
health insurance option to compete w1~ pnvate coverage plans,
an option that ha..., drawn intense opposttton from Republtcans.
"We must not seUle for legislation that merely gesture at
reform.'' the two Democrats\\ rote. "\Ve must deliver on the
promise of true change."
Additionally. the rc\ ised proposal calls for a $750 annual
fcc on cmplo) ers·for each full-timt.&gt; worker not offered co_vcrage through their job. The fee. would be set at $375 lor
pa11-time workers. Companjes w1th fewer than 25 employees would be exempt. The tee was forecast to generate $52
billion mer 10 years, money the go,ernment wo~ld use to
help provide subsi.d~e:-o t9 those wh? cannot afford msurancc.
The same prO\ 1ston 1s abo e:-.umated to greatly reduce
the number of workers whose employers would drop coverage, thus addressing a major concern noted by CBO
when it reviewed the earlier proposals. .
.
Kennedy. D-Mass .• and Dodd. 0-Conn., ctrcu~ated the1r letter a f~w days before lawmaker)&gt; return from theu· July 4 va,
tion. with the Health Committee one ol~ sev~ral paneb ex~
cd to take action on health care Jegtslatton that Pres1den
Samek Obama has placed atop his dome~t1c agenda.
Kennedy, the committee chairman. was diagnosed with a
brain tumor more than a year ago and has been absent from the
Senate for weeks. although he and his aides ha\·~ been heavily involved in the deliberations on a health care btll. Dodd. the
next semor Democrat on the committee, has pre:-.ided at committee sessipns and taken an increa... ingly public role.
With its government option. the prop?sal is unlikely to
gain an) bipnrti:-.an suppo.rt in the con~mtttee.
Separately. Democrats and Republtcans on the Senate
Finance Committee arc at work trying to reach agreement
on an ahemative that calls for creation of nonprofit cooperatives to sell insurnnce in competition with private industry.
Agreement has been elusive on that and other i~sues. and it
is not clear whether a deal is possible before Democrats opt
for a more partisan approach.
·
In their letter. Kennedy and Dodd said the Congres!-tional
Budget Office "has carefully reviewed our complete bill.
and we arc pleased to report that CBO has scored it at
$611.4 billion over I0 years. with the new coverage provisions scored at $597 billion....The completed bill virtually
eliminates the dropping of currently covered employees
from employer-sponsored health plans.

Major military operatio:g.
under way in Mghanistal'

Idaho F&amp;G Plan to kill Pell•cans hits obstacles

20t'

You can now pay your bill online at:

www.pvalley.org

PLEASANT VALLEY HOSPITAL
2520 Valley Drive • Point Pleasant. WV •

"

675-../340

...

�Page A3

1riHIIE

The Daily Sentinel

Thursday, July 2,

2009

AN t,dE'S MAILBC)X

Children need to
know of decision
BY KATHY MITCHELL
AND MARCY SUGAR

Submitted photo

Gallia County resident Ethel Price has made a miraculous recovery following a near-fatal accident on March 29. Mrs. Price
was released from Holzer Senior Care Center on June 19 to return home. She and her husband, Eddie, join with staff left
ight, front, Pam Summe, COTA; Eddie 'Price; Ethel Price; Alka MaheswM, LPTA; and Bridget Raymond, CAN, and
k, Jason Moore, OTR/L, Program Director for Therapy Services, and Clint Potter, LNHA, Administrator of Holzer Senior
re Center, for a photo.

Holzer pronles padenrs progress
GALLIPOLIS - Ethel
Price is a walking. talking
miracle.
About three months ago.
however, the future did not
look good for Mrs. Price
following a multiple vehicle accident on March 29.
in which she suffered
severe injuries.
She and her husband,
Eddie, were on their way
home to Gallia County from
·a trip to Florida when the
wreck
occurred along
Interstate 75 near London.
Ky. Mr. Price \vas also
injured, but has since made
a full recovery.
Given the extent of Mrs.
Price's injuries, though, the
ial prognosis offered by
sicians was not positive.
•
the very least. her journey back to health was
expected to be a long, arduous process.

"I had multiple fractures,
a tom aorta and was not
expected to survive," said
Mrs. Price. "But with teams
of doctors and the grace of
God, my life was spared."
Physicians
at
the
University of Kentucky
Trauma Center performed
surgery to repair the aorta
and fractures to her pelvis ,
spine and other areas of her
upper body.
On April 12. Mrs. Price
was admitted to the Holzer
Medical
Center
Rehabilitation Unit in
Gallipolis, and then on
April 22 she was moved to
Holzer Senior Care Center
(HSCC) with hopes of
making the transition back
to her everyday life.
"The wonderful therapists
diligently worked with me
even though I was on complete bed rest,'' Mrs. Price

said. "The doctors and nurs
es and staff here are very
caring; just like one big
family. l have received the
best of care."
Jason Moore, OTR/L.
Program
Director
for
Therapy Services at Holzer
Senior Care Center, said Mrs.
Price's recovery has been
nothing sh01t of a miracle.
"I think any therapist or
clinician that would have
looked at her case and the
physical level she w'!s at
when she first got here,
would have said that she
would need at least three to
six months to recover." said
Moore. '·However, she cut
that to less than 60 days."
An extremely joyful Mrs.
Price left Holzer Senior
Care Center on Friday. June
19. happy to return home
with her husband to their
residence near Vinton.

'"Several factors helped
her therapy," Moore added.
"She ·s benefited from
excellent motivation and
incredible family support.
She has a wonderful
demeanor and is very pleasant to work with. She
always gives 100 percent."
Mr. and Mrs. Price are
member..; of the Rodney
Pike Church of God and
they credit the prayers of
friends there and many
other churches with helping to speed Mrs. Price's
recovery.
"I wish to thank everyone
everywhere for the many
prayers that went out for me
on my behalf and for God's
loving hand that held me all
the way,'' Mrs. Pnce said.
For more information
about flo/~er Senior Care
Center. call 740 -146-5001,
or I'isit www.hol::.er.org.

·Bob Evaris Farm features new exhibits
RIO GRANDE - The
Bob Evans Farm is featuring two new exhibits which
will remain in place through
Dec. 23 and be open to visitors daily from 10:30 a.m.
to 5:30 p.m. Admission to
the exhibits. as well as the
Homestead Museum and
Quilr.Bam. is free.

The new exhibits are:
The Homestead's 2009
Exhibit: The Story &amp;
Legacy of Smokey Bear A
celebration of Smokey
Bear's 65th birthday, the
'exhibit displays artifacts
and memorabilia that tell
Smokey's story and how he
remained a national
•
n since his creation in

1944. Smokey Bear's message of fire prevention is the
longest-running public service announcement campaign in the U.S. Visitors to
this exhibit will learn about
fire prevention and the history of firefighting in the
U.S. Forest Service and see
items
which
include
posters,
photographs,
books, toys and Smokey
Bear figurines. Items on display in the exhibit are on
loan from the Wayne
National Forest.
Quilt
Barn
Exhibit:
Celebrating Ohio Farms
The Ohio Farm Bureau's
"A Tip of the Hat to
Agriculture" art exhibit is

featured this year in the ing a first-hand look at the
farm's QUilt Bt1m.
heritage of the Bob Evans
The exhibit features straw Farms company. entreprecowboy hate:. that have been neur Bob Evans and the histransformed by cqunty farm tory of the region.
bureaus into artistic repre
F01 more informatiOn,
sentations of agriculture in · directions and a listing of
their area. The hats. decorat- special el'ents hosted at the
ed with . paint. fabric, fig fimn. pick up a Bob Eva/IS
urines and other materials, Farm brochure in any Bob
are colorful and interestmg f.:\'(/m Restaurallf or visit
in their design.
11'\\'W.bobevans .com
and
In addition, guests may select the "Bob Evans
v \sit
the
Homestead Farm'' tab. For information
Museum
a popular and a schedule for the Bob
tourist destination whi...:h Emns Farm Festival, l'isit •
brings the past to present H'li'W.bobevans .comlfannwith its life-like displays . fcstival.
The Homestead Museum is
both a company mu:seum
and historical center, offer-

Colonial Days: Where the past meets the future
GALLIPOLIS The
Our House Museum will be
holding its annual Girls
Colonial Days on Tuesday,
July 14 from 11 a.m.-2 p.m.,
for ages 9-12. Girls will
dress in period costumes
(provided by the museum)
and will enjoy a Victorian
Tea/Lunch.
Costumed volunteers will

give each child various
information about a girl's
life in Colonial days during
this interactive experience.
They will experience life
as it would have been in
the early 1800's, learn
colonial medicine and public health; children's games
and much more.
They will also complete a

craft to take home as a
rem~mbrancc of the day.
Registration is re4uired.
cost is $20. Pre-payment is
preferable, although payment can be made on the
day of the event. Check!.
are to be made out to Our
House Museum. To register call 740-446-0586 by
July 7.

Community Calendar
Public meetings
Wednesday, July 1
PAGEVILLE - Scipio
Township Trustees. regular
meeting,,
6:JO
p.m.,
evilJe Town Hall.
OMEROY - Meigs
• ~ unty Board of Health,
regular meeting, 5 p.m.,
conference room Meigs
County
Health
Department.
Thursday, July 2
SYRACUSE - Syracuse
Village Council to meet at 7
p.m. at village hall.

Friday, July 3
SYRACUSE ...:, Sutton
Township Trustees, 7 p.m ..
regular meeting, Syrac{lse
Municipal Building.
\I

Clubs and
organizations
Thursday, July 2
TUPPERS PLAINS
Ladies Auxiliary of VFW
Post 9050,7 p.m. at the hall.
Chester
CHESTER Shade
Historical
Association, 7 p.m. at the
Chester Courthouse.

Monday, July 6
POMEROY
Meigs
Athletic Boosters, 7 p.m. at
the high school

Thesday, July 7
CHESTER Chester
Council 323 Daughters of
America, regular meeting,
7:30p.m., at the hall.
POMEROY Ladies
Auxilary of Drew Webster

Unit 39, regular meeting. I
p.m .. legion hall.

Thursday, .July 9
CHESTER Shade
River Lodge 453. 7:30 p.m.
at the hall. Refreshments.
6:30p.m .
TUPPERS PLAINS Tuppers Plains VfW Post
9053, 7 p.m. Meal served at
6:30p.m.

Birthdays
Wednesday, July 8
RUTLAND
Clvde
Davis who resides on Berch
Grove Road, Rutland, will
observe his 90th birthday on
Wednesday, July H. Friends
are invited to stop by and
visit him.

Dear Annie: How do l talk to my adult children
about divorcing their mother? I've been a good father
and tried hard to be a ~&lt;~od husband, but l kn~"" curl)
on that the rushed deciSion to matTy \Vas a m1stake. I
considered divorce 17 years ago and went to counsel
ing, but my wife said l was the one with the problem.
and things didn't change. I have had a number uf
indiscretions seeking companionship and intim&lt;:~c) .
When my wife said she would tum my chtldre n
against me. I became depressed and had thought~ of
suicide. She has said she will make my life hell if r
leave her. But. Annie, we have no life as a couple, and
I often wish God would take me. My children are
tremendously important, but I tee! manipulated b)
them with their threats of keeping the grandchildren
from seeing me if I divorce their mother. I plan to sta).
in the marriage a little longer for the sake of my
youngest child, who \vill graduate next year. but I
don't know how much more I can take.
My wife and I are both at fault for this broken marriage. T am guilty of many things and have apolo
gized. My children know their mother is difficult to
live with . I want them to understand that the marriap:0
is beyond repair and divorce could be a way to heal. I
am angry that my wife isn't thinking of the children
when she bad-mouths me to them. What can I do? Fearful in the Dakotas
Dear Fearful: Most children. no matter the age, are
upset when their parents divorce. And it is unfortunate
that many spouses try to alienate the other parent
• from the children. When you decide to file, get your
children together for a discussion. Explain that you
love them all deeply and have no intention of enumerating their mother's faults or your own and assess
ing blame. Things just haven't worked out, anq you
are both unhappy. No matter how difficult the situa
tion becomes, it is important that you don't give up
communicating with your children. We also recommend the National Center for Fathering (fathers.com).
which is loaded with information and support.
Dear Annie: A dear friend of mine has become
quite the gum chewer and is tenibly noisy with it popping and cracking, etc. When I quit smoking some
years back, l took up gum chewing and understand
that chomping away can bring pleasure. but I don't do
it in public. "John," however, seems oblivious to his
noise, no matter vvhen or where. I've seen friends give
him nastv looks, but he doesn't notice.
I love John and can endure these noises, but some
of our friends have begun to distance themselves and
he can't understand why. 1 don't want to hu11 his feel ings, so how can 1 tell him his gum chewing is the
reason? - Would Walk Across Croc-Infested

Waters for Him
Dear Would Walk: Say, "Honey. I never realized
how loud our gum cracking has become. When I do '
it, will you please tell me ~o I can stop? It must he
really lrritatmg to others. And I' 11 tell you when ) ou
do it. OK?"
Dear Annie: You told "Confused Bride" that
bridesmaids purchase their own clothing. Where anJ
when did this tradition originate? It is the bride's wedding. and if she can't afford to provide dresses for her
attendants, she shOJ..tld cut back somewhere else, Thts
is a huge expense for young paople. - S.O.
Dear S.O.: Attendants have always supplied their
own attire. Considl!mte brides will allow some flexibility with the gowns. i.e., choosing the color \\bile
allowing the bridesmaids to select their own styk : P l
price. Brides who can afford to spring for the dres-;cs
are welcome to do so and many have. Otherw,o::e.
bridesmaids who cannot manage the expense shouiJ
decline the honor.

Annie's Mailbox is written by Kathy Mitchell and
Marcy Sugar, longtime editors of the Ann Landers
column. Please e-mail your questions to anniesmailhox@comcast.net, or write to: Annie's Mailbox, RO.
Box 118190, Chicago, IL 60611. To find out more
about Annie's Mailbox, aud read features by other
Creators Syndicate writers and Cllrloonists, visit the
Creators Syndicate Web page at www.creators.c:om.

�PageA4

The Daily Sentinel

Thursday, July 2,

Pundits get out if the Iran~ 'green' zone

The Daily Sentinel

1

also "the antithc-.is of all "e
A~ide
from a mass
belicvr" - no worries: it's
deplo) mcnt of force againc:t
(740) 992-2156 ·FAX (740) 992-2157
• all good.
unarmed pr~ltcstors (\\ hich.
www.mydallysentinel.com
AmaLingly, the thought
unfortunately. is not unlikely) what i:-; the worst pos~i­
that th~re might not be a
ble outcome in It an?
pro- we~t hor""' to riJe here
Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
Diana
docsn 't enter the collective
Answer: That it becomes
Dan Goodrich
West
unavoidably clear the postmedia mind, from Left to
Publisher
Right. Such unbraked
election conflict isn't a
struggle betwt•cn tyranny
credulity rdkcts the lllL'dia
Charlene Hoeflich
failure to deal competently
and fret'dom - the epic
General Manager-News Editor
naml!ive we've h~.·en hear- example. so far the swooni- with any non-Weste1 n
ing in absolult', non-con~ cst of all commt:ntators. aspect of blamic societ).
Pam Caldwell
te~table terms. The worst
(harkening to the "s\\ e~:t'' 1 hl')' instant!) project their
Advertising Director
thing that could happen sound of "AIIahu Akbar" as Westem selves onto evcr)next. at ka~t for the ''the rallying cry of the pro- thing every tm1c.
ab ... olute, non-contestable testers"). continue to push
It \\Ould seem ad\ isable to
Congress shall makt• tto law respecting atl
pundit-ocracy.
is that it the opposition propaganda feel one's way into thio;
establisllmt'llt of rel({!ion, or prohibiting the
become~ clear \\e're lookthat ''there arc two interpre- ~tO!'), p,1rticularly after pickfree exercise thereof; or abridging the freedom
ing nt an Intra-Islamic tations of Islam: the aggres- mg up on the mullah-versuspower struggle that has she Islam of Ahmadinejad, mullah action, along \\ ith a
of speech, or of tlu press; or the right of the
nothing to do with liberty or the mercv Islam of few choice highlights of
'People peaceabl)' to assemble, and to petitiotl
"oppo ition"
candidate
and justice for anybod).
Mousa' i''? Probably.
tlze Gor,ernmetrt for a redress ofgrier,ance~.
If this happens. the next
And if a Stalinist-stylc Mou a\ i's resume. Mousa\ i
I que~tion becomes: At what power ~truggle b) way of (who defended the seizure
- The First Amendment to the U.S. Constitution point do said pundits ~1ecca were unmasked, ot American hostages taken
change the color of their would Pulitzer Prize winner ti·om the U.S. embassv there
- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - Twitter
a\ atar~
(Joe Charles Krauthammcr with- in 1979) served as the
Scarborough) and their blog draw his ~weeping claims Ayatollah Khomeini\ prime
backgrounds
(Andre\\ that on Tehran's streets "all minister (and is believed to
Sullivan) back from Islam hang~ in the balance'"? I ha\ c had a conn~:ction to the
green'? And will they ever doubt it. After all, he's still 1983 attack on the Marine
apologize for the russ'?
cooing over "Iraq establish- Corps barracks in Beirut).
Dream on. There·.., some- ing the institutions of a reportedly initiatt:d contact
thing about commenting on young democracy" even a~ \\ ith Pakistan\ A.Q. Khan
the Middle East - really, Prime Minister Nouri al- to launch Iran's nuclear procommenting on Islam - that Maliki is now declaring a gram, and. a~ .John Bolton
causes pundits never to ~ay "great' ictory" over the ''for- recrntl) pointed out. ·'i"
they're sorry. E'en if Iran's eign presence'' nO\\ lea' ing fully. committed to Iranian
protcsh rct1ect a theocmtic Iraq - meaning all U.S. terronsm.'' (So much for the
' po\\cr stntggle bet\\een ri' al troops who have fought and Wall Street Joumal's unconDear Editor:
tested mcntwn of Mousa\ j'&lt;;
·It seem~ that nearly every day there is a new Jaw being mullah:-; - namcl). bet\\een died for that lous) country.
Hashemi
Raf..,anjani.
Akbar
"mercy
Islam.") In a recent
And
how
about
this:
lf
the
passed to take away our fr~edom and ~ocialize our countn.
JaLeera
interview.
The average American seems to accept the fact that our who backs Mir Hos~ein Iranian opposition move- AI
elected officials arc on a steam-roll to shredding our ~lousa\i. and Ali Khamenei. ment turns out not to be Mousavi re,ealed his opinback~
t\ 1ahmoud expressing,
as ron of Ahmadinejad's genoConstitution. Declaration of Independence and Bill of who
Ahmadincjad. it \\ill just be Krnuthammer
recently cidal intention to "wipe
Rights.
time to mo\e on.
wrote. il'i "anti-re!!ime fer- Israel off the map." Mousavi
Doe~ anyone remember that America is the land of the
Such a re\ elation - that \or" but rather fer\or for its sard: "From the beginning. I
free and brave? So many have died for the rights we are letting them trample on. Wake up. America! The American this ma) be a battle bet\\een own re!!ime. \\ill \\C even objected to that phrase.''
The phrase'!
people dc~erve better from their elected representatives. theocratic. anti-Amencan. get the news? Unlikely.
anti-Israel.
pro-Jihad. ··our fundamental values
But there's more. In a
and are beginning to demand it.
demand that America stand 'cminal but barely reported
On July ~4. there will be a special celebration at noon to Khomeinist factions
I :30 p.m for Parkt:rsburg\ Independence Da) should be enough to chill with demonstrators oppos- speech on June 20, :\lousavi
Freedom!fea Rally at Bicentennial Park, next to the Cit} the enthu~iasm ol' any pro- ing a regime that is the explained his movement. It
Building on Market Street. We will be under the Farmer's democracy boo~tcr. But antithesis of all we believe," has nothing to do with freeMarket Canopy, same as the Tea Party in April. This event would the Wall Street Krauthammer wrote. If the dom. w1th modt:rnity or. as
Michael
is non-partisan and funded by local donations from con- Journal'~ Bret Stephens, for demonstrators' regime 1s lran-wat~.:her
cerned citizens.
Make a tasteful and family safe s1gn. or bring a flag to
DO WE REAL~ WANTTHESE
wave and stand or ~it '' ith local concerned citizens. There
CRIMINALS LlVIN6 NEAR US?
will be speaker~. mustc. and information. This event i~
,
open to all concerned citizens.
To help out or volunteer. go to \.1. W\v.wvtea.org or call
Sandy Staats, organizer, at (304) 424-6127.
:Alice Click
111 Court Street • Pomeroy, Ohio

I

R EADE R ' S

2009

V IEW

Wake up!
Tea party rally Saturday

Ledcen has written. a call
''in effect for the end nf the
Islamic Republic as we
knO\\ it." Indeed, Mousavi's
vision as laid out in this
speech has everything to do
with returning Iran to t
past - 1979, to be precise
In a paean to the 1979
Islamic Revolution - ··an
illumination, never experithat .
enced before''
empowered the noxious
A) atollah
Khomeini.
~1ousa\ i explams h,is intent to
f'e\ i\C ''the Islan1ic re\olution
as it was'' and ''the Islamic
Republic as it should be.''
Noting that this "noble message ... excited the younger
!!eneration. a gen~:ration that
had not seen those times. and
felt a di-.tance between ... this
great inheritance." he speaks
of the "righh of the people" to
fair election result&lt;;, and
pledges his lo) alt) to this
cause. And finally th1~:
"We are not up against
our sacred regime and its
legal stntctures; this structure
guards
our
Independence. Freedom and
Islamic Republic. We arc up
.
against the deviations and
d~tceptions and we want t
reform them; a reformatio
that returns us to the pure
principles of the Islamic
Revolution.''
Returning the "sacred
regtme'' to the "pure principles
of the
Islamic
Revolution'' isn 'r the kind
of "reform" most pundits
have in mind. Which should
be enough to tum their faces
ureen _:: J.ihad oreen - but
eIt \\Oil't.
~

(Diana "i&gt;st is the author
of "The Death ofthe Groll'nup: Holl' Amuica \Arrested
Del'e!opment Is Bringing
Down llbtem Cil'ili:.ation,"
and blog.\ at dianawest.net.
She can be contacted via
dianmrest@verizon.net).

•

Mount Alto

TODAY IN HISTORY
Toda) is Thursday, July 2, the 183rd da) of 2009. There 1
are 182 day~ left m the year.
~Joday's Highlight in History: On · July 2. 1776, the
C'9ntinental Congress passed a resolution saying that "these
United Colonies arc. and of right ought to be, free and independent States.''
On this date: In 1881, President James A. Garfield was
shot by Charles J. Guiteau at the Washington railroad sta
t10n; Garfield died the following September. (Guiteau was
hanged in June 1882.)
In 1926. the United States Army Air Corps was created.
"First, do no harm.''
ln 1937. aviator Amelia Earhart and navigator Fred Noonan
Contrary
to popular belief,
di~appeared over the Pacific Ocean while attempting to make
lhe phrase doesn't actually
the first round-the-world flight along the equator.
In 1961. author Ernest Hemingway shot himself to death appear in the Hippocratic
Oath taken by physician,. At
at hb home in Ketchum. Idaho.
Thought for Today: "The instinctive feeling of a great times like the present. ho\\people b often wiser than it~ wbest men:· - Louis evcr. it\ tempting to think it
~ould be added to the pre'IK?ssuth, Hungarian statesman ( 1802-1894).
dential oath of office.
With Iran in fearful tum1oil
LETTERS TO THE
..., ho~c outcome nobody can
predict, some political rivals
EDITOR
arc urging President Obama
Letter.\ to the editor are welcome. They should be less to make a theatrical gesture
than 300 word.\. Al/lt•tter.\ are subject to editing. must be affirming that the United
~tgned. and include addre.n and telephone number. No States remains. as Sen. John
unsigned letters will be published. Letters should be in McCain put it, "tht: greatest
good ta.\te, addressing issues, not personalities. Letters of nation in history.'' The
thanks to organimtions and indh•iduals will not be accept- Washington Post quoted a
intellectual
conservative
ed for publicatum.
lamenting that Obama
"~ccms unwilling to aggressively proJect American global power, as if it were something to be a~hamcd of.''
· Reader Services
&lt;usPs 213-9so&gt;
This would be the same
Correction Policy
Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
McCain
, incidentally. who
Our ma.n concern in all stones 1s to Published every mornmg Monday
announced la~t year that.
be accurate If you know of an error through Friday 111 Court Street.
"We are all Geomians." durin a story, call the newsroom at (740) Pomeroy. OhiO. Second-class postage
992·2156.
paid at Pomeroy.
ing that countr) ·~ brief.
Member: The ASSOCiated Press and
bloody confrontation with
the Oh10 Newspaper Assooauon.
Our main number is
Russia. It was meaningless
Postmaster: Send address correc·
(740) 992-2156.
bravado, forgotten within
to
The
Dally
Sentinel
PO.
Box
lions
Department extensions are:
day~.
One needn't doubt his
729, Porneroy. Ohio 45769.
News
sincerity to note that
Editor: Charlene HoefliCh Ext 12
Subscription Rates
McCain 's audience was
Reporter: Bnan Rood, Ext 14
By carrier or motor route
purely domestic. Pew in the
Reporter: Beth Sergent, Ext. 13
4 weeks •..•.....•••. .'11.30
rebcll
ious former Soviet
52 weeks ••••. •. ••...'128.85
Advertising
republic werc'deccivcd into
Dally .••. •.. •.......•..•50'
Ai:lvertlslng Director: Pam Caldwell,
thinking that Amcricun help
Senior Citizen rates
740·446·23421 Ext 17
26 weeks .•.....•.....'59.61
\Vas on the way.
Retail: Matt Rodgers, Ext. 15
52 weeks ..... ..... • .'116.90
So it is with the Iranian
Retail: Brenda Davis, Ext 16
Subscnbers should remit in advance
ClassJCirc.: Judy Clark, Ext. 10
except more so. It
crisis,
d1rcct to The Daily Sentinel. No subshould
he
lost on nohody scription
by
mail
permitted
in
areas
Circulation
and it definitely resonates in
whore home earner serv1ce IS available.
Circulation Manager: David Lucas,
7~0·446·2342, Ext 11
Tehran - that most, if not
Mail Subscription
District Circulation Manager:
all. of the U.S. ''hardliners''
Inside Meigs County
~keWh1U
urging President Obanw to
12 Weeks
.•••• '35.26
take sides in Iran's di~puted
General Manager
26 Weeks • • • • . • . .'70.70
Charlene Hoeflich, Ext. 12
52 weeks
• . . ...•..'140.11
election spent the preceding
eight year~ urging President
E-mail:
Outside Meigs County
mdsnews 0 myda rysentinel.com
Bush to bomb them to
12 Weeks
. • . .•...'56.55
smithereens.
26
Weeks
•
•
•
•
•
•
.
'113.60
Web:
Porcible "rcgtmc change"
52 Weeks •••••.•• '227.21
www.mydallysenunel com
in Iran wm. a maJor !heme of

Bear witness to the truth in·Iran

The Daily.Sentinel

.

Gene
Lyons

the 1999 "Project for a New
American Century" statement signed by the Bush
administrdtion's leading ncoconservatives - Ciieney.
Rumsfeld. Wolfowitz, etc.
After 9/11 . Iran rendered
assistance to the United
States in attacking AI
Qaeda, a mutual enemv, in
Afghanistan . Bush neveilheless dubbed it part of his illfated "Axis of E\'i},'' absurdly linking Iran to Saddam
Hussein's Iraq. against
whom 1t fought a cata~troph­
ic war duril)g the J980s.
.McCain. it\\ ill he rel'nembered. san!! "Bomb. Bomb
Iran" to ihe tune of the
Beach Bovs· ''Barbara Ann"
during hi; 2008 presidential
campaign. GOP candidate
Rudy Giuliani indicated
he'd consider a pre-empt1ve
nuclear strike on Tehran.
· Hard!) a month pas~cd without some Republican. along
with Democrats like (nowIndependent) Sen. Joe
~ieb~rman. predicting an
tmmment U.S. or Isral'li
strike.
Inside Iran , the results
v.:~rc precisely the opposite
ot what conservative~
claimed to want. The more
categorically they condemned the Iranian regime,
Pre~ident
characterized
~lahmoud Ahmadinejad as
the "new Hitler" (the
Persian George Wallace is
more like ~ it), called

"Supreme
Leader"
Ayatollah Ali Khamenet a
m~:galomaniacal
empire
hui lder (I ran hasn't attacked
an) bod) in 300 years). and
depicted Iranians generally
as an undifferentiated mob
of lslamist fanatics. the
stronger. and more paranoid. the regime gre\\.
How can an) body be surpnsed? What nation \\OUid
react to con~tant threats from
stronger powers by growing
more open and tolerant of
dissent'! This is not to defend
the Iranian regime or its suppression or citizen~ protesting Ahmadincjad's manifestly rraudtllcnt re-l!iection.
Notice, though. that one
thing w~:'re not hearing is
lr~mian . or Iranian-American
voices urging the United
States to get invoh ed. Quite
the opposite. The dnunatic
e\ ents taking place in Iran are
a hwnegmwn mamfestation
of the tension::. and divi.srons
within Persian ~otiety, and of
its uniquely comple\. and
opaque political sy,tem. They
won't be rcsoh cd overnight.
H:l\ ing spent some time
there in our youth. my wife
and I have found oursel\ es
transf1xcd b) the image~
captured on Iranian cell
broadcast
phones and
world\\ ide. 'I hc-.e are the
warm. passionate, dignified
and courageous Persians we
once knew.
We can scarl·ely look at
the Facebook page L'Omm~:mor;~ting ) oung Neda
Agha-Soltan, cut down b) a
rooftop sniper, without
tears. In death, &lt;;he has
hccome a S) mbol of Persian
\\oman hood and yearning
for frc·edom . .Ncda has gi,cn
the movement a face; her
'en name means "a voice.''
\\'hat legitimacy can an)

goYernment claim that resorts
~o murdering young women
m the street? Approximately
the same a~ oflicials in
Alabama and ~lissi~sippi
who set police dogs on civil
rights marchers during the
196(h. as tho-.e responsible
for shootin!! to death collcl!e
students ~protesting the
Vietnam War at Kent Staa
University. or as individua.
who welcomed the assassination of the Rev. Martin
Luther King Jr.
This is~ again. not to
assert a false~ equivalence,
merely to emphasize how
absolutely fitting were
Obama 's carefully chosen
words last week. "The
Iranian government," he
said "must understand that
the world is ~ atching. We
mourn each and ever) inno
cent life that is lost. ...
~~~in Luther King once
sa1d. 'The arc of the moral
unh erse is long. hut it
be~ds toward justice.' I
be he' e that. The international community believes
that. And right nO\\ we arc
bearing ''ltnes~ 'to the
~raman peoples' (sic) belief
111 that truth, and '' e will
continue to bear witness."
As both a religiou~ leader
and a mart) r to freedom, Dr.
Kin~·s name resonates wit~
lran1ans as no otht.: W
American's would. It's that
aspect of the AmcriL'an tradi-'
tion that frightens the Iranian
t~rants; empty threats only
g1ve them excu~cs.
(Arkansa..,
DemocratGazette columni 't Gene
National
Lyons i., a
Mar:a~ine Al\'ard winna
and . co-author of ..
llunnng of the Pre.\ident ..
(St. •Hartin's Pre::..,, 2000!.
}ou can e-mail Lyon\ at
eu~enelyons2@ yahoo.com).

nw

�I

Thursday, July 2, 2009

Local Briefs

4-H club plans fun and service events

PO~tEROY - The Meigs Local Enrichment Foundation
''ill be represented in both the Rutland and Middleport July
4 parades.
Mike Burtrum, president. i~ encouraging those mterested
in the Foundation acth tties. to ··put on their maroon and
ld and join a walking unit lor the two parades."
He said the emphasis v. ill be on promoting the Phil Dirt
the Dozers concl'l1 on July 18 in the Meigs High
School gymnastum to raise money for the Foundation's
projects. The nature trail is cun·ently under construction
and plans arc moving forward for construction of a stadium
on the high school campus. Those walking in the parade
~~ill be handing out fl) crs about the concert. All proceeds
raised at thc concert \\ill go to penefit the Foundation.
Lineup time for the Rutland parade rs 9 a.m. at the Meigs
Local Elementary School or Bricli.. at Depot Streets. The
parade willtm'&gt;ve out at 10 a.m.
In ~tiddlcport the parade \\ill form at 4:45 p.!Jl. on Front
Street r.ear the Dair) Queen and will begin moving through
town at 5 p.m.
·
'"

POMEROY - The following were arraigned in Meigs
unty Common Pleas Comt:
•
Joseph Boyd. two cqunts of non-support of dependants.
Bond set at $1,000 personal recognizance. Trial set for Sept. 9.
• Richard Jeffers, possession of cocaine, trafficking in
cocaine. Bond set at $1.000 personal recognizance. Trial
set for Sept. 7.
• Lee FitJ:patrick, two counts of non-support. S 1.000 personal recognizance bond. Trial set for Sept. 9.
• Steven Shuler, on two counts of non-support. $1.000
per~onal recognizance bond. Trial set for Sept. 1.
• Jason Milliron. on two counts of non-support. S1.000
personal recol!nizancc bond. Trial set for Sept. 3.

Sentenced
P0\1EROY - Tedd) Slater was sentenced in Meigs
County Common Pleas Court to one year. suspended. on a
charge of grand theft. He was ordered to participate in
Community Corrections .

Marriage licenses
PO~EROY - ~latTiage licenses were issued in Meigs
County Probate Court to William Allen Racer. 37, and
Bobby Lee Pierce. 3 ~. Racme: Timothy Edv.ard Shanks, Sr.,
and Nicole Frederick. 36, Pomeroy: William Kurtis Rollins.
23. and Heather Renee Elam. 20. Shade; Timothy Justice
g. 27. and Susan ~arie Leg~, 32, Langsville; Matthew
holas Barringer, 18. and .Manah Lyn HilL 18. Pomerov.
errick Lee Bolin, 26. and Bethany Diana Amberger. 23.
omeroy: James Randall Price. 51. and Lisa Jayne Lutes.
47. Long Bottom; Kevan Ray Hatfield IL 21. and Rebecca
Sue Wolfe, 28. Racine: and William Wesley Hawk. Sr.. 58.
and Cheryl Ann Graham. 50, Pomeroy.

t

Civil War Days to explore the past·

This free support session
is open to the public.
Facilitator Alice Ha\\thome,
director of O'Blenes~ social
service department, will
lead the meeting and discus~ion. Topics for discussion
include grief. bereavement.

ATHENS - O'Biene~s
Memorial
Hospital
in
Athens will host a \\ idoww •d&lt;;m ers_' support group
sesston luesda). Jul~ 14.
from 6 p.m. to 7 p.m. at
Toscano's Restaurant, 4
Depot St., Athens.

P0~1EROY - The Meigs County Health Department
will offer a childhood immunization clinic from 9-11 a.m.
and 1-3 p.m. on Tue~day.

Arraigned

a

COLUMBUS (AP) Tempers tlared Wednesday
as a budget impasse over
Gov. Ted Strickland's gambling proposal intensified.
all but guaranteeing that
Ohio lawmakers will need
at least a second temporary
budget before they can
resolve their differences.
The
GOP-controlled
Senate announced that it
would
begin
hearings
Thursday on Strickland's
proposal to put slot machines
at the state's SC\Cn horse raeing tracks to raise an estimated $933 million over l\\0
years. TI1e House. controlled
by Democrats. \Oted 84-11
to approve a second sevenday budget that would fund
state agencies at 70 percent
of cutTent leveb from .July R
through July 14.
Lawmakers
already
approved, and the governor
s1gned, a temporary budget
for
a
period
from
Wednesday through July 7.

"How can the governor
expect anyone to support him
tf we don't even know what
his plan actually is?'' Senate
President Bill Harris said in a
statement explaining the need
for the hearings, which may
continue into the holiday
weekend. Han·is wants to
knmv how Strickland arrived
at his revenue estimate for the
gambling plan. and what
''ould happen to education
fund in!! if the actual revenue
falls short.
House Democrats took
the move as a signal that the
Senate intends to drag out
the budget proces~. House
Speaker Armond Budish
said Harris wa-; "noncommittal" when asked whether
the Senate would vote to
give Strickland the authority to establish slots if the
hearings made it clear that
was needed.
"For that reason I'm concemed about where these
hearings are going,'' said

I

and recover~ from the los~
of a spouse or life partner.
'I11csc sessions are intended
to aid in the healing process
for the widows and widowers.
welcome
Anyone is
regardless of age. rcligiou~

or sexual affiliation. and
there are no member~hip
due~ or fees to participate.
For more information
Alice
please
contact
Hawthorne at O'Biene~~·
~ocial service department at
(740) 592-9337.

Budish. who said he didn't
find out about the hearings
until Wednesday, despite
meeting with Harris on
Tuesday.
The House moved to
make a statement of its own
by scheduling meetings to
review what nearly $I bitlion in additional cuts to the
$54 billion budget plan
would look like. If the
Senate \',;asn't going to raise
taxes or aw.ee to the slots.
Budish satd, there ,.,.·as no
choice but to resort to further cuts to completely
erase a $3.2 billion deficit.
"Since the Senate has
rejected any tax hike. it's
become apparent that the
Senate intends to propose
deep and painful. cuts to programs and services which
are likely to cause great pain
for the people of Ohio,"
Budish said Wednesday.
The House is considering
options to force the Senate
to vote on the slots propos-

al. One option would have
been to attach the slots proposal to the intenm budget
passed Wednesday.
"We're trying to think
about anything possible'' to
end the stalemate, Bud ish
said.
The temporary budgets
present a planning chalIenge to a host of service
organizations that receive
state funding. including
food banks struggling to
meet a surge in demand.
"Admmistratively it is
chaos," said Lisa Hamler"
Fugitt. executive director ot' .
the Ohio Association of
Second Harvest Foodbanks.
She said the agency is used to
placing three orders for food.
over the course of the year,
and now can only place an
order for seven days. Given
the uncertainty of the budget.
it's hard to know whether the .
food that's on the shelves this
week will be there the next,
Hamler-Fugitt said.

Meigs from Page At
After a report from ~lark rized to proceed with \'ariRhonemus, treasurer/CfO. ous insurance co,·erage
the Board approved the final from the Ohio School Plan
revised permanent appropri- for an annual premium of
ations for fiscal year 2008- $62,135
for
$5
09 of $28.046, 519 (which million/occurence and $7
includes federal money) and million aggregate coverage.
a temporary appropriation
Personnel action included
for the 2009-l 0 year of approving a one-year leave of
$25.452.980 which does not absence to Jennifer Tesar,
include federal money.
who is taking a year off to
The vision insurance complete her PhD program:
renewal with Vision Plus for hiring Morgan Douglas
the next year was approved Halley and Jacquelyn Buck
with no employee premium Harsh as English teachers at
increase; the treasurer and Meigs High on one-year consuperintendent were autho
tracts; and hiring Jeffery

~Weather

Local Stocks

Bissell, auto mechanics
teacher on a 20-day extended
scr. ice contract for the purpose of preparing the shop
and classroom for instruction
and to order. receive and store
materials for auto'mechanics.
Also hired or approved
were Brent Bissell. Middle
school football coach:
Amber Baker. high school
junior varsity basketball and
softball coach: Della Wolfe
and Missy Howard high
school volunteer basketball
Shawn
coaches,
and
Hawley, high school junior

'arsit) basketball coach .
The Board voted to renew
the district's member::.hip in
the Coalition of Rural and
Appalachian Schools at a
cost of $300 and in the Ohio
Coalition for Equity and
Adequacy of School funding at a cost of 50 cents per
student for the commg
school year.
Attending the meeting were
Buckley and Rhonemus, and
board members, Roger·
Abbott, Ron Logan. Barbara
Musser, Larry Tucker. and
Scott Walton.

AMP from Page Al
tance being offered to the
broader business and manufacturing sector?''
The Sierra Club also :-.aid
in its statement "thi~ development raises new doubts
regarding
AMP-Ohio's
commitment to its workers;
over the course of the project. AMP-Ohio has sought
public funding for 'temporary housing· for construction workers. Temporary
housing would only be
if AMP-Ohio
needed
intended to hire large numbers of workers from outside the local area of the
plant. The unemployment
rate for Meigs County was
14.1 percent in May."
"Ohio has a choice,"
Kanfer continued. "We can
continue giving handouts
to the coal industry, or we
can create thousands of
clean energy jobs across
the state. Unless Governor
Strickland acts, this i~ just
more of the same nonsense
that got us in this mess in
the first place.''

l!vening

'

will take place from 10 a.m.
to 2 p.m. on July 25. Project
updates were g ven • by
member~ and the \ev. 'I ork
trip fundraiser to b~.. held on
Sept. 25 was discussed.
For the program Meghan
Short talked about sunburn.
Members painted suncatchers as recreation and Allison
Seers ser.·ed refreshments.
For roll call members
responded by naming their
favorite zoo animals.

Ohio House approves second 7-day budget

GALLIPOLIS - The learn to march and will be
Our House Museum will be shown a variety of memoraholding it's annual Civil bilia items.
War Day on rriday. Jul y 10.
Registration is required,
from to a.m. to 2 p.m. for cost is $15. Pre-payment is
boys age 9 to 12 who will preferable. but can accept
be dressed in period cos- payment that day. Lunch is
tumes provided by the not provided .. It is suggested ; only for companies with
demonstrator.
those attendmg take sack I thousands of employees.''
Costumed volunt&lt;.&gt;ers will lunches. Checks should be Sen. Ste\\art told l11e Daily
gjve each child various made out to O~r House Sentinel employers with
information about life in .\1useum. To regtster. call on.r 500 employees are eliCivil War during this inter- 7~-446~05~6 Deadline for gible to receive self-insured
active experience. Boys v. ill regtstratton IS July 3 ·
status at this time which
- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - AMP-Ohio will have during the construction phase
of the project. After the project is over, the power plant
and adjacent fertiliter plant
Thursday...Partlv sunny clear. Lows in the lower 60s. will provide around 165
with a slight chi111ce of West winds 5 to 10 mph.
permanerlt jobs . Stewart
showers and thunder:-.torms.
Independence Day and added, obviously after the
Highs in the mid 70s. West Saturday night ...Mostly construction phase is over,
winds 5 to 10 mph. Chance cloudy. Highs around 80. the company would no
of rain 20 percent.
Lows around 60.
longer be eligible for selfThursday night...Mostly
Sunday
through insured status
cloudy. A slight chance of Monday...Partly cloudy.
"Subsidizing coal without
showers and thunderstorms Highs in the lower 80s. subsiditing clean energy is
in the evening. Lows in the Lows in the lower 60s.
not only unfair. it's the
upper 50s. West winds 5 to
Monday night. •.Partly exact wrong direction for
10 mph. Chance of rain 20 cloudy in the evening ...Then Ohio," ~aid Enid ~agel.
percent.
becoming mostly clear. chair Of the Sierra Club
Friday... Partly
~unny.
Lows in the lower 60s.
Ohio Chapter. ''This is the
'Highs in the upper 70s.
Tuesday...Mostly sunny. second time Ohio has
West winds 5 to I 0 mph Highs in the mid 80s.
offered financial as'\istance
with gust:-. up to 20 mph.
Tuesday night .•.Mostly to this project that runs
Friday
night ... Mostly clear. Lows around 60.
counter to a national trend
of supporting clean energy.
Wh~ isn't the same a::. sis-

Ohio Valley Bane Corp. (NAS·
DAQ)- 30.25
BBT (NVSE) - 21.69
Peoples (NASDAQ) - 17.56
Pepsico (NVSE) - 56.52
Premier (NASDAQ) - 6.50
Rockwell (NVSE) - 32.52
Rocky Boots (NASDAQ) - 3.89
Royal Dutch Shell - 50.93
Sears Holding (NASDAQ) 65.15
Wai-Mart (NVSE) - 48.37
Wendy's (NVSE) - 4.11
WesBanco (NVSE)- 15.15
Worthington (NVSE) - 13.27
Dally stock reports are the 4
p.m. ET closing quotes of transactions for July 1, 2009, provided by Edward Jones financial
advisors Isaac Mills In Gallipolis
at (740) 441-9441 and Lesley
Marrero in Point Pleasant at
(304) 674-0174. Member SIPC.

Hot dogs and marshmallows v.cn: roasted. Plans for
the Zoo trip \\ill be finalitcd at the next meeting and
4-H projects and judging
will be di~cussed. A special
meeting to be held on July
II at 2 p.m. at the Extension
Oftice was announced
In another meeting of the
group there was a discussion about a county wide
service project for 4-H
clubs at the fairgrounds. It

O'Bleness widow-widowers' support group

Imn1unization clinic

For the Record

Sophie Carleton the 4-H
pledge. For rol_l cal~ m.embcrs
named a fa,onte p1cmc food.
Officers· reports ''ere given
b\ Courtney .!\lather and the
health and ~afety report was
eniven by
. Mcgahan Short..
Advtsor report~ were gt ven
bv Julie Spaun and Kristi
Fin Ia\\. A demonstratton on
woodworking tools was
given by Matthew Werry and
project lesson about chick
ens b) Mattison Finlaw.

POMEROY - A trip to
the Columbus Zoo on Jul\
28 "as planned "hen the
Cowbo)l Boots and Countr)
Roots 4-H Club met June 13
at the home of Mattison
Fin law.
Otht.:r businl!ss indudcd a
discussion on judging dates.
4· H dub shitts \Vert.: handed
out to the 17 member:-. attend
ing. The mccting opened with
Matthew Wcny leading in the
pledge of allegiance and

MLEF to participate in parades

AEP ,(NVSE) - 29.07
Akzo (NASDAQ) - 44.85
Ashland Inc. (NYSE) - 28.20
lots (NVSE) - 21 .06
Evans (NASDAQ) - 29.45
gWarner (NVSE) - 34.40
tury Aluminum (NASDAQ)
- 6.09
Champion (NASDAQ) - 1.66
Charming Shops (NASDAQ) 3.75
City Holding (NASDAQ) - 30.47
Collins (NVSE) - 42.05
DuPont (NVSE) - 25.80
US Bank (NVSE) - 17.58
Gannett (NVSE) - 3.66
General Electric (NYSE)- 11.78
Harley·Davldson (NVSE) - 16.41
JP Morgan (NVSE) - 33.77
Kroger (NVSE) - 22.23
Umited Brands (NVSE) - 12.29
Norfolk Southern (NVSE) 38.18

The Daily Sentinel • Page As

www.mydailysentinel.com

~INI~6 Cfi!TirlaTIO~

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OFFERING 80·40 HOUR CLASSES &amp;
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The Sterra Club's statement closed with: "The proposed AMP-Ohio plant
would be located in i\.leigs
County. which has the highest death rate from lung and
bronchus cancer in the state.
as well as the shortest male
life expectancy. Local residents are already overburdened by air pollution from
four nearby coal-fired
power plants. a manganese
processing facility. and
other polluting industry.
If AMP-Ohio receives the
exemption and then suffers
more
workplace-related
injuries than anticipated
during construction. the
company introduces itself to
risk of default on compensation payments, leaving
workers to rely on an emergency state fund designed to

Purses
ZS% off

continue such payments in
the case of the failure of a
self-insured company. The
compan~ is under investigation by the CS EPA for failing to compl) with the
Clean Air Act at it:-. onlv
other coal plant. the Richard
Gorsuch generating station
in Marietta."

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�PageA6

The Daily Sentinel

Thursday, July

Iraq far behind in mine clearance
BY PATRICK QUINN
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

BAGHDAD - The Iraqi
govcmmcnt"s failure.: to grasp
the scope of ib land mine and
bomb problem has derailed
efforts to clear \Vhat is L:onsidcred one of th~ world's
most contaminated countries.
two United Nations agc.:ndes
said Wednesda\

The go\ ernment has
banned
Ci\'ilian landmine clearance because of
mliitary fears that the old
weapons will wind up in the
hands of militants. That has
threatened Iraq's chances of
meeting its intemationally
mandated obligation to
clear the countrv of land
mmes and unexpioded remnants of war by 20 18.
"The)' are in the same
league as Afghanistan in
AP photo
Jerms of saturation,'' said From left to right: Lt. Gen. Ahmed Hashim. representative of Iraq's ministry of Defense,
Kent Paulusson, the Umted Kent Paulusson, United Nation Development Fund's senior mine action adviser, and
Natton&lt;&gt;
Development Arnold Glmer, special representative of the General Secretary of the UN, presents the
Fund's senior mine action report on the steps taken by Iraq to clear land-mines and unexploded bombs at a meeting
adviser for Iraq Juring a in Baghdad, Iraq, Wednesday.
presentation Wednesday.
"The government needs to lished in a report jointly The U.N. overview cited a UNICEF. the L"Ountrv will
recognize the size of the presented in Baghdad by report that 50 million cluster not meet that deadline in the
problem and deal with it.''
UNDP and UNICEP indi- sub-munitions were used in near future.
Iraq's land mine problem cates that so far the) have Iraq from 1991 to 2006.
'They definitely ..., ill not
is a result of the war \Vith identified 4.000 contamiThe number of 'ictims reach the Ottawa deadline:·
Iran
in
the
19&amp;0's, nated hanrd areas totalin~ from land min~s and other Paulusson said.
Operation Desert Storm in 670 square miles (I .738 unexploded remnants of
Paulusson said that to
199 1 and the 2003 invasion, square kilometers).
war was also unclear clear the areas that have
Paulusson said. While the
Although the number of because of a lack of an ade- already been identifit•d. Iraq
problem has been overshad- remaining mines is unclear. quate reporting mechanism needs 19.000 de-miners
owed b\ the mternal strife an Iraqi report submitteu to in Iraq in recent years.
work ina for the next 10
and ne·ar ci,·il war that the U .~. last vear said that
According to the U.N. years. But it only has 300 for
broke·out three years ago. 20 million anti·-personnel report, land mines and the v.hole country, excludthe deadly weapons remain mines were sown by Iraq's unexploded remnants of ing the Kurdish north, and
buried and scattered across military alone on the borders war have also prevented they've been banned hy the
the country and along its and the southern oil fields economic development of gmcrnment from operating:
borders. The U.N. said they during the.: various wars.
semiausome areas. including Kurdistan's
affect the lives of I .6 mil~ tonomous government has
The two wars ae-ainst the potential oil lields.
lion Iraqis.
United States also littered
lraq became a party to the been running its ov. n de··some areas arc so conta- many part!. of the southcm Ottawa mine ban conven- mining program since 1993.
minated that people can't desert along the borders with tion last year and agreed to
The government banned
live there," Paulusson said. Kuwait and Saudi Arabia clear all areas containing civilian de-miners because
The problem areas are with cluster bombs, in addi- mines and unexploded of security concerns, as
spread across the country, tion to the mines laid by bombs by 2018. According mines and une;\ploded ordiand a partial survey pub- Saddam Hussein's forces. to the U:\'DP and the nance arc.: the pnmary mate-

all

rials fo1 the manufactur~ of
car and roadside bombs. and
Is relying instead on the
military.
The Jraqi environment
ministry has pushed for
ch ilian de-miners to be
allO\H~d to operate, sa) ing
it's the only way to achieve
success quickly. The U.N.
also thinks that the military
does not have the resources
for the job and says it&lt;; engineers ~rc tasked with dcfus~
mg \\Capons being used
aeainst th~m.
~The Iraqi military has said
it can do the job. It docs not
want civilian invoh cmcnt
and claims that private companies have in the past have
proven questkmablc - a
veiled reference to private
security firms.
"Our ministry has spccialiLed and engineering unib
that can de-mine all areas,"
the defense ministl) 's Lt.
Gen. Ahmed Hashim said
during the presentation
Wednesday.
Hashim added that in the
defens~ ministrY's view
"de-mining is a weapon that
can be used in t\\ o directions. The first one is
remo\ ing mine-.. but it can
also be used in harming citizens." 'l11erefore, he said.
the defense ministry feels it
should control de nuning
operations.
Hashim said the ministry
would prove its capabtlity
by de-mining the southern
desett in September.
PNtlusson said part of the
difficulty was with the government's failure to under~tand the size of the challenge and the urgenc) it
·requires. He ::.aid even if the
300 ci\ihan de-miners v.ere
allowed to work it wouldn't
be enough.
"It would take 300 people
about 600 years." he said.

Honduras government's isolation grows after coup
Bv WILL WEISSERT
AND NESTOR IKEDA
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITERS

TEGLCIGALPA.
Honduras - Thousands of
Hondurans demonstrated
Wednesday for the return of
ousted President Manuel
Zelaya, who vowed to fly
home this. weekend despite
a warrant for his arrest.
Thousands more rallied in
favor of the military-backed
government.
Newly appointed President
Roberto Micheletti said it
would take a foreign invasion to put Zelaya back in
power. and said he was sending
a
delegation
to
Washington in an attempt to
reverse the country's increasing international isolation,
though his own foreign minister later denied that.
France, Spain, Italy. Chile
and Colombia joined other
nations Wednesday in
recalling their ambassadors.
T he Pentagon suspended
joint U.S.-Honduran military operations and the
World Bank said it was
freezing loans. Honduras'
three neighbors have suspended cross-border trade.
Soldiers stormed Zelaya's
residence and flew him into
exile Sunday after he insisted on trying to hold a referendum asking Hondurans if
they want to change the constitution. The Supreme
Court, Congress and the military all deemed hi::. planned
ballot illegaL Zelaya backed
down Tuesday. saying he
will no longer push for constitutional changes.
Seeking to stem internal
unrest. Congress approved a
bill Wednesday that toughens a curfew in place since
the coup. The law gives
authorities the power to
conduct warrantless an·est.s
and removes constitutional,
rights to -assembly and
movement during the I0
p.m. to·5 a.m. curfew.
Both sides of the dispute
mobilized supporters in the
streets Wednesday. with a
pro-Zelaya march in the
capital and pro·Micheletti
demonstrations in other
cities. No violence \\as
reported.
"We want Mel~'' 30-yearold farm hand Javier Santos
yelled over a megaphone,
using Zelaya's nickname. as
marchers walked to the local
offices of the Organization of

Alm.•tican States and sang the
national anthem. fi::.ts thrust
skyward. No violence was
reported, though ~usincsscs
yuickly lowered thetr shutters
a" marchers approached.
The largest pro-Mi.chelctti
rally \'v'as in Choluteca. 75
miles ( 120 kilometers) south
of the capitaL where demonstrator~ wore the blue and
white of the Honduran flag.
Those
demonstrations
received heavy coverage on
Honduran television station:-.. which all but ignored
the pro-Zelaya protests.
Leftist hroadcasters say the;
have been forced off the air
or had signals interrupted by
soldiers under orders of the
new gO\·ernment. Micheletti
said he would look into the
allegations.
The OAS gave Micheletti
until Saturday to step aside
before Honduras is suspended from the group. an ultimatum Secretary-General
Jose .\1iguel Insulza said
was mc.:ant "to show clear!)
that military coups will not
be accepted. We thought we
\verc in an era when militat)'
coups were no longer posstble m this hemisphere."
Zelaya delayed plans to
return Thursday to let that
deadline play out.
''I'm going to respect
those 72 hours that the OAS
asked for," he said in
Panama, where he attended
a prestdential inauguration.
In an interviev. v. ith The
Associated
Press.
Micheletti vowed Zelayu
would he arrested if he
returns. even though the
presidents of Argentina and
Ecuador have agreed to
accompany him, along with
the heads of the OAS and
the U.N. General Assembly.
"He can no longer return to
the presidency of the republk:
unless a president from :mother Latin American count!)
comes and imposes him using
guns," Micheletti said.
He abo made a bold claim.
suggesting
the
entire
Honduran population hacks
his interim government.
Though /..claya still enjoys
strong support. especially
among the poor majority.
Micheletti warned that all
"7 .5 million Hondurans \\ill
be ready to detend our ten·itory" agmnst a foreign invasion.
Hi s foreign minister,
Enrique Ortez. also threatened Zelaya's escorts, sayirig:
"We will let his companions

•

enter if they represent friend- news conference.
ly countries. If not. no."
On Titcsday, :\1ichdcttt :;aid
The ne\\ govc.:rnment was he was worried alxM the poson a long-shot diplomatic sibilit~· of inva-;ion from other
offensive Wednesday, order- Latin Amencan countdes. He
ing home Honduras· pro- did not name specific counZclaya ambassadors to the tries. but earlier Chave1 said
lJnited States. th&lt;.. Umted any aggression toward Zelaya
Nations and the OAS. U.N. from Micheletti's government
Ambassador Jorge Arturo should prompt a military
Reyna said he t&lt;'lok order~ intervention by the United
only from Zelaya's govern- Nations.
ment. but Honduras· ambasVenezuela's socialist leader
sador to the United States said Wednesday that he
returned home and ::.aid he would have liked to accompawas
recognizing ny L'~laya when he relums to
}londuras this weekend, but
Micheletti\ govemment.
"This is not a coup d'etat. deddcd it wasn't "prudent.''
but rather a process in . "I wanted to go. but I
which a judicial order ha-. shouldn't. if I'm going to be
been carried out,'' Roberto at all prudent," he said.
Flore~ Bem1udez :said.
"Now they're ~aytng it's Ill)
The amba~sador to the fault - the coup-plotters
OAS could not be located are saying ifs my fault they
for comment.
overthrew Zelaya."
Later
Wednesday.
l'vlichcletti also said that
Micheletti
blamed Honduras had sent a delega\'ene:welan Prc!)idcnt Hugo tion to Washington. hoping to
Chavez - a vocal leftist wm international support that
ally of Zdaya - forth~ cri- has eluded the new governsis Honduras faces.
ment. The coup has bec.:n con"The intervention of demned by countries worldChavez is dear and well- wide from across the political
defined in the situation spe~.·tnun. a-; well as by the
Hondura:;
ts
living U.N. General Assembly.
through ." .Micheletti told a
.\tichcletti
said

Wcdne::.dny tnorning that
the delegation had already
arrived in Washington. But
Ortez later said nobody had
been sent. ln-.ulza's deput),
Albert Ramdin. said the
OAS would not receive an)
pro-Michelctti delegation
in any case.
"Members of the OAS
stated \'cry clearly that we
don't recognize an) body
else than President Zelaya
as constitutional president
of Honduras,'' he said.
The Obama administration
has also sided clearly with
Zelaya. despite criticism from
Republicans that this puts it
on the same side as Chavez
and the Castros in Cuba.
,\llicheletti told the AP he has
had no contacts with an) U.S.
of1iciul since the coup.
P~ntagon

~pokt·sman

Brvan
Whitman
said
Wednesday that joint t.:.S.Honduran military operations ure on hold ··ns \\ c
as~ess that situation.'' The
U.S. has close relations with
Honduras· military and has
some ROO personnel at an air
ba~e north of the Honduran
capital used primarily for
anti-dntg operations.

2, 2009

Group: World
failing to halt
biodiversity
decline
B Y BRADLEY

S. KLAPPER

ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

GENEVA

Governments are failing to
stem a rapid decline in biodiversity that is now threatenin!! extinction for almost
half ~the \\ orld 's coral reef
species, a third of amphibians and a yuarter of mammals . a leading cnvironmentJl grmt{~ warned Thursday.
''l ife on Ea11h is under
~erious
threat,''
the
International Union for
Conservation of Nature
said in a 155-page report
that describes the past five
years of a losing battle to
protect species. natural
habitats and geographical
regions from the devastating effects of man.
IUC:\1. the producer of the
"orld 's Red List of endangered animals, analyzed
over 44.000 species to test
government pledges earlier
this decade to halt a global
loss in biodiversity by 201.
That target \\ill not be m
the Gland. Switzerlandbased body said. describing
the prospects of coral reefs
as the most alarming. It also
said slightly more amphibians. mammals and birds
were in peril compared to
five ~ears ago. with species
most prized by humans for
food or medicine as disproportionately threatened.
"Biodiversity continues to
decline and next year no
one wi 11 dispute that," said
Jean-Christophe Vie. the
report's senior editor. "It's
happenrng everywhere."
Vie told The Associated
Press that biodiver~ity threats
need to be highlighted and
combatted. even at a time
"hen many world leaders are
preoccupied by economic
recession and financial instabilitY. Unlike markets and
debt;. animal extinction is an
in·eversiblc clement '
todav's "wildlife crisis."
He urged governments
usher in major changes to
societ). such as reducing
cnerg) and overall consumption. redesigning cities and
rcas~es~ing the em ironmental consequences of globalization - producing goods
in one part of the world and
::.ending them thousands of
mile~ to be sold.
Vie said climate chane-e
only threatened to make the
-.ituation worse.
Governments pledged in
2002 at a meeting of the
U .~.
Biodiversity
Comention and the World
Summit on Sustainable
De\ elopment to halt biodiversity decline b)' the end of
the decade. European governments have set a similar
goal among themselves.
In Europe, "about 50 percent of "pecic.s are under
threat or Htlnerable," said
Barbara
Hclfferich.
a
European Union spok.
woman. "Habitats are shrin
ing and a lot needs to be
done. We are doing a lot. but
it's not enough as promised
to halt biOdiversity loss."

July 3rd, 4th, and Sth
Main Facility
Meigs Facility
Jackson Facility
Athens Facility

HOLZER
CLINIC

1pm-9pm

11am-9pm
11am-9pm
9am-9pm

•
l

�I

Thursday, July 2, 2009

Local Briefs

4-H club plans fun and service events

MLEF to participate in parades
P0~1EROY - The ~ kigs Local Enrichment Foundation
"ill be represented m both the Rutland and Middleport July
4 parades.
.Mike Bartrum. presitknt. is encouraging those mterested
in the Foundation IH.'tivitics. to .. put on their maroon and
ld and join a walking unit for the t\'vO parades."
He said the emphasis will be on promoting the Phil Dirt
d the Dozers concert on Jul) 18 in the Meigs High
School gymnasium to raise money for the Foundation's
projects. The nature trail is cutTently under construction
and plans arc moving forward for construction of a stadium
on the high school campus. Those walking in the parade
~viii be handing out ll)~rs about the concert. All proceeds
raised at the concert "ill co to benefit the Foundation.
Lineup time for the Rutland parade is 9 a.m. at the Meigs
Local Elementary s~hool or Btick at Depot Streets. The
parade will mo\·e out at 10 a.m.
In Middleport the parade will form at 4:45 p.rp. on Front
Street 1.ear the Dair) Queen and will begin moving throul!h
town at 5 p.m.
"'

Immunization clinic
PO~tEROY - The ~teigs County Health Department
will offer a childhood immunization clinic from 9-11 a.m.
and 1-3 p.m. on Tuesday.

For the Record
Arraigned
POMEROY - The following were arraigned in Meigs
unty Common Pleas Court:
•
Joseph Boyd. two counts of non-support of dependants.
Bond set at $1,000 personal recognizance. Trial set for Sept. 9.
• Richard Jeffers, possession of cocaine. trafficking in
cocaine. Bond set at S1.000 personal recognizance. Trial
set for Sept. 7.
• Lee Fitzpatrick, two counts of non-support. Sl ,000 personal recogmzance bond. Trial set for Sept. 9.
• Steven Shuler, on two counts of non-support. $1 .000
personal recognizance bond. Trial set for Sept. 1.
• Jason Milliron. on two counts of non-support. $1.000
personal recognizance bond. Trial set for Sept. 3.

Sentenced
POMEROY - Tedd) Slater ~as sentenced in Meigs
County Common Pleas Court to one year, suspended, on a
charge of grand theft. He was ordered to participate in
Community Corrections.

Marriage licenses
POMEROY - Marriage licenses were issued in Meigs
County Probate Court to William Allen Racer. 37, and
Bobby Lee Pterce. 34, Racine: Timothy Edward Shanks. Sr..
and Nicole Frederick, 36, Pomeroy: William Kurtis Rollins,
23. and Heather Renee Elam. 20. Shade: Timothy Justice
g. 27. and Susan Marie Legg, 32, Langsville; Matthe~
holas Barringer. 18. and Mariah Lyn Hill, 18. Pomeroy.
errick Lee Bolin, 26. and Bethany Diana Amberger. 23.
omeroy: Jame' Randall Price, 51. and Lisa Jayne Lutes,
47. Long Bottom; Kevan Ray Hatfield II. 21. and Rebecca
Sue Wolfe. 28. Racine: and William Wesley Hawk. Sr.. 58.
and Cheryl Ann Graham, 50. Pomero).

t

Civil War Days
to explore the past ·
GALLIPOLIS - The
Our House Museum will be
holding it's annual Civil
War Day on Friday, July 10,
from 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. for
boys age 9 to 12 who will
be dressed in period costumes provided by the
demonstrator.
Costumed -.oluntecrs will
gj-.e each child various
information about life in
Civil War during this interactive experience. Boys will

. ocal

The Daily Sentinel • Page As

www.rnydailysentinel.com

learn to march and will be
shown a variety of memorabilia items.
Registration is required,
cost is $15. Pre-payment is
preferable, but can accept
payment that day. Lunch is
not provided. It is suggested
those attending take sack
lunches. Checks should be
made out to Our House
Museum. To register. call
740-4-t-6-0586. Deadline for
registration is July 3.

Weather

Thursday...Partly sunny clear. Lows in the lower 60s.
with a slight chance of West winds 5 to 10 mph.
showers and thunderstorms.
Independence Day and
Highs in the mid 70s. West Saturday night...Mostly
winds 5 to I 0 mph. Chance cloudy. Highs around 80.
of rain 20 percent.
Lows around 60.
Thursday night ...Mostly
Sunday
through
cloudy. A slight chance of Monday ...Partly cloudy.
showers and thunderstorms Highs in the lower 80s.
in the evening. Lows in the Lows in the lower 60s.
~londay
night ...Partly
upper 50s. West winds 5 to
10 mph. Chance of rain 20 cloudy in the evening .. .Then
percent.
becoming mostly clear.
Friday... Partly
::.unny. Lows in the lower 60s.
' Highs in the upper 70s.
Tuesday...Mostly sunny.
West winds 5 to 10 mph Highs in the mid 80s.
with gusts up to 20 mph.
Tuesday night...Mostly
Friday
night ... ~lostly clear. Lows around 60.

Local Stocks

Sophie Carleton the 4-H
pledge. For roll call members
named a fav01ite picnic food.
Ofticers' reports were given
bv Courtnev Mather and the
health and safety report was
gi\'en by Mcgahan Short.
Advisor reports were given
by Julie Spaun and Kristi
1-'inla~. A demonstration on
woodworking tools was
given by Matthew Werry and
a project lesson about chick
ens by Mattison Finlaw.

POMEROY - A trip to
the Columbus Zoo on Jul\
28 was planned when the
Cowbo).' Boots and Country
Roots 4-H Club met June 13
at the home of Mattison
Fin law.
Other business inclu&lt;.led a
discussion on judging Jates.
4-H club shirts were hanued
out to the 17 members attending. The meeting opened with
Matthew Wen-y leading in the
pledge of allegiance and

Hot dogs and marshmallows wen: roasted. Plans for
the Zoo trip will be finalitcd at the next meeting and
4-H projects t~nd judging
will be discussed. A special
meeting to be held on July
II at 2 p.m. at the Extension
Office was announced
In another meeting of the
group there was a discussion about a county wide
service project for 4-H
clubs at the fairgrounds. It

will take place from 10 a.m.
to 2 p.m. on July 25. Project
updates were given by
members and the New York
tnp fundraiser to be held on
Sept. 25 \vas discussed.
For the program Meghan
Short talked about sunburn.
Members painted suncatchers as recreation and Allison
Seers served refreshments.
For roll call members
respol}ded by naming their
favorite zoo animals.

O'Bleness widow-widowers' support group
This free support session
is open to the public.
Facilitator Alice Hawthorne.
director of O'Bieness social
service department. will
lead the meeting and discussion. Topics for discussion
include grief. bereavement.

ATHENS - O'Blene~~
Memorial
Hospital
in
Athens will host a widowwidowers' support group
session Tuesday. July 14.
from 6 p.m. to 7 p.m. at
Toscano's Restaurant. 4
Depot St., Athens.

and recovery from the loss
of a spouse or life partner.
These sessions are intended
to aid in the healing process
for the widows and widowers.
Anyone is welcome
regardless of age, religious

or sexual affiliation. and
there are no membership
dues or fees to participate.
For more information
please
contact
Alice
Hawthorne at O'Bleness'
social service department at
(7 40) 592-9337.

Ohio HouSe approves second 7-day budget
"How can the governor
COLUMBUS (AP) Tempers flared Wednesday expect anyone to support him
as a budget impasse over if we don't even know what
Gov. Ted Strickland's gam- his plan actually is?" Senate
bling proposal intensified, President Bill Harris said in a
all but guaranteeing that statement explaining the need
Ohto lawmakers will need for the hearings. which may
at least a second temporary continue into the holiday
budget before they can weekend. Harris wants to
know how Strickland arrived
resolve their differences.
GOP-controlled at his revenue estimate for the
The
Senate announced that it gambling plan. and what
would
begin
hearings would happen to education
Thursday on Strickland's funding if the actual revenue
proposal to put slot machines falls short.
at the state's seven horse racHouse Democrats took
ing trc.1cks to mise an estimat- the move as a signal that the
ed $933 million over two Senate intends to drag out
years. The House. controlled the budget process. House
by Democrats. 'oted 84-11 Speaker Armond Budish
to approve a second seven- said Harris was "noncomday budget that would fund mtttal" when asked whether
state agencies at 70 percent the Senate would vote to
of current levels from July 8 give Strickland the authorithrough July 14.
ty to establish slots if the
Lawmakers
already hearings made it clear that
approved. and the governor was needed.
''For that reason I'm consigned, a temporary budget
for
a
period
from cerned about where these
Wednesday through July 7. hearings are going," said

Budish. who said he didn't
find out about the hearings
until Wednesday, despite
meeting with Harris on
Tuesday.
The House moved to
make a statement of its own
by scheduling meetings to
review what nearly $1 billion in additional cuts to the
$54 billion budget plan
would look like. If the
Senate wasn't going to raise
taxes or a~ree to the slots.
Bu&lt;.lish satd, there was no
choice but to resort to further cuts to completely
erase a $3.2 billion deficit.
"Since the Senate has
rejected any tax hike. it's
become apparent that the
Senate intends to propose
deep and painful, cuts to programs and . services which
are likely to cause great pain
for the people of Ohio,''
Budish said Wednesday.
The House is considering
options to force the Senate
to vote on the slots propos-

al. One option would have
been to attach the slots proposal to the interim budget
passed Wednesday.
''We're trying to think
about anything possible" to
end the stalemate. Budish
said.
The temporary budgets
present a planning challenge to a host of service
organizations that receive
state fundmg. including
food banks struggling to
meet a surge in demand.
.. Admmistratively it is
chaos," said Lisa Hamler- .
Fugitt, executive director ot' .
the Ohio Association of ·
Second Harvest Foodbanks.
She said the agency is used to
placing three orders for food .
over the course of the year,
and now can only place an
order for seven days. Given
the uncertainty of the budget,
it's hard to know whether the ·
food that's on the shelves this
week will be there the next,
Harnler-Fugitt said.

Meigs from Page Al
After a report from Mark rized to proceed with vari- Bissell, auto mechanics
Rhonemus. treasurer/CFO, ous insurance coverage teacher on a 20-day extended
the Board approved the final from the Ohio School Plan ser. ice contract tor the purrevised permanent appropn- for an annual premium of pose of · preparing the shop
ations for fiscal year 2008- $62,135
for
$5 and classroom for instruction
09 of $28.046, 519 (which million/occurence · and $7 and to order. receive and store
includes federal money) and million aggregate coverage. materials for auto'mechanics.
a temporary appropriation
Personnel action included
Also hired or appro\·ed
for the 2009-1 0 year of approving a one-year leave of were Brent Bissell. Middle
$25,452,980 which does not absence to Jennifer Tesar. school football coach;
include federal money.
who is taking a year off to Amber Baker. high school
The vision insurance complete her PhD program: junior varsity basketball and
renewal with Vision Plus for hiring Morgan Douglas softball coach; Della Wolfe
the next year was approved Halley and Jacquelyn Buck and Missy Howard high
with no employee premium Harsh as English teachers at school volunteer basketball
increase; the treasurer and Meigs High on one-year con- coaches,
Shawn
and
superintendent were autho- tracts; and hiring Jeffery Hawley, high school junior

varsity basketball coach.
The Board voted to renew
the district's membership in
the Coalition of Rural and
Appalachian Schools at a
cost of $300 and in the Ohio
Coalition for Equity and
Adequacy of School funding at a cost of 50 cents per
student for the commg
school year.
Attending the meeting were
Buckley and Rhonemus. and
board members, Roger ·
Abbott, Ron Logan, Barbara
Musser, Larry Thcker. and
Scott Walton.

AMP from Page Al
only for companies with
thousands of employees.''
Sen. Stewart told The Dail)
Sentinel employers with
over 500 employees are eligible to recetve self-insured
status at this time \\ hich
AMP-Ohio will ha\ e during the c?nstruction phase
of the proJect. After the project is over, the power plant
and adjacent fertilizer plant
will provide around 165
permanent jobs. Stewart
added. obviously after the
construction phase is over,
the company would no
longer be eligible for selfinsured status.
"Subsidi;:ing coal without
subsidizing clean energy is
not only unfair. it's the
exact wrong direction for
Ohio." sa1d EniJ Na~el.
chair 6f the Sierra C~lub
Ohio Chapter. "This is the
second time Ohio has
offered finandal assistance
to this project that runs
counter to a national trend
of supportmg dean energy.
j Why isn't the same assls-

tance being offered to the
broader business and manufacturing sector?'"
The Sierra Club also said
in 1ts statement "this development raises new doubts
regarding
AMP-Ohio's
commitment to its workers:
over the course of the project. AMP-Ohio has sought
public funding for 'temporary housing' for construction workers. Temporary
housing would only be
if AMP-Ohio
needed
intended to hire large numbers of workers from outside the local area of the
plant. The unemployment
rate for Meigs County was
14.1 percent in May."
• Ohio has a chotec,"
Kanfer continued. "We can
continue giving handouts
to the coal industry, or we
can create thousands of
clean energy jobs across
the state. Unless Governor
Strickland acts. this is just
more of the same nonsense
that got us in this mess in
the first place."

The Sierra Club's statement closed with. "The proposed AMP-Ohio plant
would be located in Meigs
County. which has the highest death rate from lung and
bronchus cancer in the state,
as well as the shortest male
life expectancy. Local residents are already overburdened by air pollution from
four nearby coal-fired
power plants, a manganese
processing facility. and
other polluting industr).
If AMP-Ohio receives the
exemption and then suffers
more
workplace-related
injuries than anticipated
during construction. the
company introduces itself to
risk of default on compensation payments. leaving
workers to rely on an emergency state fund designed to

continue such payments in .
the case of the failure of a
self-insured company. The
compan) IS under investigation by the GS EPA for failing to compl) with the
Clean Air Act at its only ·
other coal plant. the Rtchard
Gorsuch generating station
in Marietta:·

b'ening

AEP (NYSE) - 29.07
Akzo (NASDAQ) - 44.85
Ashland Inc. (NYSE) - 28.20
Lots (NYSE) - 21.06
Evans (NASDAQ) - 29.45
gWarner (NYSE) - 34.40
tury Aluminum (NASDAQ)
-6.09
Champion (NASDAQ) - 1.66
' Charming Shops (NASDAQ) 3.75
City Holding (NASDAQ)
30.47
Collins (NYSE) - 42.05
DuPont (NYSE) - 25.80
US Bank (NYSE)- 17.58
Gannett (NYSE) - 3.66
General Electric (NYSE) - 11.78
Harley-Davidson (NYSE)- 16.41
JP Morgan (NYSE) - 33.77
Kroger (NYSE) - 22.23
Limited Brands (NYSE) - 12.29
Norfolk Southern (NYSE) 38.18
II

Ohio Valley Bane Corp. (NASDAQ)- 30.25
BBT (NYSE) - 21.69
Peoples (NASDAQ)- 17.56
Pepsico (NYSE) - 56.52
Premier (NASDAQ) - 6.50
Rockwell (NYSE) - 32.52
Rocky Boots (NASDAQ) - 3.89
Royal Dutch Shell- 50.93
Sears Holding (NASDAQ) '
65.15
Wai·Mart (NYSE) - 48.37
Wendy's (NYSE) - 4.11
WesBanco (NYSE)- 15.15
Worthington (NYSE) - 13.27
Dally stock reports are the 4
p.m. ET closing quotes of trans·
actions for July 1, 2009, provid·
ed by Edward Jones financial
advisors Isaac Mills In Gallipolis
at (740) 441-9441 and Lesley
Marrero In Point Pleasant at
(304) 674-0174. Member SIPC.

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�Inside

Bl

The Daily Sentinel

Sports shorts, Page 82
Pistons sign Gordon. Villanue\'a, Page 82
Shaq arrives in Cleleland, Page 86

Thursday, July 2, 2009
~. . "''"....

records
fifth ace of
Riverside season

Stone wins frrst half of Riverside
Senior Men's Golf League

STAFF REPORT
MOSSPORTSOMYOAILYSENTINEL.COM

STAFF REPORT
MOSSPORTSOMYOAILYSENTlNEL.COM

MASON, W.Va. - Scott
Husell, a riverboat captain
on the Mississippi and Ohio
rivers has made the tifth
hole in one of the 2009 season at Riverside Golf
Course in Mason. Hussell
used a nine iron to ace the
131 yard ninth hole. Hussell
was
playing
in
the
Wednesday night men's
golf league as a substitute
during the shot. Witnessing
the event was James Toth of
Point
Pleasant, Curti s
Roush of West Columbia,
and Fred
Bryant of
Gallipolis, Ohio.
This marks the second ace
of Hussell 's career, his first
being on the same hole
uly 20, L994, when the
•
wal:l then the seventh
hole at Riverside.

SPORTS BRIEFS

Rio 300 Club
tickets available
RIO GRANDE - The
University of Rio Grande
men's and women's basketball programs are gearing up
for the annual 300 Club Golf
Outing and Raffle. Tickets
are now available for the
event.
The Golf Outing will be
held Saturday.August l at the
Franklin Valley Golf Course
in Jackson, OH with a shotgun start beginning at 8:30
a.m. The dinner/raffle will
be August 22 inside the Newt
Oliver Arena. The dinner
begin at 6 p.m. with the
ing to be held at 7 p.m.
ru&gt;t year, Gallipolis resiBetty Moore V.'as the
winner of the grand prize of
$10,000.
' The cost for a ticket to the
300 Club raffle is $100 and
the grand prize award is once
again $10.000.
The 300 Club Golf Outing
and Raffle will officially kick
off the 2009-10 season. a season in which the RedStorm
will begin competition in the
Mid-South Conference.
The raffle is the main
fundraiser for the men ·s and
women's basketball programs. The proceeds are
used for both programs to
participate in a tournament in
Hawaii every four years.
If you are interested in participating in the 300 Club raffle contact Rio Grande head
men's basketball coach Ken
French at (740) 245-7294 or
by
e-mail
at
kfrench@rio.edu.
u may also contact Rio
de head women's bas•
ketball coach Da.,id Smalley
at (740) 245-7491 or by email at dsmalley@rio.edu

Wellston youth
basebaWsoftball
tournaments
WELLSTON
The
Wellston Ohillco Society
will hold the annual Toni
Parsons Mega Summer
Classic on Friday, July 17.
through Sunday. July 19, at
Veterans Memorial Park.
There is a $200 entry fee
for the 10-and-under and 12and-under divisions in baseball. while there will be a
$300 entry fee in softball for
the 10-and-under, 12-andunder, 14-and-under and 16and-under divisions.
There is also a $I 50 entry
fee for the 8-and-under age
ups in both baseball and
balL
ach team Will be guaranred:l4 games. Awards will be
given to the top two teams in
each division. A SIOO nonrefundable deposit must be
paid prior to the draw on
July 15.
Each team must furnish
two approved balls and only
36 teams will be accepted.
Contact Jason Wilson at
740-357-8471
or John
Derrow at 740-7 10-5069 for
more infom1ation, or email
jsderrow@aol.com

l

MASON. W.Va. - Carl
Stone of Ripley has taken
~he fi.rst half championship
m the 2009 Riverside
Senior Men's Golf League.
Stone amassed 163.5
points to best Chet Thomas
of Patriot by 31.5 points.
as Thomas scored 132 total
points to finish runner-up.
Claude Proffitt was third
with 128 points. followed
by Mick Winebrenner and
Ralph Sayre with respec
ti ve totals of 122.5 and
ll8. Earl Johnson wa~
sixth with 114 points.
The first six places v.·ere
awarded gift certificates

totaling $300 in prizl!s.
The players \\til start their
point totals from scratch
starting next Tuesday ..
A total of 82 players
were
on
hand
for
Tuesday's halfway match.
There were 19 teams of
four players and two teams
of three players. -which
made for a possible total of
21 points.
The low score for the
day was 55 ( 15-under par)
by the team of Pat Harbour
(Letart), Bob Stewart
(Cottageville),
Bill
Stricklin (Point Pleasant)
and
Jack
Maloney
(Gallipolis).
There was a two-way tie

for second place with identical scores of 57. or 13under par. Those sc:ores
were fired by the teams of
Mick
Winebrenner
(Racine). Boyd Corn-well
(Athens). Catbird Roush
(Gallipo li s) and Haske!
Jones (Charleston), a!&gt; well
as Carl Stone (Ripley).
Dick Dugan (Racine). Tom •
Hoschar (West Columbia)
and
Bub
Sti'vers
(Pomeroy).
The closest to the pin
winners were Chet Thomas
(Patriot) on No.9 and Carl
Stone (Ripley) on No. 14.
A total of 123 different
players attended the first
half of the season.

Riverside Seniors
Golf League
Carl Stone
Chet Thomas
Claude Proffitt
M1ck Winebrenner
Ralph Sayre
Earl Johnson
Haskel Jones
D1ck Dugan
John Thompson
Bob Oliver
Ken Wh1ted
Jim Lawrence
Bob Stewart
Curtis Grubb
Bill Pethtel
Bub Stivers
Bill Winebrenner
Rich Mabe
Pat Williamson
Jimmy Joe Hemsley
Siebert Belcher
J1m Spencer
Bob Humphreys
Bill Yoho
Jack Maloney
Butch Bookman
Don Waldie
Frank Brown
J1m Gress
Willis Dudding
Phil Burton
Bob Avery
Charlie Hargraves
Bob Hill
Jack Ocheltree
Paul Lanham

163.5
132.0
128.0
122.5
118.0
114.5
112.5
112.5
111.0
109.0
108.0
106.0
104.0
102.5
98.5
97.0
97.0
96.5
95.5
94.5
94.5
92.0
90.0
86.5
86.6
86.0
86.0
85.0
83.0
83.0
81.5
80.5
80.5
80.0
79.5
79.5

Cueto, Reds blank slumping D-Backs 1-0
CINCINNATI (AP) Right-hander Johnny Cueto
settled in after two wild
innings on Wednesday
night, and Joey Votto singled home a sixth-inning
run that sent the Cincinnati
Reds to a l-0 victory over
the
slumping
Arizona
Diamondbacks.
Arizona has lost nine of
1} due largely to an offense
that's among the NL's
worst. The Diamondbacks
managed only an infield hit
during six innings against
Cueto (8-4) and a bunt single off the bullpen.
Jon Garland (4-8) pitched
six solid innings but couldn't break the longest losing
streak of his career. The
right-hander hasn't won
since May 19. going 0-6
with a pair of no-decisions.
Blame Arizona's offense.
which has scored three or
fewer runs in five of those
games.
The Diamondbacks had
their best chance in the seventh, when Gerardo Pana
bunted for Arizona's second
hit and Arthur Rhodes
loaded the bases with two
outs on a pair of walks.
Felipe Lopez flied out to
end the threat.
Francisco
Cordero
pitched a pe1fect ninth for
his 19th save in 20 chances,
completing
Cincinnati's
seventh shutout of the season.
Cincinnati scored in the
six:th with a pair of hits over
the infield. Chris Dickerson
hit a soft liner to center for a
single, advanced on a
groundout and came around
on Votto's single to center,
another ball that found the
right spot.
Since he was reinstated
from a stint on the disabled
list for anxiety issues. Votto
has gone 11 for 32.

Please see Reds, Bl

AP photo

Cincinnati Reds starter Johnny Cueto pitches against the Arizona Diamondbacks in the
first inning of a baseball game on Wednesday in Cincinnati.

White Sox
sweep Tribe
CLEVELAND (AP) Jose Contreras got a rare
road win as the right-hander, shipped to the minors
earlier this season. pitched
eight superb innings and the
Chicago White Sox won
their fifth straight. 6-2 over
the
lifeless
Cleveland
Indians on Wednesday
night.
Contreras (3-7) improved
to 3-2 with a 2.17 ERA
since being recalled from
Triple-A
Charlotte.
a
month-long .
demotion
prompted by the 37-yearold opening the season 0-5.
The right-hander, who was
just 1-6 in his previous 10
road starts, had little trouble
with the Indians.
Contreras allowed two
runs and five hits, pitching
into the eighth for the fourth
time since being recalled.
He struck out e ight and
walked one.
Cleveland has dropped
five 111 a row, 13 of 15 and
the Indians' slide into
obscurity shows no signs of
ending anytime soon.
Chicago backup catcher
Ramon Castro hit a threerun homer off Jeremy
Sowers (2-6) m a four-run
sixth as the White Sox
improved to 12-4 since June
13 to move within three
games of first-place Detroit.
The White Sox completed
their first three-game sweep
of Cleveland since the final
weekend of the 2005 season. when they knocked the
Indians out of the playoff
race.
Sowers ran into a familiar
problem in the sixth inning:
the sixth inning.
The left-hander has had
trouble getting outs his third
time through a lineup and
the White Sox tagged him
for four runs and five hits to
open a 5-1 lead.
Jim Thome and Paul
Konerko hit consecutive
singles before Castro, batting . 105 since being
acquired from the New York
Mets in May, drove Sowers'
first pitch over the fence in
right to make it 4-l. Jayson
Nix followed with a double
and scored on Gordon
Beckham's single.
Cleveland closed within
5-2 in the sixth on back-toback doubles by Victor
Martinez and Shin SooChoo.
The Indians came in hitting just .218 ( 12 of 55) in
the previous two games and
scored only 11 runs in the
past four. They took their
first lead of the series in the
second, but missed a chance
to have a big inning against
Contreras .
J amey Carroll singled and
Ben Francisco, in a 4-for-37
slide. doubled to put runners
at second and third with
nobody out. However,

Please see Tribe, Bl

Judge lifts Mayfield's suspension
CHARLOTTE, N.C. (AP)
-Two months after a positive drug test for metham- .
phetanunes,
Jeremy
Mayfield is getting ready to
retum to NASCAR.
U.S. District Court Judge
Graham
Mullen
on
Wednesday issued a temporary injunction to allow the
driver to get back behind the
wheel
at
Daytona
International Speedway this
weekend.
"This is huge for us,''
Mayfield said. "This means
more to me probably than
any race I've ever won or
anything."
Concluding the "likelihoo9 of a false positive in
this case is quite substantial.'' Mullen said as he ruled
in Mayfield's favor after
about two hours . of ar$uments, ,
m.cludtng
NAS&lt;;AR.s contention that
Mayf1cld IS a d~nger to. ~he
sport . after testmg pOSitiVe
for htgh amounts of a dangerous, illegal drug.
But Mullen sided with

Mayfield's attorney, Bill
Diehl. who argued the test
results would only be accurate if Mayfield were a
habitual meth user. 1f
Mayfield used the drug at
the levels the NASCAR test
indicated, Diehl suggested
Mayfield would be "either a
walking zombie or he's
dead."
" His teeth were never rotting out, his eyes were not
sunken," Diehl said. "He
nc\er displayed any characteristics that are commonly
seen by everyone among
people who use meth."
In an affidavit filed last,
week, Mayfield denied ever
using methamphetamines
and said he didn't know how
he failed the May I random
d~ug test. He was suspended
e1ght days later.
Mullen ~uled t~e ·:h.aml to
¥L ~ayf1eld slgmflcantly
outweighs.. ~he. h~nn to
!'J~SC~R
1n .lsstung the
IDJUnctJon, wh1ch doesn't
settle the larger civil suit
filed by Mayfield or

NASCAR's countersuit.
"We're disappointed, but
we 'II honor the court's wish
es. That's where we stand:·
NASCAR chairman Brian
France said. 'Tm not going
to comment on what we're
going to do yet on the next
legal process:·
To address NASCAR 's
concerns of allowing someone who tested positive for
an illegal drug back on the
track. Mullen said NASCAR
can test Mayfield constantly
and ask for a hair sample ·'to
determine if he's been a
meth-head or not."
"lf they want it, I cut it
about onc0 a week so we can
do that,'' Mayfield said.
''Whatever we've got to do."
NASCAR
spokesman
Ramsey
Poston
said
Mayfield w11l be required to
undergo a drug test if he
attempts to qualify for
Saturday
night's
race.
Mayfield said he gladly
would submit to any tests.

Please see Mayfield, Bl
l

AP photo

NASCAR driver Jeremy Mayfield wipes his face outside the
federal courthouse in Charlotte, N.C., on Wednesday. A
judge has lifted Mayfield's suspension, saying the NASCAR
driver should be allowed to race.

�Sports Shorts
Matchups set for Jimmy V Classic
BRISTOL. Conn. (AP) - Butler will meet Georgetown
and Indiana will face Pittsburgh in this year's Jimmy V
Classic at Madison Square Garden.
The pairings for the Dec. 8 doubleheader were
announced Wednesday.
This will be the 15th annual Jimmy V Classic and the
seventh played in New York City. The games are part of the
fundraising effort for the V Foundation for Cancer
Research, which is named for the late Jim Valvano, who led
North Carolina State to the national championship in 1983.
It will be the first ever meeting between Butler and
Georgetown, while Indiana holds a 4-3 lead in the series
with Pittsburgh.

Wood, Childress among HOF nominees
NEW YORK (AP) - Former drivers-turned-owners
Glen Wood and Richard Childress are among the 25 nominees for the first NASCAR Hall of Fame induction class.
NASCAR released the tw~ names Wednesday ahead of
the announc~ment of all nommees Thursday night.
'Yood helped pioneer the modem-day pit stop. while
Ch1ldress shares the record of 11 owner championships in
N AS CAR's three national series.
The first class, consisting of five members, will be
inducted in conjunction with the opening of the Hall of
Fame in Charlotte next May.
A 21-member committee selected the nominees from
NASCAR drivers, owners and promoters.

Kenseth 2nd, Stewart 5th in challenge
OREGON. Wis. (AP) - Matt Kenseth finished second at
his hometown track and Tony Stewart was fifth in a shorttrack All-Star Challenge at Madison International
Speedway on Tuesday night.
Chris Wimmer. a short-track veteran from Wausau, Wis.,
won the 100-lap super late model race on the half-mile
oval.
Kenseth led 861aps, but did not have the dominant car of
the night. That distinction belonged to Wimmer.
Kenseth was aiming for his fourth
in eight attempts
at MIS since 2003. He started on the pole after a 13-car
field inversion.

win

Kroger Co. to sponsor Indiana Fever
INDIANAPOLIS (AP) -The Kroger Co. grocery giant
has announced a five-year deal to be an official sponsor for
the financially struggling Indiana Fever of the WNBA.
Kroger and Pacers Sports 'and Entertainment made a joint
announcement on Wednesday. The deal includes advertising on television, radio, print, billboards and the Internet.
Kroger also has a deal with the Indiana Pacers.
Fever co-owner Herb Simon told the Indianapolis Star in
March that he is committed to the Fever for just one more
year. He has refused to comment since.
Pacers Sports and Entertainment president Jim Morris
has said the Fever have not turned a profit the past nine
years. He called the Kroger sponsorship' a good step.
Kroger is based in Cincinnati.

Steele named interim Marshall AD
HUNTINGTON President Stephen J. Kopp
announced today the appointment of David Steele, associate athletic director for finance at Marshall University, to
the position of the university's interim athletic director.
Steele replaces Bob Marcum, who retired. A nationwide
search for a permanent athletic director is under way.
Steele, who grew up in Texas, has been at Marshall since
fall 1995. His current responsibilities include overseeing
business operations, budgeting. video and concessions,
while assisting the athletic director with football scheduling. Steele also is treasurer and a member of the Big Green
Executive Committee.
Steele and his wife, Diana, have one daughter, Madison,
who is 18.

Reds
from PageBl
Reds manager Dusty
Baker held a team meeting
in before the game, assembling all 25 players in his
spacious office. Baker doesn't hold many team meetings. but sensed that his
club - which has been
stuck around .500 - needed encouragement.
"You just feel it,'' Baker
said. "Sometimes you've
got to use your office to do
more than just chastise."
Cueto gave a reassuring
performance
that
got
Cincinnati back to breakeven at 38-38.
The 23-year-old pitcher
made an attention-grabbing
debut
against
the
Diamondbacks last season,
allowing only one hit Justin Upton's solo homer
-during seven innings of a

Tribe
from Page Bl
Contreras.
struck
out
Asdrubal Cabrera and gave
up Grady Sizemore's RBI
groundout before retiring
Martinez on a fly ball to
left.
·
The White Sox tied it in
the
fifth
on Alexei
Ramirez's two-out RBI
, single.
NOTES: Ramirez left in
the middle of the eighth
with an apparent right hand
injury .... Thome recorded
his 1 ,600th walk, breaking a
tie with Hall of Farner Stan
Musial for 12th on the
career list. Next up is

Thursday, July 2, 2009

www.mydailysentinel.com

Page B2 • The Daily Sentinel

3-2 win.
He was in deep trouble
early Wednesday. walking
four of the first eight batters. Also, he grabbed his
lower back after one pitch.
bringing Baker and a trainer
from the dugout. He settled
down after that. allowing
only Lopez's infield single
- a grounder that deflected
off Cueto's leg. He retired
the last 12 batters he faced.
NOTES:
The
Diamondbacks plan to activate RHP Yusmeiro Petit off
the DL to start Saturday
against Colorado. Petit has
been out since May 9 with a
sore right shoulder. In five
rehab starts, Petit is 0-1
with a 6.89 ERA. "He hasn't pitched as well as we
would have liked," manager
A.J. Hinch said. " He is
healthy." .,:The Reds called
up INF Drew Sutton from
Triple-A Louisville and
optioned reliever Jared
Burton, adding depth to
their injury-depleted infield.
Darrell Evans (I ,605). ...
The Indians received favorable reports on RHP Fausto
Carmona. who had h1s second straight strong minor
league start Tuesday. The
former 19-game winner is
trying to get back to the
majors.
Manager Eric
Wedge said there is no
timetable on Carmona's
return, but the club has been
encouraged by his progress.
.. . Cleveland has used a
major league-high 25 pitchers . ... The White Sox will
play their next 10 games
against AL Central opponents, a stretch manager
Ozzie Guillen said will
determine how active the
club might be before the
July 31 trading deadline.

AP Source: Pistons land PAs Gordon and Villanueva
DETROIT (AP) - The Detroit
Pistons \vanted to add talent and get
younger this offseason.
On the first day of free agency,
Detroit did both.
Ben Gordon and Charlie Villanueva
agreed in principle to five-year con-·
tracts with the Pistons. a person wtth
the knowledge of the negotiations told
The Associated Press on Wednesda)
night.
The person, who spoke on the condition of anonymity because NBA rules
prohibit announcing deals with free
agents until next week. said Gordon's
contract is worth $50-plus million and
Villanueva will make at least $35 million.
The 26-year-old Gordon averaged
20.7 points for the Chicago Bulls, leading them in scoring for the fourth
straight year.
He improved his market value by
scoring 42 points in a playoff game
against the defending champion
Boston Celtics and averaging a teamhigh 24.3 points in seven postseason
games.
Bulls officials had said re-signing
Gordon. the No. 3 pick in 2004, was a
top priorit) after previously failing to
keep the former Connecticut star with
a long-term contract.
Villanueva, who turns 25 next
month. averaged 16.2 points and 6.7
rebounds last season for the
Milwaukee Bucks. He went from
being a restticted free agent to an unrestricted one when Milwaukee chose to
not make him a qualifying offer.
The Toronto Raptors drafted
Villanueva No. 7 overall out of
Connecticut in 2005 and traded him to
Milwaukee after his rookie season
when he averaged 13 points. 6.4
rebounds and was on the All-Rookie
team.
Detroit desperately needed to make a
splash this offseason, entering it with
nearly $20 million in salary-cap space
and coming off its worst season in several years.
The Pistons had a lot of mone) to
spend because Rasheed Wallace and
Allen Iverson had expiring contracts.
The franchise wanted to infuse the roster with fresh options after breaking up
a group of players that won the 2004
NBA title and advanced to six straight
conference finals.
Detroit was swept by the Cleveland
Cavaliers in the first round this season,
mercifully ending a miserable season

Mayfield
from Page Bl
He also might have to win
over some drivers. Jeff
Gordon
and
Jimmie
Johnson submitted affidavits last week as part of a
NASCAR filing. In the
court documents, the drivers said they are not ''willing to put my life at risk driving a race car on a
NASCAR track with drivers
testing positive for drugs
that diminish their capacity
to drive a race car."
Mayfield said he understands drivers won· t hesitate to share their feelings.
"We heard Jimmie also
say during the week in one
of the interviews that it wasn't directed at me, it was the
policy," Mayfield said. "I

AP photo

In this Friday, Nov. 7, 2008 file picture. Chicago Bulls' Ben Gordon reacts after
making a three-point shot against the Phoenix Suns in the fourth quarter du· ·
an NBA 'basketball game in Chicago. Gordon is an unrestricted free agent
was in Michigan on Wednesday for talks with Detroit Pistons president for player personnel Joe Dumars, according to a person close to the talks.

that soured as soon as All-Star point
guard Chauncey Billups was dealt to
Denver for Iverson and his cap space.
Michael Curry, who snuggled as a
rookJe coach in a tough sttuation, was
fired Tuesday and might be replaced
by Avery Johnson, Doug Collins or
John Kuester by this weekend.
Detroit's fifth coach this decade will
potentially have an interesting decision
to make if the roster remains intact.
While the 6-11 Villanueva can easil)
slip into the starting lineup, the 6-foot3, 200-poond Gordon does not seem to
have a spot secured.
Gordon likely has to replace leadingscorer Richard Hamilton at shooting
guard or come off the bench behind
him.
Gordon was voted the NBA's top

understand that. That's ""hat
they feel. It's part of it."
But it's still unclear
whether Mayfield will be
able to secure the money
needed to bring his lowbudget car to Daytona considered one of the most
dangerous NASCAR tracks
because of speeds upward
of 200 mph and bunched-up
racing on the superspeedway.
The deadline to enter
Saturday's race was June
23. Mayfield, however, still
can join the race a&lt;; a late
entry until the garage opens
at 8:30a.m. Thursday.
Mayfield also suggested
he might attempt to drive a
car for another team.
"It's kind of late in the
game nght now, but we're
able to go." Mayfield said.
"That was our ·goal. to be
able to go back. to work and

reserve in 2005 and if he accepts that
role again, the Pistons would have an
intriguing three-guard rotation with
him. Hamilton and Rodney Stuckey.
Gordon or Hamilton may a problem
with coming off the bench and the next
coach could have to deal with poor
chemistry just as Cuny did.
If the Pistons have enough money and talent - to re-sign Antonio
McDyess, one of the most likable players in the league can help them cope
with issues on and off the court.
McDyess. though, is a free agent
with plenty of options.
"We are in the process of evaluating
our options and will make a decision
shortly,"' McDyess· agent. Andy
Miller. wrote in a text message to the
AP.

race cars."
Mayfield broke into a
wide smile after the ruling
was his announced after a
20-minute recess follov,:ing
about two hours of testimony. His wife, Shana. sitting
near the back of the courtroom, briefly jumped out of
her seat, puts her hands to
her face and started crying.
"The truth came out,"
Mayfield said.
Mayfield has blamed his
positive Lest result on the
combination of Adderall for
Attention
Deficit
Hyperactivity Disorder, and
Claritin-D for allergies. an
explanation
repeatedly
debunked by NASCAR 's
program administrator
NASCAR attome) Paul
Hendrick added the "massive amounts" of methamphetamines in the drug sample indicate Mayfield's

claim is a "statement that's
simply not true."
Added another NASCI
attorney. Helen Ma
"This is not a case ab
chocolate milk or orange
juice. This is about public
safety."
"Who will protect the drivers? Who will protect the
fans?"
she asked, if
Mayfield were allowed
back on the track.
He was, after Diehl successfully argued there·
enough inconsistencies in
the testing system
including failing to get his
backup ''B" sample tested
by an independent laboratory - to create the possibility that Mayfield was
wronged.
"Now we've cleared the
air,"
Mayfield
said.
"Hopefully everybody will
think different of me now."

�Thursday, July 2, 2009
..
l"

L

The Daily Sentinel • Page 83

www. mydailysentinel.com

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Want to buy ...............................................1 035
cropped lai dew c_ws
• Wanted ......................................................,.235 Automotive ............ _ ................................. 2000
&lt;lone
$400
Mn
....................................................... 300 Auto RentaVLease..................................... 2005
Dauch1.rd pups, dapple, 900
Merchandise
Servlce ........... """""""""'''""""'302 Autos .......................................................... 2010
piack, rod 1st shot dew
Classic/Antiques ....................................... 2015
.,,,,_,~th'A """'"""""""""""'""""'""-""' 304
claws dewormed done
Building Materials ....................................... 306 CommerciaVIndustrlal .............................. 2020
all AKC, (740)696·1085
Business ...................................................... 308 Parts &amp; Accessorles ..................................2025
Antiques
Caterlng .....................................: ..................310 Sports Utlllty..............................................2030
Purebred
S•bor.an
Husky
Child/Elderly Care ....................................... 312 Trucks .........................................................2035
Big July Sale, Gtbb's An·
pupp1es. 5 femmes. ven- tiques, 49985 Tornado
Computers ................................................... 314 Utility Trailers ............................................ 2040
Contractors ..................................................316 Vans ............................................................2045
ous cotors w•th masks RD.. Ractne OhtO 45771
Domestics!Janltorlal ................................... 318 Want to buy ...............................................2050
shots &amp; WOII"'ed playf1.l 740·949·2246
Open
Electrical ...................................................... 320 Real Estate Sales ...................................... 3000
&amp;
aves people
10 Tues. thru Sat. 10:00 to
Ffnanclal .......................................................322 Cemetery Plots .......................................... 3005
weeKs.
$180
each,
call
5:00, Sun. t :00 to 5:00,
Health ........................................................... 326 Commerclal................................................301 0
(740)508 0279
Heating &amp; Coollng ............................: ..........328 Condomlnlums .......................................... 3015
from Pomeroy, Oh go
Home Improvements 330
For Sale by Owner.....................................3020
Sh1 Tuz ruppies. 4 F. 1 east on new Route 33
lnsurance ..................................................... 332 Houses for Sale......................................... 3025
M asKing $400, ready turn right at second
Lawn Servlce ............................................... 334 Land (Acreage) .......................................... 3030
7124/2009 304·481·9630 oRac1ne ex1t also repair
Music/Dance/Drama .................................... 336 Lots ............................................................3035
furniture
Other Servlces .............. :..............................338 Want to buy ................................................3040
"oy
Poodle
Puppies, ;;;!~~~~~~=
Plumbing/Eiectrlcal .....................................340 Real Estate Rentals ...................................3500
CKC reg. vet checked,
Professional Servlces .................................342 Apartments/Townhouses ......................... 3505
Auctions
Repalrs ......................................................... 344 Commerclal................................................351 0
tails docked dew claws
Aoofing .........................................................346 Condominlums .......................................... 3515
removed
dewormea, Auctions &amp; Flea Markets
Security ........................................................ 348 Houses for Rent ........................................ 3520
WJth a11 current shots, fe- We have several mixed
Tax/Accounting ........................................... 350 Land (Acreage) ..........................................3525
males $350. males S300, pallets of merchand•se
TraveVEntertalnment ..................................352 Storage.......................................................3535
Tome
or
Sheryl for sale 740-446-7327
Flnancla1 .......................................................400 Want to Rent ....................: ......................... 3540
740.992·7007
Financial Servlces ....................................... 405 Manufactured Housing ............................. 4000
Hobby I Hunt &amp; Sport
Insurance .................................................... 410 Lots.............................................................4005
Froo
Kittens
Ca I
Money to Lend .............................................415 Movers.......................................................4010
74n ••t o"49
Compound
Bow
with
Education ..................................................... 5oo Rentals ....................................................... 4015
,_... ""'
arrows.
Paid
Several
Business &amp; Trado School ........................... 505 Sales ...........................................................4020
F•ee to good home AKC S800 for rt w I take $250
Instruction &amp; Trelnlng .......-........................ 510 Supplies ..................................................... 4025
Gem1an Po tor
short ke now
().
-8
Lessons ........................................................ 515 Want to Buy ............................................... 4030
74 441 299
Personal ....................................................... 520 Resort Property ......................................... 5QOO
hMed 2 year o'd male. or 74Q-441 •5472
An lmals ........................................................ 600 Resort Property for sale ........................... 5025
Call 740-446-4523
~~~~~~~~
An imal Supplles ................-........................ 605 Resort Property for rent .......................... 5050
Miscellaneous
:.....
r
·•·.f.'
1
·:.
:'J!P"'.,
;·
Horses .......................................................... 610 Employment...............................................6000
~0~~.• ,.~ , .' ·. ~grlculture
Llvestock ......................................................615 Accountlng/Financial ................................ 6002
•..
.\~.. •
r:. ••
'
Jet Aeration Motors
Pets ...............................................................620 Admlnlstrative1Professlonal .....................6004
repaired, new &amp; rebuilt
Want to buy ..................................................625 Cashier/Clerk ............................................. 6006
re ................................................... 700 Child/Elderly Care ..................................... 6008
In stock. Call Ron
Form Equipment
pment ..........................................705 Clerlcal ....................................................... 6010
Evans 1·800·537·9528
&amp; Produce .......................................710 Constructlon .............................................. 6012
EBY,
INTEGRITY,
..ay, Feed, Seed, Grain ............................... 715 Drivers &amp; Delivery ..................................... 6014
KIEFER BUILT,
-------Hunting &amp; Land ........................................... 720 Educatlon ................................................... G016
VALLEY
HORSE/LIVE· Barg1n Tools· AT 554
Want to buy ..................................................725 Electrical Plumblng ...................................8018
STOCK
TRAILERS. buying· mech &amp; carpen·
Merchandise ................................................ 900 Employment Agencles ..............................6020
LOAD
MAX
EQUIP· tor tools, lawn &amp; garden
Antiques .......................................................905 Entertalnment............................................ 6022
Appliance ..................................................... 91 0 Food Services...........................................6024
MENT
TRAILERS, tools mowers, weed eat·
Auctlona .......................................................915 Government &amp; Federal Jobs .................... 6026
CARGO EXPRESS &amp; ers. cha1n saws also, lapBargain Basement.......................................920 Help anted· General .................................. 6028
HOME'STEADER
tops
computers.
cell
Collectlbles .................................................. 925 Law Enforcement ...................................... 6030
CARGO CONCESSION
phones.
lpods,
Black
Computers ................................................... 930 Maintenance/Domestic ............................. 6032
TRAILERS
B+W Borrys, GPS &amp; ets.
Equlpment!Suppllos....................................935 Management/Supervisory ........................ 6034
GOOSENECK FLATBED Home 740-388·1515 Coli
Flea Markets ................................................ 940 Mechanlcs ..................................................6036
Fuel 011 CoaVWood/Gas ............................. 945 Medlcal .............................................._....... 6038
$3999 VIEW OUR EN· 794· 1188
Furniture ...................................................... 950 Muslcal ....................................................... 6040
TIRE TRAILER IIWEN·
Hobby/Hunt &amp; Sport....................................955 Part-Time-Temporaries ............................. 6042
For Sale· Rose colored
TORY AT
Kid's Corner................................................. 960 Restaurants ............................................... 6044
gltder rocker with foot
WWW CARMICHAEL·
Miscellaneous ..........................................._ 965 Sales...........................................................6048
stool Used very little.
Want to buy..................................................970 Technical Trades ....................................... 6050
TRAILERS COM
Yard Sale ..................................................... 975 Textiles/Factory......................................... 6052
5250. Call 740-441-8299
740-446-3825
or 740-441·54 72
Accred:ted 1.1 ber At;;;
1n0 Cound lor l~dependen:
College and Scl&gt;ool$ 12746

Frt 713 from 8-4 at 213
Carman Dr. Tara E~t.
clothes. kntek ltnaeks.
floral arrangements. an·
gels Longaberger

2005 fifth wheel ti\O ca
tratler,lns•de
box
45
long,
wh•te
exccller:
cond·tion. wrth three Sid€
doors, electnc " encr
Price S9.500 c.::
fc-•
Garage.lyard sale 4th St. more
nfo '1'\Jtl
Mason July 1&amp; 2 9·5 fol- (740)949·2217
low s1gns ram or sh1ne.

Real Esta~
te '
Huge 2 family sale 1l2
m1le out Georges Creek
from Rt. 7. Antiques,
Shop Vac, 410 shotgun,
For Sole By Owner
clothes, etc. 8·4 on
713&amp;714
For Sale by Owner·
Support Cnme Watch 7.5 acres m1n1 farm
Yard Sale July 3·4 from house 11 yrs old, approx
9·5 at Jay Dr. Park Ln. 2200 sq. ft. 3br 2 5 bath
Mobile Homo Park. As· 50x120 Horse Barn • H•
sorted 1tems. antiques. stalls w/ nd•ng arena.
mile from Holzer "iosp1
collechbles.
tal. Pictures on
Wed &amp; Thur 2miles out
I'IWW.OAVB COlT'
L1t1le Kyger from High
call
74D-441·9531
o
School. Somethmg for 441·5239
evervone!
Yard sale 3 1/2
Houses For Sale
miles out Sandhill
+- 46 acres w new 4 bed
Rd, on left toys.
21 '2
bath
Posslb
kids comforters &amp;
owner finance 446·3570
tires &amp; lot:; more.
Friday only
2 bed 1 bath $24
month 74D-446-3384
Yard Sate July 1 · :::.
2009
at 15132 State 3 bed 2 bati' new con
Route
554,
Bidwell, strucllon on +I· 5 acre
I
Ot&gt;1o From the Korne~ $525 I'"IOOth Ow
av
Store goo ng toward R10 nance
Grande, go 2 Miles past 740-446·3570
the post Office 1n curve.
Bed.2
Baby clothes sizes 0 to ho"'e' 'Only 199 •
18 months. Boys 18 dwn I~ )r&lt; at R
Months to 3T Jumor ana ~\l!l-610·-19.1~&gt; ex r 41i
Mtsses clothtng. 2 infant .L.,
eG~r;.;;a.-nd_e;.;,;,,;,;B.;.,Iv;.d.-.--3-BF
cer seats, baby sw1ng, 2 brick, hardwood floor
bouncers,
baby
bed, FA, 2 full baths cenlr
bassinet.
Small
TV a11, 10X14 motcll build
mtcrowave.
109, 5 mins troll' tow,
$89,000. 740·'709 18~8
Recreational
1000
Vehicles

'W'Sfr
,~,

. ,,
=;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;

gal pollsc:lrec.W ;geed

Utility Trailers

3ooo

NOTICE OHIO VALlEY
' Edu~ilon
PUBLISHING CO. rec· Pet
Cremations.
Call 500
orrmonds that you do 740-446-3745
buSiness With peopfe you ~~~~~~~~ ~
know, and NOT to send
Professional Services
Business &amp; Trade
School
money through the mall
TURNED DOWN ON
untn you have lnvesllgat· SOCIAL SECURITY SSI
Gallipolis Career
ng the offenng.
No Fee UnlesS We w,,,
College
1·888-582·3345
(Careers Close To Home)
SEPTIC
PUMPING
Gallia
Co.
OH
and
Mason Co. WV. Ron
Evans
Jackson,
OH
800.537·9528

FV

$1 .00 for large

any Iota or qxpenso 11141 results trom the publlca110n or oml•lon olan •dvtrtloemtnl Corrote~lon wltl be mldeln tht fll'llt a-tallable edition. ·Box numbtf ada
aro alwap conftdmtlal • CU!rem rate card appllea • All r•l eetlltt ll&lt;lver1ttemtntt are MJbject to !he Fll&lt;lerel Fair Houe•n; Act ol 11168. • Thlt nt"ttep~
ac:cepts only I!Cip Wlnlcd ads meetll&gt;g EOE IIUindar&lt;IS. W1l wilt nol knoolllngl, accepe•ny edvertlllt1llln VIOIIIion of the la.w. Win no1 be rnpontib!o lor lll'IV
ttrora tn an aa taken C'tlf thO phone.

• Flilanclai'
. ; ..

Now you con hove borders and graphics
~
added to your cl~ssified ads
.{ ;
1
1m
Borders $3.00/perod
1:!
,~
Graphics SO¢ for small
,........

POUCt£S Ohio Vlliley PubUshlng r a - - the right to 1&lt;111. rtjtct. or cencelany ed at any lime. Errors mutt be reported on the ffrln diiV ol publlcetlon lind thl!
Tri~U.Senlinol.f!ogll:ler will be retlf)Ontlblt tor no more than lhl COli of tho IPOC• occupied by thl error and only 1111 ftrll 1~1on. We ella II no1 be liable for

• Include Phone Number And Addras When Needed
• Ada Should Run J Oa~

Announcements

Alf Display: 12 Noon 2
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• Start Your Ad• With A Keyword • Include COmplete
Oesc:rlptJon • Include A Pric:e • Avoid Abbreviations

200

VISA

GET YOUR CLASSIFIED LINE AD NOTICED

Display Ads

Dally :Xn-Columru !ii:OO a.m.
Monday-Friday for Insertion
In Next Ooy's Paper
Sunday ln-&lt;:olumn1 9100 a.m.
Friday For Sundays Paper

--

JUST SAY

CHABGE LT!

WantTo Buy
Absolute Top Dollar • sll·
vertgold
co ns
any
10KI14KI18K gold jew·
elry, dental gold, pre
1935
US
currorcy,
proof/!T'1nt
sets,
dla·
monds, MTS Co1ri Shop.
151 2nd Avenue, Galh·
polis. 446·2842
-;;;=;;;;Y;;;;o;;;;r;;;;d;;;;S:;;a:;;le==•
3 family yard salo 116 K1·
neon
Dr.
Gallipolis
Fn/Sat
July 3&amp;4, 9·4
household
goods,
lg
women clothes&amp; wed·
dtng dress
Garage Sale Thursday •
Frday July 3 &amp; 4 164
Fairv1ow Rd 1'4 m1 o off
850
Yard
Sale July 3-4
SAM·? 3616 SR 141
Couch &amp; char, sofa bed
&amp; chair, desk, lamps, piC·
turos,
clothes
(men&amp;
women), lots of other
tems
1

Boots I Accessories
24 It, Pontoon boat,
501lp N ssan motor. runs
great 2 yrs. old S5500.00
304·638·1619.
Campers I RVs &amp;
===•T•ro;;;;i;;;;le•rs===
Apartments/
Townhouses
92 Soult'Wlnd 30 motor ===;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;=;;;;.;;.;;;;;;o

t&gt;o!T'e wt a11, power gen·
erato w/ awntng, fully
Hugo Yard Salo FriJSat self conta•ned
askmg
July 3-4 JunctiOn St At $7900. 740·256-6346

279 &amp;
Centerpoint Ad
Guns.
hunttng •toms,. tools, de·
s•gner
purses,
name
brand
clothtng.
toys.
housewares,
movies,
games, etc.
2 family. at Alligator
Jacks parktng lot. lots of
little gtrls clothes, Jumor
&amp; ladtes clothes. glass·
waro, kntek·nacks &amp; lots
more, July 3rd &amp; 4th
806 Pickens St., Aatene
clothes.
crafts,
mise
terns, Thurs &amp; Fri.
;.;.;..~.;.;.;.;;..;;...;..._ _ _
Friday July 3, 965 Ash
St.,
M•ddleport,
g1rl's
Gymboreo
cloth ng,
boy's
lad o's,
men's
cloth ng,
knrck·knacks,
;.;
rr.;;
o;.;;
re.;.
.8
;;..;;.
30:;.,?
.;...._ _ _ _
Garage Sale- 3 famtly,
July 2nd, 3rd. Rutland
St , Mtddreport

-------AV Service at Carmt·
chael
Tra•lers
740·446·3825
RV
Serv1co at Carmichael
2BR APT.Ciosc ,
Tra11ors
zer Hospital on
740·446·3825
CIA. (740)441·01 4

20°0

Automotive

Commercial/lndustri~l

2000 Fretghtliner wh1te
extenor, DetrOit eng1ne,
500 hsp. Faton Fueler 10
speed transmrss on. Stn·
gle axle, 596,000 miles,
sleeper, 33.000 GVW,
u t ~" tiO
Pnce·
oxce en """"' n,
511' ooo ca n 1or more tn·
formalton,
,;,{7~4~
0)~94
~9~-2
~2~1~
7~~~~
.::
Ports &amp; Accessories

Apartment avalla I
Atverbend
Apt
Haven WV. Now
lng
appi1C8tton
HUO·subsldozed,
Bedroom Apts
Ut rt &lt;
1ncluded. Based on 30'l
of adJUsted tncome Cc
304·882-3121,
va abk
for Son10r and D1sable

!It

poop

_ _.....;;;;;.;;.;...._ _ _ ,
CONVENIENTLY
lC'
GATED
&amp;
AFFORC
ABLEI Townhou
aosrt
ments
enc1or
sna
Cal

IPP'
GigantiC yard sole July 3
&amp; 4 lrorn 9·5, Lanmngts,
112 m11e past former Bea·
con
Gas
Station/Pomeroy
Corp.,
sign on Route 833
July 3rd, Oarn, Wardens
on Morningstar, name
brand
cloth1ng,
bikes,
ho!T'O docor. purses, TV
stand &amp; lots moro
July 3rd &amp; 4th, Pat Noel
restdenco off St At 7 on
Rt 124 3rd llouso.on left
Estate Sale July 3 &amp;4
across from city parktng
lot (behind l1brary) fum ,
diShos, collectibles

Sports Utility

;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;
2003 Goo Tracker, 4 dr.,
auto, air, 4 cyl. 4x4
Tw1n Rivers Tower s ac740·256·6890.
cepting applteattoro fo
wailing Its! lor 1-lUD sul
Trucks
stdlzed, 1·BA npart rr
-========
2007 F350 Superduty for the ekler1y'd s bl
truck. power stroke d•e- call 675-6679
sci, black exterior, Lanat
4 wheel dnve, loaded
f•lth wheel Installed &amp;
3 room and bath lown
Reese
hitch Installed stairs f1rst Months on1 f.
80,000 m1les, $25.500. deposit. references ro
Call for !T'ore rnformatiOil, qu•red
No Pets an&lt;'
(740)949·2217
clean. 740-441&gt;0245

tit

�........_____.,. ___.,. ____

~~~~~~------------~-----"""'!""--~~------- ~-~-~

Apartments/
Townhouses

Apartments/
Townhouses

1 &amp; 2BR renovated
owntown apts. 1nc1udes
new
appliances
lam.
flooring water sewer &amp;
trash
1ncluded.
1BR
S31,5/mo. 2BA $575/mo.
74()..709-1690
I

NOW LEASING Jordan
Landing. 2 &amp; 3BR Available No Pets. Tenant
Responsible for Rent &amp;
Electric 304-674-0023 or
304-617-9986
Nice 3BR Pt, Gallipolis
CitY Part. Fum, WID
some uti!. 1ncl. No Pets.
S5951mo. 740-591-5174
Middleport, 1 &amp; 2 br. furnished apt., no pets, dep
&amp;
ref.
required,
(740)992-0165

New Haven 1 br. fur- Island View Motel has
nished apt no pets, dep. vacancies
$35.00/Night.
&amp;
ref.
required, 740-446-04C6
(740)992-0165
Jordan Landing Apart4
room
apt. ments
w/stoveJfridge,
utilities 2,3,4, br. available, all
pd. upsta1rs. no pets at electric, no pets call for
46 Olive St. $450.'mo + details 304-674-0023 or
dep. 740-446-3945
304-610-0776
Beautiful Apts. at Jack- '\ic~ lbr. Appliance,, furson Estates. 52 West- ni'h&lt;oJ, S.'7S + depo,il. near.
wood Or., from $365 to PI'HS
304-67S-Jl00
or
$560.
740-446-2568. ~04-675-5509
Equal Housing Opportusecondfthird
nity. This 'nstitu!lon is an Spacious
apt
overlooking
Equal Opportunity Pro- floor
Gallipolis City Park and
vider and Employer.
River. L.A. den, lrg.
Gracious Living 1 and 2
Kitchen-dining area with
Bedroom Apts. at Village
all new appliances &amp;
Manor
and
Riverside
cupboards. 3 BR, 2
Apts. in Middleport, from
baths,
laundry
area.
$327
to
$592.
$900 per month. Call
740-992-5064.
Equal
446-2325 or 446-4425
Housing Opportunity.

Classifieds

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U·Sill IT

Apartments/
Townhouses

W.IIOI'. loa

Tara
Townhouse
Apartments - 2BR. 1.5
bath, back patio. pool,
playground. (trash, sewage,
water
pd.)
$425/rent,
$425/sec.
dep. Call740·645-8599
Commercial
Office/
Warehouse/Storage
Great Location 749 Third
Ave., Gallipolis!
$399/month for 1800
sqft. Build-out negotiable
Call Wayne
404-456-3802
Houses For Rent
Sl99.mo! 4

l&gt;cd. 1 balh.

Very nice home for rent
1n
Middlepodrt,
good
neighborhood. Newly remodeled
New
appliances. 2 bedrooms, 1
bath. central air &amp; heat,
large deck on back, garage
available,
call
740-992-9784
or
740-992-5094 for more
details
4000

Manutactu~ed

Housmg

Lots
Trailer space for rent 5
112 miles out Redmond
Ridge 304-675-4893.
Rentals

Bank Repo~ (5&lt;:&lt; down. 15
yea!'&gt;, 8% APR) lor lisling' Newly remodled 3BA 2
bath on larm $750 mth.
800-f&gt;20·4946 " R027

utilities
included.
1br. house 1n New Haven 540-729·1331
$300.00
a
mon.
+
$300.00 dep., no pets For rent or sale Small 2
br. mobile home 1n
304-882-3652.
Racine, $225 a month,
2 br. $400.00 a mon. + $225
deposit,
years
$400.00 dep. 88 Garlleld
lease.
No
Pets.
740-645-1646
(740)992-5097
1BR all utilities pd. in- Trailer tor rent, close to
cludes cable &amp; phone on Walmart in Mason. $475
river front in Crown City. per mo. (740)992-3961
740-256-8132
3BR dble-wide furnished,
2BR, carport. 66 Lower SR 143 - Pomeroy. $625
Garfield Gallipolis. $425 mo. incl. most utilities &amp;
rent
&amp;
deposit. lawncare 740:591·5174
740·645-8879
Small 2br mob1le home
3BR, 1 bath, stove &amp; re- at
Johnsons
Mobile
frig. turn. Gas heat. C/A, Home Park. , Water &amp;
No Smoking, WID hook trash pa1d. no pets.
up, No Pets. $600/mo + 740-645-0506
deposit. Nice location.
Gallipolis. Call 446-3667
Sales
House tor rent in the
Country living· 3-5BR,
town of Gallipolis (Locust
2-3 BA on property.
St.)2BR, 2 bath, LA, DR,
Many floor plans! Easy
large kitchen, detached
Financing! We own the
garage. $600/mo., utilibank.
Call
today'
ties not included. $500
866-215-5774
Security
Deposit
required.
ABSOLUTELY
The Proctorville
NO
PETS.
Call
Difference
740-645-1688, Leave a $1 and a deed is all you
message.
need to own your dream
hom'e. Call Now!
3BR house at 91 CeCiar
Freedom Homes
St. $650 month. Call
888-565-0167
740-388-1100
Help Wanted

Help Wanted

SIJI8I SMART BUY llW.S ON YARD SAI.f
SAVBI ...,_~W~Y WIIEfl1 ,...,_."""

11111#1110

[llrlY

a. areuam s•u·st.ooo

31oot,3.,. 4 -1ll11$ 4-IU•II

---

Thursday, July 2, 2009

YOUNG'S

BA~KS

Carpenter Service

CO:\STIU CTIO~

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

ont:s1o '2.99 s14.99 '20.99 s29.99

The Daily Sentinel

Conunercinl •

Residential
• Free Estimates

(141)) 1)92-5009

V.C. YOUNG Ill
992-6215
740-591·0195
Pomeroy, Oh1o
30 Years Local Experience
FULLY INSURED

·1ree removal, planting,
lawn care, and all your
landscaping needs.
Residential and Commercial
Fully

30 YtanJ Exp. • Ins. • Free Estimates

Owner-Ronnie Jontt

Iii J.'1il
iII [H fl

Roofing, Sidmg,
Soffit, Decks,
Doors. Windows,
Electric. Plumbing.
Drywall,
Remodeling, Room
Additions

29625 Bashan Road
Racine OH 45771

740-949-2217

Local Contractor

7 40-367-0544

Hours

Free Estimates

7:00am· 8:00 pm

7 40-367-0536

Advertise
in this
space
for

$70
per
month

BVTheWav
Country Store
langsville. Ohio

742-0012
NEW OWNERS
NEW MENU
Daily Specials
Sen-ing Breakfast
Open 7 days a week

740.446.9200
2A59 St. Rt. 160 ·Gallipolis

740-367-0266/740-367-7141
Sales

Help Wanted- General

2005 16x80 Clayton An
glebrook, 3 br. 2 bath,
rock f11eplace m living
room, g. walk-in closets
&amp; garden tub, cia, microwave, dishwasher stove.
refrigerator
wfd.
v1nyl
steps &amp; under pining rncluded must move off lot
asking price $28.000,
(7 40)416-0544

Hiring Long-Term
Employees

Employment

Part Time accounting for
retail (no degree re·
quired). Submit resumes
14728 ST. At. 554, Bidwell, Ohio 45614

brought to enforce re·
sponsiblllties in relation to environmental
reviews, decislon·mak·
ing, and action; and
that these responsibili·
ties have been satis·
tied.
The legal effect of the
certification Is that
upon its approval, the
Meigs County Commissioners may use the
Federal funds, and the
State o Ohio will have
satisfied its responsibilities under the National Environmental
Policy Act of 1969, as
amended.
The State of Ohio will
accept an objection to
Its approval of the release of funds and acceptance
of
the
certification only if it is
on one of the two following bases: (2) the
certification was not, in
fact, executed by the
County o Meigs chief
executive officer or
other officer of the
County of Meigs ap·
proved by the State of
Ohio; or (b) that the env1ronmental
review
process.
Written
objections
must be prepared and
submitted In accordance with the required
procedure (24 CFR Part
58) and must be addressed to: State of
Ohio; Environmental
Officer, Community Development
Division;
P.O. Box 1001; Columbus, Ohio 43266·01 01.
Objections to the Release of Funds on
basis other than those
stated above will not be
considered by the State
of Ohio. No objections
received after August 7,
2009 (which is at least
15 days after it is anticipated that the State
will receive a request
for release of funds),
will be considered by
the State of Ohio.
The address of the
chief executive officer
is:
Mick Davenport, President
Meigs County Commissioners
Meigs County Court·
house
Pomeroy, Ohio 4575g
(7) 2

HI

~'1

wvrw.tiJnl,erel'e:ek~abinetey.com

Truck Full in~IJTed
Senior Citlun Discount

Accounting / Financial

Friday (except holi·
days) at the office of
the
Meigs
County
Grants Office, 117 East
Memorial
Drive,
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769.
No further environ men·
tal review of such project is proposed to be
conducted, prior to the
request for release of
Federal funds.
The Meigs County
Commissioners plan to
undertake the project(s) described with
the Federal funds cited
above. Any person,
and/or
agencies,
groups, who have any
comments regarding
the environment or
who disagree with this
finding of No Signlficanl Impact decision,
are Invited to submit
written comments for
consideration to the
Meigs County Commis·
sloners, Courthouse,
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
by 4:30p.m. on July 20,
2009, which is at least
15 days after the publication of this combined
notice.
NOTICE OF INTENT TO
REQUEST RELEASE
OF FUNDS (NOVRROF)
TO ALL INTERESTED
PERSONS, AGENCIES,
AND/OR GROUPS:
On or. about, but not
before, July 21, 2009,
the Meigs County Com·
missioners, will request the State of Ohio
to release Federal
funds under Section
1 04(g) of Title 1 of the
Housing and Community Development Act
of 1974, as amended;
Section 288 of Title II of
the Cranston Gonzales
National
Affordable
Housing Act (NAHA),
as amended: and/or
Title IV of the Stewart b.
McKinney Homeless
Assistance Act, as
amended,; to be used
for the project( s) de·
scribed above.
The Meigs County
Commissioners
are
certifying to the State
of Ohio, that Meigs
County and Mick Davenport, in his/her offi·
clal
capacity
as
resident, Meigs County
Commissioners, consents to accept the ju·
risdlction of Federal
courts if an action is

[f I li

Harlfilo~~ ~~bin~tr; J.lnd Furnitun

www.mydailysentinel.com

house
Pomeroy, Ohio 4575g
(740) 992-2895
TO ALL INTERESTED
PERSONS, AGENCIES,
AND GROUPS:
The Meigs County
Commissioners, pro·
poses to request the
State of Ohio to release
Federal funds under
Section 104(g) of Title I
of the Housing and
Community Development Act of 1974, as
amended; Section 288
of title .11 of the
Cranston Gonzales National Affordable Hous·
ing Act (NAHA), as
amended; and/or Title
IV of the Stewart B.
McKinney Homeless
Assistance Act, as
amended; to be used
for the following proj·
ect(s):
2008 CDBG Neighborhood
Revitalization
Program
Demolition/Clearance
Project
Source of Funds: FY
'08 CDBG Neighbor·
hood
Revitalization
Program
Single Year Project
Syracuse Village
Estimated total cost of
project- $28,400.00
It has been determined
that such a Request for
Release of Funds will
not constitute an action
significantly affecting
the quality of the
human environment
and accordingly the
Meigs County Commis·
sloners have decided
not to prepare an Environmental
Impact
Statement under the
national Environmental
Policy Act of 196g, as
amended.
Environmental Review
Record(s) (ERR) for
each of the Project(s)
listed above have been
conducted
by the
Meigs County Commissioners. The ERR(s)
documents the environmental reviews of
the project(s) and more
fully sets forth the reasons why such statement is not required.
The ERR(s) are on file
and available for the
public's examination
and copying, upon re·
quest, between the
hours of 9:00 a.m. to
4:00 p.m. Monday thru

Cu,rom Hum~ Bu1lding
1
Steel I ramc Rullding'
Buildmg, Rcnllxlcling
Gcncr.~l repair
"" w.bank~.:clh.com

Nate's Tree
Service

6000

Public Notices in Newspaper,.
Your Right to Know, Delivered Ri~ht to Your Door.

co.
J&gt;oml•ro). Ohio

78 Elcona Tra1ler 14X70
good shape you move @
635
Paxton.
740-645-1646
or
740-446-2515.
@7200
OBO

nt.IIOI'If

IIOfl laOI8
111•1111'" 411an,3 _,.
4..,.,, • .,. ........."

COURT OF COMMON (513) 241-3100
attyemail@lsrlaw.com
PLEAS
MEIGS COUNTY, OHIO (6) 18, 25 (7) 2
Home Loan Investment
Ban~FSB
----------------Plaintiff
Public Notice
VS
Pamela Sue Shields, et PUBLIC NOTICE NOTICE: is hereby given
al
that on Friday, July 3,
Defendants
2009 at 10:00 a.m., a
Case No.: 09-CV-054
public sale will be held
Judge: Fred W. Crow
LEGAL NOTICE IN at 211 W Second St.,
SUIT FOR FORECLO- Pomeroy, Ohio. The
SURE OF MORTGAGE Farmers Bank and SavRonald
Randall Ings Company Is sellShields, whose last ing for cash in hand or
know address is 42423 certified check the fol·
State
Route
7, lowing collateral:
Dodge
Ram
Coolville, OH 45723, 1990
and the unknown heirs, 1B7KM2689LS667793
devisees, legatees, ex- 2005 Ford Freestyle
ecutors,
administra- 1FMZK06125GA51785
tors,
spouses and The Farmers Bank and
Company,
assigns and the un· Savings
known guardians of Pomeroy, Ohio, reminor and/or incompe· serves the right to bid
tent heirs of Ronald at this sale, and to with·
Randall Shields, all of draw the above cQIIat·
whose residences are eral prior to sale.
unknown and cannot Further, The Farmers
be reasonable dill· Bank and Savings
gence be ascertained, Company reserves the
will take notice that on right to reject any or all
the 1st day of May, bids submitted.
2009, Home Loan In· The above described
vestment Bank, FSB collateral will be sold
filed it Complaint in the "as Is-where is", with
common Pleas Court of no expressed or lm·
Meigs County, Ohio in plied warranty given.
Case No. og.cV-054, on Fot further information,
the docket of the Court, or for an appointment
and the object and de- to Inspect collateral,
mand for relief of which prior to sale date con·
pleading is to foreclose tract Cyndie or Ken at
the lien of plaintiff's 9g2-2136.
mortgage
recorded (6) 30 (7) 1, 2
upon the following desoribed real estate to ---------------Public Notice
wit:
Property
Address:
42423 State Route 7, The Orange Township
Coolville, OH 45723, Trustees will hold a
and being more partic- public hearing on the
ul(lrly descri.bed In proposed budget for
plaintiff's
mortgage 2010 on July 7, 2009,
recorded in Mortgage 7:30 at the home of the
Book 258, page 763, of Fiscal Officer, Osie
this County Recorder's Folirod.
(7) 2
Office.
The above named de·
fendant Is required to ---------------answer within twenty·
Public Notice
eight (28) days after - - - - - - . . . , . . . - last publication, which NOTICE TO PUBLIC OF
shall be published NO SIGNIFICANT 1Monce a week for three PACT ON THE ENVI·
consecutive weeks, or • RONMENT (FONSI)
they might be dented a NOTICE OF INTENT TO
hearing In this case.
REQUEST RELEASE
Lerner, Sampson &amp; OF FUNDS COMBINED
Rothfuss
NOTICE
Attorneys for Plaintiff
Date: July 2, 2009
P.O. box 5480
Meigs County CommlsCincinnatl, OH 45201- sioners
5480
Meigs County Court·

I

Houses For Rent

rtr.-. fW-IWIJ - . 1 C..,T...., . . . . . ........,, "*-I*'
......._1
.w,. .......... IIIIIY... -.1
..,,..
a..

l'tPf'IO*III'IJ

-- - - -- -~- ~-

www.mydailysentinel.com

Page 84 • The Daily Sentinel
Apartments/
Townhouses

-

Child/Elderly Care
Wanted, full time baby
s1tter/nanny to work 1n
our home.
Applicants
must have experience
canng for and working
w1th multiple children.
Excellent pay. Weekends
off. Looking tor an expenenced
Mother/Grandmother tyue of a person.
Call 740-416-0241 dur·
1ng
the
day
and
740-416-6301 in the evening.

Will care for elderly in
your home, have ref.
304-895-3217 leave
message for Sue.

Food Services

We are currently
seeking long-term full.
and part time
employees to help
fulfill client needs. You
will take Incoming and
make Outgoing calls
for well known
organizations.

Racine, Ohio 740·247-2019
Owners:
Jon Van Meter &amp;
Paul Rowe

Take advantage of our
company's
comprehensive benefits
package, pr)fessloral
work1ng enwonment,
advancement
opportunitieS and much
rnore!
Stop by and Complete
Your Application:
lnfoCision Management
Corporation
242 Third Avenue
Gallipolis. Oh1o

J&amp;L
Construction

·Vinyl Siding
• Replacement
Or Call and Schedule
Windows
Your Interview:
·Roofing
1-888 IMC-PAYU
·Decks
ext. 2454
·Garages
http://jobs.lnfocision.com
·Pole Buildings
• Room Additions
Mechanics
Owner:
Appalachian Tire ProdJames Keesee 11
uctscurrently · seek1ng 2 ...._ _
742·2332
is
_ _ _ _....,

Service Technician position available for diesel
and hydraulics. Experience
necessary.
Health/Retirement
&amp;
Benef1ts. Fax resume to
740-446-9104 or e-mail
to LLC@CAREO.COM

I ~f', ne\ tr tro.ttn. heads Oll
~ 10

Pml IS

per lb Cash only
requir~d in advance

Shtpmcnts arrive every
oth&lt;!r Frida\

Service
Gallipolis, OH 45631

Insured, Free
No\\ St!lhng:

• Ford &amp; \1otorcraft
Pa11~ • Engines,
TramJer Ca~es &amp;
Tratl,mission~

• Aftermarket
Replacement Sheet
\leta! &amp; Component\
!'or AU

\Ia~&lt;'

of \'eh•clc'

Racine. Ohio

Estimates. 20) rs Exp.
7-10-~1-9387
Johnson-0\~ner

Rick

Creative
child care
Now enrolling for
summer childcare.
Call Anita or Sharon

740-949-1956

(740) 949-2122

ROBERT
BISSEll

LEWIS
CONCRETE
CONST-R UCTION

CONSTRUCTION
• New Homes
• Garages
• Complete
Remodeling

Concrete Removal
and Replacement

All Types Of
Com•retc Work
29 Years Experience

593 _ 6421 Eshmate. 140·992·1611
Stop &amp; Compare
Get AJump
on

Da,·id Lewis

Replacement
\\'indn\1), ancl
Vin) I Siding
Specialists, I:fD

Stanley TreeTrimming
&amp; Removal

Help Wanted· General ~~~~

Care G1ver Is needed.
ThiS IS a FULL TIME poSition, meanmg you w1ll
be living here as 1f 11
were your l)ome. This IS
NOT a dayt1me or night
lime only positiOn. Sleep
here at n1ght and do normal l"ot.sehold dt11es
thr~&gt;
tt&gt;e day. PArson
need1ng ass1stance IS
mobile and can •unc.t1on
on her own.
FREE
RENT&amp;
FREE
UTILI·
TIES plus small salary.
740·367-7129

Fresh \orlh Carolina
SHRI'\tP
(7-10) 7"2-2563

t11eioil servtce techs tor - - - - - - - - - our Point P:easant WV
H&amp;H
location. Wages based
G
·
On exp. &amp; be1efitS lnCIUd·
uttermg
1ng 401K, health 1nsurSeamless Gutters
ance and paid vacation Roofin.g. Siding. Gutters
are
also
ava,lable.
"insured &amp; Bonded
Please apply in person at
740-653-965 7
426 V1and Street.

Expenenced
Baker
Medical
needed for Sodexo. Apply tn person at the CMA or LPN NeededUniversity of Rio Grande
Full Time CMA or LPN
needed for physicians office.
Prev1ous ExperiExperienced
Cook ence preferred, Competineeded tor Sodexo. You tive
Benefits,
Please
can make up to $10.85 send resume by June
an hour Apply in person 29th to: PO Box 220,
at the University of Rio Athens, Oh 45701
Grande.
Servic~ I Bus.
9000
Directory
Food
Serv1ce
Worker
needed part-time, on call ;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;:;
for Sodexo. Apply in perConcrete ,
son at the University of
A1oGrande.
All types Masonry, bnck,
block. stone. concrete,

CASH LAND
Now h111ng full t1me customer serv1ce associate
pos1tion excellent pay,
benefit
t'kg
1nc uded
cash handilrg reGuHed.
Log
orto
cashaMenca com
under
caree1 s to ar,ply

740·416·5047

Cell:

, SAVINGS

1740) 742-2563
• Sidin~ • \in) I
\\indo''' • .\Ictal
and Shingle Roofs
• l&gt;cck~ • Additions
• Elf!ctrical

• Plumbing
• l'ulc 8arn'&gt;

740-992-6971
Insured

*Pn1mpt and Quality

\\orh
*Rea,.,nable Rutes

*lnsun:d
*bpl•rienred
Rclcrem:es 1\\ail:tble!
C.1ll Gary Stank) @
740-591-8044
Pleas..- lea\e

-.PSI CONSTRUCTION
Room \clditiuns, Rcmodclin~. C\lt'tal &amp;

Shop the
Classifieds!

Shingle Ruot's.l"cw Home~. Siding. Decks.
Bathroom Remodeling. l.icen,ed &amp; Insured
WV#040954

Cell740-416-2960

740-g92-0730

�ll!l!ll-~--·~~~~~~~~-11!'1111-..,

____

'1111!1'"""'------~-.----~-------~------·-

Thursday, July 2, 2009
ALLEY COP

----

·-·~..---

The Daily Sentinel • Page B5

www.mydailysentinel.com

NEA Crossword Puzzle
BRIDGE
ACROSS

Phillip
Alder

West
• 6 3

11iorth
01-02 09
• Q 10 9 5
'I A 4
+ KJ 63
... J 9 2
East

'I K Q 6 3
• Q 10 8 7
... 6 5 :l

•

4 2

•

J 10 9 7 2

• 95
... K 8 7 4

South
l.l AKJ87
• 8 5
+A42
... A Q 10

Dealer: South
Vulnerable: East-West
South
1A
4 ..,

6A

West
Pass
Pass
Pass

~orth

Ea~t

3A
4 'I
Pass

Pass
Pass
Pass

Opening lead· 'I 'K

FRANK &amp; EARNEST

If you think slam,
tell partner

AVIAN
CHI~oP~ACTIC

CLINIC
~ ST~AIGHTEN

vp ANP

FLY

~IGHT

;;

THE BORN LOSER

~"""m1~ ~e.w t&gt;\tl I!&gt; &amp;ot~&amp; ~ ~GE:t.,&amp;t.
10 WORK FOR. MC..- IT

C."'-Rf..rUL,

GU~\E:£~

PiF '&lt;OU STI\'&lt;00 II TOO~&amp;;
YOU C.OUU&gt; t&gt;IS~PPtf:\12:.!

fv\Otl\ ...

I'LL LOSE:. fl\lt.
POU~tf.&gt;~

If you open one spade and partner ra•s·
es to three spades, a hm1t ra1se show1ng
10·12 support po1nts and •nv•ling game,
what do your various rebids mean?
If you have a "dog• opening bid w1th 5·3·
3·2 distribution, you pass out three
spades. With some extra values, you
raise to four spades. If, however, you bid
four of a new suit, you are showing a
control in that suit, usually first-round
(ace or void) and announcing interest in
a slam.
Responder then makes a control·bld 1n
return if h1s hand •s slam suitable - he
has aces and k•ngs. not queens and
1acks; decent trumps· a short SUit somewhere. Or he b•ds foUl' spades If hiS
hand 1s slam negat1ve - he has
·quacks,• not aces and king; poor
trumps; 4·3-3-3 d stributlon. Here, North
rebids four hearts, over which you drive
mto SIX spades. How would you play
after a heart lead?
You are in trouble. You must draw
trumps cash your dlamond ace, and
play a d amond to dummy's Jack. If the
f1nesse loses, the contract dies.
However, 1f the finesse wins, dummy's
diamond k1ng is cashed. If the su•t
breaks 3·3, you d•scard your heart loser
on the 13th diamond and take the club
finesse for an overtnck. If, though, the
diamonds are 4·2, you must hope East
has the club king.
Phillip Alder 1s running a bridge cruise
from Oct. 24 lb Nov. 2 out of and back to
Fort Lauderdale that will go around the
Caribbean and into the Panama Canal.
Details
are
at

Pressed
Dawdle
Stingy
1 B·vitamin
Dwarf
source
cousin
6 The pits
56 Goddesses'
11 Postpone
statues
12 Clay-based
57 Asian
rock
capital
13 Arranged
15 Settling up
DOWN
16 Piece of
china
18 "-Te Ching"
Fabric
19 Simian
meas.
21 Toupee
2 Want-ad
22 Ranch
abbr.
measure
3 Kenya's loc.
23 Scholarship 4 Parlor
basis
furniture
25 Zilch
5 Cone
28 Hotel patron
producer
30 Animal
6 PDQ
shelter
7 How come?
31 Whichever
8 -accompli
32 Summer In 9 Arm bone
10 Toy building
France
33 Hgt.
block
35 Sea duck
14 Repair a
'ST Bear's refuge
tear
38 Destroy.
15 Seattle's
40 Marshy
Sound
17 Pool
tract
41 VCR maker
implement
42 Kind
(2 wds.)
of critic
19 Intense
43 Channel-surf 20 Primp
46 Hagar of the 22 Mellowed,
comics
as whiskey

HEY, MAYBE.. '(ES 1
FRO!"\ t-IERE
'(OU C.A.N SEE THE

YES !!

Mc.NULTY!;.' POOL!

PEANUTS

GARFIELD

LLS
W"AT~

ll.JE

RAN6ER
(:d(

YoU

(;blH~

iot/AY,

~Ro ?

·WtiAT'S SO E.REAT
ABOUT iHE Mc.NI.X..T't's'
• POOL?

G

'1bur CBirthday:

Friday, July 3 , 2009
By Bernice Bede Osol
A number of relallonsh ps developed
over the past several years could tako on
greater signifocance In the year ahead.
Knowmg these people support your
efforts Will be enormously 1mponant In
helpmg to ach1eve your goats.
CANCER (June 21·July 22)- An oppor·
tunity to show your stuff could occur 1n
an area you do not consider a customary
channel. It'll serve to be a pleasant d1ver·
s1on, as well as a new source of future
income.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) - It behooves
you to discuss your thlnk1ng w1th your
mate before acting on a soctal dect&amp;lon
that could affect both of you. Hts or her
ideas could be a bit d1fferenl than yours
-and maybe even better
VIRGO (Aug. 23·Sept. 22)- Someth•ng
you've been reluctant to pursue should
not be ignored any longer Once you act
on it. your apprehensiOns and retuctan&lt;:e
Will evaporate and you'll feel better lor
taking the bull by the horns
LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 23) - Be more
assertiVe about someth1ng that needs
doing. Just believe 111 yourself, and you'U
eas•ly be able to advance past your
fears.
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22)- Although
you might be a slow starter, onco you get
go•ng, you'll keep your eye on the target,
shift 1nto h1gh gear, and move things
along at a last c1 p.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23-Dec. 21)- You
are a natural-born salesperson, yet it
behOoves you to work from a method1cal
presentat1on at thiS t•me or you could talk
all around the subJect w•thout making
any salient potnls
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22·Jan. 19)- Try to
conserve energy resources, because
later on or even tomorrow, you may bo ·
too tired to enjoy your own hard work.
Pace yourself; don't wear yourself out.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 19)- Having
personal freedom and 1ndependen&lt;:e is
Important to you and to your way of
achieving th1ngs. Don't permtt others to
place you 1n a posttlon where your mobilIty IS inhibtted.
PISCES (Feb. 20·March 20) - It's
1mportant not to diSCOunt your 1ntu1t1ve
perceptions, but be sure to assess critical matters from a logtcal perspectiVe as
we I. If coupled together, your Ito nklng
Wlll be right on the mark
ARIES (March 21-Apnl 19)- If you're
senous about getting somethtc'lg to work
out, you can pull It together. By the same
token, If you leave it to the vicissitudes or
life, noth1ng WII come ollt
TAURUS (Apnl 20-May 20) - Even If
your day begtOs on a rather playful noto,
you can make the transitton toward seri·
ousness when events call lor it. It won't
take muCh lor you to change course.
GEMINI (May 21·June 20) -To your
cred1t. you'll know how to ma1nta1n a
philosophical outlook should some
sobering developments occur. This aUI·
tude will go a long way toward keep1ng
things running smoothly.

24 Change
color
25 Low point
26 Lying still
27 Early Greek
harp
29 Pothole
filler
34 Wildly
dramatic
36 Envisage
39 Carpentry
item
43 Ristorante
order
44 Like the
Gobi
45 Walt Kelly
strip
46 Poodle
pros ·

47 Eggy drinks
49 Maple Leafs
org.
51 Overly
52 "Down
_
under" bird •
53 Family
mem.

..

CELEBRITY CIPHER
by Luis Campos

Ct!ebltty Ciprler cryptog&lt;&amp;'IIS are a9a!90 110m QUCW?nS riY rarnous !)tQille. past aod &gt;-'ISitll.
EaCh earonl':llctplle&lt;sta.'ldS!ora"#.'llr
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S HN N E C
PREVIOUS SOLUTION; ·This Information is top secunty. When you have read~
H, destroy yoursett.· • Marshan McLuhan

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�Page B6 •

The Daily Sentinel

Thursday, July 2,

www.mydailyscntinel.com

2009

Sena e to hold hearing on college football's BCS
WASHI\IGTON (AP) The Senatt.· plans to hold a
hearing next \\Cek looking
into antitrust bsues surrounding
the
Bowl
Champ10n:-hip Series. It'~
the second tune th1s year
that Congress 1s shining a
light on the polanzm'! S)Stem college football uses to
crO\\ n its national champion.
The hearing will be held
the
next Tuesday in
Judiciary Committee's subcommittee on antitru:;t,
competition polk) and consumer rights, according to a
posting on the committee\.,
Web site.
Sen. Orrin Hatch of Utah.
the subcommittee's top
Republican and the Ia"maker who sought the hearing, did not return telephone
and e-mail messages left at

his office Tucsda).
In an e~say for Sports
Illustrated being released
Wednesday. Hatch wrote
that the Sherman Antitrust
Act prohibits contracts.
combinations or conspiracies designed to reduce
competition.
"I don't think a more
accurate description of\\ hat
the BCS docs exists:· Hatch
\HOte. lie noted that six
confercnc~:s get automatic
bids to participate in series,
'' hilc others do not. The
~) :-.tem, he argued, "intenand explicitly
tional!)
favors cl'rtain participants."
Citing the mone) generated b) the BCS. Hatch \HOte.
"If the gm ernment were to
ignore a similar husine~s
ammgement of this magnitude in any other industry, it
would he condemned for

::.hirking its responsibility."
When
asked
about
Hatch's comments, BCS
coordinator John Swofford
said the BCS' ln\\)e!'S ha\c
..\\orkc:-d diligently to ensure
that the BCS is in compliance with the law."
Football fans in Hatch's
state ''ere furious that Utah
\\as h) passed for the
national
championship
despite going undefeated in
the regular sea on. Hatch
noted that President Barack:
Obama and other::. ha\e
called for the BCS to be
replaced with a playoff system
··one thing is clear: No
changes Will take place if
Congress does nothing,''
Hatch wrote.
• Rep. Joe Barton of Texas,
the top Republican on the
House
Energ)
and

Commerce Committee. has
introduced legi~lation that
'"ould pre\ ent the !'\CJ\A
from calling a game a
championship
national
unle'is it's the outcome of a
playoff. At a Ma) hearing.
Barton warned that the legislation \\Ould mo\e for'' ard "if \\C don't see some
attion in the next t\\0
month~" from
BCS on
swih:hing to d pia) l&gt;ff ::.ystem.
David Frohnmayer, president of the Unhersit) of
Oregon and chairman of the
BCS J&gt;residenti&lt;tl 0\ersight
Committee. expressed a
preference Tuesday for the
current s) :-.tem. saying the
proposals for a pla)off system "disre,pect our academic calendars, and they
utterly lack a business
pl:lll."

In this
March 8
file photo,
Phoenix
Suns center

Shaquille
O'Neal •
waits for
San
Antonio
Spurs free
throw during the first
quarter of
an NBA
basketball
game in
San
Antonio.
AP photo

Tiger wants to be ''greedy host'' at Congressional
BETHESDA. Mel. (AP)It's not often that a player is
bold enough to challenge
Tiger Wood:- on the go! f
course. Rarer still is when it
happ~ns during a pro-am
round from one of h1s amateur partner:-.
..That still puts me I up,"
Dallas Cowboy~ quarterback
Tony Romo said to him
Wednesday morning.
"Does it, now?'' Woods
replied. not -.ounding the
least bit concerned.
The world's No. I pla)er
then ::.muk.~u a fairway metal
down
the
17th
at
Congressional
Country
Club. Romo. a scratch player
who asked to pia) from the
championship tees. followed
with a 3-wood that traveled
about a yard farther.
On the par-3 second.
Romo appeared to have the
edge when Woods bladed a
bunker shot O\ er the green
and into the gallery. He didn't finish out the hole, and
when Romo three-putted
from the fringe. the quarterback said, "You wouldn't
have made 4 from there."
They dido 't mention the

stakes or how many shots
Woods ga\ e Rorno - 1f any
- although it had a familiar
conclusion.
"He contributed to my
S{)ending fund. \\ hi&lt;.'h is
n1ce.'' Woods said later on
his Web site.
The bold move by Woods
\\as playing w1th the
CO\\ boys' quarterback in
Washington Redskins countr.. and while it attracted a
large gal.Jery for the 6:30
a.m. tee t1me. the cheers and
jeers were relatively tame.
"How about an autograph?" one fan said to
Romo. 'Tve got a Tony
Romo jerse) on and l'\e
already been in three fighb."
Romo kept walking.
"Jason Campbell signed
it," the fan called to him.
Campbell. the Redskins
quarterback. pla)ed in ano~h­
er pro-am group. while
Woods and Romo were
joined by House Minority
Leader John Boehner, who
spent most of his da) picking
up his ball be' ore 11! reached
the e.reen.
There was plenty of star
power at Congressional.

~:ven during·the opening ceremony
when
Jessica
Simp on sang the national
anthem.
·
\Vhen the AT&amp;T National
gets under way Thursd,t), the
biggest star will be the tour1
nament host.
Woods missed his O\\n
tournament la,t )ear. which
was pia) cd a week after he
had season-ending knee
surgery. He had to watch
from h1s couch as Anthony
Kim closed v.ith a bo!!e\free 65 for a two-shot 'lctory.
.. I thought he \\as here last
year," Kim said. "His name
was all over the place."
It IS e\!Cf) \\here but the
troph).
One obscure piecl' of trivia
that could come out of this
tournament is a chance for
Woods to match Jack
~icklaus by winning his
tournament on the :-.econd
trv. Nicklaus won the
~fcmorial in 1977. the second year of the tournament.
The onl) Nicklaus record
that matters to Woods is 18
profc~sional major~. and
that's on his mind, too.

,; " .

Woods i~ playing for the
first time since he failed to
defend his title in the U.S.
Open at B~thpagc, largely
CLEVELAND (AP) due to his putting. Next up is Shaquille O'i'ical took his
the Rritish Op~:n in two first look at his new basket\\eeks at Turnbe!T). a links ball horne.
cour~e he has onh seen on
The 15-time All-Star centele\ is ion.
•
ter toured the Cavalicro,;'
For now. he is intent on suburban practice facilit)
being a "greedy host."
and took his physil.:al on
He \\ants the ·120-man Wednesday, one day before
field at Congressional to he i formall) introduced as
ha\e a great \\eek. as long as superstar LeBron James'
he goe~ home "ith the tro- newe~t teammate.
phy.
O'Neal and a :;mall group
··1 always put in a~ much as of associate~ met briefly
I possibly can to win an
ith Cavs coach ~like
event," he said. "It is fun ''
Brown and others at the
''inning your own e\'ent.''
Cle\ eland Clinic Courts in
He has "on the Chevron Independence, Ohio. The
World Challenge, his charit) Ca\ialiers
,1re
hoping
tournament 111 Californw. O'NeaL \\ hn has won four
fou1 times. Woods also is
going lor a hat trick 01 so1 s Nl3A title", can be the missb) tl') i1)g tow in three tourna- ing piece to help James win
ments m one year hosted by his first champ1on~hip and
PGA Tour pla)crs, having end the city's title drought
pr~:\ iously won the Arnold . dating to 19M.
TheCa\ alicr~ ha\'e schedPalmer Invitational at Bay
uled
a I p.m. news conferHill and the ~1r.!morial,
ence on Thursday to \\elwhich ~icklau runs.
Strange!) enough, both corne 0'!\:cal. He was
those tournaments were his acquired in a trade \\ ith the
Phoenix Suns last week:.
final events before a major.

Shaq arrives in Cleveland
[t i" not kno\\n if James,
who "as vacationing outside the country when
0 ·~eal " a traded. '' iII be
at the news conference. Ti t
leaoue MVP \\as in L
Angeles last Sunday for tH
BET Awards.
O'Neal, who will wear
jerse) No. 33 - his high
school and college number
- in Cleveland. is staying
at a posh downtown hotel
during this visit. He hasn't
decided 1f he will buy a
house. rent or stay in a hotel
during his time with the
Cavaners, his fifth NBA
team.
Cleveland is the first
cold-weather city ''here
O'Neal has played after
stops in Orlando. Fla .. Los
Miami
and
Angeles,
Phoenix
O'Neal has one season
left under contract. but the
37 ·)ear-old center recent!)
indicated on his T\\ itter
page that he can play three
more seasons.

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