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•

lmmi~ant groups

Bengals reach
deal with TO, Bt

·criticize fingerprint
initiative, A2

OBITUARIES
Page AS
• Odessa Wolfe Erbes
·Richard P. Gress
• Linda Moore

Workshop on
preserving

Village hall project enters Phase 3 Gerl~ch:
Bv BRIAN J. REED
BREED~MYDAILYSENTINELCOM

MIDDLEPORT - Middleport
Village Council approved the third
and final phase of planning its new
village hall on Pearl Street
Monday evening, approving the
preparation of final plans an&lt;;! bid
specifications.
Those documents are necessary
before the village approves the

bank financing on the $800,000
project. The village is banking on
pro~~eds_ from an expanded jail
fa~tht) m order to convet! ~he
!"ftddleport _Elementary bulldmg
JO!? a new :·~lage hall.
. We ~e now down . to

departments and replace the building now in usc on Race Street.
Gerlach explained that the
three phases of planning overlap.
The first phase consisted of a
preliminary plan and interviews
with department heads and staff
M~ddlepoll E~ementary ~ecom_mg .to determine the needs. The secM!ddleport Ylllage Hall. Gerlach ond phase involved securing
~aid .. The vill~ge _plans ~o !Dove financino
mto Its new village hall m JUSt a·
o·
year. It "'ill house all village
Please see Hall, AS

CHESTERHILL
Rural Action will host a
food preserv. ation
kshop,
Thursday.
) 29, 3 p.m. at the
Chesterhill
Produce
Auction. The CPA '"'ill
begin at 4 p.m. and folks
can purchase fruits and
vegetables for preservation.
Free snacks will be
provided. For info. contact Kat Shaw. 740-767or
4938
ks328405@ohio.edu.

1
I

1

1

1

.

Bv BRIAN

J.

·

REED

oncco(i;MYDAILYSENTINELcoM

MIDDLEPORT
July is expected to be the
rpost "profitable" yet for
Middleport's jail. since it
has been re-opened to
Dozens of kids in Meigs and Mason Counties took inmates from other jurispart in an Art Adventure summer program made pos- dictions and jail housing
sible with grant mone) awarded through the Ohio rates \Vere bumped up
River Border Initiative to the Riverbend Arts Council. last year.
A portion of the $2.250 grant from the Border
At Monday evening's
Initiative (ORB!), a joint project of the Ohio A1ts regular
of
meeting
Council and the West Virginia Commission on the Arts, Mjddleport
Village
\\'as used to purchase rut supplies and programming Council. :\1ayor ~1ichael
materials for the Ait Adventure. The rest will go for the Gerlach said the \ illage
Art in the Park exhibit and program in September.
is expected to receive
Bobbi DeLong. art teacher in Meigs Local schools, more revenue this month
was instructor for the program. Here she assists some than ever. a good indicachildren at the Pomeroy Library session on print and tor that the \~llage 's plan
book making, as another child, five year old Abby to pay for its new village
Pauley works diligently on her butterfly print.
hall with oubide jail revCharlene Hoeflich/photos
enue might be a good
one. The new jail \\iII
house. 24 prisoners - 10
men. 10 '"omen and four
additional prisoners in a
temporary holding cell. It
will be located in the rear
comer of the Pearl Street

I

VBtifUtB

Lunch Along
the River
MIDDLEPORT
Middleport Community
Association's monthlv
Lunch Along the River
will be held from 11 a.m.
to 1 p.m. on Friday at
Diles Park. The menu
will be pork barbeque.
provided by Wild Horse
Cafe. '"ith cole slaw,
aroni salad. home~e cakes. and soft
ks. Proceeds will go
toward seasonal acti vities sponsored by the
association for the community.
I

school building.

Overcrowding is a
problem experienced b)
jai I facilitie'&gt; and law
enforcement agencies in

I

Please see Revenue, Al

King's Daughters
Medical Center
-.....~&amp;~~1 1 announces staff.
, reduction

..
'

,

Outside
revenue
from J81 1
on the rise

. WEATHER

82 employees
lose their jobs
Bv ANDREW CARTER
t~DTNEWS@~YDAIL'f"RIBUNE.COM

ASHLAND.Kv.- The
economic crunch has
apparently taken a toll on
one of the tri-state region's
I largest employers. ~
'-~-~=---==:=!i 1 Citing mounting debt
and an~ incrdse In the
number of patients who
can't pa) for their medical
care. officials from King\
Dau~hters
.:\.ledical
Center in Ashland. Ky..
announced Tuesdav ·afternoon that the hospital is
reducing the number of
staff members. effective
immediately.
In a prepared statement. KD~IC officials
did not release anv
details about just ho'v
many of the hospital\
. 4.200-pl\ts employees
would lose their jobs.
Ho\\ever. Rob Johnson.
hospital division director
of the Service Employees
Union.
International
Submitted photo
1199',
said
that 82
District
Michael Coleman, Dorothy Hill, Charley Nutter, and Bryan Stewart, left to·
hospital
employees
lost
right, were presented plaques for completing requirements for the Ohio
High School Equivalence Diploma through the Meigs ESC ABLE program.
Please see KDMC, AS
I

1

High: 86.
Low: 73.

Ceremony honors adult educational ac~ievemen.t

tiDEX
2 SECTIONS -

BY CHARLENE HOEFLICH
HOEFUCH@MYDAILYSENTINEL COM
12 PAGES

Calendars
Classifieds
Comics
Editorials
Sports

B Section

.0 2010 Ohio \'alley Publishing Co.

ll.l.ll ,I !1!.!1!11

'

POMEROY - Achievements of
students enrolled in the Adult Basic
and Literacy Education (ABLE)
program in Meigs County were recognized in recent ceremonies held at
the Fultz Center of Rio Grande
Community College.
Those who have completed
requirements for their Ohio High
School Equivalence Diploma,
(GED) and those who are still working toward that goal, their families
and friends were guests for a recognition dinner hosted by the
Middleport-Pomeroy Rotary Club.
Dr. John Costanzo. director of the
Athens-Meigs Educational Service
Please see ABLE, AS

Contact one of our !onder today!
Pomoroy • GD211213G
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PageA2

The Daily Sentinel

\ \1

ednesday, July 28,

2010

Audit: U.S. cannot Immigrant groups criticize fingerprint initiative
account for $8.78 s~~T~~~;:o
in Iraqi funds
~

•
BAGHDAD (AP) - A
U.S. audit has found that
the Pentagon cannot
account for over 95 percent of $9 .I bi Ilion in
Iraq
reconstruction
money, spotlighting Iraqi
complaints that there is
little to show for the massive funds pumped. into
their cash-strapped. warravaged nation .
The $8.7 billion in
question
was
Iraqi
money managed by the
Pentagon. not part of the
$53
billion
that
Congress has allocated
for rebuilding. It's cash
that Iraq. which relies on
volatile oil revenues to
fuel its spending, can ill
afford to lose.
"J.raq should take legal
action to get back this
huge amount of money,"
said Sabah ai-Saedi,
chairman
of
the
Parliamentary Integrity
Committee. The money
"should be spent for,
rebuilding the country
and providing services
for this poor nation."
The report by the
Special Inspector General
for Iraq Reconstruction
accused the Defense
Department of lax oversight and weak controls,
though not fraud.
"The breakdown in
controls left the funds
vulnerable to inappropriate uses and undetected
loss,'' the audit said.
The Pentagon has
repeatedly come under
fire for apparent mismanagement of the reconstruction effort
as
have Iraqi officials them
selves.
Seven years after the
U .S.-led invasion. electricity service is spotty,
with generation capacity
falling far short of
demand. Fuel shortages
are common and unemployment remains high, a
testament to the country's inability to create
new jobs or attract foreign investors. •
Complaints surfaced
from the start of the war
in 2003. when soldiers
failed to secure banks,
armories and other facilities against looters. Since
then the allegations have
only multiplied, including investigations of
fraud, awarding of contracts
without
the
required government bidding process and allowing contractors to charge
exorbitant fees with little
oversight, or oversight
that came too late.
But the latest report
comes at a particularly
critical time for Iraq.
Four months after inconclusive elections, a ne..,.
government has yet to be
formed, raising fears that
insurgents will tap into
the political vacuum to
stir sectarian unrest.
In a sign that insur. gents are still intent on
igniting sectarian violence, at least six people
were killed and dozens
more wounded when a
female suicide bomber
blew herself up near a
checkpoint in t~ holy
city of Karbala, local
police said. They spoke
of
on
condition
anonymity because they
were not authorized to
speak to the media.
Thousands of Shiite
pilgrims are converging
on the city, 50 miles (80
kilometers) south of
Baghdad, for an important religious holtday
marking the birth of a
Shiite saint known as the
"Hidden Imam'' who disappeared in the ninth
century. Such mass displays of devotion by
Shiites have often been
targeted
by
Sunni
extremists.
Iraqi lawmakers met
Tuesday, but for the second time this month
failed to convene a parliament session, leaving
wide open the question of
when the new government will take shape
Underscoring its financial challenges. the

International Monetary
Fund in March approved
a $3.6 billion loan to help
Iraq meet its obligations.
Iraq is projected to run a
deficit through 2011.
according to analysts,
with a possibility of a
surplus following that
hinging on oil prices.
· Iraq took a financial hit
in 2008 as oil prices
plummeted on the back
of the global financial
meltdown. While those
prices
have
since
rebounded. Iraq remains
at the mercy of internationa! oil markets. with
revenues from petroleum
sales accounting for over
90 percent of its government budget.
The $9 .I billion in
question came from the
Development Fund for
Iraq, which was set up by
the U.N. Security Council
in 2003. The DFI
includes revenues from
Iraq's oil and gas exports,
as well as frozen Iraqi
assets and surplus funds
from the defunct. Saddam
Hussein-era U.N. oi -forfood program.
Iraq had given the u.S.
authorization to tap into
the fund. which is held
in New York, for humanitarian and reconstruction efforts. \Vithdrawing
that
approval
in
December 2007.
With the establishment
of
the
Coalition
Provisional Authority,
which ran Iraq shortly
after the start of the U.S.
invasion in 2003 until
mid-2004, about $20 billion was placed into the
account. The $9.1 billion
audited by the Iraq reconstruction inspector general were funds withdrawn
from
that
account
between 2004 and 2007.
The report found that
the Defense Department
could
not
"readily
account for its obligations, expenditures and
remaining balances assocrated" with the DFI. At
issue was $8.7 billion, or
95 percent of the withdrawn funds.
Of this amount, the
Pentagon could not
account at all for $2.6
billion, according to the
audit.
Tracing the rest of the
money
is
difficult
because of a combination
of lax financial controls
and management, the
failure to designate an
organization to oversee
the spending and the failure to set up and deposit
the funds in special
accounts. as required bv
the Treasury Department.
The
Defense
Department. in responses
attached to the audit, said
it agreed with the report's
recommendations
to
establish better guidelines for monitoring such
funds, including appointing an oversight organization mostly likely by
November.
The failure to properly
manage billions in reconstruction funds has also
hobbled the troubled
U.S.-led effort to rebuild
Afghanistan. About $60
billion have poured into
Afghanistan since 200 I
in hopes of bringing electricity. clean water, jobs,
roads and education to
the crippled country.
The U.S. alone has
committed $51 billion to
the project since 200 I.
and plans to raise the
stakes to $71 billion over
the next year - more
than it has spent on
reconstruction in Iraq
since 2003.

DENVER - The federa! government is rapidly expanding u program
to identify illegal immigrants usmg fingerprints
from arrests. drawing
'opposition from local
authorities and advocates
who argue the initiative
amounts to an excessive
dragnet.
The program has gotten less attention than
Arizona's new immigration law, but it may end
up having a bigger
impact because of its
potential to round up and
deport so many immigrants nationwide.
~The San Francisco
sheriff wanted nothing to
do with the program. and
the City Council in
Washington,
D.C ..
blocked use of the fingerprint plan in the nation's
capital. Colorado is the
latest to debate the pro- ,
gram, called Secure
Communities. and immigrant groups have begun
to speak up, telling the
governor in a letter last
week that the initiative
will ihake crime victims
reluctant to cooperate
with police "due to fear
of being drawn into the
immigration regime."
Under. the program. the
fingerpnnts of e\ eryonc
who is booked into jail
for any crime arc run
against FBI criminal history
records
and
Department of Homeland
Security
immigration
records to determine who
is in t~e country illegally
and whether they've
been arrested previously.
Most jurisdictions are not
included in the program,
but Immigration and
Customs Enforcement
has been expanding the
initiative.
Since 2007. 467 jurisdictions in 26 states have
joined. ICE has said it
plans to ha\'e it in every
jail in the country by
2013.
Secure
Communitic~ is currently
being phased into the
places where the government sees as having the
greatest need for it based
on population estimates
of illegal immigrants and
'crime statistics.
Since everyone arrest~d would be screened.
the program could easily
deport more people than
Arizona's new law. said
Sunita Patel. an attorney
who filed a lawsuit in
New York against the
federal government on
behalf of a group won·ied
about the program. Patel
said that because illegal
immigrants could be
referred to ICE at the
point of arrest. even
before a conviction. the
program can create an
mcentive for profiling
and create a pipeline to
deport more people.
"It has the potential to
revolutionize immigration enforcement." said
Patel.
Patel filed the lawsuit
on behalf of the National
Day Laborer Organiling
Network, which is concerned the program could
soon come to New York.
The
lawsuit
seeks.
among other things. statistical information about
\NhO has been deported as
a result of the program
and what the) were
arrested for.
Supporters of the program argue it is helping
identify dangerous criminals that would other" ise
go undetected. Since Oct.
27. 2008 through the end
of May. almost 2.6 million people have been
screened with Sccurc
Communities. Of thosc,
almost 35,000 were iden-

I

'"'"""-.....:"'''' UNIVEitSifT Ot

,~q g~gtTY

COllEG!

Your FUTURE within REACH
MEIGS CENTER
www.rio.edu

42377 Charles Chancey Drive • Pomeroy, OH
740-992-1880

AP photo/Ross D. Franklin

A suspect, left. is fingerprinted by a Maricopa Country Sheriff's detention officer
on Monday to check his immigration status at a 287{g) processing station after
being brought from the Maricopa County Sheriff's Office Fourth Avenue Jail in
Phoenix. The federal government is rapidly expanding a program to identify illegal
immigrants using fingerprints from arrests, drawing opposition from local authorities and advocates who argue the initiative amounts to an excessive dragnet.
tified as illegal immigrants previously arrested
or convicted for the most
serious crimes. including
murder and rape. ICE
said Thursday. .More than
205.000 who were identified as illegal immigrants
had arrest records for less
serious crimes..
In Ohio. Butler Countv
Sheriff
Rick
Jone~-.
praised the program.
which was implemented
in his jurisdiction earlier
this month.
"It's really a heaYensent for us:· Jones said.
He said the program
helps solve the problem
police often have of not
knowing whether someone they arrested has a
criminal history and is in
the country illegally.
"I 'don't want them in
my community." Jones
said. 'T\'c got enough
homegrown criminals
here ...~
Carl Rusnok. an ICE
spokesman. said Secure
Communities is a wav for
la\J. enforcement to identif) illegal immigrants after
their arrest at no additional cost to local jurisdictions. Jones agreed.
"We arre:-.t these people
an) way." he said. "All it
does is help us deport
people who shouldn't be
here."
Rusnok said ICE created the program after
Congress directed the
agency to improve the
way it identifies and
deports illegal immigrants with criminal
backgrounds. ICE ha~
gotten $550 million for
the program since 2008.
Rusnok said.
Rusnok said the onlv
place he knows of that ha's
requested not to be a part
of Secure Communities Is
San Francisco. which
began the program June
8. Eileen Hirst. the chief
of staff for San Francisco
Sheriff
Michael
Hennessey. said it happened ''without our input
or approval."
Htrst ~aid the sheriff
thought
Secure
Communities cast too
wide a net and worried
that it would sweep up'
U.S. citizens and minor
otTcnders, such as people
who commit traffic
infractions but miss their
court hearings. Hirst also
said the prt)gram goes

against San Francisco's
sanctuary city policy that
·calls for authorities ,to
only rcpm1 foreign-born
suspects hooked for
felonies.
"Now, \J.c're reporting
C\Cr) single individual
..,. ho come:. into our custody and gets fingcrpnnted,'' Hirst said.
California Attornev
General Jerr) BrO\\
denied
Hcnnesse) 's
request to opt out. Brown
said that prior to Secure
Communities.
illegal
immigrants '' ith criminal
histories werc often
released bcforc their "tatus \\a~ disco\ crcd.
This
month.
Washington. D.C .. police
decided not to pursue the
program hccausc the City
Council introduccd a bill
that
would
prohibit
authoritks fwm :-.haring
arrest data '' ith ICE out of
conccrn for immigrants·
civil rights. Matthew
Bromeland. special assi~-

n

tant to the poiice chief,
said police wanted the
program and were talking
..,. ith ICE about h.
address concerns fr
immicrant
advocates
before the bill forced them
to halt negotiations.
Colorado
officials
became interested in the
program after an illegal
nnmtgrant
from
Guatemala with a long
criminal record \\as
accused of causing a car
crash at a suburban
Denver ice-cream shop,
killing two women in a
truck and a 3-year-old
inside
the
store.
Authorities say the illegal immigrant, Francis
M. Hernandez, stayed off
ICE's radar because he •
conned police with 12
aliases anq two different
dates of birth.
A task-force assembled
after the crash
mended
Communities as
tion.

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-..........

'at risk· clients and their
locations to coordinate
with area EMAs in the
MARIETl/\ The event of emergenctes and
Buckeye Hil ls Area weather-related disasters.''
·on Aging (AAAR)
AAA8 Case Managers
\ ·cd a 2010 utilized handheld GPS
n A
c.l from data collection units to
the National A ~ociation gather pertinent informaof
De' lopment tion to assist first responOrganizations {.'ADO) ders in finding the homes
Research Foundation for of at-risk 60+ clients durits
Geographic ing an emergency.
Information
Svstems
As requested, countyClient Mapping Project specific maps can be
and · Diners .Choice made available. To control
Nutrition Program.
security and privacy. these
The AAA8\.vhich serves maps and the related data
several I 0 Southeastern will be available via the
Ohio counties including internet as part of a secure.
Meigs has been recog- password protected and
nized for compiling infor- customized ArcGIS server
mation instrumental to web application.
assisting area Emergency
With this information,
Management Agencies AAA8 can more readily
(EMAs) in identifying "at assist
Emergency
risk" elderly residents at Management groups and
times of power outages or first responders in knowother problen' .
ing where in-home clients
"Our
teams
have are located and what, if
worked to develop a pro- any. special needs they
gram that ~til capture in may have in the event of
one local system. location an evacuation, natural
information for all PASS- disaster. or other weatherT clients receiving related emergency.
With funding support
m their homes,'' said
8 Director Rick made available through
Hindman. 'This informa- The American Recovery
tion will be used to create and Reinvestment Act,
arid disseminate maps of AAA8 offered more than

500 participants who
were 60+ years of age
access to the new nutrition program called
Diner's Choice.
Designed to give residents better access to
nutrition sites, it utilized
the services of seven
local restaurants in areas
determined to be underserved by regional congi·egate meal sites.
"We believe that by
working with local
restaurants, the ARRA
funding had a double
impact, nutritious meals
for seniors while pumping money into the local
economy.'' said Buckeye
Hills Executive Director
Misty Casto.
;T'he pilot program used
community diners with
menus designed to meet
USDA nutrition guidelines. The program
served 10.321 meals with
a combination of breakfast and lunch coupons
bemg redeemed. A total
of $66.943 in coupon
redemption supported the
seven small restaurant
businesses.

SENTINEL STAFF

MDSNEWS@MYDAILYSENTINELCOM

li

For more information
on AAA8, contacJ 1-800331-2644
or
visit
www.areaagency8 .org.

Meigs County Forecast
Thursday: Showers
and thunderstorms likely
before 3 p.m., then a slight
chance of showers.
Mostly cloudy, with a
high near 86. Chance of
precipitation is 60 percent.
Thursday
Night:
Partly cloudy, with a low
around 62. North wind
around 5 mph becoming
calm.
Friday: Mostly sunny,
with a high near 86.
Friday Night: Partly
cloudy. with a low

around 61.
Saturday: A chance of
showers and thunderstorms.· Partly cloudy,
with a high near 84.
Chance of precipitation
is 30 percent.
Saturday
Night:
Partly cloudy, with a low
around 64.
Sunday: A chance of
showers and thunderstorms. Mostly cloudy,
with a high near 88.
Chance of precipitation
is 30 percent.

e mmunity Calendar
Monday, Aug. 2

SYRACUSE - Sutton
Township Trustees, 7
p.m., village hall.
Tuesday,Aug.3

REEDSVILLE- Olive
Township Trustees, 6:30
p.m. at the township
garage.

Clubs and
organizations
Wednesday, July 28

RACINE - Southern
High School Athleti&lt;;:
Boosters, regular meet-

•

53460 County Road 31,
Portland,Ohio 45770.

ing. 6 p.m.. Southern
Community
Fitness
Center at SHS, all parents of athletes encouraged to attend.

Sunday, Aug. 1

POMEROY The
80th birthday of June
VanVranken will be celebrated with an open
reception in her honor
from 2 to 4 p.m. at the
New Beginnings United
Methodist Church in
Pomeroy.

Tuesday, Aug. 3

MIDDLEPORT
Regular stated meeting
of Middleport Lodge 363,
7:30 p.m., Past Master's
Night. Bring non-perishable items for food bank.
Refreshments at 6:30

Reunions

Birthdays

Sunday, Aug. 1

Friday, July 30

PORTLAND
Gertrude Lehew will
observe her 90th birthday on July 30. Cards
may be sent to her at

PORTLAND
VanMeter Reunion, dinner at 1 p.m., Portland
Park, bring lawn chair,
covered dish, old photographs to share.

Revenue from Page AI

southeastern Ohio and all
over the state. That is one
reason the village ts seeing its jail pay off as well
as it is. according to Lt.
Mony Wood, the village's jail administrator.
Wood said the villae:e
is ''almost guaranl2ed'
five housed-fua-f)«Y prisoners a day once the new
jail is built.
For years. the current
jail was closed to inmates
other than those incarcerated by the village police
department. a result of a
ruling from the village's
liability insurance carTier
after two inmates committed suicide in the jail.
Since it has re-opened.
and the rate per night has
increased to $45. the jail
has become a significant
revenue source .
cal Officer Susan
r
said that jail rev•
enue, estimated at $21 ,000
for the current fiscal year.
will provide the bulk of
the revenue needed to
retire the debt the village
plans to undertake in order
to turn the old Middleport
Elementary School into a
new village hall.
"Overcrowding in jails
is a statewide problem,"
Gerlach said. "There is a

- -

---

·--

~-~---~-~-

Wednesday, July 28, 2010

Area Agency on Aging
receives national recognition

Public
meetings

-·- ~

PageA3

The Daily Sentinel

Wednesday: A chance
of showers and thunderstorms. main1y after 11
a.m. Mostly cloudy, with
a high near 86. Chance of
precipitation is 40 percent.
Wednesday Night: A
chance of showers and
thunderstorms.
then
showers likely and possibly a thunderstorm after
5 a.m. Mostly cloudy,
with a low around 73.
Chance of precipitation
is 60 percent.

---

need for jail space all
over Ohio."
Gerlach said there has
been an indication from
the state officials working with the village in the
preliminary plans for a
new jail that the village
mi~ht be permitted to
house even m01e inmates
than it is designed for increasing revenue from

ASK DR. BROTHERS

Interview questions
can make a difference
communicated
your
expectations about her
performance. and that it
is not satisfactory. You
also should give a new
employee at least a few
months to get acclimated
to her new position.
If you've tried these
things. you still need to
think about the practicalities of firing an employee.
Make sure you have a
Dr. Joyce Brothers
plan to deal with being
one person short. and
for that next intimidating make the transition as
smooth as possible to
interview.
minimize the impact on
• ••
your
other employees.
Dear Dr. Brothers: I
You
also
want ta keep
am the manager of a
small office, and we this woman ·s feelings in
have one employee who mind, and if it comes
really hasn't been per- down to it. have the conforming up to par recent- versation in private when
ly. I think that I'm a fair there are no clients or
and forgiving boss. but outsiders around. If posthis woman is really sible or realistic, offer to
pushing the limit. This is act as a reference. or
the first time I've been in allow her to resign. This
the position of deciding will ease her transition to
whether it's appropriate a new job. Lastly, it's
to fire an employee. and important to communiI really don't know what cate with the rest of the
to do. Are there any office throughout the
guidelines for when it's a process.
(c) 2010 by King
good idea to fire someFeatures
Syndicate
one?- S.B.
Dear S.B.: The first
time you have to fire
someone can be quite
intimidating. It's hard to
know when to try to work
with that person, and
SERVING POMEROY-.
when to finally pull the
plug. In the long run,
though. it's best to confront the situation and do
what needs to be done.
• FIU'E 2.417 Ttehnital Suppott
•lo!lsll'~~('Q·~Yf)J! tluilelflist'
rather than tisk losing the
• 10 IKlla•f a«resses .,.Ill Wet&gt;mail
respect of your other
• Ctsslom S!lltl Page • neW$. wer.t.er &amp; &lt;rae'
employees as they con.Er,_
tinually resent the underSurf up to 25x laster!.J
(
J'Gst 311'JOI'"e
performing employee.
Sign Up Ooliot! www.LocaiHet.com
There are a variety of
things you should try
tion you're applying for before firing this person.
- whether it's asking though. First. it's imporReliable Internet Access Stnce 1994
about your hobbies or tant that you've clearly
your favorite movie.
With these questions. the
interviewer is trying to
get a more complete idea
of what kind of person
you are. How you spend
your free time can indicate a lot about your personality and what kind of
employee you're likely
to be. It is best to be honest when answering these
questions, and think
about this kind of thing
ahead of time if you're
nervous. The reality is
that in the cunent job
market. everything you
can do to give yourself an
edge is important. so
don't put off preparing

Dear Dr. Brothers:
I've been interviewing
for jobs. and have had no
success for a while. I
think I'm qualified. but I
don't do well one-on-one
with the interviewer I'm terrible at ad libbing!
I always thought that
when interviewers asked
you your favorite color or
what you do in your
spare time. they were just
killing time. Do these
questions reaJly get you
anywhere? And have I
been losing out because I
never know how to
answer these meaningless questions? - J .L.
Dear
J,L.:
Unfortunately, you're
mistaken about these
"filler" questions. A lot
of the time, these seemingly meaningless or
unimportant questions
have a very important
purpose - and that's
why they are used in
almost every interview
for any job. There are a
lot of "stock" questions
that don't have right
answers but give the
interviewer an idea of
how prepared you are for
the interview, as well as
how
much
you've
thought about yourself
and your personal and
professional life. These
questions are the ones
that you just know
they're going to ask:
"Where do you see yourself in 10 years?" And
''What are your greatest
weaknesses?" If you
don't have an answer
prepared, you sound like
you're not serious about
the interview.
Then there are the
questions that seem totally irrelevant to the posi-

Visit us
onlin~ at

1

dhe (uJatv.! &lt;fftllt11if9
t

1Buele€~e

www.mydallysentinel.com

that source even more.
Jail space has been a
priority in preliminary
plans for the new village
hall. As much as $300,000
in outside revenue might
be expected from housing
men and women from
other jurisdictions. That
revenue will be the primary funding source for the
new village hall.

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740-992-2891 '
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�~

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------~~~-----------------!11'-

____. . ___...

11111111~

Pagei\4.

. The Daily Sentinel ·

Wednesday, July 2S,

2010

The Daily Sentinel
Leaks of hi~

111 Court Street • Pomeroy, Ohio

classifioo,
top secret
:national secur.ity
documents ...

(740) 992-2156 ·FAX (740) 992-2157

v

www.mydailysentinel.com

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
_ Sammy M. Lopez
Publisher

YOU'RE KIDPI};G!
Theyfou»d

the )fuest list
for Chelsea.

Cl in~11·s~ ?f
weddntj1 ~ .

Charlene Hoeflich
General Manager-News Editor
Pam Caldwell
Advertising Director
Congress shall make 110 law respecting an
establishmeut of rel({!imr, or prolribitiug the free
exercise thereof; or abridgin.~ the freedom of
speech, or of the p1·ess; or the r(~ht of the people
peaceably to assemble, and to petit;.on the
Go11e.mment for a redress of grie11attces.
The First Amendment to the U.S. Constitution

YOU!{. OPINION

Tea Party racist?
Dear Editor:
Judy L. Thomas wrote an article July 13 entitled
"Ted Party is Racist, NAACP Says." Have you
ever felt defensive about people falsely labeling
you? Some have labeled the Tea Party "red''
(Republican). as opposed to '"blue" (Democrat).
They are wrong." We don't endorse any party.
According to the NAACP. we are "white'' as
opposed t~l ''black.'" That also is wrong. This is the
age-old tactic of alienating in order to silence. We
are absolutely not against blacks. If' anyone wishes to paint colors on us, let them be "red. white
and blue.''
T have to resist being labeled a color. The Tea
Party. is composed of various backgrounds and we
won't be painted into a corner. We are united by
the Declaration of Independence. the Constitution
of the Gnited States of America and the Creator
who inspired the authors to write and sign these
documents.
. I've been reading about the Holocaust era during World War IT and have seen parallels to the
d1rection the United States of America is headed.
At this time. the Jews were alienated and given a
"yellow" star to \.vear:Eventually they ended up in
a fiery crematory. How did this happen?
The Na7is began taking over one institution
after another and began taking away God-given
rights one by one. Eventually they ended up
telling the preachers they couldn "t preach against
the government. Does that sound familiar?
I've been reading a book by Eric Metaxas entitled ·'Bonhocffer - Pastor, Martyr. Prophet. Spy:
A Righteous Gentile vs. the Third Reich." The
new biograph; 1s about Dietrich Bonhoeffer who
became part of the resistance against Hitler. God
re\ealed to Bonhoeffer the final destruction the
Nazi-; would bring, while most of the German
church was blinded. Hitler knew that by painting
Jews "'yellm\ .. and claiming they were enemies of
the state. they could alienate them. Eventually
Hitler eliminated six mtllion Jews and millions of
Chnstians including Dietrich Bonhoeffer.
What should we do? Let us stand strong in the
belief that ''all men are created equal. that they are
endowed by their Creator with cet1ain unalienable
rights. that among these are life. liberty and the
pursuit of happiness - that to secure these rights,
governments are instituted among men. deriving
their just powers from the consent of the governed
- that whene\er any form of government
becomes destructive to these ends, it is the right of
the p~ople to alter or abolish it. and to institute
new gO\iernm~Jnt ." Our children and grandchildren are counting on us. Let's not let them down.

Peter Martina'ate
President, Meigs County Tea Party

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 person·
alilies. "Thank You" letters will not be accepted for publication.

Consumer corifidence
falls to lowest since February•
Bv

ANNE D'INNOCENZIO
ASSOCIATED PRESS

Americans' confidence in the
economy eroded further in July
amid worries about a still-stagnant job market. The report raised
concerns about the economic
recovery and the back-to-school
shopping season
The Conference Board. a private research group. said Tuesday
that its Consumer Confidence
Index slipped to 50.4 in July.
down from the revised 5'4.3 in
June. Economists surveyed by
Thomson Reuters expected a
reading of 51.0. The decline follows last month's nearly I 0-point
drop: from 62.7 in May, which
marked
the biggest
since
February, when the' measure also
fell lO·points.
The survey was taken July 1-21.
beginning just as the Standard &amp;
Poor's 500 index was falling to a
nine-month low of I ,022.58 on
July 2. It had risen 4.5 percent by
July 21 and has since climbed an
additional 4 percent as upbeat
earnings reports from manufacturers like 3M Co. and Caterpillar
Inc. have made investors more
convinced that the economic
recovery isn't stalling as much as
they had originally thought.
However, stocks traded in a
tight range Tuesday as investors
again try to balance conflicting
economic and upbeat earnings
reports to figure out the pace of a
global recovery. A slowdown in
regional manufacturing activity
from the Richmond Federal
Reserve dampened the market's
early gains. leaving indexes
mixed in midmorning trading.
The Dow Jones industrial average
rose 3 points. Stocks rose moderately at the open because of strong
earnings from chemical maker
DuPont Co. and European banks
UBS and Deutsc.1e Bank.
Still. a susta.inable recovery
can't
happen
without
the
American consumer. And the second straight month of declining
confidence
following·
three

months of increases is worriesome. economists say.
"Consumers have a much different view of the economy than
the stock market does. and their
views matter more to the economy... said Mark Vitner. an economist at Wells Fargo. The reading,
he says. "tells me that the economy is heading for slmver growth
in the second half."
One component of the index.
which measures how shoppers
feel 110\\ about the economy.
declined to. 26.1, from 26.8. The
other barometer. which measures
shoppers' outlook O\er the next
six months, declined to 66.6, from

72.7.
The index - which measures
how shoppers feel about business
conditions. the job market and the
next six months - had been
recovering fitfully since hitting an
all-time low of 25.3 in February
2009. The index typically falls
before the economy slows down.
and on the.way out of a recession.
the expectations component,
which accounts for more than 60
percent of the reading. n-;es
sharply. Franco said.
"It's all abour jobs. That's still
the primary source of income."
said L\. nn Franco. director of The
Confe;-ence Board Consumer
Research Center. "Until we see
the pa~e of job grov.·th pick up
and consumers are confident that
this is sustainable. \Ve are not likely to see a significant pickup in
confidence."
Economists say the expectations component correlates more
closely with the stock market
movements. but Vitner noted that
the big plunge in May has made
such an imprint on consumers that
the recent rebound hasn't registered. On the other hand. confidence usually rises before an
improvement in the gross domestic product. the broadest measure
of economic activity. Vitner said .
Economists watch the numb~r
closely because consumer spending accounts for about 70 percent
of U.S. economic activity and is

critical to a strong recO\ery. A
reading above 90 indicates the
economy is on solid footmg.
With unemployment stuck near
I 0 percent. Americans are skittish
about spending. A continuing
stream of sobering economic data
- from disappointing job figures
in May and June to weak housing
numbers - is increasing worries
that the economic recoverv 1s
stalling just as government stimulus programs are disappearing.
In particular. concerns are rising
about the housing market. While
the S&amp;P/Case-Shiller 20-city
home price index relea~ed
Tuesday showed a I .3 percent rise
in May from April, the home
buyer's tax credit. which expired
April 30. had an impact on the
reading. In fact, the report
that 'the recent e:ai n s in ho
prices are 110t likely to last.
Economists
will
monitor
Friday's first reading o n secondqum1er GOP. Only modest growth
is expected. And on Aue: . 6 the
government is expected iO report
that employers eliminated 85.000
jobs in Jul), following ~ loss of
125.000 in June. Economists '-llrveyed by ThomsQll Reuters on
av~rage expect the jobless rate to
rise to 9.6 percent. from 9.5 percent.
Retailers had a surprisingly
solid start to the year, but business
has been slowing since April.
Stores have had to deepen ·their
discounts on summer clothing
more than planned to make room
for back-to-school merchandise.
That raises concern about whether
stores v. ill have to mark dO\\ n fall
goods earlier than expected to get
shoppers to bu).
The Conference Bomd sun e\.
based on a random survey mailed
to 5,000 households. showed that
consumers· assessment of the job
market was more negatiH~ th.
the month before. Those claimi1
that jobs are "hard to ge{·
increased to 45.8 from 43.5 percent. while those saying jobs are
"plentiful'' remained unchanged
at 4.3 percent.

\\arn''

The Daily Sentinel
Reader Services

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Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
Published Tuesday through Friday.
111 Court Street, Pomeroy. Ohio.
Second-class postage paid at
Pomeroy.
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Reporter: Brian Reed, Ext. 14
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Correction Policy
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error tn a story, call the newsroom
at (740) 992-2156.

l

NEXT
NATIONAL
GUARDSMAN·

5MILES

Circulation

Circulation Manager: 740-446·
2342. Ext. 11

General Manager
Charlene Hoeflich, Ext. 12
E-mail:
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Mail Subscription
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12 Wee~s
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26 Weeks . . . • . . .' 70.70
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12 Weeks .. . . .• .. . ..' 56.55
26 Weeks . • . ...• .' 113.60
52 Weeks . ...•.• ..'227.21

-------- -----

�--~- --- - -----~---· --.--":"""----------

Wednesday, July 28,

2010

Obituaries

~For the Record

Richard P. Gress

I'I

Richard P. Gress of Middleport, passed away on
Monday, July 26 at home, in the presence of his
family.
Born Oct. 28. 1924 to Lillian Meier Gress and
Frank E. Gress. Richard attended Sacred Heart Grade
School and graduated from Pomeroy High School,
s of 1943 and went directly into the U.S. Army,
basic training in California and Louisiana. He
•
arrived in France the day after Normandy Beach invasion .. ~articipating in the Battle of the Bulge and
remammg days of World War II.
He was employed as a Supervisor by the Kyger
Creek Power Plant and retired in 1990.
In December of 1948 he married Mary Martha
Roller of Middlep01t and to this loving union were
born two sons, Mike and Pat.
Richard was preceded in death by his parents.
Frank and Lillian Gress; brother, Frank E. Gress. Jr.;
sister and brother-in-law: Betty Gress Ohlinger and
David Ohlinger.
Surviving are his wife of 62 112 years, Martha
(Marty): Sons: Richard Michael (Mike) Gress and his
wife Jennifer of Wilmington, Ohio; Mark Patrick
(Pat) Gress and his wife Debra of Monument, Colo.
grandchildren, Christopher Gress and Jenna Gress of
Columbus: Ben Gress of Chicago; Joe Gress, Jon
Gress and Will Gress of Monument. Colo.; sister:
Patricia McKnight, Pomeroy: brothers-in-law and sisters-in-law, James and Ida Roller, Waldorf, Md. and
Richard and Loretta Roller, Belpre; Nancy Ca1e.
Middleport: numerous cousins. nieces and nephews:
and his beloved pet, Gretchen.
A funeral mass will be held at I 2 noon on Thursday.
July 29. 2010, at Sacred Heart Catholic Church.
Officiating will be Rev. Walter Heinz .
urial will follow in Sacred Heart Cemetery.
nds may call on Wednesday. July 28. from 6 to 8
•
p.m. at Anderson McDaniel Funeral Home in
Middleport. A Vigil Service will be conducted at
7:45p.m.
In lieu of flowers, donations may be made to:
American Cancer Society, Strecker Cancer Center in
Marietta, or the Arthur James Cancer Center-Ohio
State University Medical Center, Columbus.
An online registry is available at www.andersonmcdaniel.com.

Deaths
Odessa Wolfe Erbes
Odessa Wolfe Erbes, formerly of Letart Falls, died
June 26,2009, at her home in Sublette, Ill.
A memorial service will be held Aug. 1 at the Dixon
United Methodist Church, Dixon, Ill.

Linda Moore
Linda Mae Moore, 52, of Syracuse,'Ohio passed
yon July 25. 2010. Funeral services will be held
Friday, July 30, 2010 at Anderson McDaniel
•
eral Home. Visiting hours will be on Thursday
from 6-9 p.m. at the funeral home.
A registry is available on-line at ww\v.andersonmcdaniel.com.

KDMC from PageAl
their jobs on Tuesday.
KDMC security reportedly
escorted
the
employees to clean out
their lockers, confiscated
their ID l:&gt;adges and then
escorted them off the
hospital premises.
Another 150 employees were presented with
the following options:
work part-time, change
shifts or leave their jobs.
All options included a
pay cut.
The
statement
releas"ed Tuesday by
MC officials reads in
t, "The economic
cession has hit our
region hard and is lasting longer than anyone
expected. KDMC has
weathered the economic
downturn for two years
by minimizing capital
expenditures, changing
benefits, renegotiating
contracts and changing
flow processes whenever possible to improve
efficiency."
KDMC officials further stated in the press
release, "However, the
harsh reality is that
patients are delaying
their own health care
and Qften those who are
receiving the needed
care cannot pay for it.
Unreimbursed (sic) care
and bad debt are at an
all-time high for our
organization
approaching the $100
·llion mark this year,
ich is a 33 percent
crease over just a year
ago. This is a $25 million difference in one
year. Cost reductions
alone cannot compensate for this change in
our community and in
our country."
KDMC officials also
stated that the hospital is
working with employees
affected by the downsizing to explore other job
opportunities in the

I

\

t

The Daily Sentinel • Page As

www.mydailysentinel.com

center
or
medical
around the region as
well as unemployment
benefits.
Johnson said SEl U
1199 will fight the layoffs because KDMC
allegedly has not honored its agreement with
the union. He said hospital officials promised to
meet with the union and
hospital employees and
provide a 7-day notice
prior to any layoffs, but
failed to do so.
According to its Web
site, KDMC is the largest
employer in the region
between
Charleston.
W.Va .. and Lexington.
Ky. The hospitaL which
now boasts 465 beds.
was founded • in 1899.
Over the years, the hospital bas received numerous honors, including
being named one of the
Top 100 Hospitals in the
U.S. by Thomas Reuters.
KDMC has also been
recognized as one of the
top places to work in
Kentucky
by
the
Kentucky Society for
Human
Resource
Management
State
Council
and
the
Kentucky Chamber of
Commerce.

911

an inmate in the jail, and Second Avenue, was
his
wife.
Audra charged wi-th disorderly
Chandler,
Mason,
POMEROY - Meigs W.Va., were charged by intoxication and
resisting arrest after offiCounty 91 I dispatched
with illegal conveyance cers were called to his
POMEROY The
these calls:
of weapons, drugs or brother's home, where following proceedings
Monday
8:0 I a.m., Mount Olive· other prohibited items he was beating on the were recently filed in the
into the jail, a felony of door and trying to get in public records of Clerk of
Road. seizure: 9:27 a.m .. the
the house .
second degree.
Courts Diane Lynch:
Ohio 681. Reedsville.
Swift
said
Audra
•
James
R.
Blackwell,
Criminal
difficulty
breathing;
Chandler
admitted
to
Fourth
Avenue.
was
•
Jesse
Ward sentenced
I I :29 a.m., North Second
Avenue, diabetic emer- placing Schedule II nar- arrested and jailed for to one year on charge of
cotics on the floor and obstructing official busi- non-support of depengency: 12:44 p.m .. Union slipping
them through a ness and felony vandal- dents. ordered to pay
Avenue. chest pain.
crack
in
the door. which ism after officers were at $12.521.28 in back child
4:22p.m .. Main Street.
her
husband
then picked his home on a complaint. support.
Reedsville,
difficulty
up
with
a
towel.
Blackwell was hand• Joshua Rathburn senbreathing. hang up call;
Officers
observed
the
cuffed
and placed in the tenced to three years for
5:13
p.m.,
General activity on a security
police cruiser and he breaking and entering.
Hartinger Parkway, fall;
allegedly
kicked the robbery with a firearms
camera
and
were
assisted
10 p.m., South Third in the investigation by windows out.
specification. community
Avenue, high blood pres- the Major Crimes Task
•
Jacob
Well.
South
control.
sure: 4:52 p.m., Vance Force.
Third
Avenue,
advised
Civil
Road, difficulty breathChandler is jailed on someone had entered his
• Foreclosure granted
ing: 5:05p.m., Ohio 143. charges
of armed robbery car on Lincoln Street and to Farmers Bank and
Albany. fall.
at the TNT Pit Stop
stolen golf clubs. a base- Savings Co. against
• Grover Arnold was ball glove and other items. Amie M. Hart, and othcharged with domestic Several other cars were ers.
violence after a com- broken into at the same
Domestic relations
MIDDLEPORT
plaint was filed alleging time and investigation is
• Dissolutions granted
Police Chief Bruce Swift threats against a family continuing. Anyone with to Jeremy and April
member.
reported:
information is asked to Lawrence, Derik and
• Alexander Chandler,
• Eddie Rhodes, South call the department.
Samantha Winebrenner.

Common
Pleas

Middleport

ABLE from Page Al
Center, extended the welcome with Carol Brewer.
Meigs
coordinator.
speaking about ABLE.
the dedication of its
instructors. and its successes.
The awards for the students, provided by the
Rotary Club. were presented by 'the instructors
Lois Knadler at the
Tuppers Plains ABLE
Center, and Susan King
Charla
Oden,
and
instructors
at
the
Middleport
ABLE
Center, with words of
praise and encouragement.
Four of the ABLE students recognized were
GED graduates of the
2009-2010 years. They
were Michael Coleman,
Dorothy Hill, Charley
Nutter
and
Bryan
Stewart.
Coleman and Stewart
spoke following the presentation about their
experiences in the ABLE
program in appreciation
of the help received in
completing requirements
for the GED diploma.
"Education at the
Middleport Able Center

Submit1ed photos

Susan King, who has
completed more than 16
years as an ABLE
instructor, was presented
a plaque of appreciation
by Carol Brewer, ESC
staff coordinator.
provided
a
second
chance for me," said
Stewart, whose plan now
is to further his education
at Hocking College. He
credited education with
providing him a new way
to solve old ·problems,
and expressed appreciation to his wife and
extended family for their
love and support.

Brenda Barnhart of the Middleport-Pomeroy Rotary
Club which hosted ABLE's dinner and provides the
awards, presents the plaque to Michael Coleman,
GED graduate.
Coleman spoke of the
"great appreciation" for
the Middleport ABLE
Center and the instructors who helped him
obtain his GED. ''I am
now pursuing a career in
business which has been
opened to me because of
Charla Oden and Susan
King," (ABLE instructors).
commented
Coleman.
On behalf of ABLE

and the Educational service Center staff, Brewer
recognized Susan King
for her 16 years of service to the Meigs County
ABLE program.
More
information
about the program is
available by calling
Coordinator Bre..,1•er . at
the Meigs Office of the
Athens-Meigs ESC, 9925592, or the Middleport
Center, 992-5808.

Hall from Page AI
Fiscal Officer Susan
Baker said the village
budgeted $15 .000 for
planning in all three
phases and has spent
$11,015 to date.
Council Member Julia
Houston raised questions
about the balance of the
recreation fund and payment of liability insurance through that line for
its portion of the village's
policy. Fiscal Officer
Susan Baker explained
that the cash balance and
appropriation balance are
different, and that the
original appropnat1on
was $2,660, with $1.034
spent so far this year.
Houston also ques-

tioned whether·funds are
available, for example,
for equipment repairs
and other recreation
expenditures. and Baker
said the general fund supports the parks and recreation facilities through
utility payments, man
hours and other costs.
Houston
expressed
thanks on behalf of Heath
United Methodist Church
for park maintenance for
their monthly dinners in
Diles Park.
Councilman
Shawn
Rice noted the location of
potholes and drainage
issues which need to be
repaired.
Council
Member

E-mail us your
community news
. and photos!

Sandy Brown discussed
needed repairs at the boat
launching facility.
Nancy
Burns.
Hamilton Street. discussed concerns with the
relocation of her water
meter.

Council also:
• Approved payment of
bills, $34.055.14.
• Approved depattmental reports and the
mayor's court of fines

collected, $8,088.
• Appointed Tom
Lowery
to
replace
Emerson Heighton on the
Zoning
Board
of
Appeals. Heighton is
now a councilman.
Also present were
Mayor Michael Gerlach,
Fiscal Officer Susan
Baker. President Rae
Moore. and members,
Heighton and Craig
Wehrung.

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Bv

JuLIE CARR SMYTH

The

GOP

camp~ign

PHILIP ELLIOTT

ASSOCIATED PRESS

WASHINGTON

ASSOCIATED PRESS

savs

Ohio's

Democra~ic governor has taken nearly $1.5 million

111 camp&lt;ugn money from those with ties to the financial industry while attackinn the Wall Street tics of
his Republican rival.
e
State Republican Chairman Kevin DeWine and
Republican legislative leaders called Gov. Ted
Strickland a hypocrite for taking the cash. Strickland
has made Republican challenger John Kasich \time as
a high-salaried managing director at the failed Ldnnan
• B1:?thers invest_ment ~~nk a thC!J1C of his campaign.
It turns out 111 add1tton to bcmo a oreat critic of the
financial industrv. Ted Stricklmfd h~'ls been a oreat
beneficiary of the financial industry.'' DeWine s~d.
~he pm1~· releas~d a binder full of \vhat they dubbed
Stnckland s undisclosed ''love affair" with Wall
Street, which included the contributions. details of
several Ohio bond deals with Lehman or its successor
Barclays Capital. and $25.000 in contributions
Stric~land h~s taken f~om he_irs of the Lehman family.
. Stnckland s. campmgn reJected . the party's asser~Ions. They sa1d_the GOP padded the total b) includu~g small-tO\vn msurance agents, accountants, financial planners, and bank IT staffers with little to do
'
with Wall Street.
"We don't know v.:h~t's more amusing. that Ohio
Republicans want to InJeCt Lehman Brothers into the
g~ve~nor's race once again or that they are equating
Circuit board producers in Canton with Wall Street
tycoons like Dick_ Fuld.'' s~id Strickland campaign
manager A~ron Pickrell. "Either way_ their math is
~?Ore quest1on~ble t~an the accounting practices that
former managmg d1rector John Kasich and his coworkers used to cook the books at Lehman Brothers."
Kasich was not part of Tuesday's news conference.
De~ine was jo~ned by Ohio Senate president Bill
Hams and Oh1o House Republican leader Bill
Batchelder, two seasoned state lawmakers who field
and fund ~andidates for the state Legislature.
Both smd they need a governor who is honest.
The..GO~ used a methodology that defined "Wall
Street . to mclude both the banking and insurance
mdustnes, as well as their lobbyists, PACs and
employees. Ohio has the ninth-largest insurance
industry in the nation. with 249 insurance companies
headquartered in the state in 2009, accordinf! to the
Ohio Dcpm1ment of Insurance.
...
DeW~ne repeated!~ accused Strickland and groups
supportmg h1s cand1dacy of "demonizino the entire
fin~ncial s~rvices ind~stry" with thei( campaign
agamst Kastch, and satd average Ohioans workino
throughout the sector were included to shov. ho\".-· fa;.
reaching the Wall Street label goes.
"They're the ones who have defined Wall Street as
the State Farm agent," he .said. "It's a nice fooossed
sound bite. You can talk about somebody has 'Wall
Street values' and somebody has ·Ohio values,' \Vhen
the truth of the matter is the way they've defined the
f1ght, they' re picking a fight \Vith Ohio business. with
Ohio companies.''
Strickland's campaign has focussed on Kasich 's
time_ with ~ehm~n in ad~ and campaign speeches.
seekmg to ltnk hun to an 1mage of greed that is resor~atmg strongly with economicall) -challenged \Oters
th1s year. The campaign has pointed out investment
losses sufTe~e? after ~ehmar~ went bankrupt. particularly at Oh10 s pubhc penswn funds, and made an
tssu~ of the roughly $580.000 in salary and bonuses
Kas1ch made annually for the years he was there.
The stat~ has lost $29 million on the piece of business Lehman did as part of the state's $5.5 billion
tobacco securitization deal. which made up most of
the state busine&lt;;s cited in the GOP analysis. The state
has sought return of the money .in court.

Wednesday, July 28,

2010

Denis nervously eye Fisher's troubles in Ohio

GOP says Strickland took
moneyBvfrom Wall Street
COLUMBUS

PageA6

Democratic Senate candidate Lee Fisher faces a
daunting 9-to-1 disadvantage in fundraising in
his campaign against
Republican Rob Portman
in Ohio and has endured
unexpected
staff
turnover, developments
that have spread concern
among national party ·
leaders about his ability
to remain competitive in
the race.
Fisher, the state's lieutenant governor, recently
hired his third campaign
manager while his campaign spokesman and
, researcher quit. Sluggish
fundraising has left him
badly trailing Portman, a
veteran of President
George W. Bush's White
House and Cabinet. The
Republican
reported
almost $8.9 million in his
campaign account at the
end or June; Fisher had
about $1 .3 million available. but was carryi~g
more than $110.000 111
debt after a costly win in
May's Democratic primary.
•
Ohio,
one
of
Democrats' top chances
to win a Republican-held
seat. has become a
headache for national
party leaders who fear it
could take millions just
to. get Fisher caught up
w1th Portman. Privately.
in
Democrats
Washington expressed
frustration with Fisher's

. operation,
especw!ly h1s. h,ands-on
m~nagem_e!H St) le, and
e' e1~ questwned whether
President Barack Obama
~hould spend_ 1_11ore time
111 the state ra1s1ng money
for the Senate candidate.
~isher skipped a campm,gn appearance with
Obama in May. The
Democrat joined Vice
President Joe Biden at a
fundraiser last month.
Publicly, Democrats
insist Fisher has a shot at
defeating Portman and
win the seat vacated by
Republican Sen. George
Voinovich. Ohio is a
swing state that Obama
won two years ago and it
would be pa11 of any calculation for 2012.
"Lee will have the
resources he needs to
show Ohioan~ the clear
choice
they
have:
between Lee's work on
the ground to create Ohio
jobs and Congressman
Po11man 's two decades in
Washington supporting
devastating trade policies
that shipped Ohio jobs
O\'erseas," said Lynne
Bowman. Fisher's campaign manager.
The
Democratic
Party's massive political
machine in Ohio could
help Fisher with $3 million raised during the last
40 days to help statewide
candidates. Organized
labor has long played a
role in the statG and has
opened political offices
in Columbus. Cleveland
and Cincinnati. And
Obama's political arm.

Organizing for America.
~ever truly shut down
ctftcr. the 2008 ruce an.cl
contm~es to communicate With supporters who
helped Obama carry the
state with 52 percent of
the vote.
The state party. the
largest in the nation. has
more than 206 paid
staffers working for
Democrats. The Ohio
Democratic Part) has
taken over the statewide
voter turnout and political aspects of the campaigns, including Gov.
Ted Strickland's bid for
re-election and Fi,her's
Senate run.
"We know hO\\ to
win," Ohio Democratic
Party chairman Chris
Redfern said.
Redfern
dismissed
Washington Democrats'
worries and said the state
party was capable of ushering Fisher and others to
victory.
"Folks are fixated on
the number of campaign
managers Lee Fisher hao.,
hired or fired in the last
year," Redfern said. "It's
late July and there's nothing to talk about."
But Democrats in
Washington are citing
those developments as
they decide where to
allocate
resources.
Fisher's
former
spokesman John Collins
is now workinn on the
open Senate ~ace in

DAQ)- 18.96
BBT (NYSE) - 26.09
Peoples (NASDAQ) - 17.29
Pepsico (NYSE) - 65.69
Premier (NASDAQ) - 7.47
Rockwell (NYSE) - 55.96
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Sears Holding (NASDAQ) 70.78
Wai-Mart (NYSE) - 50.96
Wendy's (NYSE) - 4.39
WesBanco (NYSE)- 17.11
Worthington (NYSE) - 14.55
Daily stock reports are the 4
p.m. ET closing quotes of
transactions for July 27, 2010,
provided by Edward Jones
financial advisors Isaac Mills
in Gallipolis at (740) 441-9441
and Lesley Marrero in Point
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Ohio Valley Bane Corp (NAS-

\\here

pcm~)C~at Jack Conway
1s t acmg tea pany-

backed candidate Rand
J1aul.
Demonats hope to
remind
voters
that
Portman was Bush's bll.
get director and tra
ambassador and then link
him to the state ·s struf!gling economy. \vhich
posted a 10.4 percent
unemplo) ment rate last
month .
In an ad released
Tuesdav. Portman's earnpaign hit back on the
Democrats' criticism and
noted that 400.000 Ohio
jobs were lost durin!! the
bst three years alone.
Portman's camp also
pushed l]ack on claims
the former southwest
Ohio
conf!ressman
shipped Oh1o 's jobs overseas: officittls cite data
from Ohio's Department
of Labor that 6 times as
many Ohio jobs wem
across state lines as went
overseas during those
same three vears~
Organized lahor. a
powerful force during
pre~idential elections •
Oh1o. notes the state's 1.
million voters with tie~ to
unions. But not all workers' groups are behind
Fisher. Last week. the
Ohio Fratemal Order of
Police backed Portman
OYer Fbher, who spent
three days seeking their
support.

W®llil ~~lill ~aoo~
~IT®miD

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Kentucky,

Calll-888-696~ 2341

Jack Hanna wards off
grizzly with pepper spray
COLUMBUS (AP) - TV host and LOokeeper Jack
Hanna says ~e took his own advice and used pepper
spray on a gnzzly bear headed toward him.
The Columbus Zoo keeper and frequent David
Letterman guest sa1d he was with his wife and other
hikers in Montana's Glacier National Park on
Saturday when a bear cub, \\·eighing about 125
pounds, charged them. Hanna told The Columbus
Dis_patch that he held up a canister of pepper spray.
wh1ch he takes routinely on hikes.
"At about 30 feet. I unload my pepper spray. and the
wmd takes it." he told the newspaper.
But _the bear kept coming. Hanna sprayed toward ·
the am mal again, but still it kept com inn.
. "~he.n th7, third time I unload that pepper spray right
111 h1s tace. Hanna said.
The bear turned around and fled .
. Hanna said he's been can·ying pepper spray on hikes
tor 15 years. but Saturday was the first time he's used it.
The group was returning from Grinnell Gtacier by
way of~ naiTOW trail with a cliff on one side and a steep
drop-oft on the other. They rounded a comer and saw a
motryer bear and two large cubs about 30-feet away
commg toward them. the newspaper repotted Tuesday.

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Inside
Clarett returns to OSU, Page B2
Local Sports Briefs. Page B6

'
Wednesday•.July 28, 2010

Tomlin, Indians handle Yankees; 4-1

DAYS

CLEVELAND (AP)
- Josh Tomlin took a
shutout into the eighth
inning against Alex
RodrG~ucl ~and the Ne\\
York Yankees to wm his
major league debut with
the Cleveland Indians. 41 on Tuesday night.
Getting one more
chance at hitting his
600th homer \Vith two
outs in the ninth inning.
Rodriguet. grounded into
a forceout to shortstop to
end the game A-Rod
went 0 for 4 on his 35th
birthday.
The
25-year-old
Tomlin outpitched former Indians ace CC
Sabathia ( 13-4). handing
the left-hander his first

Please see Indians, 86

~fending

champ
~Conn to face
OSU in Maggie
Dixon Classic

,

'

shawley@mydailytribune.com

Hard-hitting
: former Raider
Jack T.I atum
•
dieS
at 61 ·

1

COLU:V1BUS. Ohio
(AP) - Jack Taturn. the
Pro BO\\'l safetv for the
Oakland Raiders be~t
known for his crushing
hit that paralyzed Darr)1
Stingley in an NFL preseason game in 1978. has
died. He was 61.
Nicknamed
"The
Assassin:· Tatum. died of
a heart attack Tuesday in
an Oakland hospital.
according to friend and
former Ohio State teammate John Hicks. Hicks
said Tatum had diabetes
the last sc\ eraf years. and
lo'-.t hi~ left leg because
of circulation prohlem ....
On Aug. 12. 1978. in
an exhihition game
again:--t the 1\:e'' England
P~ttnots. the hard-hltting
Tatum slammed into
Stingle\ with his helmet
while the receiver was
running a crossing pattern. The blO\\ se\ ered
Stingley's fourth and
fifth 'eterbrae and left
the recei \'er para I) Led
from the neck do&gt;' n.
David Perry/Lexington Herald-Leader/MCT
The two never met
NFL player Terrell Owens arrived for the 136th running of the Kentucky Derby at after the hit. Stingle)
Churchill Downs in Louisville, Kentucky, Saturday, May 1.
died in 2007.
~
"The T.O. Show."
Tatum was not penalAlready, it's like some- to cable.
Ochocinco 's last show ized on the pia) and the
By adding the 36-yearthing out of a reality
show.
· old Owens. the Bengals involved eliminating two • .NFL took no di~ciplinary
Ochocinco
gushed will lead the NFL in real- contestants. Owens' last action. but it did tighten
show
· stars. program had him walk- its rules on violent hits.
about the matchup on his ity
Despite Tatum\ failure
Twitter feed. welcoming Ochocinco competed on ing down a runway as
O'wens and joking that "Dancing With the Stars" part of a fashion shO\\ m to show remorse. Hicks
··an of our games have in the offseason. and has metrosexual attire
said Tatum was haunted
been moved to pay-per- a dating show called bare chest under an open by the play.
"It was tough on him.
The jacket with huge neckview. you got to pay to "Ochocinco:
Ultimate Catch'' current- lace and a wig.
too." Hicks \aid. "He
see this."
wasn't the same person
Both of the look-at-me ly running on \HI. After
receivers are accustomed Ochocinco 's show comes Please see 8engals, 82 after that. For ) ears he
was'almost a recluse."
Tatum had said he tried
to \ isit Stingle) at an
Oakland hospital short!)
after the collision but was
turned
a\\'H)
by
Stingle\ ·s famih members~ ··If~ not so much that
Dan) I doesn't ''ant to.
but it's the people around
him:· Tatum told the
Oakland Tribune in 2004.
"So we ha,en"t been able
to get through that. E' erv
who spent last season
tin1e \\e pliin somethini.
backing up rookie Jonny
it geh messed up.
Flynn on the woeful
Getting. to him or him
Wolves. as their new
getting back to me. it
point guard.
never lmppens."
Sessions averaged 8.2
Part of the alienation
points on 45.6 percent
came after Tatum wrote
shooting with 3.1 assists
the 1980 book. "Thev
in a career-low 21 .I minCall ~tc A:-.sa~sin." in
utes per game last sea'' hich he was unapoloson. He signed a fourgetic for hi~ headhunting
year. $16 million deal to
\\ay-..
join the Wolves before
ln a statenwnt. the
last season. The native of
Raider~ -.aid. "Jack was a
South Carolina is close
true Raider champion
friends with Cavs guard
and a true Rmder wmTior.
Mo Williams from~their
... Jack \\as the standard
days together with the
bearer and an inspiration
Milwaukee Bucks and
for the posttion of safety
should get much more
throui!hont college anll
in
playing
time
profe~sional football."
Cleveland this year.
After starring for Ohio
The
25-vear-old
MaryJo WalickVMilwaukee Journal SentlneVMCT State unckr coach Wood\
Hollins is a super-athletic. but very raw. for- In this April 13, 2009, file photo, Milwaukee Bucks Jl,\\ es, l'atum ''as drafiward/center who aver- Ramon Sessions drives to the basket, as Orlando ed 'in the first round b\
aged 6.1 points and 2.8 Magic's Rater Alston defends at the Bradley Center in the Raiders 111 1971. li1
Milwaukee. Wisconsin. Sessions was traded from the
Please see Tatum, 86
Please see Trade, 86
Timberwolves to Cleveland on Monday.

Timberwolves trade
Sessions, Hollins to Cavs

Us

AP Photofrony Dejak

AP Source: Bengals reach deal with TO

ciNCINNATI (AP) A year after they were
NEW YORK tAP) featured on HBO's "Hard
Maya Moore and the Knocks.'' the Bengals
Connecticut Huskies will hav~ scripted their own
return to tvtadison Square reaht) show.
Garden to play Ohio
T.O. and Ocho. Two
State in the Maggie self-conscious stars. one
Dixon Classic on Dec. NFL team.
19.
How will the) fit? How
The two-time defend- will it work? Which
ing national champions receiver will provide
have won an NCAA- most of the drama?
rcc&lt;?rd 78 straight games
And. more imp011antly.
havmg gone unbeaten the will any of it help the
last two seasons. They Bengals get back to the
return three starters from playoffs?
last season's team that
The Bengals reached a
beat Stanford for a sev- contract agreement with
' enth national title. The receiver Terrell Owens
Huskies beat Penn State on Tuesday. a person
• 1n the Maggie Dixon familiar with the situaClass1c in 2008.
tion told The Associated
Rutgers will face Texas Press. He's expected to
\11 in the first game of report to train.ing camp in
women's ba'Skctball a day or two.
bleheader.
The Bengals were his
Ohio State \\ill be tirst choice. giving him a
making
its
second chance to team with close
appearance in the Classic fiiend Chad Ochocinco,
. as the Buckeyes traveled who has already dubbed
• to West Point in 2006 for the pair Batman and
the
inaugural game Robin. The Bengals
against Army. Ohio State made an offer on
finished eighth in the Monday. and Owens
final Top 25 poll before accepted a day later.
Players are required to
losing to Mississippi
State in the second round report for the start of
camp
on
of the NCAA tourna- training
Wednesday
in
ment.
The. Buckeyes still Georgetow·n. Ky. Owens
have a potent inside-out- is expected to shov. up
side offense with center when workouts begin on
Jantel Lavender and Thursday. said the person
guard Samantha Prahal is speaking on condition of
and should once again be anonymity because the
one of the top I0 teams in team had made no
announcement.
the nation.
On his Twitter account.
It's the fourth straight
season that the Scarlet all Owens would sa;
Knights \Vill play at the was. "Hoping 2 b a
Garden in the Classic Bengal w/in the 24hrsll"
named for the former He's expected to sign his
y women's coach. deal with he arrives in
.Jers
lost to Tennessee Georgetown.
•
last season in front of
nearly 7.200 fans.
Texas A&amp;M finished
ninth in the Top 25 last
season af~r winning the
Big 12 title. The Aggies
lost to· Gonzaga in the
MII\NEAPOLIS (AP)
second round of the
-Goodbye. LeBron.
NCAA tournament.
Hello. Ramon.
Rutgers coach C.
The
Cleveland
Vivian Stringer. UConn 's
completed
Geno Auriemma. Ohio Cavaliers
State's Jim Foster and their first post-LeBron
Texas A&amp;M's Gary Blair James personnel. move
have combined for over on Monday night, trading
troubled guard Delonte
2.850 victories.
West
and point guard
Maggie Dixon died
April 6. 2006. of arrhyth- Sebastian Telfair to the
mia, probably caused by Minnesota Timberwolves
an enlarged heart. Her for point guard Ramon
death came three weeks Ses~ions. 7-footer Ryan
after her first season as a Hollins and a future sechead coach. a perfor- ond-round pick.
After James dumped
mance that \\On the
Ca\ s on national telethe
admiration of the academy and all of college bas- vision and tled to Miami
to join Dwyane Wade.
ketball.
Chris Bo~h and the Heat,
owne'r Dan Gilbert sent
off a scathing letter to
Cleveland fans vowing to
win a title before LeBron
1-740-446-2342 ext. 33
does.
The Cavaliers tried to
Fax..:. 1·740·446·3008
start the roster makeover
E-mail: mdssporls@mydaolysenhnel.com
by signing restricted free
SP9J:te..Sta1f
agent point guard Kyle
Bryan Walters
Lowry to an offer sheet.
(740) 446-2342, ext. 33
but the Houston Rockets
bwalters@ mydailytribune.com
matched it. So they settled on Sessions. a quick.
Sarah Hawley
(740) 446·2342. ext. 33
pick-and-roll specialist

1

.

Cleveland lndtans Asdrubal Cabrera, left, scores as New York Yankees catcner Francisco Cervelli can't make
the tag in the fourth inning in a baseball game, Tuesday, in Cleveland.

a

�----·----- - . . ---

~-

-------·--

Page B2 • The Daily Sentinel

National Sports Briefs

...

...

-------....,....,~...,..--ll--"!"'-"'""'"---.-~~-~-

www.mydailysentinel.com

-.-~-'!11--

..-,.........

--"-~

Wednesday, July 28,

2010

Matt Garza pitches 1st no-hitter in Rays history

ST. PETERSBURG.
Fla. {AP) - ~fatt Garza
insists the first no-hitter in
Tampa Bay history and the
in the major leagues
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP)- Ohio State University fifth
this
season
isn t the most
says former football star Maurice Clarett has been
satisfying
moment
of his
granted re-entry to pursue his degree after he spent career.
more than three years in prison.
That.
Garta
said
Ohio State spokesman Jim Lynch says in a stateMonday
night
after
facing
ment that Clarett started classes on Monday after he
minimum 27 hatter~ to
was readmitted· by the College of Education and the
beat
the Detroit Tigers 5-0.
Human Ecology, where he was originally enrolled.
came during un MVP perClarett says in a statement that it is a "surreal feel- formance as the wmning
ing to be back at Ohio State" and that he doesn't want pitcher in Game 7 of the
to be a "distraction or nuisance" to the football team 2008 AL champion:-.hip
or other students.
series.
Clarett led the Buckeyes to the 2002 national cham"It's not even close tu
pionship in hi~ only college season. He pleaded guilty that feeling. Shoot. we
m 2006 to aggravated robbery and carrying a con- went to the World Series,''
ceal~d weapon, and served 3 1/2 years in a Toledo the hard-tht'O\ving rightprison, where he took college-credit courses.
hander said in a hmaily srt
up intef\ iew room after
the Rays finally wound up
on the right side of a mem, arable pitching performance.
COLUMBUS. Ohio (AP) - The Ohio State Fair's
"I'm a big team athlete.
traditional butter cow and calf made are accompanied Anything that gets us to
this year by figures from the world of pigskin.
the nextlevel is what I'll
When the fair opens Wednesday. visitors to the do. We win - we all win,
dairy exhibit also will see butter sculptures of Joe and I win. Tonight was just
Thomas of the Cleveland Browns and Chinedum about these guys. They
Ndukwe of the Cincinnati Bengals, along with a giant played great defense. They
hit when the&gt;.' had to. If
butter football.
A team of Cincinnati artists worked nearly 400 they weren t there, I
hours to craft this year's display out of one ton of but- wouldn't be in here."
ter. The figures are housed behind glass and kept
The gem left the San
refrigerated at 45 degrees.
Diego Padres and New
Last year's fair featured three generations of a dairy Yorl&lt; Mets as the only big
league teams without a nofamily and a veterinarian made of butter.
Butter sculptures have been part of the fair for more hitter and moved the second-place Rays a seasonthan 100 year~.
best 22 games over .500,
three games behind the
New York Yankees in the
AL East.
Garza set a team record
CLEVELAND (AP) - The Cleveland Browns for fe,vest batters faced in
have signed defensive back T.J. Ward to a multiyear a complete game, allowing
contract. leavin~ Joe Haden as their only unsigned only a second-inning walk
to Brennan Boesch, who
draft pick. ·
The Browns announced the signing Tuesday. Ward v..·as erased on a doubJe
was a second-round pick from the University of play.
"It's great. I wao.; a walk
Oregon.
away
from being perfect.
The 5-foot-1 0, 211-pounder walked on with the
But the best part 1s that we
Ducks.
The team hopes to have Haden, a first-round draft won. We're keeping puce.
pick, under contract by the time camp opens on we're keepin~ the heat on
the Yankees,' said Garza,
Saturday.
who was obtained from
Minnesota during the offseason before Tampa
son in Cincinnati, and · Bay's improbable nm to
went looking for a the World Series t~·o years
replacement. They gave ago.
Owens a tryout in \1arch.
from PageBl
"We taught that ouv
•
0 '
but decided to sign everythmg
he knows,'
Antonio
Bryant
to
a
fourTwins
manager
.Kon
In a couple of days, it
deal instead.
Gardenhire said in Kansas
will be the dancer-and- year
Brown
had a one-on- 1 City, where Minnesota
dater on one side of the one meeting
with Owens , was playing the Royals.
field, the metroscxual and
came
away
The 26-year-old Garza's
model- on the other.
impressed.· When the previow. longest bid for a
In the middle will be receiver still available as no-hitter was six innings
quarterback
Carson
was opening. twice. including June 26,
Palmer. who helped camp
Brown
decided
to add 2008 at Florida, when he
bring
Owens
to him. as well.
gave up a homer to Hanley
Palmer
Cincinnati.
The Bengals could Ra01irez leading off the
worked out with O",:ens move Bryant to an inside seventh and finished with
in California and called slot position. one they've a 1-hitter.
coach Marvin Lewis, struggled to fill since T.J.
"We needed one. I don't
saying the team ought to Houshmandzadeh left as care who it came from. We
try to sign him.
a free agent. They could just needed one for our
Bengals owner Mike alternate
the
two own confidence," Garza
Brown went along, even receivers at an outside said, mindful that the Rays
though he knew Owens spot opposite Ochocinco, have been held hitless four
also brings a lot of bag- who was regularly dou- times in their 13-season
history - three times in
gage. The outspoken ble-teamed last season.
receiver has a history of
Agent
Drew the past year. 'The guys
undercutting his quarter- Rosenhaus, who repre- are just as excited as I am.
Owens
and It's fun."
backs. though he was on sents
Two of the no·hitters
good behavior last sea- Ochocinco, didn't return
a phone message to dis- tossed against the Rays
son· in Buffalo.
Brown doesn't mind. cuss the deal. believed to since July 2009 were perfect games. They didn't
He has a history of pro- be for one year.
viding extra chances to
players who have caused
trouble. allowing them to
extend their careers in
Bengals stripes. In the
last two years. the
Bengals also have signed
receiver Chris Henr&gt;'·
running back Cednc
Benson, running back
Larry
Johnson
and
receiver Matt Jones, all
of whom were let go
because of off-field
issues.
"Yes, people can make
mistakes," Brown said at
the team's preseason luncheon on Monday. "It
doesn't mean that they go
on the rest of their lives
making mistakes. They
can get their ship pointed
in the right direction.
This is a 36-year-old
man. He's been through a
lot. He's proven as a
player and as a person.''
The question is how
much he has left.
Owens caught 55 passes for 829 yards and five
touchdowns with the
Bills last season. his
least-productive full season since early in his
career
with
San
Francisco. The Bengals
are trying to upgrade a
passing game that was
one of the NFL's worst
last season. ranking 26th.
The Bengals won the
AFC North by relying on
defense and their running
game. They released
receiver
Laveranucs
Coles after his only sea-

Ex-football star Clarett back
in class at Ohio St.

Ohio fair features NFL
players sculpted of butter

Browns sign defensive back
Ward to multiyear deal

Bengals

•

AP Photo/Mike Carlson

Tampa Bay Rays starting pitcher Matt Garza, center, is greeted by catcher Kelly
Shoppach, left. and first baseman Carlos Pena after the final out of his no-hitter :
against the Detroit Tigers in a baseball game Monday, in St. Petersburg, Fla. The
Rays won 5-0.

manage a hit Monday off
starter Max Scherzer until
ex-Tiser Matt Joyce's
sixth-mning gmnd slam.
"It was one of those
days where everythinp
lined up,'' Garza said.
"The defense made great
plays. I really can't say
enough about them."
Gau~ ( 11-5) was the latest to shine in the Year of
the Pitcher. The last time
there were at lea'&gt;t fiye nohitters in a season was
1991 . when Hall of Farner
Nolan Ryan threw one of
se\en in the big leagues
that vear, accordin!! to
STATS LLC.
~
It's only the tliird time in
major league his tO!)' that a
team has been inYolved m
three no-hitters during or~e
season. The 1917 St. Lollis
Browns and Chica£!o
White Sox were involved
in three - all against each
other.
It's also the first time in
37 years that two no-hitters have occurred in the
same AL ballpark in one
season. After going 1.006
games without one at
Tropicana Field. two have
been tossed in the last 11
£!ames at the hitter-friendry dome.
''The guv obvious!\
made hisiO!)· for Tampa.

congratulations to him,"
Detroit · manager Jim
Leyland said. adding that
Garza dominated the
Tigers with "high fa:-.tball
after high fastball.''
Garza, the ALCS MVP
when Tampa Bay beat
Boston for its first pennant, rebounded from one
of his worst outings this
season to \\in hi:-. fourth
straight decisiOn and lie a
career tx:~t for \ ktoncs.
He retired pinch-hitter
Ramon Santiago for the
final ~ut on an ea')y fly ball
to nght fielder Ben
Zobrist, who made a tenific nmning catch in the
third to rob Danny Worth.
"In the ninth inning. I
ran out there and I just told
myself. .well. we can go
about thts two wa\ s. I can
II)' not to get coniact and
get in trouble or I can go at
these suy~ and if it happens, 1t happens,'' Gatra
said.
The closest Detroit's
injury-depleted
lineup
carne to a hit \\as Wmth 's
two-out liner, but Zobrist
made a lcapmg grab above
his head as he mn toward
the ''all.
''I was able to t1me it just
rj.ght for my jump."
Zobri~t said. "Caught it
right in the end of 111)

glove."
.Miguel Cabrera hit a
deep ~fly ball to center in
the fifth and a hard liner to
left leading off the eighth,
but the Tigers couldn't
avoid being no-hit for the
first time since Randy
Johnson shut them down
at Seattle on June 2. 1990.
Garta struck out six in
Tampa Bay's 2.039th
game - and on a night
when the Rays were held
to ju~t three hits themsehes.
•
Jovce 's slam on a .
pitcl1 with two outs in
sixth was the flrst hit off
Scherter (7-8). The next
batter, Jason Bartlett. sin~led for the onlv other hit
until Crawford"' homered
off Enrique Gonzalez in
the eighth.
''I wanted to keep challem!ing. I didn't want to
walk him in that situation," Scherzer said. "I
grooved it. and he hit it."
Garta, 0-4 with a 5.85
ERA in six career starts
against Detroit before
Mondm. retired Don
Kelly " on a routine
grounder to second base in
the ninth and struck out
Gerald Laird before getting Santiago to end it on
his !20th pitch before a
crowd of 17.009.

'-

�....

-----------~-----~----:----:"'-----:-----:-----~~-----···~----

Wednesday, July 28, 2010

...

The Daily Sentinel • Page 83

www.mydallysentinel.com

..
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500

Education

Business &amp; Trade
School
Gallipolis ca reer
College
(Careers Close To
Home)

Call Today! 740-4464367
1·800·214·0452
ga poi~Seareercollege edu
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Aa:redoting Courc~ for
Independent Col eges and
Schools 12748

700

Agriculture

or Fax To (740) 446-3008

l\egister

Farm Equipm11nt
EBY,
INTEGRITY,
KIEFER BUILT,
VALLEY
HOASEJLIVESTCCK
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AT
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446·3825

900
Merchandise
Have you pnced a John
Deere &lt;ltely? You'll be
surprised! Check out
WantTo Buy
our used Inventory al
Absolute Top Dollar
www.CAREO com.
Carmichael Equ1pment salver/gold coins, any
10KI14K/18K
gold
74()-446·2412
Jewelry, dental gold, pre
1935 US currency,
proof/mint
sets.
d1amonds, MTS Com
Shop. 151 2nd Avenue
Gall polls 446-2842

1 000

Recreati.o~

Vehtcles

Ca mpers I RVs &amp;
Trailers
AV
Service
at
Carmichael
Trailers
740·446-3825

JUST SAY
CHARGE 11!

or Fax To (740) 992·2157

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. ,. aiMyl conlldentlll • C"IIOI lilt card appUta. • All ,_, ettllt ldvtf11aententl I Ill eub)tclto tfJI Fldtlll Flit Housing Act ot t968. • Till$ .-sp.per
tcctptl only ~p Mnlt&lt;l eels mtttlng EOE llandlrdll. VIe 'IIIII not knoWingly ~~ l~Y edvtt1111ng Ill violation of lht law. WID 1101 bo resporcll&gt;ll fof ai'Y
trrort In en lid Itkin
phone

t•tht

Campers I RVs &amp;
Trailers

Security

Garden &amp; Produce

RV
SeMCe at Carmichael
Traders
740-446·3825

API
Free Home
Security
S850 Value
with purc hase o f
alarm monitoring
services from A DT
Securi ty Services.
Call 1·888·274·3888

Tomatoes, squash,
hot &amp; sweet peppers.
canners packed or
you pick own. 740·
247-4292

3500

Real Estate
Rentals

Aportmenbl
Townhouses

400

Second floor 1 B.A.
apartment overlooking
Gallipolis City Park,
LA ,Kitchen/dinning
area, bath, washer &amp;
dryer $400.00 mo. call
740·446·4425 or 740·
446·2325.

Financial

Financial Services

CREDLT_CA..B.Q
BELIEE

log Home style apt.
2BA, 1BA, CIA, no
pets, Lease, refldep.
$500/mo 740·446·2801

Burled In Credit
Card Debt?
Call Credit Card
Rel ief for your free
cons u ltatlon:
1·877· 264·8031

Houses For Rent

Money To lend

1br, $375/month an
Syracuse.
Deposit.
HUD approved. No
Pets
304-675·5332
weekends
74()..591·
0265

FIND
BARGAINS
EVERY DAY
IN THE
CLASSIFIEDS

4000

Manufactu~ed

Houstng
Rentals

2BA Mob1le Home
water, sewer, trash pd.
No pets, Johnson's
Mobile Home Park
740·446·3160

Jlailp mrtbune
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The Daily Sentinel
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~allipoltg

L---------------------------------------~

Legals

Cabin
BR
appliances fum1shed,
utlities pd. Thurman
area. Also 2 BR. apt
740·286·5789
or
740·441·3702.

200 Announcements
2 BA Addison Area no
pets, ref roq. $425/mo
$425
dep.
May
Notices
cons1der rent to own
w/small down payment NOTICE
OHIO
mobile home only 740· VALLEY PUBLISHING
367·7025
CO. recommends that
you do business with
Sales
people you know, and
NOT to send money
"The Proctorville
through the mall unt1l
D1fferonce"
you have investigating
S1 and a deed IS all
theoffenng.
you need to own your
dream home Call Now!
fo'tctures that
Freedom HOMeS
have been
888·565.0167
placed in ads at
the Gallipolis
Employment
6000
Daily Tribune
must be picked
Help Wanted ·
within 30 days.
General
Any pictures
Ohio Valley Home
that are not
H~atth, Inc. Accepting
picked up will
applications for A1des.
be
Apply at 1480 Jackson
Pike, Gallipolis, on u...;;;diiilsiiiciiiaiiiroiiiidiiiieoiiiid'"'.---"
interne!
al
www oyhh,org or phone
Wonted
740·441·1393
Competitive wages and
J &amp; J Painting.
benefits
including
mlloage and healltl Interior/exterior,
power
washing.
msurance.
homes,
garages,
Free
WANTED·
Part·lirne barns.
postuons available to est1mates.
assist lndMduals wlltl References
mental rotardation at a available. 304·812·
group home In B1dwcll· /689
1) 21 hrs· 8.30a·3·30p
TuM'ITh. 2) 27 5 hrs: GREEN
LAWN
3.30-11p Frl: 10a-8p. Mowing
304·675·
Sat 1·9p Sun, High 1610 or 304·593·
school diploma!GED. 1960 No job too bag
vafid driver's license or small!
and threo years good
dnving
exponence
Services
required
$8.97/hr, 300
after tra1ning, Pre·
employment
Drug
Testing Send resume
Financial
to: Buckeye Commun1ty ;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~~~=
Serv1ces, P.O Box 604.
EAST IRS
Jackson, OH 45640 or
RELIEF
e·mail .
to:
~~ahoo com
Do you owe over
•
Deadline
for $10000 to the IRS?
7/30/10 Settle Out Over Due
applicants:
Equal
Opportunity
Taxes for Less
Employer
1·88S.692·5739

=======

• Hometown News
~Area Shopping
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e Community
Calendar
... and much more.

100

NOTICE Borrow Smart.
Contact
the
Oh1o
DIVISion of Finanaal
lnsl1lJ!Jons Off1ce • of
Consumer
Affa rs
BEFORE you refinance
your home or obla n a
BEWARE
of
loan
Home lmprovemenb requ=sts for any large
advance paymerts of
lees or Insurance. Ca I
Basement
the Office of Consumer
Waterproofing
Uncondotiorallleume Affia•s ton free at 1·
866·278·0003 10 learn
11.uaranteo. Local
If the mortgage broker
references furmshed.
Established 1975. Call or lender Is properly
24 Hrs. 740·446-0870, licensed (Tt&gt;1s Is a
publ1c
serv1ce
Rogers Basement
announcement from the
Waterproofing
Oh1c Valley Publlsh1ng
lawn Service
Corrpany)

900

Merchandise

Applionc:aa
Giveaway
chest
freezer works 740·
446·1062
Equipment I
Supplies
Equtpment must go 2
wet station 2 hair
dryers 2 Arnish wood
shelves 1 salon mat
2 stylist chairs 1
arthritic
bed/
aromatherapy 740·
645·8599

=======
M iscellaneous •

Jet Aeration Motors
repaired, new &amp;
rebuilt In stock. Call
Ron Evans 1·80(}.
537·9528
------For sale all natural
com feed freezer
beef. Aprox. 1000
lbs. 740·245·1500

2 York Package side
or
rooftop,
heat
pumps w/ heat strips,
220 volt, 3 ph. one is
5 ton, other is 7.5
ton. Both still in
wrapping·
R-22
Best Lawn Care now
Animals freon Also have roof
accepttng new lawns 600
curbs to go with.
740·645·1488
Ask1ng $6,000 or
Peb
Other Services
trade for a ntce 1eep
or little back hole call
Pet Cremations. can Free Kittens, tndoor
740-446·3745
only, 1·8 month neut. 7 40-441-1236 after 7
male 740-446·3897
pm
~
~~~~~~
For the best TV
experience,
upgrade from cab le
to
DlrecTV todayI
Packages start at
S29.99
1-866-541 ·0834

QlSJ:t
Nf.TWOftK

Yard Sale
Ktttens to gaveaway.
3 yellow males 2
3 Famtly Yard Sale
calico females 740·
Fn &amp; Sat 8·4. 80
446-8567
Windsor Dr Galnpohs
Found 2 large blond - - - - - - hatr dogs, on St. Rt. Yard sale Sat July
554,
Morgan 31.
1686 Lancoln
Tov.nshap, may have Pake 8·2 only. tv &amp;
been lost tor several stand, band saw.
days. 740·367·7737 clothang, toys, crafts.

Engh~h
Bulldog
Best Otter Ever! Over
puppies, AKC reg.
120 Top Channels
008 6·1·10, vet ck.
only $24.99/mo. for
ready
now. 740·696·
one year. Call Now
1085
1·888· 688·5943
Dish Network
Draken Terriers' CKC
Reg1stered
Jack
Yfl!iAGE
Russell
Terrier
Unlimited local puppaes. Tri-colored
and long
rough coat malo, tn·
colored smooth coat
distance
Shots.
calling for only female.
wormed,
docked.
$24.99 per
References
month.
available. 304·675·
Get reliable phone 7071
service from
Vonage
700
Agriculture
Call Today I
1-sn-673·3136

Professional Services

Form Equipment

TURNED DOWN ON
SOCIAL SECURITY
SSI
No Fee Unless We
Wtnl
1·888·582·3345

2007 Model B7610
KUBOTA tractor wath
belly mower and 48'
Roto nller, $9,950 or
OBO. call 740·256·
1836 evenings after
6pm

SEPTIC
PUMPING
Gallia Co. OH and
Mason Co. WV. Ron
Evans Jackson, OH
800·537·9528

STIHL Salos &amp; Serv1ce
Now
Available
at
Ca:"T'itchacl Equ prT'ont
74()..446·2412

!SHOP CLASSIFIEDSI

lots more
Fri &amp; Sat, 2.5m out
Georges Creek on
Johnsons Ridge, 2nd
house on L plus sz
womens, boy 0·12m,
tools,
Coca-Cola,
Home
lnt,
Tupperware
1st time yard sale,
Sat only, comer of
30th St. &amp; Anniston
Dr
Pt.
Pleasant
Name brand clothes
&amp; household 1tems.

1000

Retreational
Vehicles

Boob I Accessories
24• Pontoon Boat
wath ra•se·up top 50
HP Yamaha Eng1ne
wtth trailer $4.000.
or trade 740-446·
7327 740·256·, 270.
Campers I RVs &amp;
Trailers
2005 Jayco Eagle
Gooseneck
Hitch,
sleeps s1x. Excellent
cond1tion
Asking
S19.900.
See
photos
at
www.carrmchaeltraile
~
740-446·
2412

�---

--~~~-- ----

-- ---

~ --

------ -------- ---

...---...

-~ -- -·-'7~----:----:--~~-r---~---~"'!"---"'!""'~~---~----"!l--

Page 84 • The Daily Sentinel

www.mydailysentinel.com
--------------------~

Compel"$/ RVs &amp;
Trailers
For Sale 1196 35'
Fleetwood Bounder
Motor Home AIC,
must sell due to
health,
740-256·
6412

3500

Real Estate
Rentals

Apartments/
Townhouses

Apartments/
Townhouses
Racine area, 2 br, 1
bath
apartment,
$400
mo.,
$200
deposit.
740-416·
3036

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PSI CONSTRUCTION
EXPERIENCED
BARTENDER

2&amp;3BR apts $395 and
up. Central A~r, WiD
Motorcycles
hookup, tenant pays
2008
Suzuki electric. Call between
Bouevard c50 t Black the hours of BA-BP.
EHO
11 k miles $5500.
Ellm VIew Apts.
740-446-3300
(304)882-3017
Spring Valley Green
Other
Twin R1vers Tower is Apartments 1 BR at
accept1ng applications $395+2 BR at $470
For sale Yahama for wa1ting list for HUD Month. 446-1599.
Elect.
golf
cart subsidized,
1-BR
wlcharger clean has apartment
Commercial
for
the
everything, see to elderly/diSabled,
call
Office Space for rent.
believe $1,000. Call 675-6679
417 2nd Ave. rear.
740-441-1236 after 7
private parking lot
pm
Great
for
S500mth. +deposit.
Camping or Fatrs
call 740-446-1761
WantTo Buy
ask for Jennie.
1BR
Oilers now buying Furnished
Houses For Rent
junk vehtcles 740- wfkitchen use, for
rent.
by
day
or
week
2BR.
ntce,PP area
388-0011 or 740call after 2pm, 740- $465-Hornestead
441-7870
Reality Ask for Nancy
853-1484
2000
Auto~otive 1 BR, stove &amp; ref 304-675-0799or 675furn. 2nd fl., AJC, 5540
258
State k St. -2B-R-.....8-8-G-arf-ie-l-d,
Classic/ Antiques' 5400/mo 5400 dep. $425/$400 deposit +
740 "446"3667
. ult. 740-645-1646
Two
1968-Ford
Fai~lanes.
304-576- 1 BR effc. apt.
2 BR, Rodney area,
2046. Cell 304-593· $375./mo wate/trash
WID, ref 4 stove inc,
included.
740-7092448
NO pets. dep &amp; ref.
1690
req. call 740-446Trucks
Attractive,
1271 or 740-709·
one 1657.
1998 Ford F-150 Ext unfurntshed
2nd
cab, 4 6 Triton V-8, bedroom apt.
blue, 2 wheel dnve, floor. comer Second Spnng Valley Area,
cloth interior, very and Pine. No pets, 3BR. 11/2 BA, no
clean. ex. cond. References required. pets. no smoking,
740-247·2475.
Secunty
deposit. $650/mo +dep. 740asking $5.500 OBO
S325 per month 645-3836
water mcluded. call
Real Estate
740-446-4425
or House for rent 1 BR
3000
Sales
22 N Main st Pt
740-.:'46-3936.
Pleasant.$425 mon +
Renovated spactous dep. 740-794-0040
For Sale By Owner 2 BR apt overlooking
remodeled,
city park. $575/mo Newly
6 apts $158.000
4BR. 80 Locust St.
water/sewer/trash
rent $2030 mo, 740incl
complete Gallipolis, no pets.
446-0390
740-441-1202
kitchen, stove, frig. Kim
micorwave. disposer, or June 304-674Houses For Sole
3170
740· 709-1690
Disabled American - - - - - - Veteran wlleukemia Tara Townhouse Apt. 2 BR houses for rent
needs to sell 23 acre 2BR 1.5 BA. back in Gallipolis, 1 sm
farm
tn
western patio,
pool. dog ok in some
Me~s Co., because playground. No pets. locations, reference
unable to kept 11 up. S450 rent. 740-645· &amp; security deposit
required.
740-446Private setting, older 8599
3870
house WI lots of Apartment for rent 1
updates,
new BR 1 BA furnished 2 br. house, 1 br
kitchen, 2 new baths. WID AC S500imon + apartment, both have
carport. new septic, dep. All utlittes pd. central air &amp; heat, No
$87,500 call 740- call 740-446·9595
pets or smoking, call
742-2752.
740-992-3823
FIRST MONTH
Land (Acreage}
FREE
&amp;
mobile
House
2 &amp; 3 BRAPTS.
home
for
rent,
38 acres for sale in
$385 &amp;
Racine
area.
740Mason County. Good UP. Sec. Dep $300
949-2237
hunting
&amp; good
&amp; up.
buildtng site. Also, AIC, WID hook-up, Nice 2 bd house.
good access. 304nice quite area, but
ten674-3627
close to town. nice
ant pays electric,
yard. avatlable Aug.
EHO
In Memory
1, rent $400 you pay
Ellm View Apts.
utilities, No tnside
304-882·3017
pets. 7 40-444-3134
Immaculate 2 BR for appt.
apt. in country, new
carpet and cabniets. Pomeroy- 3 br. near
Value,
Freshly
painted, Super
appliances.
WID stove/ref fumished,
wid
hookl·up,
hook-ups,
water/trash
paid. $500/mo, 740-992Beautiful
country 6886
setting.
only
10
House for rent in
minutes from town.
New
Haven.
1
to
Must
see
possible 2 BR. $300
appreciate S425/mo
rent &amp; $300 dep. No
614-595-7773
pets. 304-674-31a1
or7 40-645-5953

Position available immediately
for qualified bartender for
Eagles Aerie #2171, located in
Pomeroy, Ohio.
Resume to
P.O. Box 427
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769.
No phone calls

6000

Employment

Accounting/
Financial

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

In Loving Memory

of
Michael
Patrick Bissell
on his
Birthday 7·28
Sadly missed by
Mom, Dad
&amp;Sister

Experienced
Tax
Professional needed
in Meigs County.
Extra income, flexible
hours.
helptng
others, possible fulltime.
'
ongoing
training.
Send
resumes
or
indications of interest
to:
Daily Sentinel,
PO Box 729· 17•
Pomeroy, Oh 45769

Cashier/ Cleric
SMITH CHEVROLET
BUICK is looking_ to
hire
an
office
assistant with title
work and cashier
experience a plus.
Basic computer skills
required.
Must be
mature
and
dependable.
Good
pay and benefits plus
a welcoming work
environment. Apply
in person to Smith
Chevrolet Buick 1911
Ave.
Eastern
Gallipolis OH.

Medical

Truck
drivers
needed. Flat beds
and dump trailers
apply in person at
935 Pinecrest Drive.
Education
Full-time Teacher's
Assistants.
M-F
Daytime
Hours
$7.85/hr
Limited
benefits.
Send
resume by Aug. 4,
2010
to
Early
Education
Station
817 30th St., Pt.
Pleasant WV 25550

FIND AJOB
OR ANEW
CAREER
IN THE
CLASSIFIEDS

304-773-5441
or· 304-593-8458

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

Owner: Sam Smith. ~lason, W\'

HRS Repa;u. . t-740-992-3061
20+ yrsexp

YOUNG'S

Services .Most Heating &amp;

CARPENTER SERVICE

Cooling System (including

• Room Additions &amp; Remodeling
• Ne'1 Garages • Electrical &amp;
Plumbing • Roofing &amp; Gutters
• Vin) I Siding &amp; Painting • Patio and
Porch Decks
wv 036725

~~··.

Heatpumps) and Controls
Tankless Hot Water Heater
Change-outs/ Replacements.
Whole House Water Purifiers
(helps against C8 intake)

V.C. YOUNG Ill
992-621.5 740-591-0195
Pomeroy, Ohio
36 Years Local Experience

Flat 45.00 hrl) Rare+ I0.00 Trip Chrg.

Stanlev Tree
Trimming &amp; Removal

I!OBri!T BISSrLL
CON5TI!UCTION

* Prompt and Quality Work
* Reasonable Rates

• New Homes • Garages
• Comple_te Remodeling

References Available!
Call Gary Stanley

740-992-1671

* Insured * Experienced

Ceu740-591-8044

Stop &amp; Compare

Please leave message

RAVENSWOOD

LEWIS

CHIROPRACTIC CENTER
If we ca11't help you We will
ji11d you the help ynu need
.-\uto ,\ccidents • Work
Injurie~ • ~eck &amp; Back Pain•
Shoulder, Arm. Hip &amp; Ll'g
Pain • Headache~ • :\lassagl.'
Therap) • Acupuncture

CONCRETE CONSTRUCTION
Concrete Removal and Replacement
Alll)'pes Of Concrete Work

30 Years Experience

\'ew Extended hours· M-l:
Dr. Kelly K.
Sar &amp; t o'l'lllllgl t nzer~encies Jonc_,, D.C.
M tl
A
td

Law Enforcement

Drive'"' &amp; Delivery

33 Years Experience

Rick Price· 17 yrs. Experience

=~~~~~~

non
Full-time
smoking babysitter
needed in my Mason
Co. home 304-633·
3682

Child/Elderly Core

Nice 16x80, for rent,
Food Services
3 Bedroom, 2 bath,
Fried
Country
setting. Kentucky
is
now
740-339-3366 740- Chicken
applications
taking
367-0266.
for Shift Managers.
2 br. mobile home in Qualified applicants
Racine S325 a mo., must
be
$325 dep.. 1 yr dedicated,hard
lease, No pets. No working and highly
calls after 9pm, 740- motivated. Must be
992-5097
willing to follow and
enforce all policies
Soles
and procedures and
Two 3BR 14' wide be a team player, We
competitive
L
mobile
homes offer
wages,
based
on
52,000 each Must
Announcements Announcements SELL OR TRADE experience and paid
Apply
in
ASAP. Nice sound weekly.
at:220ti
units that need some person
" A place to Call Home"
minor repair. 304- Upper River Road
FOSTER PARENTS NEEDED
675-3952 daytime M- Gallipolis
IN YOUR COUNTY!!!
F
$30-$40 A day for the care

\

donation. Mst have
car. Be willing to
travel..
Conip/Expenses
patd.
Seniors
weclcomed!. email
resume
to
jely@veteransoutrea
c:1.com or call 866·
212-5592

The
Middleport
Police Department is
taktng
applications
for
a
part time
dispatcher.
Applications can be
picked up at the
Police Department at
237 Race Street.
Middleport.
Applications must be
retumed by August
2. 2010. No Phone
Calls Please EOE

would especially like to thank my
granddaughter Amy and the staff at
Arbors for the love and care that I
received. Heartfelt thanks to my
many friends, pastor and church
members for cards, flowers, food
and special prayers. Most loving
thanks to all of my family for the
love that they express through their
visits. phone calls, pictures and
making my recovery
a more pleasant process.
God Bless All of Youl
Betty Fife. Middleport

INVENTORY
CLOSEOUT!
Save
thousands on steel
buildings' Only a few
left. 24x30, 35x34.
30x60. Ask about our
Display Program for
additional
savings!
Call now' 1-866-3520469

Driving
instructor
needed. Must pass
background check.
work eve/weekends.
Drop resume off at
Gallipolis AAA office
or fax attn: AI 74()351-0537

'!"S-ea_r_s-in....,G-al-lip-o-lis-is
now hiring for full
time &amp; part time
positions for delivery,
warehouse &amp; some
sales. Please apply
in person at store &amp;
bring resume·. 2200
Ave,
Tax Easterll
Seasonal
Professional needed Gallipolis OH. 45631
in Meigs County. Representative
for
Earn extra income, charity.
Operate
find a new career, scheduled
become
full-time fundraising events at
associate. We will grocery/department
train Send resume stores outside their
or
indications
of exits greeting the
interest- to:
Daily public. Reps hand
Sentinel, PO Box out help info and
729-5, Pomeroy, Oh offer
patriotic
45769
merchandise for a

Crewleaders wanted
to work with adults
with developmental
disabilities to provide
janitorial and lawn
maintenance
services. Experience
- - - - - - - - .2-BR house in New preferred. Must have
Card of Thanks
Card of Thanks Haven $325 mo. a valid Ohio driver's
$325 deposit No license and high
pets. 304-674-5525
school diploma or
THANK YOU
GED. Send resume
I would like to sincerely thank the
4000 Manufactu~ed to: Meigs Industries,
staff at Holzer Hospital, Riverside
Houstng
Inc. · P.O. Box 307,
Methodist Hospital, Select
Syracuse,
OH
Specialty Care for the excellent
Rentals
45779
care during my hospitalization. I

of a child 1n your home.
. Can be single, married, or
"empty nest". Call Oasis
to help a child find a place to
call home.Training begins at
Albany
August 7. Call1-877-325-1558
for More information or
to register for training

Help Wanted·
General

Specializing in Insurance Jobs including,
storm, wind &amp; water damage.
Room Additions, Remodeling, Metal &amp;
Shingle Roofs, New Homes, Siding,
Decks, Bathroom Remodeling.
Licensed &amp; Insured

David Lewis

.

740-992-6971

304-273-5321

Insured

316 Washington St. ·Ravenswood

Social
worker
needed for Point ;;;;;;;;=--=~=­
Pleasant
dialysts Jones Tree Service
complete tree care
facility,
Master's stump grinding. bucket
degree required. Fax truck &amp; crane Insresume to 304-675- worker Comp.
7401505.
367-0266.
740-3393366
Servic_e I Bus.
9000
Directory Remodel work. small
jobs, fence painting,
odd jobs, concrete.
Home Improvement 304-593-6569 ask for
Matthew.
Tankless Hotwater
Heaters. For 3BR, 1
cr 2 BA. Hms.
starting @ $300.
HRS REPAIR 740·
992-3061

WV04218;&gt;

Free

E~t1mate1&gt;

ea,tt
Marcum Construction
Commercial &amp; Residential

fiND It ALl.
in the

PUBLIC
NOTICES

,

Need a
lob Done?

Shop
fhe
Classilieds ~

r;t,..,.~,v;;r.J~I

NOTICE BY PUBLI·
CATION:
IN THE COMMON
PLEAS COURT OF
MEIGS
COUNTY,
OHIO
National
Home
Bank. Plaintiff, vs.
Sara Jordan, et al.,
Defendants, Case
No. 10 CV 065
To: The Unknown
Heirs, Next of Kin,
Devisees, Legatees,
Administrators.
Executors. Successors and Assigns of
Gary A. Jordan aka
Gary Jordan, deceased.
and the Estate of
Gary A. Jordan aka
Gary Jordan,
whose names and
addresses are unknown.
You are hereby noti·
tied that you have
been named Defendants in the action
entitled Home Nattonal Bank. Plain·
tiff, vs. Gary A.
Jordan aka Gary
Jordan, et al., Defendants. This ac·
tion
has
been
assigned Case No.
10 CV 065, and is
pending
in
the
Court of Common
Pleas
of Meigs
County, Ohio. The
object of the Complaint
demands
judgment against
the
Defendants,

Sara
Jordan,
Samantha Jordan,
and The Unknown
Heirs. Next of Kin,
Devisees. Legatees,
Administrators, Executors,
Successors and Assigns of
Gary A. Jordan aka
Gary Jordan, deceased and the Estate of Gary A.
Jordan aka Gary
Jordan. for purposes of foreclosing on Plaintiff's
security, in the sum
of 523,923.01 with
interest thereon at
the rate of $7.3555
per day. until fully
paid, plus and costs
advanced for fees
accrued. in order to
foreclose upon a
mortgage upon real
estate located at
53594 Number Nine
Road. Reedsville.
OH 45772, (Auditor's Parcel Nos. 09·
01266.007
and
09-01266.009),
ln
the Township of
Olive,
Meigs
County, Ohio, which
Is more fully described in deed
recorded In Volume
204,
Page
899,
Meigs County Offi·
cial Records. and
costs of this action;
that the mortgage
be foreclosed and
that the liens and/or
. interests in or on

said property, if any,
be marshalled and
the real estate title
quieted and said
real property sold in
the foreclosure action
and
all
amounts due Plain·
tiff be paid from the
proceeds of the
sale.
You are required to
answer the Com·
plaint within twentyeight (28) days after
the last publication
of this Notice, which
will be published
once each week for
three (3) successive
weeks.
The last
publication will be
made on the 4th day
of August, 2010,
and the twenty·
eight (28) days for
answer will commence on that date.
In the case of your
failure to answer or
otherwise respo.
as requested by
Ohio Rules of Ci
Procedure,
judgment by default will
be rendered against
you and for the relief demanded in the
Complaint.
Attorney for Plaintiff: Douglas W. Lit·
tie, P.O. Box 686,
Pomeroy, OH 45769,
Telephone:
(740)
992-6689
(7) 21, 28, (8) 4

�r

Wednesday, July 28, 201 0

The Daily Sentinel • Page 85

BLONDIE
"':"1'\EM INTO
ONS HUMONGOUS

'J...,~f~~LY

~~

FUNKY WINKERBEAN

Tom Batiuk

BECAU~ ''..'OUR PHC(51CAt...
fHERAPI5f WANI5 '..'OU 10 GEf
B.llCK BEHIIJD fHE WHE.Et... OF
A CAR RIGHf AWPR.

I ASSUME fHERE '5 /JO
51GIJIFICA/JC£ 10 fHE
PAR!&lt;JIVG (..Cf '..'OU Plc./&lt;£0.

HAGAR THE HORRIBLE

·~

Chris Browne

HI &amp; LOIS

By THOMAS
ACROSS
1 Almanac
fill
6 Singer
Horne
10Abrasive
stuff
11 Hi~ala­
yan land
12The
Yokum
boy
13 Boot out
14 Location
15 Hitchcock
thriller
16 Pot brew
17 Have
lunch
18 Distress
letters
19Curls up
22Jazz
combo
23Jokes
26Conveys
sneakily
29Use a
spade
32 Farm
animal
33 List-ending abbr.
34Queued
up
36Diamond
corner
37 Suspect's
story
38 Argo
captain
39Gymnast
Comaneci
40Concerning

JOSEPH
41 Some
sheep
42 Landlord's
income
DOWN
1 Big
dinners
2 Surrounding
3 Manhorse
hybrid
4 Squirrel's
home
5Leb.
neighbor
61mpose,
as taxes
7Long
stories
8Chip
choice
9 Choir
singers

11 Savings
15 Buddy
17 Diva's
problem
20USO
audience
21 Slump
24"Bang,
zoom!"
speaker
25 Begins
27Take
advantage of

28 Perfumes
29TV's
Sawyer
30 Holiday
visitor
31 Move
smoothly
35Sacred
bird of
Egypt
36Talking
pig of film
38 Pickle
purchase

NEW CROSSWORD BOOKI Send $4.75 (Check/m.o.) to
Thomas .Joseph Book 1 PO. Box 536475. Orlando. FL 32853-6475

7-28

Brian and Greg Walker

THELOCKHORNS

MUTTS

William Hoest

Patrick McDonnell

"WHY DO YOU ALWAY€) REMEMBER MY AGE
BUT NEVER MY BIRTHDAY?'"'

ZITS

THE FAMILY CIRCUS
Bil Keane

I IAPPY BIRTI IDAY for
Wednesday; July 28, 2010:
Jerry Scott and Jim Borgman
This yea~;. you often find that you
are juggling conflicting issues, situations and people. Others seem to be
d1anging before your very eyes,
adding an clement of unanticipated
!:&gt;1lrprise: You easily could be on overload with corrununication. Talk is
nice, but you need to act. Learn new
ways of relaxing and letting go. Take
up a stress-buster hobby. If you are
single, those you meet could be very
interesting, but because of the underlying theme of chaos in the year, insist
on a slow and easy courtship. If you
are attached, the two of you seem to
be perpetually renegotiating your
boundaries. Make that OK during
changing times. A trio restores your
bond. PISCES sees different ideas and
·
by Dave Green
visions from you.
Tlu• Stars Show the KiJui of Day
You'll Have: 5-Dynamic; 4-Positire; 3Avernge; 2-So-so; 1-Difficult
~· '
ARIES {March 21-Aprill9)
*** The tenor of the day, though
confusing and fraught with misunderstandings, will seem much easier
than in recent days. Just chug along
and do what you must. Keep your
ears to the ground. You will learn a
lot and have the information you
need. Tonight: Juggling a Jot.
TAURUS {April20-May 21)
** ** You might want to try
another approach or do something
very different. rhough an idea might
seem off-the-wall, try it out. Look at
the big picture. Understand what is
happening behind the scenes. •
7r1K
D&gt;fficulcy ~.evel * **
!(might: Dancing the night away.
GEMINI (May 22-June 20)
• • • 1~·'"'1 .(Jtn:&gt;!JJ!G
*** Stay anchored and know
what work.c;. You might find some
~
0
~
uproar surrounding the home front.
,...
&amp;
Listen to news with a touch of cyni~
~
cism.
Maintain a high profile. You
""
:J'
know what is happening in yotrr
~
immediate circle. Tonight: A must
f
appearance.
§'
~
CANCER Oune 21-July 22)
1
****Look to greater give-andl
take because of a new perspectiw.
l
lJnderst&lt;~nd wh&lt;tt is happening
~
~
nround you by dctilching. Fatigue
"'
could mark your plans. 1bnight: Use
the mind rather ttian the bodv.
~ ~
LEO Quly 23-Aug. 22)
•
!f
~
***You juggle the pro~ and con~
of a ~ituation. Your more possessive
~
side emerges with a partner. Isn't this

CONCEPTIS SUDOKU
.2 9

8
9
1.

4
3
7

4 5 8 6
3

1

5

6 3

"You'll never empty out the whole
ocean yourself, PJ! · Here- I'll
help youl"

DENNIS THE MENACE
Hank Ketchum

5
9

5
6

2

8 7

v

.
~

L
G 8
L 9
6 G
B 9

v

8 6
9 B

,

4
6

2

9

_

2

6 8 G
B
6
9 L B
v B 8
J 9 17
8 6 9
G 9 9
L G
9 v L

1

3

17 L B 9
9 9 8 G
9 v
6
G
6 9
L 8 9 B
G v L
6 B L 8
B 9 9 v
£ 6 G

._

____

a reflection of your own insecurity?

Think through a decision or action
clearly. Tonight: Dinner for h.vo.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22)
**** If you can, try to handle a
problem directly and with clarity
Others seem to be out there_ but &gt;villing to talk. The smart Virgo •\ill agree
to disagree. Creativity swirls around
you. Use it. Tonight: Go with an invitation.
LIBRA {Sept. 23-0ct. 22)
*** Knowing your limits could
be important in your dealings. You
see a situation a lot differently.
Investigate an alternative more openly. How you handle a family p1ember
cannot always be the same. Tonight
Put your feet up in your favorite spot.
SCORPIO {Oct. 23-Nov. 21)
**** Let your imagination come
forward. Your style of corrununkating with a person who seems inclined
not to answer needs to be revised.
Your creativity comes out in this situation. Tonight: Be light and easy.
SAGITTARIUS "{Nov. 22-Dec. 21)
*** Knowing what is important
and your understanding evolve. You
might want to reviotie your money situation. Be aware of what is going on
behind the scenes and others' inclinations. Get street smart fast. Tonight:
Be cynical \·vith a financial offer of
"let's make a deal."
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-jan. 19)
***** You hm•e the knowledge
and ability to transform vour direction. Rea Ilzc what needs' to happen in
order to change gears. As you change,
others ch,mgc. Be more direct in your
dealings than in the past. Tonight:
l look up with friends.
AQUARIUS Oan. 20-feb. 18)
**** Ch~arl)~ your mind is
working overtime. You might be
revising your opinion of what is happening. Your in~tincts come out, especially with what you offer emotionally and. financially. Ionight: Your treat.
PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20)
***** You'll st.&gt;e an opening in
a mL&gt;cting or intl•raction if you look
carefully. Put out your sails and Plide
right on in. Within h0urs, you'll h.we
an answer to whnt h,ts bt.-en a hassle.
At first you mi~ht not like it, but you
\\ill. lonight: Relax with a tmsted
friend and or lo\'ed ,one.
jacque/me Bigar is on tlu•lntcmct
at llffp://urwmjacqllt'lilld11gar.cnm.

-

} --

..

'

�Page 86 • The Daily Sentinel

Indians
from Page Hl
loss in 12 stat1~ ince
Ma) 23.
With nashbulb" popping in the SC\Cnth.
Roclriguet. brought the
crowd of 27.416 to it:-.
feet '' ith two outs and
Nick
isher on third
base. The Yankees star
hit a 1-2 pitdl to rightcenter. but the ball fell
just short of' the warning
track and was cas1h
caught.
Rodriguei.
grounded out weakly h1s
first two times up.
Tomlin t 1-0) '' asn't
even on CIC\ eland's 40man roster to start the
cia), but baffled a
Yankees lineup that ha&lt;.
the maJOrs· best record
'' ith breaking balls and a
sneaky fa~tball. The
right-hander gave up one
run on three hits after
having his contract pur
chased from Triple-A
Columbus, where he had
an R-4 record and 2.68
ERA. He struck out two
and walked none. lca\"ing
after
allowing
Robinson Cano 's leadoff
double in the eighth.
Cano scored on a oneout groundout by pinch-

s,,

Tatum
from Page Bl
mne seasons with the
Raiders, Tatum 'tarted
I06 of 120 games wtth
30 mterceptions and
helped Oakland ''in the
1976 Super Bowl. He
played h1s final season
with the Houston Oilers
in 1980.
Tatum
also
wrote
books titled "They Still
Call Me Assassin: Here
We Go A!!ain" in 1989
and ''Final Confessions
of an NFL Assas-.in" in
1996.
In the latter he "rote.
·'I was p&lt;1id to hit, the
harder the better. ,\nd J
hit. and I knocked people
down and knocked people out. . .. J under-;tnnd
\\ hv Darrvl ts considered
the.\ictim. But I'll ne,er
understand wh) some
people look at me as the
villain."

Trade
from Page 8 1
rebounds last year.
"In Ratnon. we're
excited to add a young.
multi-dimensional guard.
and with R)an, we're
adding a young. athletic
center,'' ne'" Cavaliers
GM Chris Grant ~aid in a
statement issued bv the
team. "We think ·both
Ramon and R) an arc
really good fits for this
team. We're also happy
to add another asset for
the future with the additional draft pick."
They also have to be
relic\ ed to rid thcmseln!s of West, who was
the team·., M.:cond-bcst
performer next tn James
in the playoffs in 200H
and 2009 before his play
suffered thanks to several
otT-the-court issues last
vear.
· West pleaded guilty in

www.mydailysc ntinel.com

\ Vcd nesday, .July 28,

..

hitter
Colm
Curtis
aga1nst relie\er Joe
Smith.
Chris Perez '' orked
the ninth for his lOth
sme in 13 chances.
Shin-Soo Choo had
three hib and Matt
LaPorta t\\ o RBis for
CJe, eland. \
LaPorta \Vas the key
pia) er acquired in the
four-for-one deal that
sent
Sabathia
to
Milwaukee in July 2008
when it became apparent
the 2007 AL Cy Young
winner was going to
leave Cleveland as a free
agent after that ~eason.
Sabathia \\ent 11-2 to
pitch the Brewers into
the playoffs, then signed
a seven-year. $161 mil·
lion deal with ~ew York.
The left-handcr gave
up nine hits and four
runs O\ er se\ en innings.
He \\ns 9-0 "ith a 222
ERA over hi~ previous
II ~tai1s.
Yankees catcher Jon!e
Posada was a !Zametime
scratch because of left
knee sorene.ss.
Po~ada was replaced
bv Francisco Cervelli.
\\;hose defense kept
Clevdand from scoring
in the first.
With Choo on second.
Austin Kearns singled
between third and short.

Left
fielder
Brett
Gardner made a strong
thro" to Cervellt. who
blocked the plate so ''ell
that the sliding Choo
ne\ er got there.
Errors by Ccrvelli and
second
baseman
Robinson Cano gave
Cleveland a 2-0 lead in
the'fourth.
With runners on :-.ccond and third. Kearns
grounded to Rodnguez.
The throw home hy the
Yankees' third bmcman
was in time to get the·
sliding i\sdubal Cabrera
- but Cervelli dropped
it. )
One out later, Jhonn)
Peralta hit a potential
double-play grounuer up
the middle and New
York didn't get any outs.
Shortstop Derek Jeter
fielded and flipped the
ball to Cano. who threw
to first. Cano got an e1Tor
for not being on the bag
when he caught the ball.
Since Peralta also beat
the throw, Cleveland had
the bases were loaded.
LaPorta's sac fl) made
it 2-0 before Sabathia
struck out Jason Donald
to get out of the jam.
LaPorta had an RBI
double
and
Chris
Gimenez a bases-loaded
walk to make it 4-0 in
the sixth.

'Ii.&gt;mlin started in the
rotation spot opened
when left-handcr Aaron
Laffey was placed on the
disabled li:-.t Frida) with
shoulder fati!!ue. A 19thround pick out of Texas
Tech in _2006, he went
1-24 ow:1th a 3.20 ERA
111 the 1~1mor ~eagues. .
Rodngue1 1s 0 for? 111
two
games
agam~t
Cleveland and 5 for 20 in
five game:-; since hitting
No. 599 on Thursday.
NOTES:
Yankees
R HP Alfredo Aceves. out
since May 12 \Vith a
strained lower back.
threw a bullpen session.
... Indians R HP Kerry
Wood, out since July I J
\\ ith a blistered right
index fin!!cr, also threw
in the butlpen. Manager
.\1annv Acta said he will
wall ·until seein!Z how
Wood feels Wed'llesda\"
hefore the team decide".;;
future plans . ... Indians
rookie C Carlos Santana,
in a 2 for 13 slt1mp. didn't :-tart. Santana is batting .208 i1'l July. . ..
Sabathia hasn't allowed
a home run in 73 innings
since Baltimore ·s Luke
Scott did it June 3 . . ..
Yankees
IB
Mark
Teixeira had his streak of
reaching base safely
stopped at 42 games.

Tatum was a central
figure
in
"The
Immaculate Reception ..
in the Raider~· 1972
playoff loss to the
Pittsburgh Steelers. With
22 seconds left. Tatum
jarred loose a pas&lt;; to
French) Fuqua from
Terr) Bradshaw. and the
ball bounced off Fuqua\
foot and ricocheted into
the arms of Steelers running back Franco Harris.
Harris never broke stride
and ran 42 yards for the
winning touchdown.
Despite their I ingering
resentment. Stingley was
grac;ious in 2003 when he
learned that Tatum had
diabetes and several toes
amputated.
·'You can't. as a human
being. feel happy ·about
~omething like that happcnmg to another human
being." Stingley told The
Boston Globe.
Tatum be!!an a charitable group to help kids
with diabetes and helped
raise more than $1.4 mil-

lion to fight the dbeasc
in the Columbus area.
Tatum grew up in 1\ew
Jersev and had little
interest in organized
sports until high school.
He grew to love football
and was offered a ~chol­
arship to Ohio State.
Rccmited as a running
back, Tatum would meak
over to the defensive stde
to play I inc backer. In
time. the Ohio State
coaches
particularly
secondary coach Lou
Holtz - rcco!!nized that
Tatum was a ~natural on
defense.
Tatum was a part of the
"super :-.ophs" class that
led Ohio State to an
unbeaten season and the
national championship in
1968. He st'ole the headlines in the Buckeyes'
showdO\\ n with No. I
Purdue early m the season, shadowing AllAmerican runnmg back
Leroy Keyes in Ohio
State\ 13-0 upset of the
Boilennakers.

In his three years as a
'\tarter. Tatum's teams
went 27-2 and won two
Big'Ten titles.
Each week after an
Ohio State game. the
coaching staff awards
the "Jack Tatum hit of
the \\ eek" award for the
hardest tackle or block
by a Buckeye.
"We have lost one of
our greatest Buckeyes:·
current Ohio State coach
J im Tressel said in a
statement. "When you
think of O hio State
defense. the first name
that comes to mind is
Jack Tatum. H is loss
touches every era of
Ohio.. State players and
fans.
Raiders
safetv
~1ichael Huff sent
mes~age on Twitter after
learning of T:uum 's
death:
'·R.I.P.
Jack
Tatum the a~sassin . One
of the best safetvs to
ever play this game. his
legacy will live forever."

~1 aryland

semifinals.
The young and n:huildin!! Timberwolvcs arcn 't
interested in taking on a
player with West's baggage. H is $4.6 million
contract will onlv cost
Minnesota $500.()00 if
West is wahcd by Aug.
5. and that's what the
Woh·es plan to do.
Telfair.\\ ho played for
Minnesota for two seasons after coming over
from Boston in the Ke' in
Garnett trade in 2007.
also likeh "ill be traded
or bought out.
The principle reason
for the Wolves to make
this deal \\as to aile\ iate
log jams at both point
guard and in the front
court. The Wolves have
Flynn returning and
signed veteran Luke
Ridnour to a (our-year.
$16 mi llion deal last

earher this
month
to
weapons
charges. He was sen
tenced to eight months of
home detention with
electronic monitoring.
two years of unsupe~­
vised probation. 40 hours
of community service
and psychological counseling.
Pro..,ccutors said that
the sentence would allow
West to attend practices
and tra'&lt;cl to i\'BA game~
a" his team's schedule
reyuires, but t\'BA officiab are revic\\ in!! the
case for possible f~rther
di~ciplinc.

The Ca' aliers did all
the\ could to \\Ork with
We~t. who averaged 8.8
poinh and 3.3 assists in
25 111inutes per game. He
also dealt with a host of
personal problem11 that
coupled
\Vith
his
September gun aJTest to
serve as major distractions to the team. which
lost to Boston in the
Eastern
Conference

?

a

\\ eek. They have also
brought
in
forward
Michael Beasley and·resigned center Darko
Milicic and have agreed
to a three-year deal with
center Nikola Pekovic
that is expected to be
announced any day 110\\.
So there simply was no
room for Sessions and
Hollins.
"\Vith the arrivals of
Luke Ridnour. Michael
Bcaslcv. i\'ikola PekO\ ic
and the signing of Darko
.\.1ilicic, it was clear that
Ramon and Ryan \\OUid
have lesser roles this season if the\ were to
remain." Kahn said in a
~tatement. "This move
provide~ them a better
opportunity in Cleveland
und ndds to our flexibility both this season and
beyond in relation to the
salary cap."

We speoalrze m min imum coverage opt ion s
like PassportSM fr om Grange. Passport
delivers Grange's ren owned claim s coverage
a nd serv rce at th e lowest p ossible price. It's
minimum coverage· with zero compromises .

Call 740-992-3381 or visit
www.downing-childs.com

tA'1musser
I~M-~

2010

w

Grange

lnsuranc:r

Sports Briefs
Meigs ~1iddle School
Football Helntet Fitting
1
1

ROCKSPRINGS. Ohio- There \\ill be a 7th and
8th grade football meetmg and helmet fitting at the
!\letgs Local Field House on Saturda). Jul) 31. at 9
a.m. All students must ha\ c a sports ph) ~teal before
beginning conditioning, forms will be available at the
meeting.

MYL Fall Ball signups
MIDDLEPORT. Oh1o - The ~1iddlcpm1 Youth
League will he holding Fall Ball signups for both boys
and gids - ages 5-16 - from noon until 3 p.m, on
Saturday. Augu~t 7. and Saturdnv. August 14. at the
Middlcpo11 ball fields.
•
For more information, contact Da\e Bovd at 5900438.
.

MYL teen co-ed softball league
MIDDLEPORT, Ohio
The Middleport Youth
League
be holding a co-ed -;oft ball league for
boys and girl~; - ngt-'- I ~-18 - throughout the month
of August. For more infonnation, contact Jackie Fox at
416-1261 or Tanya Coleman at either 992-5481 or
416-1952.

'"ill

3rd Annual Southern
Basketball Golf Scramble
RACJ[';E. Ohio - Southern Basketball will host a
four-man golt scramble on ,\ug. 7 at Riverside Golf
Club in .\-1ason, W.Va. The ~eramble will be an 8:30
a.m. shotgun start. The fonnat i., brin~ your own team.
with only one player under 8 handtcap \\·ith a tot'
team handicap of 40 or abo\ c.
The cost b S60 per person ($240 per team) '"it
optional cash pot. :-.kms, .md mulligan purchase.
Prize&lt;. of first. second. and thtrd finishes will be
a\~ardecl. Additional prize&lt;. for lon!!est putt. longest
dnve. and close t to the pm will be presented.
Beverages and food \\ill be prO\ ided.
To enter please contact head coach Jeff Cald\\ ell at
740-949-3129.

3rd annual Eagle 5k road
race to be held Aug. 7
TUPPERS PLAINS. Oh10 - The third .umual
Eagle 5k Road Race and Walk and the one mile fun
run will be held on Saturda&gt;. Aug. 7. beginning at 8:30
a.m. at the St. Paul Cn1ted \lcthodist Church in
Tuppers Plains. Ohio.
The run is sponsored b) the Eastern Athlet1c
Boosters, \\ith registration beginning at 7 a.m. at the
Tuppers Plains hall 11elds. The entry fee isS 12 before
Aug. 4 or S15 on the day of the race.
. The race will begin at the St. Pmll United Methodist
Church and will be n111 in the surroundm!! streets and
road~. A" ards \\Ill be gi\tm to the top three male and
female overall fini!.hers and the top three male and
female finio;;hers m the one mile fun mn. T-shirts will
be given to the first 75 registrants.
•
•
Divisions for both male and female runners "ill
~y age. 14 and under, 15-18, 19-25.26-35,36-49. ru.
.)0 and O\ er.
For more information or to regtster contact Jo:-.h
Fogle at 740-667-9730.

SHS VolleybaUCamp
RACINI.:., Oh10 - Southem Hi!!h School "ill be
offering a \olle) ball camp for girls~ going into grades
3-X from August 2-5. in the high school g) m. Th1s
learning experience \\ill be a ~hance for girb to interact with high school coaches and players and develop
an understanding of ,·ollc) ball mechanics and fundamentals through dnlls. m&lt;ttches. !!ames, and contests.
Each camper ,., ill receive a free l'-shi11 and have the
opportunit) to \\in se\·cral other pri1es.
The camp \\ill O) split in to two groups. \\ ith girls
from 3rd to 5th grades from 9 to II :30 a.m. and girls
6th to 8th grades from l to 4 p.m. There is a fee of S35
per camper or $60 for a famil) of two. Campers are
asked to bring knee pads and a "ater bottle. and are
asked to arrh e earl) on the first da) for registration.
To preregister call Coach Dtckson at 740-525-2500.

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DELIVERING
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Prescription~

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