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6unbap ltmt~·itnttntl

DOWN -ON THE FARM
Local youth·recognized as BEST winner Graduate awarded
UPI scholarship

COLUMBUS - The 2008-09 Ohio
Cattlemen's Association BEST (Beef
Exhibitor Show Total) Program
wtllpped up on June 6 with its annual
awards banquet held at the Ohio Expo
Center in Columbus.
Several representatives of the program's sponsoring partners were on
hand to help with the presentation of
more than $25,000 worth of awards in
the form of U.S . Savings Bonds, luggage, coats, trophies and show materi.
als.
. This year's sponsoring partners
included Farm Credit Services of MidAmerica, Greeri Oak Farms, Ohio
Farm Bureau Federation and MAC
Trailer. In addition. a BEST participant was awarded the use for the
2009-20 10 BEST season of a 7.5-by22 Wrangler livestock trailer donated
by Eby Trailers.
The winner was drawn from over
3,000 entries based on the number of
shows ·and entries each participant had
throughout the November through
April season.
The 2008-09 BEST program featured 17 sanctioned shows and weaved
its way across the state. from as far
west as Preble County to as far east as
· Tuscarawas County. Over 445 head of
cattle and more than 310 youth were
entered in the program. The following
Gallia County youth claitned high
honors in her respective division:
Mackenzie Hall of Rio Grande
exhibited this year's Fourth Overall
Bred and Owned Steer and received a
trophy at the banquet. . She is the
daughter of Matt and Eileen Hall. .
BEST is a youth program of the Ohio

Sunday, June 21, 2009

Submitted photo
A Gallia County youth, Mackenzie Hall of Rio Grande, left, had a successful
2008-09 BEST season. The BEST Program is a youth recognition program coordinated by the Ohio Cattlemen's Association. These youth were recognized during the annual BEST banquet. With Hall is OCA President Mike Carper.

Cattlemen's Association that recognizes
Ohio's junior. beef exhibitors through a
series of shows. Juniors who participate
in these sanctioned shows earn points
for their placing at each show. The OCA
. BEST program promotes educating

Ohio's juniors about the beef industry's
issues . and rewards the successful
accomplishments and hard work of
those junior beef producers.
For further ill forma/ion, call Jamie
Ki11g at (614) 873-6736.

To exhibit at Angus show
BIDWELL
Jacob ters in St. Joseph. Mo., is
The National Junior
McCormick of Bidwell will one of 557 young Angus Angus Show is the largcs~
exhibit Angus cattle at the · breeders from 31 stall's who single-breed registered beef
in
the
show
2009 National Junior Angus have entered a total of I ,225 cattle
Show at the Georgia head in the show.
world. This year's event
Frank Jackson, Sanborn, will host ·a beef cook-off,
National Fairgrounds · and.
Agri Center, Perry, Ga., July Minn. , will judge the bred- team sales competition,
19-25,
reports
Bryce . and-owned cattle and cow- public speaking , photograSchumann, chief executive calf pairs. Bill Conley, phy, graphic design.• writing
officer of the American Clarksdale, Mo., will evalu- and poster contests in addiate ·
Angus Association®.
the
owned tion to the traditional·cattle
Callis, · show.
Jacob, a junior member of heifers . Brandon
the
American
Angus College Station, Texas , will
The National ,Jun.ior
Angus Show is sponsored
Association with headquar- judge the steers.

COLUMBUS - Evan
Wood of Patriot recently
received the 2009 United
Producers
Inc.
(UPI)
Scholarship for District 15
for the amount of $1,000.
Wood, who graduated
from Gallia Academy High
School on May 22. is the
son of Lloyd and Marlene
Wood. After graduation,
Wood plans to attend college and study agriculture
and farm management.
"The future of agriculture.
depends highly on those
who are currently consider.ing and pursuing a career in
this critical industry,'' said
UP! President and Chief
Executive . Officer Dennis
Bolling.
"We want io do all we can
to encourage students who
have an interest in agribusi ness, farming , veterinary
medicine or other agriculture-based industries to pursue their careers and th1s is
our way of helping them do
so," he added.
.
One $1 .000 scholarship
from each of UPI 's 16 districts was available to an·
. eligible student.
Those selected . were
. required to be a Preferred
Member of UPl or a child of
a Preferred Member. a grad-

by the American Angus
Association
and
the
National Junior Angus
Association (NJAA) and
hosted by the Georgia
Angus and Junior Angus
Associations this year. "he
NJAA serves a membership of more than 7,000
junior Angus breeders in
. the . United States and
Canada.
For more i11ji:mnarirm , go
ro www.njas.il!fo. .

If you are planning a Building) ,is located on old County Agriculture a~ld ·
cookout, fogging a couple U.S. 33 just north of Natural
Resources
hours ahead with malathion County Road 44.
Educator, Ohio State .
or carbaryl will temporarily
(Hal K11een is the Meigs University Extension) .
.keep mosquitoes away. For ·
further information, · read
OSU
. factsheet, ·
"Mosquitoes,''·at www. ohioline .osu .edu.

•
.

Mid~eport
£

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SeePageBl

.

• Pomeroy; Ohio

•

It I ""!l \\

.H :\I :.!·~ .

:.!OOIJ

inside council's chambers al that by acting as the head of
the Pomeroy Municipal a large buyi11g group they
Building. ·
·
. can · secure lower natural
POMEROY
As
By a narrow
to 81 gas rates for residents .
required by the Public margin, ·voters in Pomeroy
Alscr at last night's counUtdities Commission of approved participation in cil meeting; council voted to
Ohio, las! night Pomeroy the gas aggregation pro- . pursue the variable price
Village Council set two gram, allowing village purchasing plan from
public hearings to inform council to act as the head of Volunteer Energy Services
residents of a pi'icing plan it a buying group for resi- in
Columbus.
VES
chose as part of a gas aggre- dents who wish to partici-. Representative ·
Fred
gation program.
pate in the program .. Holmes told council that by
The hearings are set for Participation is not manda- enrolling in the variable
officials~ .feel price plan, this would pass
6:30 p.m., July 13 and 27 tory. Village.
'
BY BETH SERGENT

BSEAGENTOMYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

eJ

Evan Wood
uating high school senior,
and enrolled in a college or
technical school studying an
agriculture-related field.
United Producers Inc.
serves more than 45 ,000
livestock producers in the
Midwest United States. UP!
offers livestock marketing
services to farmer-rancher
members , along with risk
management and . financial
services.
United Producers is a
jarmer-ow11ed cooperative
in
headquartered ·.
Columbus. For more informaiioll visit www.uproducers.com.

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set

SPORTS
• Glover wins US Open.

~

Printed ... 100%
Rl!&lt;yt~ Newqll'lnl ~.... :

'

:)0 CE:\ IS • Vul. ;)H. \:u . .2;~H

'

along an estimated seven
percent savings to current,
. eligible Columbia Gas customers and a 10 percent or
more savings to non-profit
organizalions, such ··as
churches, that don't pay a
sales tax.
Holmes said the variable
price of natural gas changes
from month to month and
. last ·year · there were some
months Columbia Gas had
better prices. than VES

. though overall · VES had·
lower prices for natural gas
when looking at the annual
savings.
· . .
According to the PUCO,
after tile local government
decides to purchase die·
energy directly or chooses a:
supplier, a notice containing
supplier information (if
applicable) rates, terms and
conditions must be sent to
.
.
PIHse ... PolnM'Gl', AS
c

Association:
.nearing ·
fireworks
fundraising
target ,
,.•

\p,.t·iul ( ore

BY BRIAN

J. REED

BREEDIIMVDAILYS~NTINEL.COM·

MIDDLEPORT . •
,...
Organizers of Middleport's
July 4 celebration w:e confi., ·
dent their fundraisiilg
efforts for frrewofl;s will be~
successful.
Debbie Gerlach; rresidertt ·
PageAS
.
MtddldjlOrt,
. of . the
Community
Associai!Qn,
• Johnny Donohue; 61
said a fundraising . letter
: • Roger Morgan, 85
campaign has been success, . ·
• Donald Leroy PiQ91t, 85 .
. ful ill raising money for the.
$5,000 display. The associa;
• Betty Su~;~gl1 63 .
tion has also raised around
half of the money necessary
for the fireworks througll;
monthly. Lunch Along the
River fundraisers, ,
·:
The next fundraismg lun• .
cheon will be held .from ll
• Amateur Video
a.m. to I p.m. on Friday in
· turns woman Into
Dave Diles Park. The nteriu
will include hot dogs, chips;
icon of lrari unrest.
cole slaw, specia:IW dessert
SeePageAl
breads and soft drinks, for
$5. The Juncheoils are open
. • Don't let rape
· . .. ~
.
.
·
·
..
·
Beth Strgentlphoto . to the public.
go unreported. .
·
The
festivities
will
begin
With summer officially arriving on the calendar in Meigs County, many are taking to the Ohio River to .catch a cool bre\lte •
See Page A3 ..
at.3
p.m.
on
July
4
in
Dave
like these two ,glrls along the Pomeroy river front.
,
Dtles
Park,
.for
''food
.• fuil
• Summerflelds to
and games," Gerlach said.
celebrate anniversary.
'fhe Middleport Ministerilil
Association has volunteered
~Page AS
to
· assist · with a bounce
animals, would create a 13- felony, he doesn't riecessar- Fatmers Union, says a fight
• Thomas scholarships
BY TERRY KINNEY
hou~e
and other pre-parade:
ASSOCIATED PRESS WAITER
mentber . Ohio Livestock ily agree with all ofthe soci- is pointless, expensive and activities.
awarded. See Page AS
·
·.
Care Standards Board. If ety's ambitions.
unwinnable.
• .Local Briefs.
CINCINNATI - The approved by the Legislature,
"It's imtiortant . that we
"We've come to the con- · Tht parade will be held at
slate should ·have a board to which will take it up stand up for our rights as elusion that a negotiated set- 5 p.m., with, lineup at 4:45
SeePage AS
p.m. on . Fi-ont Street new:
set guidelines for the care of Wednesday, the plan would agriculture
!XlOple," tlement is .the best way to Dairy
Queen. ·while ·alL
livestock,
Gov. · Ted go before voters this rear.
Domenick said. "We're a go," said Roger Wise, a thirdentries
welcome, . chi!-:
Strickland .said Monday,
"The board,'' Stnckland farming state. We don't need genemtion farmer and presi- d.ren. on are
decorated
bicycles·
adding to the debate said in il statement, "will a downturn in farming at this dent of the Ohio Fanners
are particularly encour;aged: .
between farm interests and ·ensure that Ohioans contin· pointto affect us even more." Qnion. "It's misguided to to
participate. ·
.
:
ibe nation's biggest animal ue to have access to a safe
The II million-member draw a line in the sand and
Following· the parade
welfare organization.
· and affordable local food · · Humane Society already say it's us versus them."
down North Second Avenue
The
head
of the •supply and will make our had targeted Ohio for its
He said a fight would and
South Third Avenue,
Washington,
D.C.-b11sed state a national leader in the next comprehensive action result in acrimony, vitriol
Humane Society of the · level of animal care and on a range of issues from and "ugly images on televi- Pleese ... _Fireworb, AI :
United States said such a responsibility."
·
livestock confinement to sion to portray extremes as
ooafd would give fanners
He didn't say who would puppy mills. On Monday it the nonn to drive a wedge
too much leeway and would- be on the hoard.
released a survey it Said . between producers and conn'! guarantee a ban of crates
Pacelle called the council shows Ohio is ripe for the sumers." ··
. ·
·
that are used to confine "a transparent attempt by taking, with 67 percent pul!The Fann Bureau is going
breeding sows or cages that agribusiness .interests" to lie support for a ballot ini- ·the ·other way, saying it
are too small for laying hens. :thwart a ballot initiative on tiative m November 2010. · doesn't want debate on the
"II provokes us to do a animal confinement.
Domeniclc. noting · that issue to be driven by one
Dettolla on Page AS
ballot initiative," said soci"It would create an indus- the Humane Society waged · point of view. II has ~ated
ety
president
Wayne try-dominated council that a $10 million campaign to a Center for Food and
COLUMBUS (AP) _;
Pacelle, who has guided would seek to embrace the · win in California, said, "If Animal Issues to addiess all State troopers in Ohio have
suocessful initiatives and status quo in Ohio agricul- it makes it to the ballot, the fann animal, family pet, zoo been writing more speedinsi
legislation .in several states. ture," he said.
Humane Society is going and research issues •.
tickets to motorcyclists;
R.ep. John DomeniCk, to win."
·
"It's very easy for the pub- especially older ones. ·. ::
"It almost forces our hand
a SECiloNs- ta·PAGES
to seek a measure for who h~ads the House agriPacelle has said that lie not to have all the facts,"
The State Highway Patrol
November
2010
on
confinecul~re
committee,
said
Illinois
, Massachusetts and spokesman Joe . Comely . said Monday that overall.
Annie's Mailbox
ment practices."
even though he was named Washing~n also are in the. · said. "We hope to bring a lot JOOtotcycle . Speeding C.ila"
'
The constitutional amend- the Humane Society's Ohio group's sight$.
· of voices to the discussion . tions rose 25 · :perceilt
Calendars
ment backed by Strickland, legislator of the year for his
One fann group, the Ohio and not lose out in the pub- between 2006 and 2008;
who didn't cite any current bill .last year that would Fann Bureau, is bracing fot lie policy area because we The increase was 43 JNir~
Classifieds
standards forthecareoffarm have made cockfighting a a fight. Another, the Ohio didn't show up."
cent among bikers 46-55,
Comics
Bs
and the number of tickets !Q.
lhose in • the 56-65 ..: ago
Editorials
A4
group jumped by an ev~n
greater
73 percent.
· :
STAFF REPORT
gated the death of Skyler gators found witnesses testi" of the vehicle, the boy
Obituaries
The patrol's superin~' ·
MOSNewsot-.f(l),!(lmiENTINELCOM
Perry, the 19 month-old son mony ..and other evidence pulled the vehicle out of
dent,
Col.. Rich!IM CQitins;
of Wesley Perry and Jodie indicated the boy's death · park and sti:uck his younger
Sports
· · B Section
notes
that
m 2008 there were..
POMEROY - Sheriff Deartb .of AJbany, who was . was accidental. ·
brother, who was riding .a
215
motorcycle
, ~lated.·
Robert Beegle said the struck and killed by the
According to witnesses, tricycle at the time.
Weather
As death
of a young boy struck family's van, occupied by the three year-old Perry boy
Skyler Perry died of mul- deaths on Ohio ro&amp;as, .~
by
the
family
van
has
been
the
boy's
three-year
old
climbed
into
the
van,
which
tiple
skull fractu~s.
. most in 25 yeats of IJ'tKlking
© to09 Ohio Volley Publlahina Co.
ruled an accident. and brother, on June 14.
bad locked side doors,
The Perrys were visiting these fatalities. lh a·· Sill~
charges will not be filed
Beegle said investigators through the unlocked rear friends on Ohio 689 in ment, Collins says it's iiDPct~
against his parents.
found no evidence of crimi-· door and climbed into the Columbia Township but live iant for motorcyclists to obe~
Beegle said the prosecut- nal intent and charges will driver's· seat. When his in Athens County, Beegle the speeil limit 10 s!QP
• ing attorney's office investi- not be filed . He said investi- mother tried to get him out said Monday.
tragedies from occlll1inJ . .

0Bl'f(jARJES .

$8.50

Sundav Special Buffett
Children 3·9 t/2 prlce''i"
Children Under 3

All DA1f

Are you being annoyed
and bitten by mosquitoes?
Our wet spring and lots of
standing water have provid. ed ideal breeding s1tes for
mosquitoes. Over 60 different species of mosquitoes
survive in Ohio. Only the
•••
females bite to obtain blood
'':J rom Onr .~J/om e ·To ')(&gt;to:&lt;"
Are y,ou interested in canto Survive while male mos' . fling fruits and vegetables
quitoes feed on flower nec- this summer? OSU is offer~
tar Qr plant juices.
ing a two-hour "Cunning
Some mosquitoes have Workshop" on July 21 from
955 Second Avenue • Gallipolis, OH
only one generation each 5:30p.m. to 7:30 p.m.at the
year while other species · Shade Community Center.
www.corblinandanydar.com
have several generations
Learn what are tbe curHOURS: Mon g.7• Tue.sat S.S • PH 74Q.446.1171• 8Q0.&amp;64.5462
each year. The female lays rent . acceptable canning
her eggs in or near water techniques. Find out why
and quick] y hatch when grandma's · .canning techwater is present (flooding. niql,les are not killing
drainage ditches , rainfall, today 's microbes. Pressure
standing water). The eggs canning lids will be tested
",
~~'&lt;lnt'Sday July 1st at 6pm at Main Stage · ..
hatch in a couple of days atier the meeting. Please
'&gt;;J;,1•
All talent Is welcome. · • . · ,. "'
,,.,..
and begin their lives as wig- call our office (992-6696)
if ' ' )&gt;if! ..
4ta: Glllllfi'S: .
·' ' . . . .
:J
.gly larvae in water for up to
.~: ~PI't'8Chooi/K-4th (~rudt' •JunkNt~..Sth· {;r , · · ;·,,
or
email
kneen.1@osu.edu
seven days. They then form
·~~~·9t!f.l2tb Gradt&gt; • Rr-gir.ter under Ou~ atrOOt !'OD wiU:tit lalhlt fa~;~·
you plan on attending so
a pupae (resting stage) and if
emerge as adults after two we can hav11 sufficient
CAUGOKIES:
·, ·.;~·;l!~:.·f _,,r
•• Unllct•/ChL-cr, Sia.w'ln~lrun!_tnlal ·
- ;.. .
Shade
or three days . Within 48 handouts.
."-uxaltal') (Batoos, 1-'bg~ l\1u¢c Comedy. tk.)
...,
·
Community
Center
(former
hours the new mosquito is
Oatllpotis (7-14!~ 446•ltltl ·
l~ftRlster .at the Chamber or('omuttftt' t~r bill {740) i4..~3l6t tiU N(IOJ'I OA
. Elementary Point Pleasant (.)(14) 6'1!-Slet
July lSI. 't'al&lt;nl sbuw ftl!l'"ratlon !&lt; $ll with a Slllo.. r.. tfpold ofler dtadllno.
ready to bite and restart the Shade .
live cycle. Mosquitoes may
lransmit diseases such as
d!mque fever, yellow fever,
malaria, encephalitis, and
West Nile Virus.
Prevuntion is an important step in controlling mosquitoes . Remove possible
breeding sites such as
c.logged drainpipes, abandoned tires , clogged ditches, and containers holding
water. Water gardens need
to be stocked with lish and
·frogs or keep an ample supply of an bacteria product
such as "Mosquito· Dunks,"
which · are composed of
Bacteria
thuringiensis
Berliner var. israelensis to
Pay no Interest: f'or 72 mont:hs
toss into the water.
on GC:2400 and GC:2600 Series subcompacts.
Another larvicide to use is
l't 's t .hat spec ial t.ime of y ear again , and 'th e fun i s · just. beginning. Especi~:t.lly when w e're Talking about tra.ct.or5
methoprene which prevents
that ar-e so versatile . comf&lt;.:J.rtabl e and easy 1:0 ope:ra1"e tha'T. you can'"t. help bu't love ' em. O ur M assey Fer"g,usonR
larvae from evolving into
GC2 '"1 tO a"'t: 22 . 5 gro ss engine HP and th e GC26t0 a"t 25 gross engine HP e ven come w i1.h load e r and backhoe .
s tandard . But all models fea·rure - 1he roomiest oper·ator ptat.form in t .h e tr class. with more les room. a more
adults. Methoprene is also
co mfo rt.abte sea.'t, logi cally placed co ntrots an_
d even c n ...Jise con1..rol . lntel"e St ed? VVe have n O doub1. yo'&gt;:J'II be
available in b~quets which
very ha.ppy 'together·. See your· Massey Feq:~uson d ea fer· tCJd ay or vi sh. www:rtu:lsscyferguson.com.
can be tossed into stagnant
*On .se~1 ""00ef5 ~ , ~r •al ..,VlT"'bet"S wrtn approv~ c f'(ltdl't fo"'m A("';.C O F'""'""c e L..LC . .A.vaU&lt;~ol:)~1!': k:J, e q uo:ll tT,Ontnly p.i!yn'lenu; o h ly, Lea!t."S~ an&lt;;l .
ditches: Screen windows
l;:)ai iOOn ~aymer"\H a ....l!ula b~ at shghtl)r t"'•ghct" ~"'.nt~. OHor- "'PPI •C&amp;b e t(;.• pun;:.ha5e$ rnacoAr.,.:d I "th•ougt1 ·jyr.e .)O, ·L00 9 Contact }"'Ur panie:.:•p.ating
and doors with 16-by-16 or
d@lt.lf!lt- f or C e1
.
14-by-18 mesh to prevent
entry of mosquitoes into
your homes. When working
.
2150 E;ASTERN AVENUE, GALLIPOLIS, OH
or playing outside apply
v••e•Y ••IIIIIU-.aN"
.
740 446-9777 • (740) 448-2484
""' ""~·. tnd • .•• ,J~·r~: •huor.~.:. ,_,
repellents such as DEET
(N.N-Diethyl-m-toluamide ).

Cor6in &amp;Snyiu furniture
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smashes another, A2

1.1 \....,1...,1, '-I 1&lt;\ II

EXTENSION CORNER---Mosquitoes driving you to distraction?
BY HAL KNEEN

Rutland alumni
honors own, A3

DC transit train

'~· '\~!!&lt;·

·0 \n.

.

1

aol ~

JIM'S FARM EQUIPMENT, INC.

INSIDE

Ohio governor backs plan for livestock ·Standards

· WEATIIER

Motorcycle
speeding
citations rise.

INDEX
.

.Investigation in child's death reveals no criminal wrongdoing ·

.IL

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�Daily Sentinel

'

NATION

PageA2

• ·WoRLD

•

r.:::~~~J. SNifFEN

"'

PRESS WRITERS

WASHINGTON ·- One
transit train smashed
the rear of another at
height of the capital
"s Monday evening rush
killin$ at least six peoand inJuring scores of
M1ers as th«; front end of the
~~H~g:i~tra~in jackknifed viol,
the air and ·fell
the first.
of both trains were
tl~~er'open and smashed
tc
m the worst acciin the Metrorail sys33-year history.
()i,;rri.ot of Columbia fire
~pokes1rnan Alan Etter said ·
tre\.vs had to cut some ~­
out of what he descnbed
a "mass casualty event."
workers propped
ladders up to the upper
· cars to help survivorS
~ramble to safety. Seats
the smashed cars
~-;''~" out onto the track.
D.C. Mayor Adrian Fenty
· six were confii'IMd
Fire Chief Dennis
~~:::~said rescue ·workers
lr
76 people at the
and sent some of
to local hospitals, six
critical injuries. A,
~~~~~~u~f~~o.r further victims
t;'
into the night.
A Metro official said the
included the operator
the trailing train . Her
was not immediately
teleflsed.
The crash around 5 pm.
too~ place on the sys·
's red line, Metro's
M1~tro

Officials had no explanation for the accident. The
National
Transportation
Safety Board took charge of
the investigation and sent a
team to the site. DC police
and the FBI also had investigators at the scene to help
search the wreckage for any
overlooked injured or dead
passengers and evidence.
Officials would not say
how fast the train was trav!}~~~; which
runs of
below
for much
its eling at the time of the accibut is at ground level dent. The crash Occurred in
accident site near the an ;uea with a sizable dis'
tahce between rail stations
ra::~~~li;bo=td~:e~r in north- in which trains are allowed
John Catoe to travel at higher speeds,
the first · train was Metro . spokeswoman
~tc'Pp!~d on the tracks, wait· Candace Smith said.
another to clear the · The trains' devices that
ktM'inn ahead, when the
record operating speeds and
Jrai.Iin@ train, one of the .old- commands are being tvrned
in the Metro fleet, over to the NTSB, Smith
said.
tlll&gt;wc~ into it from.beh'lnd.

f

District of

Columbia .
Fire and
Emergency
workers at
the site of a
rush-hour
collision
between two
Metro transit
trains In
northeast
Washington,
D.C. Monday.
APpholo

'

real.'.-

At Howard University
Hospital, Dr. Johnnie Ford,
an emergency room doctor.
said a 14-year-old girl suffered two broken legs in the
accident. A 20:year-old mille
patient "looked like' be had
been tumbled around quite a
bit, bumps and bruises from
head to toe," Ford said.
Homeland
Security
Department spokeswoman
Amy Kudwa Said less than
two hours after the crash
that federal authorities had
no indication of any terrorism connection.
"'I don't know the reason
for this accident," Metro's
Catoe said. "I would still
say the system is safe, but
we've had an incident."
Monday's crash was the
third major subway or com,
·muter rail crash in a big city
in the past nine months. In
the earlier accidents: . · ·
• In September 2008, a
commuter rail train and. a
freight train crashed in Los
Angeles, killing 25 people.
The crash was blamed on an
engineer on the commuter
rail Sending text messages
on a cell phone.
• Last month about 50

Rudand alumni honors own ·Don't let rape go unreported .

people were injured in
Boston when one trolley
rear-ended another. The
conductor admitted to send- ,
ing a text message when the
.crash occurred.
No reason was given for
the Washington crash, but
some safety experts are concerned .about the recent
.increase.
"I'm not sure if everyone
in the safety system is paying the proper attention that
needs to be paid," said
Barry Sweedler, · a San ·
Francisco-based safety con·
sultant and former investigator and manager at the
NTSB . "These things
shouldn't be happening."
However, Robert Lauby, a
·former NTSB rail investigator, said the increase in accidents could well be mere
coincidence.
"Just because you had
them doesn't mean there's a
specific issue that · caused
them," Lauby said.
The only other time in
Metrorail's 33-year history
that there · were passenger
fatalities was on Jan. I 3,
I 982, when three people
died as a result of a derailr
ment underneath downtown.
That was a day of disaSter in
the capital -,. shortly befor¢
the su~way crash, an .Air
Aorida plane slammed into
the 14th Street Bridge
immediately after takeoff in
a severe snowstorm from
Washington
National
Airport across the Potomac
River. The plane crash killed
78 people.

.,

At· it's recent gathering,
:the ~utland Alumni honBY KATHY MITCHELL
me a kiss hello and goodbye, Parenting." whose daugh~
ored those fellow classAND MARCY SuGAR
and it feels awkward.
wants to attend an unsuper:
mates and friends who have
He also comes over all the vised overnight prom party;
passed ·away by h.anging
Dear Annie: I am I6 years time unannounced. I'"e got· Many parents think that
posters and pictures of those
old, and my friend "Kelly" is ten up in the morning and with eight couples present;
deceased alumni at the 80th
I 7. Last week, Kelly went to been startled to see Dad sit- the kids will be too modest
Annual Alumni Reunion.
a party where there was alco- ling at the kitchen table. H'e for sex and will watch out
More than 40() people .
hol. Sbe got a little drunk and · drops by when I'm not home for each other.
attended the reuruon beld at
then drove her bl'!&gt;lher home, and looks through our mail. · After 35 years of teachinl
the Rutlam;l Civic Center.
along with one of his friends The last straw was when he high school. I can tell you.tb&amp;
.The event got under way
who stayed over. She was walked into our bedroom, more kids, the more proo(
with a .social hour as .the
.asleep when her brother's bent over my bed and said, they are to have sex. 1'b.ii ·
alumni gathered. President .
friend came into her bedroom .. Are you sleeping?" He includes the honors and ~ ·
Sue Clonch Larkin weland forced himself on her. scared me to death . I fmally kids. the band kids, even~
:comoo all to the ballquet. The
She couldn't fight him off .told Dad he has to knock on kids who seem to be in ~
gym and tables were decoratbecause the alcohol made her the door and announce him- mined relationships. 1be;
ed throughout with .the
feel disoriented. Afterward self, and if we are not home, model what the~ see on TV:
school colors, red and black.
she
realized she was raped.
he has to leave. But he still This mother is nght to W&lt;lftJ(
Darlene Smith Vanaman
.
llubmlltecl pho!D
Kelly
doesn't
want
to
report
gave the invocation with the Eugene Fink (pictured) was honored altha 80th Annual
keeps trying to hang around. I cannot tell you the numbC:t
Pledge of Allegiance led by Rutland High' School Alumni Reunion lor attending his 75th it.because there was underage
I am in counseling, but I of students whose colleg~
drinking
involved
and
this
John Montgomery. The WID· Class reunion.
don't
feel like I am handling plans have been chari~ ·or
•
boy is her brother·s best this well. I suggested coun- destroyed because of ·~
dlelight dinner was provided
by the Star Grange 778.
Jack Bolen, Russell Carson, Harrington, Larry Haynes, friend. She isn't pregnant, so I seliog for Dad and even unplanned pregnancy c_or,
Treasurer Kathy Thomas Alberta
Snowden Charlotte Smith Hescht, doubt she'll seek medical found a senior center where health issues involving ST[)lL
. Schultz presented Larry Rupe Montgomery.
John Steve
King,
Daniel · help. She illsists she wants to he could meet others, play a Please do not use my pame. l
Paul McDonald, · .Roberta Smith put it behiild her. She feels too little cards, etc., but he won't am - Still Teaching .· :
. with an award for the' count· ' Montgomery,
Dear Still: Thanks · fot
less hours of his time ~to Shoemaker; Class of 1956, Meyer, Ellis Myers, Connie ashamed to tell her parents go. I can't give him the rela·
and
ber.brother,
and
I'm
livid
lions hip he wants . Please one more warning tll add .t~
the preservation of .
'nil Weldon Bartrum, Lynn Haley
Nelson,
Jack
·
··
the memorY' of Rutland 'gil B~ Ben~hoter, Janet Peterson, Marvel Foley that this boy is going to get help. - Lost Without Mom the list .
School alive. Rupe has over . Turner Bolin, joe Bolin, Petry, Rosemary Harless away with it. How can I conDear Lost: FlfSt, put new
Annie's Mailbox is wrii•
250 alumni emails the he Harold Carson, Jim Dyer, Pope, Linda H1cks Rife , vince her to talk to someone? locks on your doors and us.e len by Kathy MitcheU ~
sends to nightly. Eugene Donna Will Higgins, Larry Gary.Saxton, Pamela Wilson - Nigh~ in Maine
them. Then try to cut Dad Marcy Sugar, lortgtime ~
Dear Maine: Kelly sorlle slack. He's lonely. With tors of the Ann Landtrs .
Fmk, class of 1933, was also Pickens; Class of 1957, Ted Shepherd, . Connie Rice
· awarded fiJI' his 75th year of Cremeans, Bill Edwards, Siemer, Benny Slawter, should report this,but please . the loss of his wife, he is now column. Please e-mail yout
·attending the Rutland High Jo.hn Jeffers, Kenneth Jerry . Tilli~. Danny . Tilljs, don't. push her too hard. It valuing the relationships he questions to. anniesmail~
will only add stress to what has left. He.is tt'ying to form a box@cmhcast.net, or wrltt
School Alumni Reunion.
Longsti'i:dl, Clarence Might, Sharon Quillen Wise.
LfmY Haynes introduCed Robert Rife, Jerry Class of 1965. Carolyn is obviously a difficult situa- closer bond, and we hope you tu: Annie's Mailbox,. f.().
Me1gs Archery Coach Jeff Schoonover, Joseph Scragg, McKnight Dailey, Cecil tion. Instead, urge her to will allow it to happen. Yes, it Box 118190, Chicago, 14.
Jones who have a short sum- Judy
Hatfield
Simon, JohnstOn, Bill Lambert, Judy contact the Rape, Abuse &amp; is awkward now, but hopeful- 60611. To find out miln
. mary of the acoomplishnien!S Raymond Wilcox, Joan Rife Cremeans
McDonald, ll)cest National Network ly ~ou can adjust if you give about Annie's Mailbox{
·m Meigs Local Schools in Wolfe; Class of 1958, Duane. William Porter, Larry Rupe, hotline (rainn .org) at .l-800- ittrme, and we urge you to try and read features by othei
( 1-800-656- a bit more.lt could turn out to Creators Syndicate wrttei-1.
's_tate and nati~ competi- Bart, Judy Hayes Eads, Ronnie Taylor..Class of 1966, 656-HOPE
lions. Then, reCipients of the . Robert Goode, Charlotte Ray Alk1re, Linda Hysell 4673). The call is anony-. be very rewarding.
.. and cartoom"sts, visit tht.
RHS
2009
Alumni Birchfield Grant, Charlotte Bates, Barbara Cotterill mous and confidential, and
Dear Annie: I read the · Creators Syndicate 'We•
Scholarships were ~nted. Harrison Harper, Danny Cremeans, Joetta Erlewine someone there will help her letter from "Hopeless in page a1 www.creatqrs.t(Jmi'
by ~anet Tiuner Bobn. A total HOlliday, Margaret Ballengee Eskew, .Latischia Gates sort through her options,
..
of SIX scholarships were giVen Ne.Ison, John Priddy. . .· Graham, Steve Grimm, including counseling.
Dear Annie: My wonder- ~------------~--------~
.in the amount of$SOO each·.
Class of 1959, Linda · Nancy Lambert Haddox, Sam
freat~n•nl ·
Following the roll call of Turley . Ball,
Dennis Hicks, · Rosanna · Goff ful mother recently died.
classes, the program con- Ballengee, Thelma Shaffer Kitchen, Linda Lathey, .Dad is not the type who can
· "Your Carptt &amp; Upholstery Cleaning Solutiqni&gt;
eluded wit)l the. Sit~Bing of Bliss; David Carsori, Dan Loretta Harless McQuaid,, manage on his own. We
the school song, accompa· Cremeans, Elaine . Steele Mike Nicholson, . Sanely never h~ a close . relation- .
740-992-7090 .
Voted Trihied by catherine. ~lwei! Qyer, LouiSe Parsons Eads, Tucker Phillips, Beverly ship, and liow he wants to be
Shenefield. Danny·Tillis led ~ 'Thomas Easter, Euna Forbes Rupe, Charlotte Rupe my best frien1H just can't do ·
County's #l · aae,..9~2-7090
Marty O;Bryant, Owli~r .
· .the benediction . All sang · Ri~;hardS · Eaton, Lanna Stewart, Kathy Tillis Weaver. it. There are too many· hard
Carpet Cleaner . Over
~ill We Meet Again" to · Tut:net Gonde, · Jimmy Linda Stafford Will; Class of feelings. He never interacted
20 Yean Experienu
end the reunion.
.
Graham, Shirley Ballengee 1967, Clyde Ferrell, Karen with us .. When my husband
. Alumni who attended·1he Head, Keith Kennelly, Tucker Floyd,. Sabra Canaday and kids came to see him, he
Check Out Our Sumnwr Spec1~ls
;reunion were: Class of,L933, Gloria Atkins Kloos, Janet Gibson, Nancy Knotts Hall. would watch TV the entire
At www r cdcmpettre~tmen t orq
Eugene Fmk; Class Of 1939, Caton Ladd, Eddie Long; Eritest Lee Hawkins, Gary time. Now he wants to ~ive
Robert .Smith; Class of 1~, Betty Jeffers l:.ongstr~th, Haynes, Lilly Imboden
Alta W11l Casdorph, Mlli]one Larry May, .Judy Oalhon Kloes, Sue Clonch Larkin,
:Standley Rice; Class of 194 I, McGuire, Geraldine Dewees Dixie Wamsley Leonard;
-Darrell Burson, Maxine McQuaid, Roger Musser, Bonnie Grate . Nicholson,
O~.din Griffith; Class .of Richard Nels()n, Allen Page, Debbie ·Turner 'Pool, Dixie
1942, James Thomas;· Class Audrea Cross Parr, .. Phyllis Carson Sayre, Kathy Thomas
of 1943,Jean Amos Redden; Williams Rife, Ronnie Rife, Schultz,.Gilford "Oil" Turley.
Class of · 1944, Marie Gary Rife, Geraldine Stacy Darlene Smith Vanaman, Jim
Hoffman · Riggs, Eleanor Spurlock, Larry Turley. .
Vanaman, Betty Clark
Taylor Thomas; .Class of · Class of 1960, John VanMatre, Denms Weber,
1945, Goldie Knotts Nelson, Brogan, Eloise Musser Harry Yarbrough, Scholarship
Delma Riggs Nelson; Class Carson, Patty Young Clark, Zulu; Class of 1968, Mary
· of 1946, William Larkin; Linda Haley Roffman, Clru-a · Hall ·Fallon, Jim Fink, Larry
Class of 1947, Daniel Mae 'Hysell, Irene Searles Montgomery, Mike Porter,
Dawson, Catherine Colwell Kennedy, 'Judith Slawter Mary McKinney Wells,
Shenefield; Class of 1948, Marinacci,
Carlos Diane Holliday Young; Class
Charles Buck; Class of 1949, McKnight, Marjorie Priddy of 1969, Janice SQ1ith
Phyllis Burson Amos, Rife, Carolyn Robson Rife, Grimm, Larry Lemley, Joe
Charles Amos, Helen taylor Wayne Roush, Bonnie Myers, Jennifer Cray Pope,
Atkeson, David Colwell, Rathburn Skidll)ore, Sandy Diane Knorr Robinson, Jack
Dorothy Caton Deemer, Tillis Smith, Norma Barrett Robinson, Jeff . 'Snowden •.
Mildred Thqmas Donahue, Stanely; Class of 1961; Becky taylor · Tannehill,
John Dyke, Merlyn Farmer, Sherman Ballengee, Paul Candy Chafin 'I)Ilis, 'Jeff
Carol Dawson Pack, Caroll Browning, Gladys Stowers Tillis, Ronnie Vance, Dean
Snowden,
Raymond . Cross, . Margaret · Smith Weber.
Thomas.
Edwards, David Martin, · ·Class of 1970, Lin Black,
Class of 1950, Bill Brown, Richard I?fe; Class of 1962, Karen. Griffith, Cheryl
Maxme Rumfield Dyer, June T1lhs Bearhs, Sammy Hutchmson
Lemley,
Avanell Jordan Georg~. Janet Birchfield, Lee Combs, Franklin. Pope; Class of
O~din Jones, Bruce May, Richard Dugan, Louise
1971, , Bill Cray, Becky
Mickey Williams; Class of . Hijlginbotham Dulany, Billy Houdashell Johnston, Betty
1951. Jack Barton, Marie Hayes, Ellen Might Johnson, Smith Lambert, Sherrie
Little Birchfield, Joan Paul Pierce, Junior Rife, T\irner Might, Linda Midkiff .
Snowden · May, Henry Viola McKnight Shoemaker; Montgomery, Gloria Goff
McKnight, Virgmia Moore Class of 1963, Darlene Goff Oiler, Bob· Stewart; ClasS of
Michael, Shirley Cremeans D!ll, Jim Ferrell, Dreama 1972, Lois Rupe SmJ~grass;
Simmons, Lowell vance; BlfChfield PJarvey, Paul Class of 1973, Jim
Cl~s of 19~2. Betty Fa_rmer Higginbotham,
Charles Birchfiel~; Class of 1974,
'
Gnm, Amslee Wilson Hoffman, R1chard Lambert, Robert Birchfield; Class of
McKnight, Helen Stevens Bobby Pope, David Scragg, 1975, Regina Harrison
Ransom,
Mary
Dyke Harry Shaffer, Allen Stacy, Wolfe; Class of 1977, Opal
Woodrum; Class of 1953, John "Butch" Tillis; Class of Dyer; Class of 1978, Brent
Clyde . Clonch,
Joan I ?64, Patsy Welch Artrip, Bolin; .Class of 1981, Aoyd
Montgomery Con!er, Marcia Warren Jerry Black, Gla~ Holliday, Richard Swanson,
Russell Mulbmx , Tom. Warner Campbell, · Anc1l Carla Smith Wyant. ·
Schoonover; Class of 1954, Cross, Dick Fetty, Sheryl . Faculty from RHS llttendDon
Swisher,
Billy Wolfe Finn, Dinah 'Lee ing were Donald Spencer and
Williamson; Class Of 1955, Gryszka, Karen Gilkey Martha Ohlinger Vennari . .

fte led Carpal

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Are You Unable to Manage Your ·

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With Diet and Exercise Alone?

If you ...
• Have not been treated with, or have had only
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• Are between 18 and 77 years of age ·

You may be ell&amp;ible to participate in a alobal
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Community Calendar

Participants may receive study-related medical
care, study medication, laboratory work, and

Public meetings · Paul

United Methodis.t
Birth~ys
Church, for trip to
•
Wednesday, JIDie 24·
Ravenwood Castle · and
SatUrday, June 27
POMEROY - Meigs Hocking Hills.
LONG BOTTOM
~ounr.y · Commiasioners
TUPPERS P(AINS Ruby Brewer will celebrate
reschedultd'rqular'weekly Tbc 1\!ppm Plains VFW her 85th birthday today,
. ~ J·p m ·
,
Posr· 90S" will meet at 7 cards can be sent to PO Box
meetdl
:....
··y·,
Juoe
;,;,
s.;,
p.m. at the:&gt; hall.
4, Long Bottom, 45743 .
T ..,_,
POMEROY - Meigs .
Soil
and
. Water
, ; ', (:,lil MARCUM CONSTRUCTION
Conservation District Board
•
ComnWIIC.1 1 &amp; Res1dent1al
of Supervisors, regular ses•
sion, IJ:30 a.m., district
Room AddmOna, O.Cka, Oarag... Vl!lyl &amp; Wood
offige.on !iillmd ~- · ·
Mng, Roofing; Chain Unk &amp; Wood Fencing

evaluations, at no colt.
To learn more about this clinical research study,
please call today. All calls are c.on1idential,

Laurie Wayland, LPN
Holzer Clinic Department of Research
90 Jackson Pike, Gallipolis, OH 45631
740.441 .3990

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orpniabs ·

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Tuesday, June 23, 2009

ANNIE'S MAILBOX .

Each train had six cars · the train.
and was capable of holding
Webber raced to the scene ·
as many as I ,200 people. after hearing loud boom .
Safety Board member . like a "thunder crash" and
Debbie Hersman said the .then sirens. She said there
trains were bound for down- was no panic among the
town. That would mean survivors.
they were less likely to be
Passenger Jodie Wickett,
filled during the afternoon a nurse, told CNN she was .
rush hour.
seated on one train, sending
The trains had pulled out text messages on her phone,
of the Takoma Park station when she felt the impact.
and were headed · in the She said she sent a mes5age
direction of the Fort Totten to someone .that ir felt ·like · ·
station.
the train·had hit a.bump: . ·
· More than ·200 frrefigbt"From thnt ' point on, .it
ers from D.C., Maryland happened·so fast,.I flew out
Exe&amp;v&amp;&amp;loD ...... 0..-.tr.. lnictud.es:.
and Virginia eveniually con· . of the seat and hit my head."
Drlve"""ays. L a n d Clearlna~
Po-n~s. "'"'renchlng,. R.ec:IR.D'I.a~lon.
verged on the . scene. Wickett said she stayed at
e!k ~uch :l'lvioire!
Sabrina Webber, a 45-year· the scene and tried to help. ·
. --·. ··-·~
.
old real estate agent who She said "people are just in ·
::r-e
lives in the neighborhood, very bad shape."
,_.,z;;.-- ~
said the first rescuers to
"The . people that were
arrive had to use the "jaws hurt, the ones that . could
C•ll t o d • v 'lor ,., h-•• ••t:in11•t•l
M-n..-•1 ('7. . 0) . 1180-37'00
of lif!!" to pry open a wire speak, were calling .back as
o•nnv (740) e•o-eai!IO
Mile· (74'9') ISe0~31?011
fence along rail line to get to we called out to them," she

a

PageA3 ·

BY THE· BEND

The Daily Sentinel

Tuesday, June 23, 2009

said. ''Lots of peOple were
upset and crying, but there
were· no screams.''
One man said he was riding a bicycle across a bridge
over the Metro tracks when
the sound of the crash got
·his attention. ·
'"
"I didn't see any panic,"
Barry Student said. "The
whole situation was so sur-

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PageA2

• ·WoRLD

•

r.:::~~~J. SNifFEN

"'

PRESS WRITERS

WASHINGTON ·- One
transit train smashed
the rear of another at
height of the capital
"s Monday evening rush
killin$ at least six peoand inJuring scores of
M1ers as th«; front end of the
~~H~g:i~tra~in jackknifed viol,
the air and ·fell
the first.
of both trains were
tl~~er'open and smashed
tc
m the worst acciin the Metrorail sys33-year history.
()i,;rri.ot of Columbia fire
~pokes1rnan Alan Etter said ·
tre\.vs had to cut some ~­
out of what he descnbed
a "mass casualty event."
workers propped
ladders up to the upper
· cars to help survivorS
~ramble to safety. Seats
the smashed cars
~-;''~" out onto the track.
D.C. Mayor Adrian Fenty
· six were confii'IMd
Fire Chief Dennis
~~:::~said rescue ·workers
lr
76 people at the
and sent some of
to local hospitals, six
critical injuries. A,
~~~~~~u~f~~o.r further victims
t;'
into the night.
A Metro official said the
included the operator
the trailing train . Her
was not immediately
teleflsed.
The crash around 5 pm.
too~ place on the sys·
's red line, Metro's
M1~tro

Officials had no explanation for the accident. The
National
Transportation
Safety Board took charge of
the investigation and sent a
team to the site. DC police
and the FBI also had investigators at the scene to help
search the wreckage for any
overlooked injured or dead
passengers and evidence.
Officials would not say
how fast the train was trav!}~~~; which
runs of
below
for much
its eling at the time of the accibut is at ground level dent. The crash Occurred in
accident site near the an ;uea with a sizable dis'
tahce between rail stations
ra::~~~li;bo=td~:e~r in north- in which trains are allowed
John Catoe to travel at higher speeds,
the first · train was Metro . spokeswoman
~tc'Pp!~d on the tracks, wait· Candace Smith said.
another to clear the · The trains' devices that
ktM'inn ahead, when the
record operating speeds and
Jrai.Iin@ train, one of the .old- commands are being tvrned
in the Metro fleet, over to the NTSB, Smith
said.
tlll&gt;wc~ into it from.beh'lnd.

f

District of

Columbia .
Fire and
Emergency
workers at
the site of a
rush-hour
collision
between two
Metro transit
trains In
northeast
Washington,
D.C. Monday.
APpholo

'

real.'.-

At Howard University
Hospital, Dr. Johnnie Ford,
an emergency room doctor.
said a 14-year-old girl suffered two broken legs in the
accident. A 20:year-old mille
patient "looked like' be had
been tumbled around quite a
bit, bumps and bruises from
head to toe," Ford said.
Homeland
Security
Department spokeswoman
Amy Kudwa Said less than
two hours after the crash
that federal authorities had
no indication of any terrorism connection.
"'I don't know the reason
for this accident," Metro's
Catoe said. "I would still
say the system is safe, but
we've had an incident."
Monday's crash was the
third major subway or com,
·muter rail crash in a big city
in the past nine months. In
the earlier accidents: . · ·
• In September 2008, a
commuter rail train and. a
freight train crashed in Los
Angeles, killing 25 people.
The crash was blamed on an
engineer on the commuter
rail Sending text messages
on a cell phone.
• Last month about 50

Rudand alumni honors own ·Don't let rape go unreported .

people were injured in
Boston when one trolley
rear-ended another. The
conductor admitted to send- ,
ing a text message when the
.crash occurred.
No reason was given for
the Washington crash, but
some safety experts are concerned .about the recent
.increase.
"I'm not sure if everyone
in the safety system is paying the proper attention that
needs to be paid," said
Barry Sweedler, · a San ·
Francisco-based safety con·
sultant and former investigator and manager at the
NTSB . "These things
shouldn't be happening."
However, Robert Lauby, a
·former NTSB rail investigator, said the increase in accidents could well be mere
coincidence.
"Just because you had
them doesn't mean there's a
specific issue that · caused
them," Lauby said.
The only other time in
Metrorail's 33-year history
that there · were passenger
fatalities was on Jan. I 3,
I 982, when three people
died as a result of a derailr
ment underneath downtown.
That was a day of disaSter in
the capital -,. shortly befor¢
the su~way crash, an .Air
Aorida plane slammed into
the 14th Street Bridge
immediately after takeoff in
a severe snowstorm from
Washington
National
Airport across the Potomac
River. The plane crash killed
78 people.

.,

At· it's recent gathering,
:the ~utland Alumni honBY KATHY MITCHELL
me a kiss hello and goodbye, Parenting." whose daugh~
ored those fellow classAND MARCY SuGAR
and it feels awkward.
wants to attend an unsuper:
mates and friends who have
He also comes over all the vised overnight prom party;
passed ·away by h.anging
Dear Annie: I am I6 years time unannounced. I'"e got· Many parents think that
posters and pictures of those
old, and my friend "Kelly" is ten up in the morning and with eight couples present;
deceased alumni at the 80th
I 7. Last week, Kelly went to been startled to see Dad sit- the kids will be too modest
Annual Alumni Reunion.
a party where there was alco- ling at the kitchen table. H'e for sex and will watch out
More than 40() people .
hol. Sbe got a little drunk and · drops by when I'm not home for each other.
attended the reuruon beld at
then drove her bl'!&gt;lher home, and looks through our mail. · After 35 years of teachinl
the Rutlam;l Civic Center.
along with one of his friends The last straw was when he high school. I can tell you.tb&amp;
.The event got under way
who stayed over. She was walked into our bedroom, more kids, the more proo(
with a .social hour as .the
.asleep when her brother's bent over my bed and said, they are to have sex. 1'b.ii ·
alumni gathered. President .
friend came into her bedroom .. Are you sleeping?" He includes the honors and ~ ·
Sue Clonch Larkin weland forced himself on her. scared me to death . I fmally kids. the band kids, even~
:comoo all to the ballquet. The
She couldn't fight him off .told Dad he has to knock on kids who seem to be in ~
gym and tables were decoratbecause the alcohol made her the door and announce him- mined relationships. 1be;
ed throughout with .the
feel disoriented. Afterward self, and if we are not home, model what the~ see on TV:
school colors, red and black.
she
realized she was raped.
he has to leave. But he still This mother is nght to W&lt;lftJ(
Darlene Smith Vanaman
.
llubmlltecl pho!D
Kelly
doesn't
want
to
report
gave the invocation with the Eugene Fink (pictured) was honored altha 80th Annual
keeps trying to hang around. I cannot tell you the numbC:t
Pledge of Allegiance led by Rutland High' School Alumni Reunion lor attending his 75th it.because there was underage
I am in counseling, but I of students whose colleg~
drinking
involved
and
this
John Montgomery. The WID· Class reunion.
don't
feel like I am handling plans have been chari~ ·or
•
boy is her brother·s best this well. I suggested coun- destroyed because of ·~
dlelight dinner was provided
by the Star Grange 778.
Jack Bolen, Russell Carson, Harrington, Larry Haynes, friend. She isn't pregnant, so I seliog for Dad and even unplanned pregnancy c_or,
Treasurer Kathy Thomas Alberta
Snowden Charlotte Smith Hescht, doubt she'll seek medical found a senior center where health issues involving ST[)lL
. Schultz presented Larry Rupe Montgomery.
John Steve
King,
Daniel · help. She illsists she wants to he could meet others, play a Please do not use my pame. l
Paul McDonald, · .Roberta Smith put it behiild her. She feels too little cards, etc., but he won't am - Still Teaching .· :
. with an award for the' count· ' Montgomery,
Dear Still: Thanks · fot
less hours of his time ~to Shoemaker; Class of 1956, Meyer, Ellis Myers, Connie ashamed to tell her parents go. I can't give him the rela·
and
ber.brother,
and
I'm
livid
lions hip he wants . Please one more warning tll add .t~
the preservation of .
'nil Weldon Bartrum, Lynn Haley
Nelson,
Jack
·
··
the memorY' of Rutland 'gil B~ Ben~hoter, Janet Peterson, Marvel Foley that this boy is going to get help. - Lost Without Mom the list .
School alive. Rupe has over . Turner Bolin, joe Bolin, Petry, Rosemary Harless away with it. How can I conDear Lost: FlfSt, put new
Annie's Mailbox is wrii•
250 alumni emails the he Harold Carson, Jim Dyer, Pope, Linda H1cks Rife , vince her to talk to someone? locks on your doors and us.e len by Kathy MitcheU ~
sends to nightly. Eugene Donna Will Higgins, Larry Gary.Saxton, Pamela Wilson - Nigh~ in Maine
them. Then try to cut Dad Marcy Sugar, lortgtime ~
Dear Maine: Kelly sorlle slack. He's lonely. With tors of the Ann Landtrs .
Fmk, class of 1933, was also Pickens; Class of 1957, Ted Shepherd, . Connie Rice
· awarded fiJI' his 75th year of Cremeans, Bill Edwards, Siemer, Benny Slawter, should report this,but please . the loss of his wife, he is now column. Please e-mail yout
·attending the Rutland High Jo.hn Jeffers, Kenneth Jerry . Tilli~. Danny . Tilljs, don't. push her too hard. It valuing the relationships he questions to. anniesmail~
will only add stress to what has left. He.is tt'ying to form a box@cmhcast.net, or wrltt
School Alumni Reunion.
Longsti'i:dl, Clarence Might, Sharon Quillen Wise.
LfmY Haynes introduCed Robert Rife, Jerry Class of 1965. Carolyn is obviously a difficult situa- closer bond, and we hope you tu: Annie's Mailbox,. f.().
Me1gs Archery Coach Jeff Schoonover, Joseph Scragg, McKnight Dailey, Cecil tion. Instead, urge her to will allow it to happen. Yes, it Box 118190, Chicago, 14.
Jones who have a short sum- Judy
Hatfield
Simon, JohnstOn, Bill Lambert, Judy contact the Rape, Abuse &amp; is awkward now, but hopeful- 60611. To find out miln
. mary of the acoomplishnien!S Raymond Wilcox, Joan Rife Cremeans
McDonald, ll)cest National Network ly ~ou can adjust if you give about Annie's Mailbox{
·m Meigs Local Schools in Wolfe; Class of 1958, Duane. William Porter, Larry Rupe, hotline (rainn .org) at .l-800- ittrme, and we urge you to try and read features by othei
( 1-800-656- a bit more.lt could turn out to Creators Syndicate wrttei-1.
's_tate and nati~ competi- Bart, Judy Hayes Eads, Ronnie Taylor..Class of 1966, 656-HOPE
lions. Then, reCipients of the . Robert Goode, Charlotte Ray Alk1re, Linda Hysell 4673). The call is anony-. be very rewarding.
.. and cartoom"sts, visit tht.
RHS
2009
Alumni Birchfield Grant, Charlotte Bates, Barbara Cotterill mous and confidential, and
Dear Annie: I read the · Creators Syndicate 'We•
Scholarships were ~nted. Harrison Harper, Danny Cremeans, Joetta Erlewine someone there will help her letter from "Hopeless in page a1 www.creatqrs.t(Jmi'
by ~anet Tiuner Bobn. A total HOlliday, Margaret Ballengee Eskew, .Latischia Gates sort through her options,
..
of SIX scholarships were giVen Ne.Ison, John Priddy. . .· Graham, Steve Grimm, including counseling.
Dear Annie: My wonder- ~------------~--------~
.in the amount of$SOO each·.
Class of 1959, Linda · Nancy Lambert Haddox, Sam
freat~n•nl ·
Following the roll call of Turley . Ball,
Dennis Hicks, · Rosanna · Goff ful mother recently died.
classes, the program con- Ballengee, Thelma Shaffer Kitchen, Linda Lathey, .Dad is not the type who can
· "Your Carptt &amp; Upholstery Cleaning Solutiqni&gt;
eluded wit)l the. Sit~Bing of Bliss; David Carsori, Dan Loretta Harless McQuaid,, manage on his own. We
the school song, accompa· Cremeans, Elaine . Steele Mike Nicholson, . Sanely never h~ a close . relation- .
740-992-7090 .
Voted Trihied by catherine. ~lwei! Qyer, LouiSe Parsons Eads, Tucker Phillips, Beverly ship, and liow he wants to be
Shenefield. Danny·Tillis led ~ 'Thomas Easter, Euna Forbes Rupe, Charlotte Rupe my best frien1H just can't do ·
County's #l · aae,..9~2-7090
Marty O;Bryant, Owli~r .
· .the benediction . All sang · Ri~;hardS · Eaton, Lanna Stewart, Kathy Tillis Weaver. it. There are too many· hard
Carpet Cleaner . Over
~ill We Meet Again" to · Tut:net Gonde, · Jimmy Linda Stafford Will; Class of feelings. He never interacted
20 Yean Experienu
end the reunion.
.
Graham, Shirley Ballengee 1967, Clyde Ferrell, Karen with us .. When my husband
. Alumni who attended·1he Head, Keith Kennelly, Tucker Floyd,. Sabra Canaday and kids came to see him, he
Check Out Our Sumnwr Spec1~ls
;reunion were: Class of,L933, Gloria Atkins Kloos, Janet Gibson, Nancy Knotts Hall. would watch TV the entire
At www r cdcmpettre~tmen t orq
Eugene Fmk; Class Of 1939, Caton Ladd, Eddie Long; Eritest Lee Hawkins, Gary time. Now he wants to ~ive
Robert .Smith; Class of 1~, Betty Jeffers l:.ongstr~th, Haynes, Lilly Imboden
Alta W11l Casdorph, Mlli]one Larry May, .Judy Oalhon Kloes, Sue Clonch Larkin,
:Standley Rice; Class of 194 I, McGuire, Geraldine Dewees Dixie Wamsley Leonard;
-Darrell Burson, Maxine McQuaid, Roger Musser, Bonnie Grate . Nicholson,
O~.din Griffith; Class .of Richard Nels()n, Allen Page, Debbie ·Turner 'Pool, Dixie
1942, James Thomas;· Class Audrea Cross Parr, .. Phyllis Carson Sayre, Kathy Thomas
of 1943,Jean Amos Redden; Williams Rife, Ronnie Rife, Schultz,.Gilford "Oil" Turley.
Class of · 1944, Marie Gary Rife, Geraldine Stacy Darlene Smith Vanaman, Jim
Hoffman · Riggs, Eleanor Spurlock, Larry Turley. .
Vanaman, Betty Clark
Taylor Thomas; .Class of · Class of 1960, John VanMatre, Denms Weber,
1945, Goldie Knotts Nelson, Brogan, Eloise Musser Harry Yarbrough, Scholarship
Delma Riggs Nelson; Class Carson, Patty Young Clark, Zulu; Class of 1968, Mary
· of 1946, William Larkin; Linda Haley Roffman, Clru-a · Hall ·Fallon, Jim Fink, Larry
Class of 1947, Daniel Mae 'Hysell, Irene Searles Montgomery, Mike Porter,
Dawson, Catherine Colwell Kennedy, 'Judith Slawter Mary McKinney Wells,
Shenefield; Class of 1948, Marinacci,
Carlos Diane Holliday Young; Class
Charles Buck; Class of 1949, McKnight, Marjorie Priddy of 1969, Janice SQ1ith
Phyllis Burson Amos, Rife, Carolyn Robson Rife, Grimm, Larry Lemley, Joe
Charles Amos, Helen taylor Wayne Roush, Bonnie Myers, Jennifer Cray Pope,
Atkeson, David Colwell, Rathburn Skidll)ore, Sandy Diane Knorr Robinson, Jack
Dorothy Caton Deemer, Tillis Smith, Norma Barrett Robinson, Jeff . 'Snowden •.
Mildred Thqmas Donahue, Stanely; Class of 1961; Becky taylor · Tannehill,
John Dyke, Merlyn Farmer, Sherman Ballengee, Paul Candy Chafin 'I)Ilis, 'Jeff
Carol Dawson Pack, Caroll Browning, Gladys Stowers Tillis, Ronnie Vance, Dean
Snowden,
Raymond . Cross, . Margaret · Smith Weber.
Thomas.
Edwards, David Martin, · ·Class of 1970, Lin Black,
Class of 1950, Bill Brown, Richard I?fe; Class of 1962, Karen. Griffith, Cheryl
Maxme Rumfield Dyer, June T1lhs Bearhs, Sammy Hutchmson
Lemley,
Avanell Jordan Georg~. Janet Birchfield, Lee Combs, Franklin. Pope; Class of
O~din Jones, Bruce May, Richard Dugan, Louise
1971, , Bill Cray, Becky
Mickey Williams; Class of . Hijlginbotham Dulany, Billy Houdashell Johnston, Betty
1951. Jack Barton, Marie Hayes, Ellen Might Johnson, Smith Lambert, Sherrie
Little Birchfield, Joan Paul Pierce, Junior Rife, T\irner Might, Linda Midkiff .
Snowden · May, Henry Viola McKnight Shoemaker; Montgomery, Gloria Goff
McKnight, Virgmia Moore Class of 1963, Darlene Goff Oiler, Bob· Stewart; ClasS of
Michael, Shirley Cremeans D!ll, Jim Ferrell, Dreama 1972, Lois Rupe SmJ~grass;
Simmons, Lowell vance; BlfChfield PJarvey, Paul Class of 1973, Jim
Cl~s of 19~2. Betty Fa_rmer Higginbotham,
Charles Birchfiel~; Class of 1974,
'
Gnm, Amslee Wilson Hoffman, R1chard Lambert, Robert Birchfield; Class of
McKnight, Helen Stevens Bobby Pope, David Scragg, 1975, Regina Harrison
Ransom,
Mary
Dyke Harry Shaffer, Allen Stacy, Wolfe; Class of 1977, Opal
Woodrum; Class of 1953, John "Butch" Tillis; Class of Dyer; Class of 1978, Brent
Clyde . Clonch,
Joan I ?64, Patsy Welch Artrip, Bolin; .Class of 1981, Aoyd
Montgomery Con!er, Marcia Warren Jerry Black, Gla~ Holliday, Richard Swanson,
Russell Mulbmx , Tom. Warner Campbell, · Anc1l Carla Smith Wyant. ·
Schoonover; Class of 1954, Cross, Dick Fetty, Sheryl . Faculty from RHS llttendDon
Swisher,
Billy Wolfe Finn, Dinah 'Lee ing were Donald Spencer and
Williamson; Class Of 1955, Gryszka, Karen Gilkey Martha Ohlinger Vennari . .

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ANNIE'S MAILBOX .

Each train had six cars · the train.
and was capable of holding
Webber raced to the scene ·
as many as I ,200 people. after hearing loud boom .
Safety Board member . like a "thunder crash" and
Debbie Hersman said the .then sirens. She said there
trains were bound for down- was no panic among the
town. That would mean survivors.
they were less likely to be
Passenger Jodie Wickett,
filled during the afternoon a nurse, told CNN she was .
rush hour.
seated on one train, sending
The trains had pulled out text messages on her phone,
of the Takoma Park station when she felt the impact.
and were headed · in the She said she sent a mes5age
direction of the Fort Totten to someone .that ir felt ·like · ·
station.
the train·had hit a.bump: . ·
· More than ·200 frrefigbt"From thnt ' point on, .it
ers from D.C., Maryland happened·so fast,.I flew out
Exe&amp;v&amp;&amp;loD ...... 0..-.tr.. lnictud.es:.
and Virginia eveniually con· . of the seat and hit my head."
Drlve"""ays. L a n d Clearlna~
Po-n~s. "'"'renchlng,. R.ec:IR.D'I.a~lon.
verged on the . scene. Wickett said she stayed at
e!k ~uch :l'lvioire!
Sabrina Webber, a 45-year· the scene and tried to help. ·
. --·. ··-·~
.
old real estate agent who She said "people are just in ·
::r-e
lives in the neighborhood, very bad shape."
,_.,z;;.-- ~
said the first rescuers to
"The . people that were
arrive had to use the "jaws hurt, the ones that . could
C•ll t o d • v 'lor ,., h-•• ••t:in11•t•l
M-n..-•1 ('7. . 0) . 1180-37'00
of lif!!" to pry open a wire speak, were calling .back as
o•nnv (740) e•o-eai!IO
Mile· (74'9') ISe0~31?011
fence along rail line to get to we called out to them," she

a

PageA3 ·

BY THE· BEND

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Tuesday, June 23, 2009

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Barry Student said. "The
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The Daily Sentinel
111 Court Street· Pomeroy; Ohio

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

•

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
Dan Goodrich
Publisher
. Charlene Hoeflich
General Manager-News Editor
Pam Caldwell

Advertising .Director

I

Congress shall make no law respecting an
establisht~~ent of religion, .or prohibiting the
free exercise there~ or abridging the freedom
of speech, or of the press; or the right of the
people peaceably to assemble, and to petition
the Government for a redress ofgrievances.
- The First Amendment to the U.,S. Constltutlc:m

TODAY lN HISTORY

OPINION

Page A(
Tuesday,June23,2009

President Barack Obama
in the region hate the Obama's May 19 statewent · easy on Iran in his
United States from the bot- ment in the presence of
tom of their hearts."
Israeli Prime Ministerbig June 4 speech in Cairo
so as not to become an
And,. he said, "the new Benjamin Netanyahu that
U.S . government seeks to Obama is giving Iran until
1ssue in last weekend's
Morton
transform this image I say the end of the year to see if
elections.
Some good it did. The
Kondracke finnly that this will fnot be · it is interested in negotiatruling powers in Iran achieved
by ..&gt; talking, ing in good faith.
..
.
rigidly hostile to the United
speech and slog!ffiS."
"The process can't be an
States and determined to
For sure. it makes sense open-ended thing that goes
develop nuclear weapons
for the United States to at on forever.' If, unfortunately, we see no change in (the'
rigged the vote to Iran, in one of which he least try "engagement" restore radical lslamist acknowledged that the or "tough" diJ?Iomacy, as agenda) we want to talk
President
Mahmoud United States "played a Obama descnbed it this about, ·sanctions are always
role" in the 1953 over- . week. President George W. on the table," he said .
'
Ahmadinejad to power.
Actually, more . than
And Obama's mild state- throw of the country 's Bush did so, too, after failing to ge~ anywhere by sanctions.are in play. In hi:;,
ments of "concern" at vio- elected government.
· lence directed against oppoHe's obviously conscious shunning the regime. .
own speech on Sunday,
sition protesters is not likely of that history - and the
But the difficulties, espe- Netanyahu called Iran's
to win him any points, anti-American uses the cially in getting .Iran off the nuclear · program "the
either; if and when the regime constantly makes of nuclear track, are even greatest threat facing
Iranian regime decides to it - which is ·why he went more abundantly clear after Israel, the Middle East, the
accept his offer of "uncon- out of his way to say "it's what amounts to a clerical- entire world and the
human race."· ·
ditional negotiations."
not productive for a United military putsch in Iran . ·
·Both Ahm&lt;tdinejad and
Israel's record in ctipStill, Obama's tactics are States president to be seen
understandable. He's bet- · meddling" in Iran's internal Khamenei are closely tied piing Iraq's Osirak nuclear
· . to
the
Iranian reactor in 1981 and bomb.ting that the regime headed affairs.
by
Supreme "Leader
I'dhopethatifhethought Revolutionary
Guard ing Syria's North KoreaAyatollah Ali Khamenei there was a chance of really Corps, a fascist- or supplied reactor in 2007
will prevail and that he toppling the regime, ,he Communist-like . organize- practically guaranteed that
will have to deal with it.
would speak out to support tion that polices internal Netanyahu will order a
Conceivably, the mass the opposition and that he's security, conducts forei~n strike qn Iran if diplomacy
demonstrations being con- being restrained out of cal- intelligence and terronst fails to stop the nuclear producted by supporters of c;ulation.
activities , operates busi- gram and he thinks he can
opposition candidate Mir
In Cairo, he merely nesses - and promotes the retard the weapons threat. .
Hossein Mousavi could observed that Iran "has nuclear weapons program.
Americans close to
cascade into a revolution played a role" in "acts of
The voting was bilrely Netanyahu say the chances
such as that which· ousted hostage-taking and vio- over · when Khamenei of a strike are "100 perthe Shah of Iran in 1979.
Ience allainst U.S. troops . declared Ahmadinejad's re- cent." Another Mideast
More likely, Khamenei and civilians," going easy election a "divine miracle." expert I regularly te.st on.
would use his military, on the activities that led to
Allmadinejad' may actu- this question told me, "I
R·evo1ut1onary
·
G uard an d Iran being des1gnated
· ·
b y · a11y ·have won a ~aJortty,
· ·
use d. to 'say_ 50 -50 . Th~
Islamic militias to re-enact the State Department as but a 63 percent VIctory IS !raman electiOn pushes II
the
1989 Tiananmen the world 's "most active hard to. ·credit, as is· to two-to-one.''
Square crackdown m state sponsor ofterrorism." Mousavi's loss among his
That's the limiting factor
China if the regime
He also passed. up men- fellow ethnic Azeris and in on Obama. He has a year,
appeared threatened.
tioning that, in April, his own home village. maybe two, to try direct
Khamenei obviously is Egyptian authorities arrest- Those results were meant negotiations with Iran, thef1
hoping to mollify the pro- ed 49 Hezbollah terrorists to humiliate the opposition. sanctions, ihen perhaps
testers by promising a bent on ·carrying out
Ahmadinejad, at a victo- really tough sanctions if he
review · of the election attacks, along with a han- ry rally Sunday, vowed .to · can get other countries to
results . The ouh;ome is · a dler allegedly trajned by crackdown on his political cut off gasoline supplies to
foregone conclusion. but Iran's Revolutionary Guard. rivals ("dismantle the net- Iran to force an end to the
the regime clearly ' aims to .
And, he went easy on the work of corruption") and nuclear program.
have the demonstrations long record of internation- never negotiate about
It's worth a try, and it's
fizzle.
al findings that Iran has Iran 's nuclear program understandable
that
So , the likely result is been enriching uranium with any foreign govern- Obama would want to be
what Obarna anticipated in . and evading inspections, ment.
"dip)omatic" in approachhis outreach address to the surely for the purpose "That file is shut, forev- ing 1~an . But the election
Islamic world: that he'd be though the regime denies it er," he said.
shows thl!l Iran's nuclear
negotiating with a govern- - of producing nuclear
In an interview, Obama's faction is dug in. Israel is
ment run by · Khamenei weapons.
·
national security adviser, not going to wait until it
regardless of whether
On the very day Obama Gen. James Jones,Jold ·me develops the ·instruments
Mousavi or Ahmadinejad reached out to Muslims and that the United States is in of anotber Holocaust,
.
were elected president.
spoke .of "'moving forwl\fd a "wait and see posture" on
(Morton Kol(ldrai:ke is
In that speech, 6,000 without
preconditions" · Obama's proposal .for dia- executive editor of Roll
words long, Obama devol- toward Iran, Khamenei Iogue.
Call, the newJpaper oj
ed just two paragraphs to declared that "the nations
Jones
underscored Capitol Hill),
---------------------'------'--'----'-----------'-~

.Is Obama's 'prolonged detention'American?

: The Daily Sentinel ·

4- . . ... ...

Obituari~

Elections in Iran make nuclear talks harder

Today is Tuesday, June 23,the I 74th day of 2009. There
are 191 days left in the year.
Today"s Highlight in History:
On June 23, 1969, Warren E. Burger was sw.om in as
chief justice of the United States by the man he was suececding. Earl Warren .
On this date:
In 1757, forces of the East India Company led by Robert
Clive won the Battle of Plassey, which effectively marked
the beginning Of British colonial rule in India.
In 1868, Chri~topher Latham Sholes received a patent for
his "Type-Writer."
·
: .
In 1931 , aviators Wiley Post and Harold Gatty took off
from New York on a round-the-world flight that lasted
eight da~s and IS hours.
lis~edl9 8, the Civil Aeronautics Authority was estabIn 1947. the Senate joined the Hbuse in overriding
Presidenl Harry s. Truman's veto of the Taft-Hartley Act,
designed to limit the power of organized labor.
In 1956, Gamal Abdel Nasser was elected president of
E
·
1~P\967 ; President Lyndon B. Johnson and Sovi.et
Premier Alexei Kosygin held the first of two meetings at
Glassboro State College in New Jersey.
In' 1972, President Richard M. Nixon and White House
chief of.staff H.R. Haldeman l!iscussed a plan to use the
CIA to ol)struct the FBI's Watergate investigation .
(Revelation of the tape .recording of this conversation
sparked Nixon's resignation in 1974.)
.
In 1985, all 329 people aboard an. Air India Boeing 747
were killed when the plane crashed into the Atlantic Ocean
near Ireland, after a bomb widely believed to have been
planted by Sikh separatists exploded .
·
In 1989, the Supreme Court refused to shut down the
•·dial"a-pom" industry, ruling Congress had gone too far in
passing a law banning all sexually oriented phone message
services.
· Ten years ago: A divided Supreme Court dramatically
enhanced states' rights in a trio of .decisions that eroded
Congress' power. U.S; Marines in Kosovo killed one person and wounded two others after coming under fire; no
Marines were injured. Two· months after his retirement,
Wayne Gretzky was voted ·int.o the Hockey Hall of Fame
Supreme Court Justice
along .with former referee Andy Van Hellemond and Ian
Thurgood · Marsha:II once
(Scotty) Morrison in the builder category.
·
Five years ago: In a major retreat, the United States aban- warned: "Throughout the
doned an attempt to win a new exemption for American world today there are men,
troops from international·prosecution for war crimes - an women
an(! children
effort that had faced strong opposition because of the Iraqi interned
indefinitely,
. . · ·
prisoner abuse scandal. .
awaiting trials which may
One year ago: Outraged at the turmoil in Zimbabwe, the never come or which may
U.N. Security Council declared that a fair presidential vote be. a mockery of the word,
was impossible because of a ••campaign of.violence" waged because their governments
by President Robert Mugabe's government.
believe them to be 'danThought for J'oday: "Suffering without understanding in gerous.'
Our
this life ls a heap worse than suffering '¥hen you have at Constitution ...can shelter
least the grain of an idea what it's all for." - Mary Ellen us forever against the ,danChase, American author (1887,1973).
gers of such unchecked
power" (dissenting, U.S . v.
Salerno, 1987). ·
We may have to find out
how strong a shelter the
Constitution will be .under
: Letters to the ~diior are welcome. They should be less a plan being considered by
ihan 300 words. All/etters are subject to editing, must be President Obama for "a
signed, and include address and telephone number. No new legal system" that can
unsigned letters will be published. .Letters should be in indefinitely confine good taste, addressing issues, not personalities. Letters of r.ossibly in American
thanks to organizations and individuals will not be accept- 'sup~rmax prisons" ed for publication.
•
certam terronsm suspects
at Guantanamo Bay, and
not only there. They can"
not be tried in our civilian
courts because they 'have
Reader .&gt;ervices
&lt;usPs 213-9601
been tortured (preventing
Correction Polley
Ohio Velley Publllhlng Co.
evidence against them
•Our main concern In all stories Is to Published . every · moming, Monday
being admitted) or because
:be at&lt;::urate. If you know of an errot through Frl~ay; 1t 1 Court Stre,l,
- as NPR 's Ari Shapiro
, in a stary, call the newsroom at (740) Pomeroy, Otno. Second-clflBS postage
•992-2156.
paid at Polneroy.
puts it, they "would comMember: The Associated Press and
promise sensitive sources
11'18 Ohio Newspaper Associq,tion.
Our mllln number Ia
and
methods."· Like, he
. Poetmaat8r: SQnd address correc• (7401 gg:z.:u 56.
if they've been toradds,
Department exten11ona are: tions to The Dafly Sentinel; P.O. Box
729, Pomeroy, Ohio 45769.
tured. the assumption
News
could be "they' re danger_Editor: Clla~ene Hoeflich, E&lt;t 12
Subscription Rates
ous because they've been
-Reporter: Brian Rood, Ext 14 .
a, ....,.., or motor route
tortured."
:Reporter: Beth 5ergent. EJd. 1J
'11 .30
It's important to empha52 wwko ... . .. • •. . •. '128.85
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if Obama prevails,
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This 1s America, Mr.

. LETTERS TO THE
EDITOR .

Tuesday, June 23, 2009

captured or detained after about the torture of these
Sept. II, 200 I, by our defendants will be literally
armed forces outside the buried along with them.
United States if, the Denny
LeBoeuf,
an
defense secretary and Amencan Civil Liberties
chairman
of · the Join Union lawyer involved in
Nat ..
Chiefs ofStaff have deter- death penalty cases at.
Hentoff
mined they would endan- GuliJ.ltanamo, asks:. "Don't I
ger military personnel if we have an interest as ·a
released."
society in a trial that examBut Obama continually ines the evidence and pro· and forcefully speaks of vides some reliable picture
President?
And more . "Supemiax" his "unyielding belief' that of what went on?"
prisons could be built to his administration must
The president doesn't
accommodate other "dan- operate "with an unprece- agree .
gerous" terrorism suspects dented Ievel 'of openness."
·Also, when he was a senAsks Glenn GJ,"eenwald ator, Obama threatened to
held, in cooperation with
U.S . in Egypt; (Salon, June 1): "What veto a bill that would
the
Pakistan,
Jordan, kind ·of a country passes a absolve telecommunicalndonesla - and why not law that has no purpose tions companies of comhere at home?
other than to enipowet its plicity in· the NSA's extenEver since the Bush- leader to suppress evi- sive lawless monitoring of
Cheney administration's dence of the torture it our e-m ails and phone
calls. But he then voted for
Attorney General Jo)J.n inflicted on peopier• ·
Ashcroft, American streets
Answer: We are living in the bill that was passed by
of the that very country.
·
Congress; and on June 4,
are considered
jihadists' ."batt eground," · · The Obama administra- Chief Judge Vaughn R.
and Americans suspected tion apparently never tires Walker
of
Northern
of giving the enemy of adjusting our legal sys- California's
Federal
"material support" coul.d tem to cover up defilement District Court reluctantly
be subjected to the Bush, of our laws and treaties by agreed with Obama's
and now Obama, versions itself and the Bush-Cheney Justice Department to
of due process and impris- regime . . Witness Attorney throw out dozens of Iawoned.
. General Eric . Holder, suits
bX
"ordinary
Ah, but President Qbama asserting state secrets to Americans' against AT&amp;T,
assured us (Miami Herald , force the cancellation of among other companies ,
June . 1) that "prolonged court cases that could wl)ich could hav~; been hit
detention should not be the reveal what was done to with billions of dollw:s in
decision of any one man." yictims of "extraordinary damages .
Walker
ruefullY:
He added (NPR. May 22): renditions" during the
"If and when we determine years of CIA secret pris- explained that these:
·
alleged constitutional vio-:
that the United States must ons :
hold individuals to . keep
For another illustration lations of personal privacy:
them from carrying out an of the dedicated "trans- by Bush and the telecom-·
act of war, we will do so parency" of the Obama munications companies,:
within a . system that presidency, New York championed by Obama as:
involves judicial and con- Times repqrter William well, could not withstand
gressional oversight."
Glaberson broke the story the wishes of Congress.
We continuall~ see how (June 6) that "The Obama That, you see, is Obamathat ••oversight' operates administration is'consider- style congressional and
under Obama. On May 2, ing a change in the law for · judicial "oversight."
·
the Senate passed the the military commissions
(Nat Hentoff is a nation"Detainee Photographic at
the
prison
of ally renowned authority on
Records Protection Act of Guanta0 amo Bay that the First Amendment and
2009" that prevents disclo- would clear the way for the Bill of Rights . He is a
sure of all photographs detainees facing the death member of the Reporters
taken between Sept . .ll; penalty to plead guilty Committee for Freedom oj
2001, and Jan . 22, 2009, without a full trial.'' .
the Press, and the Cato
"relatin~ to the treatment
That's II neat way to Institute , where he is a
of ind1viduals engaged, ensure that any testimony senior fellow) .

f,art

'
The Daily Sentinel • Page t-5

www.mydailysentinel.com

Local Briefs

RogerMorpn

Booths avallable for park event

ATHENS - Roger Morgan , 85, of Athens, passed away
on June :ZO, 2009.
.
·
He was born on July 8, 1923 in Pomeroy, Ohio son of the
late WtlliamA. and Gladys J. Morgan. He was a 1941 graduate of Pomeroy High School. He tben atteilded Ohio "State
UniversitY from 1941 to 1943 until he enlisted in the U.S.
Anny, serving in the European theater during World War U.
He became a member of the Army Air Corps, where he
trained and served on a B-17 crew.
Upon his honorable discharge, he returned to Ohio and
completed his education at Ohio University in Athens in
1947. At Ohio University, h.e met and married the late
Jeanne McCollneaughey of Bellbrook. They were the parents of Keith Morgan rand Kathy Morgan Moore.
Roger worked for /Ohio Power Company in Pomeroy
{AEP) fot eleven ' years and then formed Meigs
Construction Company (later Ben-Tom) with friend, .
Richard Follrod where he worked untill retirement. ·
Roger served on the board of d.irectors at Pomeroy
Natio~ Bank (Bank One), was member of the Elks for 56
yearS, the American Legion for 53 years, Heath Methodist
Church in Middleport, and the Pomeroy Gun Club.
He was active in the community. He enjoyed wann relationships with friends and family.
He is survived by his wife of 26 years, Mary Waller
Morgan, of Athens; son, Keith Morgan of Salt Lake City,
, Utah· daughter, Kathy (R,obert) Moore of Newark; gianddaugbter, Lindsay; grandson, Ryan; stepson, Randy
(Ruth) Waller of McArthur; and step grandchildren,
Amanda and Josh Waller.
'
Funeral wi\) be held at 1 p.m. on Wednesday, June 24,
2009, at Anderson McDaniel Funeral Home in Pomeroy.
Burial will follow at the Riverview Cemetery where military funeral honors will be presented by the American
Legion. Visiting hours will he from 4-8 p.m. on Tuesday at
the funeral home.
Memorial con.tributions may be made to lhe
Rocks.prings United Methodist Church or Heath United
Methodist Church.
A registry is available on-line at www.andersonmcdaniel.coqt.

RACINE - Applications are available to reserve a booth
space at Racine's Party in the Park to be held on Sept. 12 at
Star Mill Park.
Applications can be picked up at Home National Bank
and Rill"s Classic Cars 111 Racine and at Twin Oaks at Five
Points. For information or to have an application mailed
contact Maxine or Ann at Home National Bank, 949·2210.
Country artist, Joe Diffie will perform on stage. There will
be Gatling Mine tours, a parade, Saturday Night Cruisin'
Car Show, and Big Bend Fann Antiques tractor show.
For more information, call the village at 949-2296 .

Rio otTer$ bUsiness course
. POMEROY - A course to strengthen business practices
is being offered by the Rio Grande Community College
from 9 to II a .m. on July 2 at the Pomeroy Library. A light
breakfast will be served. Registration will be taken by
Michelle Donovan, Mei~s County Chamber of Commerce
director. Deadline to reg1ster is July I. Cost is $10 a person
wliich will be collected at the door.

Local Weather

Rex and Ann Summerfield

·
. Tuesda,-••.sunny. Highs around S mph.. · . ·
Thunday ••.Mostly sunny.
m tlte IIDd ·80s. Northeast
Highs in the upper 80s.
winds 5 ti&gt; 10 mph .
Tuesday night •. .Mostly
thursday night and·
clear. Lows in the mid 60s. Friclay".Mpstly cloudy. A
North winds 5 to 10 mph in chance of showers and
the
evening ...Becoming thunderstorms. Lows in the
upper 60s. Highs in the
light and variable.
Wednesday •.• Sunny. upper 80s. Chance of rain
Highs in the upper 80s. 40 percent.
Northeast winds around 5
Friday night throegh
Saturday night ...Partly
mph.
Wednesday
night ••• cloudy. ·Lows in the upper
Mostly clear. Lows in the . 60s. Highs in the upper
mid 60s. Northeast winds 80s ,

Donald PigOtt

SUMMERFIELDS .
T·o CELEBRATE
ANNIVERSARY
REEDSVILLE - Rex and Ann Summerfield of 38550
East Shade Road, Reedsville, will celebrate their 70th wedding anniversary with an open house ·gathering of family
and friends, 2 to 4 p.m. Satu!day. at the Vales Party Room,
2276 State Route 144, Coolville.
The couple were married on Junr 2, 1939 in Greenup,
Ky. They are the /.atents of Sharon Donahue, Gerald
(Janet) Slimmelfiel , Toin (Barb) Summerfield, and Sina
May{Bob) Murphy.
·
.. . ·
··
·Cards will be appreciated, but the family requests no giftsi

Local Stocks

LONG B01TOM ...:. Donald Leroy Pigott, SS, of Long
Bottom, died Saturday, June 20,2009 at hishome ..
· He was born Ma;y 14. l 924 in Meigs County, son of the
late Riley and Daile Coffman Pigott. .
·
Don is survived by four sisters: Ann (Rex)
Summerfield, Eileen (Henry) a·ahr, Lucille (Royal)
Wilson and Lorena, Wolf; a sister-in-law, Bettie Pigott;
and many nieces and nephews. . .
. · ·
Besides his · parents, he was preceded in death by a
brother, Willard; a sister, Sina Bailey; and a brother-in- .
. law, Rex Bailey. .
.
.
.
_ Arrangements are be handled by White-Schwarzel
Funeral Home, Coolville. At Don "s request, there will be no
public visitation or funeral service.

AEP (NYBE) - 28.75
Alao (NASOAQ) - 43.34
.
Alhilnd Inc. (NVSE) - 25.99
Big Loll (NYSE) - 24.18
BOb EVIIII (NASDAQ) - 29.43
BorgWei'Mr (NYSE) - 30.83
Century Aluminum (NASDAQ)
-U7
..
Champion (NASDAOI - UO ·
Clwii •• llllapt.(IWIDAQJ - 3.57
City Holding (NASDAQ) - 30.10
Colllna (NYSE) - 42,43
DuPilnt (NYSE)- 24.1.0

US tlllnk (NYSE) - 17.08
Glllnltt (NYSE) - 3.51
.0..,.,..1 Ellctrlc (NYSE) ,-- 11.52
Harlly•DIIvtdiOn(NYSE).., 15.57

JP Mo!lllh INYSE) .., 32.87 . .·
21.78
·
Llmftecl llnlnda (NYSE) - 11.!10
Norfolk !louthli'n (NVSE) - 36.40
Ohlq Vally tiline Corp. (NAB-

· Krogtr (NYH) -

RACINE ;.,. Betty Sue Writesel, 63, Racine, passed away
Sunday, June 21, 2009.at her home, surrounded by family.
Born June.2, 1946; in.Columbus, she was the daughter of .
the late Robert and Grace Frezee Hoskins.
. ·
.· On May 28, 1966, she married her husbl!nd, Howard L.
Writesel, in Columbus. She was retired from the . Kroger
Co. as the nead.deli cook. ·
.
She is survived by her husband, Howard L. Writesel;
children: Robert "Bobby" (Grace) Writesel, l;'omeroy,
Howard J. "Jason" (Rachelle) Writesel, Racine, Nicole
(Jared Kin~) Writc;sel, Shad~:; grandchildren: Alyssa Smith,
Bobby Wntesel, Gabe Writesel, Dakota Writesel, ,Tristan
Diddle; Kamryn Diddle, Jasie Writesel and Lexi Writesel;·
brotllers, Ted - Frezee, · Chauncey, and Robert Hoskins,
Columbus; sisters: Barbara Hopkins, Columbus, and
Sharon Barker, Chauncey; several nieces ~d nephews.
· Bestdes her parents, she was preceded m death by three
brothers: Tom; Larry and BiU Hoskins .
.
·
Funeral will be at 10 a.m. Friday, June 26, 2009 at the
Cremeens Funeral Home, Racine with Rev. Mike Adkins
officialing: . ··
.
.
Friends may can from 6-9 p.m. Thursday at the funeral
home. Expressions of sympathy may be sent to the family
by .visiting www.cremeensfuneralhomes.com.

Deaths
Johnny Donohue ·

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PNmlet !NASDAQ) - 8.4&amp;

Racllwel (NYBE) - 29.13
Rocky 8ootl

(NASOA~) -

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RO)'III Dutch Shell ·- 41.31 .

.... Holding (NASDAQ)- e4.14·
Wlll-llllrt (NYSE) - ...H .
Wendy'e (NYSEI - 3.75

W..Benoo (NVBE) - 14,17
WOI1hlngton (NVSE) "" 12.Q ·
Dlllly etock Npoo18 IN till 4
p.m. ET CIOIIng qu- of ll'llnoactklnelor June 22, 20011, provldlcl by Edwanl Jonee fln~n·
clal edVIIIOniiiUC Mille In
.
0.10~1111 (740) 441-8441 ond

I.Miey MlliNro In Poln~

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Mlmllet SIPC.

Kimberly $wisher

Thomas scholarships awarded

The Brandi Thomas · a maximum of two years.
Recipients are chosen on
Memorial
Scholarships
Page At
were recently awarded ·at the basis of chatactc:r, extra,
Meigs
High · School 's curricu)!lf· activities, acllde;
the consumer. .In opt-out
Next, the enrollment will Awards Assembly. This mic performance and other
communities like Pomeroy, take Jllace. Typically, the years winners of the $1,200 ·accomplishments ensuring
this notice must also specity supplier will 'mail the con- scholarships were Kimberly potential success in college
how , the · consumer can sumer infonnation about the Swisher . and · Andrew and post-college life •
choose .to opt-out or wi.th
. - . com_pany and contact infor- O'Bi"yant, SWisher is fiom
draw from tbe aggregatu~n • matlon. Be su~ .to read this Middl~port and plaqs · to
program. Typically, th1s information carefully and attend Ohio University
mvolves the . consumer save it for future reference, while O'Bryant is ·from
returning a postc,aro o! ~et•
Holmes told council there Pomeroy .. and ·plans to
ter. Customers Will extslll)g is no cancellation fee and attend Hocking College.
supplier agreements will not eligible customers must be Both are from the MHS
be switched automatically. · current on their bills.lf cus- · Class of 2009.
. .
If a .consumer de&lt;lides to toiners . get two months
Any MHS senior or
participate in an aggrega: behind on payments· they graduate attending college .
tion program, their new sup- will be . automatically that participated in track
plier will notify their natur· dropped from the program or' cross-country a mini·
al gas uti-lity. Once the utili- and
revert back
to mum of two years in high
ty receives the notification, Columbia Gas.
school · were eligible 10
it sends the consumer a ·con" · Communities set · up to receive the scholarship fo'
firmation letter in the mail. negotiate lower rates on
This letter includes the date purchasing natural gas from
you are to be switched and · Volunteer Energy Services
the right to withdraw from are Brooklyn, Alliance,
the offer within a specified Marion. Gallipolis and
period of time.
Mount Vernon .

Pomeroy rrom

.H

LONG BOTIOM - Johnny E. Dono)lue, Sr., 61, Long
Bottom,-died Thursday, June 18,2009. ·
. ·
· There will be no funeral or visitation. Arrangements are
by Cremeens Funeral Home , Ra~ine . Exf!~~sions of sympathy may .be !;eDt to the fam1ly by v1S1tmg www.cre• ·
meensfuneralhomes.com.
·

Gotltt
•2210 · Racn, OH
.992Ga ·•Syra_cuse, OH

Fireworks from Pa&amp;eAl
the Feeney-Bennett Post Dave Diles Park.
128, American Legion, wi.ll
The fireworks display
C(mduct a flag program.
will begin at 9:30. Gerlach
At 7:15 p.m. , K&amp;D said Front Street will be
Karaoke will host a karaoke bldcked off so spectators
sho~, ·followed by live . can enjoy the display over ·
mus1c by the Randall · the Ohio · River, with the
. Mullins Band at 8:30.
new Bridge of Honor as .a ·
3-5 Food fun an~ · game , backdrop.

I

We'D be there!
A.
indc:pendcn•
~&amp;W• ~·n be th&lt;N m. ~~a
)'OUf """'··

Cefe,bration ofLife" ·

To see more newsphotoa
f.n)m our pbo~graphers go to

,~~~,y,

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WJ.3610

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DlnMIII $6;10 • Chef lalade $1.10
Delivery avallebl' to Pomeroy/Middt•port ArM
To Of'der C.ll: 740-tt2.Z111 or F•x: tt2·7111

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�I

The Daily Sentinel

The Daily Sentinel
111 Court Street· Pomeroy; Ohio

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

•

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
Dan Goodrich
Publisher
. Charlene Hoeflich
General Manager-News Editor
Pam Caldwell

Advertising .Director

I

Congress shall make no law respecting an
establisht~~ent of religion, .or prohibiting the
free exercise there~ or abridging the freedom
of speech, or of the press; or the right of the
people peaceably to assemble, and to petition
the Government for a redress ofgrievances.
- The First Amendment to the U.,S. Constltutlc:m

TODAY lN HISTORY

OPINION

Page A(
Tuesday,June23,2009

President Barack Obama
in the region hate the Obama's May 19 statewent · easy on Iran in his
United States from the bot- ment in the presence of
tom of their hearts."
Israeli Prime Ministerbig June 4 speech in Cairo
so as not to become an
And,. he said, "the new Benjamin Netanyahu that
U.S . government seeks to Obama is giving Iran until
1ssue in last weekend's
Morton
transform this image I say the end of the year to see if
elections.
Some good it did. The
Kondracke finnly that this will fnot be · it is interested in negotiatruling powers in Iran achieved
by ..&gt; talking, ing in good faith.
..
.
rigidly hostile to the United
speech and slog!ffiS."
"The process can't be an
States and determined to
For sure. it makes sense open-ended thing that goes
develop nuclear weapons
for the United States to at on forever.' If, unfortunately, we see no change in (the'
rigged the vote to Iran, in one of which he least try "engagement" restore radical lslamist acknowledged that the or "tough" diJ?Iomacy, as agenda) we want to talk
President
Mahmoud United States "played a Obama descnbed it this about, ·sanctions are always
role" in the 1953 over- . week. President George W. on the table," he said .
'
Ahmadinejad to power.
Actually, more . than
And Obama's mild state- throw of the country 's Bush did so, too, after failing to ge~ anywhere by sanctions.are in play. In hi:;,
ments of "concern" at vio- elected government.
· lence directed against oppoHe's obviously conscious shunning the regime. .
own speech on Sunday,
sition protesters is not likely of that history - and the
But the difficulties, espe- Netanyahu called Iran's
to win him any points, anti-American uses the cially in getting .Iran off the nuclear · program "the
either; if and when the regime constantly makes of nuclear track, are even greatest threat facing
Iranian regime decides to it - which is ·why he went more abundantly clear after Israel, the Middle East, the
accept his offer of "uncon- out of his way to say "it's what amounts to a clerical- entire world and the
human race."· ·
ditional negotiations."
not productive for a United military putsch in Iran . ·
·Both Ahm&lt;tdinejad and
Israel's record in ctipStill, Obama's tactics are States president to be seen
understandable. He's bet- · meddling" in Iran's internal Khamenei are closely tied piing Iraq's Osirak nuclear
· . to
the
Iranian reactor in 1981 and bomb.ting that the regime headed affairs.
by
Supreme "Leader
I'dhopethatifhethought Revolutionary
Guard ing Syria's North KoreaAyatollah Ali Khamenei there was a chance of really Corps, a fascist- or supplied reactor in 2007
will prevail and that he toppling the regime, ,he Communist-like . organize- practically guaranteed that
will have to deal with it.
would speak out to support tion that polices internal Netanyahu will order a
Conceivably, the mass the opposition and that he's security, conducts forei~n strike qn Iran if diplomacy
demonstrations being con- being restrained out of cal- intelligence and terronst fails to stop the nuclear producted by supporters of c;ulation.
activities , operates busi- gram and he thinks he can
opposition candidate Mir
In Cairo, he merely nesses - and promotes the retard the weapons threat. .
Hossein Mousavi could observed that Iran "has nuclear weapons program.
Americans close to
cascade into a revolution played a role" in "acts of
The voting was bilrely Netanyahu say the chances
such as that which· ousted hostage-taking and vio- over · when Khamenei of a strike are "100 perthe Shah of Iran in 1979.
Ience allainst U.S. troops . declared Ahmadinejad's re- cent." Another Mideast
More likely, Khamenei and civilians," going easy election a "divine miracle." expert I regularly te.st on.
would use his military, on the activities that led to
Allmadinejad' may actu- this question told me, "I
R·evo1ut1onary
·
G uard an d Iran being des1gnated
· ·
b y · a11y ·have won a ~aJortty,
· ·
use d. to 'say_ 50 -50 . Th~
Islamic militias to re-enact the State Department as but a 63 percent VIctory IS !raman electiOn pushes II
the
1989 Tiananmen the world 's "most active hard to. ·credit, as is· to two-to-one.''
Square crackdown m state sponsor ofterrorism." Mousavi's loss among his
That's the limiting factor
China if the regime
He also passed. up men- fellow ethnic Azeris and in on Obama. He has a year,
appeared threatened.
tioning that, in April, his own home village. maybe two, to try direct
Khamenei obviously is Egyptian authorities arrest- Those results were meant negotiations with Iran, thef1
hoping to mollify the pro- ed 49 Hezbollah terrorists to humiliate the opposition. sanctions, ihen perhaps
testers by promising a bent on ·carrying out
Ahmadinejad, at a victo- really tough sanctions if he
review · of the election attacks, along with a han- ry rally Sunday, vowed .to · can get other countries to
results . The ouh;ome is · a dler allegedly trajned by crackdown on his political cut off gasoline supplies to
foregone conclusion. but Iran's Revolutionary Guard. rivals ("dismantle the net- Iran to force an end to the
the regime clearly ' aims to .
And, he went easy on the work of corruption") and nuclear program.
have the demonstrations long record of internation- never negotiate about
It's worth a try, and it's
fizzle.
al findings that Iran has Iran 's nuclear program understandable
that
So , the likely result is been enriching uranium with any foreign govern- Obama would want to be
what Obarna anticipated in . and evading inspections, ment.
"dip)omatic" in approachhis outreach address to the surely for the purpose "That file is shut, forev- ing 1~an . But the election
Islamic world: that he'd be though the regime denies it er," he said.
shows thl!l Iran's nuclear
negotiating with a govern- - of producing nuclear
In an interview, Obama's faction is dug in. Israel is
ment run by · Khamenei weapons.
·
national security adviser, not going to wait until it
regardless of whether
On the very day Obama Gen. James Jones,Jold ·me develops the ·instruments
Mousavi or Ahmadinejad reached out to Muslims and that the United States is in of anotber Holocaust,
.
were elected president.
spoke .of "'moving forwl\fd a "wait and see posture" on
(Morton Kol(ldrai:ke is
In that speech, 6,000 without
preconditions" · Obama's proposal .for dia- executive editor of Roll
words long, Obama devol- toward Iran, Khamenei Iogue.
Call, the newJpaper oj
ed just two paragraphs to declared that "the nations
Jones
underscored Capitol Hill),
---------------------'------'--'----'-----------'-~

.Is Obama's 'prolonged detention'American?

: The Daily Sentinel ·

4- . . ... ...

Obituari~

Elections in Iran make nuclear talks harder

Today is Tuesday, June 23,the I 74th day of 2009. There
are 191 days left in the year.
Today"s Highlight in History:
On June 23, 1969, Warren E. Burger was sw.om in as
chief justice of the United States by the man he was suececding. Earl Warren .
On this date:
In 1757, forces of the East India Company led by Robert
Clive won the Battle of Plassey, which effectively marked
the beginning Of British colonial rule in India.
In 1868, Chri~topher Latham Sholes received a patent for
his "Type-Writer."
·
: .
In 1931 , aviators Wiley Post and Harold Gatty took off
from New York on a round-the-world flight that lasted
eight da~s and IS hours.
lis~edl9 8, the Civil Aeronautics Authority was estabIn 1947. the Senate joined the Hbuse in overriding
Presidenl Harry s. Truman's veto of the Taft-Hartley Act,
designed to limit the power of organized labor.
In 1956, Gamal Abdel Nasser was elected president of
E
·
1~P\967 ; President Lyndon B. Johnson and Sovi.et
Premier Alexei Kosygin held the first of two meetings at
Glassboro State College in New Jersey.
In' 1972, President Richard M. Nixon and White House
chief of.staff H.R. Haldeman l!iscussed a plan to use the
CIA to ol)struct the FBI's Watergate investigation .
(Revelation of the tape .recording of this conversation
sparked Nixon's resignation in 1974.)
.
In 1985, all 329 people aboard an. Air India Boeing 747
were killed when the plane crashed into the Atlantic Ocean
near Ireland, after a bomb widely believed to have been
planted by Sikh separatists exploded .
·
In 1989, the Supreme Court refused to shut down the
•·dial"a-pom" industry, ruling Congress had gone too far in
passing a law banning all sexually oriented phone message
services.
· Ten years ago: A divided Supreme Court dramatically
enhanced states' rights in a trio of .decisions that eroded
Congress' power. U.S; Marines in Kosovo killed one person and wounded two others after coming under fire; no
Marines were injured. Two· months after his retirement,
Wayne Gretzky was voted ·int.o the Hockey Hall of Fame
Supreme Court Justice
along .with former referee Andy Van Hellemond and Ian
Thurgood · Marsha:II once
(Scotty) Morrison in the builder category.
·
Five years ago: In a major retreat, the United States aban- warned: "Throughout the
doned an attempt to win a new exemption for American world today there are men,
troops from international·prosecution for war crimes - an women
an(! children
effort that had faced strong opposition because of the Iraqi interned
indefinitely,
. . · ·
prisoner abuse scandal. .
awaiting trials which may
One year ago: Outraged at the turmoil in Zimbabwe, the never come or which may
U.N. Security Council declared that a fair presidential vote be. a mockery of the word,
was impossible because of a ••campaign of.violence" waged because their governments
by President Robert Mugabe's government.
believe them to be 'danThought for J'oday: "Suffering without understanding in gerous.'
Our
this life ls a heap worse than suffering '¥hen you have at Constitution ...can shelter
least the grain of an idea what it's all for." - Mary Ellen us forever against the ,danChase, American author (1887,1973).
gers of such unchecked
power" (dissenting, U.S . v.
Salerno, 1987). ·
We may have to find out
how strong a shelter the
Constitution will be .under
: Letters to the ~diior are welcome. They should be less a plan being considered by
ihan 300 words. All/etters are subject to editing, must be President Obama for "a
signed, and include address and telephone number. No new legal system" that can
unsigned letters will be published. .Letters should be in indefinitely confine good taste, addressing issues, not personalities. Letters of r.ossibly in American
thanks to organizations and individuals will not be accept- 'sup~rmax prisons" ed for publication.
•
certam terronsm suspects
at Guantanamo Bay, and
not only there. They can"
not be tried in our civilian
courts because they 'have
Reader .&gt;ervices
&lt;usPs 213-9601
been tortured (preventing
Correction Polley
Ohio Velley Publllhlng Co.
evidence against them
•Our main concern In all stories Is to Published . every · moming, Monday
being admitted) or because
:be at&lt;::urate. If you know of an errot through Frl~ay; 1t 1 Court Stre,l,
- as NPR 's Ari Shapiro
, in a stary, call the newsroom at (740) Pomeroy, Otno. Second-clflBS postage
•992-2156.
paid at Polneroy.
puts it, they "would comMember: The Associated Press and
promise sensitive sources
11'18 Ohio Newspaper Associq,tion.
Our mllln number Ia
and
methods."· Like, he
. Poetmaat8r: SQnd address correc• (7401 gg:z.:u 56.
if they've been toradds,
Department exten11ona are: tions to The Dafly Sentinel; P.O. Box
729, Pomeroy, Ohio 45769.
tured. the assumption
News
could be "they' re danger_Editor: Clla~ene Hoeflich, E&lt;t 12
Subscription Rates
ous because they've been
-Reporter: Brian Rood, Ext 14 .
a, ....,.., or motor route
tortured."
:Reporter: Beth 5ergent. EJd. 1J
'11 .30
It's important to empha52 wwko ... . .. • •. . •. '128.85
Advertising
Dlllly ...... . : ...........50'
size,
if Obama prevails,
Act...uolng Dlroctar: Pam ColdWell,
Senior Citizen !'Ilea
that his "prolonged deten74()-446.2342, EJd. 17
H - .. .. .. . . . ....'59.61
Rolllll: Man Rodge"', EJd. 15
tion" - as he prefers to
52 wwko .. .. ........'116.90
Retell: Brenda Davis, EJd 16
call
"preventative detenshould remit in edvance
Clau.ICI"'-: Judy Clar1&lt;, EJd. 10
dlred 10 The Daly S.,.inol. No ·&amp;Ub·
tion" - will, as Salon's
scription 17; mail permitted. in areas
Circulation
ever-vigilant
constitutional
Clrcullllon Manogor: David Lucas, wl'lert horne c:anief seMce is avallabkt.
Glenn
Greenwald
analyst
74D-446-2342, EJd. 11
iells us, also al.low (beyond
Mall Subacrlptlon
Dlotrlct Circulation M8Mger:
lnoldl Meigs County
Guantanamo) "imprisonMike Whitt
12 Weeks ........ . . . . .'35.26
ment not based on proven
General Manager
26 Weeks .......... . .. '70.70
crimes or past violatiOns of
Charlene Hoeftich, Ext. 12
52 Weeks ... . ........ ' 140.11
law, but of those deemed
E-moll:
Oulaldo
lhlgo
County
' dangerGENERALLY
ltldtimwSOmydallyoenbnel.com
. 12 Weeks ........ .. ....'56.55
ou.s ' by the Government
26 Weeks .... . ....... !113.60
for various reasons.''
52 Weeks ........... .'227 .21
This 1s America, Mr.

. LETTERS TO THE
EDITOR .

Tuesday, June 23, 2009

captured or detained after about the torture of these
Sept. II, 200 I, by our defendants will be literally
armed forces outside the buried along with them.
United States if, the Denny
LeBoeuf,
an
defense secretary and Amencan Civil Liberties
chairman
of · the Join Union lawyer involved in
Nat ..
Chiefs ofStaff have deter- death penalty cases at.
Hentoff
mined they would endan- GuliJ.ltanamo, asks:. "Don't I
ger military personnel if we have an interest as ·a
released."
society in a trial that examBut Obama continually ines the evidence and pro· and forcefully speaks of vides some reliable picture
President?
And more . "Supemiax" his "unyielding belief' that of what went on?"
prisons could be built to his administration must
The president doesn't
accommodate other "dan- operate "with an unprece- agree .
gerous" terrorism suspects dented Ievel 'of openness."
·Also, when he was a senAsks Glenn GJ,"eenwald ator, Obama threatened to
held, in cooperation with
U.S . in Egypt; (Salon, June 1): "What veto a bill that would
the
Pakistan,
Jordan, kind ·of a country passes a absolve telecommunicalndonesla - and why not law that has no purpose tions companies of comhere at home?
other than to enipowet its plicity in· the NSA's extenEver since the Bush- leader to suppress evi- sive lawless monitoring of
Cheney administration's dence of the torture it our e-m ails and phone
calls. But he then voted for
Attorney General Jo)J.n inflicted on peopier• ·
Ashcroft, American streets
Answer: We are living in the bill that was passed by
of the that very country.
·
Congress; and on June 4,
are considered
jihadists' ."batt eground," · · The Obama administra- Chief Judge Vaughn R.
and Americans suspected tion apparently never tires Walker
of
Northern
of giving the enemy of adjusting our legal sys- California's
Federal
"material support" coul.d tem to cover up defilement District Court reluctantly
be subjected to the Bush, of our laws and treaties by agreed with Obama's
and now Obama, versions itself and the Bush-Cheney Justice Department to
of due process and impris- regime . . Witness Attorney throw out dozens of Iawoned.
. General Eric . Holder, suits
bX
"ordinary
Ah, but President Qbama asserting state secrets to Americans' against AT&amp;T,
assured us (Miami Herald , force the cancellation of among other companies ,
June . 1) that "prolonged court cases that could wl)ich could hav~; been hit
detention should not be the reveal what was done to with billions of dollw:s in
decision of any one man." yictims of "extraordinary damages .
Walker
ruefullY:
He added (NPR. May 22): renditions" during the
"If and when we determine years of CIA secret pris- explained that these:
·
alleged constitutional vio-:
that the United States must ons :
hold individuals to . keep
For another illustration lations of personal privacy:
them from carrying out an of the dedicated "trans- by Bush and the telecom-·
act of war, we will do so parency" of the Obama munications companies,:
within a . system that presidency, New York championed by Obama as:
involves judicial and con- Times repqrter William well, could not withstand
gressional oversight."
Glaberson broke the story the wishes of Congress.
We continuall~ see how (June 6) that "The Obama That, you see, is Obamathat ••oversight' operates administration is'consider- style congressional and
under Obama. On May 2, ing a change in the law for · judicial "oversight."
·
the Senate passed the the military commissions
(Nat Hentoff is a nation"Detainee Photographic at
the
prison
of ally renowned authority on
Records Protection Act of Guanta0 amo Bay that the First Amendment and
2009" that prevents disclo- would clear the way for the Bill of Rights . He is a
sure of all photographs detainees facing the death member of the Reporters
taken between Sept . .ll; penalty to plead guilty Committee for Freedom oj
2001, and Jan . 22, 2009, without a full trial.'' .
the Press, and the Cato
"relatin~ to the treatment
That's II neat way to Institute , where he is a
of ind1viduals engaged, ensure that any testimony senior fellow) .

f,art

'
The Daily Sentinel • Page t-5

www.mydailysentinel.com

Local Briefs

RogerMorpn

Booths avallable for park event

ATHENS - Roger Morgan , 85, of Athens, passed away
on June :ZO, 2009.
.
·
He was born on July 8, 1923 in Pomeroy, Ohio son of the
late WtlliamA. and Gladys J. Morgan. He was a 1941 graduate of Pomeroy High School. He tben atteilded Ohio "State
UniversitY from 1941 to 1943 until he enlisted in the U.S.
Anny, serving in the European theater during World War U.
He became a member of the Army Air Corps, where he
trained and served on a B-17 crew.
Upon his honorable discharge, he returned to Ohio and
completed his education at Ohio University in Athens in
1947. At Ohio University, h.e met and married the late
Jeanne McCollneaughey of Bellbrook. They were the parents of Keith Morgan rand Kathy Morgan Moore.
Roger worked for /Ohio Power Company in Pomeroy
{AEP) fot eleven ' years and then formed Meigs
Construction Company (later Ben-Tom) with friend, .
Richard Follrod where he worked untill retirement. ·
Roger served on the board of d.irectors at Pomeroy
Natio~ Bank (Bank One), was member of the Elks for 56
yearS, the American Legion for 53 years, Heath Methodist
Church in Middleport, and the Pomeroy Gun Club.
He was active in the community. He enjoyed wann relationships with friends and family.
He is survived by his wife of 26 years, Mary Waller
Morgan, of Athens; son, Keith Morgan of Salt Lake City,
, Utah· daughter, Kathy (R,obert) Moore of Newark; gianddaugbter, Lindsay; grandson, Ryan; stepson, Randy
(Ruth) Waller of McArthur; and step grandchildren,
Amanda and Josh Waller.
'
Funeral wi\) be held at 1 p.m. on Wednesday, June 24,
2009, at Anderson McDaniel Funeral Home in Pomeroy.
Burial will follow at the Riverview Cemetery where military funeral honors will be presented by the American
Legion. Visiting hours will he from 4-8 p.m. on Tuesday at
the funeral home.
Memorial con.tributions may be made to lhe
Rocks.prings United Methodist Church or Heath United
Methodist Church.
A registry is available on-line at www.andersonmcdaniel.coqt.

RACINE - Applications are available to reserve a booth
space at Racine's Party in the Park to be held on Sept. 12 at
Star Mill Park.
Applications can be picked up at Home National Bank
and Rill"s Classic Cars 111 Racine and at Twin Oaks at Five
Points. For information or to have an application mailed
contact Maxine or Ann at Home National Bank, 949·2210.
Country artist, Joe Diffie will perform on stage. There will
be Gatling Mine tours, a parade, Saturday Night Cruisin'
Car Show, and Big Bend Fann Antiques tractor show.
For more information, call the village at 949-2296 .

Rio otTer$ bUsiness course
. POMEROY - A course to strengthen business practices
is being offered by the Rio Grande Community College
from 9 to II a .m. on July 2 at the Pomeroy Library. A light
breakfast will be served. Registration will be taken by
Michelle Donovan, Mei~s County Chamber of Commerce
director. Deadline to reg1ster is July I. Cost is $10 a person
wliich will be collected at the door.

Local Weather

Rex and Ann Summerfield

·
. Tuesda,-••.sunny. Highs around S mph.. · . ·
Thunday ••.Mostly sunny.
m tlte IIDd ·80s. Northeast
Highs in the upper 80s.
winds 5 ti&gt; 10 mph .
Tuesday night •. .Mostly
thursday night and·
clear. Lows in the mid 60s. Friclay".Mpstly cloudy. A
North winds 5 to 10 mph in chance of showers and
the
evening ...Becoming thunderstorms. Lows in the
upper 60s. Highs in the
light and variable.
Wednesday •.• Sunny. upper 80s. Chance of rain
Highs in the upper 80s. 40 percent.
Northeast winds around 5
Friday night throegh
Saturday night ...Partly
mph.
Wednesday
night ••• cloudy. ·Lows in the upper
Mostly clear. Lows in the . 60s. Highs in the upper
mid 60s. Northeast winds 80s ,

Donald PigOtt

SUMMERFIELDS .
T·o CELEBRATE
ANNIVERSARY
REEDSVILLE - Rex and Ann Summerfield of 38550
East Shade Road, Reedsville, will celebrate their 70th wedding anniversary with an open house ·gathering of family
and friends, 2 to 4 p.m. Satu!day. at the Vales Party Room,
2276 State Route 144, Coolville.
The couple were married on Junr 2, 1939 in Greenup,
Ky. They are the /.atents of Sharon Donahue, Gerald
(Janet) Slimmelfiel , Toin (Barb) Summerfield, and Sina
May{Bob) Murphy.
·
.. . ·
··
·Cards will be appreciated, but the family requests no giftsi

Local Stocks

LONG B01TOM ...:. Donald Leroy Pigott, SS, of Long
Bottom, died Saturday, June 20,2009 at hishome ..
· He was born Ma;y 14. l 924 in Meigs County, son of the
late Riley and Daile Coffman Pigott. .
·
Don is survived by four sisters: Ann (Rex)
Summerfield, Eileen (Henry) a·ahr, Lucille (Royal)
Wilson and Lorena, Wolf; a sister-in-law, Bettie Pigott;
and many nieces and nephews. . .
. · ·
Besides his · parents, he was preceded in death by a
brother, Willard; a sister, Sina Bailey; and a brother-in- .
. law, Rex Bailey. .
.
.
.
_ Arrangements are be handled by White-Schwarzel
Funeral Home, Coolville. At Don "s request, there will be no
public visitation or funeral service.

AEP (NYBE) - 28.75
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.
Alhilnd Inc. (NVSE) - 25.99
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-U7
..
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Clwii •• llllapt.(IWIDAQJ - 3.57
City Holding (NASDAQ) - 30.10
Colllna (NYSE) - 42,43
DuPilnt (NYSE)- 24.1.0

US tlllnk (NYSE) - 17.08
Glllnltt (NYSE) - 3.51
.0..,.,..1 Ellctrlc (NYSE) ,-- 11.52
Harlly•DIIvtdiOn(NYSE).., 15.57

JP Mo!lllh INYSE) .., 32.87 . .·
21.78
·
Llmftecl llnlnda (NYSE) - 11.!10
Norfolk !louthli'n (NVSE) - 36.40
Ohlq Vally tiline Corp. (NAB-

· Krogtr (NYH) -

RACINE ;.,. Betty Sue Writesel, 63, Racine, passed away
Sunday, June 21, 2009.at her home, surrounded by family.
Born June.2, 1946; in.Columbus, she was the daughter of .
the late Robert and Grace Frezee Hoskins.
. ·
.· On May 28, 1966, she married her husbl!nd, Howard L.
Writesel, in Columbus. She was retired from the . Kroger
Co. as the nead.deli cook. ·
.
She is survived by her husband, Howard L. Writesel;
children: Robert "Bobby" (Grace) Writesel, l;'omeroy,
Howard J. "Jason" (Rachelle) Writesel, Racine, Nicole
(Jared Kin~) Writc;sel, Shad~:; grandchildren: Alyssa Smith,
Bobby Wntesel, Gabe Writesel, Dakota Writesel, ,Tristan
Diddle; Kamryn Diddle, Jasie Writesel and Lexi Writesel;·
brotllers, Ted - Frezee, · Chauncey, and Robert Hoskins,
Columbus; sisters: Barbara Hopkins, Columbus, and
Sharon Barker, Chauncey; several nieces ~d nephews.
· Bestdes her parents, she was preceded m death by three
brothers: Tom; Larry and BiU Hoskins .
.
·
Funeral will be at 10 a.m. Friday, June 26, 2009 at the
Cremeens Funeral Home, Racine with Rev. Mike Adkins
officialing: . ··
.
.
Friends may can from 6-9 p.m. Thursday at the funeral
home. Expressions of sympathy may be sent to the family
by .visiting www.cremeensfuneralhomes.com.

Deaths
Johnny Donohue ·

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Rocky 8ootl

(NASOA~) -

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.... Holding (NASDAQ)- e4.14·
Wlll-llllrt (NYSE) - ...H .
Wendy'e (NYSEI - 3.75

W..Benoo (NVBE) - 14,17
WOI1hlngton (NVSE) "" 12.Q ·
Dlllly etock Npoo18 IN till 4
p.m. ET CIOIIng qu- of ll'llnoactklnelor June 22, 20011, provldlcl by Edwanl Jonee fln~n·
clal edVIIIOniiiUC Mille In
.
0.10~1111 (740) 441-8441 ond

I.Miey MlliNro In Poln~

f'teeunt .et (304) &amp;74-0174.

Mlmllet SIPC.

Kimberly $wisher

Thomas scholarships awarded

The Brandi Thomas · a maximum of two years.
Recipients are chosen on
Memorial
Scholarships
Page At
were recently awarded ·at the basis of chatactc:r, extra,
Meigs
High · School 's curricu)!lf· activities, acllde;
the consumer. .In opt-out
Next, the enrollment will Awards Assembly. This mic performance and other
communities like Pomeroy, take Jllace. Typically, the years winners of the $1,200 ·accomplishments ensuring
this notice must also specity supplier will 'mail the con- scholarships were Kimberly potential success in college
how , the · consumer can sumer infonnation about the Swisher . and · Andrew and post-college life •
choose .to opt-out or wi.th
. - . com_pany and contact infor- O'Bi"yant, SWisher is fiom
draw from tbe aggregatu~n • matlon. Be su~ .to read this Middl~port and plaqs · to
program. Typically, th1s information carefully and attend Ohio University
mvolves the . consumer save it for future reference, while O'Bryant is ·from
returning a postc,aro o! ~et•
Holmes told council there Pomeroy .. and ·plans to
ter. Customers Will extslll)g is no cancellation fee and attend Hocking College.
supplier agreements will not eligible customers must be Both are from the MHS
be switched automatically. · current on their bills.lf cus- · Class of 2009.
. .
If a .consumer de&lt;lides to toiners . get two months
Any MHS senior or
participate in an aggrega: behind on payments· they graduate attending college .
tion program, their new sup- will be . automatically that participated in track
plier will notify their natur· dropped from the program or' cross-country a mini·
al gas uti-lity. Once the utili- and
revert back
to mum of two years in high
ty receives the notification, Columbia Gas.
school · were eligible 10
it sends the consumer a ·con" · Communities set · up to receive the scholarship fo'
firmation letter in the mail. negotiate lower rates on
This letter includes the date purchasing natural gas from
you are to be switched and · Volunteer Energy Services
the right to withdraw from are Brooklyn, Alliance,
the offer within a specified Marion. Gallipolis and
period of time.
Mount Vernon .

Pomeroy rrom

.H

LONG BOTIOM - Johnny E. Dono)lue, Sr., 61, Long
Bottom,-died Thursday, June 18,2009. ·
. ·
· There will be no funeral or visitation. Arrangements are
by Cremeens Funeral Home , Ra~ine . Exf!~~sions of sympathy may .be !;eDt to the fam1ly by v1S1tmg www.cre• ·
meensfuneralhomes.com.
·

Gotltt
•2210 · Racn, OH
.992Ga ·•Syra_cuse, OH

Fireworks from Pa&amp;eAl
the Feeney-Bennett Post Dave Diles Park.
128, American Legion, wi.ll
The fireworks display
C(mduct a flag program.
will begin at 9:30. Gerlach
At 7:15 p.m. , K&amp;D said Front Street will be
Karaoke will host a karaoke bldcked off so spectators
sho~, ·followed by live . can enjoy the display over ·
mus1c by the Randall · the Ohio · River, with the
. Mullins Band at 8:30.
new Bridge of Honor as .a ·
3-5 Food fun an~ · game , backdrop.

I

We'D be there!
A.
indc:pendcn•
~&amp;W• ~·n be th&lt;N m. ~~a
)'OUf """'··

Cefe,bration ofLife" ·

To see more newsphotoa
f.n)m our pbo~graphers go to

,~~~,y,

,.........._._
WJ.3610

www.rteilllau.ca•

.

1 )'OU

· come in ~.0 quotf...

,...

Jessica DIIIOJi

.........,.........ff1,.. b.,,_..

-..t. ,...,·•·n-flrlt .....-.......

~ Qp{ity ?QuslnjCIW '.ftrO.. ZD !:"""'

n •• .,~~o.,

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�. Page A6- The Daily Sentinel

www.mydailysentinel.com

Tuesday, June 23,2009

Inside

Bt:

The Daily Sentinel

Kelly gtts exteMioD from UC, Page 82
uS OpeD notebook, Page 82
The Scoreboard, Page B6

Tuesday, June 23, 1009

Donald Fehr to retire as head
::!t~~:m
C)f
baseball
players'
union
.
.
Baker eager

.
.

. CINCINNATI (AP) With his team struggling to
Score runs and stay above
.500, Reds
manager
D us I y
Baker is
close to

NOTEIIOOK ~ e~ t~n ~

f

740-992·2955
. . Pomeroy, OH·

\ ~f.

.

"

.

·HOLZER CLINIC
'

.

.

offensive
help with the.return of sev~ ·
eral key playel'S, ·
. Third baseman Edwin
Encarnacion, who has been
on the disabled list since
late April with a chip fracture in his left Wrist;began a
rehab stint in the minor
leagues Sunday.
"It's a pretty big ste.l' rigbt
away," Baker sa,td of
)Sncamacion -heading to
'friple·A Louisville. "But at
least the (pitchers') control
\viii be better. You don't
have to .worry about ·getting
hit (like you do) SOJ!Ie of.
those .other places." . · . · .
: First basemiltl Joey Votto,
on the disabled list . since
May 30 with stress-related
issues, continued his rehab
assignment Sunday at
Single-A Dayton.
·
:: "I felt great out there,"
:Votto said. In .two _games
with the Dragons, Vono had
three hits;. it home run and
three RBI.
. ' Votto, who was hitting
·J57 with eight !tolhe runs .
iltl~ 33 RBis _
when he went .
on the disabled list, said he
would talk with Baker, Reds
. frainer Mark Mann and general manager Walt Jocketty
about,when to retupt.
.
: "We 'II have a httle conversation anii come .to a
conclusion what I· need to
do'next,' he:aajd.f &gt; . , ·. ·
·'They' kilow ·· what I've been going through. Tbey·
~ould be able to say, ~Are '
you ready to. go'!' My ,
~nswer would be yes."
The Reds travel to
Toronto, where Votto grew
up, to begin. a three-game
series with the Blue Jays on
Tuesday night.
"Boy it would be nice to
.get him J'ack," ·Baker said.
"You just got to be careful
riot to rush him."
·
· At Votto's request, the ·
. Reds have not released any.
information· beyond the fact
he is on the DL for stressrelated issues.
Votto said he'll tell his
story when the time is right.
"I.fl could be open with it,
totally comfortable, and .I
will be, it will answer a lot
of questions," he said,
Sunday's loss to the
Chicago White Sox dropped .
the Reds to 34-34 overall, ·
with a mark of 17-17 at
home and 17-17 on the

road.

···

.

. "We're right in the thick
?f things," Reds utility man

j

,..,.
,.,, ,

, ........ Recls,l2

PLEASANT
VALLEY
HOSPITAL

t:11111_,J Flit
Bv•lff•st .
Mclndi1"Frkll18 W6:31
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call .Us

~---

8Dhtt

J

__ .. ____.,.,._

ollri.nda. r 'V1 Hl .... ..h lltc&amp;

·. TOday To"11
., Schedule
14 ,.. ·, ..

Heatiag aad:

~

-

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-.,
17MII~I»
, _ - 17MII ..,~,.,

0....

17«11 ,.,,.,

-

/3001~

7~-992-5321

. : .SAN DIEGO (AP) teBronJames is moving his
King's Academy summer
· j)asketball camp from his
. hometown of Akron, Ohio,
io the campus of UC San
Diego. ·
· The NBA MVP and star
the Clev~;land Cavaliel'S
has scheduled his camp, for
):Joys and girls between 8
!l"d 18! for July 24.-28 ..
. Movmg
the
Ktng's
i\cademy ·gives kids in
1!J1other p!lrt of the country
!he chance to experience it,
camp director Damon Haley
~aid Monday.
.
· "He's·a guy who's a family guy, .and he's a guy who
needs a vacation in the offSeason, so that's where San
piego came into the realm
of possibility," said Haley,
l.vho also mentioned the
liumber of courts at UCSD.
The cost is $650 for
overnight campers and $510
~or day campers.

of

I.....FRIGIDAIRE
..,Coolie_ [Goodman

_,.._
. _....,,.._
......... ___ ,.......,\......

LeBron moving
.~ummer camp
· ~o San Diego

·

,.

.

.'

·. (}Ur

~

1-800-359-4303

391 Norlh Second Avenue 45760
OH 21289
Middleport, OH
WV OOBm

ca.IJIA((tiUJji£WJJ C.

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333 Page St, Middleport, OH (740) 992-6472

..__,...___~-~-----'-----·--

~

"

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

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"'

NEW YORK (AP) - recommending to the play- "I think that he's a bright
Donald Pehr's quarter cen- ers that he be given the guy," Miller said in a teletury in charge of the play- opportunity to do this job," phone interview. "He's cer·
ers' association was marked Fehr said .
tainly not lacking in ex peri- .
'by a strike that canceled the· The 47-year-old Weiner ence. He's got the backWorld Series, record will lead negotiations for ground for it."
salaries and eventually 14 the next contract; the curPlayers, concentrating on
years of labor peace.
rent labor agreement the economics, always
And to his detractors, it expires in December 20 II. backed Fehr.
was marred by a go-slow
Weiner and Steve · Pehr~ · "He'd talk like a lawyer,
approach to steroids.
the union leader's brother. but in the same sense, he
Fehr, who 'turns 61 next were the primary day-to- · would also slow it down
month, said Monday he day negotiators of labor and explain. it for us,"
will leave the powerful contracts in 2002 and 2006, Colorado's Todd Helton
union no h1ter than the end · baseball's ftrst since 1970 said.
of March. F~ihr recom- · that were achieved without
Fehr headed negotiation~
mended that he be succeed- a work stoppag~.
for five labor contracts plus
ed by union general coun"I think I have some a divisive August 2002 ·
sel Michael Weiner, the No. sense of what I'm getting drug agreement that was
3 offiCial and his longtime into," Weiner said.
revised three times under
heir apparent. The move is
As .part of the succession · congressional pressure. He'
subject to approval by the plan, Weiner met ·Monday decided he didn't want to
union's executive . board in the union's conference negotiate the next labor
and possible ratification by .room with Fehr and the 92- contract in two years and
all players.
year-old Marvin Miller,
·. "I . have no . hesitancy in · Fehr's predecessor.
Pleue IH Fehr, 141

)I

•

APpiMIIff

In this Feb. 28, file photo, Major League Baseball's Players
Association executive director Donald Fehr, right, talks will)
reporter!! after ,m~ting with the Philadelphia Phlllies belor' .
a spring training baseball game .against _the Tampa Bay
Rays in Cleal"lll(ater, Fla.

on
-~
atUSOileli

Glover.

2•ShOI

FARMINGDALE, .N.Y. now that it's over, I've j!Ot
(AP) - Lucas Glover stead- more important th.ings gomg
ied his hands for a 3-foot par on.. •
·
. ·
·
pun on the 18t.h hole, an
''And," headded, pausing~
· anticlim9tic finish to five . "oi), well."
. .. · :
dreary days at a U:S. Open Next came ·David Duval;
filled with niore delays than out of nowhere. Winless in
dram&lt;~.
·
·
eigbt years, he ran pff three··
The unlikely champion straight l!irdies on the back
turned to soak up a beautiful nine to tie for the lead as the
sight beneath gathering N~. 882 player in the world
clouds Monday at Bethpage tned to show why he wa5
Black.
·
No. I a decade ago.
"I just looked at the scoreHis hopes · ended with li
board to make sure this was . five· foot par putt on the 17th
. te~lly happening," Glov~r that spun 180 ~e~ees o~t of
srud.
· ·· the cup,81Jdhiudver-meda1
Some 24,000 fans; speck~ was nP consolation •. ·
le4 with mud from a long
~I stand before you cer·
walk soiled •. could ·. surely tainly happy with h_ow . I
relate.
played, but extremely disap. Glover never lost the lead pointed in the outc9me,"
over the finall2 holes, even Duval satd. "I had no questhough the· attention was tion in my mind I was going
always on someone else. He to win the golf tournament
closed with a 3-over 73 for a today." ·
.
two-shot victory in a U.S. · Ricky Barnes was the long
Open that might be remem- shot who didn't last very
bered more for the week long with the 54-hole lead .
than the winner.
He shot 40 on the front nine
The stage belon~ed Phil to tum control over to·
Mickelson, as tt •usually Glover, and wound up
does in New York.
. shooting a 76 to join
Lefty.charged into a share Mickelson and Duval in a tit .
ot ·the lead with a startling for second.
· bid to finally win the Open, Glover didn't have a com··
his final event before a sum· pelling storyline, just the
mer . of uncertainty as his kind of golf that wins aU .S,
wife battles breast cancer. A Open in any conditions. .
fairy-tale finish turned all
He made 'only one birdie
too familiar, however, when in the rain-del'ayed final
'Mickelson missed ' two par round, and it could not.
putts over the last four holes. have been timed any better;
and .wound up setting the Tied (or the lead wtth th~
wrong kind of record by fin· holes to flay, he split the
isl)inll second for the fifth middle o the fairway and.
time m the Am~rican nation· had 173 yards left to the,'
hole at No. 16.
,
AI&gt; photo al champtonshtp.
..
"Certainly I'm disappoint·
lucas Glover holds up the championship trophy after winning . the U.S. ·Open Golf
ed," Mickelson said . ."B"t
PIHse see GIOYer, 1:&amp;
Championship at Bethpage State .Park's Black Course in Farmingdale, N.Y., on Monday.

to

O'Neill takes on reclamation at USC
LOS ANGELES (AP) Kevin O'Neill took over
Southern California's trou·
bled basketball program on
Monday, promismg to try to
win next season under the
weight of an NCAA investi·
galion and the departures of
three starters and · several
recruits.
"There's nothing here that
says you can't win and that's
why I like this job," he said
after being introduced by
athletic director Mike
Garrett at campus news
conference.
Both O'Neill and Garrett
refused to answer questions
about the coach's contract at
the private ·university,
including its length.
"Hopefully, he's here forever," Garrett said.
·
The 52-year-old coach
returns to the college ranks
· after spending last season as
an assistant with the
Memphis Grizzles.
"My attraction to the job
was simple, it's USC,"
O'Neill satd. "They major in
graduation and championships here, two pretty

a

good things."
wanted the job from the
The titles, however, beginning · because it's
belong to the powerhouse USC," he said.
football program and to "The fact that there's an
sports other than basketball.. investigation ~oing on never
which was on the upswing changed my vtew of the uniuntil . Tim Floyd resigned ·vei:sity at all. We're going'to
suddenly on June 9 amid deal · with whatever comes
allegations that he paid to out of this and be positive
have OJ. Mayo play for him and move forward."
at USC.
But O'Neill would be
In Floyd's four-year affected by any fallout.
. tenure, the Trojans ·reached
If the NCAA can ptove
the NCAA · tournament the Floyd paid to have Mayo
last thtee seasons and won delivered to USC, tliat
the school's first Pac-1 0 would be considered a major .
tournament title in March.
violation ..The Trojans could
"I want to be able to con- . be forced to forfeit victories,
tinue the good things that and they could face recruit- .
Tim is doing here and has ing restrictions and lose
done here," O'Neill said. scholarships.
..
"He's really done !l nice job The football team also is
with the program." .
· under NCAA investigation
O'Neill said he had no for alleged improprieties
qualms -about taking over involving Heisman Trophyduring tough times. He said winning running back
Garrett told him everything Reggie Bush.
he needs to know about the
"We want to get it over,"
past.
Garrell said of the twin
"I really didn't care what investigations. "We can only
AP photo
had happen~ and we didn:t go as fast as they (NCAA)
get mto detatl because that s .want to go."
Kevin O'Neill, who was named as the new men's basketball
not my place. I was taking
·
coach at Southern California; speaks to the media Monday
the job no . matter what. I
PIHse see USC. 11
at a news conference in Los.Angeles.

- --···--- ------- - ... ~

··-- - --- ---~-----~-----.,---~--...._~-

'

�. Page A6- The Daily Sentinel

www.mydailysentinel.com

Tuesday, June 23,2009

Inside

Bt:

The Daily Sentinel

Kelly gtts exteMioD from UC, Page 82
uS OpeD notebook, Page 82
The Scoreboard, Page B6

Tuesday, June 23, 1009

Donald Fehr to retire as head
::!t~~:m
C)f
baseball
players'
union
.
.
Baker eager

.
.

. CINCINNATI (AP) With his team struggling to
Score runs and stay above
.500, Reds
manager
D us I y
Baker is
close to

NOTEIIOOK ~ e~ t~n ~

f

740-992·2955
. . Pomeroy, OH·

\ ~f.

.

"

.

·HOLZER CLINIC
'

.

.

offensive
help with the.return of sev~ ·
eral key playel'S, ·
. Third baseman Edwin
Encarnacion, who has been
on the disabled list since
late April with a chip fracture in his left Wrist;began a
rehab stint in the minor
leagues Sunday.
"It's a pretty big ste.l' rigbt
away," Baker sa,td of
)Sncamacion -heading to
'friple·A Louisville. "But at
least the (pitchers') control
\viii be better. You don't
have to .worry about ·getting
hit (like you do) SOJ!Ie of.
those .other places." . · . · .
: First basemiltl Joey Votto,
on the disabled list . since
May 30 with stress-related
issues, continued his rehab
assignment Sunday at
Single-A Dayton.
·
:: "I felt great out there,"
:Votto said. In .two _games
with the Dragons, Vono had
three hits;. it home run and
three RBI.
. ' Votto, who was hitting
·J57 with eight !tolhe runs .
iltl~ 33 RBis _
when he went .
on the disabled list, said he
would talk with Baker, Reds
. frainer Mark Mann and general manager Walt Jocketty
about,when to retupt.
.
: "We 'II have a httle conversation anii come .to a
conclusion what I· need to
do'next,' he:aajd.f &gt; . , ·. ·
·'They' kilow ·· what I've been going through. Tbey·
~ould be able to say, ~Are '
you ready to. go'!' My ,
~nswer would be yes."
The Reds travel to
Toronto, where Votto grew
up, to begin. a three-game
series with the Blue Jays on
Tuesday night.
"Boy it would be nice to
.get him J'ack," ·Baker said.
"You just got to be careful
riot to rush him."
·
· At Votto's request, the ·
. Reds have not released any.
information· beyond the fact
he is on the DL for stressrelated issues.
Votto said he'll tell his
story when the time is right.
"I.fl could be open with it,
totally comfortable, and .I
will be, it will answer a lot
of questions," he said,
Sunday's loss to the
Chicago White Sox dropped .
the Reds to 34-34 overall, ·
with a mark of 17-17 at
home and 17-17 on the

road.

···

.

. "We're right in the thick
?f things," Reds utility man

j

,..,.
,.,, ,

, ........ Recls,l2

PLEASANT
VALLEY
HOSPITAL

t:11111_,J Flit
Bv•lff•st .
Mclndi1"Frkll18 W6:31
S.IIJda,J l:eta SIIIIIIJ' 11:01-4.11

PHONE 740·992-5020

415N.2111A-•MIMlp~OWo

NA110NAL BANK
RACINE &amp; SYRACUSE

We've Got ltl ·
949-2210,•Racine, OH
992-6333 •Syracuse, OH

50d f'11(1(1PeHru:f
Vallev Drive • Point Pleasant, WJ • (304) 67:).43jl0

call .Us

~---

8Dhtt

J

__ .. ____.,.,._

ollri.nda. r 'V1 Hl .... ..h lltc&amp;

·. TOday To"11
., Schedule
14 ,.. ·, ..

Heatiag aad:

~

-

FmnenBank

-- __,_

-.,
17MII~I»
, _ - 17MII ..,~,.,

0....

17«11 ,.,,.,

-

/3001~

7~-992-5321

. : .SAN DIEGO (AP) teBronJames is moving his
King's Academy summer
· j)asketball camp from his
. hometown of Akron, Ohio,
io the campus of UC San
Diego. ·
· The NBA MVP and star
the Clev~;land Cavaliel'S
has scheduled his camp, for
):Joys and girls between 8
!l"d 18! for July 24.-28 ..
. Movmg
the
Ktng's
i\cademy ·gives kids in
1!J1other p!lrt of the country
!he chance to experience it,
camp director Damon Haley
~aid Monday.
.
· "He's·a guy who's a family guy, .and he's a guy who
needs a vacation in the offSeason, so that's where San
piego came into the realm
of possibility," said Haley,
l.vho also mentioned the
liumber of courts at UCSD.
The cost is $650 for
overnight campers and $510
~or day campers.

of

I.....FRIGIDAIRE
..,Coolie_ [Goodman

_,.._
. _....,,.._
......... ___ ,.......,\......

LeBron moving
.~ummer camp
· ~o San Diego

·

,.

.

.'

·. (}Ur

~

1-800-359-4303

391 Norlh Second Avenue 45760
OH 21289
Middleport, OH
WV OOBm

ca.IJIA((tiUJji£WJJ C.

FREE ESTIMATES

333 Page St, Middleport, OH (740) 992-6472

..__,...___~-~-----'-----·--

~

"

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

•
~

"'

NEW YORK (AP) - recommending to the play- "I think that he's a bright
Donald Pehr's quarter cen- ers that he be given the guy," Miller said in a teletury in charge of the play- opportunity to do this job," phone interview. "He's cer·
ers' association was marked Fehr said .
tainly not lacking in ex peri- .
'by a strike that canceled the· The 47-year-old Weiner ence. He's got the backWorld Series, record will lead negotiations for ground for it."
salaries and eventually 14 the next contract; the curPlayers, concentrating on
years of labor peace.
rent labor agreement the economics, always
And to his detractors, it expires in December 20 II. backed Fehr.
was marred by a go-slow
Weiner and Steve · Pehr~ · "He'd talk like a lawyer,
approach to steroids.
the union leader's brother. but in the same sense, he
Fehr, who 'turns 61 next were the primary day-to- · would also slow it down
month, said Monday he day negotiators of labor and explain. it for us,"
will leave the powerful contracts in 2002 and 2006, Colorado's Todd Helton
union no h1ter than the end · baseball's ftrst since 1970 said.
of March. F~ihr recom- · that were achieved without
Fehr headed negotiation~
mended that he be succeed- a work stoppag~.
for five labor contracts plus
ed by union general coun"I think I have some a divisive August 2002 ·
sel Michael Weiner, the No. sense of what I'm getting drug agreement that was
3 offiCial and his longtime into," Weiner said.
revised three times under
heir apparent. The move is
As .part of the succession · congressional pressure. He'
subject to approval by the plan, Weiner met ·Monday decided he didn't want to
union's executive . board in the union's conference negotiate the next labor
and possible ratification by .room with Fehr and the 92- contract in two years and
all players.
year-old Marvin Miller,
·. "I . have no . hesitancy in · Fehr's predecessor.
Pleue IH Fehr, 141

)I

•

APpiMIIff

In this Feb. 28, file photo, Major League Baseball's Players
Association executive director Donald Fehr, right, talks will)
reporter!! after ,m~ting with the Philadelphia Phlllies belor' .
a spring training baseball game .against _the Tampa Bay
Rays in Cleal"lll(ater, Fla.

on
-~
atUSOileli

Glover.

2•ShOI

FARMINGDALE, .N.Y. now that it's over, I've j!Ot
(AP) - Lucas Glover stead- more important th.ings gomg
ied his hands for a 3-foot par on.. •
·
. ·
·
pun on the 18t.h hole, an
''And," headded, pausing~
· anticlim9tic finish to five . "oi), well."
. .. · :
dreary days at a U:S. Open Next came ·David Duval;
filled with niore delays than out of nowhere. Winless in
dram&lt;~.
·
·
eigbt years, he ran pff three··
The unlikely champion straight l!irdies on the back
turned to soak up a beautiful nine to tie for the lead as the
sight beneath gathering N~. 882 player in the world
clouds Monday at Bethpage tned to show why he wa5
Black.
·
No. I a decade ago.
"I just looked at the scoreHis hopes · ended with li
board to make sure this was . five· foot par putt on the 17th
. te~lly happening," Glov~r that spun 180 ~e~ees o~t of
srud.
· ·· the cup,81Jdhiudver-meda1
Some 24,000 fans; speck~ was nP consolation •. ·
le4 with mud from a long
~I stand before you cer·
walk soiled •. could ·. surely tainly happy with h_ow . I
relate.
played, but extremely disap. Glover never lost the lead pointed in the outc9me,"
over the finall2 holes, even Duval satd. "I had no questhough the· attention was tion in my mind I was going
always on someone else. He to win the golf tournament
closed with a 3-over 73 for a today." ·
.
two-shot victory in a U.S. · Ricky Barnes was the long
Open that might be remem- shot who didn't last very
bered more for the week long with the 54-hole lead .
than the winner.
He shot 40 on the front nine
The stage belon~ed Phil to tum control over to·
Mickelson, as tt •usually Glover, and wound up
does in New York.
. shooting a 76 to join
Lefty.charged into a share Mickelson and Duval in a tit .
ot ·the lead with a startling for second.
· bid to finally win the Open, Glover didn't have a com··
his final event before a sum· pelling storyline, just the
mer . of uncertainty as his kind of golf that wins aU .S,
wife battles breast cancer. A Open in any conditions. .
fairy-tale finish turned all
He made 'only one birdie
too familiar, however, when in the rain-del'ayed final
'Mickelson missed ' two par round, and it could not.
putts over the last four holes. have been timed any better;
and .wound up setting the Tied (or the lead wtth th~
wrong kind of record by fin· holes to flay, he split the
isl)inll second for the fifth middle o the fairway and.
time m the Am~rican nation· had 173 yards left to the,'
hole at No. 16.
,
AI&gt; photo al champtonshtp.
..
"Certainly I'm disappoint·
lucas Glover holds up the championship trophy after winning . the U.S. ·Open Golf
ed," Mickelson said . ."B"t
PIHse see GIOYer, 1:&amp;
Championship at Bethpage State .Park's Black Course in Farmingdale, N.Y., on Monday.

to

O'Neill takes on reclamation at USC
LOS ANGELES (AP) Kevin O'Neill took over
Southern California's trou·
bled basketball program on
Monday, promismg to try to
win next season under the
weight of an NCAA investi·
galion and the departures of
three starters and · several
recruits.
"There's nothing here that
says you can't win and that's
why I like this job," he said
after being introduced by
athletic director Mike
Garrett at campus news
conference.
Both O'Neill and Garrett
refused to answer questions
about the coach's contract at
the private ·university,
including its length.
"Hopefully, he's here forever," Garrett said.
·
The 52-year-old coach
returns to the college ranks
· after spending last season as
an assistant with the
Memphis Grizzles.
"My attraction to the job
was simple, it's USC,"
O'Neill satd. "They major in
graduation and championships here, two pretty

a

good things."
wanted the job from the
The titles, however, beginning · because it's
belong to the powerhouse USC," he said.
football program and to "The fact that there's an
sports other than basketball.. investigation ~oing on never
which was on the upswing changed my vtew of the uniuntil . Tim Floyd resigned ·vei:sity at all. We're going'to
suddenly on June 9 amid deal · with whatever comes
allegations that he paid to out of this and be positive
have OJ. Mayo play for him and move forward."
at USC.
But O'Neill would be
In Floyd's four-year affected by any fallout.
. tenure, the Trojans ·reached
If the NCAA can ptove
the NCAA · tournament the Floyd paid to have Mayo
last thtee seasons and won delivered to USC, tliat
the school's first Pac-1 0 would be considered a major .
tournament title in March.
violation ..The Trojans could
"I want to be able to con- . be forced to forfeit victories,
tinue the good things that and they could face recruit- .
Tim is doing here and has ing restrictions and lose
done here," O'Neill said. scholarships.
..
"He's really done !l nice job The football team also is
with the program." .
· under NCAA investigation
O'Neill said he had no for alleged improprieties
qualms -about taking over involving Heisman Trophyduring tough times. He said winning running back
Garrett told him everything Reggie Bush.
he needs to know about the
"We want to get it over,"
past.
Garrell said of the twin
"I really didn't care what investigations. "We can only
AP photo
had happen~ and we didn:t go as fast as they (NCAA)
get mto detatl because that s .want to go."
Kevin O'Neill, who was named as the new men's basketball
not my place. I was taking
·
coach at Southern California; speaks to the media Monday
the job no . matter what. I
PIHse see USC. 11
at a news conference in Los.Angeles.

- --···--- ------- - ... ~

··-- - --- ---~-----~-----.,---~--...._~-

'

�. ••

~· •

4

...

•

Page Ba • 'nle Daily Sentinel

CINCINNATI (AP) - there is."
of
Kelly last season led the
University
;;::;~~~~a~ on· Monday said Bearcats to a Big East. title
coach Brian Kelly and· an Orange Bowl appear·
signed a contract exten- ance. After there were overadding a year at nearly tures Kelly might he a can·
I .5 million.
didate for other coaching
School officials said Kelly jobs. Kelly· a!ld Thoma&gt;
guaranteed S 1.475 million announced last December
stay through the 2013 sea- they were working on an
. The school said there extension.
also performance-based
"This a~reement allows
for Xelly, and me and my family to call
the new deal also raises Cincinnati our home. not
. just a place where we live,"
pay of his assistants.
"His impact has been . Kelly said.
mmediate not only as a. The 2008 Bearcats went
l:(Xtch. but also as a member 11-3, appearing in the
our community and a school's
first
Bowl
ambassador (or the Championship Series game,
foniv•"sitv" said Mike a 20-7 loss to Virginia Tech
Orange Bowl.
t•~:o ~,~il~r~i!B~:earcats • direc~ in In!hehis
first full season, .
signed a five-year Kelly led the Bearcats to a
to•~tra.ct wonh $6.3 million 10,.3 record, including a vicDecember 2007 follow- ·tory in the Papajohns.com
his first full season at Bowl. He has a 22-6 record
l=lncinnati. The new deal as Bearcats' coach .
be approved by the
He was hired from Central
L-l&gt;nnl'&lt; board of trustees.
Michigan in December 2006
've got to tell me to replace Mark Dantonio,
a better situation than who left Cincinnati after
P•nci:nnjtti," Kelly said. three seasons for Michigan
could mike a case thill State. Kelly took over the
are a feW schools out team for · tls game at the
rne!I'C, but no longer do you · ln.temational · Bowl .. in
· look at Cincinnati January of 2007, leading the
go, 'There'.s a better job Bearcats to a victory over
there.' I don't believe Westefll Michigan.

l

•

0

I

Tuesday, June 23, 2009·..

www.mydaiJysentinel.eom

US Open notebook: Mahan hit too good a shot
FARMINGDALE, N.Y.
(AP) - No golf tournament
ends without a number of
P.layers able to say "Wllat
1f?' over one hole or one
swing.
Hunler Mahan may have
the best reason to ask that
question after the U.S. Open.
Mahan's ball was sitting in
the fairway after his lee shot
on the par-4 16th at Bethpage
Black. He was 2 under par
for tournament, just one
stroke out of the lead.
But a great swing produced
a terrible result and effectively ended his chance at his
first major championship. .
"We had a good number. I
think it was like 172," Mahan
said. "Had an 8-iron downwind and just flushed ir."
If Mahan's ball had hit any
part of the green, he would
have been looking at a makable birdie pull, but the ball
hit the flag stick - and hit it
squarely.
"I hit that thing pretty hard

and it ricocheled off the
green," he said. "That happens.lt's aU S. ()pen. You're
going to gel stuff like that.
The green · is just fiiSt. I
thought I hit a pretty good 5wood runner up there. but the
green was pretty fast."
Instead of a chance at tying
for the lead, Mahan made a
bogey. Then he had another
on the par-3 17th when .his
birdie anempt caught a ridge
and left him a long par putt.
He finished tied for sixth at
even par, four strokes behind
champion Lucas Glover.
At least, Mahan is getting
closer.
This was the third straight
year he finished in the top 20
m the Open. He tied for I Oth
at the Masters in April.
BIG
PUTI':
Ricky
B'arnes' missed birdie pun on
the 18th hole wound up costing him $250,170. Make 11
and he would have finished
second alone at 277 and
would have won $810.000.

'Otribune- Sentinel -l\egister
CLASSIFIED

Instead, he finished in a ed as Open champion ifl
three-way for second with 1989, no defending champiPhil Mickelson and David on had fmished in the top 10
Duval and won $559,830.
until Tiger Woods this year.
GRANDPA KNEW: Dick
Woods was seeking his
Hendley introduced his fourth Open title, whic•
grandson Lucas Glover to would have tied him for tht
.golf at age 3. Six years later, record
with
Willie
he brought him to the late Anderson , Bobby Jones,
Dick Harmon to teach him Ben Hogan and Jack
the game. It all paid off on Nicklaus.
Monday.
His final-round 69 put hilll
"I'm floating on air," in a tie for sixth at even-par
Hendley said from Greer, 280. In his other defenses,
S.C.
he tied for 12th at Southe~f
He and his 29-year-old Hills in 2001 and tied f~
grandSon talked two week- 20th at Olymp1a F1elds 1n
ends ago .
, 2003. ·
. "I watched him chip and
When Woods won t~e
pull aitd thought he was in a Open· at Bethpage Black 1n
good fraine of mind," 2002, he was the only player
Hendley said of Glover's to break par for the toumaOpen performance. "I felt ment wtth a · 277 total.
good about it all week. I did- Woods had two· rounds ill
n't say anythln~ to anybody, the 60s that year, 67 in the
but I had a feehng he'd play first and 68 in _the second.
well the way he was hitting This year, he broke 70 three
the ball."
times with 69s in the second
TRACKING TIGER: and fourth rounds sandwichSince Curtis Strange repeat- ing a 68.

under 2.76.and earned $1.35 · Ernie Els had a 73 at thousands Of fans sur·
in
1994. rounding the green, the par
million, moving froin No. Oakmont
71 to 17th in the world.
although the only score p11tt didn't touch the cup.
The 29-year-old from · that mattered was his even"I just thought . that it.
from PageBl
South Carolina, who chews par 35 on the back nine was going to stop break·
tobacco
and
listens
to
and
that
crucial
birdie.
.
ing, and it broke a little
· lt was a · smooth S-iron,
Mickelson
wasn't
so
formore,"
Mickelson said.
like thousands he has hit on Sinatra, had not won since
tunate
with
the
putter,
typHe
came
up short on the
the driving range. It landed holing out a bunker shot on
streak.
. the final hole at Disney ical of his fortunes in a 17th. chipped eight fe..,.
He
was
designated six feet from the cup.
nearly four years ago.
major he can't seem to short and didn't hit that
Olson's permanent succes"The putt was · all you
But this was no fluke.
win.
par putt with enouglt
sor, but when the Hall of could ever ask for under
from PageBl
"I hit the shots today thill
Starting the final round speed. His last hope was
Farner returned that spring pressure," Glover said.
1had to hit in the Situation, six rounds. he shot into a to make birdie on the
he announced 0' Neill
His caddie, Don Cooper, and .that. was a little m\)re shareoftheleadwith .a .35- . 18th, but his 30-foot
The ongoing investiga- would n6 longer be part of helpecl rum with the read
·
I
and told him; ''There's no ·gratifying," Olover said. · · foot birdie putt 'ot! t~e effort slid by the hole.
along with the depar- the program.
.
first tiine the .!ough 12th hole; theri hit
Mickelson lingered at
of starters DeMar · "I went there to he an wapve'remissing.this." . .. It was
Open elided on
his ·approach, tq. 4 feet on Bethpage ari hour after he
~::~i~~:~; Taj Gibson .and assistant, and the next thing ·
would hiiVe went in a Monday w,ithout a playoff · the pa,r-5 13th for an eagle. finished to sign autoHackell for the NBA 1 knew J was the interim thtmble," Cooper said.
since 1983, courtesy of He walked to every green graphs, then headed home
several recruits asking head coach and 1 was the
Glover arnved at the
giving the fans a thumbs- to an uncertain future. He
'
of their commitments, successor coach, .then I was J7th tee in time to see that relentless rain.
have put off others
"h
'd
Duval had made bogey and
And for the first time in up, feeling the love from has said he probablj
ht gone, e sat .
dl
f..i31Tett repone Y SOUjl · · "!learned a lot during that . that Mickelson· earlier had five years, all the major the crowd, believing this won't go to the Britisb
·Open and isn't sure when
the job, includmg year. I think experiences dropped a shot there, too. 'rophtes belong to so~e­ might be his year.
t'ittsbuq:h's Jamie Dixon, . like that really to~Jghen you Suddenly, he .was two shots.. one other . than . T1ger . But after a pulling off he will return to golf.
"Maybe it's more in
ahead, and he made sure Woods.: · ·
·
· another unlikely shot - ·a
h
d
11
Lon Kruger and
Fonmt\r NBA coach Jeff Van up as a coac an rea Y · the U.S. Open didn't have a • .The defendirlg champion hyb!jd from the rough on perspective
for
me .
make you appreciate good
No.
15,
up
the
h'ill
to
.the
·because
...
I
feel
different
· reached under par for the
There were surprise ending.
"I wasn't her firsi choice, experiences.
The
18th
tee
was
moved
first time all week with a back of the_green- it all this time," he ·said. "I
some trying times there."
J'IU~er," O'Neill said, nod- .
forward
to
play
364
yards,
·
six-foot
birdie putt at the fell apart. From the fringe, don't know where to g6
However, O'Neill said he
in the direCtion of his
and
the
record
will
reflect
par-3
14th,
leaving him Mickelson's putt stopped with this, because I wa"'
was treated fairly in Tucson.
of three years. "If peo- ..
that Glover hit a 6-iron off · four shots out of the lead about three feet ·a bove the to win this tournament
"Lute
deserved
the
opporhole;. To the horror of · ba,!ly."
i
did shy away from this
tunity to come back and be the. tee and a 9-jron to the ~ut ruJfning out of holes.
for some reason, I'm
reen
on
the
final
hole
of
N'ot
that
it
:inattered.
He
hit
. U.S. 0 pen VICtOry..
.
they did. I wasn't shy- the coach. He had earned
IS
. a .5-iron over the . 15th
that over a Hall of Fame
away from this job · at
No llll\tter. His name is green to make bogey, and
There's challenges in career," he said. "A lot of on the trophy, right under had to settle ,for a 69 that
people said a lot of things
l.v.•rv job ahd we're going after
.Tiger Woods, in the .same left him in a tie for sixth,
!left, I didn't say an~­ company as so many four shots out of the lead.
meet the challenges."
thing. I don't have any 111
Floyd has not addressed
greats. ·
.. "l strip~d i~. thi~ ~e~k,"
· allegations that he paid will or any bad feelings
"I hope I don't downc Woods .satd, I h1t. 11 JUSt
,000 cash in 2007 to an whatsoever, pi\Js 1 ended up · ·grade it or anything with hke I d1d at Memonal! anf
a better job."
of Mayo, who in O'Neill
1s 171-180 in 12 my name on there," Glover · unfortunately I d1dn t .
I'd~: one season at USC seasons as a college head quipped, ''It's an honor, and . make anything."
• mt · l l a - k . De•ler
.,
leaving early for the
coach, including stints at I'm JUSt excited and nap~y ·. Glover closed with the
highest score of a U.S ..
Marquette, Tennessee and as I. can be to be on here.'
740-992·2825 • 101 N. 2nd Ave, Mlddlef)ort, OH
""''"·
"Tim ~as not forced out,"
· Glov~r finished at 4- Open champion ·since
l31trrett said. "It was a sur· Northwestern.
·Along the way, he's
that he resigned.''
developed a reputation for
Aoyd has kept a low-pro· be$g fiery both on and off
since his resignation, the court. But he went on
llltiiOUJ!h 0' Neill said the ·the offensive, bringing the
Jonmer ·coach called him issue up first:
·
he .accepted the job
"Contrary · to popular
spoke positively of his demand, I'm not Darth
at USC. O'Neill said Vader. You would think I
didn't discuss the USC was slaying people every
Brosan·Warner
with Mayo, who plays time you turn around," he
·Insurance Strvlct Inc
....a
said.
the Grizzlies. ·
"Over the years, I've been
O'Neill returns to the
CaJI7.0.ttaMD or visit bropn·warner.webapn~ll.com ·
10 after serving as in situations where not all
&amp;nt:.•n·,m coach at Arizona in the players always like the
when Lute Olson took coach. Well, guess what?
lea:ve of absence. O'Neill The coaches don't like all
the Wildcats to a 19-15 the players · sometimes
the school's 24th either, especially when
NCAA tourna- you're .in rebuilding situaappearance,
the tions. l think our players
·longest active will enjoy playing for me."

In' One Week With Us
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•

Page Ba • 'nle Daily Sentinel

CINCINNATI (AP) - there is."
of
Kelly last season led the
University
;;::;~~~~a~ on· Monday said Bearcats to a Big East. title
coach Brian Kelly and· an Orange Bowl appear·
signed a contract exten- ance. After there were overadding a year at nearly tures Kelly might he a can·
I .5 million.
didate for other coaching
School officials said Kelly jobs. Kelly· a!ld Thoma&gt;
guaranteed S 1.475 million announced last December
stay through the 2013 sea- they were working on an
. The school said there extension.
also performance-based
"This a~reement allows
for Xelly, and me and my family to call
the new deal also raises Cincinnati our home. not
. just a place where we live,"
pay of his assistants.
"His impact has been . Kelly said.
mmediate not only as a. The 2008 Bearcats went
l:(Xtch. but also as a member 11-3, appearing in the
our community and a school's
first
Bowl
ambassador (or the Championship Series game,
foniv•"sitv" said Mike a 20-7 loss to Virginia Tech
Orange Bowl.
t•~:o ~,~il~r~i!B~:earcats • direc~ in In!hehis
first full season, .
signed a five-year Kelly led the Bearcats to a
to•~tra.ct wonh $6.3 million 10,.3 record, including a vicDecember 2007 follow- ·tory in the Papajohns.com
his first full season at Bowl. He has a 22-6 record
l=lncinnati. The new deal as Bearcats' coach .
be approved by the
He was hired from Central
L-l&gt;nnl'&lt; board of trustees.
Michigan in December 2006
've got to tell me to replace Mark Dantonio,
a better situation than who left Cincinnati after
P•nci:nnjtti," Kelly said. three seasons for Michigan
could mike a case thill State. Kelly took over the
are a feW schools out team for · tls game at the
rne!I'C, but no longer do you · ln.temational · Bowl .. in
· look at Cincinnati January of 2007, leading the
go, 'There'.s a better job Bearcats to a victory over
there.' I don't believe Westefll Michigan.

l

•

0

I

Tuesday, June 23, 2009·..

www.mydaiJysentinel.eom

US Open notebook: Mahan hit too good a shot
FARMINGDALE, N.Y.
(AP) - No golf tournament
ends without a number of
P.layers able to say "Wllat
1f?' over one hole or one
swing.
Hunler Mahan may have
the best reason to ask that
question after the U.S. Open.
Mahan's ball was sitting in
the fairway after his lee shot
on the par-4 16th at Bethpage
Black. He was 2 under par
for tournament, just one
stroke out of the lead.
But a great swing produced
a terrible result and effectively ended his chance at his
first major championship. .
"We had a good number. I
think it was like 172," Mahan
said. "Had an 8-iron downwind and just flushed ir."
If Mahan's ball had hit any
part of the green, he would
have been looking at a makable birdie pull, but the ball
hit the flag stick - and hit it
squarely.
"I hit that thing pretty hard

and it ricocheled off the
green," he said. "That happens.lt's aU S. ()pen. You're
going to gel stuff like that.
The green · is just fiiSt. I
thought I hit a pretty good 5wood runner up there. but the
green was pretty fast."
Instead of a chance at tying
for the lead, Mahan made a
bogey. Then he had another
on the par-3 17th when .his
birdie anempt caught a ridge
and left him a long par putt.
He finished tied for sixth at
even par, four strokes behind
champion Lucas Glover.
At least, Mahan is getting
closer.
This was the third straight
year he finished in the top 20
m the Open. He tied for I Oth
at the Masters in April.
BIG
PUTI':
Ricky
B'arnes' missed birdie pun on
the 18th hole wound up costing him $250,170. Make 11
and he would have finished
second alone at 277 and
would have won $810.000.

'Otribune- Sentinel -l\egister
CLASSIFIED

Instead, he finished in a ed as Open champion ifl
three-way for second with 1989, no defending champiPhil Mickelson and David on had fmished in the top 10
Duval and won $559,830.
until Tiger Woods this year.
GRANDPA KNEW: Dick
Woods was seeking his
Hendley introduced his fourth Open title, whic•
grandson Lucas Glover to would have tied him for tht
.golf at age 3. Six years later, record
with
Willie
he brought him to the late Anderson , Bobby Jones,
Dick Harmon to teach him Ben Hogan and Jack
the game. It all paid off on Nicklaus.
Monday.
His final-round 69 put hilll
"I'm floating on air," in a tie for sixth at even-par
Hendley said from Greer, 280. In his other defenses,
S.C.
he tied for 12th at Southe~f
He and his 29-year-old Hills in 2001 and tied f~
grandSon talked two week- 20th at Olymp1a F1elds 1n
ends ago .
, 2003. ·
. "I watched him chip and
When Woods won t~e
pull aitd thought he was in a Open· at Bethpage Black 1n
good fraine of mind," 2002, he was the only player
Hendley said of Glover's to break par for the toumaOpen performance. "I felt ment wtth a · 277 total.
good about it all week. I did- Woods had two· rounds ill
n't say anythln~ to anybody, the 60s that year, 67 in the
but I had a feehng he'd play first and 68 in _the second.
well the way he was hitting This year, he broke 70 three
the ball."
times with 69s in the second
TRACKING TIGER: and fourth rounds sandwichSince Curtis Strange repeat- ing a 68.

under 2.76.and earned $1.35 · Ernie Els had a 73 at thousands Of fans sur·
in
1994. rounding the green, the par
million, moving froin No. Oakmont
71 to 17th in the world.
although the only score p11tt didn't touch the cup.
The 29-year-old from · that mattered was his even"I just thought . that it.
from PageBl
South Carolina, who chews par 35 on the back nine was going to stop break·
tobacco
and
listens
to
and
that
crucial
birdie.
.
ing, and it broke a little
· lt was a · smooth S-iron,
Mickelson
wasn't
so
formore,"
Mickelson said.
like thousands he has hit on Sinatra, had not won since
tunate
with
the
putter,
typHe
came
up short on the
the driving range. It landed holing out a bunker shot on
streak.
. the final hole at Disney ical of his fortunes in a 17th. chipped eight fe..,.
He
was
designated six feet from the cup.
nearly four years ago.
major he can't seem to short and didn't hit that
Olson's permanent succes"The putt was · all you
But this was no fluke.
win.
par putt with enouglt
sor, but when the Hall of could ever ask for under
from PageBl
"I hit the shots today thill
Starting the final round speed. His last hope was
Farner returned that spring pressure," Glover said.
1had to hit in the Situation, six rounds. he shot into a to make birdie on the
he announced 0' Neill
His caddie, Don Cooper, and .that. was a little m\)re shareoftheleadwith .a .35- . 18th, but his 30-foot
The ongoing investiga- would n6 longer be part of helpecl rum with the read
·
I
and told him; ''There's no ·gratifying," Olover said. · · foot birdie putt 'ot! t~e effort slid by the hole.
along with the depar- the program.
.
first tiine the .!ough 12th hole; theri hit
Mickelson lingered at
of starters DeMar · "I went there to he an wapve'remissing.this." . .. It was
Open elided on
his ·approach, tq. 4 feet on Bethpage ari hour after he
~::~i~~:~; Taj Gibson .and assistant, and the next thing ·
would hiiVe went in a Monday w,ithout a playoff · the pa,r-5 13th for an eagle. finished to sign autoHackell for the NBA 1 knew J was the interim thtmble," Cooper said.
since 1983, courtesy of He walked to every green graphs, then headed home
several recruits asking head coach and 1 was the
Glover arnved at the
giving the fans a thumbs- to an uncertain future. He
'
of their commitments, successor coach, .then I was J7th tee in time to see that relentless rain.
have put off others
"h
'd
Duval had made bogey and
And for the first time in up, feeling the love from has said he probablj
ht gone, e sat .
dl
f..i31Tett repone Y SOUjl · · "!learned a lot during that . that Mickelson· earlier had five years, all the major the crowd, believing this won't go to the Britisb
·Open and isn't sure when
the job, includmg year. I think experiences dropped a shot there, too. 'rophtes belong to so~e­ might be his year.
t'ittsbuq:h's Jamie Dixon, . like that really to~Jghen you Suddenly, he .was two shots.. one other . than . T1ger . But after a pulling off he will return to golf.
"Maybe it's more in
ahead, and he made sure Woods.: · ·
·
· another unlikely shot - ·a
h
d
11
Lon Kruger and
Fonmt\r NBA coach Jeff Van up as a coac an rea Y · the U.S. Open didn't have a • .The defendirlg champion hyb!jd from the rough on perspective
for
me .
make you appreciate good
No.
15,
up
the
h'ill
to
.the
·because
...
I
feel
different
· reached under par for the
There were surprise ending.
"I wasn't her firsi choice, experiences.
The
18th
tee
was
moved
first time all week with a back of the_green- it all this time," he ·said. "I
some trying times there."
J'IU~er," O'Neill said, nod- .
forward
to
play
364
yards,
·
six-foot
birdie putt at the fell apart. From the fringe, don't know where to g6
However, O'Neill said he
in the direCtion of his
and
the
record
will
reflect
par-3
14th,
leaving him Mickelson's putt stopped with this, because I wa"'
was treated fairly in Tucson.
of three years. "If peo- ..
that Glover hit a 6-iron off · four shots out of the lead about three feet ·a bove the to win this tournament
"Lute
deserved
the
opporhole;. To the horror of · ba,!ly."
i
did shy away from this
tunity to come back and be the. tee and a 9-jron to the ~ut ruJfning out of holes.
for some reason, I'm
reen
on
the
final
hole
of
N'ot
that
it
:inattered.
He
hit
. U.S. 0 pen VICtOry..
.
they did. I wasn't shy- the coach. He had earned
IS
. a .5-iron over the . 15th
that over a Hall of Fame
away from this job · at
No llll\tter. His name is green to make bogey, and
There's challenges in career," he said. "A lot of on the trophy, right under had to settle ,for a 69 that
people said a lot of things
l.v.•rv job ahd we're going after
.Tiger Woods, in the .same left him in a tie for sixth,
!left, I didn't say an~­ company as so many four shots out of the lead.
meet the challenges."
thing. I don't have any 111
Floyd has not addressed
greats. ·
.. "l strip~d i~. thi~ ~e~k,"
· allegations that he paid will or any bad feelings
"I hope I don't downc Woods .satd, I h1t. 11 JUSt
,000 cash in 2007 to an whatsoever, pi\Js 1 ended up · ·grade it or anything with hke I d1d at Memonal! anf
a better job."
of Mayo, who in O'Neill
1s 171-180 in 12 my name on there," Glover · unfortunately I d1dn t .
I'd~: one season at USC seasons as a college head quipped, ''It's an honor, and . make anything."
• mt · l l a - k . De•ler
.,
leaving early for the
coach, including stints at I'm JUSt excited and nap~y ·. Glover closed with the
highest score of a U.S ..
Marquette, Tennessee and as I. can be to be on here.'
740-992·2825 • 101 N. 2nd Ave, Mlddlef)ort, OH
""''"·
"Tim ~as not forced out,"
· Glov~r finished at 4- Open champion ·since
l31trrett said. "It was a sur· Northwestern.
·Along the way, he's
that he resigned.''
developed a reputation for
Aoyd has kept a low-pro· be$g fiery both on and off
since his resignation, the court. But he went on
llltiiOUJ!h 0' Neill said the ·the offensive, bringing the
Jonmer ·coach called him issue up first:
·
he .accepted the job
"Contrary · to popular
spoke positively of his demand, I'm not Darth
at USC. O'Neill said Vader. You would think I
didn't discuss the USC was slaying people every
Brosan·Warner
with Mayo, who plays time you turn around," he
·Insurance Strvlct Inc
....a
said.
the Grizzlies. ·
"Over the years, I've been
O'Neill returns to the
CaJI7.0.ttaMD or visit bropn·warner.webapn~ll.com ·
10 after serving as in situations where not all
&amp;nt:.•n·,m coach at Arizona in the players always like the
when Lute Olson took coach. Well, guess what?
lea:ve of absence. O'Neill The coaches don't like all
the Wildcats to a 19-15 the players · sometimes
the school's 24th either, especially when
NCAA tourna- you're .in rebuilding situaappearance,
the tions. l think our players
·longest active will enjoy playing for me."

In' One Week With Us
·
ndclusilie~:faytri'---· REACH OVER 285,000 PROSPECTS
·. · · .· .

l

~

u.s:

-··- ,
Ohlo*'"r
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a

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·e...,..

l\egtster.

·Sentinel

Now you can hove borders and ;raphlcs ·
IY
addedtovourclasslftedacls · .{,;~
m
BOrders$3.00/perad
I! ·
Graphics SOC forsmaU ·
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11ua1

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. have liMn ·
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tha Gallipolis
D1lly Tribune
must be picked
within 30 daya.
Aity . picture•

thlt-not

TURNED DOWN ON
SOCIAL SECURriY S8t
No Fee Unless We Wlnl
1-81i8·582·3345.
SEP'TIC
PUMPING
Gatlla Co. OH end
Mason Co. WV. Rori
Evans
JackiOn,
OH

--

Buiy
Bet
Cleaning
Home&amp; &amp; Offices. E&gt;iperl·

ence, '

I

304:812~

'

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f

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·.Ingels Elect.-onics

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Grange

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KIT &amp; CARLYLE

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Hairston has taken over at
shortstop
with
Alex
Gonzalez on the disabled
f'roln Page Bl
' Jist because of bone chips in
his right elbow. Gonzalez
Hairston It. said. "It's underwent surgery Monday
the nature of this game. to remove the chips and is
· just have to keep scrap- expected to be out four to
an~ get healthy.''
·five weeks, the Reds said.

Meiga County, OH

(740) 446·2342 (740) 992-2156 (304) 675.. 1333

usc

:·It

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1!trtbune

Glover

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----

·------

~75·2208

' rererences.
or

., •••.AI

Hov.O. For Sale
kltnearlyiOOcomcaot.net

.,.--......._...,-.---...,

3 bod, 1 ba, 1 1/2 sfooy,
carport,
clu~.

extra lo1
applianceS

Tawnhau'!"~~~~~'!!:

In· Gracious Living 1 .and &lt;2 .; ..

In· Bedroom Apts. at VHiage •

eluded. 1St ' floor laundry Manor . and
Rlverafde: ·
room, caU 740-787·11.00
In Mlekllepon, from~

APta.

or 740·949·24$9
mess.

lel!ve $327
to
740·992·5064.
Housing Opportunity.

$592. :.
Equal :

3br. ranch on 1 acre, 5 ~~~"""!::::::"''"':::::'
minutes from Pt.Pieas· ImmaCulate
2BR
apt. :
. ant,
asking $129,000 walking dl8lance 10 UAG. ·•
304·675·2006. .
new carpet, freehly •:
4 Bad, 2 BathI Only ,. palntGd,
private deck, •
S25.oo'o.
for · nsilnge · appl.
$oi5Cimonth ••
m800!!~.fi20~,4;946;;:;••~Ail;;:19= ; .814-595·7773
or •
"'
740-645-5963
1'100

r. .. ,~. r

----

'1

n. ,. '

�•

I

Tuetday, June 23, 2009
ALLEYOOP

www.mydallysenthJel.com

The Daily Sentinel • Page 85
NEA Cro11word Puzzle

BRIDGE

.,_

50 Gentle

ACROSS

Phillip
Alder
•
YOUNG'S
Carpente-r )('rVIC{.:

•

BANKS
CONSTRUcriON

co.

rllooldenilal

A6
93
lo K 10 54

West

. Soffit,~.

C&lt;inunerdal •

.

' Free Estimates
(740) 991-5009
Custom Home Building
· Steel Frame Buildings
Ruilding.~cmodeling

General repair
www haPkN'dh.£0111

But

• 85
t K86542
• J 16

Electric. Plumbing.
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Remodeling, Room

. lo 'A 8 3

•
•

AQ132
10 1 3
t AQ
• Qtt

Hours
7:00 am • 8:00 pm

Dealer: Eut
Vulnerable: Both

h'IIIIWII

. S&amp;L
'li'ucking

Eul

Ul

Pus

All pus

IIIISS.I. . .

Service

Opening lead: • 8

142-0112

We Haul Gravel,

,.

Wool Nortb
4•

FRANK &amp; .EARNEST

NEW OWNERS
NEW MENU ·

When an honor can
be too tempting

.G~ASS~ANPS

Daily SpeciDJs
Sming Breakfast
Optn 7 days a we•k

tlont

24 Slll:ky ltUII
25 o.ttuh...
DOWN
20 Eat
45 Table
26Bitlt«volze
sarver
46 t..wn77 Plop lor
1 Ga on otego 21 Rlglrt, an a
....tinw
2 Rock'a llllp
aull&gt;ut
30 Rldo I WIYI
Fighters
22 Part of
49 Mall lor
3 ..._, lddr.
Howatt
Plato
.
32 Turfdoh
alllclll
4 Clllngt
23
poJbllc 51 Swimming
33 Ia on lht go
colort
24 Floc~
37 Mldtful
5 Perhct
~8 -ling
52 Bla nama •
38 Co. honplace
29 Bllko'a rank
In Weatern ,
choo
6 - Paulo
31 Walci'Niog
nonls
31Mitcholl
T Iceorg.
55 Up for
-.lion
flnor
34 Lona ligha
Pl'fmtnl
40 Oreha1l
8profa ~5 Htckl .
56 GM
pnxiiiCI
9 Mr.
36 Mora than
II aiO
Galdftngor
lllltly
57 T-.lriper
tO JoCkay'a
4t LIIYer
58 KLM rival ·
at burnt
need
42 Joltan WBI
47 Ptggyor· 14 Pradfcornont
one
Bronda
16 can apentr 44 Movie
48 lmpalltnco
t¥golo .
mcigul

Mile'

South

CUbtlllrl

Dump Truck

740·992-3220

esment

.j(QJH!
• J 10 7

&amp;oath

· Additions

·Limestone, Coal,
Compost, Top Soil
CaD Walt or Sandy

•s

~on

Poors. Windows.

Lacal Contractor
740-367-G$44
F,..btlmates
74o-367-G536

~ t:::"

•
•

Roofing, Siding, .

Pomeroy, Olllo

='to

Puzzta

't Dlttanlty
52 Zlg'a
5 PCuy
13
1
wtth a
holrolyle
12 Uft.dl.- ~ ....
t 3 nntt
· ~~~~~15 "'lytl"
5I Gen....
!lr"·l
10 Sht IIIII
17 Uiabl"'
hoblt
,_.,
61 Colla18 - tnd- 62 Dill brNd
19 $lol"""
63 ..... Ill ..
21 FiJI. uln
64 Commo-

Nootb
..,...,
.KJ1085

CORNER STONE
CONSTRUCTION

, Answ.r to Prevtout

:=""

Comedian Joey i\damo said. 'Oo net
wony about avoiding templltlon. As you

grow oldlrl win avoid you," Not a11he

t....,.:

bridge table. You will atways be laced
with
gameo, slams. pre-

empts. - · and so on. In V. deiil
Soulh;J:
' ·avoid? HeoneIs otin- loor temptations ~.

the heart e!WII. What ehould
declarer do?
t!orth's jump to lour spadOo was a slight
West

........ca..,
·

In Memory

t ·a&amp;

ovell&gt;ld, bUI accOplable,
•~===::....~:.!::....!::~ii;:...;..:,__..:!~~:J .. South
has ftva pottntlal lose,.:

BARNEY

AU FlrnJture

can

HE'S STILL
COMPLAININ'
.'BOUT HIS
. COLD !!

t o:tM:atta)'dOm

BUT IF 'fA ASI(
Al.l. IN HIS

IN HIS
HEAD OR
CHEST?

In Memory
r/Ooo

S•· , ~
._

Rusty '~Bones" Nitz
May 13, 1.965· June ZJrd, 1984

company's
package,performance
bonuses, professional

environment,
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Missed by: Mom- Sisters Debbie &amp; Vicki
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comprehensive benefits

If rears could build a slllirway
and menwry ll illne
I'd walk riglrl up w Heaven

Bu·
'l

lnfoCislon ~anagement
Corporation
242 Third Avenue

Gallipolis, Ohio
SALON
M.ANAGERISTYLIST
WANTED
PART-TIME
CALL JULIE 703 501

Or Calland Schedule
Your Interview:

4808

hftp11)oba.lntocl•lon.t:om

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ext. 2457

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304·593-6421

FIND A
JOB OR
ANEW
CAREER
IN THE
CLASSIFIEDS

Racine, Ohio
Ownera:

,.-W~~ Ct&gt;.l\1 ~1Wh ~T~T"'t .

740~247-2019

~TNOO~?

Cell: 74D-418-5047

email:
Jon Van Meter &amp;
'.
lrshadlrm@aol.com
:
Paul Rowe

Wlndowa
·Roollng
• Decka
.

By Blmla IJedt 0101
if Integrity and lofty Idealism I• the yard·
etlck to measure · thl WOf1h ·of your
ln\(()Jvementa In the year atHtad, you will
lneteate the prob8bllltilt lor aucx:eu In
elt of your -encteavort. Hlgtl llendlrdl
are the keyatonn to VIctory.
CANCER {June 21.July 22) - Oon't

• Pole Bulldlnga .
• Room Addition&amp;

OWner:
Ja-KeeH811
742·2332

SHRIMP
(140) 742-25.63
J..utt, nevtr rroun, bel45 Oft
' $10 per lb Cosh only
Pmt is rcquirtfJ in ad\lancl)

Shipments arrive every
other Frida

WE Dl6 STRAIGMT DOWN
~Oit FIVE FEET, AND
TI-IEN WE TUNNEL A
1-lUNDRED 'I'AROS OUT

H&amp;H.

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Seamless GU11ers
Rooflng, Siding, Gutters
Insured &amp; Bonded,
740-653-9657

AND UNDER TilE FENCE ..

AS FAR AS MANKIND .
IS CONCEJINED, DOES

EVOI.IS'mi!MTTEII
ANVMOfiH

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know

Today's ChJf: A 9qU8/I 8 .

"YX UT

MGF

K' T H R X .G E

UBGTV

UTG

YKTUZTHITZ

FB

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U T L T ' EXt X G E. "

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N B L f,

;PREVIOUS SOLUTION: "!be 1018 ol my lie are my granddaughlers. They •re
beleve me. Yeo can asl&lt; m1 w!e." • Oom Dalui!o . ·

1boaulilul. You doot..

.wz::S(C1\ll)\-4~~s·
,,

.

. 1WIIw4 toy CIAYit. POllAN

~ ~""' of th;.
•.lulir
mmbltd .. . ·boo..

I

more

than th•
perton
and
be the
boM.
Henext
or 1he
¥lbo I•
lheehould.
peDmakar
Will b8 the true leader.
·
9AGITIARIUS (Nov. 23-Dic. 21) - lt't
a1wayt hard to ~ on protectt you dll•
· liM, but - g oo 01 lhlt mlilht bo
tnt~. You're llke!V to letM a lot of
unflnlthed work In YQUr wake. T•"- on
only whf.t you oan handlit.
CAPRICORN (O.C. 22.Jan. 19) lllually, the,. it no on. better tnan
at being • goOd •warct ot r.IOUrcet or
mon•. yet tt'IQI . tint qUllltles aren't
Hkety to ~ open.tlng e1 thl8 tlrM. You
oould make some dl!l'l'lb tradee. ·
·
· ·AOUARil)S. (J.n. 20-Ftb~· 19) Oemendl might btc ma• at 1hll time that
kNp vou
operating .. lndepend81"\tly u you'd like. FrUitraflon WQn't
http; nor wlllatl'li;,lng on ... , .leah.
PISCES (Fab. 20.Miii'Ch 20) - Bewar•
. of Jnellnatlonl to ttilnk negattv.ly about
everything In wtlleh you get lnVDtved.
Contrary btlhavlor will bring aDout the
vary conditions yOu're trying_to avOid.

NI R N
Ttl PES
1

,. r · r

SCIWHETS ANSWERS 6119109
Harass ~ Qlulll - Rigor - Intake - TO OlliERS ·

Ata.mous mode!'once said, "Thi: beauty offragrai)ce • .
·is that spel!ks to your heart and hopefiJIIy TO
OTHERS.u . .
. .

ARLO ·&amp; JANIS

lnsured
Free Estimates

Trimming

•Pole Barns

,__,_ _ _._.;....,~----,

740-992-6971

Stanley Tree-

•Plumbing

GARFIELD

David Lewis

Windows and
Vinyl Siding
Specialists, LTD
(740) 742-2563

·~lectrlcol

rrom

Years Experience

Reptacement

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and Shingle Roofs
• Dec:ks • Additions

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by Lula Campos

CMbrly ~ner ~·are Cfllled !rom ~ by lamout ~ paat.-.:1 prl8ltiC.
·
EIKf1lt!lel In lhe Clpller ttandl klr llllOII'&gt;tr.

vou

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The Daily Sentinel

...SinO oituotlon.
. SCORPIO (Oct 24-Nov. 22) .- Try 1o
· wcrtc In harmony with Mlnen aaaocl· '

COW and BOY

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lrrlpoae yourself In al1uatlon• whare
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ConveJP~y, MMP otne11 iotllly out of
your pereonaf arratre u well. In .atrt.r
·ease, it c»ukl Clute nttedle .. tf(M.Ibl•.
LEO (July 23-Aug, 22) - AlthouOh you
may ixlnlldtr yo1J..... , oextteme1y lnde·pendent, yovr resistance to ~low the
dlctatea of olhere oould ·be Weak. Peer
preNure rtilght cause vou to -do eome. tl'llnQ )iOU don't went to·dO,
.
VIRGO . (Aug. 23-Sept.. . 22) · lnWolvernanta 1hat rwqulre tot.al .cOncentration aren't likely tO .be your cup of tea.
If vou . mutt engag• In work thai
. demands.thlll qualification, dO Whal .yoo
can to ltOJI your thoughtl trom wanderIng.
LIBRA (Sop!. 23-0ct. 23) - or ...,..,
you sliouJd always be. on your beat
behavior In social. "" lltuatlons, but a
·. gre$ter awareneU ts nt~Ct~uary at lhtl
ttme. Saying or doing aomethtng
thoughtlwety oould taiJSe an embllr·

Fresh Norib.CaroUna

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South musl not be lsmpted by these
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South l'lns. with hlo act, ru11a hla.. last
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dtlnmy's ramairlng d~mond. whoever
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Phillip ·Ala It .rumJnO 8 !lfldgo cruise
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WW.V.phillipaldoll&gt;rldge.com.

1' \c

•GI~~~gtt

two

hearts, one diamond ahd lwo club&amp;. One .
heart lolar
be.rulled.on tho board .
AlsO, given Eist's -lng bid, ~ looks
as ff the diiOIMllld llnesee will iNOI!c. So,
lhero ~ alomptalloo lo .win the finlllrlck.
draw trumps, and take thai ll,...e .
Hllfe, though, West wins wllh the king
.and·lliads his ...:and heatt. East lakee
that 1r1etc and axi1a wllh a diamond. Now
declarer prGbebly needo to flnd the club

&amp; Removal
I•Promot and Quality
Work

I*Ft""''""-''ble Rat.es

~~~:.:~~~A~vailable!
Call Gary Stanley @

740-591-8044

PSI CONSTRUCTION
Room Additions, Remodeling, Metal &amp;
Shingle Roofs, New Homes, Siding, Decks,
Bathroom Remodeling. Licensed &amp; Insured

.

'

•I

f
l

~ ift¥.11AV~ f&gt;•l!l.

ARIES (March 21-Aprl 19) - Bll •xtra
cautious about the 'l&gt;mpany you keep,
beoause, wlthoul reali;~ing !t, you tend tQ
m!fTOr the behawlor ol those around you.
Emulale otily w!nnera.
TAURUS (Apr11 20-May 20) - Using
shortcuta to h81p .:hleve yqur objecttves
could qulcldy !vm out \0 bo • touon In
MJHty. Ewn Hono ahould bo ollt&lt;:tlvo , It
len't lfkety to ·make up for all the other

-.

..

GEMINI (May 21-June 20)- There is no

indiclltion that a hunch might be better

than logic, so unle•s you ·don't care

about tlnlthlng fl111t, .tick to lollowll'lg

your hetld, not yoUr ctr..ma.

SOUPTONUTZ
YOU

!&gt;RESSEl&gt;
LiP IN "

MOOSE

COST LIM!:~

AS I

SA. I D,
YOU

C"ME

TO THE'
~IGHT

PI.AC.E ,

�•

I

Tuetday, June 23, 2009
ALLEYOOP

www.mydallysenthJel.com

The Daily Sentinel • Page 85
NEA Cro11word Puzzle

BRIDGE

.,_

50 Gentle

ACROSS

Phillip
Alder
•
YOUNG'S
Carpente-r )('rVIC{.:

•

BANKS
CONSTRUcriON

co.

rllooldenilal

A6
93
lo K 10 54

West

. Soffit,~.

C&lt;inunerdal •

.

' Free Estimates
(740) 991-5009
Custom Home Building
· Steel Frame Buildings
Ruilding.~cmodeling

General repair
www haPkN'dh.£0111

But

• 85
t K86542
• J 16

Electric. Plumbing.
'Drywall, .
Remodeling, Room

. lo 'A 8 3

•
•

AQ132
10 1 3
t AQ
• Qtt

Hours
7:00 am • 8:00 pm

Dealer: Eut
Vulnerable: Both

h'IIIIWII

. S&amp;L
'li'ucking

Eul

Ul

Pus

All pus

IIIISS.I. . .

Service

Opening lead: • 8

142-0112

We Haul Gravel,

,.

Wool Nortb
4•

FRANK &amp; .EARNEST

NEW OWNERS
NEW MENU ·

When an honor can
be too tempting

.G~ASS~ANPS

Daily SpeciDJs
Sming Breakfast
Optn 7 days a we•k

tlont

24 Slll:ky ltUII
25 o.ttuh...
DOWN
20 Eat
45 Table
26Bitlt«volze
sarver
46 t..wn77 Plop lor
1 Ga on otego 21 Rlglrt, an a
....tinw
2 Rock'a llllp
aull&gt;ut
30 Rldo I WIYI
Fighters
22 Part of
49 Mall lor
3 ..._, lddr.
Howatt
Plato
.
32 Turfdoh
alllclll
4 Clllngt
23
poJbllc 51 Swimming
33 Ia on lht go
colort
24 Floc~
37 Mldtful
5 Perhct
~8 -ling
52 Bla nama •
38 Co. honplace
29 Bllko'a rank
In Weatern ,
choo
6 - Paulo
31 Walci'Niog
nonls
31Mitcholl
T Iceorg.
55 Up for
-.lion
flnor
34 Lona ligha
Pl'fmtnl
40 Oreha1l
8profa ~5 Htckl .
56 GM
pnxiiiCI
9 Mr.
36 Mora than
II aiO
Galdftngor
lllltly
57 T-.lriper
tO JoCkay'a
4t LIIYer
58 KLM rival ·
at burnt
need
42 Joltan WBI
47 Ptggyor· 14 Pradfcornont
one
Bronda
16 can apentr 44 Movie
48 lmpalltnco
t¥golo .
mcigul

Mile'

South

CUbtlllrl

Dump Truck

740·992-3220

esment

.j(QJH!
• J 10 7

&amp;oath

· Additions

·Limestone, Coal,
Compost, Top Soil
CaD Walt or Sandy

•s

~on

Poors. Windows.

Lacal Contractor
740-367-G$44
F,..btlmates
74o-367-G536

~ t:::"

•
•

Roofing, Siding, .

Pomeroy, Olllo

='to

Puzzta

't Dlttanlty
52 Zlg'a
5 PCuy
13
1
wtth a
holrolyle
12 Uft.dl.- ~ ....
t 3 nntt
· ~~~~~15 "'lytl"
5I Gen....
!lr"·l
10 Sht IIIII
17 Uiabl"'
hoblt
,_.,
61 Colla18 - tnd- 62 Dill brNd
19 $lol"""
63 ..... Ill ..
21 FiJI. uln
64 Commo-

Nootb
..,...,
.KJ1085

CORNER STONE
CONSTRUCTION

, Answ.r to Prevtout

:=""

Comedian Joey i\damo said. 'Oo net
wony about avoiding templltlon. As you

grow oldlrl win avoid you," Not a11he

t....,.:

bridge table. You will atways be laced
with
gameo, slams. pre-

empts. - · and so on. In V. deiil
Soulh;J:
' ·avoid? HeoneIs otin- loor temptations ~.

the heart e!WII. What ehould
declarer do?
t!orth's jump to lour spadOo was a slight
West

........ca..,
·

In Memory

t ·a&amp;

ovell&gt;ld, bUI accOplable,
•~===::....~:.!::....!::~ii;:...;..:,__..:!~~:J .. South
has ftva pottntlal lose,.:

BARNEY

AU FlrnJture

can

HE'S STILL
COMPLAININ'
.'BOUT HIS
. COLD !!

t o:tM:atta)'dOm

BUT IF 'fA ASI(
Al.l. IN HIS

IN HIS
HEAD OR
CHEST?

In Memory
r/Ooo

S•· , ~
._

Rusty '~Bones" Nitz
May 13, 1.965· June ZJrd, 1984

company's
package,performance
bonuses, professional

environment,
advancement

wo~lng

oppol1unilleS and much
more!
~top

by and Complete

Your Application:

and bring you home agilin.
Missed by: Mom- Sisters Debbie &amp; Vicki
Brolhers· Brilln· Rick &amp;Dminie

~r

jack. And there is a

I"

Taka advantage of our
comprehensive benefits

If rears could build a slllirway
and menwry ll illne
I'd walk riglrl up w Heaven

Bu·
'l

lnfoCislon ~anagement
Corporation
242 Third Avenue

Gallipolis, Ohio
SALON
M.ANAGERISTYLIST
WANTED
PART-TIME
CALL JULIE 703 501

Or Calland Schedule
Your Interview:

4808

hftp11)oba.lntocl•lon.t:om

HI881Mt-PAYU
ext. 2457

All types Masonry, brick,
block, stone, concrete.
Free

Estimate,

304·593-6421

FIND A
JOB OR
ANEW
CAREER
IN THE
CLASSIFIEDS

Racine, Ohio
Ownera:

,.-W~~ Ct&gt;.l\1 ~1Wh ~T~T"'t .

740~247-2019

~TNOO~?

Cell: 74D-418-5047

email:
Jon Van Meter &amp;
'.
lrshadlrm@aol.com
:
Paul Rowe

Wlndowa
·Roollng
• Decka
.

By Blmla IJedt 0101
if Integrity and lofty Idealism I• the yard·
etlck to measure · thl WOf1h ·of your
ln\(()Jvementa In the year atHtad, you will
lneteate the prob8bllltilt lor aucx:eu In
elt of your -encteavort. Hlgtl llendlrdl
are the keyatonn to VIctory.
CANCER {June 21.July 22) - Oon't

• Pole Bulldlnga .
• Room Addition&amp;

OWner:
Ja-KeeH811
742·2332

SHRIMP
(140) 742-25.63
J..utt, nevtr rroun, bel45 Oft
' $10 per lb Cosh only
Pmt is rcquirtfJ in ad\lancl)

Shipments arrive every
other Frida

WE Dl6 STRAIGMT DOWN
~Oit FIVE FEET, AND
TI-IEN WE TUNNEL A
1-lUNDRED 'I'AROS OUT

H&amp;H.

Guttering
Seamless GU11ers
Rooflng, Siding, Gutters
Insured &amp; Bonded,
740-653-9657

AND UNDER TilE FENCE ..

AS FAR AS MANKIND .
IS CONCEJINED, DOES

EVOI.IS'mi!MTTEII
ANVMOfiH

Save time and money. Go to www.rriydailysentinet.com
and click on Classifieds an~ follow the user-friendly steps
to place yo'ur ad.
•New Homes ·
• GarageS
•.Complete ·
Remodeling

740-812·1&amp;n'
Stop &amp;Compare

I
I'

r

-::~~::=~~tl

NOWI\D~VS, IT SEEMS

WE DON't 1\DAPT. WE
. ~ OU~ ENVIriQNMEHT
1\DAPT TO US.~ WITH
MODEJIN MEDICINE AS
AS IT IS,.IfS LIKE

know

Today's ChJf: A 9qU8/I 8 .

"YX UT

MGF

K' T H R X .G E

UBGTV

UTG

YKTUZTHITZ

FB

XZ

U T L T ' EXt X G E. "

ZRTGY

UB LT NB L

NML

•

XG

ATYYTL

K T G LV

YKMG

N B L f,

;PREVIOUS SOLUTION: "!be 1018 ol my lie are my granddaughlers. They •re
beleve me. Yeo can asl&lt; m1 w!e." • Oom Dalui!o . ·

1boaulilul. You doot..

.wz::S(C1\ll)\-4~~s·
,,

.

. 1WIIw4 toy CIAYit. POllAN

~ ~""' of th;.
•.lulir
mmbltd .. . ·boo..

I

more

than th•
perton
and
be the
boM.
Henext
or 1he
¥lbo I•
lheehould.
peDmakar
Will b8 the true leader.
·
9AGITIARIUS (Nov. 23-Dic. 21) - lt't
a1wayt hard to ~ on protectt you dll•
· liM, but - g oo 01 lhlt mlilht bo
tnt~. You're llke!V to letM a lot of
unflnlthed work In YQUr wake. T•"- on
only whf.t you oan handlit.
CAPRICORN (O.C. 22.Jan. 19) lllually, the,. it no on. better tnan
at being • goOd •warct ot r.IOUrcet or
mon•. yet tt'IQI . tint qUllltles aren't
Hkety to ~ open.tlng e1 thl8 tlrM. You
oould make some dl!l'l'lb tradee. ·
·
· ·AOUARil)S. (J.n. 20-Ftb~· 19) Oemendl might btc ma• at 1hll time that
kNp vou
operating .. lndepend81"\tly u you'd like. FrUitraflon WQn't
http; nor wlllatl'li;,lng on ... , .leah.
PISCES (Fab. 20.Miii'Ch 20) - Bewar•
. of Jnellnatlonl to ttilnk negattv.ly about
everything In wtlleh you get lnVDtved.
Contrary btlhavlor will bring aDout the
vary conditions yOu're trying_to avOid.

NI R N
Ttl PES
1

,. r · r

SCIWHETS ANSWERS 6119109
Harass ~ Qlulll - Rigor - Intake - TO OlliERS ·

Ata.mous mode!'once said, "Thi: beauty offragrai)ce • .
·is that spel!ks to your heart and hopefiJIIy TO
OTHERS.u . .
. .

ARLO ·&amp; JANIS

lnsured
Free Estimates

Trimming

•Pole Barns

,__,_ _ _._.;....,~----,

740-992-6971

Stanley Tree-

•Plumbing

GARFIELD

David Lewis

Windows and
Vinyl Siding
Specialists, LTD
(740) 742-2563

·~lectrlcol

rrom

Years Experience

Reptacement

Windows • Metal
and Shingle Roofs
• Dec:ks • Additions

www.mydailysentinel.com

at"; don't claim that you

by Lula Campos

CMbrly ~ner ~·are Cfllled !rom ~ by lamout ~ paat.-.:1 prl8ltiC.
·
EIKf1lt!lel In lhe Clpller ttandl klr llllOII'&gt;tr.

vou

• Siding • VInyl

The Daily Sentinel

...SinO oituotlon.
. SCORPIO (Oct 24-Nov. 22) .- Try 1o
· wcrtc In harmony with Mlnen aaaocl· '

COW and BOY

NJ~o-it~yourself classified ads
t/ Do-it-yourself convenience
t/ Easy to use
t/ Upload photos and graphics
t/ Print and Online options
t/ 7 great packages to choose from

lrrlpoae yourself In al1uatlon• whare
you're not Invited to partictptte.
ConveJP~y, MMP otne11 iotllly out of
your pereonaf arratre u well. In .atrt.r
·ease, it c»ukl Clute nttedle .. tf(M.Ibl•.
LEO (July 23-Aug, 22) - AlthouOh you
may ixlnlldtr yo1J..... , oextteme1y lnde·pendent, yovr resistance to ~low the
dlctatea of olhere oould ·be Weak. Peer
preNure rtilght cause vou to -do eome. tl'llnQ )iOU don't went to·dO,
.
VIRGO . (Aug. 23-Sept.. . 22) · lnWolvernanta 1hat rwqulre tot.al .cOncentration aren't likely tO .be your cup of tea.
If vou . mutt engag• In work thai
. demands.thlll qualification, dO Whal .yoo
can to ltOJI your thoughtl trom wanderIng.
LIBRA (Sop!. 23-0ct. 23) - or ...,..,
you sliouJd always be. on your beat
behavior In social. "" lltuatlons, but a
·. gre$ter awareneU ts nt~Ct~uary at lhtl
ttme. Saying or doing aomethtng
thoughtlwety oould taiJSe an embllr·

Fresh Norib.CaroUna

CELEBRITY CIPHER

low to fonn lour ·atntplt Mmlt

-'Bill L9:
Wed-~, June 24. 2000

Construction

[f Place an online ad

.Graph

•
• VInyl Siding
• Reptaeement

"" Plaoe a newspaper ad

to

Astro-·

J&amp;L

Clalllfleda

ttmplalion

assume East has that card 10 gtt him up
to 12 polnls. Unlucky again.
South musl not be lsmpted by these
finesses. After drawing numpe, he
should lead boolc a htart. Eaot ttkas tht
lrlck .and shills to lhe dloffi9nd jack, but
South l'lns. with hlo act, ru11a hla.. last
hurt on lhe board, and calls fO&lt; '.
dtlnmy's ramairlng d~mond. whoever
wlna tht Irick 1s· tndplayod 1o open up
clubs or 16 concede 8 nill..nd-slulf. No
guessworl&lt; II required.
Phillip ·Ala It .rumJnO 8 !lfldgo cruise
from Oclobar 2' to 2 OUI of ·
and bacl&lt; to ~ort l..audeidale thai will go
around the Carllll&gt;e8n and lnlo lhe
Pan8ma CanaL Details are at
WW.V.phillipaldoll&gt;rldge.com.

1' \c

•GI~~~gtt

two

hearts, one diamond ahd lwo club&amp;. One .
heart lolar
be.rulled.on tho board .
AlsO, given Eist's -lng bid, ~ looks
as ff the diiOIMllld llnesee will iNOI!c. So,
lhero ~ alomptalloo lo .win the finlllrlck.
draw trumps, and take thai ll,...e .
Hllfe, though, West wins wllh the king
.and·lliads his ...:and heatt. East lakee
that 1r1etc and axi1a wllh a diamond. Now
declarer prGbebly needo to flnd the club

&amp; Removal
I•Promot and Quality
Work

I*Ft""''""-''ble Rat.es

~~~:.:~~~A~vailable!
Call Gary Stanley @

740-591-8044

PSI CONSTRUCTION
Room Additions, Remodeling, Metal &amp;
Shingle Roofs, New Homes, Siding, Decks,
Bathroom Remodeling. Licensed &amp; Insured

.

'

•I

f
l

~ ift¥.11AV~ f&gt;•l!l.

ARIES (March 21-Aprl 19) - Bll •xtra
cautious about the 'l&gt;mpany you keep,
beoause, wlthoul reali;~ing !t, you tend tQ
m!fTOr the behawlor ol those around you.
Emulale otily w!nnera.
TAURUS (Apr11 20-May 20) - Using
shortcuta to h81p .:hleve yqur objecttves
could qulcldy !vm out \0 bo • touon In
MJHty. Ewn Hono ahould bo ollt&lt;:tlvo , It
len't lfkety to ·make up for all the other

-.

..

GEMINI (May 21-June 20)- There is no

indiclltion that a hunch might be better

than logic, so unle•s you ·don't care

about tlnlthlng fl111t, .tick to lollowll'lg

your hetld, not yoUr ctr..ma.

SOUPTONUTZ
YOU

!&gt;RESSEl&gt;
LiP IN "

MOOSE

COST LIM!:~

AS I

SA. I D,
YOU

C"ME

TO THE'
~IGHT

PI.AC.E ,

�Pace B6 •

The Daily Sentinel

www.mydailyseotinel.com

The Scoreboard
MLB

4-4), 7;07

STANDINGS

""'adolphio

~:..:-

~-Noiohtr,..,

WL

36 31

PctGB
.537 -

35

.515 1.5

33

~~:~n
47
.299 t6

20

c.ntral Olvlaton

Stlouis

Milwaukee

Chkmgo

Cincinnati
Houston
Pittsburgh

W..t

WL
39 32
37 32
34 32
34 34
32 35

PctGB
.549 536 1
.515 2 5
.500 3 5
.478' 5

31

.449 7

38

White Sox (Danks 5-5), 8:11p.m.
Texas (Harrison 4-4) a1 Arizona
(Scherzer 4-4), 9:40p.m.
Colorado (Jimenez 6-6) at L.A. Ar1jlels

(E.Santana 1·3). 10:05 p.m.
San Francisco (Lincecum· 6~2) at
Qak!and (Manaro 2·1). 10;05 p.m. ·
San Ofego (Gaudin 2·6) at Seattle
(Olson 2·1), 10,10 p.m.

Olvlsk)r,

W

L

PctGB

46 24

657 -

37

.544 ·a

a1

36 33

.522 9.5

30

38

.441 15

29 41

.414 17

p.m.

Phll-phla !Mover 4oll) at Tampa Bay
(Pru 1·1), 7:08p.m.
BalTimore (Uehara 2·4) at Florida
(A.M1iler 2·3), 7:10 p.nt
N.Y. Yankees (Wang 0-5) at Arlanta
(Han110112-()), 7:10p.m.
Kin,.. City (Gre10ka 8-3) a1 Hooaton
(R.Ortlz 3-2), 8 05 p.m.
Minnesota (Linano 2-8) at Milwaukee
(Suppan 5-4), 8:05p.m.
LA. Dodgers (!Wroda 1-3) a1 Chicago

NATIONAL LEAGUE
EutDMaion

Fehr

TRANSACTIONS

'

BASEBAU

MAJOR

LE4GUE

BASEBAll-

Su_spencted Stockton (Cal) OF Larry
Cobb (Oakland) for 50 gemes after test·
lng positive 1or • pertonnance-enhaneing
drug.

'lllooday'o Gomes
Boston (Penny 6-2) at Washington
!Lannan 4-5), 7:05 p.m.
Chk:ago Cubs (Zambfano 4-2) at Detroit

A-.:.n,_..

(E..- 8-4). 7'05.p.m.

BOSTON REO SOX-Agreed to terms
With AHP Ale'!: Wilson, OF Seth
SchwinCfenhammer, RHP Jeremiah
Bayer. SS Drew · Dominguez. C Sean

C-I&amp;Od (D.HuH 2·2t at Pittsburgh
(Snell 2,71, r,os p.m.
·
G:inctnnati (Owings 4-7) atTorqnlo (Tallet

KUieen, RHP

4-4), 7:07p.m.

Chez

Angeloni, OF

W~lie

P.hiledelphia (Moyer 4-6) at Tampa Say Holmes, LHP Michael Sugary, AHP Tom
(Price 1·1), 7:08p.m
·
Ebert, RHP Jordan Flasher, RHP Chris
Baltimore (Uehara 2-4} at Florida Court, RHP Ryle RUtter, 28 Jordan S&amp;Hio
(A.I.1ilief 2·3), 7,10 p.m.
and 18 Drew Hedman.
'N:-~ ~nkees (Wang o-s) at Atlanta DETF!OIT TiGER5-Aaalgned C Dane
S&amp;rdlnha outright1o Toledo (IL).
! - 2oO), 7,10 p.m.
·
St. louis (Pineiro s-8) at N.Y. Mets
NEW YORK METS-Piaced OF Carlos
(U.Hornanclez 5-1), 7'1Gp.m.
t(anAU C~ tGreinke 8--3) at Houston Beltran on the 15-day DL Recalled OF
(R.Ortiz 3-2), 8:05p.m.
Fernando Martinez from BuffalO (IL).
Minnesota (lirlario 2-8) at Mitwaukee Purchased the contmcts of RHP Elmer
(liuppan 5-4). 8:05p.m
Des$ens and LHP Pat ·Misch frOm
LA. Ooc:Ners (Kuroda 1·3) at Chicago Buffalo. Optioned LHP Ken Takahashi to
Buffalo. Designated INF W~son Vaktez ·
White SOx (Danks 5-S), 8: 11 p.m.
)'ex•• (Harrison 4-4) at Arizona for assignment
PITTSBURGH
PIRATEs-Assigned
~~r 4,4), g,•o p.m.
()o1or$do (JI!nenoz 6-6) a1 LA Angels ~Hf Brad Llrcotn from Altoona (Ell to
Indianapolis (IL). 36 Padro Alvarez, RHP
IO'Sullvan H ), mo5 p.m.
San Francisco (Lincecum 6·2) at Dustfrl Molleken, ·RHP Michael Dubee
and · OF/1 B Miles Durham from
~and (Malzaro 2-1), 10:05 p.m.
I
Diego (Gaudin 2-6) at Seante Lyncht&gt;urg (Carolina) to Ahoona and INF
Chase d' Arnaud from West Virginia
(Olson 2·1), 10,10 p.m.

_,_..
....

san

(SAL)

to

Lyi&gt;chburg. Agre0(1 1o· terms

with RHP Vietor Black, 1B Aaron Baker,
AHP PhfUip Irwin and RHP Ed FaHon.

AMERICAN LEAGUE
.E elt Plvltlon
PctGB
.609 55t 4
.535 5
.52t 6

WL

J5oston

42 27

.New York

38

Toronto

aa
37

'l'ampa Bay
Baltimore

31

33
34

32 37

.464 10

Central Olviaton
WL

PctGB

36 ~t
35 36
Chicago
.33 36
Kansas City
29· 39
· Cleveland
29 42
West DIVIsion

Detroit
Minnesota

Texas
leSs Angeles
Seattle
Oakland

5St -

executive Dennis Lauscha to executive
vice president and chief financial officer.

.

Home sales stabilizing;·
·weak recovery seen, A2

Consumer How-To Guide
Inside.Today's Sentinel
.,

a

~

Prin.l edon 100%
Recycled Newsprint ~.,

Middleport
• Pomeroy, Ohio
·.
.
.

SPORTS
• Bucks to sand
Jefferson to Spurs.

•'.

BY BETti SE;RGEN;r
. .
AMPOS' air and m\tional
1lSERGENTOt.1YDAILVSENTINELCOI.4 · . pollutant discharge elimination system permits remain
LETART ' F:ALLS
under appeal by various
Yesterday the United States opponents.
Ariny Corps of Engineers . "The AMPGS project
approved a 404 permit for continues to move forthe American Municipal ward," AMP-Ohio Sr. Vice
Power-Ohio Generaung President of Member
Station proposed for Letart Services ·and External
Falls - the last major per- Affairs folene Thompson
mit for the 1,000 1negawatt said. "This advanced coal
coal-fired power plant.
generation project has

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Free of c""rge
·

received . strong .support
from local and state officials
and has been recognized by
the State of Ohio for its
state-of-the-art emissions
control technology. While
hurdles remain. the issuance
of this final critical path
permit is another important
step forward."
Section 404 nf the Federal
Clean Water Act regulates
the discharge of dredged,

excavated, or fill material in
wetlands, streams, rivers.
and other U.S. waters. The
US Army Corps of
Engineers is the federal
agency authorized· to issue
-section 404 Pelillits for certain activities conducted in
wetlands or other ·US
waters.
American
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Power-Ohio
applied for the permit in
May 2007. The permit

CINCINNATI-Signed football coach

-.a""''"'"
Street,
Pomeroy, ON

.408

Brian Kelly to a five-year contract,

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Boston fPenny 6-2) at Washington
(Lannan 4-5), N5 p.m.
Chicago Cubs {Zambrano 4·2) at Detroit
(E.JackSon 6-4J, 7:05p.m .
'Cleveland (D.Huff 2-2} at Pittsburgh

{Sneli2·7), 7:05p.m.

tinc.'lnnatl (Owings 4-7) at Toronto (Tallet

. ·..

DAVIDSON-Named Josh Lustig wide

Bv BRIJt.N J. REED
BREEDOMVOAILVSENTINEL.COM

. ·, .,

OBITUARIES

receivers co'ach.
MAROUETIE-Named Bart Lundy
direCtor of basketball .operations.
Promoted tJirectof ot basketball cpera·
lions Scott Monarch to assistant coach.

Page AS

MIAMI-Named Mike Summey director

of men's basketball operations and Bret1
Burman graduate manager for men's
basketball.
TULSA- Agreed to terms with men's
basketball coach Doug Wojcik on a six-

• Lewis 'Jake' Rupe, 77 ·

Pulocle G11n Nell
2 3/8" • 5000 CO!Int
3 114" • 2000 CO!Int

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year contract.

WASHINGTON-Fired baseball

could not move forward
until a 40 I water quality
certification was issued by
the Ohio Environmental
Protection Agency, which
was received in final form
in January of this year.
Rep. Debbie Phillips (D"
Athens) was the first to con:
tact The Daily Sentinel ·
about the issuance; of the
Please see AMP, AS

·williams ·
psychia.tric:
evaluation·
completed.

·..&lt;

COLLEGE

.478 5
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34

Foo1boll I.Oogue
ATLANTA FALCON5-Waived WR
Khalil Jonea. Signed LB Spencer Adkins.
MINNESOTA VIKINGS-Signed S
Jamarca Sanford.
•
NEW ORLEANS SAINTS-Promoted

wanted to give Weiner lead
time.
"After a while, it wears
you down," Fehr said. "I
think it will be good for
everybody."
Weiner has been with
the players ' asso,iation
since September 1988 and
has been its gene.ral counsel si nee February 2004.
The No. 2 official is Gene
Orza, the 'hief operating
officer.
Orza praised Weiner for
"enormous intelligence
and incredible energy."
"I'm sure when Michael
becomes el(ecutive director. and he should, we'll
sit down and chat about
the future, bearing in mind
of course that I'm even
older than Don is," said
Orza, who has been wiih
the union since 1984 and
turns 63 in July.
A clerk to a federal
judge who became the top
lawyer to Miller in August
1977, Fehr took over as
acting executive .director
on Dec. 8, 19&amp;3 . That was ·
2 .l/2 weeks after players
fired Kenneth Moffett, the
former mediator who had
succeeded Miller following a 50-day strike in.
1981.
"I never thought I was in ·
Marvin 's shadow. I did
think that I had an extraordinary example to look up
and try and follow," Fehr
said.
Fehr led players through

of 104 names of players · fm the Supreme Court.
testing positive from the
" It was very satisfying
2003 anonymous drug- at the end to say that the
testing survey. Federal players g&lt;it through it,
prosecutors seized the list they got through it one
the following year before piece and regardless of
it could be destroyed, and what it took to get there;
the union sued for its they · got a very good
return. litigation that i.s agreement," said Fehrj
p'nding before the 9th who ranked the agreement
U.S. Circuit Court of that followed as his proudAppeals.
est achievement. ,
:
"It is regreuable that the
There has been laboi
names have been out peace siuce then. with tht:
there.'" Weiner said . "It is
current collective bargainregrettable that the g&lt;ivernment
showed
no ing agfeement running
respect for the collective through the 20 II season;
b;ugaining agreement and, and Fehr developed
according to several businesslike if not warm
judges, the Constitution." relationship with commisFehr presided over a sioner Bud Selig.
" Don has represented
twO-day strike in 1985 followed by a 32-day lockout his constituency with pasin 1990 and a 7 1/2-month sion, loyalty and great
strike in 1994-95 that diligence ," Selig said in a
wiped out' the World statement. "Although we
Series for the first time in have had 011r differences,!
90 ye&amp;rs. That ' stoppage have ahvays res.pected hi'$
...
eQded only when the role."
Fehr said .he hopes bar~
National Labor Relations
Board, at the union 's · gaining will remaining
behest,
obtained
an peaceful, but he's confiinjunction to restore work dent . the union would
rules from U.S. District strike if necessary.
Judge Sonia Soto!Uayor,
" Rlayers will do it ," he
nominated last month by said. "I have very liule
President Barack .Obama · doubt about that."

.493 4

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FOOTBAU

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a two-day strike in 1985,
then became executive
director on a full-time
basis
the
following
January. His early years
were defined by collusion.
The union successfully
charged management with
conspiring against free .
agents following the 1985,
1986 and 1987 seasons in
violation of the labor contract and settled the cases
for $280 million.
"He.'s done so many
good things for the game.
even more so for the players,". Mets reliever and
union represel)tative J.J .
Putz said. "But you know,
he said enough was
enough, and that he was
tired. He felt that it was
best for the union thar he
step down. and put a new
face on it, and just another
outlook. He feels that .
Michael 's definitely qualified. So that's what we .
have to look forward to i11
the next nine months." '
Baseball 's · average
salary was $289,000 when
he took over 26 years ago,
and it rose to $2.9 million
by last year. Although
players fended off management's
repeated
attempts to obtain a salary
cap, he has been criticized
by some for not agreeing
to drug testing until 2002.
''If we , I, had known or
understood what the circumstances were a little
better, then perhaps we
would have moved sooner," Fehr said.
Weiner, like Fehr, was
critical of purported- leaks
of Alex Rodriguez and
Sammy Sosa from the list

Tuesday, June 23, 2009

coach

Ken Knutson.

INSIDE
• Obama takes on
insurers 6ver gov't plan.
See Page~ .· . · .

• Surgeon receives

SERIES 1000 :

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another degree.
See Page A3
• O'Bieness offers
health screenings.
SeePageA3
~ Wahama High
School holds reunion.
See Page AS
• Oil industry gets tax
break in Ohio budget '
· · plan. See Page AS
· • For the Record.
See Page.AS
• .Local Briefs.
See Page AS .·
• Iraq to mark US
pullback from
cities with holiday.See Page A6

..

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INDEX
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Annie's Mailbox

FAMILY OWNED SINCE 1996'

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

f•l\ Val~d Orl

~rd'•lstl bl 'i9~o~

mart mldt by 71lV09 ~ ~U.utt)OI.'I Po.....,. Crtdil ~ifcl. II promoi~ IH ol SZ9:1St11/S12Sw.ill bt ;j(l&lt;jld to lhll!"'d' Ui ~&amp;lii'ICI! tor .-nO\il\~ tir.~r~ce.d JTHI~I lh•n \mlt14%/tol~ rt'f)tc~Vtl). tm DI'OIT'(I wct\ue tir'(lucl":r, ~:romoi•M tw .·o ,..,c..,:~r poyn1;,nt, rtquir1 ct
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. A3

Calendars

A3

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82-4

Comi~s

Bs·

Editorials ·

A4

Obituaries

As

'12 t.IONTHS HO PJI.YiiiEN'"S ' Np l!f'TiRE,51' If M!D WfTfiN 12 wa,ITHI

1'101'1·prM'IO purd'IIXI

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.

co~ed~

:. J&gt;oitrayil\g Rob l;lrewsteriS:Nathan .pati¢nis and the ensuing' &lt;10tics as ihe
.Becker : with _R&lt;rger Gilmore a,nd · cover-up unfolds. .
. .. ·· ·. ,
·Celia'McCoy .in the role of his p~· . ·~These autho~ h~~;ve wri~ten s~me
ents ~ho bav~ ~n dec~!'V~ by lhetr zany fl!"~es ; ~ut t~ts one m.ay Just
~on. mto OO.hevtng he. 18 . a . doctor. be the1r zame~t. sa!d Gtlmore.
What ihey don't·know ts lhll~ he has Other RCP actors lakin~ part are
•used all ihe money they pro.Vtded for Gary Walker, Andrew . Btss..eU; and
medical school to live on as he has Abby Harris.
.·· . . . . . .
.pursued his fledgling writingcat'e&lt;lr. . Light refresb111ents will be Berved
. · Rob's d11y pfreckonin~ comes when at intermission.
·
hi~ parents ~ve for a v1sit~ in, desper'Tic.kets are ~8 :md can be _pur- .
. atton)ill enlurts the help of hiS lleCre- chased . at Dans 10 Pomeroy and
~ jioru,.yed, ~j, ~errl V~eeth, and . ?ed!!ie~ Bank _in Middleport. · for
his I'QOmmateJrmmy, playe_d ):&gt;y K
.. ylim .mttre ·mf?r,matiO!l call (74Q) 992King, to roUnd up actot friends 'to .~ 6759 or vtstt www.rep(ayers:net. •

·

·

'Absoz·Ute ly. devastat.zng.'

1.40Q-Ib. lowins and

payload capacily 11
• Robusl3" ladder-style steel frame

1830 OLD LOGAN RD SE
RT.33 JUST SOUTH OF LANCASTER
LANCASTER, OH 43130 • (740) 653-2827
STORE HOURS: MONDAY-FRIDAY 9:00-6:00
SATURDAY 9:00-5:00

Subnittteci phOiol

· ·

·

..
"

POMEROY
"Absolutely devastating," is
the term used by _Mei~s
County · District Pubhc
Lib{ary Director Kristi
Eblin ·to describe proposed
state budget cuts for public
'libraries .
Eblin heard of the proposed 30 percent cut in
funding for public libraries
on Friday following Gov.
Ted Strickland's press conference·discussing a framework on how to address the
$3.2 billion budget shortfall
which lawmakers are now
scrambling to address by
the June 30 deadline .
The MCDPL system relies
solei y on state tax collections and has no local operating levy for financial support like many libraries m
larger communities. Due to
dwindling tax collections,
the MCDPL has already
seen a 20 pencent cut in its
budget this year which

•

tors including Ohio Sen.
Jimll)y Stewart (R-Mcigs)
at 614-466-.8076 and Rep.
means if the 30 pencent cut Debbie Phillips (D-Athens)
is passed, it would absorb a at 614-466-2158. Libraries
50 percent cut in funding for across Ohio have also set up
the next two years.
'a ·website for those citizens
. "We are already down to who wtsh to speak out about
. bare bones," Eblin said of · the cuts, complete with
recent · budget cuts that links to local legislators, at
resulted in reducing hours saveohiolibraries.com.
and days of operation at
When contacted . by The
Sentinel,
Sen.
local branches, except for Daily
the Pomeroy Branch, and Stewart said he ho~es ~hose
the layoffs of two part-time in support of mamtammg
employees.
.
library~funding don't hesiIf the proposed 30 percent tate to contact Gov.
cut is passed in the new Strickland's office.
budget, Eblin said it's likely
"I trelieve this is a result
many branches would have of complete mismanag~;- ·
to close all together in addi- ment and incompetence in
tion to more lay offs. She the governor 's office in
said in terms of usage, ihe managing this budget,"
Pomeroy .Branch has the Stewart said. "The governor
highest but even that branch · comes out II days before
may not he exempt from a the budget has to be signed
reduction in staff and hour.&gt; and passed with a laundry
of operation if the budget list of irresponsible fiscal
cuts are finalized.
decisions. They've known
Eblin is urging patrons for months there's a proband residents who suppott lem .. .we should 've been .
the MCDPL to contact Gov. discussing these options for
Strickland's office via e- months. It just shows a
mail or by phone at 614- complete dereliction of duty
466-3555 and local legisla- on Gov. Strickland's part

Plea.. see Williams. AS

Former
.Middleport
man convicted
fOf role in
_ W.Va. murder·

.Proposed cuts in library funding

• 624ct: V-Twln OHIJ er.gine
• On·demand 4.x4 drive system

ALLPOWER EQUIPMENT

,;:

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Docto~" wtll .be

.··· ·· · ' ·.

UTILITY VEHICLE
..................................

SfARTING AT:

.

. .-

presented by ' !he Rtve~ Clly
Plaier&amp; (I~IZ.P) Fnday and s'aturday
!II the; {,!niversity bf Rio Grande.
Me-igs, C~nter: .
. . ,;
.··
.·, CiJrtliin.time is 7 p.m. both' nights.
J'he-" pl,ayr •,"'fntter\ b.y · William
VailZaridf . and •.Jane Mtlmore IS .a
~·farcic!'i colll.edy, witty and WI).C)(y/'
· itctoiding to· the •directorsi. Cathy
.·Efwirt alid Milty. ·
·· ·

VOLUNTEER'" 4x4
Top·ra~ed

.

.· kJ .l!ie,~~JJJC,otfWdy

WEATHER

•

-

Nathan Becker plays the impostor doctor pictured here wHh Celia-McCoy, in the role of his mother, when she dis.· covirs he .is not really a doctor1·;,
.'
.
. ' · ..
.
: ..··

POMEROY - The psychiatric evaluation of Charle~
Williams has been completed, but has not been made
part of the public record in
Williams' murder case.
Williams is charged with
the February murder of Doris
Jackson of Tuppers Plains.
· His competency to stand trial
has been an issue since his
indictment, and his attorneys
maintain he was treated for
psychiatric and other illne.ss
both before he was jailed on
the murder charges and since
he was taken into the county's custody,
"The defendant's mental
condition has limited his
ability. to take part in his
defense," Defense Attorney
Charles Knight said in his
motion for the psychiatric
evaluation .
Willi!lms served a year in
federal prison for threatening the ·life of President
George H.W. Bush .in the
· 1990's. His defense ~ttor­
neys. Knight and William
Eachus, have said WilliamS.
bas attempted suicide since
he was first jailed at . the

and I'm extremely disappointed in h~s perf~:rnance
and that ofhts staff.
When .contacted by The
Daily
Sentinel, . Rep .'
Phillips also expressed her
su.~port for Io:allibraries.
· Everyone m the legrslature is working hard to balance the budget," Phillips
said. "1 think this is an area
(library funding cuts) that
has people very concerned
along with other cuts. These
are thmgs that could have a
long term impact and could
be harmful."
Phillips said she realizes
many people in her district
use public libraries for free
Internet .access and other
educational and social
activities.
"We ' re really working. ·
hard to make sure the House
leadership understand what
this means in ihe communilies of Southeast Ohio."
Phillips added. "The governor said on Friday he wasn't trying to sugarcoat anything,that this is goin~ to he
really difficult. I Will do
whar I can to protect the
libraries."

STAFF REPORT

MOSNEWSOMYDAILVSENTtNEL.COM

COLUMBUS - A former
Meigs County man was convicted last week .on six
charges, including murder, in
the death · of Christopher
Roush of Clifton, W.Va., in
2007 , and faces life in prison.
Elisha "Lacy" Dickens;
29, formerly of Middleport,
was convicted in U.S .
District Court on six counts~
includin~ felony murder. He
is the th1rd co-defendant to
either enter a plea or be convicted for their roles in the
Roush's death.
Adam
McClellan,
Zanesville, was convicted
last monih on six charges·.
including a felony murder
charge. Michael Haynie, 49,
Columbus, entered into a plea
agreement and testified in
McClellan's.case. Sentencing
in his and McClellan's cases
is pending.
·
Charges against Dickens
included two counts of
interstate travel leading to
~oush 's death , drug conspiracy involving cocaine,
and three fireaims charges,
· Haynie testified that .
McClellan han sold him
Please see Dickens, AS ·

•

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