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                  <text>log onto www.mydailysentinel.com for archive • games • features • e-edition • polls &amp; more

Middleport•Pomeroy, Ohio

INSIDE STORY

WEATHER

SPORTS

For The Record....
Page 3

Partly sunny.
High near 84. Low
around 65.... Page 2

URG holds Class
of 1965 reunion....
Page 6

OBITUARIES
Vicki Jean Boso, 53
Marsha A. Clary, 61
Steven L. Haning, 52

Fredric Lynn Nibert, 70
Douglas Oldaker, 67
Patsy Scott, 73
Pansy Thompson, 93
50 cents daily

TUESDAY, JULY 2, 2013

Vol. 63, No. 105

Unemployment up slightly in Meigs County
Sarah Hawley

shawley@civitasmedia.com

OHIO VALLEY — After three
consecutive months of declining
unemployment in both Meigs
and Gallia counties, one county
saw an increase while the other
remained the same.
According to figures released
last week, Meigs County saw an
increase of .2 percent in the month
of May, while Gallia County remained consistent at 7.9 percent.
Meigs County’s unemployment now stands at 11.1 percent,

the second lowest rate posted in
the county this year. The lowest
rate for Meigs County in 2013
was in April at 10.9 percent. The
year’s highest rate was 14.4 percent in January.
Gallia County’s unemployment
rate remained unchanged from
7.9 percent in April, the lowest
rate of the year. Gallia County’s
highest rate of 2013 was in January at 11 percent.
Meigs County continues to
rank second in the state, behind
Pike County. Pike County has a
rate of 11.9 percent.

Other counties with a rate
above 10 percent are Scioto
County at 11 percent, Adams
County at 10.6 percent, Jefferson
County at 10.3 percent, and Morgan County at 10.1 percent.
Gallia County is currently tied
for 21st with Ross and Lawrence
counties. Gallia County was tied
for 23rd in the state with Lucas,
Henry, Ross, and Richland counties. Gallia County was ranked
tied for 37th in March with Hocking, Ashland, and Erie counties.
When it comes to unemployment rates — in terms of rank-

ings, it’s a good thing when a
county’s number rises with the
higher the ranking, the lower the
unemployment.
Mercer
County
remains
ranked 88th with an unemployment rate of 4.3 percent, up from
4.1 percent in April. Holmes
County has the second lowest
rate at 4.7 percent, followed by
Delaware County at 4.9 percent.
Ohio had an unemployment rate
of 6.9 in May, up from 6.7 percent
in April down from 7.3 percent in
March. The national unemployment rate is 7.3 percent.

Overall
winner
Chloe
Shockley is
presented
a check
by Heath
Clemons of
Taylor Motors — the
Contest
Sponsor.
Pictured
with her
are her
mother,
Lindy
Shockley,
father,
Steven
Shockley,
and brother, Cohen
Shockley.

Daily Sentinel photos

Cutest kids contest winners announced
OHIO VALLEY — The winners in Ohio Valley Publishing’s Cutest Kids Contest were Chloe Shockley and
Isabella Grace Hill.
Shockley was the overall winner, receiving more than
2,000 votes over the seven week contest.
Shockley is the daughter of Steven and Lindy Shockley of Canal Winchester. She plans to donate a portion
of her prize money to the Children’s Miracle Network,
a gift he father plans to match.
Shockley is six years old and in the second grade.
Hill was the winner in the 0-12 month category. Hill
is 8 months old and is from Elkview, W.Va. She is the
daughter of Willoughby K. and Tonya Hill. Her mother
stated that they plan to donate the prize money to an
8 year old in their home town who was recently diagnosed with bone cancer.
The contest was made possible through title sponsor
Taylor Motors of Athens and category sponsor Home
National Bank of Racine.
The contest generated 52 submissions and over
10,000 votes throughout seven weeks.

John Hoback, Vice President of Home National Bank,
he is pictured with the winner of the Newborn Category, in which Home National Bank sponsored. The winner — being held by her father, Willoughby K. Hill — is
Isabella Grace Hill.

Meigs commemorating Civil War anniversary
Charlene Hoeflich

choeflich@cititasmedia.com

POMEROY — Plans for
Meigs County’s commemoration of the 150th anniversary of the Civil War,
specifically the Buffington
Island battle fought at Portland in July 1863 , were advanced at Saturday’s meeting of committee members
at the Meigs Museum with
Karen Hassel, Ohio Historical Society chairman of
event programming.
Hassel presented a tentative schedule of activities
to take place the weekend
of July 20-21 describing the
commemoration as “a family oriented event with a
living history component,
which will tell the story of
what happened there and
how it impacted the surrounding community.”
It was reported that
Bruce McKelvey has a 12

foot banner promoting the
commemoration erected
on a truck which he will be
displaying at the Portland
Community Center, and
also driving in July 4 celebrations. At the same time,
program schedules will be
distributed.
As for bringing the cannons from the State House
lawn to Portland, Hassel
said that remains undecided at this time. However,
she reported that two Civil War flags from the Ohio
Historical Society collection will be displayed at
the Community Center,
one being a 7x7 foot flag,
which will require guards
around the clock. A special exhibit case will also
be brought in from Columbus for the display of Civil
War items in the collection of the Portland Community Center museum.
She said some skirmish-

es may be taking place, but
the emphasis of the commemoration will be on the
living history component.
“While firing demonstrations are certainly an option, traditional battles are
beyond the scope of the
event. This will be meaningful weekend at this historic site and tell the story
of what happened there
and how it impacted the
surrounding community.”
While the reenactors
will be arriving at the
camp site in Buffington Island Memorial Park on Friday, the official opening of
events will not take place
until Saturday at 11 a.m.
when the commemoration
of the anniversary begins
with the dedication of the
Heritage Trail, which runs
across Ohio and leads to
Buffington Island where
the only significant battle
of the Civil War in the

State of Ohio took place.
Ed Sharp of the Battle of
Buffington Island Preservation Association, , who
has been instrumental in
marking the Heritage Trail
across Ohio, along with
Fred Lynch, president of
the Sons of Union Veterans, will be speaking at the
opening ceremony.
The schedule also calls for
remarks by representatives
from the office of Gov. John
Kasich, the Ohio Historical Society and the Meigs
County
Commissioners
along with Representative
Debbie Phillips and Senator
Lou Gentile at the 11 a.m.
opening program.
Forty-five minute wagon
tours over sections of the
trail will be offered from
noon to 4:30 p.m. On
board will be historical
characters telling the story
See ANNIVERSARY ‌| 3

A total of 43 Ohio counties
had unemployment rates lower
than the state rate.
In Southeast Ohio, other unemployment numbers include, Athens County, 7.4 percent; Jackson
County, 8.8 percent; Washington
County, 6.7 percent; Lawrence
County, 7.9 percent; and Hocking
County, 7.3 percent.
In May 2012, Meigs County’s
unemployment rate was 11.7,
while Gallia’s rate was 8.6 percent. Ohio’s rate in May 2012
was 7.3 percent and the national
rate was 8.2 percent.

Felman to cease
operations for
three months
Register Staff

PPRnews@civitasmedia.com

NEW HAVEN — Felman Production, LLC, announced
on Friday it will immediately cease operations at its New
Haven facility for an expected period of three months.
A company press release stanted this decision was made
due to continuous challenging ferrosilicomanganese market conditions. However, during this three-month period,
the Company’s in-house slag processing unit will remain
operational.
As previously announced by Felman in, the combination of the decline in prices for silicomanganese over the
past several months and the continuing increase in manufacturing costs, such as electricity, led Felman to temporarily shut down one of its furnaces starting May 31 and
to reduce its workforce.
A company spokesperosn said since the economic and
market conditions continue to deteriorate, the decision
to cease operations of all of its three furnaces immediately was difficult, but inevitable. Within the next two
months, Felman plans to reevaluate market conditions to
determine whether operations will resume earlier or if the
plant will remain closed for an additional period of time.
Felman, which employs 211 individuals, produces ferrosilicomanganese, an essential deoxidizer and alloy additive used in the manufacturing of steel. According to Felman, notice of the closure has been given to employees,
vendors and customers in an effort to make the transition
as smooth as possible. While no layoffs are expected during the first two months of closure in compliance with
laws and ongoing maintenance activities, Felman said it
anticipates working with the appropriate state and union
officials to facilitate unemployment and other related
benefits for those employees impacted by the decision to
keep the plant closed for a longer period of time.
“While it pains us to make this very difficult decision,
after exploring a variety of options we concluded it is
no longer economically viable to operate in the current
market environment,” Mordechai “Motti” Korf, chief
executive officer of Felman’s parent company, Georgian
American Alloys, Inc., said. “This decision is in no way
reflective of the skilled and dedicated workforce Felman
employs, but rather the economic conditions that have severely hindered our ability to remain operational.”
Founded in 2006 and headquartered in New Haven, Felman is said to be a leading producer of high-quality ferrosilicomanganese, an essential deoxidizer and alloy additive
used in the manufacturing of steel. Felman Production’s
products are distributed to steelmakers across North and
South America through its sister company Felman Trading, Inc., an international ferroalloys trading company.
Felman Production is one of only two companies in the
United States that produces what it calls “critically important” silicomanganese.

Racine July 4 celebration
to be held Thursday
Staff Report

tdsnews@civitasmedia.com

RACINE — The annual Racine Fourth of July
celebration will be held beginning at 10 a.m. on
Thursday, July 4.
Line up for the parade will begin at 9:15 a.m.
at Southern High School. Those arriving at the
high school to drop off parade participants are
asked to limit vehicles due to the construction.
The parade will begin at 10 a.m., traveling
the traditional route through the village and
back to the school. The theme for this year is
“Rockin the Red, White, and Blue.”
Due to construction at the school, the flag
raising ceremony will take place at Home National Bank on the corner of Fifth and Elm
streets during the parade. The parade will
stop at the bank where members of the American Legion will conduct the flag raising as
the band plays.
Following the parade, the Racine Fire Department will hold a chicken BBQ and have homemade ice cream available.
The day’s festivities will conclude with the
fireworks display at 10 p.m. at Star Mill Park.

�Page 2 • The Daily Sentinel

www.mydailysentinel.com

Tuesday, July 2, 2013

Free STEM Camps Meigs County Community Calendar
offered for high
school students
MARIETTA — Washington State Community College
is offering free STEM summer camps for high school
students.
STEM camps exploring science, technology,
engineering, mathematics, and medicine have been
underway since early June, and will conclude the first
week of August. WSCC is registering now for the
Cyber-Media Camp, which runs from July 8-11, and
The Nightly News Camp, which runs from July 30-Aug
2. Students in the Cyber-Media Camp will learn how
to create basic 3D models using 3D Studio Max 2013
software. They will also use a game engine to create
realistic 3D environments using BOIDS, textures,
terrain, and objects. In the Nightly News Camp,
participants will learn behind-the scenes techniques
for news program productions.
They will also be taught videography, editing, reporting,
and writing. Funding for these camps is provided by the
National Science Foundation in participation with Washington State Community College and The Ohio State University. Visit www.wscc.edu/camps or call 740.374.8716,
ext 2101 for more information and to register.

Tuesday, July 2
POMEROY — The Auxiliary of Drew Webster
Post 39, American Legion,
will meet at 1 p.m. at the
hall.
ALFRED — Orange
Township Trustees will
meet at 7:30 at the Orange
Township building.

Wednesday, July 3
MIDDLEPORT — The
American Red Cross will
hold a blood drive from 9
a.m. to 3 p.m. at the Middleport Church of Christ
on Main Street in Middleport. Walk-ins welcome or
schedule your appointment
at 1-800-REDCROSS or
online at www.RedCrossBlood.org (enter sponsor
code: MCofC). Presenting

donors will receive a free
Red Cross Baseball Hat,
while supplies last.
HARRISONVILLE
— The Scipio Township
Trustees will hold their
regular monthly meeting
at 7 p.m. at the Harrisonville Fire House.
POMEROY — The
Meigs County Commissioners will hold their
weekly meeting at 11 a.m.
The meeting was moved
due to the July 4 holiday.
TUPPERS PLAINS —
The Eastern Local Board
of Education will meet
at 5 p.m. to consider the
budget/appropriations for
the fiscal year 2014 and
any personnel items. The
meeting will be held in
the Eastern Elementary li-

Health Department closed
The Meigs County Health Department will be closed on July 4. Normal
Tuesday: A chance of showers and thunderstorms, hours will resume at 8 a.m. on July 5.
mainly after 10 a.m. Partly sunny, with a high near 84.
Calm wind becoming south around 5 mph in the afterJuly 4th activities
noon. Chance of precipitation is 40 percent.
RACINE — The annual Racine
Tuesday Night: A chance of showers and thunder- Fourth of July celebration will be
storms before 1 a.m., then a slight chance of show- held begin at 10 a.m. on Thursday,
ers. Mostly cloudy, with a low around 65. South wind July 4 with the parade. Line up will
around 5 mph becoming calm in the evening. Chance be at Southern High School, and
of precipitation is 40 percent. New rainfall amounts of those taking part are asked to limit
less than a tenth of an inch, except higher amounts pos- the vehicles coming in and out of
sible in thunderstorms.
the lot due to the construction.
Wednesday: A slight chance of showers, then a chance The flag raising will take place
of showers and thunderstorms after 11 a.m. Mostly at Home National Bank during
cloudy, with a high near 83. Calm wind becoming south the parade. Following the parade
around 6 mph in the afternoon. Chance of precipitation is will be a chicken BBQ at the Fire
50 percent. New rainfall amounts of less than a tenth of an Department. Fireworks will be held
inch, except higher amounts possible in thunderstorms. at 10 p.m.
Wednesday Night: A chance of showers and thunderMIDDLEPORT — The Middlestorms. Mostly cloudy, with a low around 67. Chance of port Fourth of July celebration will be
precipitation is 50 percent. New rainfall amounts of less held on Thursday, July 4, with events
than a tenth of an inch, except higher amounts possible beginning at 4 p.m., and concluding
in thunderstorms.
at 10 p.m. with fireworks. Donations
Independence Day: A chance of showers, with thun- are currently being accepted by the
derstorms also possible after 2pm. Mostly cloudy, with a Middleport Community Association
high near 82. Chance of precipitation is 50 percent.
to help expand the fireworks display.
Thursday Night: A chance of showers and thunderWILKESVILLE — The annual
storms. Mostly cloudy, with a low around 67. Chance of Fourth of July parade in Wilkesville
precipitation is 50 percent.
will be held at 11 a.m. on July 4. RegFriday: A chance of showers and thunderstorms. Part- istration is free and begins at 10 a.m.
ly sunny, with a high near 83. Chance of precipitation is Prizes will be awarded for various
50 percent.
parade categories. For more informaFriday Night: A chance of showers and thunderstorms.
tion call 669-5646.
Mostly cloudy, with a low around 67. Chance of precipitation is 40 percent.
Ice cream social/band concert
Saturday: A chance of showers and thunderstorms.
SYRACUSE — The Big Bend
Partly sunny, with a high near 82. Chance of precipitation
Community Band will present a free
is 50 percent.
Saturday Night: A chance of showers and thunder- outdoor concert on Friday evening,
storms. Mostly cloudy, with a low around 68. Chance of at 7 p.m. at the Syracuse Community
Center ice cream social. A variety of
precipitation is 50 percent.
Sunday: A chance of showers and thunderstorms. Part- homemade ice cream will be offered
ly sunny, with a high near 84. Chance of precipitation is for sale.
The Community Band is spon40 percent.
sored by the Riverbend Arts Council in Middleport and consists of
about 15 local adult and high school
players. Band members come from
Meigs, Athens, Gallia, and Mason
counties. Director is Toney Dingess. Concert selections will include
Peoples (NASDAQ) — 21.52
AEP (NYSE) — 44.47
a salute to the Armed Forces, patriAkzo (NASDAQ) — 19.09
Pepsico (NYSE) — 82.04
otic music, and marches.. The conAshland Inc. (NYSE) — 84.47
Premier (NASDAQ) — 11.94
Big Lots (NYSE) — 31.78
cert will be presented rain or shine.
Rockwell (NYSE) — 84.99
Bob Evans (NASDAQ) — 47.86
Rocky Brands (NASDAQ) — 15.13
It is suggested that those attending
BorgWarner (NYSE) — 86.24
Royal Dutch Shell — 63.99
take a lawn chair.
Century Alum (NASDAQ) — 9.55
Sears Holding (NASDAQ) — 42.01

Local stocks

Wal-Mart (NYSE) — 74.59
Wendy’s (NYSE) — 5.91
WesBanco (NYSE) — 27.15
Worthington (NYSE) — 32.82
Daily stock reports are the 4 p.m.
ET closing quotes of transactions
for July 1, 2013, provided by Edward Jones financial advisors
Isaac Mills in Gallipolis at (740)
441-9441 and Lesley Marrero in
Point Pleasant at (304) 674-0174.
Member SIPC.

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in CREDIT
CARDDEBT?
Over $10,000 in credit card bills?
Can’t make the minimum payments?

Wednesday, July 24
TUPPERS PLAINS —
The Eastern Local Board
of Education will meet at
6:30 p.m. for their regular
July meeting. The meeting
will be held in the Eastern
Elementary library conference room.

Thursday, July 11
CHESTER — Shade
River Lodge 453 will meet
at 7:30 p.m. at the hall. Refreshments served following the meeting.
Friday, July 12
MARIETTA — The
Buckeye
Hills-Hocking
Valley Regional Develop-

Tractor Parade
MEIGS COUNTY — The Big
Bend Farm Antiques Club will sponsor a tractor ride (parade) on July 6.
The ride will leave the Meigs County
Fairgrounds at 9:30 a.m. to go to Rutland’s Ox Roast for games and display. The group will depart between
3:30-4 p.m., traveling through Middleport and Pomeroy and then back
to the fairgrounds by 6 p.m. Any
tractors is welcome, must display
slow moving emblem and be able to
maintain 10 MPH. For more information call (740) 742-3020.
Vacation Bible School
LONG BOTTOM —The Fellowship Church of the Nazarene will be
having Bible School July 8 to 12 from
6 p.m. to 8:30 p.m. each day. The
them is “SonQuest Rainforest.” The
church is located at 54120 Fellowship Drive. For more information call
Tina Carson, 74-378-6278.
RUTLAND — The Rutland Freewill Baptist Church will be having
Vacation Bible School beginning July
8-12 from 6-8:30 p.m. each evening.
The theme will be SonWest Roundup
with western type attire. A cookout
will be held on Saturday, July 13 and
two bicycles will be given away for
each class. The names of all having
perfect attendance will be collected
and two names drawn. All area children are invited. Parents too. For
more information call (740) 7422507. Ed Barney Pastor
Immunization Clinic
POMEROY — The Meigs County

Birthdays
Tuesday, July 2
REEDSVILLE — Faye
Watson will observe her
90th birthday on Tuesday, July 2. Cards may
be sent to her at 50051
SR 681, Reedsville, Ohio
45772. She can be telephoned at 667-0795.

Health Department will conduct as
childhood and adolescent immunization clinic from 9-11 a.m. and
1-3 p.m. on Tuesdays, at the Meigs
County Health Department, 112 E.
Memorial Drive in Pomeroy. Please
bring children’s shot records. Children must be accompanied by a parent or legal guardian. Please bring
medical cards and/or commercial insurance cards, if applicable. A donation is appreciated, but not required.
Ice Cream Social
SALEM CENTER — The Salem
Township Volunteer Fire Department will hold its 35th annual ice
cream social on Saturday, July 20.
Serving will be from 11 a.m to 3 p.m.
at the fire house which is located on
SR 124 in Salem Center. In addition
to 10 flavors of homemade ice cream,
sloppy joe sandwiches, hot dogs, and
pie will be available. For more information contact Linda Montgomery
at 669-4245.
Traffic Advisory
MEIGS COUNTY — Ohio 143 (located just 0.25 miles south of State
Farm Road) will be reduced to one
lane to allow for a bridge replacement project. During construction
there will be a 10’ width restriction.
Traffic will be maintained with a portable traffic light. Weather permitting, both lanes of Ohio 143 will be
open September 1, 2013.
MEIGS COUNTY — The westbound lane of Ohio 124 (located at
the 63.91 mile marker, about 1.5
miles north of Reedsville) will be
closed to allow for a bridge replacement project. Traffic will be maintained by traffic signals and concrete
barriers. Weather permitting, both
lanes of Ohio 124 will be open November, 1 2013.
MEIGS COUNTY — Ohio 124
(located 0.4 miles north of Williams Run Road) will be reduced
to one lane to allow for a bridge
replacement project. Traffic will be
maintained by traffic signals and
concrete barriers. Weather permitting, both lanes of Ohio 124 will
reopen August 31, 2013.

Middleport youth makes dean’s list
RICHMOND, KY —
Garrett Lee Wisniewski of
Middleport is one of 2,749
Eastern Kentucky University students who earned
Dean’s List honors for the
Spring 2013 semester.

Wisniewski is an Occupational Safety major at EKU.
To achieve Dean’s List
honors at Eastern, students
attempting 14 or more credit
hours must earn a 3.5 grade
point average out of a possi-

BURIED
in CREDIT
CARDDEBT?

ble 4.0. Students attempting
13 credit hours must earn
a 3.65 GPA, and students
attempting 12 credit hours
must earn a 3.75 GPA.
Eastern Kentucky University is a comprehensive

university serving approximately 15,500 students on
its Richmond campus, at
its educational centers in
Corbin, Danville, Manchester, Somerset and Lancaster, and throughout Kent

Riverside women’s
team takes fourth

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Not available in all states

Tuesday, July 9
TUPPERS PLAINS —
The Tuppers Plains Regional Sewer Board will
have their regular meeting
at 5 p.m. at the TPRSD office.

Rutland’s annual Ox Roast
RUTLAND — The Rutland
Fire Department’s annual ox
roast,traditionally held in conjunction with observance of Independence Day, will be held on Saturday,
July 6. At 10 a.m. a parade will kick
off the celebration after which activities will move to the firemen’s
park where there will be games, refreshments, bounce houses, tractor
events, wrestling and musical presentations concluding with a fireworks display at 11 p.m.

� WE CAN GET YOU OUT OF DEBT QUICKLY

for your FREE consultation CALL

ment District Executive
Committee will meet at
11:30 a.m. at 1400 Pike
Street in Marietta.

Meigs County Local Briefs

Ohio Valley Forecast

Champion (NASDAQ) — 0.201
City Holding (NASDAQ) — 40.04
Collins (NYSE) — 63.58
DuPont (NYSE) — 52.72
US Bank (NYSE) — 36.31
Gen Electric (NYSE) — 23.34
Harley-Davidson (NYSE) — 55.54
JP Morgan (NYSE) — 52.49
Kroger (NYSE) — 34.67
Ltd Brands (NYSE) — 49.59
Norfolk So (NYSE) — 72.61
OVBC (NASDAQ) — 22.08
BBT (NYSE) — 34.02

brary conference room.
CHESTER — The Chester Shade Historical Society will meet at 7 p.m.

Submitted photo

The Mason, W.Va., Riverside women’s golf team consisting of (left to right) Becky Anderson, Joyce Quillen, Dianna Lawson and Donna Nease won the Western
Section of the 2013 West Virginia State Intra-Club
team matches. The team advanced to the finals held
at Cress Creek Country Club in Shepherdstown, W.Va.,
in which the Parkersburg Country Club won first place
while the Riverside team tied for fourth.

for your FREE consultation CALL

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60412541

�Tuesday, July 2, 2013

The Daily Sentinel • Page 3

www.mydailysentinel.com

For The Record
911
June 28
10:49 a.m., Rocksprings Road, unconscious/unknown
reason; 12:09 p.m., East Memorial Drive, weakness; 1:07
p.m., Rainbow Road, difficulty breathing; 1:17 p.m., Ohio
124, high blood pressure; 8;42 p.m., Mulberry Avenue,
abdominal pain.
June 29
12:00 p.m., Long Run Road, difficulty breathing; 12:33
p.m., Seneca Drive, difficulty breathing; 3:55 p.m., East
Memorial Drive, difficulty breathing; 4:23 p.m., East Memorial Drive, allergic reaction; 4:31 p.m., Mount Olive
Road, ATV accident; 5:30 p.m., Leading Creek Road, laceration; 5:59 p.m., West Main Street, difficulty breathing;
7:50 p.m., Pearl Street, chest pain; 8:29 p.m., Thompson
Way, seizure/convulsions; 9:27 p.m., Ash Street, difficulty breathing.
June 30
7:26 a.m., Pearl Street, chest pain; 11:08 a.m., Bashan
Road, high temperature; 1:21 p.m., East Memorial Drive,
high blood pressure; 1:36 p.m., Beech Street, unknown;
9:22 p.m., Roy Jones Road, dehydration.
July 1
2:08 a.m., East Second Street, chest pain; 7:27 a.m.,
Gilkey Ridge Road, difficulty breathing.
Land Transfers
POMEROY — The following land transfers were recently recorded with the Meigs County Recorder’s Office:
Jorma Ludwik Kaukonen, Daniel Stanley, Vanessa Lillian
Kaukonen, Shirley Stanley to Daniel Stanley, Shirley Stanley, deed, Scipio; Jorma Ludwik Kaukonen, Daniel Stanley,
Vanessa Lillian Kaukonen, Shirley Stanley to Jorma Ludwik Kaukonen, Vanessa Lillian Kaukonen, deed, Scipio;
Jorma Ludwik Kaukonen, Vanessa Lillian Kaukonen to
Daniel Stanley, Shirley Stanley, deed, Scipio;
Charlotte A. Harkins, Robert E. Harkins to Ohio Power
Company, American Electric Power, easement, Olive;
Marjorie H. Drake, Hope Drake to Ohio Power Company,
American Electric Power, easement, Olive; Edward E. Adams, Tammy R. Adams to Ohio Power Company, American
Electric Power, easement, Olive; Kenneth Tolliver, Carol
Toliver to Ohio Power Company, American Electric Power,
easement, Olive; Chester Buckley, Dorothy Buckley to Ohio
Power Company, American Electric Power, easement, Olive;

David H. Weber, Deborah S. Weber to Ohio Power
Company, American Electric Power, easement, Olive; DV
Weber Construction to Ohio Power Company, American
Electric Power, easement, Olive; Jaymar Incorporated to
Ohio Power Company, American Electric Power, easement, Olive; Donna J. Spears, Benny Spears to Fannie
Mae, Federal National Mortgage, sheriff deed, Middleport Village; Century National Bank to Lamar Lyons,
sheriff deed, Lebanon;
George Parker to Rainbow Oil and Gas, Jeffrey M.
Burke, easement, Chester; Terry Stethem, Melanie
Stethem to Rainbow Oil and Gas, Jeffrey M. Burke,
easement, Chester; Donald E. Salmons, deceased,
Donald Salmons, deceased, to Carol Salmons, affidavit, Sutton; Virgil Bradford Teaford II, Deanna G.
Teaford, Martha Sue Teaford, April L. Harmon, Albert
Harmon to Julie A. Spaun, Shannon E. Spaun, Bill E.
Spaun, Ruth A. Spaun, deed, Sutton;
Erin Sue Haye, Chris Jesse Haye to Adam J. George,
deed, Chester; Gail Malcolm Miller, deceased, to Elaine
Miller, affidavit, Middleport Village/Salisbury; David M.
Booth, Ruby C. Booth to R. Caudill Chippi Corbett, deed,
Salem; Jull A. Dillard to Dale E. Miller, deed, Middleport
Village; Roscoe Mills to Hai V. Duong, Robert L. Rogers,
deed, Village Pomeroy/Salisbury; Damon E. Fisher, Joni
A. Fisher to William E&gt; Pickens, deed, Lebabnon;
Claudette J. Pickens, deceased, Claudette Joan Pickens, deceased, to William E. Pickens, affidavit, Lebanon;
Wells Fargo Bank, Option One Mortgage Loan, Homeward Residential Incorporated to Edgart LTD, deed,
Rutland; Village of Middleport to Jeffrey D. Brown, easement, Salisbury/Middleport Village; Farmers Bank and
Savings Company to Tracy M. Pickett, Lewis O. Pickett,
Judy A. Pickett, deed, Sutton; Lori D. Burton, Lori D.
Ritchie, Robin A. Dugan, Robin A. Wolfe, William R.
Wolfe to Nathaniel W. Eblin, deed, Pomeroy Village;
Joyce A. Johnson to Chris A. Lane, Kelly R. Lane,
deed, Salisbury; Franklin E. Ihle, Kathy L. Ihle to Christopher Roush, deed, Racine Village; Courtney Ash, Matthew Ash to Ashley Roush, deed, Letart; JP Morgan
Chase Bank, Chase Home Finance LLC, Chase Manhattan Mortgage to Secretary of Housing, deed, Salem; Peter C. Steininger to Vickie Steininger, deed, Olive; A.W.
Nease, Donna Nease to Ohio Power Company, American
Electric Power, easement, Sutton; Donald W. Mayer, Lin-

da L. Mayer to Ohio Power Company, American Electric
Power, easement, Pomeroy Village;
Wilma A. Henderson to Ohio Power Company,
American Electric Power, easement, Orange; Robert
M. Scarberry, Cathy Scarberry to Ohio Power Company, American Electric Power, easement, Salisbury;
Merlin Tracy, Melva Tracy, Melva L. Tracy to Ohio
Power Company, American Electric Power, easement,
Salisbury; Ronald E. Hensley, Patty Hensley to Ohio
Power Company, American Electric Power, easement,
Olive; Beverly J. Hensley, Henry L. Hensley to Ohio
Power Company, American Electric Power, easement,
Olive; Gerald W. Burke, Joyce A. Burke to Ohio Power
Company, American Electric Power, easement, Orange; Joseph Graci to Ohio Power Company, American
Electric Power, easement, Olive;
Jeffrey B. Russell, Pamela M. Russell to Ohio Power
Company, American Electric Power, easement, Olive;
Thomas W. Karr, Diana S. Karr to Ohio Power Company,
American Electric Power, easement, Olive; Troy Kelley
to Ohio Power Company, American Electric Power, easement, Olive; Sue M. Webster, Robert A. Webster to Ohio
Power Company, American Electric Power, easement,
Olive; John M. Harkins to Ohio Power Company, American Electric Power, easement, Olive; Boggess Real Estate
Corporation to Ohio Power Company, American Electric
Power, easement, Olive;
Aaron Sellers, Kristina Sellers to Ohio Power Company, American Electric Power, easement, Sutton; Melanie
L. Blevins to Joseph W. Davis Jr., deed, Chester; June
Ridenour, James L. Ridenour to Janet Leigh Ridenour,
deed, Chester; Delores A. Evans, deceased, Delores Evans, deceased, Jeffrey B. Evans to Alice Davis, Sabrina
J. Sales, Regina K. Lewis, James E. Evans, certificate of
transfer, Salem;
Alice Davis, Kenneth Davis, Sabrina J. Sales, Regina K.
Lewis, James E. Evans, Jeffrey B. Evans, Douglas Dixon,
Lori Evans to Alice Davis, Kenneth Davis, deed, Salem;
Larry E. Hoffman, Leverna Hoffman to Rebecca L. English, deed, Middleport Village; Garnet L. Swisher, Gail
Lynn Swisher Erlenbach, Eldon Erlenbach, Bobbie Jill
Swisher Price, Robert S. Swisher Jr., Bobbie Jill Swisher
Price to Craig Arthur Carinci, Mary Gawith Carinci,
Leon Virgil Evans, Andrea Jo Evans, Mark Alan Perry,
Kathleen Ann Perry, deed, Orange.

Prosecution wrapping up in WikiLeaks trial
FORT MEADE, Md. (AP)
— Al-Qaida leaders reveled in
WikiLeaks’ publication of reams
of classified U.S. documents,
urging members to study them
before devising ways to attack
the United States, according to
evidence presented by the prosecution Monday in the courtmartial of an Army private who
leaked the material.
“By the grace of God the
enemy’s interests are today
spread all over the place,”
Adam Gadahn, a spokesman
for the terrorist group, said in
a 2011 al-Qaida propaganda
video. The video specifically
referred to material obtained
from WikiLeaks, according to
a written description of the
propaganda piece submitted at

the trial of Pfc. Bradley Manning.
Prosecutors also submitted excerpts from the winter 2010 issue of al-Qaida’s online magazine
“Inspire,” telling readers that
“anything useful from WikiLeaks
is useful for archiving.”
The government also presented evidence that al-Qaida
leader Osama bin Laden asked
for and received from an associate the Afghanistan battlefield
reports that WikiLeaks published and that Manning admittedly leaked. The evidence was
a written statement, agreed to
by the defense, that the material was found on digital media
seized in the May 2011 raid on
bin Laden’s compound in Abbottabad, Pakistan. Bin Laden
was killed in the raid.

The evidence came as prosecutors neared the end of their case
in Manning’s court-martial on
charges he aided the enemy by
sending hundreds of thousands
of documents to the anti-secrecy
group WikiLeaks while working
an intelligence analyst in Iraq in
2009 and 2010.
Lead prosecutor Maj. Ashden Fein said the government
planned to call its final witness
Monday afternoon. That witness, a Defense Intelligence
Agency counterintelligence official, would be the government’s
28th live witness in the trial that
began June 3. The government
also has presented more than 50
written witness statements.
Manning says he leaked the
war logs to expose the U.S. mili-

tary’s disregard for human life.
He also has admitted leaking
more than 250,000 State Department diplomatic cables that he
said exposed secret deals and
U.S. duplicity in foreign affairs.
The 25-year-old native of
Crescent, Okla., is charged with
21 offenses, including aiding
the enemy, which carries a possible life sentence. To prove that
charge, prosecutors must show
that Manning, without proper
authority, gave intelligence to
WikiLeaks, knowing it would be
published online and be seen by
al-Qaida. Prosecutors also must
show he did so with evil intent.
Manning has acknowledged
sending WikiLeaks more than
700,000 Iraq and Afghanistan
war logs and State Department

Student loan rates double Anniversary
without Congress’ action
From Page 1

for them on graduation day
if Congress doesn’t take action before it breaks again
for the month of August.
“I’m upset by it,” said
Kolton
Gustafson,
a
George Washington University political science
major whose coming senior year will pack twice
the interest as his junior
year. “I wish there was a
larger reaction to it.”
“Many students are
saying and thinking, ‘I’ll
pay it later,’” the Grand
Junction, Colo., native
added. “That’s why you
don’t see more people
fighting back.”
Students only borrow
money for one year at a
time. Loans taken before
Monday are not affected
by the rate hike.
Both political parties
tried to blame the other for
the hike and student groups
complained the increase in
interest rates would add to
student loan debt that already surpasses credit card
debt in this country.
“The federal loan pro-

gram is burying them in
debt. With the doubling
of the interest rate, Congress is pushing student
borrowers to their limit,”
said Michael Russo, federal program director
with consumer advocate
U.S. PIRG.
Lawmakers knew for a
full year the July 1 deadline was coming but were
unable to strike a deal to
dodge that increase. During last year’s presidential
race, both parties pledged
to extend the 3.4 percent
interest rates for another
year to avoid angering
young voters.
But the looming hike
lacked sufficient urgency
this year and Congress
last week left town for the
holiday without an agreement. Instead, the Democratic-led Senate pledged
to revisit the issue as soon
as July 10 and retroactively restore the rates for
another year — into 2014,
when a third of Senate
seats and all House seats
are up for election.

games and viewing exhibits at the Portland Community Center museum.
Meanwhile, at Chester on Saturday there
will be exhibits of artifacts for viewing in
the oldest standing courthouse in Ohio,
along with an afternoon Civil War tea at
the Chester Academy, and open air activities featuring the demonstration of pioneer
skills. The day at Chester will conclude
with a Civil War ball from 7 to 9 p.m.
Sunday’s activities at the Memorial
Park will begin at 10 a.m., when living history events resume and a church service
is held. The afternoon will be filled with
family oriented activities including games
played in that time period.
Visitors are then invited to visit the
Meigs County Historical Society in Pomeroy anytime from noon to 3 p.m. on Sunday to view Civil War artifacts on display
along with the 1864 presidential voting
ballots of 697 Meigs County soldiers scattered in 11 states where battles between
the north and south continued.

The Middleport Community Association
Invites You to

COME CELEBRATE!

July 4th

in Middleport @ Dave Diles Park

Invites you to join our
2013 Children’s Summer Reading Program!

FREE FREE FREE

Dig into reading

Activities may include programs on archaeology,
animals that live underground, caves, rocks &amp; more.
Stop in the library to register &amp; pick up a flyer of
summer events. All programs are free of charge.

For more information, Call 740-992-5813
or visit our website, www.meigslibrary.org

0
4-1
ent
m
y
in
erta sic b 4-8
Ent Mu ueser en”
Gr er Th ut
Kip emb ldies b 5
m
4
“Re ying O s 8-9:
e
a
i
l
p ood
G

New This Year!

Team and Singles
Cornhole Tournaments
5 and 7 pm
info 740-525-5764

Fireworks
10:00 pm

P
Li ara
@ ne u de 6
R Da p @ pm
“P eme iry Q 5:3
ull m
b ue 0
P ed- er en
Pe edal Push our
ts
S e e d &amp; edc ti
on
!

For more information: 740-992-5877

60424468

Meigs County District
Public Library

60428272

WASHINGTON
(AP)
— College students taking
out new loans for the fall
term will see interest rates
twice what they were in the
spring — unless Congress
fulfills its pledge to restore
lower rates when it returns
after the July 4 holiday.
Subsidized
Stafford
loans, which account for
roughly a quarter of all
direct federal borrowing,
went from 3.4 percent interest to 6.8 percent interest on Monday. Congress’
Joint Economic Committee estimated the cost
passed to students would
be about $2,600.
“It’s kind of surprising;
that’s a big jump,” said
Rebecca Ehlers, an Iowa
State University senior
majoring in math.
A $1,000 subsidized
Stafford loan is part of her
financial aid package and
she said she’s reconsidering
how she pays for school.
“I may work more or
ask my parents for money
rather than going through
all that,” said Ehlers, 21.
She — and millions of
others who use federal
student loans to pay for
their education — has
some time before she has
to make that decision. But
not much.
“The only silver lining
is that relatively few borrowers take out student
loans in July and early August. You really can’t take
out student loans more
than 10 days before the
term starts,” said Terry
Hartle, a top official with
colleges’ lobbying operation at the American
Council on Education.
But that is little consolation for students looking at
unexpected costs waiting

of the raid and describing the aftermath of
the Battle of Buffington Island.
At 11:30 a.m. the traditional memorial
service with the placing of wreaths at the
monument will be conducted by CabotBlessing Camp 126, Jim Oiler, Commander, and Benjamin Fearing, Camp 2.
At 3 p.m. the group will be moving to
the McCook Monument where a re-dedication program is being organized by
Keith Ashley. The wagons will be available
to transport visitors from the Memorial
Park to the site of the monument.
The living history program organized
by USA Commander Kyle Yoho and SCA
Commander J.R. Sharp, will feature displays and demonstrations which present a
picture of the lifestyle of the military during the Civil War.
Included in the afternoon family activities at the park will be drill exercises with
wooden guns, participation in the living history demonstrations, and time for

diplomatic cables, along with
several battlefield video clips.
He told the military judge
in February that he leaked the
material to document “the true
costs of the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan,” including the deaths
of two Reuters employees killed
in a U.S. helicopter attack.
Manning has pleaded guilty
to reduced charges on seven of
eight espionage counts and two
computer fraud counts. He also
has pleaded guilty to violating a
military regulation prohibiting
wrongful storage of classified
information. The offenses he has
admitted carry a combined maximum prison term of 20 years.
Despite his pleas, prosecutors
are seeking to convict him of the
original charges.

�The Daily Sentinel

Opinion

Page 4
Tuesday, July 2, 2013

Is search for Snowden Momentous Supreme Court
turning into sideshow? term ends with flourish
Sharon Cohen
AP National Writer

Edward Snowden’s continent-jumping, hide-and-seek
game seems like the stuff of
a pulp thriller — a desperate
man’s drama played out before a worldwide audience
trying to decide if he’s a hero
or a villain.
But the search for the
former National Security
Agency contractor who
spilled U.S. secrets has
become something of a
distracting sideshow, some
say, overshadowing the
important debate over the
government’s power to
seize the phone and Internet records of millions of
Americans to help in the
fight against terrorism.
“You have to be humble
on Day 1 to say, ‘This isn’t
about me. This is about
the information.’… I don’t
think he really anticipated
the importance of making
sure the focus initially was
off him,” says Mike Paul,
president of MGP &amp; Associates PR, a crisis management firm in New York.
“Not only has he weakened
his case, some would go as
far as to say he’s gone from
hero to zero.”
Snowden, he says, can
get back on track by “utilizing whatever information
he has like big bombs in
a campaign,” so the focus
returns to the question of
spying and not his life on
the run.
Snowden’s disclosures
about U.S. surveillance to
The Guardian newspaper
and The Washington Post
have created an uproar in
Washington that shows no
signs of fading.
A petition asking President Barack Obama to
pardon Snowden has collected more than 123,000
signatures.
But the head of the
Senate Intelligence Committee, Sen. Dianne Feinstein, D-Calif., meanwhile,
has called Snowden’s
disclosure of top-secret
information “an act of
treason.” House Speaker
John Boehner, R-Ohio, is

among those who’ve called
Snowden a “traitor.”
The president has dismissed the 30-year-old
Snowden as a “hacker” and
he had pledged that the
U.S. won’t be scrambling
military jets to snatch
Snowden and return him
to the U.S., where he faces
espionage charges.
Snowden is possibly
holed up in the wing of a
Russian airport hotel reserved for travelers in transit who don’t have visas to
enter Russia. He might be
waiting to hear whether
Ecuador, Iceland or another country might grant
him asylum. He fled Hong
Kong last weekend after being charged with violating
American espionage laws.
Some say Snowden is losing ground in the battle for
public opinion by cloaking
his travels in secrecy, creating more interest in his efforts to elude U.S. authorities than his allegations
against the government.
By disappearing in Russia, he loses “access to
rehabilitate himself in the
public’s mind,” says William Weaver, a professor
at the University of Texas
at El Paso who has written
about government secrecy.
“You have to keep selling
yourself, if you will, and do
it in a smart way so people
don’t get tired of you. …
His only hope was to hit
a grand slam home run
with the public and make it
stick. For every hour that
he’s not doing something
like that, he’s in trouble.”
Others say Snowden’s
personality is irrelevant
and doesn’t change his major argument — that U.S.
intelligence agencies have
lied about the scope of its
surveillance of Americans.
Gene Healy, a vice president of the libertarian
Cato Institute, recently
wrote an essay denouncing pundits who’ve labeled
Snowden a “grandiose narcissist” and a “total slacker.” He maintains that the
former contractor’s revelations are all that matters.
“The content of the mes-

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sage is far more important
than the character of the
messenger,” he wrote in
the Washington Examiner.
Healy said “the most
disturbing”
part
of
Snowden’s
disclosures
was the massive amounts
of data collected on
citizens. “The potential
abuse of that information
represents a grave threat
to American liberty and
privacy regardless of
Snowden’s character and
motivations,” he wrote.
David Colapinto, general counsel at the National
Whistleblowers Center,
says it’s not surprising
Snowden has become an
“easy target’” facing harsh
criticism from those at
the highest levels of government — people “who
have a bigger megaphone
than he does.”
“The name-calling and
whatever may happen in
the future — we don’t
know what he’s going to
do,” he adds. “We don’t
know what the government is going to do. … It’s
pretty hard to pull out a
crystal ball.”
So far, America seems
to be divided, according to
polls taken in the first days
after Snowden’s leak of topsecret documents. Many
people initially applauded
the former contractor for
exposing what they saw
as government spying on
ordinary Americans. Since
then, though, government
officials have responded
with explanations of the
program and congressional testimony attesting to
the value of surveillance in
thwarting terrorist attacks.
In one poll, a June 12-16
national survey by the Pew
Research Center and USA
Today, 49 percent of those
surveyed said the release
of classified information
about the NSA program
serves the public interest,
while 44 percent found it
harmful. For those under
30, the gap was dramatically larger. That group
said it’s good for the public
by a 60-34 percent margin,
according to the survey.

Mark Sherman

The Associated Press

WASHINGTON — A historic Supreme
Court term ended with a flourish of major
rulings that marked a bitter defeat for racial minorities and a groundbreaking victory for gay rights, all in the space of a day.
The justices struck down parts of two
federal laws — the Voting Rights Act
and the Defense of Marriage Act — that
were passed with huge bipartisan majorities of Congress.
Yet only one justice at the center of this
conservative-leaning court, Anthony Kennedy, was on the winning side both times.
Kennedy joined the four more conservative
justices on voting rights and he was with his
liberal colleagues in the gay marriage case.
Just in that 24-hour span, the rulings
demonstrated two truths about the court
under the leadership of Chief Justice
John Roberts.
The 58-year-old lawyer who cut his
teeth in the Reagan administration put
to rest any questions he may have raised
about his conservative credentials a year
earlier when he cast the deciding vote to
uphold President Barack Obama’s health
care overhaul.
Roberts has shown himself to be a skillful judge who can get even ideologically
differing colleagues to agree on narrow
rulings that help form the basis for more
definitive later judgments, as happened in
the voting rights case.
The chief justice sees a benefit to the court
as an institution and to his longer-term goal
of saying, “We could go farther here, but let’s
wait and see,” said Kermit Roosevelt, a University of Pennsylvania law professor and
former high court law clerk.
But Roberts can move the court no further
to the right than Kennedy is willing to go.
Divisive civil rights cases dominated
the high court’s work in the past nine
months, including a challenge to affirmative action in higher education that ended
in a compromise ruling.
The second gay marriage case, involving
California’s constitutional ban on samesex marriage, also produced something
of a compromise. It ended in a technical,
legal ruling that clears the way for samesex unions in California, but said nothing
about a constitutional right to marriage.
The justices also delivered important
victories for business in cases that limited
class-action claims and lawsuits over international human rights abuses, allowed
authorities to collect DNA from people
they arrest, ruled that human genes cannot be patented and called into question
agreements between pharmaceutical companies that delay the entry of cheaper generic drugs on the market.
The timing of the voting rights and
gay marriage decisions was not planned,

Congress shall make no law
respecting an establishment 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
redress of grievances.
The First Amendment to the U.S. Constitution

Letters to the Editor
Letters to the editor should be limited to 300 words.
All letters are subject to editing, must be signed and
include address and telephone number. No unsigned
letters will be published.
Letters should be in good taste, addressing
issues, not personalities. “Thank You” letters will not be
accepted for publication.

but was perhaps inevitable, because the
court’s toughest cases typically are the
last ones resolved before the justices take
a long summer break.
Last Tuesday, Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg wondered what had happened to
the court’s “usual restraint” in the voting
rights case. On Wednesday, Justice Antonin Scalia said society’s debate about marriage should “be settled democratically
rather than by judicial command.”
Paul Clement, a former Bush administration official who argued that the federal
marriage law should be upheld, said what
links those two cases, apart from Kennedy’s vote, is the idea that Congress did not
give sufficient respect to states.
It subjected some states to strict federal
oversight of elections based on old data rather than current conditions, Roberts said in
the voting rights case. Congress made second-class citizens of same-sex couples in denying them federal benefits even after states
extended them the right to marry, Kennedy
said in the gay marriage case.
“It’s certainly the thread that united the
votes of Justice Kennedy in the DOMA case
and the voting rights case,” Clement said.
Roberts first expressed reservations
about the voting rights law when he was a
young lawyer in the Reagan White House.
A debate was then taking place in Congress
about extending the law’s key requirement
that states with a history of racial discrimination in voting get Washington’s approval
before changing the way they hold elections. This “preclearance” provision, often
called a crown jewel of civil rights law, was
enormously effective in heading off the
creative ways some states devised to keep
minorities from voting.
When the justices looked at the voting
rights law four years ago in a case from
Texas, Roberts wrote a consensus opinion
that pointedly criticized the law as being
focused on past problems, but he sidestepped the larger question that the court
now has emphatically answered.
The affirmative action decision ordered
lower courts to cast a more skeptical eye
on college admissions programs, but did
not throw out the University of Texas program that was being challenged. Nor did
it make a major pronouncement about affirmative action.
But it may have set the stage for a more
consequential ruling in future years, in
much the way that the court’s voting
rights decision flows from its 2009 case.
In the affirmative action case, seven
justices formed the majority, including
the unlikely pair of justices who have
benefited from affirmative action, Sonia
Sotomayor and Clarence Thomas. Sotomayor has spoken positively of affirmative action, while Thomas has been an
unyielding critic who has voted to ban
all racial preferences.

The Daily Sentinel
Ohio Valley
Newspapers
111 Court Street
Pomeroy, Ohio
Phone (740) 992-2156
Fax (740) 992-2157
www.mydailysentinel.com
Sammy M. Lopez
Publisher
740-446-3242, ext. 15
slopez@civitasmedia.com
Stephanie Filson
Managing Editor

�Tuesday, July 2, 2013

The Daily Sentinel • Page 5

www.mydailysentinel.com

Obituaries
Steven L. Haning

Steven L. Haning, 52, of Albany, passed away Saturday,
June 29, 2013, at his residence.
Born August 31, 1960, he was the son of the late Ray
N. Haning and Mary McMurray Haning. He was a woodworker and farmer.
He is survived by a sister, Cheryl (Ronald) Butcher;
brother, Christopher (Jessica) Haning; special uncle, Allen McMurray; aunt, Gertrude Monroe; his step mother,
June Haning; several aunts, uncles, nieces and nephews.
In addition to his parents, he was preceded in death by
a brother, Ralph N. Haning.
Services will be held at 11 a.m., Wednesday, at BigonyJordan Funeral Home. Burial will be in White Oak Cemetery. Visitation will be one hour prior to services at the
funeral home.

You may sign the register book at www.bigonyjordanfuneralhome.com.

Vicki Jean Boso

Vicki Jean Boso, 53, of Racine, Ohio, passed away July
1, 2013, at Overbrook Center, Middleport, Ohio.
Born February 28, 1960, she was the daughter of Claire
C. Boso and Ann Patterson Boso. She was a homemaker.
Vicki attended Racine First Baptist Church. To some
people, Vicki may have been considered “stubborn and
bullheaded,” but to us she was the toughest and strongest-willed of nine children.
Survivors are mother, Ann Boso of Portland, Ohio;
sisters, Nancy Everson and husband, Bob of Hillsboro,
Ohio, Peggy Hill of Racine, Ohio, Debbie Parsons and
husband, Dave of Portland, Ohio, and Bonnie McAngus

‘Dark day’: Flags lowered
for 19 dead firefighters

Death Notices
Clary

Marsha A. Clary, 61, of
Crown City, died on July 1,
2013, at her residence.
Services will be held at
11 a.m., Saturday, July 6,
2013, at the Willis Funeral
Home. Burial will follow
in Ridgelawn Cemetery.
Friends may call from 6-8
p.m. on Friday, July 5,
2013.
A full obituary will
appear in Wednesday’s
Tribune.

Nibert

Fredric Lynn Nibert, 70,
of Letart, W.Va., passed
away June 29, 2013, at
Pleasant Valley Hospital.
Funeral services will be
held at the Deal Funeral
Home in Point Pleasant,
W.Va., at 11 a.m., July 3,
2013, with Pastor Brian
Dunham officiating. Burial
will follow in the Forest
Hills Cemetery in Flatrock,
W.Va. Friends may visit the
family on Tuesday evening,
July 2, from 6-8 p.m. at the

funeral home. Online condolences can be made at
http://www.dealfh.com/.

Oldaker

Douglas Turman Oldaker, 67, of West Columbia,
W.Va., passed away at St.
Mary’s Hospital on June
30, 2013.
Funeral services will
be held at 4 p.m. at the
Deal Funeral Home in
Point Pleasant, W.Va., on
Wednesday, July 3, 2013
with Pastor James Hughes
officiating. Burial will follow in the Zerkle Cemetery
in West Columbia. Friends
may visit the family on
Wednesday, from 2-4 p.m.
at the funeral home prior
to the service. Online condolences can be made at
http://www.dealfh.com/.

Scott

Patsy Jeanne Scott, 73,
Ashville, Ohio, formerly
of
Gallipolis,
died
unexpectedly on Friday,
June 28, 2013.
Funeral services will be

held at 1 p.m., Tuesday,
July 2, 2013, at the McCoyMoore Funeral Home, Vinton, with Rev. Paul Voss officiating. Friends may call
from 12-1 p.m. on Tuesday
YARNELL, Ariz. (AP) — As the windat the funeral home. In ac- blown blaze suddenly swept toward them,
cordance with her wishes, an elite crew of firefighting “Hotshots”
cremation will follow.
desperately rushed to break out their
emergency shelters and take cover on the
Thompson
ground under the heat-resistant fabric.
Pansy (Morris) ThompBy the time the flames had passed, 19
son, 93, of Rio Grande, men lay dead in the nation’s biggest loss of
Ohio, passed away Sunday, firefighters in a wildfire in 80 years.
June 30, 2013, in AbbyThe tragedy Sunday evening all but
shire Place, Bidwell, Ohio. wiped out the 20-member Granite MounFriends may call from tain Hotshots, a unit based in the small
1-2 p.m., Wednesday, July town of Prescott, Prescott Fire Chief Dan
3, 2013, at the McCoy- Fraijo said as the last of the bodies were
Moore Funeral Home, retrieved from the mountain. Only one
Wetherholt Chapel, 420 member survived, and that was because
First Ave, Gallipolis. Fu- he was moving the unit’s truck at the
neral services will be held time, authorities said.
The deaths plunged the town into
2 p.m., Friday, July 5,
2013, at the Rollins Funer- mourning, and Arizona’s governor called
al Home, 1822 Chestnut it “as dark a day I can remember” and orSt., Kenova, West Virginia, dered flags flown at half-staff.
“We are heartbroken about what hapwhere friends may call one
hour prior to the service pened,” President Barack Obama said
Friday. Burial will follow while on a visit to Africa. He predicted
in Maple Hill Cemetery, the tragedy will force government leaders
to answer broader questions about how
Kenova, West Virginia.
they handle increasingly destructive and
deadly wildfires.
The lightning-sparked fire — which
had exploded to about 13 square miles by
Monday morning — destroyed about 50
homes and threatened 250 others in and
around Yarnell, a town of 700 people in
the mountains about 85 miles northwest
of Phoenix, the Yavapai County Sheriff’s
Those pressures finally Department said.
Residents huddled in shelters and resstarted to ease this year:
taurants,
watching their homes burn on
Demand from utilities startTV
as
flames
lit up the night sky in the
ed to rise as coal stockpiles
forest
above
the
town.
dwindled. Proposals for

White House has coal
country on the defensive
COLSTRIP, Mont. (AP)
— After several years of
taking a beating from the
poor economy, new pollution rules and a flood of
cheap natural gas, the coal
industry was on the rebound this year as mining
projects moved forward in
the Western U.S. and demand for the fuel began to
rise, especially in Asia.
But almost overnight,
coal is back on the defensive, scrambling to stave
off a dark future amid
President Barack Obama’s
renewed push to rein in climate change.
The proposal, with its
emphasis on cuts in carbon
dioxide emissions from
new and existing power
plants, would put facilities
like the 2,100 megawatt
Colstrip electricity plant in
eastern Montana in regulators’ cross hairs. That has
profound spin-off implications for the massive strip
mines that dot the surrounding arid landscape
of the Powder River Basin
and provide the bulk of the
nation’s coal.
Montana’s sole member
of the U.S. House of Representatives bluntly declared
that the administration
had decided to “pick winners and losers” in the energy sector with its plan.
“He wants to move toward
shutting down the coal industry,” Republican Rep.
Steve Daines said of the
president.
Energy Secretary Ernest
Moniz and representatives
of the Environmental Protection Agency rejected
claims that the administration’s plan would exclude
coal. They pointed to billions of dollars being spent
by the government on
technologies to decrease
emissions by capturing
and storing carbon dioxide
from coal plants.
Yet widespread application of those technologies
is years away, and Obama
made clear in announcing
his proposal that he intends
to halt the “limitless dumping of carbon pollution”
from power plants. He directed the Environmental
Protection Agency to craft
rules to make that happen.
The Colstrip plant,
which dominates the skyline of a coal-centered
town by the same name,
burns about 10 million

tons of coal a year from a
nearby mine and provides
power to customers as far
away as Seattle.
According to the EPA,
the plant churned out more
than 15 million tons of carbon dioxide in 2011, the latest year for which data was
available. That’s roughly
equivalent to the emissions
from about 3 million cars
running for a year.
On Tuesday, as Colstrip’s
towering
smokestacks
poured out a constant
plume of steam and smoke
into otherwise blue skies,
pipefitter Joe Ashworth,
60, was nearby packing up
his RV. He spent the past
two months working on a
maintenance project at the
plant. The traveling union
worker said people in the
coal industry were nervous
that efforts to curb emissions could cost jobs and
drive up electricity prices.
“Go green sure. But do
you have an electrical vehicle that will pull my trailer
so I can make a living?” he
asked.
Despite a frequently
heard boast that the state
has more coal than anywhere else in the U.S.,
antipathy toward the administration’s plan is not
universal in Montana. One
of Daines’ predecessors,
former Rep. Pat Williams,
said last week that warming temperatures pointed
to a “doomsday” scenario
if carbon emissions were
not addressed.
Others maintain that the
worries over lost jobs are
overstated. On Tuesday, the
Natural Resources Defense
Council plans to release a
report detailing new jobs
that would be created because of all the work needed to retrofit plants such as
Colstrip. The environmental group said its analysis
of the administration’s plan
shows 3,600 jobs in Montana alone.
Among utilities elsewhere in the country, the
trend away from coal has
been well underway over
the past several years.
Rock-bottom natural gas
prices — coupled with
huge price-tags to clean
up mercury and other pollutants from burning coal
— drove many utilities to
simply switch fuels.

and husband, Buddy of Pomeroy, Ohio; brothers, Steve
Boso, Tom Boso, Charles Boso and wife Mandy, all of
Portland, Ohio, and Michael Boso and wife, Holly of
Middleport, Ohio; several nieces and nephews, and many
friends; and special friend, J. F. Young of Racine, Ohio.
She was preceded in death by her father, Claire; nephew, J.B. Boso; brother-in-law, Max Hill, Sr.; and close
friend, Mark Beegle.
Funeral services will be held at 3 p.m., Friday, July 5,
2013, at Roush Funeral Home, Ravenswood, W.Va. Burial
will follow in Ravenswood Cemetery. Friends may visit
the family from 1-3 p.m. on Friday, July 5, 2013, at the
funeral home.
Condolences may be expressed to the family by email
at roush94@yahoo.com, or on our website at www.roushfuneralhome.com.

major new mines by Cloud
Peak Energy and Arch
Coal, Inc. gained traction.
And coal finally started
to reclaim its competitive
edge as gas prices rose.
Colstrip is among those
plants that have remained
open, in part due to heavy
capital investments. That
includes $88 million spent
on air pollution controls
since 2000, according to
PPL Montana, which coowns the 360-employee
plant and operates it on behalf of five other utilities.
Carbon dioxide controls
would cost far more: $430
million to install the equipment, plus annual operating and maintenance costs
of $900 million, according
to a PPL study from several years ago.
That would equate to $53
for every ton of coal burned,
the company said. That’s
about five times the price of
the fuel itself in the nearby
Powder River Basin, according to pricing information
from the Energy Information Administration.
Still, PPL representatives and others in the
industry see room for
maneuvering before carbon capture becomes
mandated. Key details of
the administration’s plan
still must be worked out,
including the scope of
emissions cuts and their
timetable. The broad goal
is to achieve a 17 percent
reduction in greenhouse
gas emissions below 2005
levels by 2020.
Assuming the goal
doesn’t shift, the key question will be how those reductions are spread among
different sectors of the
economy, from transportation and power production, to manufacturing.
Even without the president’s latest announcement, the Supreme Court
ruled five years that carbon dioxide and other
greenhouse gases are pollutants that the government must regulate, said
Quin Shea, vice president
of the Edison Electric Institute, which represents
investor-owned utilities in
the U.S. and has worked
with the administration
on the climate issue.

It was unclear exactly how the firefighters became trapped. Southwest incident
team leader Clay Templin said the crew
and its commanders were following safety
protocols, and it appears the fire’s erratic
nature simply overwhelmed them.
Brian Klimowski, meteorologist in
charge of the National Weather Service’s
Flagstaff office, said there was a sudden
increase and shift in wind around the time
of the tragedy. It’s not known how powerful the winds were, but they were enough
to cause the fire to grow from 200 acres to
about 2,000 in a matter of hours.
The Hotshot team had spent recent
weeks fighting fires in New Mexico and
Prescott before being called to Yarnell,
entering the smoky wilderness over the
weekend with backpacks, chainsaws and
other heavy gear to remove brush and
trees as a heat wave across the Southwest
sent temperatures into the triple digits.
As a last-resort effort at survival, members are trained to dig into the ground
and cover themselves with a one-man,
bag-like shelter made of fire-resistant
material, Fraijo said.
“It’s an extreme measure that’s taken
under the absolute worst conditions,”
Fraijo said. Eeven then, the shelters can
be undone by heat and flame and do not
always save lives.
Arizona Forestry Division spokesman
Mike Reichling said all 19 victims had deployed their shelters.
The flames apparently enveloped the
shelters. Autopsies were scheduled to determine how the firefighters died.
Gov. Jan Brewer’s voice caught several
times as she addressed reporters and residents at Prescott High School.

60430956

�The Daily Sentinel

Sports

TUESDAY,
JULY 2, 2013

mdssports@civitasmedia.com

Williams loses to Lisicki in stunner

LONDON (AP) — Serena
Williams joined a growing list of
marquee names eliminated early
at this wild and unpredictable
Wimbledon.
The defending champion and
five-time Wimbledon winner
failed to close out a see-saw third
set Monday, dropping the last
four games to Sabine Lisicki of
Germany and losing 6-2, 1-6,
6-4 in the fourth round. The result ended Williams’ career-best
34-match winning streak.
It was the latest in a string of

improbable exits to jolt the tournament, with defending champion Roger Federer and Rafael Nadal knocked out in the first three
days along with Maria Sharapova
and Victoria Azarenka.
“I probably couldn’t be more
disappointed,” Williams said. “I
think I may have backed off of a
success. I was playing something
successful. I didn’t continue that
path. The result didn’t go the
way it could have gone had I continued to play the way I did in
the second set.”

Her loss left top-ranked Novak
Djokovic and No. 2 Andy Murray as the only pre-tournament
favorites still standing.
Those two stayed on course
for a meeting in the final by winning in straight sets on Centre
Court. Djokovic ousted German
veteran Tommy Haas after Murray beat Mikhail Youzhny of Russia. Neither player has dropped a
set en route to the quarters.
Williams hadn’t either before
this match. But after dropping
the first against Lisicki, she won

nine straight games to lead 3-0 in
the third. The players then traded breaks to give Williams a 4-2
lead, but the American couldn’t
win another game despite having
four break points at 4-3.
Lisicki converted her second
match point with a forehand
winner.
“I’m still shaking,” Lisicki said
in a post-match interview, covering her face with her hands to wipe
away tears. “I’m just so happy.”
Williams said her serve —
usually her main weapon — let

Jeff Siner | Charlotte Observer | MCT photo

NASCAR Sprint Cup Series driver (20) Matt Kenseth
laughs as he talks with driver (99) Carl Edwards (not
pictured) prior to All-Star practice at Charlotte Motor
Speedway in Concord, North Carolina.

Kenseth wins at Kentucky
SPARTA, Ky. (AP) — Matt Kenseth has raced long enough
to know that rough starts can still have good outcomes.
Especially when his crew chief takes chances.
Case in point was Kenseth’s fuel-only pit stop gamble
that helped him beat Jimmie Johnson late to win the rescheduled 400-mile NASCAR Sprint Cup Series race Sunday at Kentucky Speedway.
A race that was Johnson’s to lose ultimately became
Kenseth’s series-high fourth victory of the season — and
third on a 1.5-mile track — after crew chief Jason Ratcliff
passed on putting new tires on the No. 20 Toyota following the race’s ninth caution.
“I thought he was slightly crazy when that happened,”
said Kenseth, who widened his lead when the field went
four-wide after the restart on lap 246 and saw Johnson’s
No. 48 Chevy spin from second place on a day he led three
times for 182 of 267 laps.
“I didn’t think there was any way that we were going to
hold on for that win. He made the right call at the right
time and those guys got it done.”
Kenseth led twice for 38 laps, including the final 23.
Johnson, the five-time champion and series points leader,
finished ninth and leads Carl Edwards by 38.
The restart bothered Johnson, who accused Kenseth of
breaking the pace car speed. But Johnson took solace in
salvaging his 11th top-10 despite between sandwiched in
the logjam that could have been worse.
“We were kind of in an awkward situation in that restart
there,” he said. “We were like three- and four-wide going
in the corner, then something happened with the air and
just kind of turned me around. Unfortunate, but at least
we rallied back for a good finish.”
Second was Jamie McMurray in a Chevy, followed by
Clint Bowyer (Toyota), Joey Logano (Ford) and Kyle
Busch (Toyota).
Rain Saturday night forced NASCAR officials to postpone the race to a daytime start.
See KENSETH |‌ 8

OVP Sports Briefs
GAHS Youth
Football Camp
CENTENARY, Ohio —
The Gallia Academy High
School football staff will be
conducting a youth football
camp from 6 p.m. until 8:30
p.m. on Monday, July 22,
through Wednesday, July
24, for students in grades
1-8 at the high school.
There is a fee for each
camper and a reduced rate
for multiple campers from
the same family, and registration will run from 4:45
p.m. until 5:45 p.m. on the
first day of camp. All campers will receive a t-shirt.
The camp will cover
fundamentals for all positions and players will be
instructed by the GAHS
football staff and players. Campers should wear
shorts, t-shirt and tennis
shoes or cleats. Water will
be provided but a water
bottle is recommended.
For more information or
to register, contact GAHS
football coach Wade Bartholomew at (740) 412-0104.

Big Bend Youth
Football League
MIDDLEPORT, Ohio —
The Big Bend Youth Football League will be having
football and cheerleading
signups from 11 a.m. until
1 p.m. every Saturday in
July at the Middleport Veterans Memorial Stadium.
Signups are for all interested kids in grades
3-6, and second graders
may sign up if they meet a
50-pound minimal weight
requirement. There is also
a signup fee.
For more information,
visit facebook @BBYFL or
call Sarah (444-1606), Tony
(416-3774), Chrissy (9924067), Angie (444-1177) or
Jim Porter (416-2636).
Gallia Academy
all-comer meets
CENTENARY,
Ohio
— Gallia Academy High
School will be hosting
two all-comer track meets.
See BRIEFS ‌| 8

her down in the third set.
“I felt that I was on the verge
of winning,” she said. “At that
point I just was physically unable to hold serve. … You have
to be ready and willing to hold
your serve. I wasn’t willing or
able, probably didn’t even want
to hold my serve today.”
Lisicki reached the semifinals
at the All England Club in 2011
but this will rank as her biggest
victory at the grass-court Grand

See WIMBLEDON ‌| 8

Jim Walker | photo

Members of the University of Rio Grande Class of 1965 pose for a picture during Saturday’s reunion in Ashland, Ky.

URG holds Class of 1965 reunion
Jim Walker
Special to OVP

ASHLAND, Ky. — The awardwinning
television
sitcom
“Friends” lasted 10 years. The
real-life show of “Friends” known
as the University of Rio Grande
Class of 1965 is still running.
The group of athletes who
played sports at Rio Grande and
graduated in 1965 have remained
close, along with other former
athletes who were in classes a
year or two behind them.
Legendary Art Lanham, 81,
coached basketball and was the
athletic director from 1960-80 at
Rio Grande. He was honored at
the reunion and talked about the
special ties between the group.
“I call them the ’65 Boys. The
special thing about the ’65 Boys
is that during the time they spent
at Rio Grande they established a
friendship unlike any other. I call
it love,” said Lanham.
“There are all different kinds of
love. They have a special love for
each other.”
The group of graduates presented Lanham with a few gifts
and expressed great appreciation
for the impact on their lives.
“He’s a great man. He was a
father figure and a coach to all
of us,” said Mike Burcham, another member of the 1965 class
who played baseball and is a
member of the school’s athletic
Hall of Fame.
“I coached for 47 years and I
did a lot of things he did. He knew
how to treat his players and he
made them want to play for him.
I loved him dearly and so did everyone here.”
Steve Gilmore — a former basketball player who went on to become the head coach and athletic
director at Ashland — said Rio
Grande left a lasting bond among

the players from the first day they
set foot on the campus.
“We got together the first night
and we became instant friends. I
don’t ever remember an argument
or any hard feelings. The chemistry and camaraderie I learned
and to not be a quitter I’ve carried
with me all my life,” said Gilmore
who is also the former mayor of
Ashland.
“Coach Lanham was a big part
of that. He knew how to handle
us. It was the greatest small
college anyone can ever go to. It
still is.”
Although the reunion began as
a gathering for the 1965 class, it
has expanded to include any Rio
Grande graduates.
Among those attending were
Oak Hill basketball coach Norm
Persin, former Ironton assistant
football coach Buck Foglesong,
former East Carter basketball
coach Charlie Baker, former Beaver Eastern basketball coach Don
Trainer, former Portsmouth basketball coach Tom Smith, Green
coach Dale Royse, former Rio
Grande guard Sharon Gregory,
longtime area basketball coach
Don Gibson, former Portsmouth
guard on the 1961 state championship team Rudy Shively, and
former Art Lanham assistant
coach Dr. Clyde Evans.
Others on hand included basketball standout Paul Dillon, former United Way director Steve
Toler, Dick Lusetti the former Human Resources Director for John
Morrell &amp; Co., Meat Products,
and Frank Bullock who is now a
Civil War speaker and Gen. William T. Sherman re-enactor.
“This started out as a reunion
for our class and it’s just kept
growing,” said Burcham. “You
look around here and you can see
that for a little place, Rio Grande
has turned out a lot of good

coaches and guys who have won
state championships.”
Burcham himself was a coach
for 47 years at Ironton where
he won the 1972 Class AA state
baseball championship and was
an assistant coach for the 1979
and 1989 Ironton football state
championships.
One of the more prolific members of the 1965 class on hand was
Bob Leith, former history professor at Ohio University Southern
who spent 30 years as a student,
teacher and coach at Rio Grande.
Current Rio Grande women’s
coach Dave Smalley, athletic director Jeff Lanham — son of Art
– and assistant women’s volleyball
coach Rachel Walker were also in
attendance.
Smalley made a presentation
to Leith — a.k.a Mr. Rio Grande
— for his continued service at the
school despite the fact he taught
at Ohio University.
“The love this man has for Rio
Grande is unbelievable,” said
Smalley. “He will always help people. He will carry the torch. He’s
still up to his neck in helping Rio
Grande University.”
A 1978 graduate of Rio Grande,
Smalley remembers Leith as a
teacher and showing him the
right way to become a coach.
“He would pay for meals out of
his own pocket. He would sweep
the floor and cut the grass. He
would do laundry so we’d have
clean uniforms for the next practice,” said Smalley.
“He had the ability to mold and
not make you feel embarrassed or
inferior.”
Rio Grande has quite a cast
ensemble with the ’65 Boys as
the main stars. It’s obvious this
show has quite a few more years
still to air.
Jim Walker is the sports editor of the Ironton
Tribune in Ironton, Ohio.

WVU to bring back men’s golf as varsity sport
MORGANTOWN, W.Va. (AP) —
Men’s golf is returning as a varsity
sport at West Virginia University and
will resume competition during the
2015-2016 season, WVU athletic director Oliver Luck said Monday.
It will be the first time in 33 years
that men’s golf is a varsity sport at
WVU. It was a varsity sport from
1933 to 1982.
A full-time men’s golf coach will be
hired by March 31, 2014.
“Golf had a strong tradition on this
campus, and its statewide popularity makes it a perfect addition to our
department. A lot of thought, time
and effort went into this decision as
far as cost, travel and infrastructure

goes, and I believe the strong tradition and history of Big 12 golf will
only enhance our chances of building
a championship program,” Luck said
in a news release.
The Big 12 Conference requires
members to have a minimum of six
men’s and six women’s sports. With
the return of men’s golf, WVU will
have six men’s sports and 10 women’s sports sponsored by the Big 12.
“We are excited about reintroducing men’s golf to West Virginia
University,” Terri Howes, associate
athletic director for sports administration. “We researched a lot of options, and golf kept coming to the
top of the list. Bringing the sport

back continues to put us in great
shape with our Title IX requirements. By phasing the sport in
during the next couple of years, we
believe we can have a solid foundation in place when we begin competition in 2015.”
Luck said that the university is
discussing locations for competition and practice with golf courses
around the state.
A varsity golf program at WVU
will give the state’s top junior golfers an opportunity to stay in West
Virginia and compete at the Division I level, said Ken Tackett, executive director of the West Virginia
Golf Association.

�Tuesday, July 2, 2013

NOTICE BY PUBLICATION
TO DEFENDANTS KIMBERLY G. PARSONS AND
UNKNOWN OCCUPANTS
WHOSE RESIDENCE IS UNKNOWN:
MEIGS COUNTY COMMON
PLEAS COURT
P.O. BOX 151
POMEROY, OHIO 45769
TAMMAC HOLDINGS CORPORATION
Plaintiff,
vs.
KIMBERLY G. PARSONS, et
al.,
Defendants.
CASE NO.: 12-CV-109
JUDGE I. CARSON CROW
Plaintiff has brought this action naming you as a Defendant in the above-named Court
by filing its Complaint on
November 12, 2012.
The object of the Complaint is
NOTICE BY PUBLICATION
to seek judgment against you
TO DEFENDANTS KIMfor your default in payments
BERLY G. PARSONS AND
relevant to a Security AgreeUNKNOWN OCCUPANTS
ment on a 2006 Clayton ManuWHOSE RESIDENCE IS UNfactured Home, Serial No.
KNOWN:
CLA05585OTN.
Said CollaterMEIGS COUNTY
COMMON
LEGALS
LEGALS
LEGALS
al is located at 40943 Park
PLEAS COURT
Road, No. 30, Shade, Ohio
P.O. BOX 151
WASHINGTON COUNTY-The
45776. Despite Plaintiff=s best
POMEROY, OHIO 45769
Regional Advisory Council for
efforts service has not been
TAMMAC HOLDINGS CORthe Area Agency on Aging will
able to be perfected on either
PORATION
meet on Friday, July 26, 2013
Defendant.
Plaintiff,
at 10:00 am at The Knights of
Plaintiff demands that the
vs.
Columbus, 312 Franklin St.,
Court find that the security inKIMBERLY G. PARSONS, et
Marietta, Ohio.
terest in said collateral is valid
al.,
and that the terms and condiDefendants.
The Chester Township Trusttions of that agreement have
CASE NO.: 12-CV-109
ees will have its hearing and
been breached; that Plaintiff is
JUDGE I. CARSON CROW
review for the 2014 annual
entitled to recover said collatPlaintiff has brought this acbudget. Review date will be
eral; that Plaintiff be granted a
tion naming you as a DefendJuly 9th at 7:00 PM.
money judgment for its damant in the above-named Court
Raymond Werry, Fiscal Officer by filing its Complaint on
ages due to Defendants=
breach of the said Security
November 12, 2012.
NOTICE BY PUBLICATION
Agreement; for the costs of this
The object of the Complaint is
TO DEFENDANTS KIMaction; and for any other relief
to seek judgment against you
BERLY G. PARSONS AND
the court would deem just and
for your default in payments
UNKNOWN OCCUPANTS
proper.
relevant to a Security AgreeWHOSE RESIDENCE IS UNment on a 2006 Clayton Manu- You are required to answer the
KNOWN:
Complaint within twenty-eight
factured Home, Serial No.
MEIGS COUNTY COMMON
(28) days after the last publicaCLA05585OTN. Said CollaterPLEAS COURT
tion of this Notice, which will be
al is located at 40943 Park
P.O. BOX 151
published once each week for
Road, No. 30, Shade, Ohio
POMEROY, OHIO 45769
45776. Despite Plaintiff=s best three (3) consecutive weeks,
Miscellaneous
TAMMAC HOLDINGS CORand the last publication will be
efforts service
has not been
PORATION
made on July 9, 2013.
able to be perfected on either
Plaintiff,
In case of your failure to anDefendant.
vs.
swer or otherwise respond as
Plaintiff demands that the
KIMBERLY G. PARSONS, et
permitted by the Ohio Rules of
Court find that the security inal.,
Civil Procedure within the time
terest in said collateral is valid
Defendants.
stated, judgment by default will
and that the terms and condiCASE NO.: 12-CV-109
be rendered against you for
tions of that agreement have
JUDGE I. CARSON CROW
the relief demanded in the
been breached; that Plaintiff is
Plaintiff has brought this acComplaint.
entitled to recover said collattion naming you as a DefendJames M. Brutz, Esq.
eral; that Plaintiff be granted a
Are
You
Still
Paying
Too
Much
ant in the above-named Court
410 Mahoning Ave., NW
money judgment for its damMake
the Switch
to Dish
Your Medications?
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ages due to Defendants=
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al is located
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March Notice, which will be
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Road, No. 30, Shade,31,Ohio
published
2013. Oﬀer is valid
for prescriptiononce each week for
mo.
orders only
and canthree
not be (3)
used consecutive
in
to Plaintiff=s
45776. compared
Despite
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service
has notconjunction
been with anyand
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able to
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this special offer. In case of your failure to anDefendant.
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Plaintiff
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terest in said
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accompanying policies at www.canadadrugcenter.com.
tions of that agreement have
be rendered against you for
been breached; that Plaintiff is
the relief demanded in the
entitled to recover said collatComplaint.
eral; that Plaintiff be granted a
James M. Brutz, Esq.
money judgment for its dam410 Mahoning Ave., NW
ages due to Defendants=
Warren, Ohio 44483
We’ll Repair Your Computer
breach of the said Security
330-609-5045
Agreement; for the costs of this 6/25 7/2 7/9
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action; and for any other relief
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For:
the court would deem just and
Slow Computers • E-Mail &amp; Printer Problems
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high-priced
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of
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and the last publication will be
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consumer credit counseling programs
made on July
9, 2013.
CREDIT
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swer or otherwise
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permitted by the
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00 Off
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all states
stated, judgment by default will
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James M. Brutz, Esq.
410 Mahoning Ave., NW
Warren, Ohio 44483
330-609-5045
6/25 7/2 7/9

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25

NOTICE BY PUBLICATION
TO DEFENDANTS KIMBERLY G. PARSONS AND
UNKNOWN OCCUPANTS
WHOSE RESIDENCE IS UNKNOWN:
MEIGS COUNTY COMMON
PLEAS COURT
P.O. BOX 151
POMEROY, OHIO 45769
TAMMAC HOLDINGS CORPORATION
Plaintiff,
vs.
KIMBERLY G. PARSONS, et
al.,
Defendants.
CASE NO.: 12-CV-109
JUDGE I. CARSON CROW
Plaintiff has brought this action naming you as a Defendant in the above-named Court
by filing its Complaint on
November 12, 2012.
The object of the Complaint is
to seek judgment against you
for your default in payments
relevant to a Security Agreement on a 2006 Clayton Manufactured Home, Serial No.
CLA05585OTN. Said Collateral is located at 40943 Park
Road, No. 30, Shade, Ohio
45776. Despite Plaintiff=s best
efforts service has not been
able to be perfected on either
Defendant.
Plaintiff demands that the
Court find that the security interest in said collateral is valid
and that the terms and conditions of that agreement have
been breached; that Plaintiff is
entitled to recover said collateral; that Plaintiff be granted a
money judgment for its damages due to Defendants=
breach of the said Security
Agreement; for the costs of this
action; and for any other relief
the court would deem just and
proper.
You are required to answer the
Complaint within
twenty-eight
LEGALS
(28) days after the last publication of this Notice, which will be
published once each week for
three (3) consecutive weeks,
and the last publication will be
made on July 9, 2013.
In case of your failure to answer or otherwise respond as
permitted by the Ohio Rules of
Civil Procedure within the time
stated, judgment by default will
be rendered against you for
the relief demanded in the
Complaint.
James M. Brutz, Esq.
410 Mahoning Ave., NW
Warren, Ohio 44483
330-609-5045
6/25 7/2 7/9
No Trespassing
The properties that are owned
by Deanna K. Davis are in
Meigs, Gallia &amp; Vinton Co. Mrs
Davis request that there be no
trespassing or hunting on her
property at any time.
ANNOUNCEMENTS

Lost &amp; Found
Found: 2 plastic bags of Items
&amp; books on Ridge Rd. Call
740-256-1660 to Identify &amp;
Claim
Notices
NOTICE OHIO VALLEY
PUBLISHING CO.
Recommends that you do
Business with People you
know, and NOT to send Money
through the Mail until you have
Investigated the Offering.

Pictures that have been
placed in ads at the
Gallipolis Daily Tribune
must be picked within
30 days. Any pictures
that are not picked up
will be
discarded.
AUCTION / ESTATE /
YARD SALE
Yard Sale
5 Family Rt 7N, left on Little
Kygor Rd, pass Old River Valley HS, 413 Gravel Hill Rd,
Little bit of everything, Harley
clothes, Air conditioner, too
much to mention, 1st, 2nd, &amp;
3rd. 9-5. more info 740-3677463
Huge 3 family , July 5 &amp; 6, just
outside Racine on St Rt 124.
LG size &amp; baby clothes, sports
cards.
July 1-3, 9am to 3pm. HUGE,
4 family yard sale, a little bit of
everything! S.R. 160 ¼ mile
north of Korner store on right.
Look for signs!
Three family, 7/1 &amp; 7/2, 9am5pm, 44320 Forest Run Rd,
Racine, Misc items, girls &amp;
boys clothes, toys, DVD's.
SERVICES
Professional Services
SEPTIC PUMPING Gallia Co.
OH and
Mason Co. WV. Ron
OH
Evans
Jackson,
800-537-9528

Repairs

Help Wanted General

Joe's TV Repair on most
makes &amp; Models. House Calls
304-675-1724

VACANCY: Information
Technology Instructor of Interactive Media. Certifiable
as Information Technology or
Comprehensive Business Instructor. CONTACT: GalliaJackson-Vinton JVSD (740)
245-5334, Ext. 256. EEO

FINANCIAL SERVICES

Money To Lend

WANTED:
Direct supervision employees
to oversee male youth in a
staff secure residential environment. Must pass physical
training requirement, background check and drug screening. Pay based on experience.
Call 740-379-9083, Monday
through Friday from 9:00AM to
3:00PM to request an application.

EMPLOYMENT

EDUCATION

Drivers &amp; Delivery
LIQUID ASPHALT DRIVERS
NEEDED
in the Point Pleasant area.
Must be 21 years old or older.
Must have Class A CDL with
Hazmat Endorsement and
TWIC card. Good MVR. Local
Trips. Call 1-800-598-6122
R&amp;J Trucking is seeking qualified CDL drivers for local and
regional routes with our SemiDumps and regional driving
positions with our Bulk Tanker
division. We feature weekend
home time for our regional
drivers, we offer health &amp; dental insurance, vacation and bonus pays, 401(K) and safety
awards. Applicants must be
over 23 yrs., &amp; have at least 2
yr. commercial driving exp.
Haz-Mat Cert., and a clean
driving record. Contact Kent at
800-462-9365. EOE.
Help Wanted General
ASSEMBLY/LABORERS
Workers needed for temp work
in Lesage, WV. HS diploma or
GED required. Must be able to
lift up to 50lbs. EEO. Qualified
appplicants call:
1-800-295-9470
INSTRUCTORS
MATH &amp; ACCOUNTING.
A MASTER'S DEGREE
in each subject area is required.
Email cover letter and
resume to
director@gallipoliscareercollege.edu
Licensed Practical Nurse
For full-time work in a 114-bed
long-term care State facility.
Must have current WV LPN license. Applicants may apply
online www.personnel.wv.gov
or at Lakin Hospital, 11522
Ohio River Road, West
Columbia, WV, Tuesdays &amp;
Thursdays, 10am to 2pm.
Lakin Hospital is an EEO/AA
employer. Pre-employment
criminal background check and
drug/alcohol testing are conducted. Employees may be
subject to streamline or
secondhand smoke.

Help Wanted General

Need Extra Cash???
Early Morning Newspaper
Delivery Route
Available in
Meigs County,OH

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Management / Supervisory

NOTICE Borrow Smart. Contact
the Ohio Division of Financial Institutions Office of Consumer Affairs BEFORE you refinance your
home or obtain a loan. BEWARE
of requests for any large advance
payments of fees or insurance.
Call the Office of Consumer Affiars toll free at 1-866-278-0003 to
learn if the mortgage broker or
lender is properly licensed. (This
is a public service announcement
from the Ohio Valley Publishing
Company)

YOU MUST HAVE RELIABLE
TRANSPORTATION
Call Us Today!
740-446-2342
DAVID KILLGALLON EXT: 25
JESSICA CHASON EXT: 12

Business &amp; Trade School
Gallipolis Career
College
(Careers Close To Home)
Call Today! 740-446-4367
1-800-214-0452

gallipoliscareercollege.edu
Accredited Member Accrediting Council
for Independent Colleges and Schools
1274B

REAL ESTATE SALES
Houses For Sale
3.53 acres w/3BR, 2BA,
Double Wide, permanent
foundation, black top driveway.
8x24 sun porch, 8x16 covered
back deck, 24x24 detached
vinyl siding garage, 30x24 pole
barn, w/small lean to. Evenings 740-446-6689 or 740-4417488
Coral Brick Cape Cod, 115
Harrisburg Rd. 45614, Phone
740-645-6198 or 304-8125757, Listed: Owners.com
PTJ1150 45614
REAL ESTATE RENTALS
Apartments/Townhouses
1 &amp; 2 bedroom apartments &amp;
houses,
No
pets,
740-992-2218
2 BR apt. 6 mi from Holzer.
$400 + dep. Some utilities pd.
740-418-7504 or 740-9886130
2 Room efficiency Apartment
in County setting, 7 miles from
Gallipolis on Rt 7 South. All
Electric, Utilities NOT included.
$300/mo, Dep &amp; 1st mo. Rent
&amp; References required. Call
740-446-4514
1 &amp; 2 BR, $475 to 575 month
Downtown, clean, renovated,
newer appl, lam floor, water
sewer &amp; trash incl. No pets.
Application req. 727-237-6942
3 BR-home in town. Applications available at Wiseman
Real Estate. Call 446-3644 for
more info.
RENTALS AVAILABLE! 2 BR
townhouse apartments, also
renting 2 &amp; 3BR houses. Call
441-1111.
Beautiful - 1400 sq ft. 2 bdrm.
apt. Gallipolis, w/d &amp; d -washer $700.00/mo. Parking, No
pets 740-591-5174
FIRST MONTH FREE
2 &amp; 3 BR apts
$425 mo &amp; up
sec dep $300 &amp; up
AC, W/D hook-up
tenant pays elec
EHO
Ellm View Apts
304-882-3017
For rent 1 bedroom apartment
in Gallipolis $360 per month
plus deposit. Call (740) 3888277
Furnished - 2bdrm. Apt.
$450.00/mo. Incl. w/s/g Racine,Ohio No Pets 740-5915174
Middleport, 1 &amp; 2 BR apts,
some with utilities pd, no pets,
dep &amp; ref, 740-992-0165
Spring Valley Green Apartments 1 BR at $425 Month.
446-1599.

�Page 8 • The Daily Sentinel

www.mydailysentinel.com

Kenseth

Tuesday, July 2, 2013

Wimbledon

From Page 6
The event was red-flagged for 18 minutes following a seven-car wreck involving
defending race and Sprint Cup winner Brad
Keselowski, who returned to finish 33rd. It
was the biggest incident of 10 cautions for
42 laps, but things were clean after Johnson brought out the final yellow flag.
The checkered flag crowned Kentucky’s
third different champion in as many events
though Kenseth, like Johnson, was due for
a breakthrough on the 1.5-mile oval.
He finished seventh here last year and
sixth in the 2011 inaugural race. However,
victory didn’t seem likely for the 2003
Cup champion after qualifying 16th and
running outside the top 20 during the first
quarter of the event.
“I thought our first run, we were all
right and I guess probably after the second run, we were able to move forward
pretty good,” Kenseth said. “I felt pretty
good about what we had. I thought we
need to get it better.”
From then on, the first-year Joe Gibbs
Racing driver was a perennial top-five
contender. Trouble was, he and other hopefuls
seemed to need Johnson to suffer misfortune
to have any shot of catching him. The way he

was running, that appeared unlikely.
Turns out, Kenseth needed to rely on
the left-side tires Ratcliff ordered the previous stop. Taking fuel only the final time
allowed him to gain the lead coming off
pit road, and the rubber held up on the
rough, bumpy track, both on the restart
and through the final laps.
Ratcliff was shocked that more teams
didn’t follow suit with that strategy.
“I felt like more guys would make that
call, and so I thought it was worth a shot
to get out there,” the crew chief said.
“When we rolled off pit road and saw what
everybody did, I looked to the guy beside
me and I’m like, ‘I can’t believe we are the
only ones that did that.”
The decision led to a surprising late turn
of events, and the tense finish in which
McMurray and Bowyer took turns trying
to chase down Kenseth provided a nice
makeup after Saturday night’s washout.
In a season of struggles, McMurray was
just happy with his first top five.
“Every week it’s been something,” he
said, “so it’s nice to have some good luck.”
Bowyer remained third in points and
gave Michael Waltrip Racing its second
straight top-two run following teammate
Martin Truex Jr.’s road win last week in
Sonoma, Calif.

From Page 1

reached his first Wimbledon quarterfinal since he
was the runner-up in 2010
by beating Bernard Tomic
7-6 (4), 6-7 (5), 6-4, 6-4.
Berdych beat Djokovic in
the semifinals that year.
Djokovic’s quarterfinal
streak is the third longest
behind Roger Federer’s
36 and Jimmy Connors’
27. Federer’s string ended
with last week’s loss in the
second round.
Murray, facing the
ever-increasing pressure
to become the first
British man since 1936
to win Wimbledon, was
in trouble in the second
set. He trailed 5-2
against Youzhny, who
was a 2012 Wimbledon
quarterfinalist, but broke
back when the Russian
served for the set at 5-4.
Then, down 5-3 in the
tiebreaker, Murray took
the set’s last four points.
He broke immediately

in the third, and cruised
from there to set up a
match with Fernando
Verdasco of Spain.
Murray is the only British player left in the tournament, after Laura Robson
lost. She couldn’t recover
from her missed chances
in the first set and fell 7-6
(5), 7-5 to Kaia Kanepi of
Estonia, failing to become
the first British woman in
the quarters of any Grand
Slam since 1984.
Robson, the first British
woman to reach the second
week at Wimbledon since
1998, squandered a chance
for a headline matchup
with Williams. Instead,
Kanepi will face Lisicki in
the quarterfinals.
Former champion Petra
Kvitova, last year’s runnerup Agnieszka Radwanska
and No. 4 David Ferrer
all avoided upsets to advance, as did sixth-seeded
Li Na of China.

ball program will con- and team awards will also
duct its 2013 overnight be presented on the final
instructional camp, July day of the camp. There
7-10, on the URG cam- is a fee involved, which
pus. The camp, which includes lodging, meals,
will utilize both the Newt a camp t-shirt, a certifiOliver Arena and the aux- cate of participation and
iliary gymnasium in the use of the Lyne Center
Lyne Center, is open to swimming pool. A camp
girls in grades 4-12.
store will also be available
Campers will be under throughout the week, al24-hour supervision of lowing campers the opthe Rio Grande coaching portunity to purchase
staff and a talented group drinks, snacks, pizza and
of counselors comprised Rio Grande apparel.
of college and high school
To register, or for more
coaches and players. Cer- information, visit the
tified athletic trainers will women’s basketball page
also be on site. Campers at www.rioredstorm.com,
will receive daily instruc- e-mail Rio Grande head
tion in three specific areas coach David Smalley at
– shooting, post play and dsmalley@rio.edu, or condefense. Daily schedules tact the basketball office by
will include evaluation of phone at 740-245-7491 or
shooting form, individual 1-800-282-7201, ext. 7491.
and group shooting drills,
instruction in post moves,
Alexander Spartans
instruction of post defense
Golf Scramble
and rebounding and daily
MASON, W.Va. — The
REWARD $1000
drills on team and individ- For
22nd
annual
Alexander
the return
of or information
ual defensive techniques. leading
Spartans
Golf ofScramble
to the return
the folstolen
Alex-SatA number of individual lowing
will items
be held
at from
8 a.m.

urday, July 20, at the Riverside Golf Club in Mason
County. All proceeds will
benefit the Alexander
High School Boys Basketball Program.
There is an entry fee per
golfer (includes Green Fee,
Cart, Food, Beverages, and
Prizes). Teams consist of
4 people (form your own
team and 40 handicap
minimum).
First-place
receives $500 per team,
second-place receives $300
per team and third place
receives $100 per team.
To register or if additional information is
needed, please contact Jim
Kearns at jkearns@alexanderschools.org or (740)
591-8153 or Jordan Hill
at jhill@alexanderschools.
org or (740) 416-0728.
Entry fees may be paid
at the golf course on the
day of the event or mailed
to Alexander Boys Basketball c/o Jim Kearns, 11474
Pleasanton Road, Athens,
OH 45701.

Slam. She has eliminated
the reigning French Open
champion the last four
times she played Wimbledon, having missed the
tournament in 2010. She
ousted Sharapova in the
fourth round last year.
Djokovic reached his
17th straight Grand Slam
quarterfinal by beating
Haas 6-1, 6-4, 7-6 (4).
He failed to serve out the
match at 5-3 in the third
and wasted a match point
in the next game before
closing out the tiebreaker
with a forehand winner on
his fourth match point.
“I think that I’m playing
really, really good tennis
at this moment,” Djokovic
said. “Maybe even better
than back in 2011 when I
won this tournament.”
Djokovic moved on to
No. 7 Tomas Berdych, who

Briefs
From Page 6
These meets will be open
to all ages and the first
meet will be Saturday, July
13, with registration beginning at 9 a.m. and events
starting at 11 a.m. There is
also a meet scheduled for
August 10 at 11a.m.
There is a fee for competitors and spectators and
volunteers are still needed.
Heats will be combined
if needed, but winners
will be determined by age
groups. Competitors must
check in with the clerk at
the second call prior to
their event start.
Competitors must have
your own implements for
shot and discus and must
have experience throwing
the discus or on the pole
vault. We will not allow
the novice vaulters or disc
thrower to throw or jump
for safety reasons. Parents
please supervise your kids,
you are the coach for the day
and please ensure they make
it to their events on time.

Commercial
Office Space for Rent: 257
Third Avenue, Gallipolis. Available Immediately Approx 545
sq. ft. $400 plus UTS and
$400 deposit. Contact the CVB
at 61 Court Street, Gallipolis or
(740) 446-6882.
Houses For Rent
1BR, No pets, Syracuse Oh.
350mo, 350 dep. 304-6755332, 740-591-0265
2BR, 1BA, on Farm
$600/month with utility allowance, 540-729-1331
For rent 3 bedroom house in
Pomeroy $450.00 per month
plus deposit. Call (740) 3888277

We will not enforce limits on the number of events
you may enter, but please
monitor number for the
smaller kids.To volunteer,
for more information or
if you have any questions
please call (740) 645-7316
or email ff1023@att.net
Kiwanis junior golf
tournament at Cliffside
GALLIPOLIS, Ohio —
The Cliffside Golf Club
will be hosting the fifth
annual Kiwanis juniors
at Cliffside golf tournament for golfers ages 9-18
on Thursday, July 11, at 1
p.m. The competitors will
be divided into age groups
of 9-10, 11-12, 13-15 and
16-18 and there is a fee.
Awards will be presented to the top three golfers
in each age group. Spectators are allowed, while
hole sponsors and volunteers are needed. To enter,
please contact the clubhouse at (740) 446-4653
or Ed Caudill at (740) 245MANUFACTURED
HOUSING
Rentals
3 BR, 2 BA, includes yard, carport, storage facility, front
deck, Bidwell area $600 +
dep.- Shown on Monday,
Tuesday &amp; Wednesday by Appointment Call Barbara @ 615830-4499
3BR, all electric, 16x80. SR
160. Nice 740-441-5150

Garage apt for rent: Nice and
clean, 1BR Non-smoking, ref,
dep, no pets. 304-675-5162

Mobile Home / Point Pleasant
Area / $400mo. Call 304-2385127

5919 or (740) 645-4381.
2013 Capehart
Tri-County Junior
Golf League
POINT PLEASANT,
W.Va. — The 2013 Frank
Capehart Tri-County junior golf league has begun. Play is open to boys
and girls for the following
age groups: 10-under, 1112, 13-14, 15-16 and 1718. Registration for play
is between 8:30 a.m. and
8:50 a.m. and play begins
at 9 a.m. There is a fee
but lunch is included. The
golf league will conclude
July 1 at Hidden Valley
Golf Course. For additional information contact Jeff Slone (740) 2566160, Jan Haddox (304)
675-3388 or Bob Blessing
(304) 675-6135.
URG women’s
basketball camp
RIO GRANDE, Ohio
– The University of Rio
Grande women’s basket-

Sales
Repo's
Available
740)446-3570

AGRICULTURE
Call

RESORT PROPERTY

AUTOMOTIVE
Boats &amp; Marinas

ANIMALS
Pets
FOUND: in Kanauga area,
Beagle mix, giveaway to good
home 740-339-3233
FREE TO GOOD HOME
Various cats &amp; kittens
Some neutered
304-593-3719

FOR SALE: Bass Tracker Pro
Team 185 Silver Ann Edition
w/75hp Mercury Mtr, Fish Finder, Trolling Mtr, Ex Cond
$9500. Call 9-6 740-446-9340

ander McCausland Farm, Rt
35 Pliny, WV. 08 Hauling Trailer tandem single axle, 09
YamahaMiscellaneous
Rhino Side by Side
ATV, 08 John Deere Zero Turn
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31 (NICK) Drake
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39 (AMC) (4:00) �� King Kong ('05, Act) Adrien Brody.
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�Tuesday, July 2, 2013

The Daily Sentinel • Page 9

www.mydailysentinel.com

Tuesday, July 2, 2013

ComiCs/EntErtainmEnt

BLONDIE

Dean Young/Denis Lebrun

BEETLE BAILEY

FUNKY WINKERBEAN

HAGAR THE HORRIBLE

HI &amp; LOIS

Mort Walker

Today’s Answers

Tom Batiuk

Chris Browne

Brian and Greg Walker
THE LOCKHORNS

MUTTS

William Hoest

Patrick McDonnell

Jacquelene Bigar’s Horoscope

zITS

THE FAMILY CIRCUS
Bil Keane

DENNIS THE MENACE
Hank Ketchum

Jerry Scott and Jim Borgman

CONCEPTIS SUDOKU
by Dave Green

HAPPY BIRTHDAY for Tuesday,
July 2, 2013:
This year marks an important time
in your life. Expect good fortune and
opportunity to meet. Make choices
that suit you. You are initiating a
12-year cycle, so make sure that you
are keeping your eye on the long-term
as well as the short-term. If you are
single, you will meet someone who
will enrich your life. What type of relationship evolves from there depends
on you. If you are attached, you enter
one of those warm, connected years
where your bond grows stronger.
TAURUS is loyal.
The Stars Show the Kind of Day
You’ll Have: 5-Dynamic; 4-Positive;
3-Average; 2-So-so; 1-Difficult
ARIES (March 21-April 19)
HH Be careful with any type of
spending, even if it is something
as basic as doing someone else’s
budget. The wise Ram will make no
commitments right now. Focus on a
recent assessment you’ve made, and
figure out what you need to get rid of.
Tonight: A must appearance.
TAURUS (April 20-May 20)
HHHHH You have the skill set to
manage many different interests, but
you might feel overwhelmed. You’ll
want to manage a situation differently
and move forward with a project.
Prioritizing will help diminish your
to-do list more efficiently. Tonight:
Happiest at home.
GEMINI (May 21-June 20)
HHHH Listen to what someone
wants to share; help this person form
a game plan to get there. You suddenly might discover that there is a
change in how you proceed. Your
sense of humor will emerge regarding
a discussion involving money. Tonight:
Fun doesn’t have to cost anything.
CANCER (June 21-July 22)
HHHH You know which way to go
and why you are heading in that direction. You can explain only so much
to others; otherwise, you might miss
the opportunity. Timing is critical right
now. A sense of humor goes far when
dealing with a problem. Tonight: What
would make you happy?
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22)
HHH Know how to say “no.” Your
wittiness might be best kept to yourself for the time being. Make a point
of saying “hello” more often to that
acquaintance who makes a difference
in your life. Understand what must
happen in order to get a project off the
ground. Tonight: Out late.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22)
HHHH Keep reaching out to some-

one whose opinion you trust. You
need to get feedback, but it needs
to come from someone who is not
involved in the outcome. Be willing to
put out ideas that you typically would
judge as not workable. Tonight: Let
your imagination lead the way.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 22)
HHHH Examine what you want
and expect from a family member.
This person often becomes very
innovative when dealing with you.
Maintain a good attitude, but find a
different approach. One-on-one relating is not that easy for this person.
Tonight: Have a long chat with a
friend.
SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21)
HHHH Someone seems to command more attention and decides to
take the lead in a situation. Generally,
center stage is your turf. How you
handle this reversal will be telling of
who you are. You can’t control others,
so stop any manipulative thoughts.
Tonight: Go with a suggestion.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21)
HHH Not everyone is as determined or focused as you might be
at the moment. How you speak to
someone, and your expectations
for this person’s responses, might
need revision. Choose to allow your
feelings and thoughts to flow more
openly. Tonight: Schedule some more
free time.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19)
HHH Build on an existing bond.
You know what to expect, and you’ll
find it easy to be open with this person. Open up to new possibilities,
and test them out on this friend, who
just might come back with yet another
idea. Let the brainstorming session
begin! Tonight: Ever playful.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18)
HHHH You might discover that the
best path right now is the tried-andtrue. Though normally you are more
unconventional, if you want to succeed, you’ll need to bend a little more.
Real estate, a parent and security all
are factors that need serious consideration. Tonight: Stay close to home.
PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20)
HHHH You know what you like,
and you’re capable of creating it.
Get on the phone or send out some
emails to initiate conversations with
those whom you might impact by
deciding to move in a new direction.
Brainstorm away. Tonight: You might
be amazed by what emerges.
Jacqueline Bigar is on the Internet
at www.jacquelinebigar.com.

�Page 10 • The Daily Sentinel

www.mydailysentinel.com

Tuesday, July 2, 2013

Keselowski could miss Chase
Jenna Fryer

The Associated Press

Tony Stewart’s defense
of his 2005 championship
doesn’t look so bad on paper, and it sure seemed to
be soaring during his laborious celebratory fenceclimb following his July
win at Daytona.
It was his second win
of the 2006 season, and it
pushed him to fifth in the
championship standings.
Little did he know that hot
summer night atop the flag
stand would be his crowning achievement of the year.
Disastrous finishes in
the next two races dropped
Stewart to 11th in the
standings with only seven
races to recover. It was too
big of a hole and Stewart
stunningly became the
first defending NASCAR
champion to miss the cut
for the Chase for the championship in what was then
a 10-driver field.
In true Stewart fashion, he didn’t go out with
a whimper: Stewart won
three of the 10 Chase races, but wasn’t eligible to
challenge Jimmie Johnson
in what became the first of
Johnson’s five consecutive
Sprint Cup titles.
Now here we are, seven
years later, and another
defending champion is in a
similar hole.
Brad Keselowski heads
into Saturday night’s race
at Daytona ranked 13th in
the standings and winless
this year. He’s got nine
races left to claim a berth
in the 12-driver field, and
is among a handful of elite
drivers jockeying for the final few spots in the Chase:
— Keselowski: BK had
three wins at this point last
season but finds himself on
the outside looking in after
Sunday’s disappointment
at Kentucky, where he had
hoped to repeat last year’s
victory. His problems Sunday started 48 laps in the
race — so early that Keselowski said “there is no
reason to drive like an animal” — when Kurt Busch
drove on the apron, then
shot back up the track into
traffic and into Keselowski.

It created a messy accident that stopped the
race for nearly 20 minutes
and it dropped Keselowski
four spots in the standings
to 13th. To earn a Chase
berth, he either needs to
be ranked inside the top 10
in points, or needs wins to
be eligible to claim one of
two wild card spots.
Crew chief Paul Wolfe
knew the ramifications
the moment Busch hit the
No. 2 Ford.
“We were just holding
onto the top 10 there, and
we were one bad race away
from falling out,” he said
after the race.
There is an upside to
Keselowski’s situation. He
is only 14 points behind
10th-place driver Joey Logano, his Penske Racing
teammate. That’s not bad
considering the No. 2 team
has been docked 31 points
this year in a pair of NASCAR penalties. If Keselowski still had those points
he’d be ranked eighth.
But he doesn’t have
those points and has two
months to make up the
difference.
“We have struggled before as a team and we have
worked through that and
put ourselves in position
to be champions,” Wolfe
said. “I think in the past we
have not been shy of doing
some different strategies
to make things happen and
over the next few weeks if
we are not getting the finishes where we need to be
then we will need to look
at that over the last month
closing into the Chase.”
— Busch: The 2004
champion is in the second
year of trying to resurrect a career that fell apart
when his anger issues cost
him his job at Penske Racing. He’s doing it now with
Furniture Row Racing, a
single-car team that’s not
supposed to challenge for a
Chase berth.
But Busch is in decent
shape at 14th in the standings and only 16 points out
of 10th. He’s gotten there
behind four finishes of seventh or better in the last six
races, including Sunday,
when he managed to come

back from the early incident on the apron to finish
sixth. All told, Busch has
seven top-10 finishes this
season and has climbed
from six spots in the standings in three races.
“We came through when
we needed to and had another good points day,”
said Busch. “We’re creeping up in the points and
need to avoid major slips
in the next nine races.”
— Stewart: The threetime champion won at
Dover last month and that
victory is enough to make
him eligible for a wildcard berth.
But his situation is shaky
because he’s tied with Aric
Almirola for 16th in the
standings and he could
find himself locked out. It’s
a real possibility considering Martin Truex Jr. and
Greg Biffle, who have one
win each, aren’t securely
inside the top 10 and Kasey Kahne is 11th with just
one victory.
Working against Stewart
is that he really hasn’t been
running all that well this
season. The No. 14 team
had only one top-10 finish
before Memorial Day. He
was seventh at Charlotte
and won at Dover for his
first back-to-back top-10s
all year. He carried the momentum into Pocono and
Michigan with a pair of
top-fives and he’d suddenly
climbed from 21st in the
standings to 10th.
But the last two weeks
have been two steps back,
with a 28th at Sonoma and
a 20th-place finish Sunday.
“Not the greatest showing, but we did what we
could with it,” he shrugged.
— Denny Hamlin: He’s
never missed the Chase
since his 2006 rookie season, but time is running
out on Hamlin’s comeback
story this year.
In fairness, a compression fracture in a vertebra
in his lower back sidelined
him for four races and likely
cost him any chance at the
Chase, anyway. But he returned determined to grab
a wild-card. He finished
second at Darlington in
his first full race back, then
won the pole at Charlotte
and finished fourth to go
from 31st in points to 24th.

Wally Skalij | Los Angeles Times | MCT photo

The Los Angeles Clippers’ Chris Paul, right, gets a pass off in front of the Memphis Grizzlies’
Tayshaun Prince in Game 5 of the Western Conference first-round playoff series at Staples
Center in Los Angeles, California, on Tuesday, April 30.

Chris Paul staying with Clippers
Brian Mahoney

The Associated Press

Chris Paul is staying with the Los Angeles Clippers.
The All-Star point guard agreed to
a new deal on the first day free agency
opened, agent Leon Rose confirmed.
Paul posted a message on his Twitter account Monday morning, saying “I’M IN!!!”
#CLIPPERNATION
Paul led the Clippers to their first Pacific
Division title last season and his decision to
stay is the second big victory for the longtime losers in this offseason, following the
signing of Doc Rivers as their new coach.
Paul can earn about $108 million over
five years with the Clippers. The deal can’t
be signed until July 10, after next season’s
salary cap is set.
The two-time Olympic gold medal-

ist has helped turn around the Clippers
franchise in two seasons since coming in
a trade from the New Orleans Hornets.
They made the playoffs in both seasons,
advancing to the second round in 2012,
and went 56-26 this season, the best record in their history.
Paul averaged 16.9 points, 9.7 assists and
an NBA-best 2.4 steals per game. He was the
Western Conference player of the month in
December, when the Clippers went 16-0.
Paul spent his first six seasons with the
Hornets before he was dealt to the Clippers, shortly after the NBA, then serving as
owners of the Hornets, stopped a trade that
would have sent him instead to the Lakers.
That decision has paid off big for the
Clippers, long the second-class citizens
in Los Angeles but the team that played
a much more exciting style and had much
better results than the Lakers last season.

fever
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