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GARDENING
Some flowers ate self-pl~ting
iunba~ limt• ·itnttnel

BY LEE REICH
FOR THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

Are you tired of playing
nurse_maid to baby flowers,
seedlings that each year you
plant in containers, carefu 1ly nurture, then plant out in
the garden once the weather
settles? Besides watering
each carefully, you also, of
course, have to decide
where to plant them.
.All _this work and plal)mng 1s unnecessary with
,flowers
that self-sow,
replanting themselves from
seed every year. Count .
&lt;J.mong sttlf-sowers some
annual, biennial and perennial flowers. ·
NOPL~NTING

NEEDED
One favorite self-sowing
flower, twinkling up at you
each spring with its starry,
white-eyed, blue flowers, is
forget-me-not. Nunure and
plant it once, and a new
crop of seedlings appears
each spring - reliably and
:Without your helping hand.
Shirley poppies are another self-sower, O/lfolding
papery, cardinal red flowers
each spring. ·
· Also reliably coming
back each year, all by themselves from self-sown
seeds, are calendulas, also
known as pot marigolds.
Well into fall, they brighten
the garden with their orange
and yellow flowers.
Want more? There's
ferny-foliaged cosmos as
well as that old·fashioned
· flower, bush balsam, a relative of impatiens with
upright stems along which
open red, pink or white
blossoms that resemble
miniature roses. Even impaliens itself sometimes is a
self-sower.
These self-sowing flow ers do need a little care
beyond their first planting.
You can't tell self-sowing
flowers just where to grow;

f'or

forget-me-nets,
instance: might. decide to
mch the1r way tnt~ a veg. etable garden t~at s close
enough to the1r ongmal
home. Calendulas may need
help because. they often
self-sow _too t~1ckly ..
Your JOb m cann~ f?r
self-so~mg flowers IS , m
late spnng, to pull some out
where they are overcrowded, and to pull all out where
they are not wanted.
KEEP AN EYE ON
SELF·SOWERS
You may sense that selfsowmg flowers walk a fine
line between being garden
plants ~nd weeds. True.
Fox,glove is a self-sowing
b1enmal that may be too
freely self-sowing in your
garden, so much so that you
have to "weed" it out completely. Or not.
Nicotiana is also very free
in this sense. Then again,
you may · want to keep it
around anyway ·so as not to
miss out on its irresistible
nocturnal fragrance.
Fright is not a word usual. ly uttered in the same breath
as suGh charming, dainty

PageD6
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Sunday, June 7, 2009

Kits
make
growing
•
•
ITilcro greens even easier

Ribs Festival Scenes, A6

This photo
taken May 18
BY DI!AN FOSDICK
or time-deprived gardeners
FOR THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
shows whitetrying to provide wholesome,
eyed blue flowflavorful food for their famiMicro greens and sprouts lies, Lee said. Micro green
ers. One
are among the easiest things blends have become one of
favorite selfto grow in kitchen gardens, the company's top-selling
sowing flower,
but even for these there are items since they were added
twinkling up at
shollcuts.
Commercially to the catalog two years ago.
you each spring
produced micro green plantThe kit collection she put
with its slarry,
mg
kits,'for
example.
together
for 2009 includes
white-eyed,
These
multi-ptece
sets,
one
seed
packet each of
blue llowers, is
which retail at around $30, beets ("Bull's Blood"), cress
. forget-me-not
make growing micro greens ("Broadleaf'),
kohlrabi
Nurture and
more convenie.nt than ("Chancellor"), cutting celplant it once,
. assembling them on your ery, peas ·("Green Arrow")
and a new crop ·own. Most such kits include and spinach ("Rembrandt").
of seedlings
plarit trays, absorbent pads,
"They are still a bit of a
appears each
.growing medium (vermi- niche product, but I have
spring - · reliculite, potting soil) and seed · stalled seeing them heavily
ably and withpackets.
just this year, so I think they
out your helpFew ·companies offered have
finally
broken
. ing hand.
much in the way of micro through," Lee · said. "We
AP photo
~~~ supplies until recently, have placed them in some
said Tracy Lee, horticulture of the big box stores and
flowers as chamomile and you . mulch and, of course, manager for The . Cook's they are selling well."
Johnny-jump-up. But these .· just how diligent you are Garden, a Warminster, Pa.,Little is required in the
flowers can be frighteningly about weeding.
based seed source for way. of harvest tools. Just
·With the right site and· European garden vegetables. find a pair of scissors that
.prolific in an environment
that is too congeniaL gardener, both chamomile
That is changing quickly comfonably fit your band
Chamomile not only self- and Johnny-jump-up are because of demand from new and clip away. ·
sows but also spreads by wonderful garden plants. ·
runners. Johnny-jump-ups
When you d.ecide to plant
can be charming or, because a self-sowing flower, be
they also produce under- aware that offspring will not
ground seeds from flowers . necessarily be identical to
~
that don't even open, a little each other · or replicas · of
McCORMICK'
alarming.
their _Parent - definitely
FRIEND OR FOE?
not 1f you begm . w1th
CROSS&amp;SONS
Whether a self-sowing hybrids. But the resulting
FARM EQUIPMENT
flower becomes a friend or variability and reversion to
a weed varies from garden wilder fotrns lend a relaxed,
10248 COUNTY RD.14
to garden. Not only does the friendly air to a garden.
JACKSON, OH 45140
site itself. matter, but also Moreso because self-sown
how you· garden: whether· flowers never line . themPhone (740) 286 -1966 • (740) 286 -6451
you turn the soil, whether selves up like soldiers.

c&amp; )

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Prinled 08 100%

• • Geiger wins ,gold in D-2
long jump. See Page Bl ·

·,

INSIDE
I

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WE'RE BUILDING A.NEW CAR COMPANY
JOINAND
US SHOWING
.
. 'YOUOUA
;· . . .APPRECIATION
. ,. . .... •.: ·
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.. As I proud mtmber of tht community, It Is our privlltQI to lnvltt "" to 01,1r ApP,.Ietloft £¥lat. PlliH Jain us a 1ft ~· . :.
our exc:ltln; lineup of c:.111. trueD. SUVs and mlnlvan.s. Plus, enter far Ubara to wfn 1 new ZQOt ..ettc1e or 1 trip for foUr to
Ftorfdl!

•. MiddlepOrt alumni.·
gather
lo~ . reunion ..
.... . ·-··· . .,
'" · '
.,.
See&lt; Page A2 . ··
• Transfers posted.
See Page A2
• Scouts make donation.
See Page A2
.
.
Motorcycles lined Court Street at the Gold Wings and Ribs Festival Saturday.
• Garden club makes
pOtpourri. See Page A2
• Ohio school board
VI
replac~s president.
Bv CHARLENE HOEFLICH '
Hundreds of m()torcyclists were in
See Page A2
HOEFL,ICHOMVDAILVSENTINEL.COM
town for the . festival and 'to pallici.
.
.
pate in · ·the .Saturday . afternoon
·• Lack of consent
POMEROY - Sunny $kies, good parade, the tour of the county and the
still makes it wrong.
·entertainment, variety of activities to light parades on both Friday and
See Page A3
apfeal to all ages, and plenty of festi- Saturday nights. .
. ,
.
in
the
.crowds
for
·
MIXX
·
scheduled
to
perform
va
foods
brought
• Sheriff repOrts
the seventh annual Gold Wings and Saturday in the amphitheater had to
another scam .
Ribs Festival. .
. ·
·
. pull out to the death· of a family
Chairman Bill Quickel called it member at the last minute, but the
: See Page AS
overall a real success. He described Jody Haught band booked to fill that
• Ohio governor
the entertainment as "better than time slot turned out to be a hit with
: making pitch to
ever," the ,number of concessionaires festival goers.
public for schools.
who OI\!IIe as "more than before", the
Quickel expressed disappointment
volunteers who assisted in set-lips and with the much-advenised boa! races
See Page AS

.· W&amp;R.·. F
•
·
al
•d
·
f
un
J!
G
· .estiv . pro es · .. ·. tor everyone

WEA1HER

·,MHSgrad scores big

I

Or...,

Receives National Academy nominations

l '

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BY CHARLENE HOEFLICH · .

II

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HOEFUCHOMVOAILVSENTINEL.COM

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Details on Page AJS
. l

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INDEX
2 S£C:I'IONS- 12 PAGF.'l

,

Annie's Mailbox

OUr vehicles tre backed by our best·ln-the-bUIIness Llfttimt Po•rtl'lln Limited W.rranM
• ~unlike our ApprKIItlon EVent. It wUIIast a UfttleM.

CalendarS
•

0

Classifieds

•

SYRACUSE - Racine
Village Council recently
voted to place two ·replacement
levies
on·. the
November ballot f()t'o fire
protection and current
expenses, respectively. · :
At its most recent meet··
ing, council voted to.place
.70-tnill fire protection:
replacement levy on the ballot which .expires auhe end
of thi s year with the last collection in 2009. The anticipated revenue for this levy,
based on 85 percent collection of the estimated
amount, is $2,551 a year.
Council' also voted to
place a three-mills.,current ..
expenses replacement lbvy
on the November ballot.
This levy expires ai 'the end
of 2009 with the last year of
collection in 2010. The
anticipated revenue -for the
current expenses replacement lev.y based. on 85 percent

of

the

estimated

!f'h~u~";~u!'~·~~datt'~

ning up and down the river in front of for village expenses sucb as
the parking lot during the afternoon.
street lights, viliage utilities,
The
art
show
in
the
Co.
u
rt
Street
office
supplies, palls and
·
mini-park was a real success. w~th supplies for equipment
Rhea Knight of Letall, W.Va. taking repair, building mainte- ·
.
best of show. Gina Pines was there nance, etc.
doing face painting , and Diana _ . Clerk Treasurer Dav1d
Johnson helped the children with Spencer prepare~ a. repoll
rock painting.
on what t.he _ v11lage h~s
Howard's Concessionaires was the ~pent on ut!llttes so far th1s
·
f th 2009 Oh' • B R''year. Racme has spent
wmner o . e
. to s est IllS $2,280.52 for telephone
pla9ue, whl(~ J.T. Stovellop took the service. $9,611.14 for nat. Oh10 Best W1~1gs award. Other cham- ural gas and $11,402.69 for
p10ns were ~tana Johnson, h_og call- electricity. These utilities
mg; Matt W1lson, hot dog eatmg con, are paid for a variety of
cleancup as "tremendous.," the cooper- where six were promised , four came, . teSt wmner; and Colton Lavender, 4 to buildings . including the
·
··
ation of the community, merchants and accord!n~ to him "they never real- 6, Phoemx Cleland, 7 to I I ·. age
Please ... Rllclne, A5
and village police offi~;ers ·as "great." . ly did a race' although two were run- groups, cookie eating contest winner.

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Racine to put
replacement
levies on ballot

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740-594-8555

•

. • Bobby Dill, Jr., 53
• Phyllis Glasgo, 78 .

•"

June 8-13

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' Page AS

'

Mon .-Thur. 8:3Qam-8pm;
Fri. 8:30am-6pm; Sat. 8:30am-5pm;
Sun . Closed

•

PBITUARIFS

740-992-2825 • 106 N. 2nd Ave, Middleport, OH

Come See Whet W.'rw Bulldlnv F'or You.

•

BSERGENTOMvDAILVSENTINEL.COM

Picture Gallery &amp; Jewelry .
~at&amp;t • RadioShack.

c...,....cam

....

Council · also
gave only be . us~d for construe- the purchase ot a new radio
Pomeroy Fire Chief Rick ' lion and $210 million has for the depanment' s ·newest
Blaettnar permission to pur- been set aside for these .tr\Jck for. $4,148 . The
sUe several federal grants, grants Ditionwide. Blaettnar depanment had installt'ld a
including one for a new will also be applying for radio from an older truck but
boat and one for a new fire three grants for equipment it wasn't working.
house for Pomeroy or for dive teams.
· Council also approved
Bedford
Township.
Council also agreed to Joe Barnhan as a firefighter
Blaettnar said the grant for a allow expenditures under and Ryan VanMeter and
new frre house would be $2,000 to repair the concrete Travis Dunham as junior
tough to . get but felt the bays . at the Pomeroy Fire
firefighters.
application was Wollh a Depanment which are sinkshot. The federal funds can ing. Council also approved
Pleese see Pomeroy, AS

Bv BETH SERGENT •

'.

•

Treasurer Kathy Hysell
guessed it· would be around
· $28,000, The $28,000 is a
required 10 percent match
for the federal stimulus
grant which will pay for the
bulk of the project.
Citing concern about
where the money to pay
back several loans will'
come from, Councilwoman
· Mary · McAnjlUS voted
against the motton. ·

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Athens, OH 45701

BETH SERGEitr

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Taylor Motors
25D Columbus Rd

Bv

BSEAGENTCMVOAILVSENTINEL.COM

POMEROY - ·Last night
·Pomeroy Village Council
authorized the mayor to
apply for a Joan which will
be applied toward replaciyg
.
village water meters.
The loan is through the
Water
Supply
Ohio
Revolving Loan Account, is
zero interest and Clerk-

Ingels Electronics

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SPORTS

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Retyded Newsprint

M\ddleport • Pomeroy, Ohio

IUSJIJIOG"

•

Point falls to I ,incoin ·
in Class AA final, Bt.

2009 Gold Wmgs and ·

Comics·
Editorials
Obituaries
Sports
Weather

B Section

As

© •009 Ohio Valley Publlsblnt1 Co.

•

..

POMEROY - In January
2008 when Evan Shaw was
assigned to shoot video for
NFL Films at the Super
Bowl in the University of
I:'hoenix
Stadium, . he
thought it could never get
any better ~han that.
But it has.
The 2002 graduate of
Meigs High School in the
tech prep IT interactive
media program and Ohio
University's College of
Communications, class of
2007; has been nominated
for three awards by the
of
National
Academy
Television Arts and Sciences
and the Spoils Video Group.
Friday he left for Atlanta,
Ga.
where
tonight
(Tuesday) · The Global
Media Awards ceremony
will take place. The Emmy
award winner will be
announced in Lexington.
Ky. on July 25.
Shaw credits Suzanne
Bentz . .his tech prep interactive media instructor at
Meigs High School with
getting him started on the
path to a career in spoils

Meigs Courthouse is·biker's 12th on statewide tour
Bv BRIAN J. REED
BREEDOMVDAILVSENTINEL.COM

POMEROY - Bicyclist
James Sasak is about'a third
of the way around the
perimeter of Ohio on his
trip to promote Special
Olympics. The . trip will.
encompass I ,250 miles and
37 . border counties in 26
days.
Sasak, . or "Spudd," stalled his trip on the steps of
the Cuyahoga County
Coullhouse cJn June I, and ·
367 1/2 miles later, after a·
day's rest in Athens, he
Evan Shaw
arrived at the Meigs
video . In fact Bentz secured' Counry Coullhouse at midhim as the ·keynote speaker day Monday.
for the regional Tech Prep
His bike ttip is called
awards banquet held recent- "Masonry · in Motion," recly in Mariena for high ognizing the role of Free &amp;
· . Accepted
school students.
Masons · of
Shaw is currently the Ohio's .suppoll of Special
director of Multimedia Olympics.
Marketing for the ·. OU
· Sasak will travel from
Athletic Department fol- Cleveland east across the
lowing a stint at Nonhero northern border counties
Afizona University. The on Lake Erie. south along
Meigs native , son of Lynn the Ohio border with the
and Liz Shaw. also contin- states of Pennsylvania and
ues to freelance for NFL West Virginia, all along the'
Films, w.here he had an Ohio River and then back
early internship and still north along the Indiana
{latrols the sidelines· of NFL border, east along the
'
.

Pluse ... 5"-. As

Pluse see Tour. AS

Brian J. Reed/photo

·James Sasak poses in front of the Meigs County
Courthouse Tuesday. It is one of 37 Ohio courthouses he
will visit on his "Masonry in Motion" bicycle tour in support
of Special Olympics. He will travel around the perimeter of
Ohio in 2~ days.
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�The Daily Sentinel

PageA2

LOCAL .• STATE

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ANNIE'S MAILBOX

TRANSFERS POSTED .

Jarnle Rae
Batley

Amanda

John Farley to HSBC
Mortgage Services, sheriff's
deed. Columbia.
Randy R. Wolf, Pamela S.
Wolf, to Randy R. Wolf,
Paula S. Wolf. deed,
Chester.
Rex D. Vance to Sandra
Elizabeth
Harless,
Billy E. Harless,
Diane Horton
deed, Scipio.
Robert Ward, Martha A.
Ward, to Tuppers PlainsJohnny L. Newell , Elmer Chester Water District, right
Co1urn bus; W.va.; Herscm:
'-'-1 K napp, C. Newell, Darlene Newell, of way. Olive.
. h ard s,
R1c
Adam G. Lee, Ginnie
Walburn, Sabina, , Carla Wilson Sheila Theiss, Thomas
Raymond
Lee,
to TP-CWD, right of
MiddlepOrt.
Lohrer, Troy, , Norman Theiss, to Charles Rex
.way, Sutton.
Class of 1951: James Manley, Columbus; Nancy Justis, deed, Chester.
Ralph Trussell , Jean
Buell, Knightdale, NC; Morris, Hamden; Kit Neal,
Lamar Lee Lyons to
to TP-CWD, right
Trussell,
Franees Le tart, W"
Cl 1.fford
an d
. va.; D'1c k Ro 11 er, Abraham Sellers, deed,
of
way,
Chester.
Coleman, Jackson,; Robert Belpre, ; Harold and Caryl Orange.
Jeff L. Brooks, Marisa
Dillard. Pomeroy; Myron Hudson Wolfe, Ft. Myers,
Abraham
Sellers
to
Duffield. Middleport; .Don Fla.
Lamar Lee Lyons , deed, Brooks, to TP-CWD. right
of way, Chester.
Payne, Dayton. ; James
Class of 1960: Carter Orange. '
Bruner Land Co., Inc., to
Roller, Waldorf, MD; James French, Nashville, TN; Ernie
Stephen · E. . Wolfe,
Larry
Whaley,
Fay~
Sanborn, Proctorville, , Hall, Middleport; Olivia Kri6tine E. Adams Wolfe, to
Whaley,
deed,
Chester.
Betty Ashley Snow-Rosser, Bowles Lockett, Shaker Wolfe ·
Keystone
Shade, , Dana Walburn, Heights; Phyllis Hilbert Inheritance, Stephanie J. · Bruner Land Co., Inc., to
Brandon M. Kimes, deed,
Salem
Oregon;
Dick Townsley,
Fayetteville; Ward, deed, Chester.
Walters, Columbus; Roscoe Dennis Walburn, Beverly;
David K. Rice, .deceased, Bedford.
Oretha Margaret Snider to
Wise, Middleport.
Diana Stumbo Williams, to, Mary J. Rice, affidavit,
Charlotta
Romona Clark,
Rutland.
Class of 1952: Nancy Lehigh, Fla.
p I Ph'll'
s·
certificate
of transfer,
Miller Beaver. Middleport;
Class of 1961: Tom
au
· 1 1P
Imon,
June Duffield, . Middleport; Anderson , Middleport; Judy deceased, to Allie Simon, Village of Racine.
Ernest D Whitehead,
Marlene Hall, Cheshire, ; Sauer Crooks, Middleport; · affidavit, Salisbury.
Jr.,
Debra H. Whitehead,
Carolyn Litchfield, Pt. Karen McElhinny, Athens;
Jack Everett Harless to
to
Jerry
A. Dereberger,
z·1rkl e spnnger,
·
Carolyn
Siniard,
PI easant, W."va.; Larry R'1ce, Jan
H 1
ffid
't LetJames
rt
Pauy A. Sanders, .deed,
Nicholasville, Ky.; Bill Marietta; Bill Stobart,
ar ess, a 1 a vi •
a ·
Scipio.
Taylor, Columbus.
Canal Winchester; Doris
Carolyn Siniard, Larry E.
Florence F. Butcher to
Class of 1954: Jeanette Rice Walburn, Beverly.
Siniard, James Harless,
Dorothy
Kroegel, James E.
Moore
Cunningham,
Class of 1962: Cindy Cathy Harless, to Re~kah
Kroegel, deed, Olive.
·
Huntington, W.Va.; Rae Morris Abbott Millersport; H~~:~~~r~~~ceased, to
Kathy D. Wyatt to Scot~
Ann Mills · Gwiazdowsky, Virginia Erdner Avalon, Pa.; Greg Parker, Jeff Parker, Needs, deed, Bedfol'(l . .
Middleport; Virgil Manley, .Coleen Wilson Ohlinger, affidavit, Orange.
Kathleen
· Seckman,
Brecksville, ; Carl Taylor, Zanesville.
Seckman,.
to·
Samuel
H.
Cplumbus; Marcella Taylor
Class of 1963: Charlotte
Cleo M. Smith to Alice E.
Tony
Causey.
Frances
H
·
Bumpas, cleed, Orange.
Worner,
Barb oursv1'II e, D av1'd son
anmng,
James .Qarber; Jr. to Terry Causey, deed, J,::bester.
W.Va.
Pomeroy; Janet Baker L Barber d ed OJ'
Peggy · Ruth Huuon,
Class of 1955: Sharon Downia, Pomeroy; Rich
·
• e • •ve.
deceased,
to Man ford
Riley Ashley, Middleport; Hays, London.
Stephen C. Campbell,
Huuon,
affidavit,
Ronald Fultz, Westerville,·
Class of 196-il: Marilyn Lillian
M.
Campbell,
Camus, LLC, affidavit of Salisbury.
.
Sheila Stover Hubbard, Anderson, Middleport; Judy f
Le
Manford
Hutton
to
Lancaster; Brady Huffman, . Wildermuth Allensworth,
a~~~na 'ji~ Heavener to Manford Hutton, transfer
Middleport.
·Reynoldsburg, ; Karen · Vema K. Heav.ener, fulnsfer upon death, Salisbury. . .
Class of 1956: John Bachner Brown, Columbus; upon death, Bedford. .·
Patricia Arnold, Dan C.
Vroman, Lakelimd, Fla.; . Neda Bradford; Carolyn
Harley Eugene McOonald Arnold, Everett Junior
Jerome Beach, Columbus; Nicholson
French, to Ted L. Dexter, deed, Michael, Paula Gaul, Roger
Nancy
Roller
Cale, Nashville, Tenn.; Ronald Salisbury.
.
. Gaul, . John
Michael,
Middl~port; Larry Eastep, Hanning, Pomeroy; Carroll . ·Timothy Ray . Wamsley, Deborah
Michael,
to
Columbus; Betty Ward Lyons Harper, Mid\lleport; • Diane Wamsley, to Rutland Jacqueline Hoover, James
Field, Trotwood,; Ernestine Cinda
Sauer
Harris, Township Trustees, deed, Hutton, 'June Ann Peyton,
Asbury
McComas, Middleport; Ellen Dutton R 1 d V'll
deed, Salisbury.
1
ut an ·
age.
·
Middleport ·, Sally . Wilson Kiehl, Saratoga Springs,
Charles W. Baer to J;D.
Old Lock Twenty Four
Miller, Coolville; James N.Y.; David Rice, Fla.; Drilling co., right of way, Campground to Victor
Mourning,
Middleport; Lillian Slaven Manley, Sutton.
Counts, deed, Sutton.
Donna Stewart, Gallipolis; Columbus; Hope Bishop
Juanita · Hawkins · Walker, . Reynolds, ·Ft. Myers, · Fla.;
Greenwood, Ind.
Jva
Stewart . Sisson,
Class of 1957: James Rutland; Darryl Stumbo;
Bowles, Pt. Pleasant, W.Vi!.; Lehigh, Fla.. .
·
CHESTER - Chester and Colton Reynolds particCharles DeLay, Sugar
Class · of 1965: David
Cub Scout Pack 235 recent· ipated, with assistance from
Grove; Gordon Guthrie Casci, Middleport; Diane ty collected $340.46 for Powell's Foodfair, TNT Pit
Middleport;
Richard VanCooney
Lynch,. flood victims in southern
of Chester and Taz 's
Hovatter, Middleport; Jane Middleport; Mary. Walburn West Virginia and eastern · Stop
Marathon.
·
Harris
Huffman, Taylor, Fostoria; Alan Kentucky. Den Leader
Nottingham
presented
Middleport;
Edward Wallace, Canal Winchester; Kelly Maxson organized the
the check to Pamela
Kitchen, Gallipolis Ferry, Judy
Moore
Webb, event and scouts Austin Martino, director of the
W.Va.; Barbara Capteina Lancaster; Judy Kerns Well, Carnahan,
Isaac Athens County Red Cross
Mora, Pomeroy.
· Shade.
Nottingham, Jacob Rees chapter.
Class of · 1958: Judy
Class of 1966: Joyce
Arnold, Middleport; Phyllis Long Redman, Mason,
Baker, Middleport; Ronnie W.Va.;
Roger
Shiflet,
Miller, Middleport; Carol Circleville,
Oiler, Stockport; Stanley
Class of 1967: Anna Mae
Saunders,
Canal Jeffers
Brockschmidt,
Winchester.
Woodville; Marilyn Stumbo
Class of 1959: Gene Meier, Middleport.
Abbott, Millersport, ;·Grace
Class of 1968: Bill Bwan,
Capteina Bertnick, Joliet, Las Vegas, Nev.
IL;
Eddie
Crooks,
Also attending were Pat
Brogan-Warner
Middleport; Peggy Farmer Arnold, Janice Peterson,
Grange
Insurance
Service Inc
Hannah, Jasper, Ga.; Janet Elizabeth Milton, Kathryn
Stobart Jordan, Evans, Payne, and Pale Walburn.
Call7oi0-19:L&amp;Ii88 or visit bropn·warner.webqent4u.com

·Middle.port alumni gather for reunion
Noel Thomas . daughter of
Nathan and Teresa Thomas
of Pickerington.
MIDDLEPORT
Lucky Games, reminisRecognition of reunion cent of the Tempk Theater
classes and the 1949 cham- days was played. The Buck
pionship football team Town Band performed
along with the awarding of again this year consisting of
seven scholllrships were several talented alumni.
· highlights ofthe Middleport There were several orange
Alumni Associalion's annu- and black door prizes given
al . reunion held at the out as well as many table
Riverbend Arts Council.
. flower arrangements.
Myron Duffield. presiThe meeting was closed
dent. welcomed ·the alumni, with the singing of the M.H.
the Rev. Clifford Coleman . S. fight song and the Alma
gave the invocation and Mater.
members heard officers'
Following the banquet
reports from Dianne Lynch, prepared by the Sundae
vice president, and Jim Shoppe . of The Plains and
Mourning, treasurer.
served by the Southern
: DP'i'field presented statis- Band Boosters, dance music
tics relaling to the number was provided by Tom
uf graduates having attend- Anderson and George
ed Middleport high School Harris.
over a 95 yea period and the.
Alumni attending were
status of some. He also pre- liS follows:
Class of 1935: Edison
sented a thank you from the
Class of 1957 to all alumni Baker, Middleport.
·who supported their Ohio
Class of 1940: Betty
Historic Marker Proje&lt;;t.
Allensworth, Groveport;
Special recognition was Charles Entsminger, S.
given to the 1949 champi- Charleston, W.Va.; Dorothy
onship football learn the Long. Middleport.
members of which stood for
Class of 1942: Robert
recognition in celebration of Mitch, Wheeling, W.Va.;
the 60th anniversary of the Barbara Mullen, Pomeroy.
last MHS football champiClass !If 1943: · Ann
onship.
Bailey, Middleport; Lois
: In honor of Jake Mayer's Cunningham,
Syracuse;
tecent passing, all family Mary · Mitcb, Wheeling,
and friends were thankea W.Va.
·
for their gifts to the Alumni
Class of 1944: Jeanne
Association in his honor.
Anne Bradbury, Syracuse.
. Classes recognized were
Class of 1946: Richard
1929, 1934, 1939; 1945, Bailey, Middleport; Roy
1949, 1964, 1969, and Evans, Canal Winchester;
1964 .
Alfred ScarbeiTy,Thunnan.
Scholarships were awardClass of 1947: Clara
ed for the Susan Park, Belle
Gilmore
Riley,
:Crawford-Grey-Lewis. Middleport; John Fultz,.
:Mccomas-Moore and the Middleport.
.
MHS Alumni. The Susan
Class of 1948: Dorothy
:Park Scholarship .Fund Anthony, . · Middleport;
J3oard of Trustees reported Marilyn Fultz, Middleport;
that 198 students have bene- Mary Maggied, Charleston,
fit in scholarships since W.Va.; Lorraine Neff,
:t961 with the total amount Ravenswood,
W.Va.;
being over $78,000. ·
Dorothy
Roach,
This year's recipients Middleport.
:Were Jamie Rae Bailey, · Class of 1949: . Kitty
!lau~hter of Walleye and
Bachtel Dallas, Agoura
!--on Hayfield, Pomeroy; Hills, Calif.; John Dudding,
Amanda Maine Dailey, Racine; Hazel Hawkins
aaughter of Richard and Juli Ginther,
Columbus;
Mourning Dailey,.· Point Virginia Grogan Holman,
Pleasant, W. Va.; Annalise Middleport; ·
Haz~l
Marie D'Elia, daughter of Davidson ~iller, Sunbury;
Chris and Chantal D'Elia , Robert Mills, Pomeroy;
l!ristow, Va.; Lian Marissa Rosemary Fisher Moore,
f{offman, daughter of David Columbus; Charles Saxton,
.and
Kathy
Hoffman, Columbus; Jane Custer
Middleport;
Eliza)?eth Sayre, Hilliard; Beatrice
:mane Horton, daughter of Stewart, Middleport.
Jeff and Laura Eichinger . 'Class of 1950: Grace
Horton,
Westerville; Abbott, Pomeroy; Mary
Nicholas Scott Jones, son of Gilmore Brewer, Middleport;
Preg and Jemiifer Jones, Jean Craig, Middleport; Fred
Beavercreek, and Kaleigh Hoffman, Middleport; Robert
BY CHARLENE HOEFLICH

HOEFUCHOMYOAILYSENTINEL.COM

As part of the program,
members made a sachet of
lavender
potpourri.
Connolly and Young distribined directions for making potpourri and sachets.
Young called the meeting
to order and Kila Frank
had devotions, "Decoration
Day," and "A Veteran Died
Today." For roll call, each
member told of their

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Tuesday, June 9
SYRACUSE - Vacation
Bible School, 6-8 p.m"
today through Friday,
Syracuse
Nazarene
Church.
Friday, June 12
LONG BOTTOM
Gospel
sing
with
"Redeemed," 7 p.m., Faith
Full Gospel Church.

Sunday, June 14
LONG BOTTOM
Ruth Stethem will observe
her 106tb birthday on June
14. A lifetime resident of
Long Bottom uritil a few
years ago, she resides w_ith
her son and daughter-m~
law, Gerald . and Faye
Stethem, in Canton. Cards
rna y be sent to her at 5911
Lake O'Springs Ave.NW,
Canton, Ohio 44718. . ·

•· Other events
'

Satnrday, June 13
GALLIPOLIS - River
Cities Military FamiLy
Support Community "GetAcquainted" pic11ic, -4
p.m. at the Haskins Park.

2 G811on P81nt P•ll
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Tuesday, June 9
SYRACUSE
'J
Wildwood Garden Club.
6 :30
r.m.,
SyracUS!f
Communuy Center for a
garden lour.
HARRISONVILLE
Harrisonville Order of
E;~Stern St.ar 255, 7:30 p.m.
at the hall. Election of officers. Refreshments.
POMEROY Meigs
County
Chamber
of
Commerce, business-minded
luncheon.,
noon.
Pomeroy Library. speaker
Grande
from .
Rio ·

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Sunday, June 14
KYGER CREEK ·
Annual reunion of the
family and friends of
Elbert and Delia Seaver
Gillilan, 12:30 p.m. dinner, al the Kyger Creek
ppwer plant cl~b . house.
Take a covered dish.

/

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today for c:r;:ons ~
. &amp; .'Ji!'ii..DS
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Clubs and
organizations

Reunions

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To order Call: 740-992-2161 or Fax: 992-7886

Tuesday, June 9
POMEROY - Bedford
Township Trustees, 7 p.m.
at the town hall.
POMEROY - Regular
monthly meeting of Board
oflllections, 8:30a.m.
•

Community Colle~e ofi
"customer service,' call
992-6677 to RSVP. Bun·~
Party Barn catering.
:.
Thursday, June 11 .
CHESTER
Shade.
River Lodge 453 7:30 p.m;
at the hall. Refreshments td
be served at 6:30 p.m. prior
to meeting.
TUPPERS PLAil'IS _:_
The Tuppers Plains VFW
Post 9053 will meet at 7
p.m. Meal to be ~rved at
6:30p.m.
·

...·.

I

Plans were also made for
the July 23 picnic at For~ed
Run State Par.k.
Maxine Whitehead won
the door prize.
A buffet was served to
those named and Marlene·
Putman, Sylvia Webb,
Margaret Grossnickle, Patty
Grossnickle, Frances Reed,
Ruth Ann, Balderson and
Mary Ann Harris.

shelter house, Gallipolis .
Meat, beverages, and
tableware provided. Picnic
open to all aclive-duty
military families, veterans' organizations. and
anyone. wanting to know
more about this military
support group.

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Friday. Junt 12

Community Calendar

,, .

WHEN'S THE LAST TIME .
ACHECK·UP

favorite
sachet . · scent.
Fifteen members were present. Minutes were read
and
approved
and
Cauthorn gave the treasurer's report.
Nancy Wachter presented
location the committee had
chosen for a June day trip,
and members selected
Ravenswood Castle in
Hocking Hills, for June 25.

Tuesday, June 9, 2009

WE HAVE YOUR NEW KUBOTA!

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15+ years experience

left, confused and worried. · not concerned with her'
Admittedly, Mom is not in ·emotional pain . - Been
great health. but we found it There, and Even He
troubling that someone Agrees With Me
would do this without
Dear Been Therei We
regard to how upsetting it don't disagree, although
would be. Is there a way to again, not, exactly "evideal with this comment dence." Here's another
nr1Y/! ·--Upset Daughlef· v1ew:
in.Law
Dear . . Annie:
If
Dear . Upset: · We know "Virginia" is worried' about
many readers will believe text messages, phones calls
this woman had ''special and vehicle assislaoce. my
powers" to deduce illness, advice to HIM is to run. I
but it's equally possible she am a married 47-year-old
is mentally ill and says this man who works with two
to everyone who appears !O beautiful female assistants
be in poor health - and in their 20s. I would think
based on the Jaw of aver• nothing of helping them
ages, she'll be right once in with their cars, and we frea while. Since your mother- quently text and phone each
in-law is WOJ'ried, encour- other. My wife ·refers . to
age he~ to get a complete them . as my ."daY.time
checkup and tell the doctor wives," and I as~ure you
what happened in the store. our relationship is nothing
If the news is good, it will but
professional.
cheer ber, and if it's bad, she Relationships are built on
will have an opportunity to trust. - True Love in
get treatment.
.
Bakersfield, Calir.
Dear Annie: "Worried in
Annie's Mailbox is writVirginia" said her fiance t~n by Kathy Mitchell arid
drove with a female co- Marcy Sugar, longtime edi·
workerto put air in herti res , tors of the Ann Landers ·
arid that they text and e-mail column. Please e-mail your
often. You iold her to keep . questions to anniesmai/·
an eye.on !he situation, but box@comcast.net or write
the evidence of mis.;:onduct to: Annie's Mailbox, P.O.
was "flimsy." I believe you . Box 118190, Chicago, IL
. missed the most important 60611. To find out more
evidence - her commenf about .A nnie's Mailbox,
t~at. when she. confronted and read features by other
hu~, he becam~ defens•.v e, Creators Syndicate writers
saymg he d1d nothm~ - and cartoonists visit the
wrong rand she's blown It Creators Syndicate Web
out of proportiOn.
page at www.creators.com.
Annie, anyone who has

Dear Annie: Is it OK for
a husband to have sex with
his unconscious wife? I am
a very deep sleeper. I went
to bed with my pajamas on
but woke up naked and discovered my husband had
had sex with me. He can't
understand why I am
unable to get over this. As a
result, we are currently
estranged .
His family says he did
nothing wrong. My friends
say it was sexual assault. He
is also verbally abusive, and
we've had a couple of p~ys­
ical altercations, too. He
thinks I should forgive and
forget everything, but I
want· a divorce. Who is
right? - D.D,
.
Dear D.D.: Many men
bel icve a wedding license
entitles .them to sex on
demand, but in this country,
fordng himself on you
without consent constituted
sexual assault. Combined
with the history of physical
altercations and verbal
abuse, .this enc.ounter was
· all about con.trol and power.
You can press charges,
although it may be too late
to report it. Depending on
your "individual · situation,
tlivorce may be your safest
option, and you might wish
to discuss this with a counselor·before taking action.
Dear Annie: Last weekend, my mother-in-law
went grocery shopping; at a .
that the
local store. She was spouse
lived can
withtell ayoucheating
first
sign
of
guilt
is
defen- .
approached. by a stranger
who asked tp touch her. siveness and accusing the
When my mother-in"law spouse of being the probasked, "Why?" the woman lem. The end result of this
stated she had . "special . manipuhition .is to conpowers" and told Mom that vince the wronged spouse
even though she had given that she's simply. insecure
·up smoking, it was already - which is exactly what
"too late" and she had only "Virginia" . questioned.
This woman would do well
a short time lo live.
My. mother-in-Jaw could to, rethink her fiance's
not codtinue to shop and . devotion to her when he is

·

Olrio school board replaces president .
: COLUMBUS (AP) - A last month she was leaving
retired northeast Ohio the board for family reaieacher and school board sons. She has served ·as
·member takes over leader- president or board member
:ship of the state school for 14 years.
board Tuesday.
Cain taught in Akron and ·
. Deborah Cain was elected later served on a school
· Monday to fill the unexc board in Summit County.
pired term of longtime
Board · member Ann
board president Jennifer .Womer Benjamin was elect.Sheets. Sheets announced ed Cain's vice president.

BY KATHY MITCHELL
AND MARCY SUGAR

~~Ps~~~- ~~ J~:trs~lldee~~

:_GARDEN CLUB .MAKES POTPOURRI
: REEDSVILLE - Janet
Connolly and Janice Young
presented a · program and
workshop at the recent
:meeting of the' Riverview
Garden Club, held at the
:Reedsville
United
Methodist Church.
: Margaret
· Cauthorn,
Delores
Spencer
and
Marilyn Hannum were hostesses.

·Lack of consent still makes it wrong

POMEROY Meigs
County Recorder Kay Hill
reported the following
transfers of real estate:
James H. Adams. Cheryl
L. Adams, to James H.
Adams, deed. Scifio.
;lnzy M. Newel , affidavit
~andoning life eslate.

Maxine Dalley

·BYTHE BEND

The Daily Sentinel

Tuesday, June 9, 2009

Page .As

(740) 44~2412
•

=·

M-F 9:30-5:00
101 East M111lbwt • '-nJ• OM • 741112.a71 Sat9:30-1:00

�The Daily Sentinel

PageA2

LOCAL .• STATE

•

ANNIE'S MAILBOX

TRANSFERS POSTED .

Jarnle Rae
Batley

Amanda

John Farley to HSBC
Mortgage Services, sheriff's
deed. Columbia.
Randy R. Wolf, Pamela S.
Wolf, to Randy R. Wolf,
Paula S. Wolf. deed,
Chester.
Rex D. Vance to Sandra
Elizabeth
Harless,
Billy E. Harless,
Diane Horton
deed, Scipio.
Robert Ward, Martha A.
Ward, to Tuppers PlainsJohnny L. Newell , Elmer Chester Water District, right
Co1urn bus; W.va.; Herscm:
'-'-1 K napp, C. Newell, Darlene Newell, of way. Olive.
. h ard s,
R1c
Adam G. Lee, Ginnie
Walburn, Sabina, , Carla Wilson Sheila Theiss, Thomas
Raymond
Lee,
to TP-CWD, right of
MiddlepOrt.
Lohrer, Troy, , Norman Theiss, to Charles Rex
.way, Sutton.
Class of 1951: James Manley, Columbus; Nancy Justis, deed, Chester.
Ralph Trussell , Jean
Buell, Knightdale, NC; Morris, Hamden; Kit Neal,
Lamar Lee Lyons to
to TP-CWD, right
Trussell,
Franees Le tart, W"
Cl 1.fford
an d
. va.; D'1c k Ro 11 er, Abraham Sellers, deed,
of
way,
Chester.
Coleman, Jackson,; Robert Belpre, ; Harold and Caryl Orange.
Jeff L. Brooks, Marisa
Dillard. Pomeroy; Myron Hudson Wolfe, Ft. Myers,
Abraham
Sellers
to
Duffield. Middleport; .Don Fla.
Lamar Lee Lyons , deed, Brooks, to TP-CWD. right
of way, Chester.
Payne, Dayton. ; James
Class of 1960: Carter Orange. '
Bruner Land Co., Inc., to
Roller, Waldorf, MD; James French, Nashville, TN; Ernie
Stephen · E. . Wolfe,
Larry
Whaley,
Fay~
Sanborn, Proctorville, , Hall, Middleport; Olivia Kri6tine E. Adams Wolfe, to
Whaley,
deed,
Chester.
Betty Ashley Snow-Rosser, Bowles Lockett, Shaker Wolfe ·
Keystone
Shade, , Dana Walburn, Heights; Phyllis Hilbert Inheritance, Stephanie J. · Bruner Land Co., Inc., to
Brandon M. Kimes, deed,
Salem
Oregon;
Dick Townsley,
Fayetteville; Ward, deed, Chester.
Walters, Columbus; Roscoe Dennis Walburn, Beverly;
David K. Rice, .deceased, Bedford.
Oretha Margaret Snider to
Wise, Middleport.
Diana Stumbo Williams, to, Mary J. Rice, affidavit,
Charlotta
Romona Clark,
Rutland.
Class of 1952: Nancy Lehigh, Fla.
p I Ph'll'
s·
certificate
of transfer,
Miller Beaver. Middleport;
Class of 1961: Tom
au
· 1 1P
Imon,
June Duffield, . Middleport; Anderson , Middleport; Judy deceased, to Allie Simon, Village of Racine.
Ernest D Whitehead,
Marlene Hall, Cheshire, ; Sauer Crooks, Middleport; · affidavit, Salisbury.
Jr.,
Debra H. Whitehead,
Carolyn Litchfield, Pt. Karen McElhinny, Athens;
Jack Everett Harless to
to
Jerry
A. Dereberger,
z·1rkl e spnnger,
·
Carolyn
Siniard,
PI easant, W."va.; Larry R'1ce, Jan
H 1
ffid
't LetJames
rt
Pauy A. Sanders, .deed,
Nicholasville, Ky.; Bill Marietta; Bill Stobart,
ar ess, a 1 a vi •
a ·
Scipio.
Taylor, Columbus.
Canal Winchester; Doris
Carolyn Siniard, Larry E.
Florence F. Butcher to
Class of 1954: Jeanette Rice Walburn, Beverly.
Siniard, James Harless,
Dorothy
Kroegel, James E.
Moore
Cunningham,
Class of 1962: Cindy Cathy Harless, to Re~kah
Kroegel, deed, Olive.
·
Huntington, W.Va.; Rae Morris Abbott Millersport; H~~:~~~r~~~ceased, to
Kathy D. Wyatt to Scot~
Ann Mills · Gwiazdowsky, Virginia Erdner Avalon, Pa.; Greg Parker, Jeff Parker, Needs, deed, Bedfol'(l . .
Middleport; Virgil Manley, .Coleen Wilson Ohlinger, affidavit, Orange.
Kathleen
· Seckman,
Brecksville, ; Carl Taylor, Zanesville.
Seckman,.
to·
Samuel
H.
Cplumbus; Marcella Taylor
Class of 1963: Charlotte
Cleo M. Smith to Alice E.
Tony
Causey.
Frances
H
·
Bumpas, cleed, Orange.
Worner,
Barb oursv1'II e, D av1'd son
anmng,
James .Qarber; Jr. to Terry Causey, deed, J,::bester.
W.Va.
Pomeroy; Janet Baker L Barber d ed OJ'
Peggy · Ruth Huuon,
Class of 1955: Sharon Downia, Pomeroy; Rich
·
• e • •ve.
deceased,
to Man ford
Riley Ashley, Middleport; Hays, London.
Stephen C. Campbell,
Huuon,
affidavit,
Ronald Fultz, Westerville,·
Class of 196-il: Marilyn Lillian
M.
Campbell,
Camus, LLC, affidavit of Salisbury.
.
Sheila Stover Hubbard, Anderson, Middleport; Judy f
Le
Manford
Hutton
to
Lancaster; Brady Huffman, . Wildermuth Allensworth,
a~~~na 'ji~ Heavener to Manford Hutton, transfer
Middleport.
·Reynoldsburg, ; Karen · Vema K. Heav.ener, fulnsfer upon death, Salisbury. . .
Class of 1956: John Bachner Brown, Columbus; upon death, Bedford. .·
Patricia Arnold, Dan C.
Vroman, Lakelimd, Fla.; . Neda Bradford; Carolyn
Harley Eugene McOonald Arnold, Everett Junior
Jerome Beach, Columbus; Nicholson
French, to Ted L. Dexter, deed, Michael, Paula Gaul, Roger
Nancy
Roller
Cale, Nashville, Tenn.; Ronald Salisbury.
.
. Gaul, . John
Michael,
Middl~port; Larry Eastep, Hanning, Pomeroy; Carroll . ·Timothy Ray . Wamsley, Deborah
Michael,
to
Columbus; Betty Ward Lyons Harper, Mid\lleport; • Diane Wamsley, to Rutland Jacqueline Hoover, James
Field, Trotwood,; Ernestine Cinda
Sauer
Harris, Township Trustees, deed, Hutton, 'June Ann Peyton,
Asbury
McComas, Middleport; Ellen Dutton R 1 d V'll
deed, Salisbury.
1
ut an ·
age.
·
Middleport ·, Sally . Wilson Kiehl, Saratoga Springs,
Charles W. Baer to J;D.
Old Lock Twenty Four
Miller, Coolville; James N.Y.; David Rice, Fla.; Drilling co., right of way, Campground to Victor
Mourning,
Middleport; Lillian Slaven Manley, Sutton.
Counts, deed, Sutton.
Donna Stewart, Gallipolis; Columbus; Hope Bishop
Juanita · Hawkins · Walker, . Reynolds, ·Ft. Myers, · Fla.;
Greenwood, Ind.
Jva
Stewart . Sisson,
Class of 1957: James Rutland; Darryl Stumbo;
Bowles, Pt. Pleasant, W.Vi!.; Lehigh, Fla.. .
·
CHESTER - Chester and Colton Reynolds particCharles DeLay, Sugar
Class · of 1965: David
Cub Scout Pack 235 recent· ipated, with assistance from
Grove; Gordon Guthrie Casci, Middleport; Diane ty collected $340.46 for Powell's Foodfair, TNT Pit
Middleport;
Richard VanCooney
Lynch,. flood victims in southern
of Chester and Taz 's
Hovatter, Middleport; Jane Middleport; Mary. Walburn West Virginia and eastern · Stop
Marathon.
·
Harris
Huffman, Taylor, Fostoria; Alan Kentucky. Den Leader
Nottingham
presented
Middleport;
Edward Wallace, Canal Winchester; Kelly Maxson organized the
the check to Pamela
Kitchen, Gallipolis Ferry, Judy
Moore
Webb, event and scouts Austin Martino, director of the
W.Va.; Barbara Capteina Lancaster; Judy Kerns Well, Carnahan,
Isaac Athens County Red Cross
Mora, Pomeroy.
· Shade.
Nottingham, Jacob Rees chapter.
Class of · 1958: Judy
Class of 1966: Joyce
Arnold, Middleport; Phyllis Long Redman, Mason,
Baker, Middleport; Ronnie W.Va.;
Roger
Shiflet,
Miller, Middleport; Carol Circleville,
Oiler, Stockport; Stanley
Class of 1967: Anna Mae
Saunders,
Canal Jeffers
Brockschmidt,
Winchester.
Woodville; Marilyn Stumbo
Class of 1959: Gene Meier, Middleport.
Abbott, Millersport, ;·Grace
Class of 1968: Bill Bwan,
Capteina Bertnick, Joliet, Las Vegas, Nev.
IL;
Eddie
Crooks,
Also attending were Pat
Brogan-Warner
Middleport; Peggy Farmer Arnold, Janice Peterson,
Grange
Insurance
Service Inc
Hannah, Jasper, Ga.; Janet Elizabeth Milton, Kathryn
Stobart Jordan, Evans, Payne, and Pale Walburn.
Call7oi0-19:L&amp;Ii88 or visit bropn·warner.webqent4u.com

·Middle.port alumni gather for reunion
Noel Thomas . daughter of
Nathan and Teresa Thomas
of Pickerington.
MIDDLEPORT
Lucky Games, reminisRecognition of reunion cent of the Tempk Theater
classes and the 1949 cham- days was played. The Buck
pionship football team Town Band performed
along with the awarding of again this year consisting of
seven scholllrships were several talented alumni.
· highlights ofthe Middleport There were several orange
Alumni Associalion's annu- and black door prizes given
al . reunion held at the out as well as many table
Riverbend Arts Council.
. flower arrangements.
Myron Duffield. presiThe meeting was closed
dent. welcomed ·the alumni, with the singing of the M.H.
the Rev. Clifford Coleman . S. fight song and the Alma
gave the invocation and Mater.
members heard officers'
Following the banquet
reports from Dianne Lynch, prepared by the Sundae
vice president, and Jim Shoppe . of The Plains and
Mourning, treasurer.
served by the Southern
: DP'i'field presented statis- Band Boosters, dance music
tics relaling to the number was provided by Tom
uf graduates having attend- Anderson and George
ed Middleport high School Harris.
over a 95 yea period and the.
Alumni attending were
status of some. He also pre- liS follows:
Class of 1935: Edison
sented a thank you from the
Class of 1957 to all alumni Baker, Middleport.
·who supported their Ohio
Class of 1940: Betty
Historic Marker Proje&lt;;t.
Allensworth, Groveport;
Special recognition was Charles Entsminger, S.
given to the 1949 champi- Charleston, W.Va.; Dorothy
onship football learn the Long. Middleport.
members of which stood for
Class of 1942: Robert
recognition in celebration of Mitch, Wheeling, W.Va.;
the 60th anniversary of the Barbara Mullen, Pomeroy.
last MHS football champiClass !If 1943: · Ann
onship.
Bailey, Middleport; Lois
: In honor of Jake Mayer's Cunningham,
Syracuse;
tecent passing, all family Mary · Mitcb, Wheeling,
and friends were thankea W.Va.
·
for their gifts to the Alumni
Class of 1944: Jeanne
Association in his honor.
Anne Bradbury, Syracuse.
. Classes recognized were
Class of 1946: Richard
1929, 1934, 1939; 1945, Bailey, Middleport; Roy
1949, 1964, 1969, and Evans, Canal Winchester;
1964 .
Alfred ScarbeiTy,Thunnan.
Scholarships were awardClass of 1947: Clara
ed for the Susan Park, Belle
Gilmore
Riley,
:Crawford-Grey-Lewis. Middleport; John Fultz,.
:Mccomas-Moore and the Middleport.
.
MHS Alumni. The Susan
Class of 1948: Dorothy
:Park Scholarship .Fund Anthony, . · Middleport;
J3oard of Trustees reported Marilyn Fultz, Middleport;
that 198 students have bene- Mary Maggied, Charleston,
fit in scholarships since W.Va.; Lorraine Neff,
:t961 with the total amount Ravenswood,
W.Va.;
being over $78,000. ·
Dorothy
Roach,
This year's recipients Middleport.
:Were Jamie Rae Bailey, · Class of 1949: . Kitty
!lau~hter of Walleye and
Bachtel Dallas, Agoura
!--on Hayfield, Pomeroy; Hills, Calif.; John Dudding,
Amanda Maine Dailey, Racine; Hazel Hawkins
aaughter of Richard and Juli Ginther,
Columbus;
Mourning Dailey,.· Point Virginia Grogan Holman,
Pleasant, W. Va.; Annalise Middleport; ·
Haz~l
Marie D'Elia, daughter of Davidson ~iller, Sunbury;
Chris and Chantal D'Elia , Robert Mills, Pomeroy;
l!ristow, Va.; Lian Marissa Rosemary Fisher Moore,
f{offman, daughter of David Columbus; Charles Saxton,
.and
Kathy
Hoffman, Columbus; Jane Custer
Middleport;
Eliza)?eth Sayre, Hilliard; Beatrice
:mane Horton, daughter of Stewart, Middleport.
Jeff and Laura Eichinger . 'Class of 1950: Grace
Horton,
Westerville; Abbott, Pomeroy; Mary
Nicholas Scott Jones, son of Gilmore Brewer, Middleport;
Preg and Jemiifer Jones, Jean Craig, Middleport; Fred
Beavercreek, and Kaleigh Hoffman, Middleport; Robert
BY CHARLENE HOEFLICH

HOEFUCHOMYOAILYSENTINEL.COM

As part of the program,
members made a sachet of
lavender
potpourri.
Connolly and Young distribined directions for making potpourri and sachets.
Young called the meeting
to order and Kila Frank
had devotions, "Decoration
Day," and "A Veteran Died
Today." For roll call, each
member told of their

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Tuesday, June 9
SYRACUSE - Vacation
Bible School, 6-8 p.m"
today through Friday,
Syracuse
Nazarene
Church.
Friday, June 12
LONG BOTTOM
Gospel
sing
with
"Redeemed," 7 p.m., Faith
Full Gospel Church.

Sunday, June 14
LONG BOTTOM
Ruth Stethem will observe
her 106tb birthday on June
14. A lifetime resident of
Long Bottom uritil a few
years ago, she resides w_ith
her son and daughter-m~
law, Gerald . and Faye
Stethem, in Canton. Cards
rna y be sent to her at 5911
Lake O'Springs Ave.NW,
Canton, Ohio 44718. . ·

•· Other events
'

Satnrday, June 13
GALLIPOLIS - River
Cities Military FamiLy
Support Community "GetAcquainted" pic11ic, -4
p.m. at the Haskins Park.

2 G811on P81nt P•ll
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Church events

Birthdays

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Tuesday, June 9
SYRACUSE
'J
Wildwood Garden Club.
6 :30
r.m.,
SyracUS!f
Communuy Center for a
garden lour.
HARRISONVILLE
Harrisonville Order of
E;~Stern St.ar 255, 7:30 p.m.
at the hall. Election of officers. Refreshments.
POMEROY Meigs
County
Chamber
of
Commerce, business-minded
luncheon.,
noon.
Pomeroy Library. speaker
Grande
from .
Rio ·

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3·G EXCAVATING
Manuel (740) 590·3700
Danny(740)590-9255
Mike (740) 590-3701

Sunday, June 14
KYGER CREEK ·
Annual reunion of the
family and friends of
Elbert and Delia Seaver
Gillilan, 12:30 p.m. dinner, al the Kyger Creek
ppwer plant cl~b . house.
Take a covered dish.

/

'

today for c:r;:ons ~
. &amp; .'Ji!'ii..DS
c&gt;o

Clubs and
organizations

Reunions

'

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740-985-4141

•

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Delivery available to Pomeroy/Middleport Area
To order Call: 740-992-2161 or Fax: 992-7886

Tuesday, June 9
POMEROY - Bedford
Township Trustees, 7 p.m.
at the town hall.
POMEROY - Regular
monthly meeting of Board
oflllections, 8:30a.m.
•

Community Colle~e ofi
"customer service,' call
992-6677 to RSVP. Bun·~
Party Barn catering.
:.
Thursday, June 11 .
CHESTER
Shade.
River Lodge 453 7:30 p.m;
at the hall. Refreshments td
be served at 6:30 p.m. prior
to meeting.
TUPPERS PLAil'IS _:_
The Tuppers Plains VFW
Post 9053 will meet at 7
p.m. Meal to be ~rved at
6:30p.m.
·

...·.

I

Plans were also made for
the July 23 picnic at For~ed
Run State Par.k.
Maxine Whitehead won
the door prize.
A buffet was served to
those named and Marlene·
Putman, Sylvia Webb,
Margaret Grossnickle, Patty
Grossnickle, Frances Reed,
Ruth Ann, Balderson and
Mary Ann Harris.

shelter house, Gallipolis .
Meat, beverages, and
tableware provided. Picnic
open to all aclive-duty
military families, veterans' organizations. and
anyone. wanting to know
more about this military
support group.

RAc~NE

--

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Public meetings

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Grilled Chicken
Mashed Potato Casserole
Com on the Cob
. Pineapple Upside Down Cake

-.

[~~~~:~~~~;~~~~~~~~~

SAVEDvouMONEY?

Friday. Junt 12

Community Calendar

,, .

WHEN'S THE LAST TIME .
ACHECK·UP

favorite
sachet . · scent.
Fifteen members were present. Minutes were read
and
approved
and
Cauthorn gave the treasurer's report.
Nancy Wachter presented
location the committee had
chosen for a June day trip,
and members selected
Ravenswood Castle in
Hocking Hills, for June 25.

Tuesday, June 9, 2009

WE HAVE YOUR NEW KUBOTA!

i'~"

Scouts .make donation

47239 Riebel Road, Long Bottom, OH

15+ years experience

left, confused and worried. · not concerned with her'
Admittedly, Mom is not in ·emotional pain . - Been
great health. but we found it There, and Even He
troubling that someone Agrees With Me
would do this without
Dear Been Therei We
regard to how upsetting it don't disagree, although
would be. Is there a way to again, not, exactly "evideal with this comment dence." Here's another
nr1Y/! ·--Upset Daughlef· v1ew:
in.Law
Dear . . Annie:
If
Dear . Upset: · We know "Virginia" is worried' about
many readers will believe text messages, phones calls
this woman had ''special and vehicle assislaoce. my
powers" to deduce illness, advice to HIM is to run. I
but it's equally possible she am a married 47-year-old
is mentally ill and says this man who works with two
to everyone who appears !O beautiful female assistants
be in poor health - and in their 20s. I would think
based on the Jaw of aver• nothing of helping them
ages, she'll be right once in with their cars, and we frea while. Since your mother- quently text and phone each
in-law is WOJ'ried, encour- other. My wife ·refers . to
age he~ to get a complete them . as my ."daY.time
checkup and tell the doctor wives," and I as~ure you
what happened in the store. our relationship is nothing
If the news is good, it will but
professional.
cheer ber, and if it's bad, she Relationships are built on
will have an opportunity to trust. - True Love in
get treatment.
.
Bakersfield, Calir.
Dear Annie: "Worried in
Annie's Mailbox is writVirginia" said her fiance t~n by Kathy Mitchell arid
drove with a female co- Marcy Sugar, longtime edi·
workerto put air in herti res , tors of the Ann Landers ·
arid that they text and e-mail column. Please e-mail your
often. You iold her to keep . questions to anniesmai/·
an eye.on !he situation, but box@comcast.net or write
the evidence of mis.;:onduct to: Annie's Mailbox, P.O.
was "flimsy." I believe you . Box 118190, Chicago, IL
. missed the most important 60611. To find out more
evidence - her commenf about .A nnie's Mailbox,
t~at. when she. confronted and read features by other
hu~, he becam~ defens•.v e, Creators Syndicate writers
saymg he d1d nothm~ - and cartoonists visit the
wrong rand she's blown It Creators Syndicate Web
out of proportiOn.
page at www.creators.com.
Annie, anyone who has

Dear Annie: Is it OK for
a husband to have sex with
his unconscious wife? I am
a very deep sleeper. I went
to bed with my pajamas on
but woke up naked and discovered my husband had
had sex with me. He can't
understand why I am
unable to get over this. As a
result, we are currently
estranged .
His family says he did
nothing wrong. My friends
say it was sexual assault. He
is also verbally abusive, and
we've had a couple of p~ys­
ical altercations, too. He
thinks I should forgive and
forget everything, but I
want· a divorce. Who is
right? - D.D,
.
Dear D.D.: Many men
bel icve a wedding license
entitles .them to sex on
demand, but in this country,
fordng himself on you
without consent constituted
sexual assault. Combined
with the history of physical
altercations and verbal
abuse, .this enc.ounter was
· all about con.trol and power.
You can press charges,
although it may be too late
to report it. Depending on
your "individual · situation,
tlivorce may be your safest
option, and you might wish
to discuss this with a counselor·before taking action.
Dear Annie: Last weekend, my mother-in-law
went grocery shopping; at a .
that the
local store. She was spouse
lived can
withtell ayoucheating
first
sign
of
guilt
is
defen- .
approached. by a stranger
who asked tp touch her. siveness and accusing the
When my mother-in"law spouse of being the probasked, "Why?" the woman lem. The end result of this
stated she had . "special . manipuhition .is to conpowers" and told Mom that vince the wronged spouse
even though she had given that she's simply. insecure
·up smoking, it was already - which is exactly what
"too late" and she had only "Virginia" . questioned.
This woman would do well
a short time lo live.
My. mother-in-Jaw could to, rethink her fiance's
not codtinue to shop and . devotion to her when he is

·

Olrio school board replaces president .
: COLUMBUS (AP) - A last month she was leaving
retired northeast Ohio the board for family reaieacher and school board sons. She has served ·as
·member takes over leader- president or board member
:ship of the state school for 14 years.
board Tuesday.
Cain taught in Akron and ·
. Deborah Cain was elected later served on a school
· Monday to fill the unexc board in Summit County.
pired term of longtime
Board · member Ann
board president Jennifer .Womer Benjamin was elect.Sheets. Sheets announced ed Cain's vice president.

BY KATHY MITCHELL
AND MARCY SUGAR

~~Ps~~~- ~~ J~:trs~lldee~~

:_GARDEN CLUB .MAKES POTPOURRI
: REEDSVILLE - Janet
Connolly and Janice Young
presented a · program and
workshop at the recent
:meeting of the' Riverview
Garden Club, held at the
:Reedsville
United
Methodist Church.
: Margaret
· Cauthorn,
Delores
Spencer
and
Marilyn Hannum were hostesses.

·Lack of consent still makes it wrong

POMEROY Meigs
County Recorder Kay Hill
reported the following
transfers of real estate:
James H. Adams. Cheryl
L. Adams, to James H.
Adams, deed. Scifio.
;lnzy M. Newel , affidavit
~andoning life eslate.

Maxine Dalley

·BYTHE BEND

The Daily Sentinel

Tuesday, June 9, 2009

Page .As

(740) 44~2412
•

=·

M-F 9:30-5:00
101 East M111lbwt • '-nJ• OM • 741112.a71 Sat9:30-1:00

�OPINION

The Daily Sentinel

The Daily Sentinel
111 Court Street • Pomeroy, Ohio

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

. Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
Dan Goodrich

Publisher
Charlene Hoeflich ·
General Manager-News Editor
Pam Caldwell
Advertising Director

Congress shall make no law respecting an
establishment of religion, or prohibiting the
free exe~tise thereof; or abridging the freedom
of speech, or of the press; or the right of the
people peacetJbly to assemble, and to petition
the Government for a redress ofgrievances.
- The First Amendment to the U.S. Constitution

TODAY IN HISTORY
Today is Tuesday, June 9, the I60th day of 2009. There
are 205 days left in the year.
· Today's Highlight in History: On June 9, A.D. 68 , the
· Roman Emperor Nero committed suicide.
·
On this date: In 1870, author Charles Dickens died in
Gad's Hill Place , England .
In 1940, during World War ll, Norway decided to surrender to the Nazis, effective at midnight.
. In 1953, 94 people died when a tornado struck
·
Worcester, Mass .
In 1954, during the Senate~ Army Hearings, Army special
counsel Joseph N. Welch berated Sen . Joseph R. McCarthy,
asking: "Have you no sense of decency, sir?"
In 1973, Secretariat became horse racing's first Triple
·Crown winner in 25 years by winning the Belmont Stakes.
In 1978, leaders of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter. Day Saints struck down a 148-year-old policy of excluding
black men from the Mormon priesthood.
·
In 1980, comedian Richard Pryor suffered almost fatal
·bums at his San Fernando Valley, Calif., home when amixture of "free.-base" cocaine exploded.
In J985, American educator Thomas Sutherland was kid,
napped in Lebanon; he was released in November . I 991
along with fellow hostage Terry.Waite.
In 1986, the Rogers Commission released its report on
the Challenger disaster, criticizing NASA and rocketbuilder Morton Thiokol for management problems leading
to the explosion that claimed the lives of seven astronauts.
Ten years ago: After 78 days of intense NATO airstrikes ,
Yugoslav and Western generals signed a pact clearing the
~ay . for a Kosovo peace plan. President Bill Clinton
instructed federal law agencies to colle~t race and gender
data on people they stop or arrest,' in a move to end racial
profiling by police.
.
· ·
Five years ago: The body o '!onald Reagan arrived in
Washington to .lie in state in the l) .S. Capitol Rotunda
before the 40th president's funeral. The FCC agreed to a
record $1.75 million settlement with Clear Channel to
resolve indecency complaints against Howard Stern and
other radio personalities. Ray Bourque, Paul Coffey and
Larry Murphy were elected to the Hockey Hall of Fame in
their first year of eligibility. A new scoring system for figure skatmg was approved after the Olympic pairs scandal
forced the sport's governing.boo;Jy to make radical changes.
Today 's Birthdays: Guitarist-inventor Les Paul is 94 .
Actress Mona Freeman is 83. Media analyst Marvin Kalb
is 79. Sports commentator Dick Vitale is 70 . Author Letty ·
Cottm Pogrebm IS 70. Mystery author Patricia Cornwell is
53. Actor Michael J. Fox is 48: Writer-producer Aaron
Sorkin is 48. Actor Johnny Depp is 46. Actress Gloria
Reuben is 45. Rock musician Dean Felber (Hootie &amp; the
Blowfish) is 42 . Rock musician Dean Dinning is 42.
Bluegrass singer-musician Jamie Dailey (Dailey &amp;
Vincent) is 34. Actress Michaela Conlin ("Bones") is 31.
Actress, Natalie Portman is 28. Cleveland Browns wide
receiver Josh Cribbs is 26. Actress M~e Whitman is 21 .
Thought for Today: "Next to the slanderer, we detest the
bearer of the slander to our ears." - Mary Catherwood ,
American novelist ( 1847- 1901 ).

LETTERS TO THE
EDITOR
Letters to the editor are welcome . They should be less
than 300 words. All/etters are subject to editing, must be
signed, i:md include address and telephone number. No
unsigned letters will be published. Letters should be in
good taste, addressing issues. not personalities. Letters of
thanks to organizations and individuals will not be accepted for publication.

The Daily Sentinel
Reader Services

·

Correction Polley

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Ohio Valley Publishing Co.

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PageA4
Tuesday, June 9, 2009

)

Obituaries·

Obama corifronts Bush sAxis of Evil- can he do better?
Th~

Obama administration
is confrOnting what's left of
the Axis of Evil this week .
wi th the president in the
Mideast ialking about Iran
and top aides in the Far East
dealing with North Korea.
The strategy in both cases is
the same: Enlist "friends" like
Saudi Arabia, Japan, South
Korea and China to pressure
the two rogue states to stop
developing nuclear ar..emils.
p 1·csident George w. Bush,
author of the ''Axis of Evil"
concept. toppled Saddam
Hussei n's regime in Iraq but
got nowhere containing Iran
and North Korea, either with
po licies of rigid isolation or.
later, multilateral diplomacy.
Now. wi th Iran's uranium
enrich ment centrifuges spinning and North Korea testing both nuclear weapons
and missiles . it's .Obama's
tu rn - and top aides are
fu llv aware that the two
chailenges are linked.
"Whatever we do with
respect to North Korea is
going to be closely watched
by Iran," a senior White
House aide tcild me.
"They' ll make judgments
about whether we are effective ·and serious or whether
we are just talking &lt;md will
let things proceed apace.
Everybody understands the
calculus here. It's an important moment."
The public focus of
President Barack Obama's
Mideast lrip is on his speech
to the Muslim world in .
Cairo. but he's also talking
about Iran in Saudi Arabia.
The senior official "is more
concerned about Iran than
about l; rael."
Iran also was a major
focus of Obama's meetings
last month · with Israeli

some observe rs think was a world over a weekend,"
huge blunder, Obama said
According to Korea expert
Iran would have until the Jack . Pritchard, though,
end of the year to show China fears that if it uses its
whether it was interested in economic power a~ainst
"good-faith negotiations."
North Korea, it might fail Morton
When he was in Saudi or. worse, succeed.
Kondracke Arabi a· on Wednesday,
Pritchard, a top official in
Obama presumably asked both the Clinton and Bush
King Abdullah to demand administrations and now pres. that China choose between ident of the Korea Economic
getting its oil from Saudi Institute, told me that North
Prime Minister Benjamin Arabia or Iran - in hopes Korea might stubbornly reject
Netanyahu : who reportedly the right choice will put Chinese pressure, hurting·
left ·satisfied that Obama economic pressure on Iran. China's prestige. Or it might
shares his belief that Iran's
In the case of North Korea, collapse in an embargo, hurtnuclear program presents a such a three-comer shot isn't ing China's secuiity.
mortal danger to Israel.
He said that the adminisThe huge question is: Can necessary: China, reportedly
"livid"with
recent
North
!ration
should focus on
Obama induce Iran to stop
Korean
behavior,
has
the
stopping
North Korea from
work ing on nukes before
power
to
utterly
cut
off
North
selling
missiles
, nuclear
Israel believes il has to attack
its installations -. and before Korea's lifeline to get it to material and technology.
Kirk said one way to do
Saudi Arabia makes a deci- stop menacing its neighbors.
lri
2006,
after
North
Korea
that
is to include China in
.sion that it·has to become. a·
launched
a
long~range
rnisthe
Bush-era
Proliferation
nuclear power, 100 ?
Also thi s week, Deputy · sile and conducted a failed Security Initiative, which
Secretary of State James nuclear test, China halted gives signatories the right to
Steinberg is leading a delega- fuel and other exports to stop ships and seize suspect
ti\)n of Whi te House, Defense North Korea for three days cargoes.
And, then, there's missile
and Treasury . department to express its displeasure.
It could clearly do the same defense, which Bush moved
official&gt;, plus special North
Korea envoy
Stephen - or worse - . right now. . to deploy against both Iran
Bosworth. to China in hopes Rep. Mark Kirk, R-IU ., just and .North Korea, but which
of getting it to pressure back from a trip to China. said ·Obama· is curtailing.
Even though Bush has the
Pyongyang into halting its · he told offiCials there "blunt'ly" that they should do so, and reputation of being tougheF
aggressive testing program.
Ob&lt;Ima is scheduled to said he hoped Obama 's team on adversaries than Obama
make a visit of his own to would do the same.
· · might be , Pritchard observes
"We should tell the that Bush ·did nothing in
China in July. Official s say
that another key part of the Chinese that if· they do not response to North Korea's.
"axis" strategy is to enlist control North Korea and sale of a nuclear .reactor to
Russ ia. .Obama VISits Iran, they will become the Syria, which Israel bombed
M.oscow in November. ·
father of two more nuclear in 2007 .
It's clear that Obama .nations, Saudi Arabia and
Bush removed one comer
prefers more "engagement" Japan;'' Kirk said.
of the· "axis of evil" but left
with adversari es a'nd allies
Japan's nuclear power two others to his successor as
than Bush did, at least in his plants, he said, have pro- growing menaces. Whether
fi rst term , but it remains to duced 1.5 tons of plutonium, Obama can do more than
be seen what Obama can get enough for 7,000 nuclear negotiate U.N. sanctions resout of it.
warheads . "If North. Korea olutions remains to be seen.
Obama is offering to send shows it can develop a deliv(Morton Kondracke is
special envoy Dennis Ross erable weapon, Japan could executive editor of R oll
to talk to Iran, but Iran has- become the second-biggest Call, the newspaper oj
n't responded. And, in, wnat . nuclear-armed country in the Capitol Hill.)

•

Sheriff reports another scam

Bobby Eugene Dill, Jr.

STAFF REPORT

POMEROY - Bobby Eugene Dill , Jr., 53, of Pomeroy
'
passed on June 8, 2009 at his home.
·
Born Oct. 14 , 1955 in Gallipolis, he is the son of Neeti e
Jane Roush Booker of Kawkawlin, Mich . and the Iate
Bobby Eugene Dill, Sr.
·
In addifion to his father, he was preceded in death by tw0
brothers, Ryan Dill and Tony Dill.
In addi~ion to his mother, he is also survived by daugh ter, Bobb1 ~o (Craig) Wolfe of Middleport; a son, Earl DiII
of Reedsville; three brothers , Michael (Isabel) Dill of
R~tland, Ed (Laura Winston) Dill of Syracuse a!ld Todd
Dill of Pomeroy; an aunt, Pauline Fields of Syracuse; an d
several meces and nephews:
. .
A funeral service will be held at I p.m. on Thursday at
COLUMBUS (AP) Anderson McDaniel Funeral Home in Pomeroy with Pastar
Lamar O'Bryant officiating. Burial will follow at Gilmore Ohio's popular Democratic
Cemetery. Visiting hours wilt be from J h .m. to I p.m. on governor has spoken with
Thursday at the funeral home. ·
Ohioans in every corner of
A registry is available on-line at www.andersonmc- the state, issued appeals on
daniel.com.
YouTube, and brought in the
.nation's top education official in promoting changes to
the state's school curriculum
and school-funding system.
RACINE - Phyllis M. Lawrence Ritchie Glasgo, 78 '
Since January, Gov. .Ted
Racme , passed away at 10 a.m. on Saturday, June 6, 2009 ' Strickland has been stumpin the O'Bleness Memorial Hospital, Athens.
· .
ing the state for his "eviBorn May 30, f931, in Long Bottom, she was the daugh - dence-based"
education
ter of the late Clyde and Juanita Schreiber Lawrence plan , holding roughly 4o
Phyllis worked as a bookkeeper for over 40 years and was events with busine~s leadthe owner of the R &amp; G Feed Store for many years. She wa s ers, teachers, students, para life-long member of the Ladies Auxiliary of Racine Post ents and administrators. ·
#602, American Legion·.
Political analysts and
Phyllis is survived by her daughter, Joyce Ann Ritchie ' strategists say the motives
Racine; her srecial granddaughter, Faith Wells, TUppers behind the governor's handsPlains; specia great grandchildren , Haleigh, ijeather and on approach are twofold:
Matthew Wells; sister-in-Jaw, Jeanette Lawrence ' Strickland wanrs to. build
Syracu~e ; nephew, George (Paula) Lawrence, Racine
public . support to pressure
great nieces, Dara (Shawn) . Ratner, Orlimdo, Fla .''
Kimberly Fisher and ·Kourtney Fisher, b~;&gt;th of Gallipoli s
Felly, W.Va.; great great niece and nephew, Victoria
Ratner and Braden Miller; many friends; and her beloved
. poodles, Peaches and Koko . Nothing was more important
Hysell · said. the village
·to Phyllis than family and friends . . · . .
· ·
In addition to her parents, she was {!receded in 'death by received purchase orders for
her husbands, Fred Ritchie and Marvin Glasgo; and two asphalt this week. Hysell
also told Councilwoman
brothers, Junior Lawrence and Paul Lawrence. .
Ruth
SpaU!) Beech Grove
Funeral services will be 10 a.m . Wednesday, June 10 ..
2009, in the Cremeens Funeral Horne , Racine. Officiaiing Cemetery bas been mowed
will be Rev. Gene Musser and Rev. Ryan Eaton. Interm.enI four times this year.
Spailn also asked the prowill be in the · Sand Hill ·cemetery in Long Bottom
Friends may call from 2 to 4 p.m . and 6 to ~ ·p.m, on ce4Pre for calling a towing
co~pany wh.en a traffic
Tuesday at the funeral home. . .
.
·
M~morials may .be · made in ,Phyllis' mem?ry to .the
Racme Volunteer F1re Department or to the Metgs County
Emergency Medical Service. Expressions of sympathy may
b.e sent to the family by visiting www.cremeensfuneral-homes .com .
municipal building, fire
house,.new water treatment
plant; street lights, park
lighting, wells , etc.
·
Spencer also prepared a
teport on how much it !las
cost the village ·to pay for
hauling and disposing of
POMEROY - A pedestrian was struck by a vehicle on trash at the Meigs County .
East Main Street near Gloeckner's Cafe at around 10 p.m Transfer Facility this yeru:.
on Friday. The patient was transported by an air medical To date this service has
helicopter to Grant Hospital in Columbus, ac~ording to the cost $10 ,631.88 with a
Pomeroy Police Department which is investigating. The
official rep&lt;?rt is pending and was not a.vailable as ·o f yes.
terday everung.
·

a

I

asking him to be a secret
shopper, evaluating customer service, store cleanliPOMEROY - Another ness and product quality.
financial scam has been According to the letter, the
reported, and, · once again, man could · receive $400 a
Sheriff Robert Beegle has week for the first three
issued the advisory, ." if the months, and then $600 a
offer seems too good to be week after six months.
11"\!e, it.probably 'is."
The first assignment ,
Beegle said late last week Beegle said , was to evalua resi6ent received a letter ate a MoneyGram transfer
MOSNEWSOMYOAILYSENTINELCOM

GOVERNMENT

Phyllis Ritchie Glasgo·

For the Record

Local Weather

Mr. President, here is common ground on abortion!
President Obama has·
Centers~ to offer compre- shqut. ..and nothing gets
reneged on· an iocreasing
hensive and supportive ser- done for the people we all
number of his pledges ·on
vices for pregnant women, say we care about. If we can
taking office - from guaranmothers and children.
pass this bill and get it
teeing a transparent , account"Establishes a national implemented across the
able adn1inistration to ending .
· toll-free number and public country, I believe we can
Nat
CIA "renditions" of suspects
awareness campaign to dramatically reduce the
Hentoff
to foreign nations known for
offer women support and number of abortions."
. torture. Now, howevet, he
knowledge . about options
That · same newspaper
has a golden chance to fulfill
and resources available to story told of 28-year-old
hi s often-repeated goal of
. them when · they face an Michelle Smith working
achieving · a "common Special Nutrition for Women, unplanned pregnancy."
two jobs while a full·time
ground" in the abortion wars. Infants and Children (WIC) · · And listen to this, Mr. student at Volunteer State
Two pro-life Democrats ... and increase funding .for President: "Establish nurse · Community College, and
- Congressman Lincoln domestic violence programs" home visitation for 'pregnant .deciding to have an abortion
Davis of Tennessee and (the ·latter violence against and flfSt time mothers as an f~,&gt;t eeonomic reasoqs. But, .
Sen. Sob Casey of women often spurring abor- eligible benefit under at a Nashville Agency, Hope
Pennsylvania - have intro- tions).
Medicaid and SCHIF. One Clinic, for young women
duced the Pregnant Women
Thi s literally life-saving example of this is .the Nurse- confronting unplanned aborSupport Ac t (HR 2035 in leg islation. in vital need of Family Partnership, an evi- tions, she was given a pregthe Hc,mse. S 2407 in the support from the president, deqce-based program and nancy test and a sonogram.
Senate). A; Davis says. "It's would also end the denial to national model in which
"Once I saw my daughnot abo ut pro-I ife or pro- pregnant women of health nurses mentor . young first· . ter's face," Michelle Smith
choice ." It's about ··what we care from insurance compa- time and primarily low- said, "I knew 1 didn't want
can do to bring a reductiOil ntes because of "pre-ex 1st- income mothers, establish- to have an abortion.'' (Note:
to abortions."
·
ing conditions."
. ..
ing a supportive relationship The Pregnant Women
To begin, as the Associated
Says Lincoln Davis: "A with both mother and child . Support Act would "give
Press reported (March 25): childis not acancer.Achild
"Studies have shown this women .free sono~ram
"For many Americans, the is not a heart atlack. lt's not program to be both cost examinations by providing
recession· is affecting the diabetes. A child is a, human . effective and hugely sue- grants for the purchase of
· most intimate decisions about being and is not a disease." cessful in terms of life out- ultrasound equipment.")
family planning ... Planned
Like' Davis. Bob Casey, . comes for both mothers and
As of this writing, Obama
Parenthood of Illinois clinics an Obama campaign sup- children ."
h35 given no indication that
perfom1ed an all-time high porter. ha ~ rei ntroduced the
Two additional parts of he will back th~ Pregnant
number of abortions in Pregnant Women Support the
Pregnant
Women Women Support Act. If you
January. many of them moti- Act in the curre nt Senate in Support Act address mount- really believe in reducing
vated by the women's eco- the be lief that "we can ing concerns. It will "assist pregnancies. stiffen your
nomic worries:·
transform Ih is debate by pregnant and parenting back, Mr. President.
Before this year, Davis fOc usi ng on issues that uni t- teens to !inish high sch6ol
Now a parent of a lively
has emphasized: "Of the ed us, not the issues that and prepare for college or 2-year-old , Michelle Smith
I .29 million a~ortions per- divide' us."
vocational training" - and says: "She never .ceases to
fo rmed annually. 73 percent
Hi s list of what the bill will "help pregnant college amaze me." That happens to
of women seeking abortions actually conrains is too tong students stay in school , me every time I see my
Jist economic factors as for the space J have. but offering them counseling as newest grandchild , 4-yearcontributing to the decision here are ' ections that pro- well as assistance with con- old Ruby Hentoff.
to have an abort ion.''
vide a cn&gt;cial challenge to tinuing their education, par(Nat Hentoff is a nalionAccordi ngly. as Davis both pro-lifers and pro- enting support and classes, ally renowned authority on
repom (Johnson City Pre,s. choicers to focus their pas· and child care assistance."
tire /first Amendmelll and
Feb. 19), the Pregnant sions 011 real-life. real-time
Last year, during a tire Bill of Rights. He is a
Women Support Act would common ground.
crescendo in the abortion member of tire Reporters
"Repeal the sunset on adopThe Pregnant Women wars . . Davis said (The Cmnmittee for Freedom oj
tion tax credits and make Support Act. Casey notes, Tennessean , Sept. 12, the Press, and the Caw
them permanent ... fully Fund "creates a new pilot pro- 2008): "People get angry biStitute, where he is a
Federal WIC Program. . gram . fo r ' Life Support and they scream and senibr fe llow.)

agent. The man was to cash
a check and keep $400 as
his first week 's pay, then
transfer $3,270 to a training agent listed . On his
second assignment. he was
to make a purchase for the
balance, keeping the merchandise.
According to Beegle, an
investigation reveal.ed that
the Oklahoma City compa-

ny and the bank listed on the
check are legiiimate , but the
check was not. If cashed,
rhe man would be responsible for payment when the
check was returned.
Beegle said the letter stated that the assignment as a
mys tery shopper was to be
kept confidential , "in ordet
not to introduce any form of
bias in the data collected."

Ohio governor making.pitch to public for schools

Pedestrian struck

FEDERAL

The Daily St:;ntinel .~ Page As

. www.mydailysentinel.com

Tuesday;,.Mostly cloudy · Wednesday .
night..•
in . the morning·...Then lylostly cloudy.with a chance
becoming · partly s.unny. A of showers and thunderchance of showers. A Stonns. Lows in the mid 60s
chance of thunderstorms in Southwest winds 5 to ·IO mph
the afternoon. Highs in the . Chance of rain 50 percent
upper 80s. Southwest winds
Thursday..Showers and
5 to 10 mph. Chance of rain thunderstorms likely. Highs
40 percent.
in the upper 70s. Chance of
Thesday nlght ...Mostly rain 60 percent.
cloudy with a .chance of
Thursday night...Mostly
showers and thunderstorms cloud:&gt;: with a chance of
in the evening ...Then !?art- showers and thunderstorms
ly cloudy after midmght. Lows .in the . lower 60s Lows · in the lower 60s. Chance·of rain 50 percent.
Southwest winds around 5
Friday..,Mostly cloudy in
mph .in the evening .. . · the morning ...Then becomBecoming light and vari- ing partly :sunny. Highs in
able. Cliance of rain 30 the upper7as.
percent.
Fr1day
night
and
Wednesday ... Partly Saturd~y••• Partly · cloudy.
sunny with a chance of Lows 10 the . upper 50s.
showers and thunderstorms. . Highs in the lower 80s.
Highs in the mid 80s. South
Saturday nlght ...Partly
winds 5 to 10 mph. Chance cloudy. Lows in the lower
of rain 50 percent.
·
60s.

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4G.94

district of state Sen . John
Carey, the budget chairman
who was instrumental in
stripping Strickland 's plan
from the Senate's two-year
budget proposal. Strickland
said in Carey 's own back
· yard that he should be held
accountable for remov.ing
the plan . .
.
'The governor believes that
one of his most important
responsibilities is to comrnunicate directly with Ohioans
about the most important
issues that are facing our
state," said Strickland spokeswoman Amanda Wurst. ·
The governor's plan calls
for funding organizational
units , such as teachers and
buildings, at levels supported by research findings, and
increasing the state's share

of education spending. He
wants to lengthen the school
year and emphasize problem
solving in the curriculum.
Green said the governor's
task has become especially .
difficult because of economic pressures that made the
budget process one of the
most difficult in state history.
Jerry Austin,. a · longtime .
Democratic political con~
sultan!, said Strickland likeIy already realizes the bud- · 1
get crunch will neutralize
his education plans - at ·
least for the time being;
"I think that what he's
doing is building · the constituency that he thinks he'll·
need for re-election even if
his plans don't come to
fruition m the 'budget,"
Austin said.
1

PomeroyfromPage~I
accident happens in the village. She · said a person
complained to her that their
vehicle needed towed and
they were not given the
choice of which . towing
company to use. Spaun said
this was probably a question for Chief Mark E.
Proffitt who was not at last

.
night's meeting.
Spaun also brought up the
missing railing on the parking lot wall has not been
fixed. Council has voiced
concern that a child can slip
through the openings and
fall off the wall.
McAngus reported the
grass remains high at a resi·

dence on Pleasant Ridge ~
She then asked about what
the village code enforcement officer is doing in the
village in terms. of taking
care of these problems.
·
Mayor John Musser wa&amp;
absent
with
Council
President George Stewari
presiding over the meeting ...

.

··Racme rrom Page AI
total .. of 234.13 tons of $14,000 of expenses were
tl:ash hauled away:
.deducted from that balance
Spencer reported the vii- which means ·the settlement
!age ·recently received its was a . welcome ·influx of
fmit half tax settlement of revenue. Spencer reported
around $33,000 , .l1ringing to council that as of May 31,
the cash balance in the gen- the village's primary cl)eckera! fund to $;35,404.31. Just .. ing account had a balance of
before receiving the settle- $294,067.4L
rnent, the general fund had a . Spencer also reported probalance of around $15,000 jected collections for water
and soon after around by the end of this year to be

'

$1 50,102.41 and$67,222.18
in projected, yearly CQIIections for refuse.
· :
Also at its most recent
meeting, SP.encer recog•
nized a certificate given to
the village for its "o)lt•
standin~ . service .to Metgs~
County ' from the Syracuse:
Church of the Nazarene:
which · recently · held
"Community Sunday."

Shaw from Page AI

games every Sunday · for videoboard piece that was celebrate excellence. across that was included with ari
NFL Films as a ground cin- played before Ohio Men's the entire spectrUm of col- NFL Films Pi!!ce. .
ematographer.
Basketball's clasli with lege S{lorts. video produc"Wh~n 1 $)loot football
One of the nominations is Miami. One comes in· the , tion, including work by col- games llike.to ~11 the story,
for an Ohio.Valley Regional category of "Outstanding leges and universities and of the ·game wjth my lens·, '
Emmy
for
Sports · Sports Feature", and the national and regional sports said Shaw. "Shooting an
. .
·
Photography for his work .. other is for the grand prize networks.
amazing touchdeiwn is ~;~
during the 2008 Ohio foot- of "Colle11e.Sports Video of . All · together, Shaw ; has great feeling, but what I
ball season. He will be com- the Year.'f
·
now been nominated for really enjoy 1s being able to
peting against television
The latter includes com- four Emmy's in his career. find a unique angle to tell
stations and production petition from national As 11 student at Ohio, he the game's story and prO:
~ompanies across Ohio, · media outlets, ESPN for
won an Emrny for his work vide fans with a viewpoint
Indiana, Kentucky and West "Kay Yow, In Her Own with "Gridiron Glory," a they don't get to see every:
Virginia.
Words," and the NCAA program covering · high day.
.
The other two nomina- March Madness Highlights . school football in Southeast
"Producing sports televiJ .
tions are· in the Global On-Demand Tournament Ohio. Twice he has beeri sian is my passion. And I'm
Media Awards for College Recap produced by CBS .
nominated for a . National really honored to be nomiSp&lt;irts Video, for a pregame
The Global Media Awards Sports Emrny for his work nated for these awards."

Tour from :rage AI ·
Michigan border, and back
to Lake Erie .
·
Once he has completed
his journey, Sasak will bike
to Columbus in time for the
opening ceremonies of the
Special Olympics Ohio
State Summer Garnes,
where . more . than 4,000
Special Olympics athletes
will greet him. .
Sasak is obviously a peo'
pie P,erson. During his visit
to. PomeTQy, he spoke to a
veteran, remarking on how
l mportant the man's service
was to the country. He said
he has been overwhelmed
by the friendliness of
Ohioans in communities he
has visited, particularly in
the small ol)es.
He also notes the "little
t hings" that make smallt own Ohio so charming. For
example , courthouse archi -

tecture has impressed Sas3k
on his trip so fat. So have
. the different noon-hour
~hurch bells, and the courthouse· square statues and
monuments.
Southeastern
Ohio's
beautiful rolling hills have
been a challenge to Sasak;A
veteran biker with 30,000
miles under his belt, Sasak
found the rollin~ hills he
first encountered m Monroe
and Washington counties
the most challenging landscape he has ever trayeled.
Sasak visits each count)''s courthouse. That, he
said, allows an easy reference point, since almost
anyone in any county seat
can give him directions.
Once there, Sasak. greets
local reporters and citizens, shows off the map of
his statewide trip, and sells

......

'*"'liM"' Mr
rM a'

To see more newsphotos
from our photographers go to
www.mydailysentinel.com

I 9 I Mrf

- -

$JJ9.99

You can order reprints and
photo gifts of your favorite
photos there too.

intransigent lawmakers to get
behind the plan and he wants
to create a constilliency for
his re-election campaign.
Strickland's travel~ target
both the general public and
school administrators and
superintendents who are
i~~uentia~ in local commumt1es, sa1d John Green, a
political science professor
at the University of Akron.
Green calls public pressure
"the ¥old standard of gubernatonal power."
·
Strickland has set up
YouTu~e
conversations
about his pi!ID and brought
U.S. Education Secretary
Arne Duncan to Columbus
to stress the importance of
modernizing the education
system to compete globally.
Last week, he visited the

(741) 44-lMl
(3141675-!:IH

t-shirts for travel expenses. · were unsuccessful, so he .
Sasak has a passiOn for relies on $10 shirt sales to
distance bicycling and run- pay his hotel and food bills .
nin~ . Inspired by a mid-life He also has a traveling comcrisis, he said , Sasak looked panion, Nick Hartmann of
for a way to combine his Cleveland - himself a
passion for distance bicycle Special Olympian - wh(J
travel with that for the follows Sasak in a car.
Special Olympics.
Sasak is tracking his jour;
Sasak said early eff()rts to ney
on
a website:
attract corporate sponsors www;spudd .us.

s!s~~~u~~~.
l$3 ' !• .

----.:t~
-.

~--

Watch batteries and w11tch bands.
M · Insurance appraisels. .M
'\Veustom Jewelry made on requesW'
113 COURT STUET, POIG'.ROY, OHI0.. 740-99.2·2054
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�OPINION

The Daily Sentinel

The Daily Sentinel
111 Court Street • Pomeroy, Ohio

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www.mydallysentlnel.com

. Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
Dan Goodrich

Publisher
Charlene Hoeflich ·
General Manager-News Editor
Pam Caldwell
Advertising Director

Congress shall make no law respecting an
establishment of religion, or prohibiting the
free exe~tise thereof; or abridging the freedom
of speech, or of the press; or the right of the
people peacetJbly to assemble, and to petition
the Government for a redress ofgrievances.
- The First Amendment to the U.S. Constitution

TODAY IN HISTORY
Today is Tuesday, June 9, the I60th day of 2009. There
are 205 days left in the year.
· Today's Highlight in History: On June 9, A.D. 68 , the
· Roman Emperor Nero committed suicide.
·
On this date: In 1870, author Charles Dickens died in
Gad's Hill Place , England .
In 1940, during World War ll, Norway decided to surrender to the Nazis, effective at midnight.
. In 1953, 94 people died when a tornado struck
·
Worcester, Mass .
In 1954, during the Senate~ Army Hearings, Army special
counsel Joseph N. Welch berated Sen . Joseph R. McCarthy,
asking: "Have you no sense of decency, sir?"
In 1973, Secretariat became horse racing's first Triple
·Crown winner in 25 years by winning the Belmont Stakes.
In 1978, leaders of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter. Day Saints struck down a 148-year-old policy of excluding
black men from the Mormon priesthood.
·
In 1980, comedian Richard Pryor suffered almost fatal
·bums at his San Fernando Valley, Calif., home when amixture of "free.-base" cocaine exploded.
In J985, American educator Thomas Sutherland was kid,
napped in Lebanon; he was released in November . I 991
along with fellow hostage Terry.Waite.
In 1986, the Rogers Commission released its report on
the Challenger disaster, criticizing NASA and rocketbuilder Morton Thiokol for management problems leading
to the explosion that claimed the lives of seven astronauts.
Ten years ago: After 78 days of intense NATO airstrikes ,
Yugoslav and Western generals signed a pact clearing the
~ay . for a Kosovo peace plan. President Bill Clinton
instructed federal law agencies to colle~t race and gender
data on people they stop or arrest,' in a move to end racial
profiling by police.
.
· ·
Five years ago: The body o '!onald Reagan arrived in
Washington to .lie in state in the l) .S. Capitol Rotunda
before the 40th president's funeral. The FCC agreed to a
record $1.75 million settlement with Clear Channel to
resolve indecency complaints against Howard Stern and
other radio personalities. Ray Bourque, Paul Coffey and
Larry Murphy were elected to the Hockey Hall of Fame in
their first year of eligibility. A new scoring system for figure skatmg was approved after the Olympic pairs scandal
forced the sport's governing.boo;Jy to make radical changes.
Today 's Birthdays: Guitarist-inventor Les Paul is 94 .
Actress Mona Freeman is 83. Media analyst Marvin Kalb
is 79. Sports commentator Dick Vitale is 70 . Author Letty ·
Cottm Pogrebm IS 70. Mystery author Patricia Cornwell is
53. Actor Michael J. Fox is 48: Writer-producer Aaron
Sorkin is 48. Actor Johnny Depp is 46. Actress Gloria
Reuben is 45. Rock musician Dean Felber (Hootie &amp; the
Blowfish) is 42 . Rock musician Dean Dinning is 42.
Bluegrass singer-musician Jamie Dailey (Dailey &amp;
Vincent) is 34. Actress Michaela Conlin ("Bones") is 31.
Actress, Natalie Portman is 28. Cleveland Browns wide
receiver Josh Cribbs is 26. Actress M~e Whitman is 21 .
Thought for Today: "Next to the slanderer, we detest the
bearer of the slander to our ears." - Mary Catherwood ,
American novelist ( 1847- 1901 ).

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I

PageA4
Tuesday, June 9, 2009

)

Obituaries·

Obama corifronts Bush sAxis of Evil- can he do better?
Th~

Obama administration
is confrOnting what's left of
the Axis of Evil this week .
wi th the president in the
Mideast ialking about Iran
and top aides in the Far East
dealing with North Korea.
The strategy in both cases is
the same: Enlist "friends" like
Saudi Arabia, Japan, South
Korea and China to pressure
the two rogue states to stop
developing nuclear ar..emils.
p 1·csident George w. Bush,
author of the ''Axis of Evil"
concept. toppled Saddam
Hussei n's regime in Iraq but
got nowhere containing Iran
and North Korea, either with
po licies of rigid isolation or.
later, multilateral diplomacy.
Now. wi th Iran's uranium
enrich ment centrifuges spinning and North Korea testing both nuclear weapons
and missiles . it's .Obama's
tu rn - and top aides are
fu llv aware that the two
chailenges are linked.
"Whatever we do with
respect to North Korea is
going to be closely watched
by Iran," a senior White
House aide tcild me.
"They' ll make judgments
about whether we are effective ·and serious or whether
we are just talking &lt;md will
let things proceed apace.
Everybody understands the
calculus here. It's an important moment."
The public focus of
President Barack Obama's
Mideast lrip is on his speech
to the Muslim world in .
Cairo. but he's also talking
about Iran in Saudi Arabia.
The senior official "is more
concerned about Iran than
about l; rael."
Iran also was a major
focus of Obama's meetings
last month · with Israeli

some observe rs think was a world over a weekend,"
huge blunder, Obama said
According to Korea expert
Iran would have until the Jack . Pritchard, though,
end of the year to show China fears that if it uses its
whether it was interested in economic power a~ainst
"good-faith negotiations."
North Korea, it might fail Morton
When he was in Saudi or. worse, succeed.
Kondracke Arabi a· on Wednesday,
Pritchard, a top official in
Obama presumably asked both the Clinton and Bush
King Abdullah to demand administrations and now pres. that China choose between ident of the Korea Economic
getting its oil from Saudi Institute, told me that North
Prime Minister Benjamin Arabia or Iran - in hopes Korea might stubbornly reject
Netanyahu : who reportedly the right choice will put Chinese pressure, hurting·
left ·satisfied that Obama economic pressure on Iran. China's prestige. Or it might
shares his belief that Iran's
In the case of North Korea, collapse in an embargo, hurtnuclear program presents a such a three-comer shot isn't ing China's secuiity.
mortal danger to Israel.
He said that the adminisThe huge question is: Can necessary: China, reportedly
"livid"with
recent
North
!ration
should focus on
Obama induce Iran to stop
Korean
behavior,
has
the
stopping
North Korea from
work ing on nukes before
power
to
utterly
cut
off
North
selling
missiles
, nuclear
Israel believes il has to attack
its installations -. and before Korea's lifeline to get it to material and technology.
Kirk said one way to do
Saudi Arabia makes a deci- stop menacing its neighbors.
lri
2006,
after
North
Korea
that
is to include China in
.sion that it·has to become. a·
launched
a
long~range
rnisthe
Bush-era
Proliferation
nuclear power, 100 ?
Also thi s week, Deputy · sile and conducted a failed Security Initiative, which
Secretary of State James nuclear test, China halted gives signatories the right to
Steinberg is leading a delega- fuel and other exports to stop ships and seize suspect
ti\)n of Whi te House, Defense North Korea for three days cargoes.
And, then, there's missile
and Treasury . department to express its displeasure.
It could clearly do the same defense, which Bush moved
official&gt;, plus special North
Korea envoy
Stephen - or worse - . right now. . to deploy against both Iran
Bosworth. to China in hopes Rep. Mark Kirk, R-IU ., just and .North Korea, but which
of getting it to pressure back from a trip to China. said ·Obama· is curtailing.
Even though Bush has the
Pyongyang into halting its · he told offiCials there "blunt'ly" that they should do so, and reputation of being tougheF
aggressive testing program.
Ob&lt;Ima is scheduled to said he hoped Obama 's team on adversaries than Obama
make a visit of his own to would do the same.
· · might be , Pritchard observes
"We should tell the that Bush ·did nothing in
China in July. Official s say
that another key part of the Chinese that if· they do not response to North Korea's.
"axis" strategy is to enlist control North Korea and sale of a nuclear .reactor to
Russ ia. .Obama VISits Iran, they will become the Syria, which Israel bombed
M.oscow in November. ·
father of two more nuclear in 2007 .
It's clear that Obama .nations, Saudi Arabia and
Bush removed one comer
prefers more "engagement" Japan;'' Kirk said.
of the· "axis of evil" but left
with adversari es a'nd allies
Japan's nuclear power two others to his successor as
than Bush did, at least in his plants, he said, have pro- growing menaces. Whether
fi rst term , but it remains to duced 1.5 tons of plutonium, Obama can do more than
be seen what Obama can get enough for 7,000 nuclear negotiate U.N. sanctions resout of it.
warheads . "If North. Korea olutions remains to be seen.
Obama is offering to send shows it can develop a deliv(Morton Kondracke is
special envoy Dennis Ross erable weapon, Japan could executive editor of R oll
to talk to Iran, but Iran has- become the second-biggest Call, the newspaper oj
n't responded. And, in, wnat . nuclear-armed country in the Capitol Hill.)

•

Sheriff reports another scam

Bobby Eugene Dill, Jr.

STAFF REPORT

POMEROY - Bobby Eugene Dill , Jr., 53, of Pomeroy
'
passed on June 8, 2009 at his home.
·
Born Oct. 14 , 1955 in Gallipolis, he is the son of Neeti e
Jane Roush Booker of Kawkawlin, Mich . and the Iate
Bobby Eugene Dill, Sr.
·
In addifion to his father, he was preceded in death by tw0
brothers, Ryan Dill and Tony Dill.
In addi~ion to his mother, he is also survived by daugh ter, Bobb1 ~o (Craig) Wolfe of Middleport; a son, Earl DiII
of Reedsville; three brothers , Michael (Isabel) Dill of
R~tland, Ed (Laura Winston) Dill of Syracuse a!ld Todd
Dill of Pomeroy; an aunt, Pauline Fields of Syracuse; an d
several meces and nephews:
. .
A funeral service will be held at I p.m. on Thursday at
COLUMBUS (AP) Anderson McDaniel Funeral Home in Pomeroy with Pastar
Lamar O'Bryant officiating. Burial will follow at Gilmore Ohio's popular Democratic
Cemetery. Visiting hours wilt be from J h .m. to I p.m. on governor has spoken with
Thursday at the funeral home. ·
Ohioans in every corner of
A registry is available on-line at www.andersonmc- the state, issued appeals on
daniel.com.
YouTube, and brought in the
.nation's top education official in promoting changes to
the state's school curriculum
and school-funding system.
RACINE - Phyllis M. Lawrence Ritchie Glasgo, 78 '
Since January, Gov. .Ted
Racme , passed away at 10 a.m. on Saturday, June 6, 2009 ' Strickland has been stumpin the O'Bleness Memorial Hospital, Athens.
· .
ing the state for his "eviBorn May 30, f931, in Long Bottom, she was the daugh - dence-based"
education
ter of the late Clyde and Juanita Schreiber Lawrence plan , holding roughly 4o
Phyllis worked as a bookkeeper for over 40 years and was events with busine~s leadthe owner of the R &amp; G Feed Store for many years. She wa s ers, teachers, students, para life-long member of the Ladies Auxiliary of Racine Post ents and administrators. ·
#602, American Legion·.
Political analysts and
Phyllis is survived by her daughter, Joyce Ann Ritchie ' strategists say the motives
Racine; her srecial granddaughter, Faith Wells, TUppers behind the governor's handsPlains; specia great grandchildren , Haleigh, ijeather and on approach are twofold:
Matthew Wells; sister-in-Jaw, Jeanette Lawrence ' Strickland wanrs to. build
Syracu~e ; nephew, George (Paula) Lawrence, Racine
public . support to pressure
great nieces, Dara (Shawn) . Ratner, Orlimdo, Fla .''
Kimberly Fisher and ·Kourtney Fisher, b~;&gt;th of Gallipoli s
Felly, W.Va.; great great niece and nephew, Victoria
Ratner and Braden Miller; many friends; and her beloved
. poodles, Peaches and Koko . Nothing was more important
Hysell · said. the village
·to Phyllis than family and friends . . · . .
· ·
In addition to her parents, she was {!receded in 'death by received purchase orders for
her husbands, Fred Ritchie and Marvin Glasgo; and two asphalt this week. Hysell
also told Councilwoman
brothers, Junior Lawrence and Paul Lawrence. .
Ruth
SpaU!) Beech Grove
Funeral services will be 10 a.m . Wednesday, June 10 ..
2009, in the Cremeens Funeral Horne , Racine. Officiaiing Cemetery bas been mowed
will be Rev. Gene Musser and Rev. Ryan Eaton. Interm.enI four times this year.
Spailn also asked the prowill be in the · Sand Hill ·cemetery in Long Bottom
Friends may call from 2 to 4 p.m . and 6 to ~ ·p.m, on ce4Pre for calling a towing
co~pany wh.en a traffic
Tuesday at the funeral home. . .
.
·
M~morials may .be · made in ,Phyllis' mem?ry to .the
Racme Volunteer F1re Department or to the Metgs County
Emergency Medical Service. Expressions of sympathy may
b.e sent to the family by visiting www.cremeensfuneral-homes .com .
municipal building, fire
house,.new water treatment
plant; street lights, park
lighting, wells , etc.
·
Spencer also prepared a
teport on how much it !las
cost the village ·to pay for
hauling and disposing of
POMEROY - A pedestrian was struck by a vehicle on trash at the Meigs County .
East Main Street near Gloeckner's Cafe at around 10 p.m Transfer Facility this yeru:.
on Friday. The patient was transported by an air medical To date this service has
helicopter to Grant Hospital in Columbus, ac~ording to the cost $10 ,631.88 with a
Pomeroy Police Department which is investigating. The
official rep&lt;?rt is pending and was not a.vailable as ·o f yes.
terday everung.
·

a

I

asking him to be a secret
shopper, evaluating customer service, store cleanliPOMEROY - Another ness and product quality.
financial scam has been According to the letter, the
reported, and, · once again, man could · receive $400 a
Sheriff Robert Beegle has week for the first three
issued the advisory, ." if the months, and then $600 a
offer seems too good to be week after six months.
11"\!e, it.probably 'is."
The first assignment ,
Beegle said late last week Beegle said , was to evalua resi6ent received a letter ate a MoneyGram transfer
MOSNEWSOMYOAILYSENTINELCOM

GOVERNMENT

Phyllis Ritchie Glasgo·

For the Record

Local Weather

Mr. President, here is common ground on abortion!
President Obama has·
Centers~ to offer compre- shqut. ..and nothing gets
reneged on· an iocreasing
hensive and supportive ser- done for the people we all
number of his pledges ·on
vices for pregnant women, say we care about. If we can
taking office - from guaranmothers and children.
pass this bill and get it
teeing a transparent , account"Establishes a national implemented across the
able adn1inistration to ending .
· toll-free number and public country, I believe we can
Nat
CIA "renditions" of suspects
awareness campaign to dramatically reduce the
Hentoff
to foreign nations known for
offer women support and number of abortions."
. torture. Now, howevet, he
knowledge . about options
That · same newspaper
has a golden chance to fulfill
and resources available to story told of 28-year-old
hi s often-repeated goal of
. them when · they face an Michelle Smith working
achieving · a "common Special Nutrition for Women, unplanned pregnancy."
two jobs while a full·time
ground" in the abortion wars. Infants and Children (WIC) · · And listen to this, Mr. student at Volunteer State
Two pro-life Democrats ... and increase funding .for President: "Establish nurse · Community College, and
- Congressman Lincoln domestic violence programs" home visitation for 'pregnant .deciding to have an abortion
Davis of Tennessee and (the ·latter violence against and flfSt time mothers as an f~,&gt;t eeonomic reasoqs. But, .
Sen. Sob Casey of women often spurring abor- eligible benefit under at a Nashville Agency, Hope
Pennsylvania - have intro- tions).
Medicaid and SCHIF. One Clinic, for young women
duced the Pregnant Women
Thi s literally life-saving example of this is .the Nurse- confronting unplanned aborSupport Ac t (HR 2035 in leg islation. in vital need of Family Partnership, an evi- tions, she was given a pregthe Hc,mse. S 2407 in the support from the president, deqce-based program and nancy test and a sonogram.
Senate). A; Davis says. "It's would also end the denial to national model in which
"Once I saw my daughnot abo ut pro-I ife or pro- pregnant women of health nurses mentor . young first· . ter's face," Michelle Smith
choice ." It's about ··what we care from insurance compa- time and primarily low- said, "I knew 1 didn't want
can do to bring a reductiOil ntes because of "pre-ex 1st- income mothers, establish- to have an abortion.'' (Note:
to abortions."
·
ing conditions."
. ..
ing a supportive relationship The Pregnant Women
To begin, as the Associated
Says Lincoln Davis: "A with both mother and child . Support Act would "give
Press reported (March 25): childis not acancer.Achild
"Studies have shown this women .free sono~ram
"For many Americans, the is not a heart atlack. lt's not program to be both cost examinations by providing
recession· is affecting the diabetes. A child is a, human . effective and hugely sue- grants for the purchase of
· most intimate decisions about being and is not a disease." cessful in terms of life out- ultrasound equipment.")
family planning ... Planned
Like' Davis. Bob Casey, . comes for both mothers and
As of this writing, Obama
Parenthood of Illinois clinics an Obama campaign sup- children ."
h35 given no indication that
perfom1ed an all-time high porter. ha ~ rei ntroduced the
Two additional parts of he will back th~ Pregnant
number of abortions in Pregnant Women Support the
Pregnant
Women Women Support Act. If you
January. many of them moti- Act in the curre nt Senate in Support Act address mount- really believe in reducing
vated by the women's eco- the be lief that "we can ing concerns. It will "assist pregnancies. stiffen your
nomic worries:·
transform Ih is debate by pregnant and parenting back, Mr. President.
Before this year, Davis fOc usi ng on issues that uni t- teens to !inish high sch6ol
Now a parent of a lively
has emphasized: "Of the ed us, not the issues that and prepare for college or 2-year-old , Michelle Smith
I .29 million a~ortions per- divide' us."
vocational training" - and says: "She never .ceases to
fo rmed annually. 73 percent
Hi s list of what the bill will "help pregnant college amaze me." That happens to
of women seeking abortions actually conrains is too tong students stay in school , me every time I see my
Jist economic factors as for the space J have. but offering them counseling as newest grandchild , 4-yearcontributing to the decision here are ' ections that pro- well as assistance with con- old Ruby Hentoff.
to have an abort ion.''
vide a cn&gt;cial challenge to tinuing their education, par(Nat Hentoff is a nalionAccordi ngly. as Davis both pro-lifers and pro- enting support and classes, ally renowned authority on
repom (Johnson City Pre,s. choicers to focus their pas· and child care assistance."
tire /first Amendmelll and
Feb. 19), the Pregnant sions 011 real-life. real-time
Last year, during a tire Bill of Rights. He is a
Women Support Act would common ground.
crescendo in the abortion member of tire Reporters
"Repeal the sunset on adopThe Pregnant Women wars . . Davis said (The Cmnmittee for Freedom oj
tion tax credits and make Support Act. Casey notes, Tennessean , Sept. 12, the Press, and the Caw
them permanent ... fully Fund "creates a new pilot pro- 2008): "People get angry biStitute, where he is a
Federal WIC Program. . gram . fo r ' Life Support and they scream and senibr fe llow.)

agent. The man was to cash
a check and keep $400 as
his first week 's pay, then
transfer $3,270 to a training agent listed . On his
second assignment. he was
to make a purchase for the
balance, keeping the merchandise.
According to Beegle, an
investigation reveal.ed that
the Oklahoma City compa-

ny and the bank listed on the
check are legiiimate , but the
check was not. If cashed,
rhe man would be responsible for payment when the
check was returned.
Beegle said the letter stated that the assignment as a
mys tery shopper was to be
kept confidential , "in ordet
not to introduce any form of
bias in the data collected."

Ohio governor making.pitch to public for schools

Pedestrian struck

FEDERAL

The Daily St:;ntinel .~ Page As

. www.mydailysentinel.com

Tuesday;,.Mostly cloudy · Wednesday .
night..•
in . the morning·...Then lylostly cloudy.with a chance
becoming · partly s.unny. A of showers and thunderchance of showers. A Stonns. Lows in the mid 60s
chance of thunderstorms in Southwest winds 5 to ·IO mph
the afternoon. Highs in the . Chance of rain 50 percent
upper 80s. Southwest winds
Thursday..Showers and
5 to 10 mph. Chance of rain thunderstorms likely. Highs
40 percent.
in the upper 70s. Chance of
Thesday nlght ...Mostly rain 60 percent.
cloudy with a .chance of
Thursday night...Mostly
showers and thunderstorms cloud:&gt;: with a chance of
in the evening ...Then !?art- showers and thunderstorms
ly cloudy after midmght. Lows .in the . lower 60s Lows · in the lower 60s. Chance·of rain 50 percent.
Southwest winds around 5
Friday..,Mostly cloudy in
mph .in the evening .. . · the morning ...Then becomBecoming light and vari- ing partly :sunny. Highs in
able. Cliance of rain 30 the upper7as.
percent.
Fr1day
night
and
Wednesday ... Partly Saturd~y••• Partly · cloudy.
sunny with a chance of Lows 10 the . upper 50s.
showers and thunderstorms. . Highs in the lower 80s.
Highs in the mid 80s. South
Saturday nlght ...Partly
winds 5 to 10 mph. Chance cloudy. Lows in the lower
of rain 50 percent.
·
60s.

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4G.94

district of state Sen . John
Carey, the budget chairman
who was instrumental in
stripping Strickland 's plan
from the Senate's two-year
budget proposal. Strickland
said in Carey 's own back
· yard that he should be held
accountable for remov.ing
the plan . .
.
'The governor believes that
one of his most important
responsibilities is to comrnunicate directly with Ohioans
about the most important
issues that are facing our
state," said Strickland spokeswoman Amanda Wurst. ·
The governor's plan calls
for funding organizational
units , such as teachers and
buildings, at levels supported by research findings, and
increasing the state's share

of education spending. He
wants to lengthen the school
year and emphasize problem
solving in the curriculum.
Green said the governor's
task has become especially .
difficult because of economic pressures that made the
budget process one of the
most difficult in state history.
Jerry Austin,. a · longtime .
Democratic political con~
sultan!, said Strickland likeIy already realizes the bud- · 1
get crunch will neutralize
his education plans - at ·
least for the time being;
"I think that what he's
doing is building · the constituency that he thinks he'll·
need for re-election even if
his plans don't come to
fruition m the 'budget,"
Austin said.
1

PomeroyfromPage~I
accident happens in the village. She · said a person
complained to her that their
vehicle needed towed and
they were not given the
choice of which . towing
company to use. Spaun said
this was probably a question for Chief Mark E.
Proffitt who was not at last

.
night's meeting.
Spaun also brought up the
missing railing on the parking lot wall has not been
fixed. Council has voiced
concern that a child can slip
through the openings and
fall off the wall.
McAngus reported the
grass remains high at a resi·

dence on Pleasant Ridge ~
She then asked about what
the village code enforcement officer is doing in the
village in terms. of taking
care of these problems.
·
Mayor John Musser wa&amp;
absent
with
Council
President George Stewari
presiding over the meeting ...

.

··Racme rrom Page AI
total .. of 234.13 tons of $14,000 of expenses were
tl:ash hauled away:
.deducted from that balance
Spencer reported the vii- which means ·the settlement
!age ·recently received its was a . welcome ·influx of
fmit half tax settlement of revenue. Spencer reported
around $33,000 , .l1ringing to council that as of May 31,
the cash balance in the gen- the village's primary cl)eckera! fund to $;35,404.31. Just .. ing account had a balance of
before receiving the settle- $294,067.4L
rnent, the general fund had a . Spencer also reported probalance of around $15,000 jected collections for water
and soon after around by the end of this year to be

'

$1 50,102.41 and$67,222.18
in projected, yearly CQIIections for refuse.
· :
Also at its most recent
meeting, SP.encer recog•
nized a certificate given to
the village for its "o)lt•
standin~ . service .to Metgs~
County ' from the Syracuse:
Church of the Nazarene:
which · recently · held
"Community Sunday."

Shaw from Page AI

games every Sunday · for videoboard piece that was celebrate excellence. across that was included with ari
NFL Films as a ground cin- played before Ohio Men's the entire spectrUm of col- NFL Films Pi!!ce. .
ematographer.
Basketball's clasli with lege S{lorts. video produc"Wh~n 1 $)loot football
One of the nominations is Miami. One comes in· the , tion, including work by col- games llike.to ~11 the story,
for an Ohio.Valley Regional category of "Outstanding leges and universities and of the ·game wjth my lens·, '
Emmy
for
Sports · Sports Feature", and the national and regional sports said Shaw. "Shooting an
. .
·
Photography for his work .. other is for the grand prize networks.
amazing touchdeiwn is ~;~
during the 2008 Ohio foot- of "Colle11e.Sports Video of . All · together, Shaw ; has great feeling, but what I
ball season. He will be com- the Year.'f
·
now been nominated for really enjoy 1s being able to
peting against television
The latter includes com- four Emmy's in his career. find a unique angle to tell
stations and production petition from national As 11 student at Ohio, he the game's story and prO:
~ompanies across Ohio, · media outlets, ESPN for
won an Emrny for his work vide fans with a viewpoint
Indiana, Kentucky and West "Kay Yow, In Her Own with "Gridiron Glory," a they don't get to see every:
Virginia.
Words," and the NCAA program covering · high day.
.
The other two nomina- March Madness Highlights . school football in Southeast
"Producing sports televiJ .
tions are· in the Global On-Demand Tournament Ohio. Twice he has beeri sian is my passion. And I'm
Media Awards for College Recap produced by CBS .
nominated for a . National really honored to be nomiSp&lt;irts Video, for a pregame
The Global Media Awards Sports Emrny for his work nated for these awards."

Tour from :rage AI ·
Michigan border, and back
to Lake Erie .
·
Once he has completed
his journey, Sasak will bike
to Columbus in time for the
opening ceremonies of the
Special Olympics Ohio
State Summer Garnes,
where . more . than 4,000
Special Olympics athletes
will greet him. .
Sasak is obviously a peo'
pie P,erson. During his visit
to. PomeTQy, he spoke to a
veteran, remarking on how
l mportant the man's service
was to the country. He said
he has been overwhelmed
by the friendliness of
Ohioans in communities he
has visited, particularly in
the small ol)es.
He also notes the "little
t hings" that make smallt own Ohio so charming. For
example , courthouse archi -

tecture has impressed Sas3k
on his trip so fat. So have
. the different noon-hour
~hurch bells, and the courthouse· square statues and
monuments.
Southeastern
Ohio's
beautiful rolling hills have
been a challenge to Sasak;A
veteran biker with 30,000
miles under his belt, Sasak
found the rollin~ hills he
first encountered m Monroe
and Washington counties
the most challenging landscape he has ever trayeled.
Sasak visits each count)''s courthouse. That, he
said, allows an easy reference point, since almost
anyone in any county seat
can give him directions.
Once there, Sasak. greets
local reporters and citizens, shows off the map of
his statewide trip, and sells

......

'*"'liM"' Mr
rM a'

To see more newsphotos
from our photographers go to
www.mydailysentinel.com

I 9 I Mrf

- -

$JJ9.99

You can order reprints and
photo gifts of your favorite
photos there too.

intransigent lawmakers to get
behind the plan and he wants
to create a constilliency for
his re-election campaign.
Strickland's travel~ target
both the general public and
school administrators and
superintendents who are
i~~uentia~ in local commumt1es, sa1d John Green, a
political science professor
at the University of Akron.
Green calls public pressure
"the ¥old standard of gubernatonal power."
·
Strickland has set up
YouTu~e
conversations
about his pi!ID and brought
U.S. Education Secretary
Arne Duncan to Columbus
to stress the importance of
modernizing the education
system to compete globally.
Last week, he visited the

(741) 44-lMl
(3141675-!:IH

t-shirts for travel expenses. · were unsuccessful, so he .
Sasak has a passiOn for relies on $10 shirt sales to
distance bicycling and run- pay his hotel and food bills .
nin~ . Inspired by a mid-life He also has a traveling comcrisis, he said , Sasak looked panion, Nick Hartmann of
for a way to combine his Cleveland - himself a
passion for distance bicycle Special Olympian - wh(J
travel with that for the follows Sasak in a car.
Special Olympics.
Sasak is tracking his jour;
Sasak said early eff()rts to ney
on
a website:
attract corporate sponsors www;spudd .us.

s!s~~~u~~~.
l$3 ' !• .

----.:t~
-.

~--

Watch batteries and w11tch bands.
M · Insurance appraisels. .M
'\Veustom Jewelry made on requesW'
113 COURT STUET, POIG'.ROY, OHI0.. 740-99.2·2054
.
.

�.I

The Daily Sentinel

FESTIVAL SCENES

PageA6
Tuesday, June 9, 2009

Inside

Bl

The Daily Sentinel

.11ger wins 4th Memorial, Page B2 ·

/
Thesday, June 9, 2009

Charlene Hoefllc:hlphotoe

While there were only two boats on the water for the scheduled races, those two created quite a show
for those at the festival.

Ron and Arlene
Hiles ol
Amanda travel
to Pomeroy
almost every
year for ttie
Gold Wings and
Ribs Festival. In
the trailer they
pull are two
large umbrellas
on stands to
protect from the
hot sun or ·rain,
along with comfortable lawn
chairs·. They
· were among
the bikes in the
parade.

Penguins in
another3-2
deficit against
Red Wings

The Ohio's Best Ribs award went to Howard's Concessions. Bill Quickel
presents the award to Andy Howafd.

Face painting is always popular with kids. Here Gina Pines paints the face of Madison Green of
~lddleport as her friend Andrea Bailes of Point Pleasant, W.Va., looks ori.

Taking the title of Ohio's Best Wings and awarded a plaque . by Festival
Chairman Bill Quickel was J. T. Stovetop Barbecue, Terry Young accepting.

16-year-old
Nikki Ward sang
a variety of
music lor an
appreciative
audience in .the ·
Riverfront ·
Amphitheater
Saturday
afternoon. This
was her second
appearance ·al' '
the Golq Wings
Festival.

Above: Winners of $50 for
paintings exhibited in the
Art in the Park show were
from the left, Shirley
Hamm, Racine. watercolor;
Bobbie Delong. Pomeroy,
sketching; Peggy Crane,
Middleport, acrylic, and
Rhea Knight, oil and best of
show. On the right is Diana
Johnson, chairman of the
·
Art in the Park show.
Right: Rhea Knight of
Letart, W.Va., was the big
winner in the Art in the Park
show with her oil painting
called "Song Sparrow." She
received a $1 00. prize.

Matt Wilson, winner in the hot dog eating contest, accepts his prize of $50 and
a piggy bank Irom Bill Quickel, festival chairman.
'

I

••

,

2

.

"All we know is it's 3-2 for
them," Penguins goalie
Marc-Andre Fleury said after
Monday's practice. "It doesn't matter if we lost·2-1 or 5- ·
0. All that matters is it's 3-2,
·IUld we've gotto focus on the
next one no mlitter what it is.
We're just going to try to
play our game, and we
should be all right.
.. "I really believe it's not
over. I really look for that
Game 7, but at the same time
~e 've got to be ready to just
play the fame and not worry
about it.'
· Pittsburgh trailed the Red
Wi!lcSS 3-2 in the final.s in
;!008, but tbe Penguins were
coming off an emotional
lriple overtime victory in
Detroit that made Game 6
necessary.
.
·
Now · they are trymg to
shake off a rout that elided a
two-game winning . streak
built at home,
"Mentally, I think we're in
a different situation," forwaq) Max Talbot said. "Last
year. it was 3-L We tried to
battle back and iifett so hard
to ·come back and win three
games in a row. This year it
was 2-2 and we plar gOQd at
horne.
·
··
· ·
"We're ·coming back for a
Game 6 · and the guys are
confident. We're looser.
We're ready to go. W~ kno\\(
1t won't be easy, but It's the.
biggest game of oil.r career
and we definitely don't w311t
to have the same feeling as
last year."
The Penguins will be facing elimination fo~ the second time in these playoffs.
They blew
out the
· Washington Capitals on the
road in Game 7 of the second
round after overcOming a 2-0
series deficit and then a
home loss in Game 6. .
"This year's series there is
a higher c;onfidence ,"
Penguins captain SidneY.
Crosby" said of the Red
Wings matchup. ~·we've
seen a lot better results with
the way, we've played. We'll ·
draw on that experience more so the results when
we've played our game and
the success we've had with
\1. We' II take that more from
this serieil than we would last
year's.'·
Topping the Red Wings
with the Stanley Cup in the
house poses a much greater
task. Dettoit is playotf.tested
and adept in sealing the deal .
The Red Wings are 3-1 this
year in games they could
eliminate opponents.
Tiley had won 13 straight
Game 6s in which they had
the chance to end a series and
advance before the Anaheim
· Ducks stayed alive in this
year's second round. The
Red Wings came borne and
finished them off in seven
&amp;ames.
· "Last year we were riding
hi~h," defenseman Hal Gill
sa1d. "Righrnow we're coming in and we have a job to
do. We have to hold serve
fight now, It's going to be a
!&gt;ig game and we have to be
ready for it.
. · "Last year we were pretty
~Cited that we got to this
P&lt;&gt;int, and we wanted to go
out there and get another one.
Now we feel like we're entitled it. We should go out and
iake it."
If they do, Game 7.will be
in Detroit on Friday ni~ht.
And if trends mean anythmg,
the odds are in the Penguins'
favor. The home team has
won each of the first five
games in the series ~ the
third time that has happened
in the finals since 1978.

Geiger - the two-time
state runner-up and · ·threetime finalist in thjs event - posted awinning1leap of 17
,COLUMBUS
Sometimes quantity just feet , 10.75 inches en route to
doesn't equal quality.
her first and only gold medal
Despite sending program- effort in .16 attempts at the
bests of nine athletes in 10 state level. Geiger was also
different events, the Galli a eighth in the I ()()..meter dash
Academy girls struggled to final with a time of 13.09
keep up .with traditional seconds.
.
'·
standards this weekend at
Geiger, tonia LOgan, K:ara
the 35th annual Division 11 Jackson and Brea Close also
track and · field · champi- placed seventh in the
onships at Jesse Owens 4x200m final with a time of
Memorial Stadium on the 1:44.99. That same quartet·
campus of the Ohio State just missed out on qualify"
University.
ing in the 4xl00m final by
The Blue Angels - who two-hundreths of a second.
have scored at least 22
That foursome ~ which
points in each of the last six has competed at the stale
state meets - managed just level in six relays over the
14 team points at the 2009 last three years - made.
D-2 competition, placing their final exchanges logeththem tied · for 13th overall er on Saturday in that seve
with Cincinnati Archbishop enth-place effort.
McNicholas. · ·
Having finished second in .
Cuyahoga
Valley both the 4x100 and 4x200
Christian. Academy (which relays before, their final gohad . 13 . girls . in 13 events) round was disappointing. for
and .Columbus Bishop all of them to haqdle.
Hartley (seven girls in nine However, their final race ·
events) splif the · D-2 . girls together was in no way repcrown th1s season with ,55 resentative of what this fourpoints apkce. McNicholas some has meant to this proalso had I 0 gii'ls in nine gram over th~ years.
events.
For the seniors. Saturday
It was the lowest finish - was about one final day in
both in points and placement the sun together.
. .·
..., for the GAHS girls pro"We've had a lot of great
gram smce 2002, when Sara . memories over the years,"
Wiseman's runner-up effort Logan said; "I wish them all
in the 3200m run gave the · well in their futures and
Angels a tie for 29th place hope everything works out
with eight points. lt was also . for them . It's been a lot of
the first time in. seven years fun being with them."
that the Angels did not bring
The Jtew state champion
home a silver medal from agreed with emotion.
·
the weekend.
"The day didn't end off as
GAHS, however, did have well as I had .hoped it would,
one major breakthfough this but it was fun running with
weekend" as:recent graduate these girls one more time;"':
Alexis Geiger capped her Geiger said as she started to .
stellar career in the Blue and shed 11 tear.
·
White with a gold medal in
As for the underclassmen;
t~e long jump · championship. ·
Plftle - GAHS, 81'
BY BRYAN WALTERS

BWALTERSOMYDAILYTRIBUNE.COM

.· PITTSBURGH (AP) The series score is the same,
so is the opponent and the
location, .yet this Game 6 has
a distinctly different feel. to
ihe desperate Pittsburgh
Penguins.
·
, Back home after a 5-0
drubbing in Detroit Qn
Saturday, the Penguin~ face
!he prospect Tuesday night of
Watching the Detroit Red
Wings skate around with the
Stanley Cup at their home
rink for the second straight

year.

The honor guard of Drew Webster Post 39, American Legion, led the parade through town. The parade
was a first for the Gold Wings festival.

GAHS finishes tied
for 13th at state meet

4
Bryan Waltert/photoa

Recent Gallia Academy graduate Alexis Geiger stands atop the poi:tlum during the medal
present~tlon Saturday af!E!r wihnlng the Division II girls long jump event at .Jesse Owens
Memorial Stad.ium in Columbus. .
·

Blueanuels' Alexis Geiger
ns Ull·din D-21anu iump.
Bv BFIYAN WALTERS.

BWALTERSOMYDAILYTRIBUNE.CCM

.COLUMBUS - Ale~is
Geiger has accomplished a
great many things at the :var- .
sity level during her prep · .
career at Gallia Academy
High School.
·
. On Saturday at the
Division II track and field
championships held at Jesse
Owens Memorial Stadium.
the .recent GAHS graduate
added one more major accolade in her final appearance
with the Blue ami White. ·
State chijmpion. · ..
Geiger .:... who has signed
with Ohio University to
compete in track and field ·
next spring - joined Amy
Wilson and Felicia Close in
Blue An¥els' hiStory as the
only individual state champions in an event after winning the D-2 long jump
competition . with · a leap of
17 feet, 10.75 inches.
Geiger won gold in the
long jump by more than
inch~and-a·half, as runnerliP Kendall l{omail of
Napoleon posted a mark of
17 feet, 9 inches. Geiger was
also the reigning · two•time
state runn~r~up in this e.ve~t
and also fm1shed seventh m
the state as a freshman.
'·
·'
-~··
Geiger's winning distance
of 17-10.75 was not a per- Gallla Academy's Alexis Geiger leaps through the air dursonal best at the state meet ing an attempt in the Division II long jump final held
- she jumped 18-1..75 as a Saturday at Jesse Owens Stadium in Columbus.
junior . and 18-11.75 as a ·.
.
· . .
.· but Sl;l?rled a big grin. "I could· events m four . year~) at
sophomore
Saturday's golden leap cata- •n t have asked.for better way · GAIJ.S. .
..
pulled the four-time qua,lifi- to end my sem?r year or my · .0~1¥er wlls also a state
er into a very prestigious cm:eet at Galha Academ~. part1c1pant m those events
Th1s 1s a dream come true. . dunng her freshman, sophogroup at GAHS .
And Geiger .was more than . Gei~er ~ who also com- ·more an~ juniors cal\lpatgns.
happy. to finally become a peted m the ·lOO,meter dash,
lncludmg her four events
member.
41il00m relay and 4x200m from this past weekend,
''I've been waiting three rela&gt;: this weekend .-: quali- Gei~er has fi~ished. on t~e
years to get this, but I finallr, fled 10 state cm:npelliiOns the podiUm ·(top-e1ght) m 13 of Gallia Academy's Kara Jackson, left, receives a handoff
from Tonia Logan, middle, during Saturday's 4x200m
got it. I finally got the gold,' mwumum 16 t1mes o,ver her
.
Geiger commented as she fo~r seasons (four d1fferent
Please ' " Gelpr, Be
championship ill Jesse Owens Stadium in Columbus.

Point Pleasant fmishes
·second in state, again
that pushed the tWo .
runnerS On first and Second . .'
.
After another single by Matt
CHARLESTON ·
- . Peyton who was called out
Sometimes it all comes at first, Lincoln had runners
down to a single inning. At on second and third, setting
least that's·what the athletes the stage for what would be
of Point Pleasant's baseball the beginning of the end fot
team learned Saturday after- Point
Pleasant.
The
noo.n . as. they faced off Cougars ' Josh Harlow
agamst Lmcoln H1gh School knocked out a single which
in t~e Class AA champi- . sent both runners toward
onsh1p game at Appalachian home and after an impresPower Park .
. ,
si ve attempt by catcher B J.
The matchup was a close Lloyd to tag the second runone ·with a score.of 0-0 five ner, hoth were called safe
innings . in , but a two-out and the score stood at 2-0,
rally at the bottom of the· .Lincoln.
fifth would prove to be the
The Co.ugars continued to
deciding factor for the Big · work the bases, sending runBlacks' state tournament ners home against Point
fate - a heartbreakink 6-2 Pleasanfs best efforts ,
loss.
including two more attempts
. The Cougars ~ade stri~es made b~ the Big Blacks to
ID, the rlVotal ID':Ilng With end l,.mcoln 's offensive
Lmcoln s Cody Wmters get- movement that were ultiting a walk to first followed
by a single· by Justin
Please IH Polllt, 81
BY ANNA JESSMER

. Bartlette

·A.IESSMEA.MYDAilYAEGISTEA.COM

Charlie Shepllerdlpholo

Point Pleasant catcher B.J. Lloyd, middle, tries unsuccessfully to apply a tag to a Lincoln
baserunner at home plate during Saturday's Class AA state championship baseball' game
at Appalachian Power Park in Charleston. Point lost its second consecutive Class AA final,
this time by a 6-2 margif1.
•I

•

�.I

The Daily Sentinel

FESTIVAL SCENES

PageA6
Tuesday, June 9, 2009

Inside

Bl

The Daily Sentinel

.11ger wins 4th Memorial, Page B2 ·

/
Thesday, June 9, 2009

Charlene Hoefllc:hlphotoe

While there were only two boats on the water for the scheduled races, those two created quite a show
for those at the festival.

Ron and Arlene
Hiles ol
Amanda travel
to Pomeroy
almost every
year for ttie
Gold Wings and
Ribs Festival. In
the trailer they
pull are two
large umbrellas
on stands to
protect from the
hot sun or ·rain,
along with comfortable lawn
chairs·. They
· were among
the bikes in the
parade.

Penguins in
another3-2
deficit against
Red Wings

The Ohio's Best Ribs award went to Howard's Concessions. Bill Quickel
presents the award to Andy Howafd.

Face painting is always popular with kids. Here Gina Pines paints the face of Madison Green of
~lddleport as her friend Andrea Bailes of Point Pleasant, W.Va., looks ori.

Taking the title of Ohio's Best Wings and awarded a plaque . by Festival
Chairman Bill Quickel was J. T. Stovetop Barbecue, Terry Young accepting.

16-year-old
Nikki Ward sang
a variety of
music lor an
appreciative
audience in .the ·
Riverfront ·
Amphitheater
Saturday
afternoon. This
was her second
appearance ·al' '
the Golq Wings
Festival.

Above: Winners of $50 for
paintings exhibited in the
Art in the Park show were
from the left, Shirley
Hamm, Racine. watercolor;
Bobbie Delong. Pomeroy,
sketching; Peggy Crane,
Middleport, acrylic, and
Rhea Knight, oil and best of
show. On the right is Diana
Johnson, chairman of the
·
Art in the Park show.
Right: Rhea Knight of
Letart, W.Va., was the big
winner in the Art in the Park
show with her oil painting
called "Song Sparrow." She
received a $1 00. prize.

Matt Wilson, winner in the hot dog eating contest, accepts his prize of $50 and
a piggy bank Irom Bill Quickel, festival chairman.
'

I

••

,

2

.

"All we know is it's 3-2 for
them," Penguins goalie
Marc-Andre Fleury said after
Monday's practice. "It doesn't matter if we lost·2-1 or 5- ·
0. All that matters is it's 3-2,
·IUld we've gotto focus on the
next one no mlitter what it is.
We're just going to try to
play our game, and we
should be all right.
.. "I really believe it's not
over. I really look for that
Game 7, but at the same time
~e 've got to be ready to just
play the fame and not worry
about it.'
· Pittsburgh trailed the Red
Wi!lcSS 3-2 in the final.s in
;!008, but tbe Penguins were
coming off an emotional
lriple overtime victory in
Detroit that made Game 6
necessary.
.
·
Now · they are trymg to
shake off a rout that elided a
two-game winning . streak
built at home,
"Mentally, I think we're in
a different situation," forwaq) Max Talbot said. "Last
year. it was 3-L We tried to
battle back and iifett so hard
to ·come back and win three
games in a row. This year it
was 2-2 and we plar gOQd at
horne.
·
··
· ·
"We're ·coming back for a
Game 6 · and the guys are
confident. We're looser.
We're ready to go. W~ kno\\(
1t won't be easy, but It's the.
biggest game of oil.r career
and we definitely don't w311t
to have the same feeling as
last year."
The Penguins will be facing elimination fo~ the second time in these playoffs.
They blew
out the
· Washington Capitals on the
road in Game 7 of the second
round after overcOming a 2-0
series deficit and then a
home loss in Game 6. .
"This year's series there is
a higher c;onfidence ,"
Penguins captain SidneY.
Crosby" said of the Red
Wings matchup. ~·we've
seen a lot better results with
the way, we've played. We'll ·
draw on that experience more so the results when
we've played our game and
the success we've had with
\1. We' II take that more from
this serieil than we would last
year's.'·
Topping the Red Wings
with the Stanley Cup in the
house poses a much greater
task. Dettoit is playotf.tested
and adept in sealing the deal .
The Red Wings are 3-1 this
year in games they could
eliminate opponents.
Tiley had won 13 straight
Game 6s in which they had
the chance to end a series and
advance before the Anaheim
· Ducks stayed alive in this
year's second round. The
Red Wings came borne and
finished them off in seven
&amp;ames.
· "Last year we were riding
hi~h," defenseman Hal Gill
sa1d. "Righrnow we're coming in and we have a job to
do. We have to hold serve
fight now, It's going to be a
!&gt;ig game and we have to be
ready for it.
. · "Last year we were pretty
~Cited that we got to this
P&lt;&gt;int, and we wanted to go
out there and get another one.
Now we feel like we're entitled it. We should go out and
iake it."
If they do, Game 7.will be
in Detroit on Friday ni~ht.
And if trends mean anythmg,
the odds are in the Penguins'
favor. The home team has
won each of the first five
games in the series ~ the
third time that has happened
in the finals since 1978.

Geiger - the two-time
state runner-up and · ·threetime finalist in thjs event - posted awinning1leap of 17
,COLUMBUS
Sometimes quantity just feet , 10.75 inches en route to
doesn't equal quality.
her first and only gold medal
Despite sending program- effort in .16 attempts at the
bests of nine athletes in 10 state level. Geiger was also
different events, the Galli a eighth in the I ()()..meter dash
Academy girls struggled to final with a time of 13.09
keep up .with traditional seconds.
.
'·
standards this weekend at
Geiger, tonia LOgan, K:ara
the 35th annual Division 11 Jackson and Brea Close also
track and · field · champi- placed seventh in the
onships at Jesse Owens 4x200m final with a time of
Memorial Stadium on the 1:44.99. That same quartet·
campus of the Ohio State just missed out on qualify"
University.
ing in the 4xl00m final by
The Blue Angels - who two-hundreths of a second.
have scored at least 22
That foursome ~ which
points in each of the last six has competed at the stale
state meets - managed just level in six relays over the
14 team points at the 2009 last three years - made.
D-2 competition, placing their final exchanges logeththem tied · for 13th overall er on Saturday in that seve
with Cincinnati Archbishop enth-place effort.
McNicholas. · ·
Having finished second in .
Cuyahoga
Valley both the 4x100 and 4x200
Christian. Academy (which relays before, their final gohad . 13 . girls . in 13 events) round was disappointing. for
and .Columbus Bishop all of them to haqdle.
Hartley (seven girls in nine However, their final race ·
events) splif the · D-2 . girls together was in no way repcrown th1s season with ,55 resentative of what this fourpoints apkce. McNicholas some has meant to this proalso had I 0 gii'ls in nine gram over th~ years.
events.
For the seniors. Saturday
It was the lowest finish - was about one final day in
both in points and placement the sun together.
. .·
..., for the GAHS girls pro"We've had a lot of great
gram smce 2002, when Sara . memories over the years,"
Wiseman's runner-up effort Logan said; "I wish them all
in the 3200m run gave the · well in their futures and
Angels a tie for 29th place hope everything works out
with eight points. lt was also . for them . It's been a lot of
the first time in. seven years fun being with them."
that the Angels did not bring
The Jtew state champion
home a silver medal from agreed with emotion.
·
the weekend.
"The day didn't end off as
GAHS, however, did have well as I had .hoped it would,
one major breakthfough this but it was fun running with
weekend" as:recent graduate these girls one more time;"':
Alexis Geiger capped her Geiger said as she started to .
stellar career in the Blue and shed 11 tear.
·
White with a gold medal in
As for the underclassmen;
t~e long jump · championship. ·
Plftle - GAHS, 81'
BY BRYAN WALTERS

BWALTERSOMYDAILYTRIBUNE.COM

.· PITTSBURGH (AP) The series score is the same,
so is the opponent and the
location, .yet this Game 6 has
a distinctly different feel. to
ihe desperate Pittsburgh
Penguins.
·
, Back home after a 5-0
drubbing in Detroit Qn
Saturday, the Penguin~ face
!he prospect Tuesday night of
Watching the Detroit Red
Wings skate around with the
Stanley Cup at their home
rink for the second straight

year.

The honor guard of Drew Webster Post 39, American Legion, led the parade through town. The parade
was a first for the Gold Wings festival.

GAHS finishes tied
for 13th at state meet

4
Bryan Waltert/photoa

Recent Gallia Academy graduate Alexis Geiger stands atop the poi:tlum during the medal
present~tlon Saturday af!E!r wihnlng the Division II girls long jump event at .Jesse Owens
Memorial Stad.ium in Columbus. .
·

Blueanuels' Alexis Geiger
ns Ull·din D-21anu iump.
Bv BFIYAN WALTERS.

BWALTERSOMYDAILYTRIBUNE.CCM

.COLUMBUS - Ale~is
Geiger has accomplished a
great many things at the :var- .
sity level during her prep · .
career at Gallia Academy
High School.
·
. On Saturday at the
Division II track and field
championships held at Jesse
Owens Memorial Stadium.
the .recent GAHS graduate
added one more major accolade in her final appearance
with the Blue ami White. ·
State chijmpion. · ..
Geiger .:... who has signed
with Ohio University to
compete in track and field ·
next spring - joined Amy
Wilson and Felicia Close in
Blue An¥els' hiStory as the
only individual state champions in an event after winning the D-2 long jump
competition . with · a leap of
17 feet, 10.75 inches.
Geiger won gold in the
long jump by more than
inch~and-a·half, as runnerliP Kendall l{omail of
Napoleon posted a mark of
17 feet, 9 inches. Geiger was
also the reigning · two•time
state runn~r~up in this e.ve~t
and also fm1shed seventh m
the state as a freshman.
'·
·'
-~··
Geiger's winning distance
of 17-10.75 was not a per- Gallla Academy's Alexis Geiger leaps through the air dursonal best at the state meet ing an attempt in the Division II long jump final held
- she jumped 18-1..75 as a Saturday at Jesse Owens Stadium in Columbus.
junior . and 18-11.75 as a ·.
.
· . .
.· but Sl;l?rled a big grin. "I could· events m four . year~) at
sophomore
Saturday's golden leap cata- •n t have asked.for better way · GAIJ.S. .
..
pulled the four-time qua,lifi- to end my sem?r year or my · .0~1¥er wlls also a state
er into a very prestigious cm:eet at Galha Academ~. part1c1pant m those events
Th1s 1s a dream come true. . dunng her freshman, sophogroup at GAHS .
And Geiger .was more than . Gei~er ~ who also com- ·more an~ juniors cal\lpatgns.
happy. to finally become a peted m the ·lOO,meter dash,
lncludmg her four events
member.
41il00m relay and 4x200m from this past weekend,
''I've been waiting three rela&gt;: this weekend .-: quali- Gei~er has fi~ished. on t~e
years to get this, but I finallr, fled 10 state cm:npelliiOns the podiUm ·(top-e1ght) m 13 of Gallia Academy's Kara Jackson, left, receives a handoff
from Tonia Logan, middle, during Saturday's 4x200m
got it. I finally got the gold,' mwumum 16 t1mes o,ver her
.
Geiger commented as she fo~r seasons (four d1fferent
Please ' " Gelpr, Be
championship ill Jesse Owens Stadium in Columbus.

Point Pleasant fmishes
·second in state, again
that pushed the tWo .
runnerS On first and Second . .'
.
After another single by Matt
CHARLESTON ·
- . Peyton who was called out
Sometimes it all comes at first, Lincoln had runners
down to a single inning. At on second and third, setting
least that's·what the athletes the stage for what would be
of Point Pleasant's baseball the beginning of the end fot
team learned Saturday after- Point
Pleasant.
The
noo.n . as. they faced off Cougars ' Josh Harlow
agamst Lmcoln H1gh School knocked out a single which
in t~e Class AA champi- . sent both runners toward
onsh1p game at Appalachian home and after an impresPower Park .
. ,
si ve attempt by catcher B J.
The matchup was a close Lloyd to tag the second runone ·with a score.of 0-0 five ner, hoth were called safe
innings . in , but a two-out and the score stood at 2-0,
rally at the bottom of the· .Lincoln.
fifth would prove to be the
The Co.ugars continued to
deciding factor for the Big · work the bases, sending runBlacks' state tournament ners home against Point
fate - a heartbreakink 6-2 Pleasanfs best efforts ,
loss.
including two more attempts
. The Cougars ~ade stri~es made b~ the Big Blacks to
ID, the rlVotal ID':Ilng With end l,.mcoln 's offensive
Lmcoln s Cody Wmters get- movement that were ultiting a walk to first followed
by a single· by Justin
Please IH Polllt, 81
BY ANNA JESSMER

. Bartlette

·A.IESSMEA.MYDAilYAEGISTEA.COM

Charlie Shepllerdlpholo

Point Pleasant catcher B.J. Lloyd, middle, tries unsuccessfully to apply a tag to a Lincoln
baserunner at home plate during Saturday's Class AA state championship baseball' game
at Appalachian Power Park in Charleston. Point lost its second consecutive Class AA final,
this time by a 6-2 margif1.
•I

•

�Page 82 •

The Daily Sentinel

Tuesday, June 9, 2009

www.mydailysentinel.com

Tuesday, June 9, 2009

www.mydallysentlnel.com

Tiger has all answers with recor~ 4th Memorial win

Charlie Shepherd/photo

Teammates B.J. Lloyd (right) and Philip Allen (left) talk with
Tyson Jones (center) during Saturday's Class AA state final
against Lincoln High School. Jones pitched close to five
innings against the Cougars who went on lo defeat Point
Pleasant 6-2.
·

·. Point

Despite four birdies on the putt for birdie and the lead.
DUBLIN(APJ - No one back to competitive golf in
ever doubted Tiger Woods' late February. Even though front nine he still trailed Then at the closing hole, he
heart or his head, althougn he won the Arnold Palmer Byrd, who had holed an 82- hit a 3 iron off the tee - the
there were some lingering Invitational and was in con- yard wedge for an eagle at 14th fairway he hit in as
whispers about his rebuilt tention in several other tour- the seventh hole, by three many tries - and then
knee.
naments. some had won- strokes as he played the II th torched a 7 iron that rode the
Now even those have dered whether at J3 years hole. Woods, showing · no wind and ended up a foot
evaporated.
old he or his reconstructed signs of hesitancy or doubt, away from the hole for a
Adding to his lore with knee would ever be the . hit his drive 329 yards lind kick·in birdie.
"It was unreal. I don't
then hit a 5 wood 253 yards
birdies on three of !he last same Tiger.
that
went
through
the
green
even
know how to ·describe
"For most people, that
four holes - not to mention
it," Letzig said. "It was the
· a highlight-reel chip-in for would be unbelievable," and into the deep rough.
"I didn't see the lie bul it best golf I've ever seen."
eagle a few holes earlier - Nicklaus said of Woods'
Woods climbed out of a record since coming back. had to be terrible;" said. Two shots clear of the
four-way tie with a 7-under "For him, that's not his best. playing · partner Michael field, he had just enough to
65 to win the Memorial But it's still pretty darn Letzig, awed by Woods' hold off Furyk, a former
play and the c1rcus sur- Memorial winner himself
Tournament on Sunday. It good."
was a record fourth iime he
Woods looked at the win . roundin~ him. "He had who also birdied the final
had won the event ·created on Sunday as confirmation some wild, one-handed fol- hole for a 69.
Asked if Tiger was indeed
by his idol and measuring · of what he thought all along. low-through. I saw that out
stick, Jack Nicklaus ,
"I knew I could do this," of the corner of my eye and back, Byrd, who shot a 72
"Tiger Woods is always Woods said afier collecting then I saw how the ball was and ended up tied with
Tiger Woods," said runner- his 67th career victory with tracking. I just told my Wilson (73) at 280, broke
·
up Jim Furyk, who finished a score of 12-urider 276, brother (Darren. his caddie) into a wide grin.
who
was
standing
there,
"lt
just
depends
on
what
alone in second, a shot bac·k. "It's just a matter of give me
"He can't be 100 percent a little bit of .time. I just 'Oh, my god!' It was nuts." ~ou consider the word
every week. But I'm sure he came off a pretty extended ·The roar echped around back' means." he said. "I
answered a lot of questions break, and I was close to the course. Every other one don't know where he went."
today."
winning, but the game was- of the contenders heard it, · Furyk was pleased with
how he played, but frustratWoods had undergone n't quite there when I really too.
Still; he trailed Byrd by a ed that he hadn't been able
knee surgery last June •. a·day needed it on Sunday. I rectiafter wincing his way to a fied that."
· shot and . was tied with to catch up with Woods. He
victory at the U.S. Open at
Thousands of spectators Wilson, with the others · joked that it was reporters'
fault for ever doubting
Torrey Pines. In. a memo- followed every shot of the refusing to wilt.
By the time Woods hit his Tiget
.
·
r~ble
performance, he drama as Woods climbed
"l just wish you all would
cau~ht .Rocco Mediate with the leaderboard at Muirfield drive on the 17th hole, he
a btrdie putt on the 72nd. Village. He staned the day was tied with Byrd, Love just quit (ticktng) him off.
hole and then beat him with tied for seventh, four strokes and Furyk at 10 under, and that's what I wish," he said
another birdie putt on the back of co-leaders Matt was playing a hole or two in in mock anger. "I · wish
. you'd quit chapping him so
final hole of the 18-hole Bettencourt and Mark front of them.
playoff a day later.
Wilson with Jim Furyk,
At the next to last hole, he has to come back and
towering
9-iron keep proving stuff."
Then came eight months Jonathan Byrd, Geoff his
approach
ended
up
9
feet
As if he had anything left
of rest, rehab and, eventual- Ogilvy and Davis Love III
ly, practice before he came also standing in his way.
away and he rolled in the . to prove,

joined by Josh Harlow,
Kenneth Healey, and Dale
Manin (Lincoln); Jacob
Justice and Colton Ratcliff
fromPageBl
(Indy); and Tyler Burdette
and . John
Morgan
mately ruled as safe. Unable (Sissonville).
to catch a break, the Big
While the · Big Blacks
Blacks puUed themselves might not have taken the
together and pushed into the championship, they still
sixth.
took their squad farther than
Senior Philip Allen start- many in the state of West
ed off inning with a walk to Virginia, and that was
first that was followed up something both Krebs and ·
by a single by Eric Veith to the Point Pleasant fans
advance the runners to first acknowledged. ·
and second base. Titus
Outfielder and pitcher
Russell stepped up next in McClung agreed. When
the rotation, blasting a dou- a~ked about this year as a
ble into the outfield to send whole he said, "As a season
both Allen and Veith home , we did great," in terms of
the score then standing as 6-. coming up short
in
2, Lincoln.
· ·
Saturday's matchup he said,
After Russell's offensive "for me. it's not good
push for the Big Blacks , enough."
Point Pleasant was unable
It is with that spirit and
to finish the job with standard of excellence that
Russell left on base at the will hopefully take the.2010
end of the inning.
Big Blacks back to state
Point held Lincoln during with another chance of
the · bottom of the sixth, clinching the title they have
keeping the Cougars from worked so hard and long to
addmg any more runs to · win:
their lead .
While Point Pleasant will
With only on~ inning left most definitely be fighting
to come back, Point· hard for next year's journey
Pleasant was unable to to state finals, it will not be
recover and the. title of without some losses .
Class. AA Champions went
The graduating seniors of
to .Lincoln High School.
the Red and Black squad are
It all came down to one a seasoned and talented
inning.
septet that will surely be
When asked about the m1ssed by their younger
game afterward Coach teammates.
Higginbotham said, "The
Seniors Philip Allen,
kids played hard. We just Michael Burris, Tyson
couldn't gel a ball to drop, Jones, BJ. Lloyd. Dennis
for us . We hit the ball hard.' Rodgers, Justiri Weaver, and
On the two-out rally that Eric Veith have made their
Lincoln had in the fifth mark on the Black Knight
Higginbotham said, "They program.
·
.
took advantage of one
Allen, honored for · the
innin~- one big inningAll-Tournament 2009 team,
just hke we did yesterday, was a four year starting outand we couldn't battle back fielder for the Red and
from· it."
Black squad. Jones, a three
· The Big BlackS were now year starter, was also named
on the other side of the blow as part of the All-Tourney
they served lnd~pendence group, pitching for · the
the following game when Black Knights in more than
Point Pleasant posted six one pivotal post-season
runs in their own two-out game. Lloyd. a three year
rally.
starter who was named
While the Big Blacks Honorable Mention Allmight be state ruimer-up, State for the 2008 season
Higginbotham is still very played solidly behind the
proud·of his boys, "They're plate as catcher for the ·
a good group of kids. One .squad. Weaver, the· team's
of these days we'll get back second baseman and second
and we'll win it. We just got year staner ·has also conto keep trying and. keep try- tributed to the successful
ing. I'm proud of every. seasc;m that Point · experi·
body. They played well."
enced. Veith, the two year
First baseman, junior starter and outfielder made
Clay Kr.ebs was also proud ~reat plays of his own durof his team. ''The fact that mg the season and was a big
we've been here three times contributor to the Red and
says . somehing about the Black offense. Burris, startplayers we've had the past ing his second year for the
.
three years" he said.
Big Blacks and Rodgers, in
A few of the individual · his first varsity appearance,
athletes Krebs was referfng .will also leave their mark on
to were honored for their . the Point Pleasant squad.
talent and performance by
The seniors will be
West Virginia ·Secondary 'missed, but their contribuSchool
Activities tions will remain. They
Commission. Chosen for have now passed the torch
Class. AA
All- to the 20 I0 senior class who
·the
Tournament team were have proven themselves as
Point Pleasant · sen'iors strong and talented athletes
Philip Allen and Tyson · who will strive to complete
Jones: and junior Brock the . job that the Black
McClung.
Knights before .them have
The Big Black trio were slarted.

- -,-&gt;- - · - -

GAHS

any of the Blue Angels at
· the 2009 state meet.
Jackson was the 400m runner-up as a freshman.
fromPageBl
Two other newcomers
competed in finals on
they both agree that Geiger Saturday, as Samantha
and Logan have been instru- Barnes and PeytQn Adkins
mental in helping their
participated in the 800m
careers. They were also and 3200rn events, respechappy to share the track tively. Barnes - a sophowith their mentors one last more - placed 16th With· a
time.
time of 2:21.98, · while
· "Alexis and Tonia have Adkins - a freshman· done a real good job of just missed the podium
helping build me up since · with a ninth-place effon of
my freshman year, being 11 :53.6 1.
. .
good role models for this
That duo, .along with
team,''
Jackson
said. recent graduate Lauren
"Thefve taught us . an Adkins and freshman
awful iot of good things McKenna Warner, . also
over the years and we've placed 12th in the 4~800\n
had. an awful lot of fun relay with a time of 9:53.47
together. It will be up to us in Friday's final.
returnees to continue this
The younger Adkins ~
tradition.
despite finishing better in
Close Wl!S equally proud her individual event ·and heanbroken to compete commented that her experiwith the recent grads one ence in the relay will be the
more time.
one thing she · remembers
"We had another good most from her first trip to
year together. We tried our Columbus.
best today, which is what
"It wasn't h6w I · had
we've always done," Close hoped things would work·
said. "We're like family out, but I've still had an
and .i t's hard to see them ~o. excellent experience this
I've had a great time wtth weekend," Adkins said.
them over the years."
"I'm really happy we made
Juckson - making her it here as a team, that's
200m dash final debut on. something l' m really proud
Saturday ~ also flaced of this wee~end. And hope'eighth with a time o 25.73 fully, I'll be back here a
seconds. It was .the fifth dif- couple more times to give it
ferent state event that another ·shot.".
Jackson has qualified for in
As for Barnes, the twoher three years, the most of day event as a whole was

what stuck with her from nerves of qualifying for .
her first trip.
finals and then being
"It's been ·an amazing relieved when you make it
weekend. It's really excit- to the finals, then you get
ing, a little nerve-wrackin~ nervous again because your
and the crowd is crazy, ' in the finals. It's been a
Barnes said. "I definitely completely new experience
want to make back here and for me and it's been a real
do this again. This is a good joy just to get here. ,"
.experience for roe and ·I Troester said. "We've
want to grow from it."
learned a lot from these
Junior Allie Troester also upperclassmen over the
made her state deb.ut on years. We (the underclassFriday in the discus event, men) know it's on us to conjust missing out on the podi- tinue the tradition · of this
um with a ninth-place effon program next season."
ofll4 feet, 10 inches.
In · Division II boys,
It was a difficult debut for Pemberville Eastwood won
Troester - who would the team championship with
have won the ·D-2 discus 47 points. Meigs - who
title with her regional throw received a school-best four
of 123-10. Still, as she com- points from Mason Metts
mented, the·complete expe- with a fifth-place effon in
rience was definitely some- the shot put - finished tied
thing to grow from.
for 51st with Germantown
Especially since the lead- Valley View, Mentor Lake
ership role will fall on the Catholic,
Garrettsville
'Garfield,
Middletown
seniors next year.
. "II was a lot of up and Madison, 'West Milton
down with nerves this Milton-Union and Navarra
weekend. There were the .Fairless.

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�Page 82 •

The Daily Sentinel

Tuesday, June 9, 2009

www.mydailysentinel.com

Tuesday, June 9, 2009

www.mydallysentlnel.com

Tiger has all answers with recor~ 4th Memorial win

Charlie Shepherd/photo

Teammates B.J. Lloyd (right) and Philip Allen (left) talk with
Tyson Jones (center) during Saturday's Class AA state final
against Lincoln High School. Jones pitched close to five
innings against the Cougars who went on lo defeat Point
Pleasant 6-2.
·

·. Point

Despite four birdies on the putt for birdie and the lead.
DUBLIN(APJ - No one back to competitive golf in
ever doubted Tiger Woods' late February. Even though front nine he still trailed Then at the closing hole, he
heart or his head, althougn he won the Arnold Palmer Byrd, who had holed an 82- hit a 3 iron off the tee - the
there were some lingering Invitational and was in con- yard wedge for an eagle at 14th fairway he hit in as
whispers about his rebuilt tention in several other tour- the seventh hole, by three many tries - and then
knee.
naments. some had won- strokes as he played the II th torched a 7 iron that rode the
Now even those have dered whether at J3 years hole. Woods, showing · no wind and ended up a foot
evaporated.
old he or his reconstructed signs of hesitancy or doubt, away from the hole for a
Adding to his lore with knee would ever be the . hit his drive 329 yards lind kick·in birdie.
"It was unreal. I don't
then hit a 5 wood 253 yards
birdies on three of !he last same Tiger.
that
went
through
the
green
even
know how to ·describe
"For most people, that
four holes - not to mention
it," Letzig said. "It was the
· a highlight-reel chip-in for would be unbelievable," and into the deep rough.
"I didn't see the lie bul it best golf I've ever seen."
eagle a few holes earlier - Nicklaus said of Woods'
Woods climbed out of a record since coming back. had to be terrible;" said. Two shots clear of the
four-way tie with a 7-under "For him, that's not his best. playing · partner Michael field, he had just enough to
65 to win the Memorial But it's still pretty darn Letzig, awed by Woods' hold off Furyk, a former
play and the c1rcus sur- Memorial winner himself
Tournament on Sunday. It good."
was a record fourth iime he
Woods looked at the win . roundin~ him. "He had who also birdied the final
had won the event ·created on Sunday as confirmation some wild, one-handed fol- hole for a 69.
Asked if Tiger was indeed
by his idol and measuring · of what he thought all along. low-through. I saw that out
stick, Jack Nicklaus ,
"I knew I could do this," of the corner of my eye and back, Byrd, who shot a 72
"Tiger Woods is always Woods said afier collecting then I saw how the ball was and ended up tied with
Tiger Woods," said runner- his 67th career victory with tracking. I just told my Wilson (73) at 280, broke
·
up Jim Furyk, who finished a score of 12-urider 276, brother (Darren. his caddie) into a wide grin.
who
was
standing
there,
"lt
just
depends
on
what
alone in second, a shot bac·k. "It's just a matter of give me
"He can't be 100 percent a little bit of .time. I just 'Oh, my god!' It was nuts." ~ou consider the word
every week. But I'm sure he came off a pretty extended ·The roar echped around back' means." he said. "I
answered a lot of questions break, and I was close to the course. Every other one don't know where he went."
today."
winning, but the game was- of the contenders heard it, · Furyk was pleased with
how he played, but frustratWoods had undergone n't quite there when I really too.
Still; he trailed Byrd by a ed that he hadn't been able
knee surgery last June •. a·day needed it on Sunday. I rectiafter wincing his way to a fied that."
· shot and . was tied with to catch up with Woods. He
victory at the U.S. Open at
Thousands of spectators Wilson, with the others · joked that it was reporters'
fault for ever doubting
Torrey Pines. In. a memo- followed every shot of the refusing to wilt.
By the time Woods hit his Tiget
.
·
r~ble
performance, he drama as Woods climbed
"l just wish you all would
cau~ht .Rocco Mediate with the leaderboard at Muirfield drive on the 17th hole, he
a btrdie putt on the 72nd. Village. He staned the day was tied with Byrd, Love just quit (ticktng) him off.
hole and then beat him with tied for seventh, four strokes and Furyk at 10 under, and that's what I wish," he said
another birdie putt on the back of co-leaders Matt was playing a hole or two in in mock anger. "I · wish
. you'd quit chapping him so
final hole of the 18-hole Bettencourt and Mark front of them.
playoff a day later.
Wilson with Jim Furyk,
At the next to last hole, he has to come back and
towering
9-iron keep proving stuff."
Then came eight months Jonathan Byrd, Geoff his
approach
ended
up
9
feet
As if he had anything left
of rest, rehab and, eventual- Ogilvy and Davis Love III
ly, practice before he came also standing in his way.
away and he rolled in the . to prove,

joined by Josh Harlow,
Kenneth Healey, and Dale
Manin (Lincoln); Jacob
Justice and Colton Ratcliff
fromPageBl
(Indy); and Tyler Burdette
and . John
Morgan
mately ruled as safe. Unable (Sissonville).
to catch a break, the Big
While the · Big Blacks
Blacks puUed themselves might not have taken the
together and pushed into the championship, they still
sixth.
took their squad farther than
Senior Philip Allen start- many in the state of West
ed off inning with a walk to Virginia, and that was
first that was followed up something both Krebs and ·
by a single by Eric Veith to the Point Pleasant fans
advance the runners to first acknowledged. ·
and second base. Titus
Outfielder and pitcher
Russell stepped up next in McClung agreed. When
the rotation, blasting a dou- a~ked about this year as a
ble into the outfield to send whole he said, "As a season
both Allen and Veith home , we did great," in terms of
the score then standing as 6-. coming up short
in
2, Lincoln.
· ·
Saturday's matchup he said,
After Russell's offensive "for me. it's not good
push for the Big Blacks , enough."
Point Pleasant was unable
It is with that spirit and
to finish the job with standard of excellence that
Russell left on base at the will hopefully take the.2010
end of the inning.
Big Blacks back to state
Point held Lincoln during with another chance of
the · bottom of the sixth, clinching the title they have
keeping the Cougars from worked so hard and long to
addmg any more runs to · win:
their lead .
While Point Pleasant will
With only on~ inning left most definitely be fighting
to come back, Point· hard for next year's journey
Pleasant was unable to to state finals, it will not be
recover and the. title of without some losses .
Class. AA Champions went
The graduating seniors of
to .Lincoln High School.
the Red and Black squad are
It all came down to one a seasoned and talented
inning.
septet that will surely be
When asked about the m1ssed by their younger
game afterward Coach teammates.
Higginbotham said, "The
Seniors Philip Allen,
kids played hard. We just Michael Burris, Tyson
couldn't gel a ball to drop, Jones, BJ. Lloyd. Dennis
for us . We hit the ball hard.' Rodgers, Justiri Weaver, and
On the two-out rally that Eric Veith have made their
Lincoln had in the fifth mark on the Black Knight
Higginbotham said, "They program.
·
.
took advantage of one
Allen, honored for · the
innin~- one big inningAll-Tournament 2009 team,
just hke we did yesterday, was a four year starting outand we couldn't battle back fielder for the Red and
from· it."
Black squad. Jones, a three
· The Big BlackS were now year starter, was also named
on the other side of the blow as part of the All-Tourney
they served lnd~pendence group, pitching for · the
the following game when Black Knights in more than
Point Pleasant posted six one pivotal post-season
runs in their own two-out game. Lloyd. a three year
rally.
starter who was named
While the Big Blacks Honorable Mention Allmight be state ruimer-up, State for the 2008 season
Higginbotham is still very played solidly behind the
proud·of his boys, "They're plate as catcher for the ·
a good group of kids. One .squad. Weaver, the· team's
of these days we'll get back second baseman and second
and we'll win it. We just got year staner ·has also conto keep trying and. keep try- tributed to the successful
ing. I'm proud of every. seasc;m that Point · experi·
body. They played well."
enced. Veith, the two year
First baseman, junior starter and outfielder made
Clay Kr.ebs was also proud ~reat plays of his own durof his team. ''The fact that mg the season and was a big
we've been here three times contributor to the Red and
says . somehing about the Black offense. Burris, startplayers we've had the past ing his second year for the
.
three years" he said.
Big Blacks and Rodgers, in
A few of the individual · his first varsity appearance,
athletes Krebs was referfng .will also leave their mark on
to were honored for their . the Point Pleasant squad.
talent and performance by
The seniors will be
West Virginia ·Secondary 'missed, but their contribuSchool
Activities tions will remain. They
Commission. Chosen for have now passed the torch
Class. AA
All- to the 20 I0 senior class who
·the
Tournament team were have proven themselves as
Point Pleasant · sen'iors strong and talented athletes
Philip Allen and Tyson · who will strive to complete
Jones: and junior Brock the . job that the Black
McClung.
Knights before .them have
The Big Black trio were slarted.

- -,-&gt;- - · - -

GAHS

any of the Blue Angels at
· the 2009 state meet.
Jackson was the 400m runner-up as a freshman.
fromPageBl
Two other newcomers
competed in finals on
they both agree that Geiger Saturday, as Samantha
and Logan have been instru- Barnes and PeytQn Adkins
mental in helping their
participated in the 800m
careers. They were also and 3200rn events, respechappy to share the track tively. Barnes - a sophowith their mentors one last more - placed 16th With· a
time.
time of 2:21.98, · while
· "Alexis and Tonia have Adkins - a freshman· done a real good job of just missed the podium
helping build me up since · with a ninth-place effon of
my freshman year, being 11 :53.6 1.
. .
good role models for this
That duo, .along with
team,''
Jackson
said. recent graduate Lauren
"Thefve taught us . an Adkins and freshman
awful iot of good things McKenna Warner, . also
over the years and we've placed 12th in the 4~800\n
had. an awful lot of fun relay with a time of 9:53.47
together. It will be up to us in Friday's final.
returnees to continue this
The younger Adkins ~
tradition.
despite finishing better in
Close Wl!S equally proud her individual event ·and heanbroken to compete commented that her experiwith the recent grads one ence in the relay will be the
more time.
one thing she · remembers
"We had another good most from her first trip to
year together. We tried our Columbus.
best today, which is what
"It wasn't h6w I · had
we've always done," Close hoped things would work·
said. "We're like family out, but I've still had an
and .i t's hard to see them ~o. excellent experience this
I've had a great time wtth weekend," Adkins said.
them over the years."
"I'm really happy we made
Juckson - making her it here as a team, that's
200m dash final debut on. something l' m really proud
Saturday ~ also flaced of this wee~end. And hope'eighth with a time o 25.73 fully, I'll be back here a
seconds. It was .the fifth dif- couple more times to give it
ferent state event that another ·shot.".
Jackson has qualified for in
As for Barnes, the twoher three years, the most of day event as a whole was

what stuck with her from nerves of qualifying for .
her first trip.
finals and then being
"It's been ·an amazing relieved when you make it
weekend. It's really excit- to the finals, then you get
ing, a little nerve-wrackin~ nervous again because your
and the crowd is crazy, ' in the finals. It's been a
Barnes said. "I definitely completely new experience
want to make back here and for me and it's been a real
do this again. This is a good joy just to get here. ,"
.experience for roe and ·I Troester said. "We've
want to grow from it."
learned a lot from these
Junior Allie Troester also upperclassmen over the
made her state deb.ut on years. We (the underclassFriday in the discus event, men) know it's on us to conjust missing out on the podi- tinue the tradition · of this
um with a ninth-place effon program next season."
ofll4 feet, 10 inches.
In · Division II boys,
It was a difficult debut for Pemberville Eastwood won
Troester - who would the team championship with
have won the ·D-2 discus 47 points. Meigs - who
title with her regional throw received a school-best four
of 123-10. Still, as she com- points from Mason Metts
mented, the·complete expe- with a fifth-place effon in
rience was definitely some- the shot put - finished tied
thing to grow from.
for 51st with Germantown
Especially since the lead- Valley View, Mentor Lake
ership role will fall on the Catholic,
Garrettsville
'Garfield,
Middletown
seniors next year.
. "II was a lot of up and Madison, 'West Milton
down with nerves this Milton-Union and Navarra
weekend. There were the .Fairless.

Ingels Electronics ·
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Tuesday, June 9, 2009

Tuesday, June 9, 2009
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PO Box 1492,Parke,.burg, WV 26102.
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Pleasant Valley Nursing and Rehabilitation
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For more information, please contact
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(304) 675-5236.

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ln this deal, you are in four spades. West
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heart. You try dummy'S queen, but East
covert with the king. After laking your
ace, how would you continua?
It you are not playing two·over-01'18
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,.--.,------------~---....,~, · polentlat rebids would mean. Would
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Play a spade to dummy's ace, then
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You are nol always 1111 most patient per·
SOfl, but noticeable Improvements can
be made !n the year ahead through
· steadfastness and constancy, especially
If you have a large goal In mind.
Remember, Rome wasn't .builtin a day.
GEMINI (May 21-June 201 - 11 you are
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1rom OOseO(lng how anoth•. htindles a. .
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the answer yoLi\te bfaen seeking.
CANCER (June 21-July 22) - Some
- - - ' ' - " " ' " " ' worthwhile Information could come y.our
way throu;r. a discussion· wlth a frtend
who does not l!mit his or her thinking to
conventlontJ;I, traditional concepts. Keep
an open mind.
.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) -'- Your Ideas for
NONe OF
1ulfllllng ·an . ambitious undertaking at
TllESE
work are worthy of Implementation. Just
act ln. accord whh your ttllnklng and
Impulses 81 this time.
VtR(lO .(Aug. 23·Sept. 221 - OQn't let
another think for you. because It'SImportant that you can act In acoordanc~ with
aome raoently acqu~od knowledge that
would bllne111 you greatly.
liBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 23) - Financial
corldltions appear 10 be qufte favorable.
Even though each transactiOn you make
miQht. be small, it wiH add .up . tq an
Impressive sum.
·

• VInyl Siding
• Replacement
Windows
·Roofing
·Decks

Transfer Cases &amp;
Transmissions
• Aftermarket
Replacement Sheet_
Metal &amp; Components

· A Do-it-yourself classified ads

52--

·wedhHdly, June10. 2008

J&amp;L
Construction

"&amp;-,d"y ,..~-

NOTICE TO BIDDERS and from Mldlcald re·STATE OF OHIO
lmbursable aervlcea.
DEPARTMENT
OF ·Proposals
mUst
TRANSPORTATION
demonstrate capaclly
· Columbus, Ohio
lo meet program goals.
Office of contracls
Qualified organization
Legal Copy Number: or agency .may aubmlt
090338
a proposal on ana or
Sealed proposals will both of tho programo.
be accepted from pre- There will lte 2 sapaquallfted blddera at lhe rata
contracts
ODOTOIIIce of Con- awarclad.
Program
tracls unlll 10:00 a.m. costa lor .-ch proon June 24, 2009. Pro- poaal cannot exc)act 090338 Ia located the following llmlta lor
In Meigs County, SR· lha vorloua oervlce
124-56.02 and Ia a AE· antaa: 1) $87,500.00; 2)
LOCAllON profect. The $4,375.00; per program
dale sailor complatlon year. This contract
of this worlc shall be aa ahall be far lho peri""
sOl forth In the bidding of July I ,2009 through
proposal. Plans and June 30, ~010. MCJFS
Speclllcallons are on may, at Its sole dlscrellle in lha Department lion, extend the con-

Eurllitln

-

and four diamonds.

Parts • Engines.

.

~

14Prevoll
upan
15 E - or

Your ll&gt; triCks are five spac;tes, one heart . ; succeS8Iul now. I mlgh1as wall lake a nap." - Carris F~her

IUIIItUI tarotJ,ffGJt I Prom

.

dloponaer
Prompled

I PREVIOUS SOLUTION: "There Is no polnl al which yoo can say, W.tl, I'm

losers.

7
AIJT"Ot'\1'1Uf!Vr
· ~ Place an on.line ild ·

12

WJU Rogers sald, "The Republicans
have their splil&amp; rif'lt after an election,
and Democrats have theirs just before
an eJection."
Bridge play""' someHmeo select a tin&amp;
of play ffght aft~r finding out about a suit

I

fJ~rJ

(hyptt.)

45 $lOW down
411 Olden limes

spl~-

I

PI""" a newspaper a d

42=:
"You bell"

ucla

FRANK &amp; EARNEST

$70
per

742·2332 .

,,;:;.;
.....,

"' 94 2
lleulb
6KJ10 !4
• A &amp;Z

Dealer: South

740.992-3220

JameaKeeaeell

Clasalfleds

KJ 9
• J 98 6

z

7
A K Q6

8 73

Vulnerable: Both

Owners:
Jon Van Met•r &amp;
Paul Rowe

All dues must be paid in
full prior to meeting.

•

•

t A5
"'J 7S

FO~ P., Ut-1\QU€:

WV State Farm ·
Museum Annual
Board Meeting
June 9th 6 pm

z

to11'x30'

Racine, Ohio 740·247-2019

The Gallipolis Elks Lodge
#107, will hold their annual
Soccer Shoot
Saturday,
June 13, 2009.
1·
· It will be held at the Elks Farm
on Slate Route 588. Sign up
will start at 9:30 a.m. with the
vompetilion starting at 10:00
,·
Compelitlon is open to all
boys and girls born on
8/j1/1996 or after. There will
be four age. groups with boys
and girls divisions. Trophies
. will be awarded f&lt;;Jr first,
second, and lhird place in
each division. This event is
- · " ··- of charge, so come on out
· and bring a friend.

9

•
•

. THE

Modicol
Local
Agency

740-949·2217
•
If II S'x10'

7

CLASSIFIED$

BUILDING MAlNTENANCE

4;:..
7 Fell ort-

K2

"'108 5
East

. 1 08!43

'\i!e' · " .

Hours

IN THE '

r

•

Racine, OH 45n1

www.U.1Mn: a eebaltlaeta,.oom

fiND AJ.OB
QR A NEW ·
CAREER

-;:======;..;========:::;

West

29625 Bashan Road

H~ Cablnelf And FUI'IIItllre

;

Help Wanted

Hill's Self
Storage

740·367.()544
740-367.()536

North
~-oe
• A Q6
• Q1
tKQf 043

An•- to Provioul P,....

40 Yalulhlalo
I lie~ 41 Otaoker

.....

Room Addlllons &amp;
Remodeling

Help Wanted

39 Hilt hard

11 ColiN

Newty remodled 38R 2
bittt'l on farm $ 750 mth. 87 14)(70 Mobile home
utilities
Included. with expando 38R, heat540.729-1331
ing &amp; cooling pump,
wood
bldg.
28A unfurnished mobile 740·339-2710
or
home' in Rodney. AJI 740-645-5218. Must be
. ~
e t,.ect,.r.;.
~·-44~6-·2;.;6.-92.._-~ moved from current loca3 br. mobile home oui- tion
side Pomeroy, S275 rent. ~=::"'-;:"'~~:-:~
$275 dep., years le~e. 14x70, 2 br, cia, large
no pels, 740.9'92-5097
closets, appliances included, (740)949-2944
'
3BR dble·wide furnished, ---~~-~,SA 143 · Pomeroy. $625
"The Proclorville
·:.; .
mo. incl. most utmties &amp;
Diffe rence~
lawncare. 740-591-5174
S1 and a deed is all you
39R, 2 bath ·doublewide need to own your dream
home. Gall Now!
on Bulaville Pike &amp;
Holp Wcmt.d ·General Holp Want.d • Gonoral Holp Want.d ·General
Freedom Homes
14x70 3BA on Bu!avilte
888·565-0167.
. ' Ovetnrook Rehabilitation Get that perfect par1 time Local Domestic Violence
Call
446-4060
belore
Sheller seeks to lill the
5pm or 367-n62 after =====~~ Ceilter is currently seek- paying job working for an
lng a .beautician to work oil lirm as a local agent
lollowing positions:
Spm
6000
Frwr'JY "f 111
in the facility's beauty ,sa· and earn mOre. Job reFull time Wayne County
'
.Sal..
::::;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; ton. Candlctates should quirements: Good com·
Advocate, Full time
~~;;;;;i~~~~ """
possoss a valid Ohio munlcation skills in Eng- Mason County Advocate.
78 Elcona Trailer t4X70 Accounting/ financial Managing · Cosmetologist ·Hsh, lntemet access Any Part time PUtnam County .
2BR 1 bath . goOd shape Ac:countent:
Full-time License. Salafy is based previous working expertAdvocate, Part time
365 Pa)(ton, you move.
on commission.
Inter- ence Could be an ad11anRelief Staff. Bachelors
$7500 080. 645-tS4fi or position with busy ac.
counting QHice In Gallipo- ested candidates should tage. ApiJiicanls should Degree in Social Service
446-2515
lis for immediate employ- fill out an application at send their resume to Japreferred, experience
333 Page Street, Middle- son Wheller email Uaworking with victims
In Memory
mont· Accounting degree
====~=:. and experience required. port, Ohio, Overbrook sonwheller27@gmail.co
accepted. Please send
Center participates in the m ) lor more info.
resume with handwritten
·Must have good organ·
izational skills and the . dmg free Workplace Pro- ~~~~~~~
cover letter to
gram
Goodt1mes Bar is seekP.O. Box 403,
ability to WOrk independ· ·
·
ing bartender &amp; door- . Huntmgton,
·
wv 25 7OB,
·1h
ent Iy w1
shong atter1manfsecurily
call
tion to detail. Please -:~~~~~--- 304-576-2220. . ask for po1~~=r~~2~~~~an
send resume and referAccepting Applfcatiol"ls . John.
..,,.,,.,,.,,.,,.,,.,.,.
ences to
Now
r-==:-:-:=::--1 ~
gallipolisaccountant@
Make fundraiSing Galls
MechaOica
gmail.com
lor conservative
Loved &amp; Missed
Service Technician posior mail to CLA·10t, PO
organizations sUch as
By .
tion a11ailable for d1esa1
Box 469. Gal~polis, OH
the NRAI
Pauline,
and hydraulics. Experi·
45631
Cali Toll Free t.o
Brenda,
ence
necessary.
schedule Interview
Holp Wan..d · GMoral
Heallh!Aetlrement
&amp;
Gary&amp;
1-888-IMC-PAYU
Benefits. Fax resume to
ext 2311
Need 7 ladies to sell
740·446-9104 or e-mail
Apply Online:
Avon calf 740·446·3358
lo LLC@CAREQ.COM
hMp :l~obs.infocision .com

Help wa,nled

NEA Crossword Puzzle
ACROSS

.

u

Help Wanted

The Daily Sentinel • Page 85
BRIDGE

'J'l"'

Dale
Barr

www.mydailysentlnel.com

Stanley TreeTrimming_
&amp; Removal
l •l&gt;rornot and Quality
Worlc
J • ~teas•onltble Raies

l~[i~::·A~•vailable!
Call Gary Stanley @
740-59 1-8044
leave

PSI CONSTRUCTION
Room Additions. RemodelinG, Melal &amp;
Shingle Roofs, New Homes, Siding, Decks,
Bathroom Remodeling. Ll«!nsed &amp; Insured

. t AM 'TROUB~E11 BY 1lll!
tURREN'T ~L.CI &amp;I'TUA'TION

0
0
0

SCORPIO(Oct. 24-NoY. 22) -eecau80
your prinaly ·lhoughla will bll on ways
AFTER OUfl Pf!IVATE JJNAS . and means to please ot~rs, It goes withllROTHERS CONCERT. ~IGHH out ~yJng that companions will find you
an especlaly nice person to be around.
SAGITTAAIUS .(Nov. 23-0ec. 21) - It
could pay .to ecor'l()mlz&amp; In ways you
i".'-.;..-J hadn't planned. Tomorrow, there will.be
something ~u'll w8f!l to p~rchase. and
you'll bll glatt to have the lunda.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan . 19)- Keep
your eveillng plana open because, as
the day wears on, your mood lsllkefy IQ
cr: ... ... ·I grow more gregarious and soctabie. ·
Come nightfall, you won't want tO be left
out of the action.
,;::;~~~~t;::2~J AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 19) -You'll
gain a close rnend II you are available 10
someoOe, who Is usually quite 81.andoffish
and sectetl\19. This person needs some·
one tO flelp unload an 1hat he or &amp;he has
hekllnslde for so long.
PISCES (Feb. 20-March 20)- ActlvWes
that are more menJai than physical will
provide the moet ptea$urt. Try to mingle
with some pals wHose thoughts and
0
deeds parallel ~ur ln1er&amp;St8.
0
ARIES (March ·at-Apnl 19) - Don't
0
undereStimate the pqwer of Nttle thlr;ags
beCause they have a way of adding up to
something big. Don't Ignore anything ~fa
financial nature just eecause it dOesn't
'look like much. •
T~URUS (Apn120-May 201- News pertaining 10 9omethllig totally ou1 pf -~our
baiHwlck might come your way: It will
have to do with changes that could affect
yOIJ In a good way.

L

SOUPTONUTZ

·~:~~LWREDr
· ·~~EFOj

11J ., r 1:

I I I I J I I I I.
.

SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS 6/S/fB
Hamper., Aba~ - Uncut ~ Length- BENEATH.
An ~ld wonian told the newlywed, "Reinember, a·
. layer of dust protects the wood BENEATH it."
ARLO&amp;JANIS

�.
Page 84 • The Daily Sentinel

www.mydailysentinel.com

'

Tuesday, June 9, 2009

Tuesday, June 9, 2009
ALLEYOOP

Hou101forltooll
Ven,· SliCe l'lOITlE!i · for rent
"
Middleport,
good
"!€ yhborhood. Newly re·
moaeled
New
applianGeS 2 bedrooms, 1
bafh. ·arge kitchen, sun

. ·Advertise·your
business on this page
for as low as

Country living· 3·5BA.
2-3 ~A on p-rty.
Many Hoor plans! Easy
Financing' We own the
bank.
Call
today!
866-215-5774

'

room , Cia &amp; heal, nice ~---!'""'-ouldool
spaces.
Call Government Loens. sin.
740- 992-9784
or gle wide &amp; double wide
740-992-5094 lor more homes Call 10 prequaldefaiiS
lfy. 866-215·5774
Government will pay you
up
to $8000 to buy a new
·1
'l,j
hOme. Ooo't m•ss yoor
share o1 the stimulus ba ll
Rentals
out money. No Gtmmicks. No Hype. Call to
1 br. in Gall. Fr-11')1 wv be
Pre.Qualilied.
S~~!i .OO a mon . . _ S325 .00 · 740-423~9728 or loll free
dr:p
JO.l-675-4100
or 666·338·3201
740- 1HJ-8'JIJII
::-:~~~~~~ Landlhome
pacl&lt;ages
2 Br water and trash in- a11ailaDle wiTh payments
eluded. No pets. At John- starting around $600/mo.
son's Mobile Home ParK. call
to
prequailfy.
Cal1740-+645-()506
866·215-5774

4000

I! 1'1

I

Phillip

Alder

YOUNG'S
Carpenter Scrv•cc
New O.rt;"
Ehrdrlca1

a Pfumb+ng

Ftooflng &amp; Gutters
Siding &amp; Plllntlng
and Porch Deoka

BANKS.
CONSTRUCTION

CORNER STONE
CONSTRUCTION

Pomeroy, Ohio

Roofing, Siding,
Soffit, Dficks,
Doors, Windoi'KS,
electric, P.lumbing,
Drywall,
Remodeling; Room
. · Additions

co.

Commercial •
Residential

• Free Estimates
(740) 9'12-5009
Custom Home- Building
Sl('el Frame Buildings
Buildin~ . Remodeling
General repair
www.bankscrlhLOm

..

C re a t i v e
c hild core
Now enrolling for
summer childcare.
Cal AnHo or Shoron

(740) 949·2122

Johnson's Tree

Serrlce .
Gallipolis, OH 45631

Insured, Free

Estimates, 20yrs E:rcp.

740-441-9387

Rick Johnson-Owner

Nate's tree
Service
Tree removal, planting,
lawn care, and all your
landscaping needs.
IR4~sidlen1tial and Commercial
Fully ~!..!'&gt;UI

Local Contractor

Seeking person to work pan-time in the
Athens area . $8.~0/hour. Maintenance ,.·
grounds keeping and common area
housekeeping. Reliable transportation a_
must Mileage paid. Police background

0

check and drug te~t. Please .send resume

with references to:
.Ma.intenance,
PO Box 1492,Parke,.burg, WV 26102.
EEO

.

STATE TESTED NURSING ASSISTANTS
REGISTERED NURSES
Pleasant Valley Nursing and Rehabilitation
Center has openings fqr State Tested
Nursing Assislanls and Per . Diem
Regislered Nurses. Twelve hour shifts.
Must have valid WV license,
For more information, please contact
Angie Cleland, Director of Nursing
(304) 675-5236.

Home
Healltl
now
hiring
STNA's, HHA's, lor the
Meigs County area~Fie11l·
ble scheduling. II in1erested
please
. ca lt

140-592-2444

Salt•
Sales Manager posi tion
available. Sales e~pe1i·
ence required. Appl't in
person ay Sparkle Supply Company 693 Stale
Route 7 Nor1h- Gallipolis.

OH.

No

phone

1...-----AilLiii~-----.J please.

calls

Free Eatlmateo

7:00am· 8:00pm

S&amp;L
Trucking
Dump Truck
Service
We Haul Gravel,
Limestone, Coal,
Compost, Top Soil
Call Walt or Sandy

Advertise
in this
· · space
for

Eul
Pa58

All pus

Opening lead: "' A

or7400-59 1-3726

month

Find the split,
. then pick the road .

ST~ESS
~ELIIf

CLASS

l-OSER

""LOOK:- KE.RE.'~ ~ WN-\1 f&gt;..r:&gt;

""'

'!)--.r-.

Cell: 'r41l-418-5047
email:
,
jrshadfrm@aal.~om

/''""'·r

:

..)OIL

ln this deal, you are in four spades. West
cahel throe ~lA&gt; tricks, thtn 1/&gt;IIIJ to a
heart. You try dummy'S queen, but East
covert with the king. After laking your
ace, how would you continua?
It you are not playing two·over-01'18
game--force, discuss with North what tlla
,.--.,------------~---....,~, · polentlat rebids would mean. Would
SO I FIGGeRED MIGHT'S WELL
throeapadeabeforclng. orgame·lnvlta·
SUTTER UP TH'
tlonal? Thoro are arguments bOth waya. ·
CUSTOMERS II
(I like forong, not being fond of landing
on a pinhead and being tamptlld by a
game bonua even If we are overbidding.)
You have two healt·tosera ttlat must be
diacarded on diamond wlnnert In .the
dummy. But before you can take those
discardS, you must draw frumpe. Since
the apade brOIIk 18 crl11cal, nnd out about
that first,
Play a spade to dummy's ace, then
return a spade to your jacl(. if tomeone
shows out, caS/1 your spade king, spade
10 and diamond ace, then play a die·
mondto dummy's queen 8nd call klr the
king, hoping tho jack appears to oetab·
llsh dummy's 10. (This Is a better llne for
"q
tour diamond trickS than a secon&lt;l-round
fiilesse ol dummy's 10.} However, when
KE.Ef'tlt.:
spades prove to be 3-2, cash your diamond ace, play a diamond to the queen,
ruH a diamond high In your hand, return
, to dummy with a spade, and take ttle
two high diamonds, pachtng your lleart

~ l.lu~T~OU~

I

•

BIG NAT£ ·· .

.;

Save time and money. Go to www.mydailysentinel.com
and click on Classifieds and follow .the user-friendly steps .
to place your ad.

t/ Do-it..:yourself convenience
t/ Easy to use
.t/ Upload photos and graphics
~ Print and Online options
t/ 7 great packages to choose from

•Garages
• Pola Buildings
• Room Additions
Owner:

SHRIMP
(7401 742-2563
l_.rJf,nevtrfreur•,lle:alb 011

$10 per lb Cam only
Pm1 is required in rtd11ance
Shipments arri11e every

PEANUTS
I(ES, '(OU NEVER
KNOW Wf.IAT f.IEfS
Tf.IINKIN6 ..

H&amp;H
GuHerlng
Seamless .Gutters
Roofing, Siding, GuMers

Insured &amp; Banded
74()-653-9657

*45.99

The Daily Sentinel
www.mydailysentinel.com

lract for a term·of one

For All Makes of Vehicle5

Racine. Ohio

740-949-1956

services In the follow- later than June 17,
ing 2 areas; 1) Non- 2009 at 12:ob noon.
Meigs County Job &amp;

E m e r g e n c y
Transportation to and
lrom Medicaid ralm·
bursablo sarvlcn. 2)
At·Riak Pr.gnancy to

Family Servlcea reserves the right to rejaclany and all blda,
(I) 2, 9, 1&amp;

CUTIING EDGE
LAWN CARE
&amp; Power Washing

Boy
Cow;·and
.---·
..-----..,
r--------, r-------:'1 .----------,

C9mrnertlal &amp;·

·Resldend•l
Free Esdmates
• Lawn Maioten&amp;nce
• Landscaping
Seth Carleton
(740) 517-5432
Jell' Stethem

(740) 517-6883

l
I
'

I

I CAN'T BELIEVE THE
PRE;SIDENT ACTUALLY
CHOSE THE BUM.PUTER
TO SAVE TI\E U.S.
ECONOMY.

I
I

RO.BERT
BISSELL

ll8NSTIUmM

L,;..;;.;.""'_.._;..;;..;...;.;;w

• New Homes
• Garages
• Complete
Remodeling ·

29 Yean Experience

J40.912·1&amp;11

740-992-6971

Slop &amp;Compare

GARFIELD

David Lewis
Insured

Free Eslimute~

Replacement ·
Windows and
Vltiyl Siding

(6) 2. 9
year i:onllngent upon
Spedallsts, LTD
the level of future fed(740) 742·2563
_ _ _ _ _ _ _ oral and ala.. funding,
• Siding • Vinyl
Public Notice
prOvider elfectlvoneas
Windows • Metal
- - - - - - - and
demonatrated
REQUEST FOR PRO. lor the aervlctta
ud Shingle Roofs
POSALS
baing afleNcl. For a .
•
Decks • Additlo~
Meigs County Job and . capr of the .fun RFP .
•Electrical ·
Fomlly
Servlcu contact Jane Bonks,
(MCJFS) Is seeking MCJFS, 175 Race
• Plumbing ·
proposals from quail· Street,
Middleport,
• Pole Barns
lied organlatlons or Ohio 45760 (740) 992·
agencies lo provide 211711Xl106. Proposal
comprehensive client must be submitted no

llome

16 Fl-. ptuo 54 Muddy up
17 Pratlde at 55 Gorilla
IN
56 Bodgera
·
18 Computer 57 Ut'bert lllilna 13 ChiMae
lang._

58 Caulltau'l

domoln

20 Up Oncf

a&amp;aut
22 Con cooled

23 Pentagon
VIP
24 Ropalrolllll
hein
'r1 GOftlUck
30 Frlontly

3 Quaint

vehlclao

35 Borry prod,

36 Payroll

lealutn

38 Altors 1

21 Sw1IOI
colors
24 Thai '
neighbor
25 &amp;wft CHill'

DOWN

2 &amp;p. miN

32 Alehouse
34 Lyric poem

36 R - .
A.J.-

19 Ball -

I Wortltln'l

nellatl
31 Commulttr

parsdo

-·

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hut

"Luck -~

28 Hamer

lldrt

39 BMcll !Indo
41 Fll bolllnd
42 Mea &lt;It

NoiJn

43 Pinch

44 Sh!pboard
Qlllff

4 Rich pootry 21 Hlmoloyan 46 Pondotaoa
5 Monulocluiw
monk
oan .

8

47 Roundup

opuo

Lady"

7 Fooling

.29 Convn·

g Flu

31 Dlveroe
33 - -relief

8 Romantic
dolly
ayrnptom

dtductlon •

-

46 Venlaon

51 Canape

back

17 ,An:llc eight 10 Anclonl p1tr11

topper

35 Sudden

1hock

CELEBRITY CIPHER
by Lull Cainpoe

.

C&amp;ltbr!tp Clpr..~ram•art erHled lrM~ ~110111 ~ytliMI4 ~~~ - pail~~
Each lfrltr 111 !hi crp!ltr ltllldllor anothlr.

TOday's cJw: NeQUals 8

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RVFAI

YZ CJ :

TKR

BVMIAHX

AF' H Z

IIBF

ZYFKC

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K U U A V'

NAil."·

YXCAHFKEXBC

EZCLBC

'blr'lllrlhtltir:

FACE CM:DS
WAVE D065
ON TfiEM ..

I

Now Selling:
• Ford &amp; Motorcrafl

of Transportilllon.

53 Quark"a

AstroGraph ·

By Bernice Bede O.at
You are nol always 1111 most patient per·
SOfl, but noticeable Improvements can
be made !n the year ahead through
· steadfastness and constancy, especially
If you have a large goal In mind.
Remember, Rome wasn't .builtin a day.
GEMINI (May 21-June 201 - 11 you are
alert, a valuable leiSOn can be teamed
1rom OOseO(lng how anoth•. htindles a. .
complelt problem slmll8t to 'tOur'S. It'll be
the answer yoLi\te bfaen seeking.
CANCER (June 21-July 22) - Some
- - - ' ' - " " ' " " ' worthwhile Information could come y.our
way throu;r. a discussion· wlth a frtend
who does not l!mit his or her thinking to
conventlontJ;I, traditional concepts. Keep
an open mind.
.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) -'- Your Ideas for
NONe OF
1ulfllllng ·an . ambitious undertaking at
TllESE
work are worthy of Implementation. Just
act ln. accord whh your ttllnklng and
Impulses 81 this time.
VtR(lO .(Aug. 23·Sept. 221 - OQn't let
another think for you. because It'SImportant that you can act In acoordanc~ with
aome raoently acqu~od knowledge that
would bllne111 you greatly.
liBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 23) - Financial
corldltions appear 10 be qufte favorable.
Even though each transactiOn you make
miQht. be small, it wiH add .up . tq an
Impressive sum.
·

• VInyl Siding
• Replacement
Windows
·Roofing
·Decks

Transfer Cases &amp;
Transmissions
• Aftermarket
Replacement Sheet_
Metal &amp; Components

· A Do-it-yourself classified ads

52--

·wedhHdly, June10. 2008

J&amp;L
Construction

"&amp;-,d"y ,..~-

NOTICE TO BIDDERS and from Mldlcald re·STATE OF OHIO
lmbursable aervlcea.
DEPARTMENT
OF ·Proposals
mUst
TRANSPORTATION
demonstrate capaclly
· Columbus, Ohio
lo meet program goals.
Office of contracls
Qualified organization
Legal Copy Number: or agency .may aubmlt
090338
a proposal on ana or
Sealed proposals will both of tho programo.
be accepted from pre- There will lte 2 sapaquallfted blddera at lhe rata
contracts
ODOTOIIIce of Con- awarclad.
Program
tracls unlll 10:00 a.m. costa lor .-ch proon June 24, 2009. Pro- poaal cannot exc)act 090338 Ia located the following llmlta lor
In Meigs County, SR· lha vorloua oervlce
124-56.02 and Ia a AE· antaa: 1) $87,500.00; 2)
LOCAllON profect. The $4,375.00; per program
dale sailor complatlon year. This contract
of this worlc shall be aa ahall be far lho peri""
sOl forth In the bidding of July I ,2009 through
proposal. Plans and June 30, ~010. MCJFS
Speclllcallons are on may, at Its sole dlscrellle in lha Department lion, extend the con-

Eurllitln

-

and four diamonds.

Parts • Engines.

.

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14Prevoll
upan
15 E - or

Your ll&gt; triCks are five spac;tes, one heart . ; succeS8Iul now. I mlgh1as wall lake a nap." - Carris F~her

IUIIItUI tarotJ,ffGJt I Prom

.

dloponaer
Prompled

I PREVIOUS SOLUTION: "There Is no polnl al which yoo can say, W.tl, I'm

losers.

7
AIJT"Ot'\1'1Uf!Vr
· ~ Place an on.line ild ·

12

WJU Rogers sald, "The Republicans
have their splil&amp; rif'lt after an election,
and Democrats have theirs just before
an eJection."
Bridge play""' someHmeo select a tin&amp;
of play ffght aft~r finding out about a suit

I

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(hyptt.)

45 $lOW down
411 Olden limes

spl~-

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42=:
"You bell"

ucla

FRANK &amp; EARNEST

$70
per

742·2332 .

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"' 94 2
lleulb
6KJ10 !4
• A &amp;Z

Dealer: South

740.992-3220

JameaKeeaeell

Clasalfleds

KJ 9
• J 98 6

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A K Q6

8 73

Vulnerable: Both

Owners:
Jon Van Met•r &amp;
Paul Rowe

All dues must be paid in
full prior to meeting.

•

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FO~ P., Ut-1\QU€:

WV State Farm ·
Museum Annual
Board Meeting
June 9th 6 pm

z

to11'x30'

Racine, Ohio 740·247-2019

The Gallipolis Elks Lodge
#107, will hold their annual
Soccer Shoot
Saturday,
June 13, 2009.
1·
· It will be held at the Elks Farm
on Slate Route 588. Sign up
will start at 9:30 a.m. with the
vompetilion starting at 10:00
,·
Compelitlon is open to all
boys and girls born on
8/j1/1996 or after. There will
be four age. groups with boys
and girls divisions. Trophies
. will be awarded f&lt;;Jr first,
second, and lhird place in
each division. This event is
- · " ··- of charge, so come on out
· and bring a friend.

9

•
•

. THE

Modicol
Local
Agency

740-949·2217
•
If II S'x10'

7

CLASSIFIED$

BUILDING MAlNTENANCE

4;:..
7 Fell ort-

K2

"'108 5
East

. 1 08!43

'\i!e' · " .

Hours

IN THE '

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Racine, OH 45n1

www.U.1Mn: a eebaltlaeta,.oom

fiND AJ.OB
QR A NEW ·
CAREER

-;:======;..;========:::;

West

29625 Bashan Road

H~ Cablnelf And FUI'IIItllre

;

Help Wanted

Hill's Self
Storage

740·367.()544
740-367.()536

North
~-oe
• A Q6
• Q1
tKQf 043

An•- to Provioul P,....

40 Yalulhlalo
I lie~ 41 Otaoker

.....

Room Addlllons &amp;
Remodeling

Help Wanted

39 Hilt hard

11 ColiN

Newty remodled 38R 2
bittt'l on farm $ 750 mth. 87 14)(70 Mobile home
utilities
Included. with expando 38R, heat540.729-1331
ing &amp; cooling pump,
wood
bldg.
28A unfurnished mobile 740·339-2710
or
home' in Rodney. AJI 740-645-5218. Must be
. ~
e t,.ect,.r.;.
~·-44~6-·2;.;6.-92.._-~ moved from current loca3 br. mobile home oui- tion
side Pomeroy, S275 rent. ~=::"'-;:"'~~:-:~
$275 dep., years le~e. 14x70, 2 br, cia, large
no pels, 740.9'92-5097
closets, appliances included, (740)949-2944
'
3BR dble·wide furnished, ---~~-~,SA 143 · Pomeroy. $625
"The Proclorville
·:.; .
mo. incl. most utmties &amp;
Diffe rence~
lawncare. 740-591-5174
S1 and a deed is all you
39R, 2 bath ·doublewide need to own your dream
home. Gall Now!
on Bulaville Pike &amp;
Holp Wcmt.d ·General Holp Want.d • Gonoral Holp Want.d ·General
Freedom Homes
14x70 3BA on Bu!avilte
888·565-0167.
. ' Ovetnrook Rehabilitation Get that perfect par1 time Local Domestic Violence
Call
446-4060
belore
Sheller seeks to lill the
5pm or 367-n62 after =====~~ Ceilter is currently seek- paying job working for an
lng a .beautician to work oil lirm as a local agent
lollowing positions:
Spm
6000
Frwr'JY "f 111
in the facility's beauty ,sa· and earn mOre. Job reFull time Wayne County
'
.Sal..
::::;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; ton. Candlctates should quirements: Good com·
Advocate, Full time
~~;;;;;i~~~~ """
possoss a valid Ohio munlcation skills in Eng- Mason County Advocate.
78 Elcona Trailer t4X70 Accounting/ financial Managing · Cosmetologist ·Hsh, lntemet access Any Part time PUtnam County .
2BR 1 bath . goOd shape Ac:countent:
Full-time License. Salafy is based previous working expertAdvocate, Part time
365 Pa)(ton, you move.
on commission.
Inter- ence Could be an ad11anRelief Staff. Bachelors
$7500 080. 645-tS4fi or position with busy ac.
counting QHice In Gallipo- ested candidates should tage. ApiJiicanls should Degree in Social Service
446-2515
lis for immediate employ- fill out an application at send their resume to Japreferred, experience
333 Page Street, Middle- son Wheller email Uaworking with victims
In Memory
mont· Accounting degree
====~=:. and experience required. port, Ohio, Overbrook sonwheller27@gmail.co
accepted. Please send
Center participates in the m ) lor more info.
resume with handwritten
·Must have good organ·
izational skills and the . dmg free Workplace Pro- ~~~~~~~
cover letter to
gram
Goodt1mes Bar is seekP.O. Box 403,
ability to WOrk independ· ·
·
ing bartender &amp; door- . Huntmgton,
·
wv 25 7OB,
·1h
ent Iy w1
shong atter1manfsecurily
call
tion to detail. Please -:~~~~~--- 304-576-2220. . ask for po1~~=r~~2~~~~an
send resume and referAccepting Applfcatiol"ls . John.
..,,.,,.,,.,,.,,.,,.,.,.
ences to
Now
r-==:-:-:=::--1 ~
gallipolisaccountant@
Make fundraiSing Galls
MechaOica
gmail.com
lor conservative
Loved &amp; Missed
Service Technician posior mail to CLA·10t, PO
organizations sUch as
By .
tion a11ailable for d1esa1
Box 469. Gal~polis, OH
the NRAI
Pauline,
and hydraulics. Experi·
45631
Cali Toll Free t.o
Brenda,
ence
necessary.
schedule Interview
Holp Wan..d · GMoral
Heallh!Aetlrement
&amp;
Gary&amp;
1-888-IMC-PAYU
Benefits. Fax resume to
ext 2311
Need 7 ladies to sell
740·446-9104 or e-mail
Apply Online:
Avon calf 740·446·3358
lo LLC@CAREQ.COM
hMp :l~obs.infocision .com

Help wa,nled

NEA Crossword Puzzle
ACROSS

.

u

Help Wanted

The Daily Sentinel • Page 85
BRIDGE

'J'l"'

Dale
Barr

www.mydailysentlnel.com

Stanley TreeTrimming_
&amp; Removal
l •l&gt;rornot and Quality
Worlc
J • ~teas•onltble Raies

l~[i~::·A~•vailable!
Call Gary Stanley @
740-59 1-8044
leave

PSI CONSTRUCTION
Room Additions. RemodelinG, Melal &amp;
Shingle Roofs, New Homes, Siding, Decks,
Bathroom Remodeling. Ll«!nsed &amp; Insured

. t AM 'TROUB~E11 BY 1lll!
tURREN'T ~L.CI &amp;I'TUA'TION

0
0
0

SCORPIO(Oct. 24-NoY. 22) -eecau80
your prinaly ·lhoughla will bll on ways
AFTER OUfl Pf!IVATE JJNAS . and means to please ot~rs, It goes withllROTHERS CONCERT. ~IGHH out ~yJng that companions will find you
an especlaly nice person to be around.
SAGITTAAIUS .(Nov. 23-0ec. 21) - It
could pay .to ecor'l()mlz&amp; In ways you
i".'-.;..-J hadn't planned. Tomorrow, there will.be
something ~u'll w8f!l to p~rchase. and
you'll bll glatt to have the lunda.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan . 19)- Keep
your eveillng plana open because, as
the day wears on, your mood lsllkefy IQ
cr: ... ... ·I grow more gregarious and soctabie. ·
Come nightfall, you won't want tO be left
out of the action.
,;::;~~~~t;::2~J AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 19) -You'll
gain a close rnend II you are available 10
someoOe, who Is usually quite 81.andoffish
and sectetl\19. This person needs some·
one tO flelp unload an 1hat he or &amp;he has
hekllnslde for so long.
PISCES (Feb. 20-March 20)- ActlvWes
that are more menJai than physical will
provide the moet ptea$urt. Try to mingle
with some pals wHose thoughts and
0
deeds parallel ~ur ln1er&amp;St8.
0
ARIES (March ·at-Apnl 19) - Don't
0
undereStimate the pqwer of Nttle thlr;ags
beCause they have a way of adding up to
something big. Don't Ignore anything ~fa
financial nature just eecause it dOesn't
'look like much. •
T~URUS (Apn120-May 201- News pertaining 10 9omethllig totally ou1 pf -~our
baiHwlck might come your way: It will
have to do with changes that could affect
yOIJ In a good way.

L

SOUPTONUTZ

·~:~~LWREDr
· ·~~EFOj

11J ., r 1:

I I I I J I I I I.
.

SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS 6/S/fB
Hamper., Aba~ - Uncut ~ Length- BENEATH.
An ~ld wonian told the newlywed, "Reinember, a·
. layer of dust protects the wood BENEATH it."
ARLO&amp;JANIS

�Page 86 • The Daily Sentinel

www.mydailysentinel.com

Tuesday, June 9, 2009

I

I

Adkins honored as
Mother of the Year, A2

RACO. awards $15,300
~ scholarships; A6

•

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio
,jt J (

' I :'\ J S • \

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SPORTS
Bryan Waltero/photoa

Gallia Academy's Brea Close, left, prepares for a baton
exchange from Alexis Geiger, right, during the 4x200m final
held Saturday at the [)..2 track and field championships at
Jesse Owens Memorial Stadium in Col.umbus.

Meigs' Mason Metts releases an attempt during Friday's
. Division II shot put final at Jesse Owens Memorial Stadium
in Columbus. Metts, by placing fifth, scored four points ~elpi11g the Marauders finish In a seven-way tie for 51 st.

Geiger ·

onships during her four-year
tenure with the Angels, as
well as wiqning 12 district
and eight regional titles.
. Geiger also lettered four
years in varsity volleyball
and was AII-SEOAL three
times in that spon, as well as
earning three varsity letters
and one AII-SEOAL nomination in basketbalL
Geiger - who matched

fmmPageBl

.. BY BETH SERGENJ'

·Strickland and Ohio Air Quality
BSERGENTOMV.DAILYSENTINEL.COM
Development Authority Executive
Director Mark Shanahan. Ohio Sen.
COLUMBUS
American Jimmy Stewan (R-Meigs) was fir5t
Municipal Power-Ohio has been· to call The Daily Sentinel about the
approved for a $30 million bridge announceme!!t.
loan from the $150 million advanced
"The first iwo ·recipients of these
energy portion of the Ohio Bipartisan funds are great examples of how
Job Stimulus Plan .to ultimately assist investing in advanced energy techin developing th.e American . nolo~ies is stimulating Ohio's econMuniCipal Power-Ohio Generation amy, ' Strickland said . "The impacts
Station proposed for Letart Falls.
of President Obama's recovery act
The official announcement · was and our bipartisan state stimulus
made yesterday ,by Gov. Ted package are becoming evident -

Gallia Academy's Samantha Sames, middle, runs with the
pack during the beginning of the second lap of the Division
II BOOm championship final held Saturday at Jesse Owens
Stadium in Columbus.
her career-best with I I .5
points this weekend scored '40.25 points at the
state meet over her four years
at GAHS, a little over one· founh. of the Angels' total of
115 points during that span.
Geiger was also the only
. member of the SEOAL this
weekend - boys or girls · to win a gold at the state
meet

lhose 16 events - coming
llway with one gold medal,
six silvers and a bronze .
.Four of those silvers and the
bronze came in relay
events.
Geiger leaves GalliaAcademy with individual
•
SEOAL records in both .the
Taking Applications
lOOm dash ( 12.1 seconds)
and the long jump ( 1710.75), and is also part of
HUD Subsidized
the SEOAL record ~ holding
4xl00m squad - along
Efflclency/1 ·Bedroom .
with Felicia Close, Kayla
_ /, SOyra or qualifying disability
Perry and Tonia Logan ,,.ALL , ~
Low Income priority
from 2006 (49.7 seconds).
lf!IUTJ($
740·992·7022
Geiger was also part AR( VAl~
Silverheels
either individually or as a
member of a relay teams ,zy/;1-'\'~ A Realty Company·EHO
of II SEOAL track champi-

Felicia Close (2003-06)
still holds the . school
records for state points with
59 in a career and 22 in one
meet (2006).

I I
.

111 '

d

11

I\ .._.

I

111 11 11

1 r .r 11

I
.

we are creating the jobs of the . "We still have our hurdles but this
future in Ohio today."
·
was certainly good news today,"
The other recipient is a Carson said of yesterday'~
Perrysburg solar panel manufactur- announcement.
er. The funding , which will be
Ohio Sen. Stewart said ot the
awarded to Willard &amp; Kelsey Solar ·loan: "It's good to see recognition at
Group LLC and AMP-Ohio, 'was the state level of the importance of
approved by the Ohio Air Quality this project, not just for Meigs
. Development Authority, the state County but the state and surroundagency responsible for administer- ing · region. Nothing compares to
ing the program's funds . · ·
this $3.25 billion investment m
Kent Carson, communications Ohio,
at least not right now."
j director for AMP-Ohio, said the
loan -is zero interest for tive years.
PleaseseeAMP,M

Roberts
hired as full..
time village .
administrator
Bv BRIAN J. REED
BREEDOMYOAILYSENTINEL.COM

"The Wilds" ·

'

The Maples

Cumberland, Ohio
World's Largest Wildlife Conservation Center
/ofo contact Alice 992,3938
poyment deadline June 15th.

_..,,..;.,..;,,..,

t

-z

I

· • Lakers, Magic in
- Game 3. See Page Bl ·

~

Printed on 100%

Rec:yded Newsprint~·

•

.The Long~berger 1009
American Summer Celebration
Frazesburg, Ohio
lnctudes.Longaberger
Basket Binga!
Only I4 reservallons
available
Payment deadline
June 15th
Info contact:
Rhonda Rathburn

MIDDLEPORT
. Middleport Village Council
. Village
OBITUARIES placed
Administrator
Faymon
•
Roberts on the payroll as a
Page AS
full-time employee Monday
evening,
ending a contract
'· • Robert Cummins, 55
a
arrangement · · with
_• Irene Hendricks, 81
Cincinnati engineering finn. ·
• Lewis McBride, 63
Roberts has been in the
position since March, 2008,
but has been an employee of
ATS engineers, under a
three-year contract with the
village. At least on paper,
Roberts has been a·· .jl,arl- .
• Meigs school
time administrator ··for
honor rolls released .
Middlepon, working in the
See Page A2
same position in Buffalo,
W.Va.
under a similar
• Program helps
with ATS.
women cancer patients. anangement
\
Middleport _ has paid
See Page A2
$4,000 per month to ATS
for
Roberts' services. At the
-• O'Bieness offers
time
the village executed
childbirth class.
the contract with ATS,
See Page A2
Mayor Michael Gerlach
Chorlono HoelllchlphOtOo
• PHS Class of '54 holds cited a financial savings to Recognition went to those ABLE students ·getting their GEDs over the past year.Those present at the recognition pro·
the village through the gram were, from the left, front, F(ari Causey, Miranda L. McKnight, and Dawn R. Johnson, and back, Deborah A. Beams·,
reunion. See Page A3
arrangement, but. said the . Nathaniel K_Dowler, and Rachael A. Bearhs.
.
.. .
• Meigs County's
main
adval)lage . to
Middleport was access to
oldest to observe
Roberts' training and qualibirthday. See ~»age A3
.fications.
·
• Gospel River Boys in
Please set Roberts, AS · ·
· concert. See Page A3
: • Military family SUpPort

INSIDE

.SERIES 1000
LTX LAWN TRACTOR
••••••••••••

.

;,

.•·

.,

!-:'·

,.

0

••

0

•• ••

0 •••

0

0

0

•••• 0

• Innovative 42"- 50" heavy-duty dee I&lt;
.;uttini system for cleaner cut
• 19 Hft .. 24 HP 1 Cub Cadet'
professionai:Jrade engines by Kohler,
and B ri ili~ &amp; S~ralton•
• lnduslry· leadins12" turnins radius
· • Fully welded steel frame ana cast-iron
front .axle
• 3- end 5-year limited Warranty*'*

..

. STAR TING AT

•1,499**

SERIES 2500

HEAVY-DUTY GARDEN TRACTOR
•••••• •• •••••••

0

0

•

0

•••••

0

••

0

••••

.' 42~- 54" neavy·duty mowins decks

Paving work
begins in
~;= = = = · Syracuse
. group plans picnic.
See Page A3
-· FortheRecorct.
_See Page.AS

• 20 HP 1 - 23 HP• Kohler, Command,
V-Twin OHV enalnes

.

I

• Heavy-duly cast-iron transm1sslon
• 3· ano 5·year.limited w.erranty~n
STARTIN!l AT:

- GEDs.awarded at
annual ABLE dinner

*3 ,499**.

..
.
W
. EATIIER..

BY BETH SERGENT
BSERGENTOMVDAILYSENTINELCCM

SERIES 3000

HEAVV-OUTV PREMIUM
GARDEN TRACTOR
0

... 0

0

•

0

•••

0

•••

0

•

0

•

0

0

•

0

0

•••••

0

0

•

0

• 44"_: 60" ne&amp;vy-duty triple-blade mowine:

decks
• 23 HP 1 - 25 HP• Kohler* Com!'Mnd 111
V-Twin OHV en1lnas
• ' excluSive E·Vac'" ensasementlor 5:mooth
·operation of declc and attachments
• 3· end 5-year limileo warranty•t•
STARTIN!J AT:
o.~

,.,..••••totr.

•s 199••
'

Details On ,Pago .A&amp; .

,

INDEX
; ; 2 SECTIONS -

ALLPOWER EQUIPMENT
FAMILY OWNED SINCE 1996
1830 OLD LOGAN RD SE
. RT33 JUST SOUTH OF LANCASTER
LANCAsTER, OH 43130 • (740) 653-2827
STORE HOURS: MONDAY, FRIDAY 9:00 -6: 00
SATURDAY 9:00·5:00

Annie's Mailbox
'

Qalendars
Classifieds

8880 UNITED LANE
ONE MILE WEST OF ATHENS ON Rl 50/32
(740l 593-3279
STORE HOURS: MONDAY-FRIDAY 9:00-6:00
SATUROAY 9:00-5:00

Comics

Editorials
'
Obituarles
Sports

' 12 ~Off"I•S. NQ PAYiro!EN"'S .i. NO INTCRC$11f Plo.IO WI"' H!N 12 WIJNTH$

u

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to ~an·
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_
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SYRACUSE
The
repaving · of several streets
in Syracuse began yesterday
and as of yesterday afternoon Oak Alley was completed with work near the
fire station and Uqion Alley
continuing.
Work is expected to last
three or four days, weather
pennitting, and a complete
list of streets to be repaved
are Union Alley, Fifth Street,
alley between Fifth and Sixth
Streets, Carleton Street, alley
between Church and Dusky
Streets, West College Road,
Karr Street on both sides of
Ohio 124, Church Street,
Dusky Street, Carleton
Cemetery Road, alley
between Water and Second
Streets, rear of Syracuse firehouse, Bridgeman Street' at
the bloc.k by village hulL
Residents on the streets
affected are asked not to park
their vehicles along these
streets and be sure to pari&lt;.
them where they can get out
once pavin~ begins._
The pavmg proJect was
discussed at the most recent
meeting of Syracuse Village
Council. The majority of the
project is paid for with Ohio
Public Works Commission
Issue Two funding. Grants
Wdter
Fred Hoffman
P...se

-

P.vln~o

AS

Two qualify for Honor Society

BY CHARLENE HOEFLICH
HOEFLICHOMYDAILVSENTINEL.COM

POMEROY - Fourteen
students in the Adult Basic
and Literacy Education
(ABLE) program who over
the past year have received
their General Equivalency
Diplomas (GEDs) were
awarded plaques at the
annual recognition dinner
held at Meigs High School ·
Monday.
Included in the group
were Deborah Bearhs,
Rachael Bearhs, Johnathan
Brunton, Fran Causey,
James Cochran, Chad
Dicken: Nathaniel Dowler,
. Kayla · · Farley, , Dawn
Johnson , Allen Maynard,
Miranda McKnight, Steven
Myer, David Pierce and
instructor, presents a certificate of Gregory Pullins.
membership in the National Adult Educational Honor
Johnson and Pierce also
Society to Dawn R. Johnson. A second recipient, ·unable to · qualified for the National
Adult Education Honor
attend, was David Pierce.

Society on recommendation
of their ABLE instnictors,
Susan King and Charla
Oden, who made the pre-sentations. Certificates were
also ·presented to numerous
students for the number of
hours spent working toward
achieving their GEDs.
In her comments to the
ABLE students, Oden talked
about the imponance of education describing it as "more
important than ever in
today 's economy" and
stressing that "education
equals opponunity." She
named lhose students
receiving GEDs who will be
attending college this fall
and reminded all that "learning is a lifelong journey."
Brent Patterson, director of
the Meigs Branch/University
of Rio Grande Community
College, presented each one
Please- ABLE. AS

'Science Camp '09' offers free educational experience
STAFF REPORT
MDSNEWSCI MYDAILYSENTINEL .COM

RIO GRANDE- A cooperative effort by Rio Grande
Community College and the
Ohio Appalachian Center for
Higher Education will bring
a unique educational experience to seventh and eighth
·students in Meigs County
this summer in the fonn of
·'Science Camp '09."
The four-day science camp
will be offered free-of-charge
to Meigs. County students
who will be in the sixth. sev-

"Our programs make a
enth and eighth grades during the next school year.
meaningful
connection
A series of diverse educa- between science and everytional activities for the camp. day life. We create learning
which will be held from June experiences for our stu15-18, will be provided by dents by designing our prothe Minority Aviation grams_ to !nclude hands-on
Education Association , a parttc1pat10n
whenever
non-profit
organization possible."
located in Wheeling, W.Va. . "Our various programs
"Living shows us that sci· and techniques are designed
ence is all around us," said to engage and interest stu.~
MAEA President and dents on ma?.y levels ,
founder Darryl Lee Baynes. Baynes added . We employ
" It impaCts everything and these diverse programs With
everyone: from the food we . the understandmg that not
eat to the clothes we wear." all students' interests are

•

•

sparked by the same thing at
the same time."
_
The MAEA is recognized
as one of the nation's largest
science and math associations . All of MAEA's programs are designed to meet
or e~ceed the educational
standards stated in the·
National Science Education
Standards Manual from the
National Research Council.
"Science Camp '09" will
be held daily- June 15·18
_ from 9 a.m, until 2 p.m.
·
.
'
Please see Sdenw. AS

I

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