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

Middleport•Pomeroy, Ohio

INSIDE STORY

WEATHER

SPORTS

OBITUARIES

Middleport Alumni
Scholarships....
Page 2

Chance of showers.
High of 83. Low of
59........ Page 2

Spurs close in on
5th title.... Page 6

Evelyn Mae
(Fields) Burton, 90
Henry Jackson Cain, 76
Belinda Ann Cook, 38
Pauline J. Cunningham, 95

John Bernard David, Jr., 82
Colleen Dunfee, 85
Charles Owen Gilfilen, 102
Harley Antwon Kanniard, 19
Lawrence Lemley, 82

Bobby O. Parker, 81
Donald K. Riffle, 75
Henry Rollins, 75
James Edwin Swingle, 82
Tyson Corey Toole, 35

50 cents daily

TUESDAY, JUNE 18, 2013

Vol. 63, No. 97

Alleged bank robber indicted on 7 counts
Sarah Hawley

shawley@civitasmedia.com

POMEROY — The Meigs
County Grand Jury returned a
seven count indictment against
the man accused of robbing the
Farmers Bank branch in Tuppers
Plains on May 30.
Chad R. Rennicker, 25, is
charged with six counts of kidnapping and one count of aggravated robbery.
According to the indictment
filed on Monday morning, Rennicker did attempt or attempt to
commit a theft offense while hav-

ing a deadly weapon on
remove another from
or about his person or
the place where the
under his control and
person was found or
either displayed the
restrain the liberty of
weapon, brandished it,
the other person, to faor indicated the possescilitate the commission
sion of use of it during
of any felony or flight
the offense.
thereafter.
The six kidnapping
Each charge carries a
counts are one count for Chad R. Rennicker maximum sentence of 10
each individual working at the years in prison and a $25,000 fine.
bank at the time of the alleged
Rennicker is currently held
offense. The indictment alleges in the Washington County Jail
that Rennicker did commit the on $500,000 bond out of Meigs
crime of kidnapping at Farmers County Court.
Bank in Tuppers Plains, by force,
It is unclear at this time when
threat or deception, knowingly Rennicker will be arraigned on

the charges in Meigs County
Common Pleas Court.
Rennicker was also wanted by
the Belmont County Ohio Sheriff’s Office and the Perry Township Police Department in Stark
County Ohio. In May, Rennicker
was sentenced on armed robbery
charges in Belmont County and
has failed to turn himself into
authorities to serve his sentence.
He along with Michaela Fritz
were arrested on June 1 in
Ripley, W.Va.
The Saturday night arrest of
both suspects at an apartment in
Ripley began with the surveillance

of a white van that the suspects
were driving. Rennicker and Fritz
went to an apartment complex in
Ripley and were followed by officers at that time. In response to
the presence of law enforcement,
the pair then attempted to hide
in the attic, but Rennicker fell
through the ceiling into the bedroom of an adjacent apartment.
He was captured and taken into
custody without incident.
Fritz is currently in South Central Regional Jail in W.Va., being
held on $100,000 bond out of
Jackson County. She was arrested
on charges of aiding and abetting.

One arrested in auto theft
Sarah Hawley

shawley@civitasmedia.com

Vintage vehicles filled Court Street for the Kickin’ Summer Bash cruise-in.

Photos by Charlene Hoeflich | Daily Sentinel

MEIGS COUNTY — Quick police
work resulted in the arrest of one individual following the theft of a vehicle
on Sunday morning.
James L. Deems, 43, of Racine, was
arrested and charged with auto theft,
a felony of the fourth degree, and receiving stolen property, a felony of James L. Deems
the fifth degree.
According to Meigs County Sheriff Keith Wood, his office received a call of the possible theft of a white Chevy
Lumina from a residence on Elm Street in Racine at 4:18
a.m. The caller stated she heard glass break. She also
stated that the person driving the vehicle may be headed
toward Columbus.
At 4:29 a.m. Deputy Brandy King spotted the vehicle
on U.S. 33 near Peach Fork Road. King stopped the vehicle and arrested the individual. Deputy Don Mohler also
helped with the case.
Officers had responded to the residence of Deems late
Saturday and earlier on Sunday on domestic complaints.
Upon completing an inventory of the vehicle, stolen
property from a burglary case which the office was working to solve was located in the vehicle.
Wood added that the owner of the vehicle did not know
that it had been taken until officers notified her. The vehicle was returned to the owner at 6:15 a.m., less than
two hours after it was stolen.
Deems is being held in the Middleport Jail pending arraignment in Meigs County Court.

Tea Party looks at politics
in education and churches

Summer Bash
continues
despite rain
Charlene Hoeflich

choeflich@civitasmedia.com

POMEROY — Last week the rain came down, the
river came up, and the amphitheater was flooded just
the day before the Kickin’ Summer Bash was scheduled to open.
But then the sun came out. While the high water Brent Patterson entertains at the Bash.
necessitated some changes in scheduling, the festival
fun got under way right on schedule.
The kayak and canoe races, the jet ski relay race,
and the anything that floats event, as well as the
river rescue demonstration, had to be struck from
Saturday’s lineup. However, festival chairman Brenda
Roush says those events will probably be rescheduled
for sometime in July.
Friday night’s vintage cars, along with two fire
trucks from the ’40s owned by Jeff Darst, filled Court
Street for a very successful cruise-in. Dash plaques and
door prizes were awarded at the well-attended show.
The parking lot stage was used for the festival entertainment since the amphitheater was underwater. The
Riverside Cloggers from Point Pleasant performed
several dances, then local singer Anna Wiles-Darst
delighted the audience with her music. A rousing performance by the Southbound Band rounded out the
Friday evening schedule.
See BASH ‌| 5 Anna Wiles-Darst belts out song after song.

POMEROY — Politics
in education and church
drove the discussion at the
recent Meigs TEA Party
meeting held at the Senior
Citizens Center.
Tom Gannaway discussed “Common Core,”
a recent national educational program already
adopted by 45 states.He
explained that in all participating states “Common
Core” standards will revise
public school curriculum,
achievement tests and performance expectations.
Constitutionally, the federal government has no
authority to do anything in
education, Gannaway said,
referring to Article 1, Section 8, which lists the powers of Congress. The 10th
Amendment says that powers not delegated to the federal government, nor prohibited to the states, are in
fact reserved for the states
or the people, he added.
Gannaway critiqued a
letter addressed to United States Department of
Education Secretary Arne
Duncan, signed by 34 US
House Representatives. In
the letter, Missouri Congressman Blaine Luetkemeyer expressed concerns

over the new program.
The speaker said the letter spoke of “coercion of
states to opt-in to Common
Core standards” and noted
that “Common Core standards will replace statebased standardized testing
with nationally-based standardized testing.”
Furthermore, the Congress members were “extremely concerned” about
how the federal government plans to collect and
distribute students’ data,
through the State Longitudinal Data System (SLDS),
he continued.
“We have become increasingly concerned over common core standards themselves,” Luetkemeyer wrote.
Addressing the above issues, Gannaway called the
Constitution the “owner’s
manual” to the nation. “Every problem that our country’s got, it’s addressed in
this right here.”
People also discussed the
effects of tax-exempt status on church and pastoral
speech. Perhaps churches
should explore the implications of abandoning taxexempt status, one person
See POLITICS ‌| 3

Flag retirement ceremony held
The Return Jonathan Meigs Chapter of the Daughters of the American
Resolution recently meet at the Chester Courthouse/Academy. The meeting was opened in ritualistic form by
Regent Grueser.
A flag retirement program was
conducted with all present members
assisting with the separation of the
flag union and stripes. As each strip
was deposited into the fire, the name
of of the original 13 states and the
date of admission into the union was
said. The union, which represented
the whole, was placed into the fire

last. Chaplain Moore assisted.
After the flag retirement ritual
the daughters returned to the academy for the remainder of the meeting and program.
Mary Morris, a 36 year member,
passed earlier this year. Regent Grueser is to obtain a DAR grave marker,
with the grave marking to take place
at a later date.
Secretary and treasury reports
were reviewed.
Native American Indian, conservation, DAR school programs and
national defense reports were sub-

mitted. Copies of the NSDAR president general blogs and OSDAR May
newsletter were made available.
Unfinished business topics addressed were 800 grocery and 1,400
non-grocery coupons had been
mailed to Grafenworhr Base. NSDAR has accepted and will publish
later this year the history of the
chapter name. Chapter banner cost
discussed and D. Jenkins will obtain
another quote. Mr. Bolin’s certifiSubmitted photo
cate has not arrived but is expected DAR members participating in the flag retirement ceremony

included, from left, Donna Jenkins, Mary Powell, Peggy Moore,

See CEREMONY ‌| 3 Patty Cook, Jackie Frost, and Cleo Smith.

�Page 2 • The Daily Sentinel

www.mydailysentinel.com

Tuesday, June 18, 2013

Boil Advisory Meigs Local Briefs
SUTTON TWP. — The Tuppers Plains-Chester Water District has issued a boil advisory in Sutton Township for the following roads: From the intersection of
Bashan Road (not including Bashan Road) on Carmel
Road to the address of 47598 Carmel Road, Pleasant
View Road, and VanMeter Hill Road to the address of
47980 VanMeter Hill Road.
When a boil order is in effect, individuals in affected
areas are asked to boil their cooking and drinking water
for three minutes before consuming it. The reason for the
order is to repair a leak.
The boil advisory will be in effect until noon on Tuesday, June 18, unless notified otherwise.

PHS Alumni Luncheon
POMEROY — The
Pomeroy High School class
of 1959 will be having their
3rd Friday lunch June 21
at noon at the Wild Horse
Cafe. A former classmate
who has not previously been
there will be attending.

Family Reunion
CHESHIRE — The
family of Otto and Phyllis
Mulford will hold a family
reunion Sunday, June 30,
from 1 to 4 p.m. at the Gavin
Clubhouse in Cheshire.
Family members of Harvey and Emma Margaret
911
Mulford are also invited to
June 14
8:37 a.m., Page Street, cardiac arrest; 9:36 a.m., East attend. Those who plan to
Memorial Drive, difficulty breathing; 10:45 a.m., East attend are asked to contact
Memorial Drive, difficulty breathing; 1:52 p.m., Ohio Janice at 740-992-5207
681, medical alarm; 2:10 p.m., Lincoln Heights, overdose;
Vacation Bible School
6:28 p.m., Pearl Street, fall; 7:06 p.m., Pearl Street, obPOMEROY — Bradford
stetrics; 7:32 p.m., Ebenezer Street, laceration; 9:32 p.m.,
Church of Christ will host
Mulberry Avenue, hemorrhage.
“Kingdom Rock” Vacation
June 15
6:05 a.m., Welsh Town Road, overdose; 9:29 a.m., East Bible School June 17-20.
Main Street, weakness; 10:06 a.m., Geoglein Road, un- VBS will be from 9-11:30
known; 12:26 p.m., Ash Street, fall; 3:03 p.m., West Main a.m. each day at the church,
Street, seizure/convulsions; 6:34 p.m., Flatwoods Road, fall. located at 38260 Bradbury
Road. For more information
June 16
1:30 a.m., Union Avenue, chest pain; 6:58 a.m., Ohio call (740) 992-5844.
COOLVILLE — Whites
681, motor vehicle colision; 9:33 a.m., Bailey Run Road,
pain general; 7:21 p.m., Lincoln Heights, seizure/convul- Chapel Wesleyan Church
sions; 8;04 p.m., unknown, seizure/convulsions; 10:07 in Coolville will have Bible
School, June 24-26 from
p.m., Beech Street, chest pain.
6:30 to 8:30 p.m. Theme
will be HayDay. The kickoff party will be at the

For The Record

Ohio Valley Forecast

Tuesday: A chance of showers, with thunderstorms
also possible after 3 p.m. Mostly cloudy, with a high near
83. Calm wind becoming southwest around 6 mph in the
afternoon. Chance of precipitation is 40 percent.
Tuesday Night: A chance of showers and thunderstorms. Mostly cloudy, with a low around 59. Light and
variable wind becoming northwest around 5 mph after
midnight. Chance of precipitation is 30 percent. New
rainfall amounts of less than a tenth of an inch, except
higher amounts possible in thunderstorms.
Wednesday: A chance of showers before 7 a.m. Mostly
sunny, with a high near 83. North wind around 6 mph.
Chance of precipitation is 30 percent.
Wednesday Night: Mostly clear, with a low around 58.
North wind 3 to 6 mph.
Thursday: Sunny, with a high near 82.
Thursday Night: Mostly clear, with a low around 62.
Friday: Sunny, with a high near 85.
Friday Night: Mostly clear, with a low around 66.
Saturday: Mostly sunny, with a high near 86.
Saturday Night: Partly cloudy, with a low around 69.
Sunday: Mostly sunny, with a high near 86.
Sunday Night: A chance of showers and thunderstorms. Partly cloudy, with a low around 69. Chance of
precipitation is 30 percent.
Monday: Mostly sunny, with a high near 86.

church on Sunday, June
23, 6 p.m. For more information call Bonnie Putman
at 667-6343.
Scholarship
Applications
SYRACUSE — Applications for the Carleton College Scholarships for Higher Education are available
for legal residents of the
village of Syracuse. Residents can pick up an application from Joyce Sisson,
College Road, or from Gordon Fisher, 1402 Dusky
Street. Applications are
due back by June 25, 2013.
Legal residents of Syracuse
can qualify for scholarships
awards for a maximum of
two years.
Immunization Clinic
POMEROY — The
Meigs County Health Department will conduct as
childhood and adolescent
immunization clinic from
9-11 a.m. and 1-3 p.m.
on Tuesday, June 18, at
the Meigs County Health
Department, 112 E. Memorial Drive in Pomeroy.
Please bring children’s
shot records. Children
must be accompanied by
a parent or legal guardian.
Please bring medical cards
and/or commercial insur-

ance cards, if applicable.
A donation is appreciated,
but not required.
July 4th activities
MIDDLEPORT — The
Middleport Fourth of July
celebration will be held
on Thursday, July 4, with
events beginning at 4 p.m.,
and concluding at 10 p.m.
with fireworks. Donations
are currently being accepted by the Middleport
Community Association to
help expand the fireworks
display.
Consumer Confidence
Report
MIDDLEPORT — The
Village of Middleport has
mailed its 2012 Consumer
Confidence Report. Anyone not receiving one may
pick it up as the Public
Works office located at 659
Pearl Street in Middleport.
Traffic Advisory
MEIGS COUNTY —
Ohio 143 (located just
0.25 miles south of State
Farm Road) will be reduced to one lane to allow
for a bridge replacement
project. During construction there will be a 10’
width restriction. Traffic
will be maintained with
a portable traffic light.

Weather permitting, both
lanes of Ohio 143 will be
open September 1, 2013.
MEIGS COUNTY —
The westbound lane of
Ohio 124 (located at the
63.91 mile marker, about
1.5 miles north of Reedsville) will be closed to allow for a bridge replacement project. Traffic will
be maintained by traffic
signals and concrete barriers. Weather permitting,
both lanes of Ohio 124 will
be open November, 1 2013.
MEIGS COUNTY —
Ohio 124 (located 0.4
miles north of Williams
Run Road) will be reduced
to one lane to allow for a
bridge replacement project. Traffic will be maintained by traffic signals
and concrete barriers.
Weather permitting, both
lanes of Ohio 124 will reopen August 31, 2013.
MEIGS COUNTY —
The bridge on Township
Road 447, Beech Grove
Road, located approximately 500 feet west of
Township Road 9, Romine
Road, will be closed beginning Monday, June 3. This
closing is necessary in order to replace the existing
bridge. The project will be
completed in approximately one month.

Meigs County Community Calendar
Tuesday, June 18
CHESTER — Chester Council
323 Daughters of America will meet
at 7:30 p.m. at the lodge hall. A committee will have an auction sale.
Please bring items.
Wednesday, June 19
POMEROY — The Meigs County
Clerk of Courts Legal Office and Title Office will be closed for the staff
to attend training.
MIDDLEPORT — A free
community dinner will be held at
5 p.m. at the Middleport Church of
the Nazarene. Pastor Daniel Fulton
invites everyone to come and join in
the food and fellowship.

CHESTER — A special meeting of
Shade River Lodge 453 will be held
at 7 p.m. to confer the fellow craft degree on one candidate. Refreshments
will be served after.

117 E. Memorial Drive in Pomeroy.
RACINE — The Southern Local
Board of Education will meeting in
regular session at 8 p.m. in the Elementary Library.

Thursday, June 20
POMEROY — The Meigs County Office of Vital Statistics will be
closed for training. No birth or death
certificates will be issued or filed on
this day. Normal business hours will
resume at 8 a.m. on June 21, 2013.

Sunday, June 30
CHESHIRE — Bradbury-Jenkins
reunion, 1 p.m., Old Kyger Baptist
Church located on Old Kyger Church
Road off of Stingy Creek Road. A potluck meal will be served.
HENDERSON — Descendants of
Sam and Melvina Birchfield will hold
a reunion at the Henderson Community Center in Henderson, W.Va.
Friends and family are welcome. A
basket dinner will be held at noon.

Monday, June 24
POMEROY — The Meigs County
Veterans Services Commission will
meet at 9 a.m. at the office located at

Local stocks

Peoples (NASDAQ) — 20.39
Pepsico (NYSE) — 82.55
Premier (NASDAQ) — 12.19
Rockwell (NYSE) — 86.87
Rocky Brands (NASDAQ) — 14.15
Royal Dutch Shell — 65.90
Sears Holding (NASDAQ) — 46.84
Wal-Mart (NYSE) — 74.95
Wendy’s (NYSE) — 5.94
WesBanco (NYSE) — 24.96
Worthington (NYSE) — 34.08
Daily stock reports are the 4 p.m.
ET closing quotes of transactions
for June 17, 2013, provided by
Edward Jones financial advisors
Isaac Mills in Gallipolis at (740)
441-9441 and Lesley Marrero in
Point Pleasant at (304) 674-0174.
Member SIPC.

Tess Marie Phelps

Drew Charles Hatter

Andrea Taylor Iannarelli

Charlene Hoeflich,

choeflich@civitasmedia.com

MIDDLEPORT
—
Seven scholarships were
awarded at the annual
Memorial Day weekend reunion of Middleport High
School alumni held in the
auditorium at Middleport
Village Hall.
The recipients of the
scholarships were descendants of MHS graduates.
Recipients selected to
receive the scholarships
were descendants of MHS
graduates.
Receiving a MHS Alumni scholarship of $1,000
were Marquez Griffin of

Point Pleasant, who qualified through Jamie Bowles,
class of 1957, and will be
attending West Virginia
Wesleyan University this
fall. The recipient is the
daughter of Erika Bowles.
Also receiving a MHS
Alumni scholarship s was
Emily Van Sickle of Gallipolis who qualifies through
Karen Roush Patterson,
class of 1962, and will be going to Ohio State University.
She is the daughter of Victor
C. and Terri M. VanSickle.
The Susan G. Park
Scholarships of $500 each
went to Drew Charles
Hater of Circleville, Andrea Taylor Iannarelli of
Monroe, N. C., Tess Marie

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Riverwalk Dental

Middleport Community Association
Announces their July 4th
Cornhole Tournament
Dave Diles Park

For general dentistry and implant needs —
accepting new patients and emergencies.

TEAM TOURNAMENT- 5pm $5.00 @ for 2 person team
1st $40.00 per team 2nd $30.00 per team
3rd 20.00 per team 4th 10.00 per team

R. Craig Mathews, DDS
530A West Union St.
Athens, Ohio 45701

SINGLES TOURNAMENT- 7pm $10.00 @
1st $40.00 2nd $30.00 3rd $20.00 4th $10.00
Contact Brian Howard @ 740-525-5764 or brian.howard@fbsc.com
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Sales • Service • Parts • Pick up • Delivery

Phelps of Pomeroy, and
Kathleen Elizabeth Spitz
of Hudson, Ohio while the
Crawford-Grey
Scholarship went to Rachel Payne
of Middleport.
Hater of Circleville qualified through his grandfather, Asa, and greatgrandparents,
Charles
Asa Bradbury and Jeanna
Young Bradbury. He plans
to pursue a degree in aviation studies through the
Fisher College of Business at Ohio State Univer- Rachel Payne
sity.He is the son of Nikki
Bradbury Thomas.
affiliation is through Edward
Iannarelli, great-grand- and Judy Sauer Crooks, and
daughter of David W. Oh- Rodney Sauer, has been aclinger, 1941 MHS gradu- cepted into the six year comate, will be going to Ohio bined BS/MD program at
University this fall for Kent State for her bachelor
training in nursing and oc- of science with a transfer to
cupational therapy for chil- the Northeast Ohio Medical
dren. She is the daughter University medical school
of Andrew Iannarelli.
for her advanced training.
Phelps,
qualifying She is the daughter of David
through her grandmother, and Cynthia Crooks Spitz.
Sandra Humphreys, class
Receiving the Crawfordof 1967, will be going to Greg Lewis Scholarship,
Muskingum University to amount not specified, was
obtain a degree in engineer- Kimberly Payne of Middleing. She is the daughter of port who will be studying
radiology at the University
Deanna Anderson Swartz.
Spitz whose MHS alumni of Rio Grande.

60425114

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Kathleen Spitz

Seven scholarships awarded at MHS Alumni banquet

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AEP (NYSE) — 45.57
Akzo (NASDAQ) — 20.64
Ashland Inc. (NYSE) — 86.10
Big Lots (NYSE) — 33.83
Bob Evans (NASDAQ) — 47.19
BorgWarner (NYSE) — 86.29
Century Alum (NASDAQ) — 10.05
Champion (NASDAQ) — 0.17
City Holding (NASDAQ) — 39.00
Collins (NYSE) — 64.44
DuPont (NYSE) — 53.70
US Bank (NYSE) — 35.23
Gen Electric (NYSE) — 23.77
Harley-Davidson (NYSE) — 53.52
JP Morgan (NYSE) — 53.85
Kroger (NYSE) — 35.18
Ltd Brands (NYSE) — 51.00
Norfolk So (NYSE) — 76.46
OVBC (NASDAQ) — 21.50
BBT (NYSE) — 33.11

Call 740-592-1483 or 1-800-923-7329
for appointment

�Tuesday, June 18, 2013

The Daily Sentinel • Page 3

www.mydailysentinel.com

Hood reunites with family Snowden won’t
return voluntarily
Sayre family holds reunion
MIDDLEPORT — Jeff Hood, formerly
of Middleport, who has spent the past nine
months in Afghanistan, has been reunited

RACINE — The descendants of Martin and
Emma (Roush) Sayre met
June 2, at the Star Mill
Park in Racine, Ohio, to
enjoy a family time with
17 in attendance.
Lillie Hart offered grace
before a potluck meal.
Gifts were given to the
youngest in attendance,
Adriana Sayre; the oldest

with his wife, Marlo, and children, Brigg,
Ava and Willow, in Bamburg, Germany. Later this year the family will be moving to Italy.

present, Mildred Hart;
and the farthest traveled,
Bruce Hart.
A “Split the Pot” was
won by Donna Sayre who
graciously donated her
winnings to the annual
reunion. Money collected
from the group amounted
to $35.
Minutes of the 2012
reunion were read by the

secretary/president Paula
Welker. She will retain her
office for 2013.
It was agreed to meet
next year at the new
shelter at Star Mill Park,
and Dale Hart and Paula
shared the expense. It is
hoped by the group that
more will be in attendance
next year and that the tradition will continue.

McCain presses Obama
on secret emails
WASHINGTON (AP)
— Republican Sen. John
McCain on Monday questioned President Barack
Obama about his political
appointees’ use of secret
government email accounts at work, saying that
Congress cannot tell the
American people what its
government is doing if it
creates a “secret alternate
communications network.”
The letter from McCain, the senior Republican on the Senate’s Permanent Subcommittee on
Investigations, comes in
response to an Associated
Press report earlier this
month, which found that
some top administration
officials were using unpublished email accounts
to conduct official business. McCain said the
practice undermines congressional oversight and
complicates access to re-

cords under the Freedom
of Information Act.
“Four years ago, you
pledged to usher in a new
era of government transparency. Since then, however,
your administration has
habitually
circumvented
congressional oversight,”
McCain wrote to Obama,
alluding to past dust-ups
between congressional Republicans and the president
over access to executive
branch documents.
White House spokesman
Jay Carney subsequently
acknowledged the practice of having alternate accounts and said all emails
— public or otherwise —
were subject to congressional oversight. The White
House did not immediately
comment Monday on McCain’s letter.
McCain asked Obama
to answer several questions by July 1, includ-

ing how many alternative
email accounts are used
in his administration and
whether the practice comports with federal recordkeeping standards.
The National Archives
and Records Administration’s chief records officer,
Paul M. Wester Jr., told
The Washington Post on
Monday that his agency
is revising its guidelines
to make sure that emails
in nonpublic government
accounts are preserved as
required under the Federal
Records Act. Wester told
the newspaper that he did
not know how widely used
the accounts are and said
having secret accounts
for government officials
is “not a good practice to
follow” because doing so
makes it harder for agencies to find and turn over
e-mails sought under FOIA
requests or other inquiries.

viewed the plans of the
new OSDAR Regent for
the next three years.
Sandy McCann will be
installed as NSDAR conference in late June. Her
theme is love, loyalty,
friendship: love of country, loyalty to the objective
of the DAR, and friendship with daughters.
Fall fun fair will be Au-

gust 17, 2013, with the
theme “I am women.” Regent Grueser has assumed
the chair of the OSDAR
90plus committee and will
have a display at the fall
fun fair. Assistance was requested, all members were
encouraged to attend.
Refreshments
were
served by the hostess
committee.

Ceremony
From Page 1
soon. His presentation
will be planned.
Discussion of presenting
high school seniors with the
DAR Good Citizen’s award
was conducted. Qualifications will be developed in
the fall, with the first award
presented in April.
Regent Grueser re-

Submitted photo

DAR members Donna Jenkins, Mary Powell, Peggy Moore and Patty Cook conduct a flag retirement ceremony.

Politics
From Page 1
suggested, he said
Members talked about
the roles churches have
played historically. During
World War II, some German churches refused to
stand with the common
people and buried their
heads. Many churches in
Germany supported Hitler.
During the American Revolution, not every church
supported the war, according to the speaker.

Accepting
New Patients

Regarding today’s church
scene, one member said,
“To the extent that being
here is a witness, part of
that witness is to challenge
those who claim to be fellow believers. Challenge
them on what they’re supporting, what form of evil
they’re countenancing.”
The Meigs TEA Party
meets at 7:30 every second
and fourth Tuesday at the
Meigs Senior Center in
Pomeroy. The public is invited to attend.

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ian infrastructure like universities and
private businesses.
“These nakedly, aggressively criminal acts are wrong no matter the target. Not only that, when NSA makes a
technical mistake during an exploitation operation, critical systems crash,”
he said, though he gave no examples
of what systems have crashed or in
which countries.
“Congress hasn’t declared war on
the countries — the majority of them
are our allies — but without asking
for public permission, NSA is running
network operations against them that
affect millions of innocent people,” he
said. “And for what? So we can have
secret access to a computer in a country we’re not even fighting?”
Snowden was referring to Prism,
one of the programs he disclosed. The
program sweeps up Internet usage
data from all over the world that goes
through nine major U.S.-based Internet
providers. The NSA can look at foreign
usage without any warrants, and says
the program doesn’t target Americans.
U.S. officials say the data-gathering
programs are legal and operated under secret court supervision.
Snowden explained his claim that
from his desk, he could “wiretap” any
phone call or email — a claim top intelligence officials have denied. “If an
NSA, FBI, CIA, DIA, etc. analyst has
access to query raw SIGINT (signals
intelligence) databases, they can enter and get results for anything they
want,” he wrote in the answer posted
on the Guardian site. “Phone number,
email, user id, cell phone handset id
(IMEI), and so on — it’s all the same.”
The NSA did not immediately respond to an email seeking comment.
But Director of National Intelligence
James Clapper has said that the kind
of data that can be accessed and who
can access it is severely limited.
Snowden said the restrictions on
what could be seen by an individual analyst vary according to policy changes,
which can happen “at any time,” and
said that a technical “filter” on NSA
data-gathering meant to filter out U.S.
communications is “weak,” such that
U.S. communications often get ingested.
The former contractor also added
that NSA provides Congress “with a
special immunity to its surveillance,”
without explaining further.
Snowden defended U.S. Army Pfc.
Bradley Manning for his disclosures
of documents to Wikileaks, which he
called a “legitimate journalistic outlet,” which “carefully redacted all of
their releases in accordance with a
judgment of public interest.” He said
the Wikileaks release of unredacted
material was “due to the failure of a
partner journalist to control a passphrase,” which led to the charge
against Manning that he dumped the
documents, which Snowden called an
attempt to smear Manning.
Manning is currently on trial at Fort
Meade — the same Army base where
the NSA is headquartered — on
charges of aiding the enemy for releasing documents to Wikileaks.
Snowden defended his description
of his salary as being $200,000 a year,
calling that a “career high,” but saying he did take a pay cut to take the
job at Booz Allen Hamilton, where he
worked as a contractor at an NSA facility in Hawaii. When Booz Allen fired
him, they said his salary was $122,000.
In one of his final replies, Snowden
attacked the “mainstream media” for
its coverage, saying it “now seems far
more interested in what I said when
I was 17 or what my girlfriend looks
like rather than, say, the largest program of suspicion-less surveillance in
human history.”

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WASHINGTON (AP) — NSA
leaker Edward Snowden defended his
disclosure of top-secret U.S. spying
programs in an online chat Monday
with The Guardian and attacked U.S.
officials for calling him a traitor.
“The U.S. government is not going
to be able to cover this up by jailing
or murdering me,” he said. He added
the government “immediately and
predictably destroyed any possibility
of a fair trial at home,” by labeling him
a traitor, and indicated he would not
return to the U.S. voluntarily.
Congressional leaders have called
Snowden a traitor for revealing oncesecret surveillance programs two
weeks ago in the Guardian and The
Washington Post. The National Security Agency programs collect records
of millions of Americans’ telephone
calls and Internet usage as a counterterror tool. The disclosures revealed
the scope of the collections, which
surprised many Americans and have
sparked debate about how much privacy the government can take away in
the name of national security.
“It would be foolish to volunteer
yourself to” possible arrest and criminal charges “if you can do more good
outside of prison than in it,” he said.
Snowden dismissed being called a
traitor by former Vice President Dick
Cheney, who made the allegations in
an interview this week on Fox News
Sunday. Cheney was echoing the comments of both Democrats and Republican leadership on Capitol Hill, including Senate Intelligence committee
Chairwoman Dianne Feinstein.
“Being called a traitor by Dick
Cheney is the highest honor you can
give an American, and the more panicked talk we hear from people like
him, Feinstein … the better off we all
are,” Snowden said.
The Guardian announced that its
website was hosting an online chat
with Snowden, in hiding in Hong Kong,
with reporter Glenn Greenwald receiving and posting his questions. The Associated Press couldn’t independently
verify that Snowden was the man who
posted 19 replies to questions.
In answer to the question of whether he fled to Hong Kong because he
was spying for China, Snowden wrote,
“Ask yourself: if I were a Chinese spy,
why wouldn’t I have flown directly
into Beijing? I could be living in a palace petting a phoenix by now.”
He added later, “I have had no contact with the Chinese government.”
Snowden dismissed the U.S. government’s claims that the NSA surveillance
programs had helped thwart dozens of
terrorist attacks in more than 20 countries, including the 2009 al-Qaida plot
by Afghan American Najibullah Zazi to
blow up New York subways.
“Journalists should ask a specific
question: … how many terrorist attacks were prevented SOLELY by
information derived from this suspicionless surveillance that could not be
gained via any other source? Then ask
how many individual communications
were ingested to acheive (sic) that,
and ask yourself if it was worth it.”
He added that “Bathtub falls and
police officers kill more Americans
than terrorism, yet we’ve been asked
to sacrifice our most sacred rights for
fear of falling victim to it.”
Snowden was working as a contractor for NSA at the time he had access
to the then-secret programs. He defended his actions and said he considered what to reveal and what not
to, saying he did not reveal any U.S.
operations against what he called legitimate military targets, but instead
showed that the NSA is hacking civil-

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Opinion

Page 4
Tuesday, June 18, 2013

Beyond secrets Repeating history or, why
Winslow Myers
As lowly citizens trying
to understand the enormous resources poured
into the national security
state, it may help to examine the “meta-thinking”
behind the mass mining of
“meta-data” from our telephones and e-mails.
Aside from debate about
whether our government
may be massively violating
the 4th Amendment, we
need to begin with compassion. It is not hard to
see how fear and political
necessity are among the
engines driving the growth
of the secrecy bureaucracy.
There are bad actors out
there, and a certain alertness is required to prevent
them from doing their
worst. Political leaders do
not get elected by advocating love for enemies.
Thus President Obama
cannot say aloud that the
lives of children in Pakistan or Yemen are worth
as much as the lives of his
own daughters. That such
evasions are politically
necessary is one indication
that our “meta-thinking”
may be inadequate.
Our conception of national and international interest
has not caught up with the
advent of nuclear weapons
and planetary ecological
stresses. Professor John
Mearsheimer of the University of Chicago has defined
the term “offensive realism”
as the only sensible stance a
nation can take in the face of
multiple existential threats.
Because it cannot know the
motivations of, say, the Chinese leadership, the United
States must stay on the offensive militarily. And in
fact the U.S. does project
its forces—and listening devices—all around the world.
The Chinese leadership,
or the Russian, or the Iranian, or the Israeli, are equally
in thrall to “offensive realism”—what will be called
“paranoid realism” once the
planet passes through this
dangerous but also opportune moment of history.
When the mutual fears of
nations and even non-state
actors motivate not only
the acquisition of worlddestructive weapons but the
need for vast systems of data-analysis in order to watch
and anticipate all the moves
of the players, the general
paranoia becomes as much
the problem as the solution.
But there are forces at

work in the world far larger
that the supposed malign
motivations of powerful
nations. These forces can
push all of us, in spite of
our mutual fears, toward
a renewed sense of compassion for ourselves as
a species and a mutuality
based in common survival
goals—similar to the mutual superpower desire to
end the Cold War after the
Cuban crisis of 1962.
In this new understanding of common interest, the
old “meta-thinking” that insists upon nations as exceptional, defensible systems
has now become obsolete.
Our present international
paranoia is a current taking us downriver toward a
waterfall. We can see this
deadly drift in Syria today.
For too long not only the
U.S. but many nations have
made a policy of selling
arms to the enemies of their
enemies. It will not work in
Syria any better than it did
in Afghanistan.
In order to dissolve the
tensions of paranoia, experts and citizens alike
need to understand our
international predicament
as a total system and build
personal
relationships
across boundaries on the
basis of this reality.
Though it has not yet
sunk into the planetary
group mind, our overall
environmental challenge is
the most obvious one that
dissolves the illusion of nations possessing separate
self-interests requiring an
“offensive realist” response,
including
exceptionalist
pretensions that the lives
of “our” children are worth
more than “theirs.”
The challenge of nuclear weapons, as Jonathan
Schell has asserted, takes
its place within the context
of the environmental crisis.
Computer models confirm
that the detonation of only
a small percentage of the
world’s nuclear arsenals
would throw enough soot
into the upper atmosphere
to shut down agriculture
for a decade—in effect,
a death-sentence for the
planet. This alone renders
all present nuclear strategy
obsolete, as even that pitiless realist Dr. Kissinger
has admitted.
Given the role of human
error, or insufficiently safe
design, in disasters such as
Three Mile Island, Chernobyl, and Fukushima,
or near-disasters like the

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Cuban Missile Crisis, in
combination with the variety of forms that nuclear
weapons have taken—nuclear missiles, mines, and
artillery shells supervised
by thousands of fallible humans—it defies all notions
of common sense that the
species can avoid forever
the inadvertent or deliberate use of these weapons.
Disarmament then becomes a gradual, reciprocal
process that depends upon
a change of emphasis appropriate to the new paradigm: diplomatic and nongovernmental initiatives
based upon mutual assured
survival, with continuing
sensible alertness toward
the ever-present possibility
of the lethal combination
of medieval mind-sets and
weapons of mass destruction—making the sequestration of all nuclear materials an urgent priority.
Sunni and Shia, Russians
and Saudis, and, yes, Republicans and Democrats will
look up someday from their
narrow preoccupation with
each other’s shortcomings
to see bearing down upon
them a planetary oneness
of disaster, oceans that rise
even as they become empty
of fish, air that our children
cannot breathe, diseases
that travel from tropical
to temperate zones on the
wings of climate change.
We’re all in this together, our
survival utterly dependent
upon what our “enemies” do
and vice versa.
The secrets that governments hold close and that
the disaffected strive to reveal contain at their heart a
hollowness based in the illusory assumption of separation. Taking their cue from
this pragmatic truth, the
major religions can function
at their best to strengthen
connection (re-ligare, to tie
back together), not to separate—on the basis of the
deep common truth of our
planetary oneness. Inverting the lines from Auden’s
famous poem—“those to
whom evil is done, do evil
in return”—reconciliation,
nonviolence, forgiveness, active initiatives to build trust
and resilience on the basis
of common goals, will cause
those to whom good is done
to respond in kind. Before it
is too late, may it be so.
Winslow Myers is syndicated by
PeaceVoice, is the author of “Living
Beyond War: A Citizen’s Guide,” and
serves on the Advisory Board of the
War Preventive Initiative.

we have a Bill of Rights
Lynn Fitz-Hugh

Harvard philosopher George Santayana
famously said, “Those who cannot remember the past are condemned to repeat it.”
This week I am very afraid that America
is doomed to relearn some very painful lessons. This was my thought as I drove along
listening to a talk show where first the host
quoted a poll released that day which indicated that 62 percent of Americans felt it
was necessary to pursue terrorists even if it
meant that citizen phone records would be
looked at. The host then encouraged people
to call in to say how they feel, and on public radio, the supposed bastion of the liberal
left, I heard person after person say some
variant of, “Well it’s not good, but I don’t
mind because we have to do something to
be safe against terrorists. If this helps them
track down terrorists I guess we have to let
them spy on us.” Boston was cited as an example several times. Hello, having the phone
records did not stop the Boston terrorists.
As more than a decade of failed homeland
security has shown, we can give up our freedoms and privacy but if someone is determined enough they will do something. (This
in not unlike the reality that when people are
suicidal enough even in a locked psychiatric
ward they will find a way to kill themselves.)
In our fear we are so desperate for safety and
security we have forgotten the notion of “in
God We Trust” and we instead seek to put
our trust in surveillance and weapons.
So a quick review: why the Bill of Rights
guarantees us protection against unreasonable searches and seizures, why it also
grants us a right to a speedy and fair trial
and why it grants the right to free speech.
Throughout Europe, before the founder’s
ancestors came to colonial America, people
were prosecuted for religious and political
beliefs, and for things they said, they were
thrown in jail and often held for long times,
if indeed ever given a trial. There were no
rules about searches and what could be
brought as evidence. There were witch
hunts in Europe and in the colonies before
Independence. Leading up to the war of Independence and during it, the British would
enter people’s homes and take things, and
they would imprison and even kill them for
their statements against the King.
Some would like to believe that once we
became independent and operating under
our own constitution that all this unjust
persecution stopped. However, I would
point out to you that during WWII the Japanese were incarcerated without trial, African Americans were treated throughout
most of our history as non-citizens afforded
none of these protections, and during the
McCarthy era people were blacklisted and
destroyed for affiliation, suspicion of affiliations or mere association with “communists.” During both the Vietnam war and
the Civil Rights movement the FBI did illegal surveillance on activists.
Most of you are not worried about the
government collecting your phone records
because you feel you are good law abiding
citizens. You are not a terrorist so you have
nothing to hide, right? Well, think again. So
if during the witch hunts instead of torturing
them to find out who they “consorted with”

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

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what if they could have just looked at their
phone records? Oh, whoops. you might have
been in there as their neighbor, or co-worker,
or banker or hairdresser. If during the McCarthy era they did not have to scrap to find signin sheets for meetings, but could instead have
just looked at what Web sites people looked
at, have you never looked at a web site even
by accident that could be misconstrued in
some way? Whose email could be in your inbox? Has anyone suspicious ever called you?
The Republicans spied on the anti-war
movement during the Vietnam war and now
the Democrats have messed with the tax records of the Tea-party during the Obama administration. So clearly neither party can be
trusted to not violate people simply for their
politics. The Kennedy administration considered trying to ruin Martin Luther King, Jr. by
revealing an affair he had that they learned
about by wiretapping. Are you sure there
is nothing in your phone records or emails
that you would not be unhappy about having revealed to the whole world if you somehow were deemed “the enemy” because of
something you said or did, or just someone
you simply befriended? How many people
throughout US history have been tried as accessories to crimes committed by a friend or
family member, simply for helping that person when they had no idea what that person
was up to? As the bumpersticker says, “1984
is a novel, not an instruction manual.”
It’s funny there are people who say they will
only let the 2nd amendment be pried out of
their cold, hard, dead hands, but I am wondering why we don’t seem to feel that way about
all of amendments that make up the Bill of
Rights? The interviews of Edward Snowden
reveal that he put a lot of forethought into his
decision to go public with the information
that our government is spying on us. He was
clear that he is probably surrendering his freedom, perhaps his life, and that at minimum
he will be looking over his shoulder forever.
Interestingly, the same public who is not too
concerned about being spied on does, by 54
percent in a New York Times poll, see him as
hero and a patriot. How one squares those
two things I do not know, but I think some
corner of us does sense what it is in our modern day to fight for our Bill of Rights, and this
he has clearly revealed to us.
Snowden also stated that his greatest fear
is that nothing will change, that we will willingly surrender our constitutional freedoms.
I can understand that fear. Our Founding
Fathers (and I use the phrase correctly
here because the women were left out the
room) put these rights into the Constitution because they were dissidents and they
understood that for democracy to be real it
would need the voice of dissent. For those
of you Republicans who were silent during
the Bush administration as these procedures
were being developed, and for you Democrats who are silent now in protection of
your president, I say time to stop playing
politics. Either our Constitutional rights
are valuable and worth standing up for, or
they are not. We should remember we had
to fight to get them; forgetting that will let
them slide away and condemn us to another
major fight to get them back.
Lynn Fitz-Hugh, Seattle, is a lifelong peace activist, a
mother, therapist, and writes for PeaceVoice.

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Obituaries
Pauline J. Cunningham

Pauline J. Cunningham, 95, of Mason, passed away on
June 14, 2013, at Holzer Hospital in Gallipolis, Ohio.
She was daughter of the late George and Maggie Johnson.
She is also preceded in death by her husband, John E.
Cunningham; and three brothers, Ralph, Don, and Dana
Johnson; three sisters, Ruth, Georgianna, and Leahnelle.
She is survived by her daughters, Carol (Don) Diddle,
of Pomeroy, Ohio, Jonetta (Bob) Davis of Racine Ohio;
brothers, Alton (Laurie) Johnson of Chester, W.Va., Earl
(Mary) Johnson of Mason, W.Va.; three sisters, Lorna
Johnson of West Columbia, Mary Capehart of Moundsville, W.Va., and Doris Roberts of Mason, W.Va.; three
granddaughters, Tammy (Mike) Lavender of Middleport, Ohio, Ann (Dave) Ramey of Shade, Ohio, and Tina
(Brian) Manning of New Philadelphia, Ohio; grandson,
John Diddle of Gallipolis, Ohio; great-grandsons, Ryan
(Tiffany) VanMatre of Rutland, Ohio, Brandon Bachner
of Middleport, Ohio; great-granddaughter, Maggie Manning of New Philadelphia, Ohio; great-grandson, Grady
Manning of New Philadelphia, Ohio; great-granddaughter, Mikayla Vanmatre; and sister-in-law, Dorothy Johnson of Mason, W.Va.
There was a one day service at the Foglesong-Roush
funeral home in Mason on Monday, June 17. Visitation
was held from 11 a.m. to 1 p.m. on Monday. Service was
held at 1 p.m, with Pastor Glenn Rowe officiating.
You may send your condolences to foglesongroushfh.
com.

Colleen Dunfee

Colleen Dunfee, 85, of Middleport, Ohio, passed away
on Saturday, June 15, 2013, at O’Bleness Memorial Hospital in Athens, Ohio, after an extended illness and other
health related issues. She was born in Trimble, Ohio, on
July 12, 1927, daughter of the late Harry Leonard and
Hazel Phillips Campbell.
In addition to her parents, she was preceded in death
by her husband, William; granddaughter, Teresa Dawn
Hawley; and brother, Rodney Campbell.
She is survived by her children, Steven H. Dunfee of
Pomeroy, Ohio, Kendall and Wendy Dunfee of Hamden,
Ohio, and Linda Bobo of Middleport, who was her Mother’s caregiver for nine years; grandchildren, Tamara Hawley, Jeri Lynn Hawley Herman, Wendi Maxson, Kenda
Lawrence, Andrea Watson, Matthew Dunfee, Casey Dunfee, Megan Dunfee, and Austin Dunfee; great-grandchildren, Brennan Klein, Aaron Maxson, Allyson Maxson,
Nicholas Casto, Raynee Herman, Tyson Herman, Kayte
Lawrence, Keri Ann Lawrence, Kourtney Lawrence, Dalton Lawrence, and Hunter Lawrence; great, great-grandson, Taryn Jerimiah Herman; sister, LaVerne Sanders of
Zanesville, Ohio; and several nieces, nephews, and close
friends.
Funeral services will be held at 1 p.m., on Wednesday,
June 19, 2013, at Anderson McDaniel Funeral Home
in Middleport. Burial will be in Riverview Cemetery.
Friends may call from 11 a.m. until time of service on
Wednesday, June 19, at the funeral home.
A registry is available at www.andersonmcdaniel.com.

Bobby O. Parker

Bobby O. Parker, 81, of Boynton Beach, Florida, passed
away June 13, 2013.
A memorial service were held on Monday June 17,
2013 at 7 p.m. in the chapel of Palm Beach Memorial
Park Funeral Home, 3691 Seacrest Blvd. Lantana, FL
33436, (561) 586-1237.
Bobby worked in the glass and glazing industry, beginning in the early 1950’s until his death. He founded
Parker Glass in Waverly, Ohio, and continued working
in the glass and glazing industry throughout Ohio and
Florida.
He is survived by his daughters, Cheryl (William)
Pieper of Piketon, Ohio, and Tamera Lane of Orient,
Ohio; sons, Robert (Shelley) Parker of Boca Raton,
Floridam and William (Debra) Parker of Boynton Beach,
Florida. He leaves many to cherish his character, including his grandchildren, Holly (Tom) Patton, Megan
Pieper, Jamie Ward, Evan Pieper, Aaron (Sarah) Lane,
Logan Parker, Allison Parker (deceased), Bryce Parker,
and Landon Parker; and great-grandchildren, Lane Leslie
and Trace Leslie.
He was predeceased by his wife, Ramona L. Parker.
In lieu of flowers, Bobby requested donations be made
to the Pulmonary Hypertension Association (in memory
of his beloved wife Ramona Parker), 801 Roeder Rd.,
Suite 400, Silver Spring, MD 20910.
Online condolences to Bobby’s family may be offered
at www.palmbeachmemorial.com.

Death Notices
Burton

Evelyn Mae Burton
(Fields), 90, originally of
Point Pleasant, W.Va., died
June 16, 2013, in Albany,
Ohio. Willis Funeral Home
will arrange a graveside
service at Pine Street Cemetery in Gallipolis, Ohio,
at 2 p.m., Friday, June 21,
2013. Family, friends and
community are welcome.

Cain

Henry Jackson Cain,
76, of Leon, W.Va., died
June 14, 2013, in Cabell
Huntington Hospital, of
injuries received in an automobile accident, on June
11, near his home.
Service will be 11 a.m.,
Tuesday, June 18, 2013,
at Casto Funeral Home
Chapel, Evans, W.Va., with
the Rev. Verlin Hart officiating. Burial will follow
in the Creston Cemetery.
Visitation will be from 6-8
p.m,. Monday, at the funeral home.

Cook

Belinda Ann Cook, 38, of
Gallipolis, died Thursday
evening, June 13, 2013, in
Pittsboro, Indiana.
Funeral services will be
conducted at 3 p.m. Tuesday, June 18, 2013, at the
Waugh-Halley-Wood Funeral Home with Pastor
Larry Lemley officiating.
Friends may call at the
funeral home on Tuesday
from 1 p.m. until the time
of service.
In lieu of flowers, contributions can be made
to
Waugh-Halley-Wood
funeral home to help with
Belinda’s funeral expenses.

David

John Bernard David,
Jr., 82, of Stratham, New
Hampshire, died Saturday, June 15, 2013, at Holzer Senior Care Center,
Bidwell, Ohio.
A memorial service will
be held at a later date in

Portsmouth, New Hampshire.
Arrangements are under
the direction of the Wilcoxen Funeral Home in Point
Pleasant.

Gilfilen

Charles Owen Gilfilen,
102, Gallipolis, Ohio, died
Saturday, June 15, 2013, at
his residence.
Funeral services will
be conducted at 12 p.m.
Wednesday, June 19, 2013,
in the McCoy-Moore Funeral Home, Wetherholt
Chapel, Gallipolis with
Father Thomas Hamm,
Officiate. Burial will follow in Vinton Memorial
Park, Vinton with Military Graveside Rites to be
conducted by the Gallia
County Veterans Funeral
Detail. Friends and family
may call Wednesday at the
funeral home from 11 a.m.
until the service hour.
In lieu of flowers, the

family requests memorial gifts be sent to: Holzer
Hospice, 100 Jackson Pike,
Gallipolis, Ohio 45631.

Kanniard

Harley Antwon Kanniard, 19, died June 14,
2013, after an four wheeler
accident. A funeral service
will be held at 1 p.m. on
Tuesday, June 18, 2013,
at the Deal Funeral Home.
Burial will be in the Kirkland Memorial Gardens.
Friends may call two
hours prior to the service
on Tuesday at the funeral
home.

Lemley

Lawrence Lemley, 82, of
Middleport, died Monday,
June 17, 2013, in the Holzer Medical Center, Gallipolis.
Arrangements will be announced by the CremeensKing Funeral Home, Middleport-Pomeroy Chapel.

Riffle

Donald K. Riffle, 75,
Gallipolis, Ohio, died
Monday, June 17, 2013, in
the Holzer Senior Care Facility, Bidwell, Ohio.
Arrangements will be
announced by the McCoyMoore Funeral Home,
Wetherholt Chapel, Gallipolis.

Rollins

Henry Rollins, 75, died
June 15, 2013.
Funeral services will be
held at 1 p.m. Wednesday,
June 19, 2013, at the Deal
Funeral Home in Point
Pleasant, W.Va., with Pastor Sampy Hart officiating. Burial will follow in
Eddy Chapel Cemetery in
Leon, W.Va. Friends may
visit the family from 11
a.m.-1 p.m., prior to the
service on Wednesday at
the funeral home.

Swingle

James Edwin Swingle,
82, of Jackson, died Friday, June 14, 2013, at the
Holzer Medical Center in
Jackson.
Funeral services will be
held at 1 p.m. Wednesday,
June 19, 2013, at the Mayhew-Brown Funeral Home
with Rev. Robert Anderson officiating and burial
to follow in the Fairmount
Cemetery. Friends may call
from 2-4 and 6-8 p.m. Tuesday, June 18, 2013, at the
funeral home.
In lieu of flowers, memorial donations in Jim’s
name can be made to the
Grace United Methodist
Church, 124 Locust Street,
Jackson Ohio 45640.

Toole

Tyson Corey Toole,
35, of Kamloops, British
Columbia, died April 19,
2013, after a courageous
battle with cancer. Services were held in Canada.

Photos by Charlene Hoeflich | Daily Sentinel

Jeff Darst displayed his two vintage firetrucks, a 1946 Seagraves ladder truck which is 43 feet
long, and a 1948 restored Seagraves pumper truck (shown) which gets about five miles to a
gallon of gas, at the Kickin’ Summer Bash’s Court Street cruise-in. Both vehicles are parade
trucks for Darst, chief of the Middleport Fire Department.
The Riverside Cloggers of Point Pleasant do a fast dance to the music.

Bash
From Page 1
Saturday’s kids events
were successful with many
enjoying free carnival rides,
taking part in contests, collecting the novelty item
give-aways, and enjoying
the sack lunches, all free.
Meigs Senior Center which
sponsors the summer food
program for school children
had volunteers on hand to
work with the children.
Jane Ann Williams was the
winner of the ice cream making contest with Julie Holter
coming in second. The decision as to the best followed a
public sampling of the product and a vote. Brad Swisher
and Megan Drummer were
the winners in the newlywed
game with Ami Thompson
and Danny Terzopplous taking second place.
Late afternoon entertainment was provided by
musicians Brent Patterson
and Mindy Braach, and
wrapping up the festival
was music by the Dirt Poor
Troubadors Band.

60416777
60396938

Kevin Schwarzel and Mike Putnam
Owners

�The Daily Sentinel

Sports

TUESDAY,
JUNE 18, 2013

mdssports@civitasmedia.com

Back home, Heat try to stop Spurs
MIAMI (AP) — The Miami
Heat weren’t supposed to be in
this situation. Not now, anyway.
Coming home from Texas with
their season on the line in 2011
was one thing. They were at the
end of their first year together
— LeBron James, Dwyane Wade
and Chris Bosh still trying to figure it all out and clearly a long
way from it.
But this season they were the
NBA’s best team, one that lost
three games in three months and
made losing three times in one

series look unlikely, if not downright unimaginable.
The San Antonio Spurs can
finish Miami off Tuesday night in
Game 6 of the NBA Finals, reaffirming themselves as one of the
league’s greatest franchises.
If so, the Heat’s Big Three
once again go from celebrated to
devastated.
“We’re going to see if we’re a
better team than we were our
first year together,” James said.
The Spurs took a 3-2 lead with
their 114-104 victory Sunday

night. Tim Duncan, Tony Parker
and Manu Ginobili were all brilliant again, and Danny Green
added to what could become one
of the most out-of-nowhere finals
MVP campaigns ever.
One more victory makes the
Spurs 5-0 in the NBA Finals,
keeping pace with Michael Jordan’s 6-0 Chicago Bulls as the
only teams to make it here multiple times and never lose.
“We understand Game 6 is
huge,” Parker said. “Obviously,
you want to finish in the first

opportunity you get. We understand that Miami is going to
come out with a lot more energy,
and they’re going to play better
at home. They’re going to shoot
the ball better. Their crowd is going to be behind them.”
None of that mattered two
years ago.
Clearly reeling and their
psyches shaken after dropping
two straight games in Dallas,
the Heat were blitzed early in
Game 6. They never recovered,
Bosh inconsolable as he made

his way back to the locker room
afterward while the Mavericks
celebrated at center court.
James had to endure the criticisms that came with not getting
it done in the finals, a story line
that was put to rest last year but
will be back again if the Heat
don’t manage to put together
consecutive victories.
“We challenge ourselves to
see if we’re a better team than
we were,” Wade said. “Same
See HEAT ‌| 8

Charles Trainor Jr. | Miami Herald | MCT photo

Yong Kim | Philadelphia Daily News | MCT photo

Justin Rose wins the U.S. Open golf tournament at Merion
Golf Club’s East Course in Ardmore, Penn., on Sunday, June 16.

Rose wins US Open
ARDMORE, Pa. (AP) — Justin Rose could see all the
pieces coming together in this U.S. Open.
The sun was breaking through the clouds Sunday evening at Merion as he stood in the 18th fairway with a oneshot lead. That famous Ben Hogan plaque was in front of
him, a road marker bronze that one pure swing and two
putts might be all that stood between Rose and his first
major championship.
That and Phil Mickelson in the final group behind him.
Rose followed his script to perfection with a par. So did
Mickelson, who can’t seem to win a U.S. Open no matter
how hard he tries.
Rose drilled a 4-iron just through the green and used a
3-wood to bunt the ball to an inch of the cup for par. Mickelson, who made two careless bogeys on the back nine,
needed a birdie on an 18th hole that didn’t yield a single
one all weekend at Merion.
“What a piece of silverware to be sitting to my right,”
Rose said, gazing at the shiny trophy after closing with
an even-par 70. “It’s just an incredible experience and a
childhood dream come true at this point.”
It was a recurring nightmare for Mickelson, extending
his record collection of silver medals in the major he covets.
“Heartbreak,” Mickelson said on his 43rd birthday.
“This is tough to swallow after coming so close. This was
my best chance of all. I had a golf course I really liked. I
felt this was as good as opportunity as you could ask for.
It really hurts.”
With remarkable poise and three pure swings under
pressure, Rose became the first Englishman in 43 years to
win America’s national championship.
Mickelson extended his U.S. Open record with his sixth
runner-up finish, and this one stung. It was the first time
he had the outright lead going into the final round. He
holed a wedge out of deep rough for an eagle to take back
the lead as he headed to the back nine.
But he flew the green with a wedge on the par-3 13th
hole and made bogey on the easiest hole at Merion. He
See ROSE |‌ 10

OVP Sports Briefs
Wilson makes ace at
Riverside
Mason, W.Va. — Jimmy Wilson of Point Pleasant recorded the sixth hole
in one of the season on the
100 yard 14th hole Friday.
Wilson’s feat, which was
hit with a wedge, was witnessed by John L. Harris
and Ira Eggleston is the
fifth ace of his career.
Gallia Academy all
comer meet
CENTENARY,
Ohio
— Gallia Academy High
School will be hosting
two all-comer track meets.
These meets will be open
to all ages and the first
meet will be Saturday
July 13, with registration beginning at 9 a.m.
and events starting at
11. There is also a meet
scheduled for August 10th

at 11a.m. There is a fee
for competitors and spectators and volunteers are
still needed. Heats will
be combined if needed,
but winners will be determined by age groups.
Competitors must check
in with the clerk at the
second call prior to their
event start. Competitors must have your own
implements for shot and
disc and must have experience throwing the disc
or on the pole vault. We
will not allow the novice
vaulters or disc thrower to
throw or jump for safety
reasons. Parents please supervise your kids, you are
the coach for the day and
please ensure they make it
to their events on time.We
will not enforce limits on

Miami Heat’s Mario Chalmers gets stopped by San Antonio Spurs’ Tim Duncan during the third quarter in Game 3 of
the NBA Finals, Tuesday, June 11, at the AT&amp;T Center in San Antonio, Texas.

Duncan closing in on 5th championship
SAN ANTONIO (AP) — It’s all
right in front of Tim Duncan now,
and the big fella can feel it.
You can tell when he broke out
that little spin move in the paint in
Game 5 on Sunday night, a nimble
little display of footwork that has
mostly been in moth balls for the
past four or five seasons.
You can tell by the elevation he
got on a first-quarter dunk, one of
the most emphatic he’s had in years.
And you can tell by the glimmer that can’t be hidden by the
far-away look in his eyes when he
talks about being one victory away
from title No. 5.
“I think every one of us wants this
very badly from the top on down,”
Duncan said after scoring 17 points
and grabbing 12 rebounds in a 114104 victory over the Miami Heat
that gave his San Antonio Spurs a
3-2 lead in the NBA Finals.
“We’re trying to play that way.
We just need to put it on the floor
and understand the kind of energy
and the kind of aggression they’re
going to come with next game.”
The 37-year-old Duncan has
been asked about retirement and
heard the reports of his Spurs’
demise for years now. His time,
his team’s time, is supposed to be
long gone.
This is LeBron’s league now.
This is the Heat’s year.
Yet there he was on Sunday
night, out-muscling Heat star
Chris Bosh, who grew up with
Duncan posters on the walls of his
Dallas bedroom.
There he was walking up to
Tony Parker before the opening
tip to offer some quiet words that
set the tone.

There he was drawing double
teams that sucked in the Heat defense and allowed Danny Green
to slip undetected into the corner for 3-pointer after backbreaking 3-pointer.
“We’ve been in situations like
this. We’ve been together for a
long time,” Duncan said. “So that
definitely plays a role. I think
we’re just trying to do all we can
to will it to happen.”
Duncan may not be putting up
the monster numbers that he used
to when the Spurs were winning
titles every other year in the middle of the past decade.
But if the Spurs are able to win
one of the next two games in Miami — starting with Game 6 on
Tuesday night — and dethrone
the defending champions, it will
be as much due to the unshakeable
resolve and unflappable poise that
Duncan has instilled in this group
as anything else.
Sure, Green is the runaway favorite for finals MVP with his
record-setting shooting from the
outside. But Duncan is the one
who draws the attention down low
to give him so many clean looks.
Sure, Parker is the focal point of
the Spurs offense and has been for
several years. But Duncan is the
one who sets those teeth-rattling
screens to free him up in San Antonio’s pick-and-roll.
Sure, Gregg Popovich is the
mastermind behind the schemes
that have turned LeBron James
from a force of nature into a flustered jump shooter.
But Duncan is the quarterback on
the court, getting everyone in the
right places and serving as the an-

chor should something break down.
“If anybody is crazy in the
group, it’s me,” Popovich said.
“They pretty much have an even
keel. Timmy Duncan sets the tone,
and he just competes. Whether
he does well or whether he does
poorly, game in, game out, year in,
year out, he competes and people
just follow that.”
That’s why the Spurs are here
right now. That’s why they’re so
close to doing something no one
outside of this silver-and-blacked
painted city thought could be
done. They’ve never trailed in a
finals series because Duncan has
never allowed it.
Even when James and the Heat
blew them out in Game 2 to tie the
series, the Spurs never wavered.
Even when Miami’s three AllStars dominated Game 4, the
Spurs didn’t back down.
It’s a testament to Duncan. To his
will. To his tenacity. To his refusal to
let anyone bury him, bury his team.
A fifth championship is oh so
close now. It would put Duncan’s
name alongside other greats such
as Kobe Bryant, Magic Johnson
and George Mikan, three titans of
the game who stood on top of the
NBA mountain five times.
The spotlight-shunning Duncan
has rarely been mentioned with
the same reverence.
Maybe this would change all that.
“With this fifth one, he dominates
his generation,” Johnson said in a
conference call last week. “He and
Kobe would be the greatest winners
during this time. And domination
wise, he’ll be just as dominant as
any big man that’s ever played, and
also be a great winner as well.”

Ex-NFL star Chad Johnson being released from jail

FORT LAUDERDALE, Fla. (AP)
— A contrite Chad Johnson apologized Monday for disrespecting a
judge when the former NFL star
slapped his attorney on the backside
in court last week, and his immediate
release from jail was ordered.
Broward County Circuit Judge Kathleen McHugh accepted Johnson’s apology and cut his 30-day jail term for a
probation violation to the seven days
he had already served since the rearswatting incident. Johnson, a flamboyant wide receiver formerly known
as Chad Ochocinco, said in court that
he’d had time to think about why his
flippant attitude was wrong — especially in a domestic violence case.
“I just wanted to apologize for
disrespecting the court last time,”
said Johnson, wearing a tan jail
jumpsuit with his hands shackled at
See BRIEFS ‌| 8 the waist. “I apologize. I did have

time to reflect on the mistakes I
made in this courtroom.”
McHugh noted that in a previous
hearing Johnson had put his arm
around a female prosecutor’s shoulders, prompting the prosecutor to
tell him twice not to touch her. The
judge also pointed out that when
Johnson head-butted his then-wife,
Evelyn Lozada of the reality TV
show “Basketball Wives,” she suffered a three-inch gash on her head
that required eight stitches. The
judge called those injuries horrific.
McHugh also said Johnson failed
to appreciate “the gift of probation”
after pleading no contest to battery
in the altercation last August with
Lozada, which prompted her to
quickly file for divorce. Johnson, 35,
was in court because he had failed to
meet with his probation officer for
three straight months.

“I find that’s an arrogant disregard
for a court order,” the judge said.
McHugh ordered Johnson to perform 25 hours of community service
and attend domestic violence counseling sessions twice a week during
probation, and she extended his probation an extra three months through
mid-October.
The attorney who had his backside
slapped, Adam Swickle, said Johnson
will fully comply with all probation
conditions and hopes to resurrect his
NFL career. The six-time Pro Bowler
was cut by the Miami Dolphins after
his arrest for battery; he played most
of his 11 seasons with the Cincinnati
Bengals followed by one year with
the New England Patriots.
“He understands that this is the kind
of situation that can derail a person’s
career,” Swickle said. “We’re very confident he will do what he should do.”

�Tuesday, June 18, 2013

NOTICE TO CONTRACTORS
Sealed proposals for the
County Cooperative Paving
Project – ROUND 27 will be received by the Meigs County
Commissioners at their office
at The Meigs County Courthouse, 100 E. Second Street,
Suite 301, Pomeroy, Ohio
45769 until 11:15 A.M., June
27, 2013, and then at 11:15
A.M. at said office opened and
read aloud.
Resurfacing portions of CR 36
Sumner Road, CR 46 Success Road and TR 91 New
Hope Road. The engineerʼs
estimate for this project is
$471,464.00
DOMESTIC STEEL USE REQUIREMENTS AS SPECIFIED IN SECTION 153.011
OF THE REVISED CODE APPLY TO THIS PROJECT.
COPIES OF SECTION
153.011 OF THE REVISED
CODE CAN BE OBTAINED
FROM ANY OF THE OFFICES OF THE DEPARTMENT OF ADMINISTRATIVE
LEGALS
SERVICES.
Bid documents may be secured at the office of The
Meigs County Engineer, 34110
Fairgrounds Road, Pomeroy,
Ohio 45769; Phone Number
740-992-2911 for a $10.00
non-refundable fee.
Each bid must be accompanied by either a bid bond in the
full amount of the bid with a
surety satisfactory to the aforesaid Meigs County Commissioner or by certified check,
cashiers check, or irrevocable
letter of credit upon a solvent
bank in the amount of not less
than 10% of the bid amount in
the favor of the aforesaid
Meigs County Commissioner.
Bid bonds shall be accompanied by Proof of Authority of the
official or agent signing the
bond.
Bids shall be sealed and
marked as Bid for: County Cooperative Paving Project –
Round 27 and mailed or delivered to:
Meigs County Commissioners
The Meigs County Courthouse
100 E. Second Street, Suite
301
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
6/11 6/18

LEGALS

ANNOUNCEMENTS

The Daily Sentinel • Page 7

www.mydailysentinel.com

60419955

NOTICE TO CONTRACTORS
Sealed proposals for the
AUCTION / ESTATE /
County Cooperative Paving
Project – ROUND 27 will be reYARD SALE
ceived by the Meigs County
SERVICES
Commissioners at their office
at The Meigs County Courthouse, 100 E. Second Street,
Professional Services
Suite 301, Pomeroy, Ohio
45769 until 11:15 A.M., June
Stanley
27, 2013, and then at 11:15
Tree Trimming
A.M. at said office opened and
&amp; Removal
read aloud.
Resurfacing portions of CR 36
• Prompt and Quality Work
Sumner Road, CR 46 Suc• Reasonable Rates
cess Road and TR 91 New
• Insured • Experienced
Hope Road. The engineerʼs
• References Available
estimate for this project is
Gary Stanley
$471,464.00
DOMESTIC STEEL USE RE740-591-8044
QUIREMENTS AS SPEPlease leave a message
CIFIED IN SECTION 153.011
OF THE REVISED CODE APPLY TO THIS PROJECT.
FINANCIAL SERVICES
COPIES OF SECTION
153.011 OF THE REVISED
CODE CAN BE OBTAINED
EMPLOYMENT
FROM ANY OF THE OFFICES OF THE DEPARTMENT OF ADMINISTRATIVE
SERVICES.
EDUCATION
Bid documents may be secured at the office of The
Miscellaneous
Meigs County
Engineer, 34110
Fairgrounds Road, Pomeroy,
Ohio 45769; Phone Number
740-992-2911 for a $10.00
non-refundable fee.
Each bid must be accompanied by either a bid bond in the
full amount of the bid with a
surety satisfactory to the aforesaid Meigs County Commissioner or by certified check,
Are You Still Paying Too
Muchcheck, or irrevocable
cashiers
Make the Switch to Dish
letter of credit upon a solvent
For Your Medications?
bank
in the amount of not less
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You can save up to 90% when you
fill your
than
prescriptions at our Canadian
and10% of the bid amount in
International Pharmacy Service.
the favor of the aforesaid
rice
Meigs County Commissioner.
Our P
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marked
as Bid for: County Co31, 2013. Oﬀer is valid
for prescription
mo.
orders only and canoperative
not be used in
Paving Project –
compared to
conjunction with any other oﬀers.
TM
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deCelebrex $437.58 Order Now! 1-800-341-2398
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for 200mg x 100
this special offer. Meigs County Commissioners
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Please note that we do not carry controlled substances and a valid
prescription is required for all prescription medication
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E. Second Street, Suite
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Call Toll-free: 1-800-341-2398
Call 7 days a week 8am - 11pm EST Promo Code: MB0113
Pomeroy,
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Use of these services is subject to the Terms of
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6/11 6/18

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MARKETPLACE

for 12 month

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877-465-0321

We’re here to help you Monday - Friday from 9am-9pm EST
Not available in all states

Lost &amp; Found
FOUND: Grey cat in Racine.
Has been loved and well taken
care of. 740-949-2991
Memory/ Thank You
THANK YOU FOR YOUR
DONATION TO THE UPKEEP OF LETART TOWNSHIP CEMETERIES.
Notices
NOTICE OHIO VALLEY
PUBLISHING CO.
Recommends that you do
Business with People you
know, and NOT to send Money
through the Mail until you have
Investigated the Offering.

Pictures that have been
placed in ads at the
Gallipolis Daily Tribune
must be picked within
30 days. Any pictures
that are not picked up
will be
discarded.
Wanted
Wanted : Someone to mow
Bethel Cemetery on Bladen
Rd. For details call Keith
Campbell at 256-1444 or Roger James 256-6015
AUCTION / ESTATE /
YARD SALE

888-781-3386

Automotive
1985 BMW 325 E, Asking
Price $1,200 Ph : 446-7383
ask for Paul.
Lawn Service
Mowing &amp; Brush Cutting. Free
Est. 30yrs Exp. Call 740-4463682 John
Professional Services
SEPTIC PUMPING Gallia Co.
OH and
Mason Co. WV. Ron
Evans
Jackson,
OH
800-537-9528

Repairs
Joe's TV Repair on most
makes &amp; Models. House Calls
304-675-1724
FINANCIAL SERVICES
Money To Lend
NOTICE Borrow Smart. Contact
the Ohio Division of Financial Institutions Office of Consumer Affairs BEFORE you refinance your
home or obtain a loan. BEWARE
of requests for any large advance
payments of fees or insurance.
Call the Office of Consumer Affiars toll free at 1-866-278-0003 to
learn if the mortgage broker or
lender is properly licensed. (This
is a public service announcement
from the Ohio Valley Publishing
Company)

2500 Off Service

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Mention Code: MB

Pleasant Valley Hospital is in
need of a full-time WV licensed LPN for a subspecialty
physician office. Ideal candidate should be a hard-working,
self motivated, and professional individual eager to work at a
busy pace.
Prior/experience
in
Medical
Health
a physician office or hospital
related area is preferred. Excellent benefits.
Send resumes to: Pleasant
Valley Hospital, c/o Human
Resources, 2520 Valley Dr.,
Pt. Pleasant, WV 25550, fax to
(304) 675-6975, or apply online at www.pvalley.org.
EOE: M/F/D/V
EDUCATION
Business &amp; Trade School

REAL ESTATE SALES

MANUFACTURED
HOUSING

gallipoliscareercollege.edu
Accredited Member Accrediting Council
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1274B

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3.53 acres w/3BR, 2BA,
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back deck, 24x24 detached
vinyl siding garage, 30x24 pole
barn, w/small lean to. Evenings 740-446-6689 or 740-4417488
FARM &amp; HOUSE 4-SALE:
DW on perm. foundation. 38
acres, 2 barns, 2 bldgs. 192
Buffalo Dr., off Wilding Rd.
Rvnswd. 304-373-5278
$189.9
Trailer lot for rent, $175 mo, incd water, 33533 Bailey Run
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REAL ESTATE RENTALS
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1 &amp; 2 bedroom apartments &amp;
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pets,
740-992-2218
2 BR apt. 6 mi from Holzer.
$400 + dep. Some utilities pd.
740-418-7504 or 740-9886130
3 BR-home in town. Applications available at Wiseman
Real Estate. Call 446-3644 for
more info.
RENTALS AVAILABLE! 2 BR
townhouse apartments, also
renting 2 &amp; 3BR houses. Call
441-1111.
APT for rent, Syracuse, 2 BR,
1 BA, water, sewage, trash incl, avail immediately, $450 mo,
$250 dep. 740-591-1578
FIRST MONTH FREE
2 &amp; 3 BR apts
$425 mo &amp; up
sec dep $300 &amp; up
AC, W/D hook-up
tenant pays elec
EHO
Ellm View Apts
304-882-3017
Ideal downtown location for
single or professional couple.
Newly renovated, 2 bedrooms,
1 1/2 baths, spacious living
and dining area, kitchen with
appliances included and laundry with w/d hookup. No
smoking or pets. Deposit and
references required. Call 740446-7654

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• A glucose meter upgrade
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monitoring

Jordan Landing Apts-1, 2 &amp; 3
BR units avail. You pay electric. We Pay water sewage and
trash. Minorities encouraged to
apply. No pets
304-674-0023
304-444-4268

H.S. CAREER-TECHNICAL
MATH INSTRUCTOR - Valid
Ohio Math license required.
CONTACT: Gallia-JacksonVinton JVSD (740) 245-5334,
Ext. 256.

Middleport, 1 &amp; 2 BR apts,
some with utilities pd, no pets,
dep &amp; ref, 740-992-0165

starting aro

und

per week

*with $99 customer
ation e and
purchase of alarm install
monitoring charg
services.

Call Today, Protect Tomorrow!

1-888-718-8142

Mon-Fri 8am - 11pm • Sat 9am - 8pm • Sun 10am - 6pm EST

Medical / Health
Pleasant Valley Hospital is in
need of a full-time WV licensed LPN for a subspecialty
physician office. Ideal candidate should be a hard-working,
self motivated, and professional individual eager to work at a
busy pace. Prior experience in
a physician office or hospital
related area is preferred. Excellent benefits.
Send resumes to: Pleasant
Valley Hospital, c/o Human
Resources, 2520 Valley Dr.,

Repo's
Available
740)446-3570

Call

RESORT PROPERTY
ANIMALS
Pets
FREE KITTENS:Rescued, to
good homes only. 740-9493408 between 5-8 pm.
Free: Kittens to good home.
740-416-3848

GIVEAWAY - To a good home
8 Shar Pei mixed puppies Call
740)388-9310
AGRICULTURE
AUTOMOTIVE
Autos for Sale
85 Corvette $10,000 Ex. Cond.
06 Suz. Blvd Motorcycle 1500
Series $5500. 304-743-6123
AUTOMOTIVE
AFTER MARKET
MERCHANDSE FOR SALE
Miscellaneous
Jet Aeration Motors
repaired, new &amp; rebuilt in stock.
Call Ron Evans 1-800-537-9528

Want To Buy
Absolute Top Dollar - silver/gold
coins, any 10K/14K/18K gold jewelry, dental gold, pre 1935 US currency, proof/mint sets, diamonds,
MTS Coin Shop. 151 2nd Avenue,
Gallipolis. 446-2842

SERVICE / BUSINESS
DIRECTORY
Miscellaneous
BASEMENT WATERPROOFING. Unconditional Lifetime
Guarantee. Local references.
Established in 1975. Call
24hrs (740)446-0870. Rogers
Basement Waterproofing
Upholstery

"Hiring Direct Care Staff for individuals with developmental
disabilities. If interested please
call 740-853-0526 or apply in
person from 10a-3p at 352 2nd
Ave Gallipolis, OH (BTS Building)"

DEADLINE: 6/21/2013. EEO

Sales

Spring Valley Green Apartments 1 BR at $425 Month.
446-1599.
Houses For Rent
165 N. 4th Ave, Middleport,
OH, 3 BR, 2 BA, brick 2 story,
NO AC, carport, stor, $500 mo.
740-992-2704 or 992-7608
2BR, 1BA, on Farm
$600/month with utility allowance, 540-729-1331
2BR, house for Rent in
Kanauga, $500/month,
$500/Deposit. plus utilities, No
Pets 740-441-2707

SNODGRASS UPHOLSTERY,
we help you to recover you
investments. Racine, OH
740-949-2202

www.mydailysentinel.com

Call NOW to make sure
you are ge�ing
the best deal on your
Diabetic Supplies!

Rentals
FOR RENT: Trailer, 450. plus
dep. Gallipolis Ferry. 304962-0167
Mobile Home / Point Pleasant
Area / $400mo. Call 304-2385127

Lots

Help Wanted General

Your insurance may pay for your diabetic
supplies with li�le to no cost to you.

3 BR House, conveniently located. Ref, dep, no smoking
and no pets. 304-675-5162
3 BR TRAILER, like new, very
nice, in country, $450 mo,
$450 dep,(Rutland area) Harrisonville, OH 740-742-7010

FOR RENT OR SALE: 2BR
House. 450mo + dep. Needs
some work. 304-812-5448
FOR RENT: 3BR 1BA house.
Lg. fenced back yard. Attached garage. 750 mo. + dep.
304-892-4325, 304-531-1197

EMPLOYMENT

ARE YOU A DIABETIC?

Houses For Rent
3 BR &amp; 2 Bath House &amp; 2 car
garage - Rent $750 Dep. $750
Located in the Georges Creek
rd area. 388-9003 leave message- NO PETS, Serious Inquires only

Gallipolis Career
College
(Careers Close To Home)
Call Today! 740-446-4367
1-800-214-0452

SERVICES

Call Now For Immediate Help

CREDIT CARD RELIEF
for your FREE consultation CALL

ANNOUNCEMENTS

Sewer &amp; Waterline Repair
Call:
304-675-3824
304-593-1991

We’ll Repair Your Computer
Through The Internet!

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

NOTICE TO CONTRACTORS
Sealed proposals for the
County Cooperative Paving
Project – ROUND 27 will be received by the Meigs County
Commissioners at their office
at The Meigs County Courthouse, 100 E. Second Street,
Suite 301, Pomeroy, Ohio
45769 until 11:15 A.M., June
27, 2013, and then at 11:15
A.M. at said office opened and
read aloud.
Resurfacing portions of CR 36
Sumner Road, CR 46 Success Road and TR 91 New
Hope Road. The engineerʼs
estimate for this project is
$471,464.00
DOMESTIC STEEL USE REQUIREMENTS AS SPECIFIED IN SECTION 153.011
OF THE REVISED CODE APPLY TO THIS PROJECT.
COPIES OF SECTION
153.011 OF THE REVISED
CODE CAN BE OBTAINED
FROM ANY OF THE OFFICES OF THE DEPARTMENT OF ADMINISTRATIVE
SERVICES.
Bid documents may be secured at the office of The
Meigs County Engineer, 34110
Fairgrounds Road, Pomeroy,
Ohio 45769; Phone Number
740-992-2911 for a $10.00
non-refundable fee.
Each bid must be accompanied by either a bid bond in the
full amount of the bid with a
surety satisfactory to the aforesaid Meigs County Commissioner or by certified check,
cashiers check, or irrevocable
letter of credit upon a solvent
bank in the amount of not less
than 10% of the bid amount in
the favor of the aforesaid
Meigs County Commissioner.
Bid bonds shall be accompanied by Proof of Authority of the
official or agent signing the
bond.
Bids shall be sealed and
marked as Bid for: County Cooperative Paving Project –
Round 27 and
mailed or deLEGALS
livered to:
Meigs County Commissioners
The Meigs County Courthouse
100 E. Second Street, Suite
301
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
6/11 6/18

�Page 8 • The Daily Sentinel

www.mydailysentinel.com

Tuesday, June 18, 2013

McIlroy miserable at Merion with awful results
ARDMORE, Pa. (AP) — Rory
McIlroy started the U.S. Open
with a run up the Rocky steps.
He ended it going a few rounds
with one of his clubs.
McIlroy was miserable at
Merion and he took out his
frustrations on his club on No.
11 on Sunday. His first tee shot
plopped in the water. He took a
drop, then sent another ball into
the same creek.
McIlroy then jammed the Nike
club into the ground and completely twisted the head.

“I think that’s what this tournament does to you,” he said. “At
one point or another, it’s got the
better of you, and it definitely
did this weekend.”
He briefly lost his cool, just
not his sense of humor.
When he was introduced at his
press conference as shooting 14
over, he joked, “You didn’t have
to tell them that part.”
He shot a 6-over 76 in the final
round.
McIlroy was part of the feature
group the opening two rounds,

playing alongside Tiger Woods
and Adam Scott — Nos. 1, 2 and
3 in the world ranking. All three
were big duds at Merion Golf
Club. Woods finished at 13 over,
and Scott at 15 over.
“I thought of the three of us,
the first two rounds, Adam
played the best, and he was the
one with the worst score,” McIlroy said. “But that is just what a
U.S. Open does to you.”
Again, McIlroy never came
close to winning. He finished
25th at the Masters this year and

was coming off a brutal 78 at the
Memorial. He barely made the
cut and finished 57th. Most notably, he quit in the middle of a
round at the Honda Classic.
The 24-year-old from Northern Ireland believed, though, his
game is rounding into form.
“I don’t feel like my game is
that far away,” he said. “That’s
what I’ve been taking out of this
week. It’s a matter of trying to let
it all click into place.”
With his wedge as bent out of
shape as his game, McIlroy fin-

ished with 13 clubs. It might not
have mattered if he had 19.
The former world No. 1 again
refused to blame his equipment
switch for his season-long
struggles.
“I sort of needed to play a little
bit more,” he said. “If I was to do it
all over again, I would have done
things slightly differently. But you
learn from that and it’s hopefully
something I’ll never have to do in
my career again. So I don’t mind
taking three months to figure it
out and go from there.”

Heat
From Page 6
position no matter how
we got to it.”
The Heat would also
host Game 7 on Thursday.
They’re trying to join the
1988 and 2010 Los Angeles Lakers and 1994 Houston Rockets as the only
teams to rally from 3-2
down by winning the final
two on their home floor
since the NBA Finals went
to a 2-3-2 format in 1985.
Of course, the Heat
— who won 27 in a row
during the second-longest
winning streak in league
history — haven’t put
together consecutive victories now in close to a
month.
“We’re in a position
where it’s a must-win and
everything that we’ve
done all year comes to this
point, and we have to win,”
Heat guard Ray Allen said.
“We’ve found ourselves
in so many situations this

year, and we’ve thrived in
tough moments because
this is a tough team. We
will be ready for Game 6.”
So will the Spurs, and
the Heat know it.
“I’m sure this team,
they’ve been here before
many times. They understand winning that last
game is one of the hardest
things you’re going to do.
And we understand it as
well,” Wade said.
“But you know what? It’s
the game; we’ve got to play
it. I like our chances, just
like they like their chances,
in this series and in Game
6. We’ll see. We’ll see
which team, which style is
going to prevail.”
Their four titles have
made the Spurs respected
but never beloved. Their
first, in 1999, came following
a 50-game lockout season,
and they certainly weren’t
the team to help the NBA
regain its jilted fan base.

Victories in 2003 over
New Jersey, 2005 over Detroit and 2007 over James’
Cleveland Cavaliers were
all low-rated, lukewarminterest series in which
the Spurs were supposed
to win and did, just not in
a way that erased the idea
that they had boring players with a boring brand of
basketball.
Win this one, though,
and they will surely get
their due. They would be
knocking off the league’s
winningest team and the
game’s best player, with
Duncan at 37 and Ginobili soon to be 36, behind
a more wide-open offense
that has helped Green
break Allen’s finals record
for 3-pointers.
Not that they’re thinking about that, or anything else beyond Game 6
at this point.
“We’ll reflect back and
let it hit us when it’s over.

We still have a lot more
work to do. There’s still
some business to be done.
We have to carry it out and
finish it,” said Green, who
was cut previously by the
Cavaliers and Spurs and
now has made 25 3-pointers in the first five games.
It looked as though
the game was finally
passing by the Spurs last
year, when the young
Oklahoma City Thunder
blew by them with four
straight victories after
San Antonio had taken a
2-0 lead in the Western
Conference finals.
The Heat routed the
Thunder for the championship and the Spurs brought
back essentially the same
team, believing another
year in their system for
players like Green and
Kawhi Leonard was a better option than seeking out
some quick-fix outsider.
That’s almost always

David Santiago | El Nuevo Herald | MCT

From left, Miami Heat guard Dwyane Wade, forward LeBron James, forward Udonis Haslem, and forward Mike Miller during the fourth quarter in Game 5 of the NBA Finals
against the San Antonio Spurs at the AT&amp;T Center in San
Antonio, Texas, Sunday, June 16.

been the Spurs’ way, and
it’s on the verge of again being the model for an NBA
title — at the expense of
the Miami one that once
appeared to be the way

champions would be built.
“I think every one of
us wants this very badly
from the top on down,”
Duncan said. “We’re trying to play that way.”

Briefs
From Page 6
the number of events you may
enter, but please monitor number for the smaller kids.To volunteer, for more information or
if you have any questions please
call (740) 645-7316 or email
ff1023@att.net
Kiwanis junior golf
tournament at Cliffside
GALLIPOLIS, Ohio — The
Cliffside Golf Club will be hosting the fifth annual Kiwanis juniors at Cliffside golf tournament
for golfers ages 9-18 on Thursday, July 11th at 1 p.m. The competitors will be divided into age
groups of 9-10, 11-12, -13-15 and
16-18 and there is a fee. Awards
will be presented to the top three
golfers in each age group. Spectators are allowed, while hole
sponsors and volunteers are
needed. To enter please contact
the clubhouse at 740-446-4653
or Ed Caudill at 740-245-5919 or
740-645-4381.
2013 Capehart Tri-County
Junior Golf League
POINT PLEASANT, W.Va.
— The 2013 Frank Capehart
Tri-County junior golf league
has begun. Play is open to boys

and girls for the following age
groups: 10-under, 11-12, 13-14,
15-16 and 17-18. Registration for
play is between 8:30 a.m. and
8:50 a.m. and play begins at 9
a.m. There is a fee but lunch is
included. The golf league will
play on June 20 at The Meigs
County Golf Course, June 27
at Riverside Golf Club and the
final week will be July 1 at Hidden Valley Golf Course. For
additional information contact
Jeff Slone (740) 256-6160, Jan
Haddox (304) 675-3388 or Bob
Blessing (304) 675-6135.
Gallia Academy boys
basketball camp
CENTENARY, Ohio — The
Gallia Academy boys basketball
program will be holding a cutting
down the net basketball camp for
boys entering 3rd-8th graders
from 1 p.m. until 4 p.m. at Gallia
Academy High School. The camp
will be held June 17-19th. The
camp will be structured to teach
fundamentals and will be taught
by GAHS coaches and players.
All campers will get t-shirt and
will be able to compete for prizes
at the last day of camp. There is a
fee for each participant. For more
information contact Coach Gary
Harrison at 645-5816.

Blue Angels Youth
Basketball Camp
CENTENARY, Ohio — The
Gallia Academy girls basketball
program will be holding the
Blue Angel Youth Girls Basketball Camp for students entering
grades 3-6 from 8:30 a.m. until
11 a.m. on Thursday, June 20,
through Saturday, June 22, at the
GAHS gymnasium.
The camp is structured to
teach the fundamentals of the
game and players will be taught
fundamentals through individual
and group drills by the Blue Angel varsity coaches and players.
All campers will get a Blue Angel
basketball t-shirt and will be able
to compete for prizes at the last
day of camp.
There is a signup fee for each
player and a discounted rate for
families with two or more campers. For more information, contact
GAHS varsity girls coach Joe Justice at (740) 645-0080 or by email
at joe.justice@gc.k.12.oh.us
URG women’s
basketball camp
RIO GRANDE, Ohio – The
University of Rio Grande women’s basketball program will conduct its 2013 overnight instructional camp, July 7-10, on the

URG campus. The camp, which
will utilize both the Newt Oliver
Arena and the auxiliary gymnasium in the Lyne Center, is open
to girls in grades 4-12.
Campers will be under 24-hour
supervision of the Rio Grande
coaching staff and a talented
group of counselors comprised of
college and high school coaches
and players. Certified athletic
trainers will also be on site. Campers will receive daily instruction
in three specific areas – shooting, post play and defense. Daily
schedules will include evaluation
of shooting form, individual and
group shooting drills, instruction
in post moves, instruction of post
defense and rebounding and daily
drills on team and individual defensive techniques.
A number of individual and
team awards will also be presented on the final day of the camp.
There is a fee involved, which
includes lodging, meals, a camp tshirt, a certificate of participation
and use of the Lyne Center swimming pool. A camp store will also
be available throughout the week,
allowing campers the opportunity
to purchase drinks, snacks, pizza
and Rio Grande apparel.
To register, or for more information, visit the women’s basketball

page at www.rioredstorm.com,
e-mail Rio Grande head coach David Smalley at dsmalley@rio.edu,
or contact the basketball office by
phone at 740-245-7491 or 1-800282-7201, ext. 7491.
Alexander Spartans Golf
Scramble
MASON, W.Va. — The 22nd
annual Alexander Spartans Golf
Scramble will be held at 8 a.m.
Saturday, July 20, at the Riverside Golf Club in Mason County.
All proceeds will benefit the Alexander High School Boys Basketball Program.
There is an entry fee per golfer
(includes Green Fee, Cart, Food,
Beverages, and Prizes). Teams
consist of 4 people (form your
own team and 40 handicap minimum). First-place receives $500
per team, second-place receives
$300 per team and third place receives $100 per team.
To register or if additional information is needed, please contact
Jim Kearns at jkearns@alexanderschools.org or (740) 591-8153
or Jordan Hill at jhill@alexanderschools.org or (740) 416-0728.
Entry fees may be paid at the
golf course on the day of the
event or mailed to Alexander
Boys Basketball c | o Jim Kearns, 11474 Pleasanton Road,
Athens, OH 45701.

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(5:30) H.Wives The Real Housewives
�� How to Lose a Guy in 10 Days Matthew McConaughey.
Tardy... (N) Don't Tardy Watch (N)
Wives NJ
106 &amp; Park: BET's Top 10 Live (N)
BET Awards The BET Awards pay tribute to Patti LaBelle and Steve Harvey; Kevin Hart hosts.
House
House
House
House Hunt. Property (N) Property (N) Flip or Flop Flip or Flop HouseH (N) House
Renovate
Renovate
Face Off
Face Off "Live Finale"
Blackout
Blackout
Blackout
Blackout (N) Exit (N)
Blackout
Blackout
Movie
(:45) Bill Maher
(:45) ��� The Dark Knight Rises ('12, Act) Christian Bale, Anne Hathaway.
Family Tree True Blood
Safe House ('12, Act) Denzel Washington.
��� The Bone Collector Denzel Washington.
The Campaign ('12, Com) Will Ferrell.
(:40) Banshee
Rock/ Roll Exposed "The Photography of Bob Gruen" History of the Eagles Explores the American soft-rock band, the Eagles.
(:05) Nurse J. (:35) Borgias

�Tuesday, June 18, 2013

The Daily Sentinel • Page 9

www.mydailysentinel.com

Tuesday, June 18, 2013

ComiCs/EntErtainmEnt

BLONDIE

Dean Young/Denis Lebrun

BEETLE BAILEY

Mort Walker

FUNKY WINKERBEAN

Today’s Answers

Tom Batiuk

HAGAR THE HORRIBLE

Chris Browne

HI &amp; LOIS

Brian and Greg Walker
THE LOCKHORNS

MUTTS

William Hoest

Patrick McDonnell

Jacquelene Bigar’s Horoscope

zITS

CONCEPTIS SUDOKU
by Dave Green

5

3 1

5

6 2

6

7

4

7

6
3
DENNIS THE MENACE
Hank Ketchum

By Dave Green

2
6 8

Difficulty Level

6
8

8
1

7
3

8
1
3 7

7
4
9

2013 Conceptis Puzzles, Dist. by King Features Syndicate, Inc.

THE FAMILY CIRCUS
Bil Keane

Jerry Scott and Jim Borgman

6/18

HAPPY BIRTHDAY for Tuesday,
June 18, 2013:
This year you will be able to
understand others even better as
you perfect the art of detachment.
Misunderstandings will be less frequent as a result. If you are single,
there is no shortage of admirers.
Date until you feel sure that you have
met the right person for this time in
your life. If you are attached, the two
of you have much energy between
you. You are a strong combination as
a team. LIBRA knows how to tease
you until you get over yourself.
The Stars Show the Kind of Day
You’ll Have: 5-Dynamic; 4-Positive;
3-Average; 2-So-so; 1-Difficult
ARIES (March 21-April 19)
HHHH If you choose not to defer
to others, the result might be better
than in the recent past. You are a
natural leader. Optimism surrounds
others, and they will be more open.
Communicate your bottom line.
Whether it will be honored is another
story! Tonight: Time with a key loved
one.
TAURUS (April 20-May 20)
HHH Continue the push to accomplish key tasks. Handle a financial
conversation with care. Confirm what
you are hearing. If need be, get an
agreement written down; otherwise,
there could be quite an unusual turnaround. Tonight: Go as late you want
or need, then please relax.
GEMINI (May 21-June 20)
HHHH You dance to a different
tune, and if you get stopped, you
could get aggravated. Be clear about
where you are coming from in an
overwhelming situation where misunderstandings might happen more
easily. Many people come toward
you. Tonight: Others cannot help but
respond.
CANCER (June 21-July 22)
HHHH Reach out to others,
especially family and close friends.
An issue needs to be seen from all
perspectives before a decision can
be made. Everyone’s knowledge,
experience and opinions will come
together. Tonight: Debate all you
want, but know that you have a busy
day tomorrow.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22)
HHHH Understanding evolves from
your recent excessiveness. Try to root
out the cause, and you will be happy
you did. Misinformation seems to be
the status quo at present. Just wait for
more facts; asking questions will only
add to the confusion. Tonight: Be playful. Meet friends.

VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22)
HHHH Listen to news with an open
mind. If information and/or financial
facts seem to be skewed, or if you
feel off, take a step back and observe
what is going on. Assume that time will
be your ally, and know that the waiting game will pay off. Tonight: Join a
friend and swap stories.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 22)
HHHH Your personality helps others bypass a problem. Ultimately, their
unawareness and carelessness could
be an issue. You might want to present the facts as you know them. Cut
back on the charm for the time being.
In the long run, you will not be blamed.
Tonight: As you like it.
SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21)
HH Watch, observe and stay mum.
You’ll see the underlying cause of a
problem as a result. Others might not
be ready yet to hear it, though, so be
discreet. Do some research in order to
stay out of an argument. Tonight: Get
some extra R and R, as you are about
to go into high gear.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21)
HHH You’ll be found shaking your
head and feeling uncertain about
which way to go with a major consideration or issue. You might sense
that information coming from a partner
is off. Wait and see what other facts
come in. Put off a meeting for now.
Tonight: Where crowds are.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19)
HHH You tend to carry a lot of
weight on your shoulders. Others want
to hear your opinions and feedback.
Hold off as long as you can; everyone
needs to make his or her own choice.
You could see a change in someone’s
mood. Pace yourself. Tonight: Count
on going till the wee hours.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18)
HHHH You might feel as if you
have pushed hard enough. A partner
or close friend will take the lead. If you
have questions, ask this person for
clarification. If you say nothing, it could
lead to an unpleasant disagreement
later. Avoid this at all costs. Tonight:
Be with a favorite person.
PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20)
HHHH You need to make it a point
to relate directly to someone you care
deeply about. This person knows how
to respond appropriately, as he or she
understands you well. Do not make a
misunderstanding out to be more than
it really is. Tonight: Go for togetherness.
Jacqueline Bigar is on the Internet
at www.jacquelinebigar.com.

�Page 10 • The Daily Sentinel

www.mydailysentinel.com

Rose

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Bob’s... CUSTOMER

From Page 6

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Friday, June 14th
While Supplies Last

Tuesday, June 18, 2013

tried to hit wedge off the green on the
15th hole to give him a good shot at par,
only he hit it so hard he made another bogey. And he never caught up. He wonders
if he’ll ever get another chance.
“At 43 and coming so close five times,
it would have changed the way I look
at this tournament altogether and the
way I would have looked at my record,”
Mickelson said, dreaming one last time
of winning. “Except that I just keep feeling heartbreak.”
Rose was pacing in the scoring area,
waiting for Mickelson to finish, wondering if he could catch him. At one point, he
looked above the TV to that famous photo
of Hogan hitting 1-iron into the 18th green
in the 1950 U.S. Open to set up a playoff
that he won the next day.
“When I walked over the hill and saw
my drive sitting perfectly in the middle
of the fairway, with the sun coming out,
it was kind of almost fitting,” Rose said.
“And I just felt like at that point it was a
good iron shot onto the green, two putts
— like Hogan did — and possibly win
this championship. So I felt like I did myself justice, and probably put enough of a
good swing where Ben Hogan might have
thought it was a decent shot, too.”
As usual, someone’s big moment in the
U.S. Open came at Mickelson’s expense.
All the stars were aligned. None of the
putts fell in.
Lefty somehow blasted out of the rough
to 8 feet on the 16th hole, but he missed the
putt. His tee shot on the par-3 17th was just
short enough that it didn’t catch the funnel toward the hole, and he missed a long
birdie putt. From the rough left of the 18th
fairway, he couldn’t quite reach the green
and to chip in from about 40 yards.
With his caddie tending the flag, Mickelson’s chip raced by the cup, and Rose
was the U.S. Open champion.
Mickelson wound up with a bogey on
the 18th for a 74 and tied for second with
Jason Day, who closed with a 71.
Day appeared to salvage his round by
chipping in for bogey on the 11th hole, and
he was still in the picture when he made a
12-foot par putt on the 17th to stay one
shot behind. But he put his approach into
the bunker left of the 18th green, blasted
out to about 7 feet and missed the putt.
The back nine was a four-way battle that
included Hunter Mahan, who played in the
last group with Mickelson. He was one shot
out of the lead until he three-putted the 15th
hole for a double bogey, and then closed with
back-to-back bogeys when his hopes were
gone. Mahan had a 75 and tied for fourth
with Billy Horschel (74), Ernie Els (69) and
Jason Dufner, who had a 67 despite making
triple bogey on the 15th hole.
Rose finished at 1-over 281, eight shots
higher than David Graham’s winning
score in 1981 when the U.S. Open was last
held at Merion. The shortest course for a

major championship in nearly a decade
held up just fine. It was the third time in
the last four years that no one broke par in
the toughest test of golf.
The last Englishman to win the U.S.
Open was Tony Jacklin at Hazeltine in
1970, though Rose added to recent dominance of the Union Jack at the U.S. Open
as the third winner in four years. The others were Graeme McDowell (2010) and
Rory McIlroy (2011) of Northern Ireland.
Walking off the 18th green, he looked
through the patchy clouds and pointed to
the sky, a nod to his late father, Ken, who
died of leukemia in September 2002.
“I couldn’t help but look up at the heavens and think my old man Ken had something to do with it,” Rose said.
It seems like more than 15 years ago
when Rose first starred on the major
scene as a 17-year-old amateur who
chipped in on the final hole at Royal Birkdale in the 1998 British Open and tied for
fourth. He turned pro the next week, and
then missed the cut in his first 21 tournaments. But he stayed the course and
slowly picked off big tournaments — including the AT&amp;T National in 2010 just
down the road at Aronimink.
The U.S. Open takes him to another
level and moves him to No. 3 in the world.
Tiger Woods turned out to be nothing
more than an afterthought. He hit outof-bounds on his second hole and made
triple bogey, and closed with a 74 to finish
at 13-over 293, his worst score as a pro
in the U.S. Open, and matching his worst
score in any major.
The score wasn’t nearly that bad considering the golf course, with its tricky contours on the greens and punishing rough.
Mickelson wore all black when he arrived for the final round, and in a brief TV
interview he said, “The best for me is to
play well and have fun.”
Sunday at the U.S. Open is rarely fun.
Just ask Donald, who was only two
shots behind starting the final round.
It all crumbled when he pulled his tee
shot on the par-3 third hole — so long
and hard that Donald hit a driver — and
struck a standard-bearer. She was on the
ground for several minutes, and Donald
appeared visibly shaken. He shot 42 on
the back nine.
Steve Stricker took his lumps on one
hole, and it was ugly. One shot behind, he
pushed his tee shot on the par-5 second
hole out-of-bounds. After hitting the next
tee shot into the fairway, he tried to lay
up with a 4-iron and hit a shank out-ofbounds. Stricker had to make a 7-foot putt
to escape with a triple-bogey 8.
Former Masters champion Charl
Schwartzel, trying to give South Africa a major for the fourth straight year,
opened with a birdie and a tie for the
lead. That became a distant memory,
however, when he dropped seven shots
over the seven holes and closed out his
front nine with a 42.

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