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GAit11ENING
Garden cemeteries n1ix

iunbap lime• -ienttnel

Swtday, June 14, 2009
This photo taken May 13 shows
Dawn Fields at the Old City
Cemetery in Lynchburg, Va.
Fielqs leads lours and helps organize garden festivals and symposiums at the Old City Cemetery,
Museums and Arboretum at
Lynchburg, Va. She stands by a
section of brick wall that was built
in the 1860's. More than 60 varieties of antique roses grow along
its 500-foot remains.

:history and horticulture
BY DEAN FOSDICK
FOR THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

P

art history, part horti·
culture. That's the
allure of thousands of
garden cemeteries across
America that were designed
to serve the spiritual needs
of the living as well as keep ·
lllive memories of the dead.
Mix.ing monuments 'with
attractive landscapes, they
may include ponds, walkways, woodlands and wildlife.
Family plots encircled by
ironwork rest snugly against
paupers' graves. Old brick
walls are covered by colorful
yines and climbing roses.
· Many historical graveyards are designated landmarks managed by nonprofit
groups. Over time , they have
grown into cultural aurae.
tions used for everything
from bird watching to biking.
: "Colonial
graveyards
Jt\nded to be crowded and
austere with virtually no
ornamental plantings, visited only for funeral services," ·said Scott Kunst.
owner of Old House
Oardens, an Ann Arbor.
Mich .,"based nursery,
"They were meant to
scare sinners as much as
anythin~ else. But once the
Romanttc movement started
to gain traction in the 19th
century, people began to
look at cemeteries as places
to remember and celebrate
their loved ones ," he said.
The first such "rural cemetery" in the United States was
Mount Auburn at Cambridge,
Mas:&gt; .• which was laid out in
the 1830s by members of the
Massachusetts Horticultural
Society.
"It's sort ·of like a vast
public park but with people
buried m it," Kunst said.
"It became such a popular
spot for leisure outinj;s that
it inspired the creatton of

New York's Central Park ,
the first public park as we
know them today ."
Other noteworthy rural
cemeteries are Laurel Hill at
Philadelphia; Spring Grove
at Cincinnati; Mount _Hope at
Bangor, Maine; Green-Wood ·
in
Brooklyn,
N.Y.;
Hollywood in Richmond·,
Va.; and the Old City
Cemetery Museums and
Arboretum at Lynchburg, Va.
"Most 'rural' cemeteries at
the edges of cities are now
inner city. as uman growth
has gradually engulfed them,"
said Ted Delaney, curator and
archivist at the Old City
Cemetery. "However, in both
Hollywood and Laurel Hill,
which have rivers as borders, ·
•

I've found overlooks or vistas
that seem virtually unchanged
from.the 19th century."
Like many old burial
grounds, Lynchburg's Old
City Cemetery fell into disrepair and neglect over the
years. Only 20 percent of irs
monuments remain. But it
was restored and refashioned
several decades ago to
include a variety of activities.
There's a small village qf
several museum buildings
dedicated to local history, a
program of scholarly
research, nature and gardening programs, and garden
spaces for hosting events, as
well as "modern alternalives to in-ground burials.
That includes a scatter

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AP photo

Printed on 100%
Recycled Newsprint

ground (for ashes), columbarium and memorial plantings," Delancy said.
Those buried at Old City
include more than 2,200
Confederate soldiers from
14 states, and hundreds of
the city's founding families.
But most of the 20,000-plus
grave sites are for African
Americans, some of whose
personal · histories make
memorable reading for visi- .
tors.

'.

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. . ..&lt;!lioiUnploiJ ,•g~s....,-r-.

.~

VINTON BAPTiST CHURCH

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740-3.88-8454 .www. vtntonbaptl•t.com

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BREEDOMYOAILYSENTINEL.COM

- ~PageBl

POMEROY
More
changes in election procedure could be in effect the
next time voters go to. the
polls.
. Secretary
of
State
Jennifer Brunner. releas.ed
Wednesday to Gov. Ted
Strickland and the Ohio
General · Assembly a cost·effective blueprint for
enhancing Ohio's elc;ctions.

"Elections Enhancements
for Ohio" is based on recommendations.of a report frorn
· the Brennan Center for
Justice, as well as specific
recommendations from · the
. Ohio
Association
of
Elections Officials, the
County
Commissioners
Association of Ohio, and
e~perienced elections administrators with the Secretary of
State's office; Brunner satd ..
Bruruier's field representative, Michael Struble,.met

with
Meigs
Counly
Commissioners Thursday to
review the· rec.ommendations in Brunner's report. If
the recommendations are
approved by the state legislature, the county could
save costs,
The report recommends
several · cost-savmg measures for local boards of
election, whose budgets
are appropriated by county
commissioners. One such
cQst~saving proposal is to

move spec ial -elections to
primary or general election days, saving taxpayers an estimated $2.7 mil lion per year.
.
Brunner also recommends
the use' of vote-by-mail for
elections involving only a
vacancy in office.
Brunner proposes limiting
the ballot language for state
issues: reducing the costs of
ballot printing and the cost
of advertising that ballot
language, which is now

Pay no interest:· #'or 72 m .o nt:hs
on GC:2400 and GC:2600 Series subcompacts.

l"t 's 1'.ha1: special 1;.ime of year agatn, and the fun is just. b~ginntr'lg: Especially when we're ·talking a~out tractors
that are so versaTile. cornfort.able and easy tb operate that you ca.n''t help but love •em. Our Massey Ferguson&lt;'l&gt;

22.5 gross-engine HP andT.he GC2610 a-t 25 _gross engine HP even come with loader and

BY BETH SERGENT

ba.ckhc;&gt;~

standard. But all model5 feature t .he r:-oomie st operator platform in t.heir c:;la.ss. witt""! more leg room. a more
com fortable sea't. l~gica.lly placed con"tr·ols and even cr·uiS&gt;e cont.r·ol. lnt.ere$ted·7 VVe have ,no doubt. you'tl be
very ..happy
together: See your· Ma·ssey Ferguson dealer· tod8y o r visi·t WW"'AI.rnass.eyfer·guson.corn.·
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~pprovec! c;;redh.. fr-o rn AGC O F •"¥nc.• LLC. Available rQr "eQ'-'al nlor"lthly P*Ymt:n1:!i Only. ~a~s and
balloon PO')"M"lent:s avallab~ at sllJihtly hill'"'ter ra"te$ . Of'fer appl •cable to pun:.hases maoe April I t:hrough June 30. 2:009 . Contact your part.icipat:ina
dea.I•!!W f"or" de-tells.

., On ,..,.a I"YlOdels anc;::l ser"la l number·s;, 'Wi"th

BSEAGENT@MYOAILYSENTINEL.COM

POMEROY - A farmers
market is coming to
. Pomeroy to accompany the
· Rhythm .on tHe River concert series which begins
June 26.
. Kim Thompson, owner of
I Food
for
Thought
Community Market , is
organizing what's being
called . the Big Bend
Farmers Market which will
set up on Pomeroy's upper·
p!lfking lot during ~one~
nights. Thompson satd she s
· b¢en working with Hal
Kneen of The Ohio · State
University Extension Office
and Bob Fedyski of Rural
Action
Sustainable
Agriculture and the Athens
Farmers Market.
Thompson said if successful, the farmers market
may continue past the concert season and added the
market will .be free for ven. dors in an attempt to attract
interest . . T~ompson also
said the Big Bend Farmers
Market will be open from 58:30 p.m. on concert nights
tci allow people who work
during the day an opportunity to shop and check out
what items are available as
we II as the concerts.
. As for the items and vendors at the Big Bend
Fanners Market ,'Thompson
said at this time Annie
Peachy, an Amish resident
who makes baskets, baked
goods and· grows produce,
has agreed to be part of the
market as well as the Silver
I Bridge Coffee Company,
j local Rhonda Moon who
· sells produce and baked
goods with money going
towards the Friends of the
Library, and
Barbara
Ple8Se s. Market. AS

:OBITUARIES
'
'Page AS
• Oris Hubbard, 87
• Mary Kilpatrick, 94

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• ·Chesteralumni
preseni SCholai'ships.
See Page A2 ·
• Land transfers.
See Page A2 ·
• Big Boy Toy Day
• at the Vinton County
Airport. See Page A2
• Band organ rally ·
··returning to park.
SeePageA3
'• News of Local ·
Scholars ..See Page A3 .
• O'B!eness offering
refresher course for older
.
· drivers. See Page AS
: • 2009 Quilt Barn
. Ride and Poker Run,
. See Page A6
'
· .• Wizard of Oz' opens
:Saturday, See Page A6
.

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CHEVROLET

Meigs River Sweep ·1·j Construction begins onAMPh~droelectric proj~t
-.-nday
.I.U,l
Set 1' Sa-t-.

• Details on Pagt A&amp;

2 SECI10N8 -

~nie's

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Thank You Ohio &amp; We s t Virginia For Suppo .. ting Us Since 1954!

STAFF REPORT
MDSNEWSOMYOAIW&lt;SENTINEL.COM

tll PAGES

Mailbox ·

Calendars

A3
POMEROY
Volunteers are needed for
A3 River Sweep 2009, sched-

uled for Saturday, June 20,
along the shoreline of the
Ohio River.
.
Bs
In Meigs County the
Comics
Meigs Soil and Water
~ditorials
A4 Conservation· District is
A,.
once again coordinating
Obituaries
"" Ohio River Sweep sites at
B Section Dave Diles Park in
S,Ports
Middleport, the levee in
A6 Pomeroy and Star Mill Park
Weather
in Racine with work from~
a.m.
to noon.
© a009 Ohio Volley Pubtlohlntl Co.
Volunteers will receive an
Ohio River Sweep t-shirl
and lunch for their efforts.
For more information on the
, local sweep, call Raina

· Classifieds

•

reimbursed to the counties
by the state ..
The recommended changes .
also include improvements to
the statewide voter registration database, and ~treamlin. ing Ohio's voter identification laws to bring them into
line with those in other states.
Brunner recommends allowing either an official photo ID
or two non-photo IDs for voting purposes.
Pluse see Election. A5

Farmers
market
coming to
Pomeroy

INSIDE

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SPORTS

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GC2~10at

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Red.
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Savings.

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1VC All Academic
honors awarded, A3

Piano students
.h. 0 ld reCJ
. "tal' A2

83-4

..

STAFF REPORT

MOSNewsoMYDAILYSENTINEL.COM
1
.
.
•.
.• . .
i COLUMBUS ·
Fulks at the Metgs Sot! and j American
Municipal .
Water
Con~ervatton Power-Ohio stliTted conDl~trict, 740-992-4282 ·
struction on what is one of
, Th1s 1.s the 20th year for I the Jurgest deployments of
the_ Oh10 Rtver Sweep l new hydroelectric generawhtch encompasses the j tion in the country.
Oh10, .
Allegheny, 1 The organ.ization · has
Monongahela ,
Beaver, i given
Kiewit/Traylor
Kanawha, Toonessee and Constructors final notice-toKentuc~y ~~ve 1 s. and other ! proceed on cofferdam contnbutanes, smd Jeanne ! struction and powerhouse
lson! Project .. D.•rector for j excavation for AMP-Ohio's
~II s1~ states, Rtver Sweep ! Cannelton
hydroelectric
ts a nverbank cleanup that : facility .
AMP-Ohio
extends the ~nitre leng~h of President/CEO
Marc
the Oh10 R1,er and be)ond. : Gerken said Cannelton 1s the
More than ?•000 mt!es of i first of five run-of-the-river
shoreline wtll be.. con~bed , hydroelectric plants planned
lor trash and deb_ns ·This IS for existing dams on the
the largest _envtronmentaJ Ohio River. The Cannelton
event of tts .kmd an, .· facility has a Federal E_ne~gy
encompassesd SIX states. 1, Regulatory ComiDISSIOn
~he conunue ·
' (FERC) license capacity of
Please see Sweep, A5 i 84'megawatrs (MW). ·
!'.

!

!

1

I
1

Bes1des Cannelton, whtch
will be constructed at the
dam on the Kentucky side
ofthe river near Cannelton,
Ind . and Owensboro. Ky.,
the other sites are: Captain
Meldahl Locks and Dam
oear Cincinnati (being
developed in partnership
with the City of Hamilton):
RC Byrd Locks and Dam
near Ga!lipohs, AMP-Oh10
and the City of Wadsworth
are partnering to pur&gt;ue
licensure from the FERC;
Smithland Locks and Dam
in Livingston County, Ky.;
and Willow Island Locks
and Dam near Waverly.
W.Va. Combmed. · these
projects ·w11l . have an
expected capac tty of more
than 270 MW. .
. .
Ktewtt!fraylor IS a .JOint
venture . of
K1ewtt
Constructton Co. (Omaha.
Ne .) and Traylor Brothers
Inc. (Evansville, Ind .). Both
.!

compantes h_ave. ex.tenstve
ex.penence w1th smular projects. Kiewit/Traylor has
begun mobtltztng equtp·
ment at the Cannelton site
with a projected completion
date for its part of the project in · July 2010. AMPOhio plans to hold a formal
groundbreaking ceremony
at the site this summer and
anticipates the new plant
going on line in 2012.
AMP-Ohio had earlier
ex.ecuted a contract with
York, Pa .based VoithHydro
to manufacture bulb turbines a.nd generators for
four of the projects.
"Moving forward on this
scale underscores AMP·
Ohio's leadership role in
the deployment of renewable resources in our
region." said Gerken. "We
have always stressed the

Please see AMP, A5

�The Daily Sentinel

I

PageA2

LOCAL •. STATE

Tuesday, June 16, 2009

I
I

f'he Daily Sentinel

BYTHEBEND

LAND.TRANSFERS Piano students hold·recital

P0\1EROY - Meigs County Recorder Kay Hill report·
the following trun;,fers of real estate:
Timothy E. McDole, Lori A. McDole,to Kenneth Appell,
.·\drknne Appell. deed. Lebanon .
\ 'i llage ot Racine to Home National Bank. deed.
Sutwn/Village of Racine.
Village of Racine to Mei gs County Community
Improvement Corp., deed , Sutton/Village of Racine.
;-,1ei gs County CIC to Honte National Bank , deed.
Sutton/Village of Raci ne .
Jamc' E. Miller, Denise A. Miller. to Hannah El.izabeth
\Iiller. deed. Lebanon.
Javme Lurae Miller. JaVmc I.J. Hill. Dean VI. Hill. Jr ..
Hcmiuh Elizabeth Miller, James E. Miller, to Jayme L. Hill .
Dean V. Hill. Jr .. deed , Lebanon.
Henry E. Huggins. Emma Rose Hugg ins Bancrofi. to
Jodv C. Black. deed. Columbia.
Darrell E. lce to Ruth Chaney. Raymond Ice. Newton Ice.
Darrell E. lee. deed , Columbia.
Gladys Freeman. deceased. to Melvin Freeman. affidavit,
Sutton.
Harold Nutter. deceased. to Betty A. Nutter. affidavit, Olive.
Pau l R. Searls, Kathy L. Searls, to Brian K. Burchett·.
Selena L. Burchett, deed , Village at' Rutland.
Adam Basch, Jenni. Basch. to Mark Stultz. Anna Stultz.
deed. Village of Pomeroy.
.
Jane Williams to Charles J. Neece. Barbara J. Neece,
deed. Salem. ·
•·
Family Homes, Inc. to Shawn W. Amott , Billi J, Amott ,
deed , Salisbury.
·
Dori' J . Murray to James Arthur McDonald, deed ,
Village of Middleport.
.
Jackie Todd Cummins, Peggy Sue Cummins. to Roy A.
Rowe. deed, Letart.
Hazel K. Qualls. deceased, Oscar J. Qualls. deceased. to
hi&gt; Payne, William Qualls, affidavit, Village of Pomeroy.
William 0 . Qualls, Harriet Qualls, Iris A. Payne. Bobby E.
Payne. to Forest Run Baptist Church ,deed, Village of Pomeroy.
James Diddle, Maxine Sellers, to Tuppers Plains-Chester
Water District, right of way. Lebanon. .
Brandon R. Browning, Stacey J. B_rowning , lo TP-CWD,
right of way. Lebanon.
.
Beverly Elberfeld, deceased , to Kate ,Elberfeld . Blosser,
Beverly Elberfeld, affidavit, Bedford.
James R. Sheets, Jennifer L. Sheets, to Oxford Oil Co .,
right of way. Scipio.
Jeff S. Campbell, Tabitha J. Campbell, ro Kelli D.
McCarty. deed, Sutl0n!Village of Syracuse.
HSBS Mortgage Services, Lyndsie N. Metts. to Mark
Daniel Metts II, deed , Columbia.
Charlotte Ramona Clark to Da·vid Grinstaff, Bertha Inez
Grindstaff, deed, Village of Racine.
·
David L. Strang. Loretta F. Holsinger, to David L. Strang,
Loretta F. Strang, deed , Sutton/Letart.
David L. Strang. Loretta F. Holsinger, to David L. Strang,
Loretta F. Strang, deed, Sutton/Letart.
·
· .
·
. Julia M. Hysell..Robert M. Hysell.to Richard Ash, Diane
Ash, deed, Sutton/Village of Syracuse.
Dorothy J. Morris, Jesse Morris, to Larry Patterson, deed.
Scipio.
·
, Joseph M. Egan to Federal Home Loan Mortgage. sher·
iff 's deed, Chester:
. .

Mom was once
a teenager, ;itoo
Bv KATHY MITCHEU

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. Submitted photo

Piano students of June VanVrankin recent.ly performed in a recital at the New Beginnings United Methodist Chu(ch in
· Pomeroy. Playing selections were from the left, front, Brandon Baer, Cera Grueser, Cole Betzlng; Madison Fields, Kassidy
Betzing, Noah Gross, f'eyton Anderson, Rhanda Cross .and Hannah Hill, second row, Mae f-!upp, Arrry Gross, Allie
Grueser, Joana Grueser, Brandon Lewis, Eric Harris, Aubree Lyons, and blilck rovy, Amy Hill, Tori Young. Jodi Young,' an~
Jessica Ashley.
·

Chester·alumni present scholarships

'BIg
' Boy oy Day at· th
.e
. VI'nton Co'un·ty Airp
' art'

Ohio: No stimulus
money for road studies

Ingels Electronics
Picture G.-Uery &amp; Jewelry

FOR SALE:

·INGELS CARPET

.£

740·992-7028

na Bad Cupat 'l'raatmant

Mini Cheeseball with Crackers
Strawbery Poke Cake
AU Dinners $6.50 • Chef So~ lads $5.50
Delivery available to Pomeroy/Middleport Area
To order Call: 740o992·2161 or Fax: 992·7888

this is your niece, you may
wish to bring something
AIID MARCY SUGAR
small but heartfelt, although
· Dear .Aimie: l'm a 15· w.e get the distinct impres·
year-old girl whose mom is sion that "heartfelt" may be
her worst enemy. Mom and difficult.
I haven 't really connected
Dear Annie: You missed
over the pasi few years. We the boat with "Sexless
drive each other crazy, and Lady," whose husband onlY.
both of us say hui1ful things has makeup sex. You didn t
like, "I don't care about address the possibility that
you" or "You are ruining he's just given liP·
·my life."
·
My wife could have writ·
Lately, things •have got· ten that letter. When we
ten worse . She doesn't trust first met, she. dressed sexy,
me at all. She reads my e- and we made love every·
mail and text messages, where - in a closet, in the
and . hovers when my car, at the lake. After we
boyfrfend is around. I have married and had. kids, she
an older brother who has a · changed. ·Fifteen years
great relationship with later, we have sex at 10
· Mom. I really want to get p.m. on Saturday night,
along with her again and be under the covers with the
trusted. It's important that lights off. She sleeps in a
.;
: ·
SUbmitted photo she be a part of my life. cotton nightgown that goes
from neck to ankle. I
fhese Meigs.High School students were recently awarded the TVC All Academic Honor Award. To be eligible the students What can I do? . (:oncerned
Daughter
haven't seen her cleavage
had to earn. a varsity letter .in their sport, and have a 3.5 grade point average; They are from the teit, front, Catie WoHe,
13 years. My wife is
Dear
Daughter:
.in
Morgan Lentes, Olivia Beyan, Kimi Swisher, Miki Barnes, and back, tCrockett Crow,
. Cameron Bolin, and Clay Bolin.
Relationships
between . attractive a~ 45, but to her,
teenage girls and their sex is a chore. I went to a
mothers can be complicat· marriage counselor, read
ed;· and sometimes the rea- · books, bought marital aids, ·
son is because you are too tried to romance her, butit
: GALLIPOLIS -. The organs and small hand lar~ carousel band or fair. three to five rallies a year in . much alike, reacting in sim- didn't help.
.n:s. been three yea~s since
Band Organ Rally will be at cranked organs and as . ground organ, a small hand· different cities and states ilar ways when. upset or
the Gallipolis City · Park marty as 60 ·plus registered cranked street organ, or a where members can go and angry. Try to find a calm I tntUated sex. I am staying
Saturday and Sunday, June . COAA members attending, circus calliope, provides take ,their organs to . pia~ . moment to talk to Mom. for the kids and have let her
20 and 21.
one from as far away as · what enthusiasts refer.to as Members io the ·COAA IS Tell her you love her. Say believe my sex drive disap· ..
. Activities will take place San Juan Puerto Rico.
''The. Happiest Mosie On open to .anyone with an that she is important to you, peared, One day, I will leave
10 a.m. to 9 p.m. on
Another highlight of the Earth." The Carousel Organ interest in organ music, and and ask how you can make . and find a woman who
Saturday, and from noon to r~lly will be the Mark Association of America, .or includes a magazine pub- your · relationship closer. doesn't see fondling as per·
She was once a teenage girl verted, who dresses with .
5 .p.m. on Sunday. Organs Woods Fun Show from 11 COAA, is th.e one and only lished four times a year. .
To ·find out more about and may have a more com· sex appeal and who might
from 10 different states a.m . lo 12:30 p.m. and again organization in the United
and Canada will be on dis- from· l:30 p.m. to 3 p.m. on States devoted solely- to the COAA, visit www.coaa.us · prehensive idea of the chaf- cook breakfast in the nude.
play for all the public to· both Saturday and Sunday. enjoyment and preservation or call the Gallia County lenges facing you. But you Ladies; sex starts· with the
· Convention &amp; Visitors can 'also remind her of how mind. If you aren't into it,
see and. hear. There wiH be
Outdoor
mechanical of this type of music. .
The COAA sponsors from Bure~b at (740)446-6882 . . difficult it is to navigate he ·will find someone who
large lrl!iler niounted music, whether ·it is from a
through these years, and a is. - Just Waiting
Dear Just: We'd be happy
closer, less discordant bond
would help. You also can to start a National Married
discuss th1s problem with No Excuse Sex Day, but
your school counselor, close o)lce a yeat' doesn't see!JI
relative
or a friend's mother. sufficient'. And it · won't
Jacob Wilson. Sophomores, Eastern High School for the Allie Rawson, Robert jay
Dear Annie: My niece encourage your wife to drfSS
a · and b, Jesse Cope, last grading period of the Wan1er, Danielle ,Cime,
was
married in a big wed· in a more sexually provoca·
2998-2009
school
year;.
Baylee
Collins,
Cheyenne
: RACINE _ Southern Merrissa Fisher, Trevor
ding
several years. ago. · tive manner. Have you told
Kyle Sargent, Andrew Doczi, Kristin Fick; Brenna
High School's honor roll for Flint, Daniel1ones, Zachary
They
·divorced
after two her? If not, please do.
the fourth nine weeks is as Manuel, · ·Charley Pyles, Benedum, Matthew Friend, Holter, Samuel Levacy,
years,
and
she
was
soon livAnnu's Mailbox is writ·
Myers, Marie
follows: Seniors , all A's , Braxton· Thorla. Freshmen, HannaH . Hysell, · Whitney Kelsey
Meni Collins, Drew Hoover. · all a's, · Andrew Ginther, Putman, Devon Baum, Brady .Powell, and Ashley Putnam, ing · with someone else. tfn by Kathy MitcheU and
She's been with the current · Marcy Sutar, longtime ediEmma . Hunter, Chelsea .. Hope Teliford ,. G:ourtney Bissell, Megan Carnahan, A/B honor JVll.
..
guy
for three years, and he tors of the . .Ann lAnders
Pape, Samantha Patierson, Thomas, Abbie Williams; a Jessica Clelan!l, Ashleigh
finally
popped the question. column. Please e-ma# your
Jaime Warner; a an b, Brad and b, Emily Ash, Amber Duffy, Lonnie Westfaii,Janae
Big
deal.
.
questions to tinniesmail·
·
Brown , ' Michael Flinn, Hayman, Katelyn · Hill, Boyles, all A's.
I
thought
surely
there
box@comcast.net, or write
Brody Flint,, Kyle Goode, Chelsea Holter, Emily · Tasha Barber, Brittany
would be no showers for io: Annie's Mailbox, P.O•
Alex Hawley, Hannah : Manuel, Natalie Marler, Casto, Zach Moore, Tresa
this
second go-round, but a B()X 11819(}, Chicago, IL
Hawley, Chris Holter, Tosha Morgan McMillan, Emma · Swatzel, Chris Minerd, . POMEROY - Renee D.
few
days ago I received an 60611, To find out more
Jones, Brittany Meldau, Powell, Kelsey Powell, Andrea Buckley, Breea Bailey, Pomeroy, was
invitation.
think this is in about Annie's Mailbox,
April Richards, Weston Kelsey Strang, Andrew Bpckley, Dakota Collins, named to the Wheeling very poor ltaste.
They both and read features by othfr
Wade Collins, Samantha, Jesuit University's dean's
Roberts. Juniors, all A's, Roseberry, Dyllan Roush.
have
excellent
jobs
at).d own . Creatrm Syndicate writers
Cummins, Erin Dunn, Haley .Jist for the spring quarter.
·
.
·
Michael Manuel, Breanna
a
house.
They
have
every- and ~artoonisls, visit. the
Perdas ,'Mandy Roush , Sam
Students named · to the
Taylor,.Lynzee Tucker, Katie
High · Rucker,
they
need
.
Am
I Creators Syndicate Web
thing
Stephanie Shuler, dean's list earn a .grade
Woods; a and b, James
·
wrong
to
resent
being
invit·
page at www.creators.com.
Hayley Aanestad, Emeri point average of 3.5 grade ed to another shower? Evans, Gabby Johnson. Kris .
Connery, Klinton Connery, point average and must be Very Irritated
Kleski , Ion . Powell, Cyle
·
TUPPERS
PLAINS
.
Kyle . Connery, · . Scott full-time students, en~lled
Rees, Dominick . Rose,
Dear Irritated: It is not
. ·Timothy . for 12 hours or more of col· uncommon to haye bridal
, Dustin
Salser,. Dustin The following students were Gilbride,
. Smeck, Asl)ley Wal~er, named to the honor roll at Mark worth, Ashley Miller, ·lege credit.
showers for second-time
.·
•
brides, but those who were
invited to a previous shower
are not obligated to bring a
·.
....
. .
second gift. The purpose is
not to help .furnish · the
Junior Grailge·#878 potluck home, which is presumably
supper and fun night, 6:30 stocked
· sufficiently,
p.m. Open to public.
. CHESHIRE - Jazahera A.
Instead, such shower gifts .
Moore, two-year-old daughter
often include theater tickets,
Thesday, June 16.
Cht~rch
6f Heather Moore of Cheshire
bottles of wine, etc. Since
MIDDLEPORT - Special
fllld the late )ason Black, has
Thursday, June 18
meeting of Middleport
~n competing in pa~eants in
MIDDLEPORT - Free
Lodge 363, 7 p.m., with
Ohio and West Vrrgima.
community dinner, 4:30-6
work
in
Entered
Apprentice
: She has won three inajor
degree. Dinner at 6:30. All p.m , Dave Diles Park,
titles and will now be fea·
sponsored by Heath UnitFd
Master Masons invited.
tured ·in TLC-Tots and Tiaras
Methodist Church.
·
Thursday, June 18
luiving won the title of Miss
Saturday, June 20
. RACINE
Regular
Oroovy Baby State Queen
MIDDLEPORT - Free
meeting
of
Pomeroy
/Racine
2009 in her age division.
Lodge 164,7:30 p.m. Lodge .Carnival for Christ, noon to 3
Her grandparents are
welcomes new member.~ p.m. with food, games and
Freddie ~nd Della Moore of
who joined last · weekend . prizes at the Abundant Grace
Pomeroy. Judi and David
through the Grand Master's Minisdtry, 923S. Third Ave.,
Moore , Kristy Montgomery
Class
with an education pre· Middleport . The carnival is
and Ricky Black.
Jazahera A. Moore
sentation. Dinner to follow. for children aged two to I4.
Sunday, June 21
PORTLAND -, · The
MIDDLEPORT
- The
Sonshine .circle will have its
annual picilic at the riverfront Singing Byrds will ' be
home of lhe McKelveys !I! 6 singing at the Middleport
p.m. Take a covered dish . Church of the Nazarene at
10:30 a.m. There will be a
Meat will. be furnished.
Day dinner follow-·
Father's
Saturday, June·20
. RUTLAND - ChloeRena
lng the service. Pastor Tom
. SALEM CENTER Loraine McKinney, daughter
Star Grange #778 and Star Powell welcomes the public.
of Li 11 ie and Archie
McKinney has been chClsen
liS .a slate finalist in tile
National American Miss
C4U U&lt; Today
Ohio Pageant to be lteld at 7
HENDERSON, W.Vac To
SclndNit A ToNr
p.m . on June 2 at the Hyatt .
Shawn and Brittany Gibson
Regency, Columbus, The
of Henderson, W.Va.,
J&gt;ageant is held for girls ages
announced the birth their
four througn six. ChloeRena
son, Layne Patrick, on April
«S fiv!!.
16, 2009, at Holzer Med1cal
: The youngster qualified
Center.
·
~o paJ1icipate in the Miss
He weighed eight pounds,
Ohio Pageant in a Miss
11 ounces.
bhio Preliminary Pageant
Jill Walburn Carpenter,
ChloeRanae ·Loraine
held on May 15 at
Tuppers
Plains, is his maternal
. McKinney
grandmother. Paternal grand~hillicothe. She was one of
five out' of 50 to be selected. and banner, a bouquet of parents· are Wayne Gibson of
• The winner. of the stale roses, and air transportation Hendeoon and the late Patty
10 6EastM'"' 5
pageant will receive a to compete in the national Gibson. Dale and Marjorie
t &lt;l " l'h oil ·l .rt'1 ·E IHV.; .C.rrJ', ·1·l • I Pomc•oy CH
:Sl .OOO ca&gt;h award imd will pageant at Disneyland in Walburn of Middleport are
~
9921&amp;~·
Layne
Patrick
Gibson
great
grandparents
.
be given the official crown California.

.

Holter, Woodrow Mora',
CHESTER
Pomeroy, Mary Kathryn
Scholarships were present·
Tuttle Rose, Robert Wood',
ed to three Eastern High
Dayton Spencer, Long
School graduates and a .
Bonom.
·
Westerville st1,1dent at the
recent Chester High School
1948: Kathleen Torrence
Morris, Grover White, Jr.,
Alumni
Asso~iation
Long Bottom, · Howard
Banquet, held at Eastern
Wolfe, Belpre;
Elementary SchooL
1950: Nola Epple Brown,
Orie hundred thirty two
alumni and guests attended
Heath, Paul Osborne,
the banquet. School colors
Matthew
Elizabeth ·
Benjamin
Lancaster, Elizabeth Crary
· Barringer
Horton
Buckley
of blue and white streamers
Smith, Reedsville; .
1951: · Dorothy Pullins
were used on the tables with Horton ·and granddaughter Epple Will. Columbus,
Meter Evelyn Bahr Well , Betty Chaney, Shade, Howard
flower arrangements pro· . of Opal Van
vtded by · the Chester Eichinger ('43 ). She will · Genheimer Dean. Pomeroy, Larkins, Portland, Harol(j
T
Garden Club.
attend The Ohio University Golda Biggs Frederick, Newell, Chester.
1952: Belly Smalley
1
.Following the welcome in the fall.
Long Bottom, Harry Holter,
. Reid , Pataskala, Betty
by H~rold Newell, those
The Kautz and Pepsi-Cola Racine.
attendmg.gave the Pledge Sch"larship~ were present·
1949: Jeanette . Claik Nelson Newell, Chester,,
of Allegtance, and sang ed to BenJamin Buckley Lawrence, Racine, Lois Margaret Groce Cauthorn,
· Massa~.
"God Bless America" led Long Bottom son of Kev1~ Spencer .
Ebersbach, ,Starling
Reedsville;
;
McARTHUR - The Vinton County Airport will be the by (\nna Jean Rose Phipers and Darlene Buckley, great- Chester, Charles Koenig,
.
1953:
John
Ginther,
Long
scene of the annual "big boy toys day" where adults bring ' assisted by Esther Frecker grandson of John Bailey Moundsville, W.Va.
their motorized toys - cars, trucks, motorcycles, tractors; and Mary Virginia Mora ('31) and ' grandson of
1954: Paul and Shirley Bottom, Virginia Windo11
etc., for disP.Iay at the airport. It will be held Sunday, June 28. Kautz. .
·
Darlene Bailey Buckley, Hayes Scott, Kodak, Tyler, Gallipolis, Luella ·
There wtll be garden tractor and ATV pulls, skydivers, . John .Riebel, Sr. ~ave the ('56) and the late Roger Tenn., Jeanette Thomas Riebel Thomas, Virgil
food, airplane rides, plus a variety of other events. Unusual 1 ~voca11on before ~ e steak Buckley ('55). He is also Koenig, East Mansfield , Windon, Pomeroy;
1955: Betty Ours Gaul:,
,aircraft is expected to fly in and there will be grudge runs dmner pn;pared · by the the grandson of Starling Donna
Dorst
Story,
which will test cine vehicle against another.
·
schopl cooks and served by . Massar ('.52). ·
Marysville, Anna Jean Chester, Roger Keller',
,
· Sponsored by the Vinton County Pilots and Boosters the Pioneer 4·':1 club. . .
Benjamin plans to attend Rose Phipers, Lakewood, Pomeroy.
Roso;
1956:
Rosemary
The followmg off1cers Rio Grande Community Colo., Richard Gaul,
Association, everything will begin at 11 a.m. at the Vinton
County Airport, 6 miles north of McArthur on Airport were elected for 2010: College.
Chester, Frana Bissell Keller, John Riebel, Sr,,
Road. Pilots fly to 221.
·
Roger Keller, . p_resident; · Kathryn · Smith Windo~ Riffle,
Nara
Wolfe Pomeroy, Maril~ri Scott
. For more information, contact Booster president Nick · Robert Wood, ftrst VICe read the names of alumm Hartman, Kathleen Bissell Mason, Gallipolis, Roger
Rupert ar 740·357·0268 or Steve Keller at 740-418-2612. pr~sident;
.Kathryn who died during the past . Seckman, Long · Bottom, and June Ridenour Epple,
R1ggs,
Racine,
Gene
WtndQn, second vtce-pres- year. A moment of silence Allen Brown, Dover ..
Reedsville;
·
ident; Elizabeth Smith, was observed.
Also attending were:
1957:
Marion
Slater,
secretary; Frances Reed,
Special recognition was . Class of 1940: Gladys
ass1stant secretary; John given to classes 1929 Pickens· Meredith, Beverly, . Albany, John Crary, Frisco,
Reibel, Sr., treasurer; 1934, 1939, 1944 1949, Lila
Bahr
Winters, Tex. , George Morrison,
George Morrison, assisrant and
1954.
Willia~ Parkersburg, W.Va.; · · Lelah Koenig Windon, .
treasurer.
.· .
. Matlack, the only living . 1941: William Meredith, Long Bottom, Don Van .
Sue ·
Chester;
Four scholarships were graduate of the · Class of Beverly, John and Eloise Meter,
COLUMBUS (AP) - State transportation officials have awarded to high sch.ool · J 934 had traveled from Buckley Lodwick, West Lambert Qui~ley, Fultoh,
dropped plans to ·use· some federal stimulus funds for plan- graduates. who were grand· Aguira, Calif. to attend . Jefferson, !\-jaxene Bahr Kathryn Sm1th Windon·,
ning and studies of highway projects, and announced children
Pomeroy.
,
of
alumni. Others who graduated in Goeglein, Pomeroy; ·
Mond&lt;J.y that the money will be used for construction.
Matthew
Barringer, the 1930's classes were
1943: Opal Van Meter
Hanging baskets of
The state initially passed over some ready-to-go construe· Reedsville, son of Bobbie. introduced: John Bailey Eichinger.
·
flowers donated by Bob's
tion projects, steering 7 percent of its $774 million in high- and Joan Barringer, and ( '3 1), Harry Lee Bailey and
1945: Donald Mora, Market , ' Mason, W.Va .',
:way stimulus money for planning and preliminary studies. grandson of Ferra . Lou Samuel Michael ('35), Pomeroy, Marlene Wolfe were given for door
: Even though the projects were eligible for funding . Ohio Ch,evalier Barringer ('56) Esther Frecker, Richard Thompson, ·
Newark, prizes .
reversed course at the request of federal transportation offi- was presented an Alumni Coleman, ' and . Mary Frances Miller Reed.
The ladies' barbershop
'cials, who preferred the money be spent on projects that Scholarship. He plans to Virginia Mora Kautz ('36); Maxine Pickens Whitehead, quartet,
. "frencli
could quickly create and retain construction jobs , Ohio attend Wash'ington State Alfred Wolfe ('37), and Reedsville;
Foursome.': entertained.
highway department spokesman Scott Varner said.
Community College..
Rexal Summerfield ('39).
1946:
Betty
Dean Suzy Parker Hysell, a memA core tenet of Obama 's $787 billion program was to
Ano.ther
Alumni They received gifts.
Chevalier, Tuppers Plains, ber of the quartet who intrQ..
spend the money quickly to jolt the economy and put mil· Scholarship was presented
Alumni attending from Horace Karr, .Pomeroy; ·
duced the musical numbers,
.I ions of people back to work. Vice President Joe Biden has to
Elizabeth · Horton, reunion classes were:
1947: Cleo Weber Smith, is a former Eastern teachej
;defended the pace of tederal stimulus funding. warning that Westerville. daughter of
1944: Maxine Hawk Reedsville. Reid Young, and the daughter of the late
:hasty spending on wasteful projects could jeopardize the Jeoffrey and Laura Jean Hunnell, Columbus, Freda RaCine, Delores Epple Homer Parker ('41}.
·
entire program and that spending on infrastructure projects
will speed up in the coming months.
·
The $57 million that had been set aside for planning pro·
CARPET SALE
jects in Ohio will go toward construction. Varner said .
\\(··,~· lmHTnl•llll" prin·~ nnlwtHirnl' 11! \lnh,l\1~
About $30 million will go to nine highway,projects around
olor( t·ntn l"&lt;H pd' ... IIH · fit11·..,1 q u;dit 1 l ott' pd' 11 l ' t o~n .1 ~
.the state. including the replacement of a bridge on State
;
.
11 ~un'H' ht't 'll \\ :tiling lt 1r lht· pnll't"l ... a !!- IP htn 11111
Route 18 in Lorain County. The remaining money will go
t·:u·pl'l lor 1 1111r IHIIlU' .. II . . _, IIIIU:
to 'arious state projects that haven't been finali zed.
Democratic Gov. Ted Strickland had wanted the stimulus
money to fund ·studies of long-term projects that would
po, ition the state for future economic growth.
I75 North ~nd Ave.
That included a two-year study of a highway and rail proatltt ijt RodioShock Dealer
Middleport, OH
jecl&lt;m the east side of Cincinnati and the design of a 3- mile
~oml connecting Interstate 490 to Cleveland's art and muse740-992-2825 •106 N. 2nd Ave, Middleport, OH
:um district. The cost was S20 million each..

Ham &amp; Turkey Subs

Tuesday,Junet6,2009

ANNIE'S MAlLBOX

~d

Frjday. June 19

PageA3

Marty
OO'Bryanr,
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Ph: 740-985-4141 • Cell : 740-416-1834
2S yti11 tJ!PO!Ltnct
Nat Af'llllaWd Wlttt MID

Frot Estimtlto
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RMiodtl ...._ _. . . .

.Band orgall rally returning to park .

News of Local Scholars
· SHS honor roll

·Named to
dean's list

·. Eastern
School honor roll

CommUJ1ity.Calendar .
Two-year-old
:wins pageant titles .Clubs 'and
organizations

events

[McKitmey selected
for state pag~ant

Gibson birth announced
of

Anderson's

'

•

�•

'

.

.OPINION

·The Daily Sentinel

PageA4

111 Court Street • Pomeroy, Ohio

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

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
Dan Goddrich

·

•

Publisher
Charlene Hoeflich

General Manager-News Editor
Pam Caldwell

I

Advertising Director

Congress shall make no law respecting an
est!lbli~hmen( of religion, or prohibiting the
. free exercise thereof; or abridging the freedom
of speech, or of the press; or the right of the
people peaceably to assemble, and to petition
the Government for a redre~s of.~rievances.
I
·- The First Amendment to the U.S. Constitution

T10DAY IN HISTORY

The secret of Pan D is ment sets prices, it does nor
tha' private insurance com- hold down costs in the long
padies are competing for run.
customers and offering
But there was one huge
them a wide array of choic- problem with Medicare Part
es. Seniors can switch plans D, too. Its cost - whethei
once. a
year.
The it's $400 billion or $500 bilDemocratic health care lion -,. was 1101 paid for
reform plans unveiled so far . with tax hikes or spending
the Senate Health, cuts.
Education, Labor and
Obama wrote Congres•
Pensions Committee plan that "health reform must not
and the joint House Energy add to our deficits over the
and Commerce Committee next 10 years," thou$h nio8i
and Ways and Means estimates for covenng t~
Committee plan - all en vi- nation's 47 million unin·
sion·private competition but sured come in at$! trillioti
propose a government-run to $1.5 trillion.
.
"public plan" to "compete"
Eventually, making t!K
with them.
health' system moreefficienj
Some progressives make - with digital medicat ·
no bones about the fact that · records and chrQnic-diseasc
.the "public plan'' is. ·meant to management - may cut the
drive private!tealth insurance costs., But in t11e meantime~
companies out of business Democrats ilre. looking to
and replace . them with Medicare provider cuts aitd
"Medicare for all" ora sin~- taxing employer-provided
payer system like Canada s. · benefits as answeis.
l
Obama, in a letter to
Left out are some ideas
Congress, said he wants •a that Obama could adopt
public plan "to keep insur- froMn Republicans and ma~e
ance companies honest." He the! reform effort bipartisan
has not defined what he - such as medical ton
want~.
reform,
means-testing
But the House and Senate Medicare and allowint
committees envision a plan small companies to form
that would pay · hosprtals . insurance-buying
pools
and doctors what Medicare across state lines. · ·. · .
· pays, plus 10 percent.
· But the most proven cost·
Such a plan could charge saver , is intense private .
premiums
significantly competition. And to "keep
· cheaper than private insur- insurance companies !Jon&lt; ·
ance -:- resulting in massive est;' Congress c.ould add a
droppmg of pnyate msur- "tngger,'' as proposed by
ance by employers and indi- conservative Democratic
viduals.
Blue Dogs, so that if costs
The authoritative Lewi11 aren't ke~t in line, 11
Group estimated this week Medicare-hke public plari
that 96.7 million of the 160 kicks in.
million people now covered
The 2003 drug law actual;
by private msurance might ly h.as a trigger, but it ha~
m~ye to a "Medicare-plus- never had to be pulled. . .
.10 plan . . The d1fference · (Morton Kof!dracke u
between Medicare Parts A . executive editor of Roll
and B and MedicarePart D Call, the 11ewspaper ·C!I
shows that when govern- Capitol Hill).

TP.day is Tuesday, June 16. the I 67th day of2009. There
are 198 days left in the year.
· Today's Highlight in History:
On June 16, 1858, as he accepted the Illinois Republican
· Pany's nomination for U.S. Senate,Abmham Lincoln said
the· slavery issue had to be resolved . declaring, "A house .
divided against itself cannot stand ."
On this date:
In 1567, Mary, Queen of Scots, was · imprisoned in
Lochleven Castle in Scotland. (She escaped almost a year
later, but ended up imprisoned again.) •
In 1897, the ·government signed a treaty of annexation
with Hawaii.
· In 1903, Ford Motor Co. was incorporated.
In 1932, President Herbe11 Hoover and Vice President
Charles Curtis were re-nominatcd .at the Republican national convention in Chicago,
In 1933, the National lndtlstl-ial Recovery Act became
:law. (It was later struck down by the Supreme Court.)
In 1958, the Supreme Court, in Kent v. Dulles, ruled that
:artist Rockwell Kent could not be denied a passpon
because of his communist affiliations.
In 1959, actor George Reeves. TV's "Superman,'' was
found dead of an apparently self-inflicted gunshot wound
in the bedroom of his 5everly Hills, Calif., home; he was
.45.
· In 1963, the world's first female space traveler, Valentina
SU.MMER PE'STS ... .
• •
Tereshkova, was launched into orbit by the Soviet Union
aboard Vostok Six. ·
•
: In 1976, riots broke out in the black South African town~hip of Soweto.
In 1978, President Jimmy Carter and Panamanian leader
Omar Torrijos exchanged the instrument~ of ratification tor
the Panama Canal treaties. ·
.
Ten years ago: Vice ·President AI Gore formally opened
his candidacy for the Democratic presidential nomination ..
TICK
K~thleen Ann Soliah, a fugitive member of the Symbionese
Liberation Army, was captured in St. Paul, Minn., where
she had made a new life under the name Sara Jane Olson.
Thabo Mbeki took the oath as president of South Africa,
succeeding Nelson Mandela.
Five years ago: Rebuffing Bush administration claims,
the independent commission investigating the Sept. II
attacks said no evidence existed that ai-Qaida had strong
ties to Saddam Hussein.
One year ago: Former Vice President Al Gore announced
his endorsement of Barack Obama. A California Supreme
Court ruling that ovenurned the state's bans on same-sex
Following the cold,bloodAmerican CIVICS lesson· Salon.. Daily Kos, Air
marriage becariJe final at 5:0 l p.m. ~acific time. Tiger ed.murder of late-term abor- ·
from J4stice Oliver Wendell Amenca and the other Web
Woods, pi eying on an injured knee that latet' required sea· tionist Dr. George Tiller,
Holrnes: "If there is · any sites happily engaging iri
son-ending surgery, won an epic U.S. Open after a 19-hole Mike Hendricks of the
principle or the Constitution . il u i It-by- s 11 i ppe IS -o f •
playoff with Rocco Mediate.
Kansas City Star, like many
• that more imperatively calls speech-association could
Today's Birthdays: Actor Bill Cobbs is 74. Author Erich other outraged commentafor attachment than any have performed a public
Nat
Segal is 72. Author Joyce Carol Oates is 71. Country singer . tors, declared that anyone
other it is the principle of educat1o.n service by addinj
Billy "Crash" Craddock is 70. Songwriter Lamont Dozier who had, in the past, critiHentoff
free · thought - not free the news for many of it•
is 68. R&amp;B singer Eddie Levert is 67.
cized Tiller's practice therethought for thoSe who agree contributors of a 1969
Thought for Today: "Not to know is bad. Not to want to by became "an accomplice"
with us but freedom for the Supreme Court decision,
know is worse . Not to hope is unthinkable. Not to care is to the killing (Wall Street
thought that we hate."
Brandenburg v. Ohio.
'
unforgivable." - Nigerian saying.
Journal, June 3). Especially · along with Fox News as a
The leader of a Ku Klull
I've long_ been . trying.
gui lty, said others on the co-conspirator. A key iUus- Without . success, to con- Klan klavem was convicted
inflamed Internet, were tration of his alleged vince the top of ihe ACLU's in a·lower court ·Of advocat~
LETTERS TO THE
those who hlld called him "a involvement in the murder chain of command that the ing violence by pledginll
baby killer."
is his having said in 2006: ACLU's official support of that because the then presf7
EDITOR
I, a pro-lifer, have indeed "If 1 could .get my hands on "hate speech laws'' dent, Congress and the ·
Lerrers to the ~ditor are welcome. They should be less criticized Tiller for, in thou- Tiller!" But O'Reilly imme- adding more prison time for Supreme Coun were givins
than 300 words. All letters are subject to editing, must be sands of c·ases, having diately added: "Well, you crimes "perceived" to be preference to blacks, he and ·
signed, and include . address and telephone number. No aborted fetuses so close to know. Can't be vigilantes. motivated by hate - ·is con- his hooded followerS would
umig11ed letters will be publil·hed. Letters should be i11 viability - or actually Can't do that. It's just a fig~ trary to the ACLU's initial go to Washington to take!
.good taste, addressirrg iss11es; no( personalities. Letters of viable - that he was com- ure of speech."
·
founding in erder to protect care of these officiall
·thanks to organization' and individuals will nor be accept- mitting infanticide. Some
In his syndicated column free thought and speech.
depriving him and other
ed for publication.
were healthy. but the moth- (New York Post, June 3),
With regard to the charge whites of their rights.
er was depressed or an~­ G'Reilly wrote: "No matter that Bill O'Reilly was .an
Reversing the conviction4
ious. 1 may have called liim what you think about abor- accomplice in the murder of the Court unanimous!)!
"a baby killer," as l certain- lion. it is a sad day for the Tiller, a New · York ruled that violence· can be!
ly have President Obama country when vigilantism . University Constitutional lawfully advocated i~
tor his series or votes as im takes a life." He has also law professor whom I've speech, unless the speaker is
Reader Services ·
(USPs 21wso&gt;
Illinois
state senator to deny called the killing of 'filler ~·An long known and respected, e.n!l~ged in "inciting or pro-:
Correction Polley
Ohio Valley PubllshiiJQ Co.
medical care to live babies aimrchist act that will assure Burt Neuborne, a former ducm~ IMMINENT law lest
Our main concern in all stories is to Published ev~;try morning. Monday
born after a botched abor- the collapse of any society." · national ACLO legal direc- ~ction : ilddressing ~
be accurate. If you know of an error through Frida~, 111 CoUrt Street.
tion. -.
in a story, call the newsroom at (740) F&gt;omero~. Ohio. Second-class postage
1 have often cnticized Mr. tor, was quoted in The New 1mmed1ately ready and will~ ·
992·2156.
paid at Po!Tiefoy.
·
However, being a pro- O'Reilly, urging that he take ·York Times (June 2) as !JOt- ing to - .at a speciftc ploce
Member: The Associated Press and
lifer, . I am absolutely a remedial course on the ing that while this kind of and time - committhe vW.
Our main number Is
the Ohio Newspaper Asso61Bli0n.
opposed
to killing any Constitution, very much laying blame debate isn't lence, for example, to thai
.(740) 992-2156;
Poetmett..-: Send address correchu.man
beings,
including a including the Bill of Rights. new, "the ability to te¢Jltio- doctor at. 7 p.m. "Let's get
Department extensions are: tions to The Daily Sentinel, P.O. Box
late-term
abonionist
. That's He.und I were at odds on the logically call up snippets of that doctor at 7 p.m.!"
72 9, Pomeroy, Ohio 45769.
News
why I'm also opposed to the Bush-Cheney revisions of . speech" is.
Under that Supreme Court
Editor: Charlene Hoeflich. Ext. 12
SubscrlpiiOIJ Rates
death penalty. I agree with the Constitution . But unlike
For
ex~mple
,
within
nine
decision, calling someone
Rtpol1er: Brian Reed. Exl. 14
By carrier or motor route
the largest national pro-life the
American · Civil hl)urs of the murder of baby killer" is not in itself
RepOrter: Beth Sergent, Ext 13
4 weeks .•. . . ..... ....'11 .30
the National Libe1ties Union. which used Tiller, Salon magazine cata- incitement. Neither is charg•
Adverti!ling
· s2 weeks ••• . •• • .. . .•'128.85 organization,
Right
to
Life
Committee. to be quite disinclined to loguet;l and made available ing O'Reilly with "having
Advertlolng DlfiiCior: Pam Caldwell, Oally · · · • · · • · ' · · · · · · · • · · .50'
which
responded
to the have it otl"icials appear on on its Web site references to blood on his hands," It's too
. · 740 .446- 2342 • Ext 17
Senior Cltl1en rates
26
assassination, saying it his program (forg~tting that Tiller on 29 shows of ''The bad civies classes have largeRetail: Man Rodgers. Ext 15
weeks · · • · · · · · • · · •. '59.e1
52 weeka • .. • ........'116.90
Rlllllll: llnmda Davis, Ex116
"unequivocally condemns the best answer to bad O'Reilly Factor" from 2005 ly disappeared from our pub-:
SIAlscollie.. ~ remit " advance any such acts of violence
ct...JCtrc.: Judy Clalk, E•t 10
dnQ lo The Ooly · No SUb·
speech is more speech) , I to 2009.
he schools so that at least out
regardless of motivation ." A was his guest once, and I
Says Neubome: "In every students would know how the
Circulation
scription by mail pom-jt1t&lt;t " .....
special target for having survived .
Clrcul.tlon Manager: David Lucas, where homo canier service Is avallabte.
complex political setting, Constitution teaches thent
74o-446-2342. Ext 11
.
incited the murder of Tiller
to
there's a tendency to single why they are Americans.
This
righteous
rush
Mall Subscription
Dl1lrlcl Clrcul11iolt Manager:
according
to
contributors
accuse
O'Reilly.
as
some
out
the loudest of the other
(Nat Hentoff is a natioo•
tno!H Metga County
Mike Whitt
to
the
Huffington
Post,
have , of "having blood o.n side and claim that what ally renowned authority ott
12 Weeks .. .. . . . .... . '35.26
Daily Kos . Air America and his hand,'" comes from they're doing is not political the First Amendment and
General Manager
26 Weeks .. .. . .... ....'70.70
Charlene Hoeflich . Ext 12
52 Weeks .. .. ... . . .. .' 140.11
other Web sites - is Bill antagomsts who are clearly speech but is· incitement," rite Bill of Rights . Hr is d
O'Reilly.
and vigorously exercising he said. "It's important not member of the Reporter!
E·mlll:
Outside Melgo County
mdsnewsOmydailysentinet.com
Selected
excerpts
from
t~cir
own frce:speech to allow that to happen. It Committee for Freedom oj
12 Weeks ... . .........'56.55
his
TV
and
radio
shows
are
nghts.
So
l take th1s as ··a would have a dramatic the Press, and the Carn
26 Weeks ............' 113.60
Wttb:
shown
to
indict
the
proudly
teaching moment" for (negative) effect on the abil- Institute·. where he is 11
52 Weeks . . . .. • , . .. , .'227.21
www.mydai~nMel .com
contentious Mr. O'Reilly - remembering an essential ity to speak vigorously." senior fellow).

Can the First Amendment protect Bill 0'Reilly?

The D~ily Sentinel

"a

The Daily Sentinel • Page As

www.mydailysentinel.com

tor

Obituaries

Tuesday, June tf), 2009

Medicare
drug
plan
ought
to
be
model
for
health
reform
The .Daily Sentinel
As they work on comprchensive health reform,
Congress and President
Barack Obama ought to
look to the most successful
model yet: the 2003
Medicare prescription drug
Morton
law.
Kondracke
Passed amid rancor and
predictions of catastrophe,
the law has proved to be an
enormous success ·- much
cheaper than expected lind much depends on who's
overwhelmingly popular measuring .
with seniors.
A scandal erupted in late
The problem for liberal 2003 when the Bush adminDemoi:rats is ideology. The istration sold the program to
Medicare Part D program is Congress as costing $400
based on competition billion over a 10-year periamong private insurance od, then abruptly chanJ!ed
plans, whereas they are the estimate to $534 bilhon.
determined to model health
But · this Marcb, the
reform on government-run, Medicare trustees . said it
price-controlled Medicare .would come in at $37S bilParts A a11d B or. on lion for fiscal years 2004Massachusetts'. individual- 2013 .
mandate plan.
In
2006,
the
But, as the latest Congressional
JJudget
Medicare trustees report Office estimated that the
warned, Medicare's hospital 2007-2016 cost would · be
insurance plan (Part A) is $1.2 trillidn . lts estimate has
scheduled to go bankrupt in dropped every year and is
2017: And Part B, which now at $520.7 billion, 43
pays doctor, bills, is experi- percent lower than expectencing "steep cost increas- ed.
·
When the prescriptiones" for taxpayers and will
demand "unusually large drug benefit was enact.ed,
pr-emium increases" for opponents predicted that
seniors who can afford to ·few insurance plans would
pay.
. emerge to offer coverage.
Meanwhile, Massachusetts' Instead. dozens did, causing
heavily regulated plan, while critics to say seniors were
covering 355,000 previously confused by the choices. .
uninsured residents, is costing
However, surveys show
much more than expeqted - high satisfaction with the
32 percent more mils frrst program - 87 percent in a
year and an anticipated 2o per- 2007
Wall
Street
cent more this.year. Migmtion · Journal/Harris Interactive
from private insurance to the poll.
state's fully subsidized plan
That's panty because prehas boosted costs for those miums are lower than
who pay premiums by 5. per- • expected. T~e mont~ly
cent to 9 percent in ooe'year.
average for th1s year ong1By . contrast, Medicare· nally was expected to be
Pm1 D costs far less than ~44. It's actually $28, up
was expected
by how JUSt $3 from 2008.

Tuesday,Junet6,2009

Oris Hubbard

ATHENS - O' Bieness
Memorial Hospital in
Athens will offer a classroom course aimed at help·
ing older people to refresh
and improve their driving
skills.
The AARP Driver Safety
Program session will be
held on Saturday, June 27,
frofl! 9 a.m. to I p.m . in
O'Bleness' Lower· Level
Room 006. All drivers.
especially those who are
50 years old or older, are

mobility and independent:e. ard&gt;, ad~erse road condi ·Wanda Llewellyn . AARP tions, ··road rage," energy
dri,er ' afety instructor. will conservation
measures ,
present information about proper Yehidc use and
normal changes in vision, maintenance. and accident
hearing and reaction time prevention ta~:tic s.
associated with aging and
The cmt is $1c for AARP
provide practical techniques members and ~ 14 for nonro compensate for these AARP members. Please
changes. The following top- call instructor Wanda
ics will also be covered: the Llewellyn at (740) 707impact of medications on a 2063 to regi;ter.
.
person's driving abilities.
Participan1s must· bring
basic driving rules, license · ·their driver 's license and
renewal , local traffic haz- AARP membership card.

invited to participate in the
program .
the
Developed
by
American A;sociation of
Retired Persons (AARP).
the comprehensive classroom refresher course is
geared toward the .specific
neeqs of drivers who are 50
years
old or older.
According to . AARP, the
course helps drivers update
their driving knowledge and
skills, prevent traffic crashes
and violations. and maintain

·· Oris Allan Hubbard, 87, of Syracuse, died Sunday, June
·14, 2009 , at Scenic Hill&gt; Nursi11g Center in BidwelL
He was bam Sept. 8, 1921. son of the late Leslie and
~ary Hendrix Hubbard . He was an indistrial painter, and a
veteran of the U.S. Army. He was a member of the Disabled
)\merican Veterans and the American Legion. He attended
Syracuse Mission Church.
" Surviving are three daughters: Linda (Don) VanLangen,
Columbus, Ann (Bob} Felty, Syracuse, and Judy Bannister,
.Seynour, Ind .; 13 grundchil&lt;.lren, )8 great grandchildren
jtnd 12 great:great grandchildren.
; Besides his parents, he was preceded in death by his wife
pf 51 years, Mae S~re Hubbard , five·i:)rothers, founisters ,
l.:ovo sons, a daughter, a grandson, a granddaughter and two
great .grandsons.
•· Funeral will be at I p.m. on Wednesday, June . l7, 2009 ,
"This is a change that will mail-in ballot for each elecat Syracuse Mission Church, with Mike Thompson officiprovide
botbvoters and poll lion that year. Now.. voters
ating. 5urial will be in Plants Cemetery.
1
workerS
with greater cer- must request absentee bat;· Friends may call from 6-S. p.m. on Tuesday at the Ewmg
tainty and predictability in lots for each election,
funeral Home in Pomeroy.
administering voter lD although · Ohio law no
laws," :Brunner said.
longer requires absentee
Absentee voters could \foters to specify their rea. .
request, an annual vote-by- son for doing so. .· .
! Mary Will Kilpatrick, 94, died Saturday, June !3, 2009, mail bhllot, wh.ich would The recommendation~
711 Rocksprings Rehabilitation Center, Pomeroy.
automatically provide a also inc'lude expanding the
• . She was born in Meigs County, to the late William A. and·
Edna G. Will. She graduated from Chester High School
Class of !933 and attended Ohio Universiiy, where she met
:'
The love of her life, Jack J. Kilpatrick.
· Mary started her teaching career at Chester High School
-ltnd after raising her family she resumed her teaching career the physician!r and nurse gy and intricate techat Whitehall Yearling High School, where she taught the practitioners another duty niques l had studied so
first high school special education class, and then taught was to play with the children hard were .being put to use
to calm their fears." said and r was having the time
with Columbus Public Schools. .
.
·
Haynes
who . readily of my life."
'• Mary completed her bachelor's degr~e at Capital
"While my trip was very .
acknowledged
that she "
tlniversity in 1958. She then went on to The Ohio State
absolutely
fell
in
love
with
exciting
and gratifying, it
University and completed h7r master's.in 1965. She was
more than one little child" was also ·a new, scary
, · .llWarded an NDEA Fellowshrp to study m Germany.
during
her stay in Honduras . adventure that required me
•. Mary retired. from Columbus Public Schools after 35
Haynes
described the to rely on many abilities
~earS of servtce . .She was a member of Brookwood
experience
as one of the and skills developed as a
r.resbyterian ·. Church, O.E.A. and ·Psychological
said
most rewarding of her life. Cutler scholar,"
;Association of Ohio, Who's who of American Women.
·.She was a former member of Bexley United Methodist "I really enjoyed putting Haynes.
all my clinical skills, so
While a Cutler Scholar at
Church and Bexley Chapter #524 Order of Eastern Star.
Ohio
University, Haynes
~ She was preceded in death by her husband, parents, diligently practiced in lab,
to use on real patients. All . said the Outward Bound
~ughter, Christine K. (Jay) Altmaier, brothers: Roland
(Nellie and Helen), John, Montgomery {Grace), Victor of the elaborate term1nolo- trip provided her with
(Nola), Phillip, Milton (Ruth), Bill (Juanita) Will; sisters:
Louise (Dane) Fisher, ·Florence (Fred) Ferrell; and brothers-in-law and sisters-in-law: George (Kay) Kilpatrick,
from Page At
,Agnes (Randall) Rodgers, Jean (Keith) Glendenning.
.; She is survived by a son, John M. (Carmalee) Kilpatrick ·"River Sweep is very and . Public Protection ·
of ·Columbus; daughters, Marianne ·Heaton of Columbus important because for a Cabinet, and Kentucky
and Kathi Schmidt of Houston. Tex.; grandchildren: few hours 'on one day val- f River Authority. ORSAN.Shannon (Joe) Carver, Jon Christopher, Kilpatrick (Bekah) unteers. can help make a CO is the, water pollution
Will, Lena Schmidt, Erik (Lesley) Schmidt; great grand- difference in the appear- control agency for the Ohio
children: Rhiannon and Renaissance Carver, Nico .Will, ance of this great ,natural River and its tributaries.
Hanna and . Ellioi Schmidt; sister, Betty Loucks (Elmer resource," said lson. "The
"There are many entities
'Linden); numero!JS nieces and nephews. . .
Sweep has grown so much that make the River Sweep
Funeral service will be at II a.m. Wednesday at Evans in the . past few years , work. Governmental agenFuneral Home, 4171 E. Livingston Ave., Columbus, where we've been able to expand cies, industries and private
friends may call ail hour prior to service,
the project to tributaries citizens in the Ohio River.
Adam Will will officiate. ·
·
and feeder streams of the Valley .play an . import'\nt
Interment at Mount Hermon Cenie)ery, Pomeroy. Ohio River." ·
role m this great environPonations may- be made to Reach Unlimited, serving peoThe Ohio River Valley mental event,'" continued
ple with special needs, 12777 Jones Road Su1te 103, Water
Sanitation Ison. "Not only do they
Houston, Tex. 77070.
www.reachunlimited.org, Commission .(ORSANCO), provide financial support,
www.evansfuneralhome.net.
in partnership with various they also provide volunindustries tliroughout the teers and in-kind services.
Ohio River Valley, sponsors It's a great example of
everyone workin~ together
the Ohio River Sweep.
Other sponsoring agen- for a good cause.'
Sweeps will be going on
cies are the West Virginia
in
other areas of the county
Make It S'hine Program.
Pennsy! vania Department and in neighboring counties
of · · ·· Environmental in Ohio and West Virginia.
CHESTER:_ Shade River Lqdge 453 will hold a special Protection,
Ohio· People wanting to volunteer ··
meeting at 7 p,m. on June 25· to confer the Entered Depat;tment of · Natural for this event can call 1'AP.frentice degree on one candi.date. A spaghetti dinner Resources, Illinois EPA. 800-359,3977 for local
~tl be served at 6 p.m. to honor the candidate and recent Kentucky. .Environmental coordinators in their area.
&lt;ine-day dass Masons.
· ·

Election rrom Page At
number of places an in .
person early ballot could
be cast , and bring a shorter
(20 days iflStead of 30)
early voting period into
line with those of .other
states.
Provisional
balloting ,
which often .causes delays
in deciding dose races,

Mary Kilpatrick

.

·Haynes rrom Page At.
courage and confidence. as
well as the opportunity for
development as a team
member. "My community
service su'mmer on the
Navajo
reservation
exposed me to discrimination first hand and taught
me how to approach situations in which prejudices
may be. an issue :
"Critical ihipking, global

Sweep

8189
.

Remomber Dad on Father's Day
"''rith a gift from Clark'a Jewel!y.

"Rl~==~.ii
Key Rklgs, Money Clips 8nd Zlppo Lighters•.
1s ooURr snt.em. POM.IROY, 01110..740 m.~

WHEN'S THE LAST TIME

drive

.,
~

·, '

..
••
'·

Al\1P from Page Al

:Importance of a diversified such as wind, solar and
power supply portfolio for landfill gas generation.
$1ur member. communities Together. these will not only
wnd we're working closely bring ari increase in diversi,with them to achieve that fied, responsible electric
generation, but will also
.diversity.
·
.bring
jobs to the region."
.These projects - along
Seventy-nine AMP-Ohio
!With another potential pro1ect atthe Bluestone Dam on member communities in
the New River in Wesr five states are panicipating
:Virginia - will benefit from in the hydroelectric projects
bur experience with the and have executed contracts
Belleville Hydroelectric to purchase power from the
Plant (on the Ohio River at facilities. The Cannelton
:Belleville, W.Va.). which we project , which has a pro'built and operate for Ohio jected capital cost of $408
Municipal
Energy million, will employ 200Generating Agen.cy Joint 400 construction workers
Venture 5. The Cannelton and 7-9 pemianent operat'project is pan of an aggres- ing positiol)s.
"Moving forward with
'l:ive plan to significantly
increase hydroelectric pro- these hydro projects - and
,duction in the region, with Cannelton is just the first
the goal of adding a total of step - shows the imponant
'more than 380 MW ,of role that renewable genera}tydroelectric capacity. That. tion plays for public
Jn tum. is pan or an asset- power," said Gerken. "Too
based strategy that includes much of the energy from
'rossil fuel. hydroelectric and . water flowing over Ohio
'Qther renewable resources River dams has been left

ACHECK·UP

SAVED YOU MONEY?

untapped until now. While
renewable energy is in the
news frequently right now,
the step we took this week is
the result . of actions that
AMP-Ohio and its member
commUnities made . much
earlier thi·s decade." ·
Gerken is the incoming
chair .of the American
Public Power AssociatiDn
Board of Directors and has
traveled extensively on
behalf of the national association. "Quite frankly I'm
surprised by the lack of
acknowledgement from all
panies in the energy/climate ·
change debate over the data
that supports hydroelectric
facilities in this region
being more climate change
friendly and economically
preferable to wind. solar
·and
other
renewable
resources . Obviously, AMPOhio understands the
advantages offered by
hydroelectric generation."
Gerken said.

' w

--

Brogan·Warner

Market f~m Page At

Woodmen to have dinner

'!.u

QCiark'i J etuelrp
'

Special meeting

~ SYRACUSE - Bill Davis who is in charge of water
;j;&gt;perations for the village has announced that the Syracuse Ronstandt who is a member
t;loard of Public Affairs will be flushing the water system of the Athens Farmers
Market, to name a few.
'from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. on June 22,23 and 24.
Other items grown and pro''
duced locally scheduled to
•
be sold at the 5i~ Bend
•
..
Farmers Market mel ude
;., GALLlPOLIS - The Modem Woodmen of America will cut, dried flowers, re~;ds.
meet at the Pizza Hut in Gallipolis from 5 .to 7 p.m. honey, maple .syrup; pot\Tuesday. The Woodmen will pay $3 on each meal.
..
tery, salsa and other local
(
an1sans displaying theirtal•..'
ent and goods.
Blood
"We want to make local
items
more available,"
· · POMEROY - The American Red Cross will hold a
Thompson
said. "This also
'blood drive from l-6 p.m., tomorrow at the Mulberry
helps these growers, proCommunity Center.
.

·awareness. and respect for
opposing opinions were cui;
tivated through the many
Cutler colloquia I attended.
These opportunities and
experiences supponed my
personal development · as·. a·
Cutler scholar and helped
me to accomplish my most
recent adventure us .a slur
dent doctor." Haynes cone
eluded.

2 Gallon.l'alnt Pall
lnterlorll!xterlor

Local Briefs ·

Flushing to begin

would be streamlined under
Brunner's recommend!ltions. Reasons for requiring
a ,provisional ballot ·.would
be lirnited~
· Struble told commissioners ,Thursday. the chapges
.· could be approved a)ld in
effect in time for &gt; the
November general electjon . .

Grange

Insurance Service Inc

ducers and anists get exposure. We just want it to be
fun and something for the
community."
Thompson said
by
bringing these unique and
local ite111s to Pomeroy, it
will allow consumers· to
shop locally and not have .
to drive to places like
Athens.
·

Call740.992.11i88 or visit bropn-warner.webqen~u.com

For those i11tere.fted in
becoming !I vendor for the
Big Bend .Farmers Market
or for qr1estions, call
Thompson at 992-3785.

@'lJ(!)jQJjl]lJ ~

!!J$[i-Jl~-ifj.ttJ:.tiP)! ~~1J.t~1f·
((Jl. Ce[e6ration of Life"
Pr(Jviding Qua lily N11rsing Care For 0•-er 20 Yettl'~

Offering Skilled a11d luternzediate Levels of lV11n·i11g Care
.Bthabifilqtjqu Scnirc•·.·
·lctep«ed Paw Sources.·
Ph)ticol, Occupatio11nl..

Ce11i./ietl b.f Medicare a11d Mtdiraid

SfJf!trh nud Respirtlloty Thc"'PY
111dudillg·Ventilator Can

W1ricn CmllfJf!II&lt;IJJio11npprowd
Arrepri"g moil pri•m• imunmc&lt;S

(alii nd/1\ I"
\,lit clu/, I I uur

JJJ PngtStretl• Middleport, Ohio 45760

(740) 992-6472

www.overbrookrelzabilitationce1rter.com

�PageA6

COMMUND'Y

The Daily Sentinel

Tuesday,Junet6,2009

Local Weather
Tuesday...Partly sunny.
Isolated showers in the
afternoon. Highs in the
lower 80s. East winds
around 5 mph. Chance of
rain 20 percent.
Tuesday night ...Mostly
cloudy. A chance of showers
with a slight chance of thun·
derstorms
in
· the
evening ...Then showers likely with a chance of thunder·
storms after midnight. Lows
in the mid 60s. Southeast
winds around 5 mph.
Chance of rain 60 percent.
Wednesday ... Cloudy
with showers likely with a
chance of thunderstorms.
Highs in the upper 70s.
Southeast winds .around 5
mph. Chance of rain 60 percent.

Submitted photo

The Sons of the American Revolution Ewing Chapter recently held its annual awards dinner at the Chester Courthouse.
Pictured are those awarded at the dinner (from left) ,Robert Troxel, lire safety medal and certificate, Carlos Bailey, certifi¢ate of appreciation, Arron Olithant, Sam McCall and.Eugene Patterson, Eagle Scout certificates, Pat Holter, broi)Ze good
citizenship medal and certificate, Bob Byer, EMS medal and certificate, Ewing SAR President Jim Smith, John Snyder,
certificate of appreciation, Beverly Schumacher, outstanding service to SAR certificate, Judge Alan Gold~berry, law
enforcement medal and certificate. Also presE!nted at Ohio University were two silver ROTC medals to sophomore Cadet
Heather Harvey, US Air Force and freshman Cadet Matthew Sheets, J,JS Army.
·
·

i · 2009

-7.45
Champ~n

(NASDAQ) - 1.89
Charming Shopa (NASDAQ) 3.73
City Holding (NASDAQ) - 32."19
Collins (NYSE) - 44.01
.
DuPont (NYSE) - 25.79
US Bank (NYSE) - 17.82
Gannen (NYSE) - 4.1
General Ele~trlc (NYSE) ~ 13.15
Harley-Davidson (NYSE) - 16.11
JP Morgan (NYSE) - 34
Kroger (NYSE) - 21.29
Limited Branda (N,YSE)- 12.51
Norfolk Southern (NYSE) -

o

Quilt Barn Ride and Poker Run ·

Benefit for Athens Rotary/cancer research
·. ATHENS - The Athens
AM Rotary Club's annual
Quilt Barn Ride and Poker
Run will raise funds for the
Club's charity work and for
Pelotonia, a grassroots bike
tour based in Columbus
with one goal .- to end
cancer.
The Quilt Barn. Ride
· begins . at 8 a.m., July 18,
~arting
at the Athens
County Convention and
Visitor's Bureau, 667 East
State St., Athens. Prizes will
be announced at I p.m . '
A special route has been
designed to provide cyclists
with a scemc ride through

climbing, golf, and canoeing trips.
Riders who do not wish to
participate in the Poker Run

39.21

Barns include paintings of in
the. 100-mile-long
tradiiional quilt patterns on Pelotonia Tour.
local barns. The Quilt Barns . Armstrong and other part of the ride have the
were created from l.an cyclist will ride from option to ride the route at a
Appalachian Ohio art pro· · Columbus, Ohio to Athens discounted fee.
ject, with funding fro~n the on Saturday Aug. 29. The
For more informarion
Ohio Arts Council, which value of this prize is $1,500, about regi.rtration and
has planted the seeds for all of .which will go toward . details for the 2009 Athens
what is becoiTiing a national cancer research at The Ohio 'County Quilt Barn Ride and
movement.
State
University Poker Run, as well as further
Poker ~un riders have the Comprehensive
Cancer 'information about Pe/otonia ,
opportunity to win a variety Center-James
Center please visit www.quilcbarn·
of active lifestyle-Qased Hospital
and
Solove ride.org, or email us at
prizes including the grand Research Institute.
info@quiltbarnride.org.
prize - the opportunity to
Other prizes include cabin ·
ride with Lance Armstrong, · and bed and breakfast
seven-time Tour De France overnights, kayak tours,
winner and cancer survivor, horseback riding, rock ..

Wednesday
night ...
Mostly cloudy with a
chance of showers and
thunderstorms. Lows in the
mid 60s. South winds
. around 5 mph. Chance of
rain 50 percent.
Thursday and Thursday
night .. .Mostly cloudy with a
chance of showers and thunderstorms. Highs in the lower
80s. LoM in the mid 60s.
Chance of rain 30 percent.
Friday and Friday
night ...Mostly
cloudy.
Highs in the upper 80s.
Lows in the upper 60s.
Saturday and Saturday
night ••• Mostly cloudy. A
chance of showers and !hunderstorms. Highs in the mid ·
80s. Lows in the lower 60s.
Chance of rain 30 percent. ·

Ohio Valley Bane Corp. (NAS..
DAQ)- 30
BBT (NYSE) - 22.60
Peoples (NASDAQ). - 16.22
Pspok:o (NYSE) - 52.88
Premier (NASDAQ) - 6.43
Rockwell (NYSE) - 31.85
Roclcy Boots (NASDAQ) - 4.11
Royal Dutch Shall - 51.97
Sears Holding (NA$DAQ) ,...

66.82
Wai-Mart (NYSE) - 48.46
Wendy's (NYSE) - 3.92
WesBanco (NYSE) - 15.45
IVI&gt;rthl~gton (NYSE) - 13.
Dally atQCk reports are the 4 .
p.m. ET ctoalng quotes of traneactlons for June 15, '2009, provided by Edward Jonea llnan·
clal advlaora Isaac Millo In
Gallipolis at (740) 441-9441 and
Lesley Marrero In Point Pleaeant
at (304) 674.0174. Member SIPC.

n

112HI'Oatv•

. ..., . OJ,_•.,1

Meeks Staying in NBA draft, Page BZ

· Thesday, June 16, 2009

.

SPORTS BRIEFS

. Meigs Flag .
Football
Registration .
POMEROY
~egistration is now open for
the 2008 flag football season, the league is open to
b_oys and girls in grades K-6
b$!ginning with the 2009-10
St:hool year. The registration
fee is $40 per player and
$25 for each additional sibli)lg.
· . The gaines will be played
startin!J in Septembi:r on the
Meigs High School practice
field and the final date for
registration is July Ist.
· ·The payment must also be
received by July I st. A
workout/combine will be
iu:ld in late July at Meigs
!iigb School. All checks
must be made out to Meigs
f-iag football League,
?8195 Hemlock Grove
Road, . Pomeroy, Ohio

Martin wins Cup race in Michigan
BROOKLYN, Mich. (AP)
- Mark Martin was just trying to finish, He ended up in
Victory Lane.
With the laps winding
down in Sunday's- NASCAR
Sprint Cup race at Michigan
International
Speedway,
Martin and most of the other
drivers in the LifeLock 400
were simply hoping to conserve enough gas to get to
the end of the 200-lap event.
"I always. always come ur,
short in those gas things.'
Martin said. "I'm probably
about two and 25 in these
things."
Make that 3 for 25 now.
It wasn't an easy day for
the 50-year-old driver.
Martm has run well this
season but had plenty of bad
luck. It looked like more of
the same Sunday when the
battery in his No. 5
Hendrick
Motorsports
Chevrolet began .to fail
before the halfway mark.
Martin turned off everything · in the car that he

could, nursing it as best he
could. Then he realized the
race was.going to he a fueleconomy run.
lfe saved just enough ga~
.to hang on for his third victory of th~ season and the
38th of his Cup career.
He said crew chief Alan
Gustafson iold him he could
race hard for about 10 laps
after the last pit stop, but
Martin said he began to conserve fuel after two or three.
"It was irn~rtant we· fin·
ish this race,' Martin said .
"If we were in the .top five in
points, we'd have run out
today because .I'd have gone
for it. ·
,
"The bai\ery ,~d ' be~n
going dead sincctJ.W.15ldil
I turned off all tHe,.~~
stuff," he · added. "{ tUrned
(the engine) off after we
crossed the finish line and
coasted all the · way around.
Then I tried to start it up to
drive it to Victory Lane arid
it wouldn't even turn over: It
ran exactly as far as it was

going to run.'' ·
Jimmie Johnson dominated most of the race and look
the lead from Greg Biffle six ,
laps from the end as Martin
watched the duel from third
place.
The three-time reigning
Cup champion rim out of ~as
two laps from the fin1sh ,
giving the lead to Biffle. But
Biffle also ran out of gas as
the final trip around the Z·
mile oval began, cleating the
way for Martin to drive to
the .front. ·
His car also was left Will\
an empty tank on the last
lap, but Martin was al:ile to
coast to the finish ahhost 3
seconds ahead of runner-up
Jeff Gordon.
''My car was ~ood, but I
couldn't mn their pace and
save gas," Martin said.
"When Jimmie ran out, I
said, 'Heck, we're this close.
,
AP
I'm going to run hard. With
three quarters of a lap , what · Mark Martin celebrates his victory in the NASCAR Llfelock
400 auto race at Michigan lntemational Speedway ·in
Pl••se see Martin, 82
Brooklyn, Mioh., on Sunday.

4~769.

Madonna's
Nogay leads.
Class A aUstate team

' :For more information or,
to register online go to
www.meigsffl.co!TI
·i

~r. High Eagle
~asketball Camp

. ·TUPPERS PLAINS Eastern High School will Pe
WEIRTON. WVa. (AP)
holding its lith Annual
- Two members of Weirton
J:iagle Basketball Camp on
Madonna's first state tour·
uile 22 through 25 from 9
· nament team and three stars
·ll,m. to noon for boys and
of ' Moorefield's second
girls entering grades 7-9.
West Virginia Class A state
title squad headline the Ail,
. Camp staff will include
· State
baseball
team,
P.layers and coaches froiTI
released
Monday
by
the
the 2008-09 EHS boys and
West
Virginia
·
Sports
girls basketball teams. The
Writers Association.
·
climp .will focus 'on fun~a­
·
Madonna's
Max
No
gay,
mentals, most of which are
whose.monster perforJTiance
usi!Q py ·p!~Y,ers ~f!llllevels,
in
the regional semifinal
that. are essential for proagainst
Williamstown (three
ducing winning basketball.
· home runs. six RB!s)· sent
: Cost per player will .be
the
Blue
Dons
to
~5 pre-registration or $45
Charles ton. was named the
the first day of camp.
captain, another first in
Included in the cost will be
. school history. He was
a:camp T-shirt.
joined on the squad by
teammate George Magnone.
Checks should be made .
"He's something else,"
payJible to Eastern Athletic
Madonna
coach Jeff Baire
Boosters. Checks and regissaid
of
Nogay.
"He's sometration fof!Tis should be sent
body
we
could
depend on
to Howie Caldwell at 40878. ·
throughout the course of the
Old
Se.ven · Road,
PITISBURGH (AP)
Monday's parade. ·
of a truck alongside goalie the fans.
year. Same thing could be
Reedsville, OH 45'772 or at Ju~t call it the city of cham'
Tl)e Penguins won their Marc-Andre Fleury.
Betti Ll)bbe, 40 , and her said about George. ·
Eastern High School, 38900 pions. .
· ·
third Stanley Cup Friday in a ~'Thank you guys," Crosby. husband Joe Szekeres, 44,
"You. knew what you
SR 7, ·· Reedsville, OH
Four months after cele- 2·1 victory over the Detroit told the crowd at the end of both of Frederick, Md. , were going to get out of
45.772.
brating the Steelers' Super Red Wings. The parade fol- the parade. "What can I say'? drove to Pittsburgh Sunday them every time they came
Bowl victory, tens of thou- lowed the same route that I mean the support you guys night and stayed overnight mit to the ballfield.'' ·
sands · of people converged drew an estimated 300,000 . have given us , the support with family .. Szekeres is a
Nogay hit .459 wiih six
on· downtown again for a fans to the city two days you have showed ... You lifelong Penguins fan who homers and 40 RBis, and
parade, this tiiTie in honor of after the Steelers won Super deserve to be called the city typically comes to about five struck out 50 in 38.2 innings
in
becoming
the Stanley Cup champion Bowl XLUI.
of champions: You deserve games a year - but his wife pit~hed
Penguins. 'People lined city · "This is great' and there's the Stanley Cup."
needed a little mote coa'fing. Madonna's first two-time,
RACINE ~ Southern streets - in some places gonna be many more;" said
One fan carried a .hand"This i,&lt;; the first year I've first-team selection.
High School will hosting its standing 20 deep or crowd- Andrew Mehlich, 30, of written s.ign: '·Nothing like a gotten .into it this much,"
"This has been a year of
annual basketball ca111p ing onto multilevel parking Pittsburgh , who attended the Fleury in June." Others had Labbe said. "!twas them.or firsts for our baseball team."
June 22-June 25 from 9 a.ITI. garages - to get a glimpse . parade with several family homemade aluminum foil divorce so I pick¢d the Baire said. "It had bee.n I~
to 12 noon for boys and of the team a11d the cup.
. years since we won the city
members.
replicas· of the prized &lt;,:up, · Penguins."
gj,rls entering 2nd thru 6th
"It's a holiday · for
Chanting ''Let's go Pens," and threw black-and,gold
Many fans were wearing championship (against Weir
grades, In the afternoons Pittsburgh," said Michelle fans honked plastic horns confetti - the team's colors new shirts that said "Steel High). No one knows how
from I p.m. to 4 p.m.. Solkovy, 31, of Pittsburgh, and cheered along the route. - along the parade route.
City Champions" while oth· long it's been since we beat
Southern will host the Jr. who took the day off of work Team . captain Sydney
Forward Maxi me .Talbot ers opted not for the black Wheeling Central and won
. ftigh version of the camp arid brought her 4-year-old Crosby held the cup high in jumped out of the car he was
Pluse see Class A, a:a ·
for both boys and girls.
Kendall
to the air as he rode in the back riding in to shake hands with Plellse see Penaulns, 81
daughter
Cost of.the camp is $40 or
$65 for two caJTipers from
the same household. Every
Campc:r will receive a camp
r-shirt and camp basketball .
For' Lakers coach Phil per game. He wasn't out to
ORLANDO. Flu. (AP) ~The caiTip will be con: Kobe Bryant juinped and Jackson, this was title No. make friends in these finals.
llUcted by members of the punched the air. He did it 10, moving him past leg ~ he was outfor redem[Jtion.
~uthern coaching staff again, seven years of pent up endary Celtics coach' Red Throughout the playoffs, he
plong with current and for· frustration freed in a fit of Auerbach for the most by a didn't smile. He just snarled
!"er varsity•basketball playand bared his teeth.
coach in league history.
e)'s · . at
. Southern. jothis ~as the one he want"I was just completely
"I'll smoke a 'cigar in
1\Jndamentals will be· ed more than all the others. honor of Red," Jackson said. locked in," he said. "I was
grumpy for a while and now
~tressed and awards will be
"He was a great guy."
. The one to top them all.
tiesented for the winners in
For Pau Gasol. For Derek I' in just ecstatic.like a kid in
One year after failing mis~on-3, "HORSE", and free erably in the finals against Fisher. For Lamar Odom: a candy store."
O'Neal, who won three
throw
shooting .. Boston, Bryant and the Los For 'TTevor Ariza and for
i{egistration will be the first Angeles Lakers found Andrew Bynum and the rest titles with Bryant before the
Cljly of camp one-half hour redemption . They finished a of the Lakers. this was a title pair had a major falling out.
was glad to see his fom1er
!&gt;riorto the camp on the first season they felt was theirs to savor.
teammate
win another. ·
"It's
a
dream
come
true,"
with
a
99-86
win
over
the
tRorning (8:30-9:00) and
"Congratulations
kobe, u
Gasol
said.
"The
completion
Orlando Magic on Sunday
l!l'temoon (12:30-1:00).
deserve
it,"
O'Neal
said on
in Game 5 to win the of a goal." .
; : Participants whould bring · pight
15th NBA title in franchise . Odom scored 17 points, 'his Twitter page. '"You
clean basketball shoes, and history.
Ariza had 15, Gasol 14 and played great. Enjoy it my
·
~ able to provide a signed
For Bryant. this was the 15 rebounds. and Fisher, man enjoy it."
"ai ver foriTI along with missing piece from his whose two big 3s in Game 4
Bryant and Jackson .
~birt size, phone number, resume. has fourth champi- saved L.A., had 13 points.
whose relationship strained
and academic grade level. onship and fir.;t without forIt took longer than Bryant and briefly snapped under
Jl.arents or guardians must mer teammate Shaquille expected. but htr has stepped the weight of success. are
sign the waiver form.
from O'Neal's enormous ugain at the top of their
O'Neal.
games.
shadow - at last.
"I
don't
have
to
hear
that
Checks should be made
.
. AP photo
Bryant
averaged
32.4
Together.
p'ayable to the Southern criticism. that idiotic critipoints,
7.4
assists,
5.6
following
the
game,
the
Los Angeles Lakers'' Kobe Bryant (24) and teammates celAthletic Boosters. · For fur- cism anymore," said Bryant,
rebounds
and
more
than
a
the
finals
MVP.
"It
was
ebrate
after deafeating the Orlando Magic 99-86 during
ther information, please call
Pluse
see
Laken.
82
dozen
cold-blooded
glares
annoying."
Game
5
of the NBA basketball finals on Sunday.
Jeff Caldwell at 949-3129 .

t

Athens County, with stops
at local Quilt . Barns. The
route will consist ·of a 30·
mile loop, with an additional 20 miles of optional road
available for the more experienced riders who want
more of a challenge.
The Athens County Quilt

'W'IZard of.
Oz'opens
Saturday

Bl

The ·Daily Sentinel

NBA quick fixt&gt;s, Page B6

Local Stocks
AEP (NYSE) - 27.36
Alao (NASDAQ) - 46.34
Ashland Inc. (NYSE)- 27.36
Big Lots (NYSE) - 22.52
Bob Evans (NASDAQ)- 29.77
BorgWarner (NYSE) - 32.82
Centu,Y Aluminum (NASDAQ)

Inside

Cup parade

RACINE

a

SYRACUSE

We've Got It!
94g..221 0 • Racine, OH
992-6333 • Syracuse, OH

GALLIPOLIS - "The
Wizard of Oz" will open at
8 p.m Saturday at the ArielAnn
Carson
Dater
Performing Arts Centre. A
an
special opening night gala
will beheld following the
opening performance.
Additional performances
will be presented on June 27
at 8 p.m. on June 28 at 3
p.m., July II at 8 p.m. and
July 18 at 8 p.m. Cathy
Lord is the director and the
cast includes actors ·from ·
the area.
Fans of the 1939 MGM
ITIOVie-musical
enjoy
familiar
songs,
"Somewhere Over the
Rainbow," "We're Off To
See The Wizard," and others, as well as some musical
numbers that did not make
it into the film version. such
Mohawk
Co!'goleum
as "The Dance of the
Ytnyl
Berber
Jitterbugs."
Flooring Carpet
· · The Wizard of Oz openCarpet
ing ni~ht gala, immediately ·
STARTING AT
STARTING AT
STARTING AT
rollowtng the performance,
will be catered by K&amp;L
Catering, and will create Oz
Sq. Yd.
Sq.
With culinary magic for
Sq. Ft.
&amp;uests to el\ioy. Tickets for
epening night and gala are
$20 per person, and are
available through the Ariel
box office. Tickets for the
additional perfofiTiances of
The Wizatd of Oz are avail·
able for $10 and $8,
g:served seating.
Additional performances
at the Ariel in the summer
series include Southern
Fried Murder June 26, July
10 and July 17; Monster in
the Closet. July 12, 16 and
f9. Series tickets and indi·
tidual tickets can be purchased by calling 740-446ARTS (2787), or by visiting · . ._ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __.
www.arieltheatre.org.

Sonthem
Basketball Camp .

will

$595 $695

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Lakers win 15th NBA championship

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�Page 82 • The Daily Sentin~l

www.mydailyscntincl.com

Tucsday,Junet6,2009

I

Meeks is NBA bound; Harangody staying put Sizemore nearing
return to Tribe lineup
Jomed Harangody m wnhdrall mg their names and w11l
return to ..chool
;-.,teck' led the Southeu.-tem
Conferem:e m sconng and
"as eighth nationally wrrh
23.7 pomts a' a JUnror fur
Kentuckv. He had declared
him,elf ehgrble for the draft
but drd not hire an agent, leavrng the door open to return to
the W1ldcats and thetr new
coach Joh~ Calipari.
Meek&gt; provided one of the
few htghhghrs in a lackluster
Kentucky season when he
scored a team-record 54
pomrs agamst Tennessee.
The 6-foot-8 Harangody
was a consistent bright spot
for an lnsh team that fell short
of hrgh expectattons and dtd
not make the NCAA tournament He averaged 23.3
points and 11.8 rebounds last
season to lead the Btg East m
both categories in consecutive

seasons. He was the league's
player of the year in 2008.
'"We have a great nucleus
next reur and I km)W one of
Luke s goals rs to get back to
the NCAA tournament."
coach Mrke Brey surd. "He
abo has the chance to carve a
unique place in the long and
stoned history of the Notre
Dame ~sketball program."
Harangody needs 738
points next ;cason to pass
Austrn Curr a&gt; Notre Dame's
leading scorer. He needs 370
rebounds to pass Tom
Hawkins as the school's leadmg rebounder.
Teague led the Demon
Deacons (24-7) in scoring at
19 points per game. helpmg
them earn a No. I rankmg in
January before being upset by
Cleveland State 84-69 in the
first round of the NCAA tournament.
Gaudio said he figured

hit .477 with two homers and
was a perfect 4-0 on the
mound. He also singled, doubled and drove m two in the
from PageBl
championship $arne.
"I kind of mcknamed him
a sectional. No (Madonna 'Elmer" because he's been
ream) had been able to fight glue 'to our team all season
through the regionals."
long," Armentrout said of
Magnone struck out 61 and Hibbard , his designated hitwalked six in 50.2 innings ter-reliever-confidence reprtched, and had a 1.60 ERA, enforcer
Burns, the Yellow Jackets'
as he grabbed one of the
team's fo ur pitchmg spots. At most consrstenr hitter.
the p'iate. he hit .420 with two according to Armentrout,
batted .533 with two homers
homers and 31 RBIS.
and
28 RBis
·
State title-game hero
Sites,
also
the
team's
closShawn Htbbard was joined
who rut a lid on both the
by Moorefield teammates er
regiona final and state title
Trevor Srtes and Tanner game, hit .443 with two
Burns, the ftrst time home runs and 26 RBis.
Moorefield coach Wade
"He feeds off confiArmentrout could remember dence," Armentrout said.
ha vmg that man) all-staters "It's a tremendous accomon one of hrs teams
plishment for those three
Hrbbard. the winning young men, but ll's also a
puchcr m relref 111 the cham- great attribute because theX
pronshrp game agamst Man , represent our team so well.·

State runner-up Man had
one player, Travis Hurley,
earn a spot after a season 'm
which he htt a team-best
,455 clip with 22 RBis, etght
doubles and two triples.
Callison
of
Mike
Pocahontas Cou nl) rounded
out the representatives
among Class A's final four
teams, as he hll .438 with
fo ur home runs and 28
RBls
Buffalo pitcher Jason
Lewis. the only other returning first-teamet outside of
Nogay, rebounded from
mjury to post some tmpressJve numbers. He was 5-l
wah 75 strikeouts m 39
innings, finishing with an
ERA of 1.62. At the plate, he
hit 377 with four home runs
and 29 RBis.
Paden City's Wes Cosper,
like a lot of these players,
was a jack of all trades. He
hrt .427, a home run, drove
In 32 and scored 3.8 runs,

BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

Jodrc Meeb "' talon~ h"
!on~- range game to the NBA.
Luke HaranglXly dedded to
return to college for h.s 'emor
) ear and a -=han-=e to be•ome
the leadmg ;corer 10 Notre
Dame histor)
The dead! me for underclassmen who had declared
for the NBA draft but drd not
lure agents to Wrthdraw 11 as
Monday.
Meeks, the stick shootmg 6foot-4 guard from Kentucky.
Wake Forest pomt guard Jeff
Teague. Gonzaga forward
Austm Daye and Texas A&amp;M
forward Chinemelu Elonu
were among the notable players who chooe to remam draft
eligible
Maryland guard Greivis
Vasquez and Georgia Tech
power forward Gam Lawai

Class A

Lakers ·
from PageBl
parr siMred a long embrdce.
J.tckson. who once called
Bryaut ''.1' selfi sh player"
now sees the 30-year-old in
,t far different light.
"He 's learned how to
become a leader in a way in
wh"h people want to follow hrm,'' Jackson said.
"!'hat's really tmportant for
h11n to have learned that
because he knew that he
had to give to get back in
ret urn. and so he's become
.t g1ve' rather th~n JUst a
guy that 's a demandtng
le:rdcr. That's been great for
him and great to watch."
After the final horn.
Bryant and his teammates
bounced around the flour of
Amway Arena. Moments
Iuter, Bryant swept his two
daughters. both wearing
gold Lakers dresses. into
h1~ arms.
It was just as he dreamed.
"It fr nally felt like a big
old monkey was off my
buck.'' he said. "It felt so
good to be able to have this

Martin
from Page Bt
can happen?"'
Denny Hamhn frmshed
thud. tollowed bv Carl
EJ\\ards, Brttle , Juai1 Pablo
Montoya and senes pomts
lender Tony Stew,rrt Last
year\
winner.
Dale
E.rrnh,mll Jr. fimshcd 14th.
Bn,tn Vrckers ,tarted
from the pole. but K) lc
Busch pa"cd hun at the
start and leJ the frrst erght
laps wrth Johnson moving
mto second.
Johnson swept past to
take the lead on tl1e ninth
lap and looked unbeatable.
leading 141 of the next 142
laps. He was never challenged. building btg leads
after each caution flag
bunched up the field.
But Biffle and Hamlin
both came out ahead of
Johnson when the leaders
pttted under caution on lap
154.
At that point. all the leaders were being told to conserve fuel
Johnson got past Hamlm
to take the runner-up spot on
lap 179, trailmg Biffle by
I .7 seconds He steadily ate
mto that lead and lmully
"as right behind the leader
un lap 193.
The two were brielly stdc-

•

moment. For this moment
to be here and to reflect
back on the season and
everything that you've been
throu,~ h , it's top of the lrst ,
man.
.
Bryant had come up
shan twrce m the fmuls
before, m 2004 with
O'Neal against Detroit ,
and again la st season
against the Celtics in the
renewal of the league's
best rivalry. The Lakers
were beaten in six games,
lostn g the finale in Boston
by 39 points, a humiliating
beatdown tliat Bryant and
hts teammates had trouble
shaking.
They went to lrninmg
camp wtth one goal tn
mind. This was going to be
their season. and except for
a few minor mi ssteps, it
was.
In the locker room afterward, Bryant made sure
Jackson got a champagne
shower.
"He took his glasses off,
threw his head back and
soaked it all in because this
" a special trme," Bryant
said. "For us to be the team
that got hrm that historic
lOth championsh rp is spe-

cia I for us ."
Orlando will be haunted
by moments m a series that
swung on a few plays and
had two ovenime games.
After losmg Game ·I by
25 points, the Magic' had
therr chance in Game 2 but
rookie
Courtney Lee
missed an a)ley-oop layup
rn the final second of regulation. In Game 4, Dwight
Howard clanged two free
throws w1th 11.1 seconds,
and the Magic allowed
Derek Frsher to nail a
game-tying 3-pointer to
force OT.
Howard, the Magic's
superhero center. was
hardly a factor in Game 5.
He scored II points and
took just nine shots .
Rashard Lewr s scored 18
points , but was only 3 of
12 on 3s fot Orlando .
whtch after ltving on the 3.
finally died by it.
The Mag1c went just 8 of
'27 from long range.
When the game ended.
Howard drdn 't move . As
hrs teammates headed to
the locker room , Howard

Teague wa&lt;; a 50-50 bet to
stay in the draft when he first
declared. and he expects the
CLEVELAND (AP) - want to go back to that. If il
6-foot-2 guarcl wrll be a rustGrady Sizemore could off goes back to that. we have to
round prck.
Daye averaged 12 7 points the dtsabled and back m the make a decision (ori
.
:
and 5.8 rebounds as a sopho- Clevela~d lndtans· lmeup m surgeT) )."
to
10
days.
As
long
as
11
doesn
t
get
seven
more tor GJJnzaga.
An MRI exam Monday on any worse, Sizemore said he
Elonu, a 6-10 junior, averaged 9.8 points and a team- the All-Star center fielder'&gt; could play the rut of rh~
best 7.3 rebounds and had 53 ailing left elbow revealed season with thll pain he has
blocked shots. He set a school much of the inflammation now. The elbow affects his
record by shooting 66.5 per- that"s hampered him since throwing more than hittmg;
spring trainmg has subsided . but he felt good throwing
cent from the field.
The Aggies got some good Anhroscopic surgery was an from 60 feet Monday. It was
the first ttme he has thrown
news on Monday, too. Guard option.
"You hate to put a a baseball since May 24. HC:
Donald Sloan and forward
Bryan Davis announced they timetable on anythmg ,'' spent the last week before
lnd1ans ·manager Enc gomg on the disabled list as
would be back next season.
Wedge
said. "That would the destgnatcd hitter.
:
Vasquez led Maryland in
be
a
best-case
seeSizemore
is
batting
.223
probably
scoring (17.5 ppg), reboundwr'th nine homers and 3 j
.
mg (5.4 rpg) and assists (5.0 nar 1·o •
"There's
sltll
somethmg
RBis
in 49 games this sea;
apg) last season.
there.
But
it
looks
a
lot
betson.
:
Lawai. a 6-foot-9 forward,
"The key right now ts to
averaged IS. I p01nts and 9.5 ter than the last MR! he
took"
see
how it feels as we ~o
rebounds for the Yellow
Sizemore
wtll
test
the
forward,''
Sizemore said. 'It
Jackets.
elbow with more swmgs and feels better than when I went
throws Tuesday, and he will on the DL. We"ll step it up
while going 5-3 with a 2.43 be evaluated daily No more little bit tomorrow, tak~
ERA with 57 strikeouts in MRI exams have been some more swings and se~
46 inmngs.
scheduled.
how it feels from there." •
South Harrison, which
"There's a chance it could
In other injury news , the
was
eiiminated
by get worse, there's a chance it Indians have scratched Jak~
Moorefield in the regional could stay the same," Westbrook 's · next rehab
final, had two players select- Sizemore satd. "lt"s not nee- start,
scheduled
for
ed in utility man Chase essarily black and white. It Wednesday night , because
Snyder and pitcher Travis definitely could linger all of
general
soreness·.
Gawthrop.
Charleston year. It's just a matter of Westbrook, recovering froni
Catholic also had two selec- how much worse it gets. It hgarnent transplant surgery
tions in catcher John Baird had started tnakmg the mus- last summer, threw four
(.~15, 12 doubles, 31 RBis)
cles and ligaments around scoreless innings Friday
and mfielder Sam Wood the elhow sore. We don't night for Qouble-A Akron. :
(.402. six home runs, 51
RBls).
Rounding out the first
.. Sweet!"
•
team is outfielder Wes
, Kevin Greager, 35, drove;
·Green (.412, 23 RB!s) from
about three hours from
regional
runner-up
fromPageBl
Greencastle with his soli
Williamstown; pitcher Jerry
Kody,
8, and daughtet
Berkley ( 10- I , 1.85 ERA,
5. Graeger sai4
Kelsey,
75 strikeouts in 64 innings) and gold but for the oldwhen
he
heard
Sunday that
of Wahama; and Gilmer style, light blue Penguins
the parade was happenini
County outfielder Josh jerseys.
Bunon. Pocahontas Count)
SOine fans said they were he knew he had to come
infielder Reid Harper was season ticket holders who despite the three-hour drive,:
"I have to do it. I've bee!)
named the captain of the had seen the Pens play seva
longtime Penguins fan,''
second team.
eral times . Others were like
said
Greager, a firefighter in
twins Peter and Nick
Ellefson, 14 , of Beaver Frederick. Md. "We don"l
~tayed on Orlando's bench Falls, who have
only know when they're going t¢
and watched as the Lakers watched~ the team on TV. win the cup agam so we'r¢
celebrated on the Magic's But Peter summed up the going to Pittsburgh one wa:t
floor. Jameer Nelson , victory m one wor4. or another."
•
Orlando's point guard who
came back for the finals
after missing four months
with a shoulder injury,
fmally joined him
The two sat stunned.
Excavation work includes: Drheways, Land Clearing,
"What I just told Jameer
Ponds, Trenching, Reclamation &amp; Much More!
is look at it, just see how
they're
celebrating,"
Howard said. "It should
-Call today for a free estimate!
motivate us to want to get
Manuel (740) 590·3700
in the gym, want to get better."
Danny (740) 590·9255
Orlando was trying to
Mike (740) 590·3701
become the first team to
overcome a 3-1 deficlt in
the finals. They had rallied
to knock off Philadelphia
and Boston, and then upset
LeBrorr
James
and
Cleveland tn the conference finals. The Magic
always felt they had a shot
at history.
Bryant, though , wouldn't
be denied his place.
"They had an answer,"
Orlando coach Stan Van
Gundy said. "for everything ."

www.mydallysentlnel.com

.TuesdaY, June 16, 2009

The Daily Sentinel • Page 83

tEribune - Sentinel · CLASSIFIED

ndtdass~..d~:i)1tiWn•.oom

In One Week With Us
REACH OVER 285,000 PROSPECTS
a1JS YOUR AD 'NOW ONLINE

We.bsll.el:
www.mydallytribune.com
www.mydallya8ntinel.com
www.mydallyreglster.com

a

Penguins

Now you~ hove borders and 91'0Phtcs
~
adcledtovourdaull'ledGd'
m
Borders$3.00/perad
I.M
Graphics SOC for small
$1 .00 lor larQe

.f.;c..

Monday thru Friday
a.m. to 5:00 p.m
HO.W 10 WRUE AN AD

• Start,• .,.,. Wftllll A....,.. • ~c.•• rev.
D ...... •lw~Afirke•. AWidMlc 1111 u
•Ill&lt;- ,.,IIC I&lt;IMMr- - -

Scncu ful Ado

Wll•-

Should Include Th-Jtems

·~slloiiNRuJIIo'jo

To Help Get RMpon.....

«

2rHJ

OhloVattey
Publishing..the ~ght to edit,

t,rrr 1 QI.J'i,O:.I11~1 1 S

]')[)

-------

fJI•," ',

-----

_: ()fj

1111

,.., ......,

I

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Lost·&amp;Found

'*adetIt any1:111C81
any
time.

f 11

Apll.

N&lt;&gt;w mentt 1•

Haven YN. Now """"1'1lng ' •PPllcaUont
for
HUD-aul&gt;Sidlzed,
one
Bedroom APia lffilltlao
ltlotudid llaH&lt;I on 30%
of od.,sted Income Call

Mull

e

CONVENIEI'ITLY

J:;:::::::.;:.--1

J·G EXCAVATING

'!()()

[ ' I d

"

----~----

------

Lo-

CATED
&amp;
APFOADABLEI Townhouoe apanmenls, ancllor 111111111
i&gt;ouoes for rent Call
, 740-441-\111 tor appllcation &amp; lnformallon.

P•rt• a Ac&lt;:eeaor:le• ..................................:ao:ae

Sporto Utility .............................................. 2030
Truck a.............................,...........................203l5
Utility 'l"ratlar• ...................... ...................... 2a.G
Vono ..,......................................................... 204~
W.nt to buy ............................................... 2050
R•al Eetate Satea ...........:-.......................... 3000

C•metary Plota .......................................... 3001

Commerclal-..............................................3010
CondoMintuma .......................................... 3015
For Sale by Ownltl' ••.••••••••••••••••..••..••••••••••••3020

Hou..ator Sale ................................,.... - .. 3025
Lond (Acreogol.......................................... 3030
Lata ....................................... ....................3035
Wont tv buy ................................................3040
Auf Eatet. Renlela ......................... _, .......:J500
Apertmantt/tbwnhouaea ........................... 3505
Commercfal................................................3110
Condomlnluma .......................................... 3G15
HOUHI for Rent ........................................ 3&amp;20

Lllnd (Aoruge) ...................~.................. ., .. 3U8
Storage ............................ - ........ ,...,.............36315

'Ill'

i\(1111\1 11 I'

·----------

------

want to Rent .............................................. 31i40

alanufactured Moualng ............................. 4000
Lata .............................................................4QOS
Movera........................ :_.............................4010
Rantela .......................................................401$
S.lea ...................... .....................................4oao
9upplloo ..................................................... 40U

Want to Buy ............................................... 4030

Resort Proparty ......................................... 1000
RooOI'I Properly lor oato ........................... 5025
Reaort Property for rent ........................... 5050
Emplayment ............................................... sooo
AccountingiFIMnclal ... - ...........................6002
Admlnl•tratlv61Proteaatonal .....................6004
Caehter!Ciark ............................................. &amp;OQ6
· Chlld/Eidefly Core ....... ,............................. 5008
Cterlcol .......................................................5010
Con•truction ................ - ............................6012
Drtve1111 Dettvery .... ,................................ 5014
l!duetl11on .................................... ,,l ............ 6016

EtectriCOI P,IUmblnQ ....................... , .... - ....$0111

Em.-toy.,a Aa-nQtea ............................... I020 ,

Enterta~nmom ........................................... 50ZI •
l"ood 9otviCOo ............................................eoa•
Governrnent &amp; ~1'111 Job . .................... 6026
Help anted- Ooneret .................................. eoaa

t.:aw Ento.....,OIIt ......................................MIIInt,nana./Dorne:atlc ••- ........................1032
Manogoment/Bupenrloory ........................ 5034
U.Chanlca..................- .............................6036
Medlcal ......................................................~8038
Muetcel .......................................................l040
Plrt..Tim•Temporerlea ............................. 8042
A•ateurante ............................................... 6Q4A.
S.laa ...........................................................1041
Tradu

Have you prtc&amp;U a John
Deem lamly'? You'll be
$urprlstd! Check out our
used

lnvenlo')'

at

www CAAEO com
michael

Ca.r·
Equ1pment

740-446·2412

.

"

J

''

ti)
~":""---~~~

Spacklus
floor apt

second{llllrd
overlOoking

Gallipolis City Park lnd
Rlvar
L. R. d~n . trg

ELLM VIEW APTS
K~en·alnlng area wltll
2&amp;3BR and up, Central atl now eppllanceo &amp;
Air, WID hoOkup. tenant cupboalds, 3 BR. 2
pays electric. EHO Elm batht,
laundry
area.
View
Apts $900 per month. Call
(304)882-3017
446-232~or 446-4425

TUESDAY rrf1:LEVISION (;UIDE

I

TowWio~~t~~

now liking ap.
pllcatlono for ~. 3 &amp; 4
Bedroom HUD 4Subtl·
dlzad Apartmenla. Applioetlona ere taken Monday 1hrough Friday, trom
9em·1pm. Office Ia to304-882-3f21. avalable catod ot 1151 Svergr..,
lor Senior and Dllablad Drive, Point Ptllllolln~
people
wv. :304·675-5808
R!VIIbend

.

by-stde - usmg more gas
- oh lap 194 and Johnson
managed to get past the next
ttme around. Biffle unmcdiately sped up and tried to
repass Johnson - aga in
causmg both to use more
gas - with Johnson remammg ahead
"The 48 came up there
and ran like we weren 't on a
fuel-economy run." Brffle
said. "I messed with hrm a
little bit .... Unfonunately,
he came up there and we
cat-and-moused and used up
too much gas."
Johnson, who led 14,
laps. managed to get his car
to the fini sh but wound up
22nd. the last car on the lead
lap.
Munin drove only part1al
schedules the past few seasons. He joined Rick
Hendrick's elite team this
year for the full season and
rs makmg the most of it. The
latest victory for the fourtime series runner-up moved
him from J 3th - outside
the 12-man field for the
Chase - to eighth wtth II
races remaining pntil the
postseason begins.
Gordon, a teammate of
Manin,
Johnson
and
Earnhardt, went to Victory
Lane to con~tulate Martin.
"I said. Old man, you
snookered us agam.' ... He's
hke a 21-vear-old with a lot
of expene"nce under his belt,
and that's rough to beat."

"~m.clll/

Apartment avallabto now

MonqToLind

or

Errort

,

\.

�Page 84 • The Daily Sentinel

www.mydallysentlnel.com

$aloo

Education

Presch(X:ll paytng job workJ'Ig for an

Special Educatoo. Sue· Ott ftrm as a local agent
and earn mare Job reQ(mements Good com·

84 ConrlOI'S 14x64 2•9R

t I ·2 BA. new floonng
lhrougt.out, SI&lt;MQ VInYl
double pane wmdows.

heat pump w/ a backup
heater. steel front &amp; back

drs,

with

2
porche$ on front &amp; 1 on,
back and 14Jt12 bldg locate&lt;J on rented lot.
446-1297
or
740·412·4255
CQmeS

"The ProctONille
Difference·
$1 and a deed tS all you
need lo own your dream
home Call Nowl
Freedom Homes
888-565-()167

cessful
candidate
WJII
Work 3 days wr week
~counl8nt:
FuiJ·IJme (wrth some eKcaptiOns)
posmon wrth busv- ac- Must have curr&amp;nt OhtO
counltng ofi'ICe 111 GaHipo- Department of Educauon
bs lor 1mmedtate employ· License and have or be
ment . Accounttng degree el'9ll&gt;le to obla01 Early
and e!Cpeneoce required. Childhood
Intervention
Must have good organ- Speoafist
endor1emenl.
ilat•onal skills and the Send resume and copv
ability to woric tndepend· of teocf1jng ffcento by
ently w1th strong at1en- Friday. June 19th to:
tion ro detail. Please Meigs County Board of
sefl(j resume and refer· MRIDD
ences to
Carleton School

gallipolisaccoun1anl ~

gmail.com
or mail to CL.A 101. PO

Syracuse. Oh 45n9

Ga~ipof~.

OH 740-992-6881
The Meigs Counly Board
of MR/00 is an EEO emp~

FoodSrnon
Cour181de Bar ·and GriU
now hlnng IJno/Foy Coot&lt;
Plea,. apply fn person al
308 2nd Ave or call
441 ·9371 to set up' inter·
view.

Htlp Want.&lt;~ • G.ntral
Need 7 ladies 10 sell
Avon call 740-446-3358
OVerbroof&lt;

Rehabililalion
Center ls currently seek·
ing a beaullclan. to wor1&lt;
in tt1e facility's beauty saton . Candidates should
possess

a

va lid · Ohio

Managing Cosmetologist
Ucense. Salary is basi:td

on commiSsion. Inter·
ested candidates shOuld
lUI .out an application at
333 Page Slreet, Middle·
port,

Ohto.

The Daily Sentinel • Page 85

www.mydailyeentinel.com

NEA -crossword Puzzle

BRIDGE

Overbrook

ACROSS

advancement
opponunities artd much
morel

Phillip
Alder

mumcallon skUis 1n Engtlsh, lnternel acceu Any
prevKJUI wortdng · experJ.
ence COUld be an advan-

North

!age. Appifcanfl should
'send their rasun,e to Ja·
0011 Wheller email ~sonwnetiet'270gmall.co '
m 1for more Info.

YOU NG 'S
(oq w nt( r

Sc·rv •C (·

BANKS
CONSTRUCfiON

co.

l

Pomeroy, Ohio ·
C\)llllllert:lal•

Goodtimes Bar I&amp;
ing bat1ender &amp;
man/security
304-578·2.2.20

PO Bo• 307

131 oCar'leton Street

Bo• 469.
45631

Tuesday, June 16, 2009
.ALLEYOOP
'

Help Wonlod • G-..1 Help
Needed Get that perlect part lime

Teacher
Part-trme:

Tuelday, June 16, 2001

ilesideaUol
• Free Estimates

ask

.John.

(740) 992-5009

Hiring ALL Shlfla
Wt .,. currently
-fng long.tonn luff
ond PI~ limo
emptor"'
voru.-o tor 111110&lt;
nD"1f'alff

to,_..

organlzedoM.
OUr EmplorMo Enlor:
Access to on-site
physlefan
1 Weekly Pay +
perfofmance bonus .
1 Fl&gt;ed echodules
1 Paid Vacations &amp;
HoUdays
1 Comprehensive
Benefits Package
r Great Working
Environment
1

Stop by ond compft1e
rour opp11cotlon:
lnfoCISion Management
Corporation
242 Third Avenu e
Gallipolis. Ohio

FULL TIME MANAGER
Needed fOI f\YO
propertleo In Rio Grande
&amp;Oak Hill
fax Resume to:
419·758·1348
or mall resume to:
Malabar Trace 1111
. 100 E Cool&lt; Rd
Mansfield, Ohio 44907
Ann,: Deb
Equal Housing
Opponunlfy ·
TOOt 419-526'0466
"This irls11tution Is an
Equal ()pportunily
Provl~ and f:rnployer"

II
Service Technician posl·
tion available for diesel
and hydraulics. Expert·
erma
necessary.
Heallh/Rellrernenl
&amp;
Benefits: Fax resume to

Or calf &amp; oc!ltdUft your
Interview:
1·888·1MC.PAVU

·center par1icipates In the
" '· 1921
drug lree Workplace Pro- . http:ll}obl.lnloclalan.com
gram.
Hiring Long-Term
Emplovn.
Care Giver Is needed.
This is 8 FULL TIME poWt need dtf)lndllllo
sition, meaning you will
tmpiOVHI looking to
be living here as if It
1t11rt • new carMrl
were your home. This Is
You will rofM mbnor
NOT a daytime or night
for th1 country'•
time onlY position. Sleep
Ieiding ConHJVotlvt
here at night and do norOrgenlutlon1
mal tlous&amp;hotd
dulles
including the NAAf
lhru the day. Person
needing assistance is
Take advantage of our
mobile and can function
company's
on her own, FREE
RENT&amp;
FREE
LITILI· comprGhenslve ·beneflta
package, ·professional
TIES plus small salary.
working envl,ronment,
740·367·7129

740-446·9104 or e·mall
to LLC@CAREQ.COM

CuJUom H~rnc Building
Steel Frame Building1
Building, Remodeling

Oeneral r(pujr
www.banklcdb.co

C r e• tl ve
o hlld o• re
Now enrolling for
summer dllldcorv.
Coli Anita or Sharon
(740)949· 2122

Johnson's Tree
Service
GwiiJ!OIIs, OH 4Sfi3l

Insured, Free
Estimates, 20yn Exp,
740-441-9387
Rick Johnson-Owner

.Tree- removal, planting,
Jawn care, and all yoUr
landscaping needs,
IRtlSi,dential an d c·OinmerCi aI
Fully l.lJ!~.lllr€!~
.

+ J 10 3
•

......

-

"

'

·,

! "'

- .... "

740·387-11538

•u

.

.KQJJ 0987
t K6
9 5

&gt;

.......
•s.•.

Dump Truck

• 12

Call Walt

or Sandy

740-992-3220
or 7400-591-3726

+

HouN
7:00 1111· 1:00""'

bliiiWII

Compost, Top Soil

742-1112 '

D&lt;!aler: South
Vulnerable: East-West

lit EARNEST

DtU11 Spockllr
· S1rvlns BI'NI!/MI
7 dill' a wd

o,.,

••

.,........,.....

THI5 15TH' SOOK
1 READ!!

1 KNOW MIZ

Harftold C*netrr a. FRill

PRUNELl~!!

--

Salu

BORN LOSER
jV~H.EAP'&lt;OVIU\E./&lt;\0 "'q . rt'\IE.~LWt\'IS-1-W&gt;TWO
Racine, Ohio 740-247·2019
. Ownert:
Jon Van Meter I
Paul Rowe

West

Nortb

EBJI

Pass

1•

All pass

~UT Grt.Til~(;, itt&gt;\ t::&gt;/&gt;..'1~' ·

\1/&gt;&lt;.&lt;AiiO~ m1~ '((.~~. ;.

+4

The number's clear,
but not the line

NEWOWfiEb
NEW MENU

Sales Manager position
a\lallable. · Sales. experience required. Apply In
person ay Sparkle SUP"
ply Company 683 Slate
Route 7 North · GalllpoNs,
oti. No phone calls
please.

Soutb

3•

Opening lead:

Cel

Home
Healthcare
ol
SOutheasl OhiO ·• fnc. Is
currently hiring
Home
Health·
Aides,
1-740·662·1222

+A K 6

South

S&amp;L
Trucking
Service
We Haul Gravel,

8 6 53

.. A 73 2

+Q8742

;v, .

Local Contrector

•

Mtdical

E~st

• Q7

+ Q9QH

'

Pr•l!atlm-

.H

We at
• 3

Remodeling, Room ·
Additions

740-367-(1544

AKJ109

• A62
f J I0

Roofing, Siding,
Soffit, Decks,
Doors, Windows,
Electric, Plumbing,
Drywall,

Limestone , Coal,

Nata's lfraa
larvlca

•

CORNER STONE
CONSTRUCTION

06-I6-o9

WE.E.~\It\&lt;AiiON I~ ii-\E:.

P~i! T~l~ I~ t&gt;.N OVT~!

l'e.ll. WEE!I.r TI-IO~Zt&lt;~io.PI'U:-~
·
Tffi !&gt;/&gt;.,'(:) IJ/&gt;..CAT\01-l \!l TWO
WE:~!

Call: 740-418-5047
11111111:

JNhedlrmOIOI.Com

1 Wrocl&lt;er'o

job

4 London park
8 Bsianc•
oheet guru
11 BewUdorld
ruponee
12 Female
relative
13 Gam or
Rudner
15 Queen
btllor
16 Abttld
18 Grlln
20 Ravlee
21 Sinlng alkali
23 Grain crop
24 Sidewalk
eotory
27 Sudden
thought
29 Foocf
lleemor
32 lo sorry
about
33 Stare
llupldiV
34 Unroll nod
molal
35 Vue
38 Coydcloo
rrer(2wdo.)
37 Kind of race
33 lnfornutl
parent

. In ysslerday'a ~eal, Eaet could eee lhal
to defeat a five-dlamQnd a'"tract, the
defenders had to lake ona spada and
IWo htarto. In thlo deal, !hough, thers 11
more than one poaslblllty for the
required .oumber of detenalve Irick&amp;.
Soulh Is In lour hoarte. Well loado a
fourth·hlgheSI club lour: lhree, king,
nine. How should Eaet plan the
datonse?
~th haa a 18X1b0ok vulnorlbls weak·
thres opening: a good seven-card suh
and soms 6-10 hlgh·card f)!Jinla. North
· ralass :1o game, more In hope lhan
ex~a11on, but maybe he could· ~ltnce
1he opponenfl, Note lhaf live of a minor
Ia down only tWo, which Is ·a reasonable
sacrifice II tour spades Is making.
Eas1 should raal~e tha11he delsnsslsn1
genlng a major-suit inck. An~ lhera are
two chances for tour minor-suit wlnn&amp;rs:
two diamonds and two clubs, or one dla·
mond and three c1ubo. Sui how doea
East know wh~h way 10 tum?
Attar winning with his club king, East
cashes !he club ace and IOOII:s closely at
We.st's card.
If Wesfplays a higher club lhan lhelour,
showing that he led from a four-card su~.
Easl should cash ~· diamond ace, !hen

O"'., v WO'"' '"I''" ...,. ""- ~ . play a1hlrd club, conlldentlhal his part· ·
:--:1 r:,OI.J
1
''"""
"""'"'".- ,~vr'\\~
ner will. take the trick with his queen.
Remember, i!lllding a low card guaran·
tees an honor ln that ault.
Hare, though, Wslf plays1he ciubiWo at
inck lwo, lndlcaflng lhal ha lad lrom a
fiOJe·card suit. Now East sJllfts to a low
diamond. If Wasf has lhe king, any play
works, but ! West has lhe queen ond
Soulh lha king, Easl muat pul South to a .

Public. Notice
NOTICE TO CONTRAC·
TORS
Staled propoaala tor
tho Malga County
Paving Pro)tc:l• ROUND
23 will ba received by
tho Malgo County Com·
mlaolonara atlhalr of·
Ilea at Tho Mtlgo
County Courthouae
Second
StrHt'
Pomoroy Ohio 4578
until t· t p m July :z.
2oog and the~ at 1-15
p.m.: at aald ottico
opened and road aloud.
Resurfacing po~lono
or all of CR 12 Tltua, CR
1g Peach Fork CR 30
forest Run, CR' 33 Oak
Groira, CR 78 Chll•
drtn'a Homo C3S 2
Paulina Hill, ~nd CR
403 Mlnerovllle Hill The
angl-r'a "'tlmol~ lor.

S

g

=~~.":,c":n~~·~C: ~~~5876~~Ject

coed the following lim·
Ita lor the various
aervlco
aroli:
1)
$87,500.00;
. 2)
$4,375.00; per program
year. Thlo contract
ohall be lor the period
of July 1,20091hrough
Juno 30,2010. MCJFS
mov, at Ill solo dim•
lion, OKtand tho con·
trac11or a term of one
year contingent upon
the lavel of future lad·
oral and elate funding,
provider offectlveneao
and
demonatroted
need lor the aervlcea
being ollared. For 1
copv of the lulf RFP
contact Jane Banko,
175 Rtca
MCJFS,
S1rHI '
Middleport'
Ohio 45780 (740) 992·
2117oxt. 106. Propooal
muat be submiHid no
later than June17, 2009
at 12:00 noon. Meigs
County Job ' &amp; Family
Services raservea'the
right to ro)oct any and
an bids.
(6) 2, 9, 16
Public Notice
Tho Meigs County ·Of·
fico of Economic ond
Work Force Development Ia oHklng proto
~ovlde
pooala
,..
tourlom aervlooo com·
manclng Ju1v 1, 2oot
through June 30, 201 Q.
Propootll muot be
submiUed no Iaior than
4:30P.M. Jul18 22, 2009.
A copy of the RtqUtat
lor Propoaal Ia ovall·
able at the Mtlga
County EcoiiOIIfk: Deve1opmont Office, 238
Well Main StrHt,
Pomeroy, Olf, For fur·
thtr Information ,..
this
RFP
gardlng
please direct lnqulrleo
via email to dlrector @molgscounty·
olllo.com
(6) 12, 14, 16

'l'bo STINKIN'
tui'I•T'

J&amp;L

BE

30 0

'tENSE, OR VARIANCE
WHICH IS NOT PRE·
CEDED BY A· PR().
POSED ACTION, MAY
BE APPEALED TD THE
ERAC BY FILING A~
APPEAL WITHIN 30
DAYS ·OF ISSUANCE
OF THE FINAL ACTION.
ERAC APPEALS, AC·
COMPANIED BY A $70
FILING FEE WHICH
THE COMMISSION IN
ITS DISCRETION MAV
REDUCE IF BY AFFI·
DAVIT THE APPEL·
L
A
N
T
D E M 0 II S T R AT E S
THAT PAYMENT OF
THE FULL AMOUNT OF
THE FEE WOULD
CAUSE
EXTREME
HARDSHI~
.
' MUST BE
FILED WITH:
ENVI·
RONMENTAL REVIEW
APPEALS
CDMMIS·
_SIDN, 309 SOUTH
FOURTH
STREET,
.ROOM 222, CDLUM·
BUS, OHIO 43215. A
COPY OF THE APPEAL
MUST BE, SERVED ON
THE
DIRECTOR
WITHIN 3 DAYS AFTER
FILING THE APPEAL
WITH THE ERAC.
FINAL ISSUANCE OF
PSEYRR~ICTUTOSEINstR•ACLILNE
.. .
• "
REGIONAL
j;EWER
DISTRICT
VILLAGES OF RACINE
AND SYRACUSE
SU"nON TWP. OH
ACTION
DATE:
0!1121112009
FACILITY DESCRIP. ·
TON: WASTEWATER
IDENTIFICATION NO.:
710121
THIS FINAL ACTION
NOT PRECEDED BY
PROPOSED ACTION
AND IS APPEALABLE
TO ERAC. SYRACUSE·
RACINE
REGIONAL
SEWER
DISJRICT
WASTEWATER TREAT·
MENT NAD COLLEC·
TION
SYSTEM
UPGRADE AND TACK·
ERVILLEAREASEWER
EXTENSION.
(8) 16

To

W~!J!,

Construction ·

• Pole Bulldlngo
• Room Addiii-

Ownot:
J1111et K-11
742·2332

51
55
56
57
58
,
59
60
61

1
2
3
4
5
.
6
7
8
9
10
14

by Lula Campos
Elct1 ltfttr In th1 c:tphtrtlli'KII for WlQther.

·

TOOBy's Clue · Mequa1t v

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OPNTYKK

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P~EVIOUS SOlUTION: •Faith pives you an inner st1angth and a sense of.
balance and perspective i{l life, ·Gregory Peck
,

.•

T~~:t~~~ S©~~~-~£tfS"

WOlD:
IAMI ' .

- . - - - . . . . , . l&lt;lilod by CLAY I. POlLAN - - - - Rtarrong$ lsnars of lito
0 four
Kromblad word1 be·
lew 10 loi'm four 1imple word&amp;.

011, +lOW I
11ER

HUXEME

I-lATE

,

HERE!!
.

SIFT.o•
I'

•Dtckt
• Gtiragao

47

Ctllltrft' CiPhfrcryptogttmt 111 J;rtlltd lfQm QUQII.tiorll by !tmM ll&amp;OJ)Ie, Pill &amp;r~f~.

.JUST

• Vinyl Siding
• RIIPiactl)llnt
Wlndowo
• Roofing ·

I I I I'

SHRIMP
(740) 742-2!6.1
....... m-,.._, ......
$10 per lb Cash only
Pmlis rtqUired In odYII'II.'t

Shipments arrive everY
W~EN

WAS TilE LAST .

·. TIME VOU SENT .

&amp;H
Guttering ·

_,_

~~~·~~~~:~}~~ =~?:~Nfi&gt;E~=IT,Rt~

Ia
ooM'EsTiC STEEL USE DIRECTOR OF ENVI·
REQUIREMENTS AS RONMENTAL PROTEC·
SPECIFIED IN SEC· TION'S (DIRECTOR'S)
TION 153.011 OF THE INTENT WITH RE·
REVISED CODE APPLY SPECT TO THE IS.
TO THIS PROJECt SUANCE,
DENIAL,
COPIES OF SECTION ETC. OF A
!53 Ott OF THE RE PERMIT,
LICENSE,
VISED CODE CAN
ORDER,' ETC. INTER·
OBTAINED FROM ANY ESTED PERSONS MAY
OF THE QFFICES OF SUBMIT
WIIITTEN
THE DEPARTMENT OF COMMENTS DR R.E·
ADMINISTRATI~ SER· OUEST A PUBLIC
VICES.
MEETING REGARDING
Bid documonta may be DRAFT
ACTIONS.
aecurod at the office of COMMENTS OR PUB·
The Molgo County En· L1C MEETING RE·
glnHr, 3411 o Fair• ·QUESTS MUST BE
ground•
Road SUBMilTED WITHIN 30
Pomoroy, Ohio 45788 ; DAYS OF NOTICE OF
Phona Number 740- THE DRAFT ACTION.
$
"PROPOSED
AC·
992 29 11 I
1 10•00 TIDNS" ARE WRITTEN
•
or
non.,..fundllble fH.
Each bid muat be ac- STATEMENTS OF THE
compenltd by thher 0 DIRECTOR'S INTENT
bid bOild In the amount WITH RESPECT TO
of 10% of the bid THE ISSUANCE, DE·
amount wllh 1 aure!Y NIAL, MODIFICATION,
aldlolactory 10 tho REVOCATION, OR RE·
alorellld
MtiQI NEWAL OF A PERMIT,
County Commlooloner LICENSE, · OR VARI·
or bv certlfled checll ANCE. WRITTEN COM·
caahlera chec:k or 1.j: MENTS
AND
' 010 REQUESTS FOR A
ter of credH upon
~ PUBLIC MEETING RE·
vent bank In the
amount of not leu then GARDING A PR().
10% altiMI bid amount POSED ACTION MAY
In the !nor ol IIMI WIBETHIN su B~1STTOEDF
aloret~ld
Mtlga
,.,
County Commloolonor NOTICE OF THE P.R().
Bid
. POSED ACTION. AN
bonds then
be fiCo
companied
bV Proof
of ' ADJUDICATION HEAR·
Authority altho oHICial lNG MAY BE HELD ON
I I · th A PROPOSED ACTION
~n~gent 1 gn ng 1 IF A HEARING RE·
Bids ·shan be aeoled OUEST OR OBJEt:and marked oa Bid 't or: TIDN IS RECEIVED BY
Mtlgs county Paving THE OEPA WITHIN 30
Projtc:l· round 23 ond DAYS OF ISSUANCE
molledordoiiYefldto· OF THE PROPOSED
Mtlgo County Comml,;_ ACT.ION.
WRITTEN
alontra
COMMENTS,
RE·
The Mtlgo County QUESTS FOR PUBliC
CourthOuse, Second MEETINGS, AND A().
SlrHt Pomeroy Ohio JUDICATION HEARING
'
REQUESTS MUST BE
457~ 9
(&amp;) 16 23 30
SENT TO: HEARING
'
CLERK, OHIO ENVIRONMENTAL PROTEI:Public Notice
TION AGENCY, P.O.
BOX 1049, COLUMPUBLIC NOTICE
BUS, OHIO 432161049
THE FOLLOWING AP· (TELEPHONE: 61~
21291. "FINAL AC·

•

~Astro-

PLICATION$ AND/OR TIONS: ARE ACTIONS
VERIFIED
COM· OF . THE DIRECTOR
PLAINTS WERE RE· WHICH ARE EFFEC·
CEIVED, AND THE TIVE UPON ISSUANCE
FOLLOWI.NG DRAFT, OR A STATED EFFEC·
PROPOSED, OR FINAL . TIVE
DATE. .PUR·
ACTIONS WERE IS. SUANT
TO
OHIO
SUED, BY THE OHIO REVISED CODE SEC·
EN Y I R 0 N M E·N TAL TION 3745.04, A FINAL
PROTECTION AGENCY ACTION MAY BE AP•
(OEPA) LAST WEEK. PEA~ED TO THE ENVI·
"ACTIONS" INCLUDE RONMENTAL REVIEW
THE ADOPTION, MODI· APPEALS
COMMIS.
FICATION, OR REPEAL SION (ERAC) 8Y A
OF ORDERS (OTHER PERSON WHO WAS A
THAN . EMERGENCY PARTY TO A PR().
ORDERS); THE IS· CEEDING
BEFORE
SUANCE,
DENIAL, THE DIRECTOR BY FIL·
MODIFICATION OR RE· lNG
AN
APPEAL
VOCATION OF L1· WITHIN 30 DAYS OF ·
CENSES,
PERMITS, NOTICE OF THE FINAL
LEASES, VARIANCES, ACTION. PURSUANT
OR
CERTIFICATES; TO OHIO REVISED
AND THE APPROVAL CODE
SECTION
OR DISAPPROVAL Of 3745.07, A FINAL AC·
PLANS AND SPECIFI· TION ISSUING, DENY•
CATIONS. "DRAFT AC· lNG,
MODIFYING,

44

Antwer IQ PrevfOlll Puzzte
Galaxy unit
Suohlllsh
Detklopo
Block,
as a tlreom
Large home
Donie! or
Pot
Sugar
ouball1u1e
31-dar mo.
Pigment
Droop
Cable movie
chonnll
NNW
oPDOOitt
Plinota, to 17 Arc11c
41 Car lag
pools
canoe
43 Eggo on
-Nimitz
19 Pub plnlo 44 Wine cask
22 leo skating 45 Oolrls'
DOWN
, tlgurea
btlovld·
23 Sov onalher 46 Some hoop.
Unfreeze
way
workoro
Owl
24 Fllfh
48 Diamond
Rollor
25 Myo11quo
Head aile
coootor cry 26 Manage lor 49 8111111
Too quick
oneooll
lumP*
" The King
28 Andrewo
50 Freud's
and I" nome
or Wynter
concerns
Meeno oliO 29 Got
5~ Couple
Llotendor
threadbare 53 Almolphero
Sweet
30 Aloud
54 Sammy
liqueur
31 Fral·party
Soao'a orli.
ConHar
orrlora
Nlfortlll'o
36 Muppol
god
·
grouch
Sum
37 Promo tape

CELEBRITY CIPHER

guess.
REQUEST FOR PRO·
POSALS
Malga County Job and
FomiiV
Services
(MCJFS) Ia aeeklng
proposals from quail·
fled organlzallono or
agenclea to provide
comprohanalva client
oervlcaa In IIMIIoiiOW·
lng 2 aroaa; 1) Non·
E m a r g a n c y
Tranapo~atlon to and
from Medicaid rolm·
buroabie aervlceo. 2)
AI·Riak Pregnancy to
and from Medicaid relmburaable atrvlcea.
Propoaala
must
demonatrale capacity
to 111H1 pr09fam goela.
Qualified organization
or agency may eubmll
a propoeal on one or
bolh of the pragramo.
There will be 2 Hplrt1a
conlracta
awarded.

39
40
41
42

ME FLOWERS 1

SoamlaU Gutters
Rooting, Siding, Gutters

740-653·9657

SCRAM.JEI'S ANSWERS 6/l:wJ

An:ade - Fight - Sworn - Melric - TWICE
i was taught that suooess is not avoiding all mistakeS
but in never making the same one TWICB.

. s ..,&lt;, , ..., ...
Now Selling:

• fonl &amp; Mo1orcmft
Parts • Engines,

~mttleda

Tmnsfer Coses &amp;..

·

Transmissions

• Aftennarket
Sheet

&amp;:

Rosldentlal
FMe F.ollmloits
lAwn Malntn•rf
• Llnclof:JI.....
Seth~

(740) 517oo543l

JdfStetlletn
517-6813

fJ ~rJ
.
: 1\ Do-lt-yourself classified ads
.

'

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

I WISH

ARLO &amp;JANIS

SUPEJ1HEROES
EXISTED IN THE.
11EAL WOIILD.

J
...

·New·Homes

w ..

• Garaaes

• Complete
Remodeling

Ml-112·1171
Srop &amp; Comport~

tl Do-it-yourself convenience
tl Easy to use
t1 Upload photos and graphics
tl Print and Online options
tl7 great packages to choose from

Replacement

Stanley Tree-

Windows and
. VInyl Sidilll!
Specialists, LID
(740) 741-1563
• Siding • VInyl

Trimming
&amp; Removal

Roars

• O..ks • Additions
.•Eiectric:al

•l'luinblq
• Pole Barns

www.mydailysentinel.com ·

SOUPTONUTZ

Windows • Molal
and
llgle

s..

The Daily Sentinel

I•Promptand Quality

T&gt;~eRe

Call Gary Stonley •

was aN 01.0

~WriOSW&lt;I~

a FL'i••

740-591-8044

PSI CONSTRUCTION
Room Additions, RemodellnR, Mel.ol A
Shingle Rool's, New Homes, Sldlq, Dtdls.
Bathroom Ra11od M l· U.u d A

111!111n,.l
I

�:. Page 86 • The Daily Sentinel

www.mydailysentineLcom

Tuesday,Jurte16,2009

Quick fixes available, but will teams spend?
ORLANDO, Fla. (AP) last place Phil Jackson
ex.~ted to end up when he
returned to coach the Los
1\ngeles Lakers was the
NBA finals awards POdium .
.Sure, the Lakers !lad Kobe
B-:r,ant, but that was about it.
· 'I said that I'd have to
· think about it a long time
because this team is quite a
,ways from a championship
even though Kobe Bryant
alwa~s gives you a chance to
win,' Jackson (ecalled of his
discussions · with Lakers
executive Jeanie Buss. his
girlfriend, in 2005.
"So over the next two and a
half months I spent some
time thinking about it and
rekindling my energy to
come back and coach, but
when I came back I didn't
anticipate we 'd win. I'd be
part of it. I thought maybe I'd
build the steP.s to a winning
team, but I dtdn't think I'd be
part of it, and ihis is much
qui.,:lcer than I thought it
would happen."
A good trade can do that.
The last two NBA champions have proved just that, and
the next team willing to make
a bold move might be the one

The

'
sipping champagne
next
June ..
But how many teams dare
to do it during an uncertain
economic climate?
NBA commissioner David
Stem said before the finals
that revenues could be down
as much as I 0 percent next
season, and the league
already has warned its teams
that the salary cap is expect•
ed to decrease in the next few
years.
That means some may
have to put All-Star players
on the market as a way to cut
costs and avoid having to pay
the luxury tax, and a team
willing to open its wallet to
acquire one of them could
see a rapid reward.
Boston was coming off one
of the worst seasons in irs
storied history when it traded
for Ray Allen and Kevin
Garnett in separate deals two
summers ago. The Celtics
surged to the best record in
the NBA, , the greatest oneseason improvement · in
league history, and won their
17th championship by beating the Lakers last June.
By then , Los Angeles was
clearly on the nse after

acquiring Pau Gasol from
Memphis at midseason , The
Spamsh forward averaged
18.6 poinrs in the finals, joining Bryant to give the Lakers
the I -2 punch that every
champion needs.
"He's a dominant post-up
player, extremely versatile,
makes great decisions, arid
obviously when we got him
last year, that reallr, took us
to that next step,' Bryant
satd.
.
Shaquille O'Neal, Amare
Stoudemire and Vince Carter
were among the players who
were believed to be available
at the trade deadline, but
there were no significant
moves. More big-name, bigsalary players will likely be
put on the market around the
oraft or IMer in the summer
- Phoenix already has discussed trading · O'Neal to
Cleveland, according to
reports. ·
The Suns are among the
mariy teams looking to slash.
Harder to find are the ones
willing to spend. ·
The Cavaliers' Dan Gilbert
will, vowing to do whatever
it takes to show LeBron
James the commitment to

~avre says he is considering playing again
· NEW YORK (AP) - but "nothing more than are
Breit Favre says he is con·- .YOU interested.'.'
. sidering coming out of ·HBO said Favre agreed iii
retirement for a second· April to appear on the show
time and the only team he at the request of Buck, the
has talked to about a return longtime baseball and footto the NFL Is the Minnesota ball announce·r. That was
Vikings. ·
'
before his release from the
Favre appeared on the Jets, which _prompted
new HBO show "Joe Buck Minnesota's interest in the
Live" in his first public 39-year-old three-time NFL
appearance since retiring MVP.
from the New York )ets in
Favre has been assessing
February.
the condition of his arm
The three-time NFL MVP and whether he is interested
said Monday night he had in coming out of retirement
surgery' 2 l/2 weeks ago on for a second straight year.
. his throwing arm. He says · The Vikings were a prethe doctor who performed sumed suitor last summer
the surgery on his biceps when Favre renounced his
told him it would take four retirement from the Packers
to five weeks for the NFL's and was told Green Bay
career leader in touchdown was going with Aaron
.passes to know if the proce- Rodgers at quarterback .
diue was a success.
But the Packers weren't
Favre says he has had going ·to let him go to their
contact with the . Vikings, NFC North rivals, and after

a messy divorce with Green
Bay, Favre was shipped to
the Jets.
·
· He threw 22 touchdown
passes and 22 ihterceptions
last season for a team that
finished l-4 to miss the
playoffs.
The Vikings won their
division without him, but
have been unsettled at the
sport's most important
position for the past threeplus years. Quarterback
continues to be viewed as
one of the team's few weak
spots on an otherwise tal·
ent-laden roster.
·
Quarterbacks Tarvaris
Jackson
and
Sage
Rosenfels , have
gone
through an offseason of
uncertainty as rumors swirl
about Favre. The Vikings
report to training camp in
just over six weeks.

In The Pits: NASCAR could accept.m_ore automakers
CHARLOTTE, . N.C. Speedway - a short drive Chase for the champi(AP) - Fans cringed and from the home offices of onship ·are OM-supported.
teams shuddered when Ford, GM and Dodge - If that money dries up, par~ASCAR opened its door&amp; probably didn't sit well ticularly before the ·end of
to Toyota, the first foreign with those in NASCAR.
the season, it will have
•automaker to e.nter a sport
B ut on what groundscan wide-ranging effects on
"10Ut·1 t · aroun d Amencan
·
·
any Amencan
automakers · the competition.
•~ars.
object to NASCAR allowThere would be no, way
· ·· competitors feared that a ing more manufacturers for Richard Cht'ldr·ess
&amp;eJ?-pocketed company into the sport? Chrysler Racing to revive its slumpWilli its free spending and and GM are in Chapter I I ing program before the end
technological savvy would bankruptcy protection, and of the year, and Juati Pablo
fun wild over the loyal the restruciuring plans Montoya would have an
~pporters of Detroit's Big have led to cutbacks in extremely difficult time
T-hree
manufacturers. each auto racing budget.
making his first Chase.
L:ongtime fans simply
Dodge flagship owner Tony Stewart's bid to
cpuldn ' t
stomach
a Roger Penske says it's becoine · the
first
l;~panese car racing side by been business as usual for driver/owner to win a
~ide against the·ir red, his team since Chrysler's championship since the
!fhite and blue models .
filing. But Richard Petty late Alan KulwiCki would
: It's now been five years Motors ports cut salarie_ s bec.ome much harder, and
·
T
d ·
stnce oyota ease mto across the b_oard and la1d many longtt'me loyaJt1·es to
NA Sc AR in the third-tier off at least m.ne. employees . Chevrolet could be test·ed. .
Truck Series - three since .Ja_st w
_ e_ek as 11 prepares fo_ r
So
w·hy
shouldn't
the automaker graduated stgntftcant . shortfalls m . NASCAR let more manuinto ·the premier Sprint Dodge fund mg. , _
. facturers into the sport?
Cup Series - and a for- .The? ,came GM s dect- Two of' the three cUrrent
eign brand didn ' t bring the ~ton late. last week to end participants are struggl\ng
sport to a halt. Nor did it tis sup~rt of team~ m the · 10 pay the bills. and Ford
r.uin the racing. If any- lower-tter Nattonwtde and . ' t
II'
. bl
thing, .its improved both Truck Series, a cutback lsn exac Y on s_ta e
the competition and over- that slashes the bottom ground. Even ~tght_y
all health of the industry. lines at race teams owned Toyora has taken a htt thts
Now. NASCAR says it is by Dale liarnhardt Jr., year: and as the o!'lY playw,illing to · consider other Kevin Harvick and every er 10 Natr.onwtde a~d
foreign automakers .
organization not run by a ~rucks , the company :-v'll
, BMW, Honda, Hyundai. big· time NASCAR star. hkely _have to reconstder
Nis&amp;an , and Mercedes- Th&amp; pullout leaves Toyota spendmg money on those
Benz all have manufactur- as the only manufacturer senes.
(ng plants inside the U.S. supp.orting teams in either
F~a~ce nt::eds to make
- the same criteria Toyota of those series.
dectslons based on the
B.ut GM 's cost-cutting long-term health of !he
inet · when .NASCAR
accepted the automaker could also reach the Cup mdustry. a_nd worrymg
into NASCAR in 200~ - series as early as this about rankling _fans wh~
and Volkswagen is build- week.
and
every only buy Amencan can t
ing a facility in Tennessee. Chevrolet-supported team be a consideration. W!th
Any of those manufactur- has got to be on edge as sp~nso~shtp opportumttes
ei-s
can · approach owners wonder just how dwm~lmg , many teams are
NASCAR about coming on much cash might van ish hangrng on by a thread.
board, and chairman Brian from the 2009 budget .
They need money and they
Never mind the flashes need manufacturer supFrance is apparently willing to listen . . .
of muscle shown by port , and without it, they'll
"We're the pre-eminent Toyota the · past year. eventually vanish from the
place in North America for .. Chevrolet is still the top NASCAR landscape .
oar manufacturers to build player in NASCAR with
The automakers' current
!heir business with an auto great
success
spread economic woes will evenracing group," France said among ~ diverse lineup of tually jeopardize everybefore Sunday's race. "We teams and drivers. Chevy thing a NASCAR fan
remain that and clearly teams have won i 3 of the wants: full fields. competithere ·s some companies last 16 Cup titles. and tive racing and exCiting
that are going to look at Mark Martin's victory drivers to ·cheer every
opportunities that may not Sunday was its eighth in weekend. By opening the
bave even been there in the 15 races this season.
industry to more foreign
past that could be present·
There were 14 Chevy's automakers,
NASCAR
ed in the future."
in .the 43-car field Sunday, could ta.ke a significant
That his comments came and six of the 12 drivers step toward stabilizing the
at Michigan International currently qualified for the future of the sport.

-.
•

·~

.

building a champion. Dallas
owner Mark Cuban has said
he is open to taking on additional salary, but doesn't
believe there will be many
others, even after it seeing tl
work out for the Lakers and
Celtics.
"I don't. Because if it doesn't pay off, the losses could
be huge," he wrote in an email.
Cuban took his risk last
year at the trade deadline
with the acquisition of Jason
Kidd, a .move that sent his
payroll soaring and will force
him to pay about $23 million
in luxury tax for this season's
second-round exjt.
But the NBA is a superstar's league , and they don't
come cheap. The Cavaliers,
Lakers and Celtics, who had
the leag.ue 's three top
records, had three of the five
highest payrolls.
Gasol will cost the Lakers
nearly $35 million in salary
over the next two seasons. So
as good as he is , Gasol wasn~t sure he would ever get his
Wish to get out of Memphis
because not many teams are
willing or able to take on that
kind·of commitment.

Wayne National
Forest plans Smokey
Bear parties, As

Army couple's rarest

asset m Iraq:

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SPORTS
:• WR Stallworth gets 30
days in jail. See Page Bl
,

BY BRIAN

REED .

POMEROY - A former Eastern ·
High School teacher has ' been
·indicted for allegedly procuring
illiCit drugs from students.
Carman Mitchell, 39, Bidwe)l,
was indicted by the Meigs County
Grand Jury on six felony counts:
two counts of corrupting another
with drugs , possession of drugs,
&lt;;omplicity, contributing to the
delinquency of a child and permitting drug abuse.

APphoto

Los Angeles Lakers coach Phil Jackson walks from the
interview room after the Lakers won the 2009 NBA basket- ·
ball championship with a 99·96 win over the Orlando Magic ·
in Game 5 Sunday in Orlando, Fla. The title was the 1Oth of
Jackson's career.
'

Kobe .wasn't going to let the big one get away.
This bt\ing a Twitter world,
himself to think past the next
Kobe Bryant got his con$1'1tugame, a11d Bryant was -so '
lationsfromthebigguy m 140
focused that he was still :
characters or less.
scow lin~ after the Lakers won .
No need for anythinfl more ·
in overttme in G~me 2 to go ,
personal, not on this mght of
up a commanding 2-0 in the
nights for .Bryant. Besi&lt;fes, he
serie~.
·
had new teammates to celeAfterward, he was asked if
brate with, new memories to
he was happy with the win.
savor.
"What's there to be haJllly
Shaquille O'Neal seemed
about?" B~ant asked. "The :
another lifetime away. Bryant
job's not fimshed."
,
was the one with the NBA
They hopped on for the ride
E
.
they believed, ju~t . veryone was happy on this .
fimas
I MVP trophy ·m hand, an because
like Scottie Pippen, Steve mght because the JOb was .
old score finally settled.
K
d
De · finally fmished. Bryant's long
""'ell
l
don't
have
to
hear
err,
an
'
yes,
even
nms , ro·ad to redemption from 1asc
.. ,
Rodman believed in Ch'cago
1
that criticism, that idiotic criti· They kn~w if they did the~ year's embarrassing ,loss toihe ·
cism, anymore," he said. jobs the Lakers would be on Boston Celtics was finally
"'llJat's the biggest thing."
tgp when it was all over and, over, and Jackson's record
Idiotic, maybe. Unfair, pos- even if they didn't, there was a lOth coaching title - in just
sibly.
good chance that . Bryant · 19 years - was finally .
But until Sunday night 'in would find a way to rescue the secured.
Orlando it was never just all team anyway.
Jackson donned a yellow
about Bryant. Like it or not,
The cliampagne flowed in cap made by his children with
until he won a ring of his own· the locker room because the the Roman numeral X ·on it
his legacy was afways .·going'. Lakers had just won the 15th and the years of his 10 titles, a .
to be intertwined with the cen·· title in the team's history. and rare display for a coach who .
ter he won with and feuded even the Zen Master htmself even to the end gave all the :
with Until all of Los Angeles go.t soaked. But . Bryant had credit to his players. He and ,
wasn't even big enough to even more reason to celebrate Bryant had a long embrace .
contain their collective egos. · because. there wasn't anyone and; later in the locker room. ·:
Bryant didn't like it, but he who · wanted this champi- Bryant orchestrated a surprise :
heard.it..Heard it so often that onship as desperately as he champagne shower for his ·
it got to the point he couldn't did.
coach.
·
stomach the thought of talking
LeBron James may have
Jackson would later remem· ·
about it.
been this year's MVP. But ber back to a different time ·
He doesn't have to
Bryant was tile MVP when it and a different Bryant. It was ·
more. The•e
were
Kobe's
mattered most.
early into his first stint as ·
•
Lakers. and this is Kobe's
"It felt like. a big 'ol monkey . coach
of the Lakers an&lt;~
B
·~v
championship.
off my back.," he said.
ryant
had
gotten
caught
up
in
h u· d' 1 ·
He ·was detennined to do
This wasn't a classic cham.
'" a, s.,oo ng
t tsp ay
· htm a game
1
whatever was humanly possi- pionship series. though few m •orou o one mg . neg ect- ,
ble to make sure they didn't that end 4-1 are. The Orlando ing his teammates and turning .
fail. And he delivered m a way Magic had a nice run. but itmto a one-man game. ·
·
that wou.ld have been unimag· . there was never tlte feeling
He brought Bryant in for a '
inable back in the days when that the Lakers would relax chat and told him he needed to ,
his supreme talent was often like they had done against be a leader. Bryant declared he
obscured by his petulimt ways. other teams earlier in the play- ~as ready to becot:ne captain
The 30 points, six rebounds offs.
nght then.
·
· and five assists in the box
Not with Bryant trying to
"Yes.butriobodyisready .to
score didn't. begin to measure make a claim to being one of follow you." Jackson told his :
Bryant's claim to this game, the greatest players ever. Not star.
·
..
just as his equally impressive with thil Jackson sitting
They are now, and they're
stats in the four other games serene y on the bench while NBAchampions because of it.
didn't begin to tally ul[i:o what cementmg his claim to being And while Jackson may j'ust
he mean1to h'ts team. 1s.was
·
the greates t coach ever.
dect"de to call it quits after this
8 ant be'mg M'tc hne1 Jord an,
k
Jac son, of course, is one and go off in search of
' I'mg h'ts •,eammates on to 'tamous '.or h'IS ph'lt osophy of tOller
·
wt~
peac_e. you ~t the '.ee1great things because he living in the moment, some- mg that wmmng this one may
expected nothing less than thing Bryant embraced along make Bryant even more hungreatness from the in.
the way, too. Neither allowed gry for the next.

J.

BREEDOMYOAILYSEI'ITINELCOM

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. Emily Grace Deem

Community
to 'Walk
and Play
for the Park'.

INSIDE
,,
•.

BY BETH SERGENT

.

BSERGENTOMVDAILYSENTINEL.cOM

Moments ,after ·the implosion,

POMEROY · :.... Author
Hans Christian Anderson
Beth Sergentlphotoe once wrote about a. butterthe Ohio pier disappears from view as If lt were part of a well orchestrated magic trick.
fly's journey through life
from the butterfly's point of
view which remmded readers: "Just living is · not
enough. One must have
sunshine, freedom and a little flower."
, Taking their cue from the
wise butterfly, the family of
the l!lte Emily Grace Deem
day but resumed shortly
is preparing a place to allow
after. Traffic on the new
visitors to enjoy "sunshine,
bridge will be halted again
freedom and a little flower" .
today during the implosiOn.
by creating the Emily Grace
As for yesterday's demoliDeem Remembrance Park
tion, Betzing said it went
near the Pomeroy Ball
"as planned." As for what
Fields. The goal is to pro-·
remains of the piers which
vide a safe and fun environsit underwater, they will be .
ment for play and an atmosdrilled, filled with explophere to reflect.
sives and "shot" two feet
On Saturday, the First
below the river bottom.
Community Walk and Play
The . Pomeroy Mason
/.for the Park will be held to
Bridge traces its toots bac~ ·
raise funds for the park's
to .1914 when W.A.
construction. Registration
Compton and W.F. Reed,
for the walk begins at 9 tl;m.
Pomeroy businessmen, took
on the Pomeroy Parking Lo.t
the leadership in promoting
and the actual walk begin:s
the project. The bridge was
at 10 a.m: and is open to all
dedicated on Nov. 12, ,1928
ages. Registration is $15 for
and closed to traffic on Dec.
the walk and those who
30, 2008. It had a cantilever
wish to register early can
span of 1,185 feet, a channel
pick up forms at Main
span of . 665 feet .and an
Street Party Supplies on
over-all length of 2,000 feet
East Main Street. Door
which was nearly a half
prizes will be awarded at
mile. Four concrete piers,
noon. Proceeds from the
with two anchor spans
walk go •toward the' park's
I
between the shoreward piers
I
constructton. .
·
supported. 1,847.75 feet of
· In addition to the walk,
"steel
superstructure"
there will be family activi'
according to a 1946 newspaties on · the parkmg lot,
per anic le. The larger piers The Ohio pier to the old Pomeroy Mason Bridge waits on its including inflatables, a
fate yesterday afternoon.
I bounce house, giant slides,
Pluse see Pier. AS
obstacle courses, face painting and crafts. Rockin'
Ull
Reggie will also be providing music and Emi's Place
release includes $728,000 in gram is brand new, local training and help families will be serving up grilled
Recovery Zone Economic officials h~ve bad little dis· strugglin~. with this tough burgers. sausages an~ other
.
snacks.
Development Bon~ and cussion about how the bond economy._ .
$1,092,000 in Facility Bonds program could be used, but
Accordmg to deta1ls . Emily's mother and ,
available to Meigs County.
said it appears it will be a released by . the Treasury 1\. father. Dave and Jamie
Recovery Zone Bonds, valuable resource in consid- Department today, the pro- Deem of Pomeroy, estimate
created under the American ering funding sources for gram includes two new they need to raise $125,000
Recovery and Reinvestment infrastructure.
·
· types o(' Recovery ·Zone to complete the park. So far
Act. are targeted to areas
"These bonds will help in Bonds : Recovery Zone $21,000 has been raised
panicularly affected by sig- so ma!Jy ways," Wilson Economic Development which is getting them close
nificant job loss and wm said. "This bond program Bonds and Recovery Zone J to purchasing the ptayhelp state and local govern- will make it easier for Facility Bonds.
I ground's biggest equipment
ments obtain capital for counties and private busi·
Recovery Zone Economic piece that costs around
much needed economic nesses to borrow money at Development Bonds are $25,000. The Deems are
development projects. U.S. a better rate. The counties another type of taxable Build meeting with park designers
Rep. Charlie Wilson said.
and businesses that make America Bond that allow ·\ A&amp;M Outdoor Concepts on
Economic Development up my district can then use State and local governments Friday in Columbus to firm
Director Perry Varnadoe that money to impr(lve
\
PIMse s.e load. AS
Pluse see Dee.._ As
said Tuesday smce the pro· inft:astructure, increase job

Ohio Pier goes down, ·
West Vi • ·a follows today
BY BETH SERGENT
BSERGENTIIMYDAILYSEI'ITINEL.COM

POMEROY - The last
visible piece of the old
Pomeroy Mason Bridge, the
West Virginia pier, will. be
imploded itt I p.m. today,
.
weather permitting.
At 2 p.m. yesterday, workers with Duane Houkom
Inc. out of Texas imploded
the top, visible portion of the
Ohio pier with 5()() pounds
of a C4 mixture. The
remainder of the pier, which
sits underwater, will be
implode&lt;! in a similar fashion, according to Cary
Betzing, project en'gineer
with the Ohio Department of
Transportation. Betzing said
workers could not drill all
the -way down the pier all at
once because of tapers in the
pier which wouldn't allow
workers to get close enough
to the outside edges since
the drill used is vertical.
Traffic was stopped ,along
the Ohio River, on West
Main Street iri Pomeroy and
on the Bridge of Honor for a
brief period of time yester-

·~ •Gospel sing

; at riverfront stage.
' 'SeePageAS
:. Meigs youth
.participate in band
;camp. See Page A3.

••
'•

•

.

OWtita on Page A3
' '. '

SECI'IONS -

ta PAGI!S

Bv BRIAN J. REED
eA~EOOMYDAILYSEI'ITINELCOM

.POMEROY - More than
$ Ll million in additional
bond authority will be made
$litorials
available to Meigs County
As
through the late!it campo·
Obituaries
nent of the federal economB Sec.tion ic stimulus program.
Sports
U.S. Rep. Cbarlie Wilson,
A3 D·Bridgeport. announced
Weather
that the U.S. Treasury
e •009 i&gt;hio Valley Publishing eo. · Depanment
released

Comics

.

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8? 9 .

1

• 1us program
A.dditional bond authority availahie •1.....ough sttmu

'

Classifieds

,·ibr&lt;.~tion

;:

· PageAS
·-~. Elmore Flowers, 90
'•Mary Kilpatrick, 94
• Kelli Shawn Robie, 42

Calendars
l \

.. '··

. '

........

• Contributing to the delinquency of
· a minor, a first-degree misdemeanor.
. • Permitting drug abuse, a fifthdegn:e felony.
.
Williams confirmed that more
than one juvenile was involved in
the offenses, and that they were students at the school.
Mitchell is scheduled to appear
before Judge Fred W. Crow fil on
the charges on July 6. The secret
indictment was originally filed June
12. Secret indictments are not made
part of lhe public record until the
. defendant is served. ·

OBITUARIES .

Annie's Mailbox

lig.htw~ight.low 6..

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hon,t'O\\ ncr usc
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INDEX

STIHL"'

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• Two counts of corrupting anoiher with drujls. that she induced or
cal!sed a JUVenile to commit a
felony drug abuse offense, specifically possession of or trafficking in
hydrocodone and marijuana, one
charge a second-degree felony and
the other a fourth-degree felony.
• Possession of hydrocodone, a
third-degree felony.
• One count of complicity, for
allegedly soliciting another to
commit the offense of obstructing
justice. The charge is a fourthdegree felony.

__

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Dahlberg

Gifts lfe'll Love .

Mitchell re!\igool her position in
the district in february. In addition '
to her teaching duties, Mitchell had
served as an advisor to the Naiional
Honor Society and senior plays.
. Prose,cuting Attorney Colleen S.
Williams said Tuesday the charlles
allege that Mitchell , in a continumg
course of action between the begin·
ning of the 2008-2009 school year
and Jan. 15, arranged to purchase
marijuana and pain medication
from students.
The charges against the former
teacher are as follows:

•

$45,477,000
in bond authority for local governments
in
Ohio's Sixth Congressional
District under the Recovery
Zone Bonds program. The

•

1

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