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                  <text>Cincinnati zoo
director helps with
turnaround, As

alysis: Obama
lets NKorea's Kim
save face, A6

•

Printed on 100%
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•(huly~l'nt i 111 ·l .nun

SPORTS
• Cubs hand Reds
another loss ..See Page Bl

Arrest in burglary of restaur~ t
BY BETH SERGENT
BSERGENT@MYDAILYSENTINELCOM

POMEROY - An arrest
in the burglary of a local
restaurant, thefts and traffic
accidents are all cutTently
under investigation by the
Pomeroy
Police
Department, according to
Chief Mark E. Proffitt.
In July, McClure's of
Pomeroy was burglarized
twice with the second

-------

attempt happening on July
20, only this time a subject
was taken into custody.
Harley F. McDonald. 28.
Middleport, was arrested
and charged with burglary in
relation to the incident on
July 20. McDonald has not
been charged with the burglary of the restaurant which
took place earlier in July
where $2,082 was taken
from the restaurant's safe.
As for the alleged burglary

on July 20. the Pomeroy
Police Department reports
shortly after midnight on July
20 McClure's store alarm
went off. An officer on the
scene moments after the
alarm sounded observed a
window in the door on the
drive-thru side of the building
had been busted. Two witnesses on the walking path
reported hearing the alatm go
off and seeing a male running
from in-between a church

and the Pomeroy Ball Fields. which remains under investiAn officer then patrolled in gation. McDonald was incarthe direction given by the cerated in the Middleport Jail
witnesses and picked up then reprimanded into the
McDonald on the sidewalk ' custody of the Meigs County
on East Main Street. Sheriff's Office to face a burMcDonald was then taken to glary charge in Meigs
the
Pomeroy
Police County Comt.
Department for questioning
Also under investigation,
and in the official report he Marion Snider reported his
denies having anything to do apartment at 245 Union
with the incident.
Avenue was broken into with
Evidence was collected but
not specified in the incident
Please see Arrest, AS

Veterans appreciation/remembrance dav planned
BY CHARLENE HOEFLICH
HOEFLICH@ MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

OBITUARIES
Page AS

· • Helen Burson, 77
• Lois Ann Willis, 72

INSIDE
:. Antigua's highest
ak renamed 'Mount
ama.' See Page A2
•
• Haiti lawmakers OK
·minimum wage hike after
clashes. See Page A2
• 4-H Miscellaneous
judging results.
.see Page A3
• Holzer offers lap
band info seminars.
See Page A3
• Stuarts hosting
free outdoor concert.
See Page A3
·• Lawmakers looking
to rev up Ohio's auto
industry. See Page AS
• Mortgage aid
program helping
fraction of borrowers.
See Page A6

POMEROY - A day to
recognize,
honor
and
remember all veterans and
pay tribute to prisoners of
war and those mrssing in
action will be held in
Pomeroy on Sept. 12.
Drew Webster Post 39,
American Legion, is sponsoring the special observance which will kickoff
with a parade down
Pomeroy's Main Street at
10 a.m. concluding at the
rivetfront parking lot where
there will be speakers,
bands. concessions and military displays. Veterans
groups. fire departments,
bands and other patriotic
organizations are expected
to participate in the parade.
At 1 p.m. an F-16 t1y~by
will take place. The aircraft
will be coming from the
178th Fighter Wing of the
Ohio Air National Guard
located at Springfield.
according to Del Pullins of
the planning committee.
All veteran's organizations in the area are being
invited to participate in the
parade. and veterans, their
families, friends and the
general public are encouraged to attend the event in a

show of appreciation for
those who have served their
country.
Anyone interested in participating in the parade, as a
speaker or entertainer, or by

setting up a display booth, is
asked to contact Bill Spaun
at 992-3992 or Pullins at
985-3669.
The
Meigs
County
Commissioners will sign a

proclamation declaring Sept.
12 Veterans Appreciation
Day in conjunction with the
national .
POW/MIA
Recognition Day.
"Everyone is welcome to

come and enjoy the day's
events set to recognize,
honor and remember all veterans/POWs/MIAs for their
dedication and service to:
our countr) :· said Pullins. ·

"RATHER

Beth Sergent/photo

The Racine Dollar General has taken shape over the course of the summer and now job
applications are being taken for the new store. Dollar General Stores typically employ
between six-1 0 people.

Details on Page A5

Applications taken for new Dollar General

INDEX
,

2 SECTIONS -12 PAGES

Calendars

A3
A3

8lassifieds

B3-4

Annie's Mailbox

i

Bs

mics
to rials

Obituaries
Sports

A4
As
B Section

As

Weather

© 2009 Ohio Valley Publishing Co.

li.IJIJI,I !1!1.!1!11 .
,.
•

'J

BY BETH SERGENT
BSERGENT@ MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

RACINE - As construction continues on the new
Dollar General Store in
Racine. so do questions
about how to apply for a job
at the store.
A spokesperson from
Dollar General which has
its corporate office in
Goodlettsville, Tenn .. said
the stores typically employ
between six-10 people. The
spokesperson said at this
time, those interested in
applying for a job at the
Racine store can pick up
applications at the Pomeroy
Dollar General but when
returning those applications. applicants must tell

the manager they are for the
Racme
location.
Applications can also be
found at Dollar General's
website but must be turned
into the Pomeroy store.
The spokesperson also
confirmed Dollar General
still has plans to open the
Racine Store but gave no
firm date. Earlier this year,
contractor Jerry Lee of
DGJL of Dublin. the store's
contractor, said the store
should be open by the first
of September.
DGJL's
agreement with Dollar
General requires the store
be built in so many days and
once built Dollar General
moves in much like a tenant
moves into a new house and
pays a landlord rent. Lee

and his business partner
would be the landlord in
this case.
The Racine store will be
9.100 square feet whtch is
the latest and largest of the
Dollar General prototypes.
In comparison. the smaller
stores are at 6,000 square
feet. In addition to all the
nom1al items found at Dollar
General Stores, Racine's will
also have a specialty cooler
for reftigerated items.
The building began atTiving in pieces in May and has
been assembled over the
course of this summer. The
new store sits at 602 Elm
Street next to the location of
the nc\V Home National
Bank which will have an
address of 103 Fifth Street

Erin Patterson

· Samuel Evans

Meigs Junior Fair royalty
candidates announced
BY CHARLENE HOEFLICH
HOEFLICH@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

POMEROY
The
names of candidates for the
2009 Meigs County Junior
Fair king and queen to be
selected on the opening
night of the fair. Aug, 16.
ha~ve been announced~
.
They are Olivia Davis.
Erin Patterson. and Haley
Perdas for queen. and
Samuel Evans for king.
During the fair the king at~d
queen. as well as animal

. princes -and princesses. will
reign at many of the junior
fair events. The title winners. selected by a panel of
judges on the basis of participation and \\Orkin youth
organizations.
will
be
announced at Junior Fair
. night at the grandstand.
Olivia Om ts. daughter of
Danny W. and Kimberly K.
Davis of Rutland is 17 and
has been a 4-H member for
13 years. She is a member of

Please see Candidates, AS

�4

PORT-AU-PRINCE,
Haiti (AP) - Lawmakers
voted to more than double
Haiti's mmtmum wage
Tuesday night after long
hours of debate and clashes
between police and protesters, who complained they
can't feed and shelter their
families on the cunent pay
of about $1.75 a day.
The ptan adopted fell short
of the $5 wage demanded by
the demonstrators, although
it would more than double
the minimum pay to about
$3.75 a day.
The raise also would
jnclude workers at factories
producing clothes for export,
an idea that President Rene
Preval opposed. After refusing to publish into law a plan
passed by Parliament in May
to nearly triple the minimum
wage, Preval proposed giving
the garment factory workers
an increase to about $3.
Given the lateness of
Parliament's 55-6 vote to
adopt the new raise, there
was no immediate reaction
from the president or from
the protesters.
Earlier in the day, police
fired tear gas at some 2,000
protesters who gathered
outside Parliament to
demand a big increase in the
minimum wage. As legislators prepared to meet on the
issue, some of the protesters
threw rocks at police and
began ripping down flags of
U.N. member countries near
the building.
Most of the crowd dispersed
before
the
Parliament session began,
with no arrests and only two
reported injuries, including
a cameraman who was hit in
the head with a rock.
Many of the protesters
were minimum-wage factory workers, such as Banel
Jeune, a 29-year-old father
who sews sleeves on shirts.
"Seventy gourdes, that
doesn't do anything for
me," he said, referring to his
cunent minimum wage. "I
can't feed my kids, and I
can't send them to school."
The issue has been inflammatory in Haiti, which is the
Western Hemisphere's poorest nation. But despite the
heated debate and occasional violence, few people
would be affected by the
wage increase.
Most of Haiti's 9 million
Haitians who are employed
.work on small farms or sell
basic goods on the street.
Only some 250,000 people
have jobs covered by the
minimum salary law, said
lawmaker Steven Benoit,
who sponsored the bill.
Still, some. development
experts argue that a pay
increase would hurt plans for
fighting Haiti's widespread
unemployment by creating
more jobs in · the factories
that produce clothing for
export to the United States.
With new trade advantages that allow for dutyfree exports of clothing to
the U.S., such factories
could provide "several hundred thousand jobs to
Haitians ... over a period of
just a few years," according
to a report submitted to the
U.N. in January.
But it said that plan
requires costs be kept down.
The report had been
requested by SecretaryGeneral Ban Ki-Moon and
Oxford
prepared
by
University professor Paul
Collier. It is now being promoted by former U.S.
President Bill Clinton, the
new U.N. envoy for Haiti.

.,

a

4.

VVednesday,August5,2009

Antigua's highest peak renamed 'Mount Obama'
Bv ANIKA KENTISH
ASSOCIATED PRE~S WRITER

ST JOHN'S, Antigua
Antigua's highest mountain
officially became "Mount
Obama" on Tuesday as the
small Caribbean nation eel
ebrated the American president on his birthday and
saluted him as a symbol of
black achievement.
Prime Minister Baldwin
Spencer presided over the
re-christening ceremony at
the base of the mountain,
unveiling a stone sculpture
and plaque honoring the
president as an inspiration
in the twin-island nation of
Antigua and Barbuda and
throughout the Caribbean.
"This great political
achievement by Barack
Obama resonated with me
in a way that I felt compelled to do something symbolic
and
inspiring,"
Spencer told the crowd of
about 300, including several
U.S. officials, at the base of
the mountain near the
island's southern coast.
"As an emancipated people linked to our common
ancestral heritage and a hisof dehumanizing
tory
enslavement, we need to at
all times celebrate our
heroes and leaders who
through their actions inspire
us to do great and noble
things," Spencer said.
The plaque on the rock
sculpture at the base of the
mountain reads: "Mount
Obama, named in honor of
the historical election on
Nov. 4, 2008, of Barack
Hussein Obama, the first
black president of the
United States of America, as
a symbol of excellence, triumph, hope and dignity for
all people."
Spencer announced his
intention to rename the
mountain,
previously
known as Boggy Peak,
shortly after the election.

AP photo

U.S. Congresswoman Yvette Clark, left, Antigua ahd Barbuda's Prime Minister Baldwin Spencer, third left, lvor Jackson,
chairman of the Mount Obama Committee, right, and acting Governor General Eustace Francis, second left, pose for a
photo at the stone sculpture and plaque honoring President Barack Obama during a ceremony where Antigua's highest
mountain was officially named "Mount Obama" in St. John's, Antigua Tuesday. The small Caribbean nation celebrated •
American president on his birthday and saluted him as a symbol of black achievement.
The gesture reflected the
U.S. leader's widespread
popularity in the country,
where it is common to see
Oban'la bumper stickers and
T-shirts.
Still, there was some
criticism on talk radio and
in the local newspafers.
Lester Bird, leader o the
opposition Antigua Labor
Party, called the change
"silly" and said they might
as well name it for
Michael Jackson. But parliament's approval was not
required for the new name
to take effect.
The prime minister has
also announced plans for
Mount Obama to become a

national park with a museum and other amenities.
The tree-covered mountain
has pineapple and mango
farms at its base and rises
about 1 .300 feet (396
meters) along the island's
southern coast. Its peak,
topped with a radio antenna, offers views of the
Caribbean Sea and the
island of Montserrat and its
active volcano in the distance.
Antigua's reigning calypso
monarch,
Trevor
"Zacari" King, played a rendition of ''For You Barack"
for a crowd that included
American actress Angela
Bassett, who wept during

the performance, and U.S.
Yvette
Congresswoman
Clark, a Brooklyn native of
Jamaican heritage.
"It wasn't only about
Barack Obama. It was
about the history of black
people around the world
and the struggle and sacrifices that have been done so
that he could rise to the
position that he is in today,"
Bassett said.
Brent Hardt, the charge
d'affaires for the U.S.
Embassy for the eastern
Caribbean in Barbados,
thanked the government for
bestowing a "singular
honor" on Obama ..
"It's not every day a pres-

ident has a mountain named
after him." he said. "It's a
much appreciated tribute to
a man who will forever hold
a unique place in American
history."
A local cultural activist,
Dorberene O'Narde, said he
generally supports the
peak's new name but people
must realize remember what
others have done for blacks
before Obama.
"Although there is nothing but utter respect for the
man .8arack Obama, I
would prefer to see the
whole concept done out~
side the man. the individual. ... We need to go further than that."

Colombia's Uribe on trip to defend U.S. bases pact
Bv VIVIAN

SEaUERA

ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

BOGOTA - President
Alvaro Uribe headed off on
South
a
whirlwind
American tour Tuesday to
defend his plans to expand
the U.S. military's presence
in Colombia, a prospect that
worries even friendly
nations in the region.
The trip coincides with a
two-day visit to Brazil of
U.S. National Security
Adviser James Jones.
Jones met Tuesday with
President Luiz Inacio Lula
da Silva's foreign affairs
adviser, Marco Aurelio
Garcia, who said afterward
that the U.S. official
acknowledged
that
Washington could have
handled the issue better.
"There was recognition
that the subject was not
approached properly," 0
Globo Online quoted
Garcia as saying, adding
that Jones said the bases
were part of the fight
against drug trafficking and
would also be used for
humanitarian missions.
Last week, Silva said "I
don't like the idea of an
American military base in
Colombia," while Chilean
President Michelle Bachelet
said countries in the region
were "uneasy" about the
eventuality.
Brazil's foreign minister,
Celso Amorim, told the
Folha de San Paulo newspaper over the weekend that
his country was worried
about "a strong military
presence whose objective
and capacity to go a lot fur-

ther than Colombia's internal needs:'
Colombian officials say
they hope talks next week
will produce an agreement
that will give U.S. forces
greater access to three
Colombian air bases and
two naval bases. The
Palanquero base in the central Magdalena valley
would host U.S. Air Force
counternarcotics missions
that had been based in
Ecuador.
The 10-year lease agreement would not boost the
presence of American
troops and civilian military
contractors above the 1,400
cunently permitted by U.S.
law, the Colombians say.
U.S.
officials
have
refused to discuss details of
the negotiations, although
U.S. Ambassador William
Brownfield has insisted that
an accord would not produce U.S. bases but rather
"cooperative security locations" at Colombian-run
installations.
Jones told reporters in
Brasilia on Tuesday that the
bases issue "will in no way
interfere with the progress
of our friendship and our
cooperation together on
matters of mutual security
interest."
Uribe has put Colombia's
leftist rebels on the defensive with more than $5 billion in U.S. aid, including
special forces training and
the sharing of intelligence
from satellite and airborne
communications intercepts.
He mer Tuesday with
Peruvian President Alan
Garcia, who said his coun-

Some people tried to leave
the quarantined area Monday
evening, mostly by foot, after
the third death was reported,
two residents reached by The
Associated Press said.
"A lot of people ran off last
night when they heard that
another person died of this
plague. They are mostly
from other provinces," a
. local food seller, surnamed
Han, said Tuesday. "They
headed back home with food,
water and their donkeys.''
A Tibetan woman named
Xiumaocuo, a migrant construction worker from
another village in Qinghai,

try would '·always back the
fundamental work you
have done.''
While Colombia's ties
with most of the continent
have been on the whole cordial, it has feuded with
Ecuador and Venezuela
over their leftist leaders'
alleged ties with the
Revolutionary
Armed
Forces of Colombia, or
FARC, which has been
seeking
to
overthrow
Bogota governments for 45
years.
Neither country is on
Uribe's itinerary.

Venezuela's
President
Hugo Chavez pulled his
ambassador from Bogota
last week after Colombia
complained that three
Swedish anti-tank rocket
launchers
bought
by
Venezuela's military in
1988 wound up in a FARC
weapons cache seized in
October.
In Caracas, Chavez said
the impending deal with
Washington "is turning
Colombia into an imperialist base of operations. from
which Venezuelan sovereignty is threatened:'

President Rafael Co.
of Ecuador was stung b
FARC video given to
'
Associated Press last month
in which a rebel commander
discusses making contribu·
tions to Correa's 2006 election campaign.
Ecuador is hosting a summit on Aug. 10 of South
America's fledgling UNASUR defense community,
which most of the continent's presidents are expect
ed to attend. Uribe and his
foreign m1mster. Jaime
Bermudez, plan to be
absent.

'UNIVERSITY
'• ~q QW.J2r~N:!.I_T! !2Y~C~0~2!E___'___,
Of

For more it!(Ormation comact:
Brem Pa11ersou

(7./0i 992-/&lt;380 or
Sarah Bnoth

(800) 282-7201, ext 7026
Email:
hrelllp@rio.edu or .,bootil@rw.cdrt

On the l~eb. go to 1n.m.ria.edu!adtmmon1

DE MEIGS·CENTER
BFR'\ \RD \. Fl LTZ CI;'\TER
FOR HIGHF.R EDl C.\TJO'\
~23'7" &lt;.:baric; &lt;.h~nce} Dnve

Fall Semester 2009

1\&gt;mero) Oh1o -l5"o9

August 24 - December 11, 2009

People try to flee Chinese town hit by plague
BEIJING
(AP)
Residents of a remote farming town in western China
say people have been seeking to flee in defiance of a
lockdown by authorities to
prevent the spread of highly
infectious
pneumonic
plague which has claimed
three lives in the area.
Police have set up checkpoints around Ziketan in
Qinghai province, a town of
10,000 people, which has
been put under quarantine
after at least a dozen people
caught the lung infection
that can kill within 24 hours
if untreated.

-'--

PageA2

The Daily Sentinel

Haiti lawmakers
OK minimum
wage hike
after clashes

« e « a

4

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said there were very few
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"I've heard the migrant
workers who build projects
wt:nt home last night," !)ht:

said by telephone. ''My boss
told me that more than 50 of
the 100 construction workers on our project left
homes already.''
It was unclear if the people
who headed out of the town
made it past the police
checkpoints, -which residents
say have been set up in 17mile (28-kilometer) radius
around Ziketan, which lies
more than 300 miles (480
kilometers) west of Beijing.

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:rhe Daily Sentinel
ANNIE'S MAILBOX

Can she trust
ihim any longer?
cr. but you must understand
that she is ultimately
responsible for her own
• Dear· Annie: I recently health and you cannot f'orce
inarried my boyfriend. her to stop smokmg. Under
those circumstances. the
~·Joe).'' We have a 5-monthl1ld bab). Joey ~till goes out most loving thing you can
'drinking with his friends. do is not to judge or argue
ond I don't kno\\ if he's with her about her choices.
cheating on me. I've usked hut to accept her as she is.
Dear Annie: I have somel1im many times to come
j10me and take re!;ponsihili- thing to say to .. Baby
() for hb famil) bccau c he Mama," \\ ho is 19 and
~oesn't spend a lot or time wants to have a babv.
When I was 19, (became
~vith us. He always promises
will, but nothing changes. pregnant. My boyfriend and I
• Joey is also lazv. He had not planned this. Because
;,leeps until noon and·\\ on 't of 111) pregnancy. I lost my
help \\ ith the housekeeping job and was unable to go to
·or cooking. We argue college. Due to complicaulmost every day, and I'm tions. I needed a C-section.
~ired of it. For our baby's and it will now be difficult to
have any more kids should I
~a.ke, I'm trying to keep
:thmgs together. hut all the choose to do so. My
{ightinl.! and tension can't boyfnend. who I thought
would be with me through
good f'or our child.
I believe a man who can't thick and thin, left us when
J&lt;eep his promises is a liar. our baby was 8 months old.
Would it be better for the and it's been a constant strugbaby if I leave'? We can't gle to get him to pay child
ord counseling. and I support. I was desperate for
•
't hold on much longer. love and support. so I moved
in \\'ith a guy who turned out
·- Need Ad\'ice in Palau
' Dear Pal~w: Docs Joey to be an alcoholic and a drugha\'e a job? b he helping to gie and very abusive.
I am glad to say I am on
,supp011 his family? The t\\0
of you need to decide what the right track now. I love
'will provide the healthiest my son dearly. but this is
envuonment for ) our bab). not the life I wanted I live
.Your clcrg) person should with my parents sharing a
be able to direct you to low- small bedroom v. ith my
cost counseling services. now 3-year-old son. I work
lind \ ou also nUl\ be able to two jobs and am ooking for
find· affordable· counseling a third. If it weren't for mv
through Palau Community parents. we would surely be
College. Please look into it. on the street.
I hope to go to colJege
. Dear Annie: My grandmother has emphysema and when my son starts school
refuses to get help. Worse. she · next year, but I know my
still smokes. She's started los- hours will be long and hard. I
ing her memory and has want to tell this young girl not
become increasingly irra- to make this decision until
tional and combative. She she is older. It takes a lot to
also has severe migraines and raise a child. including love,
time and money. Wait until
'has lost nearly 50 pounds.
Todav, I sat her down and you are married and have a
told her e' eryone in the fam- stable home so you can give
lh is '' onicd about her. I said your baby everything he
•... all love her and arc trying needs. - Single Mom
A.mzie's Mailbox is writhelp. She accused me of
ng disrespectful and ~aid I len by Kathy Mitchell and
•
made her feel stupid and use- Marcy Sugar, longtime edijess. l\ly mom has ghen up tors of the Ann Landers
on her, but I haven 't.l'm only column. Please e-mail your
·17. and it's like the world is questions to anniesmailori my shoulders. What can I boxcomcast.net, or write
to: Annie's Mailbox, P.O.
do? - Feeling Old
' Dear Feeling: Ask your Box 118190, Chicago, IL
mother
to
speak
to 60611. To find out more
Grandma's doctor about her about Annie's Mailbox,
migraines and the iiTational. and read features by other
con1bativc behavior. There Creators Syndicate writers
.may be more going on than and cartoonists, visit the
aging. Wl' know you care Creators Syndicate Web
'deeply for your grandmoth- page at www.creators.com.

.

KATHY MITCHELL
MARCY SUGAR

,e

be

~Emergency

Medicine
: doctor joins Holzer
• GALLIPOLIS - Holzer
l:linic announces the addi~ion
of
Emergcnc)
-tvtedicine Phvsicinn. Jason
~. Remes, ~M.D. to its
lti-specialty group prac, of profes&lt;&gt;ionals
•
• Dr. Reaves is now seeing
~at1enh m the Emergency
~oom at Holzer Medical
:Center in Gallipolis.
• Reaves received his med~cal degree \\ ith distinction
:Crom the Uni\'ersity of
:Kentucky
College
of
fvjedicinc 111 Lc.xington,
-Kentucky. He completed hi:-.
l-csidcncy at the Ohio State
;L'nivcr:-.it) Medical Center
:)n Columbus. Additionally.
-Rea\ cs holds a :VI asters of
:Susiness Administration
Jrom the Univer~it) of
:Chicago Graduate School of
·Bw. iness in Chicago, Ill.
: He is a member of the
~merican
College
of
:Emergency
Physicians,
jecei\ ed the Academic

Jason S. Reaves, M.D.

Excellence Award from the
Ohio State University
Department of Emergency
~1edicine and ts an accomplished violinist
He and his wife Lisa. an
ophthalmologist at Holzer
Clinic, reside in Jackson
with their two young children. Alexander and :-Jathan.

Parking scam near
Ohio State Fair costly
•
LUMBUS (AP)
:Vchidc owners complain
ihcy're getting conned into
:Parking in the wron~ place for
)he Ohio State Fmr and are
:then facing big towing costs.
• The owner of one busi':ness close to the fair~round in Columbus says
;1e has had dozens of ille~ally parked cars towed
J'rom hb prope11y. He says
he has found vehicles jamming hie; Jot and making it

,,

tough to do business.
Motorists who parked
there say they were flagged
down by people who directed them to park in the lot and
took $5 as payment. the same
as it costs to park in the fair's
legitimate parking areas.
The fairgoers caught in
the scam have had to pay
around $140 each to recover
their Yehicles from a tow lot.
· The 12-day state fair runs
through Sunday.

VVednesday,August5, 2009

Community Calendar
Clubs and
organizations
Wed nesday, Aug. 5
POMEROY Meigs
County Board of Health,
regular meeting 5 p.m., conference
room.
Meigs
County Health Department.
Thursday, Aug. 6
TUPPERS PLA INS The Tuppers Plains Ladies
Auxiliary of the VrW, 7
p.m. at the hall.
CHESTER
Chster
Shade Historical Association,
7 p.m. at the Chester
Courthouse. Planning session
for future developments of
the organization.
Friday, Aug. 7
POMEROY
The
Meigs PERI 74 will meet at
I p.m. at the Mulberry
Center. A representative
from Express Scripts will be
present to discuss pharmacy
services. Mike Mussell,
OPERS Health Care representative will be there to

discuss changes facing
retirees.
Satur day, Aug. 8
RACINE - Ohio River
Producers, regular meeting
and picnic, 6 p.m .. Wooly
Acre
Farm
(Leanna
Beegle), everyone asked to
bring a covered dish. awarding scholarships, handi ng
out fair passes.

Reunions
Sunday, Aug. 9
POMEROY
85th
Hayes-Young and Holiday
School
Reunion.
old
Holiday School grounds on
Gilkey Ridge Road. Potluck
at 1 p.m. Friends. relatives
invited. Bring photographs.
genealogy information and
entertainment.
RACINE - Linley and
Sarah Oliver Hart family
reunion at the American
Legion Hall in Racine.
Dinner at 12:30 p.m. Take
covered dish. All family and
friends welcome.

RACC'-H · Charles and
Alma
Snyder
fami~y
reunion. noon. Star Mtll
Park. picnic lunch. bring
item for white elephant
auction.

Church events
Wednesday, Aug. 5
MIDDLEPORT
Revival services will be
held at the Old Bethel
Freewill Baptist Church,
Route 7 and Storys Run
Road, Middleport. with
Norman Taylor preaching.
Services will continue
through Aug. 7. Ralph
Butcher is the pastor.
MIDDLEPORT
Family vacation Bible
school. 6:15 to 8:30 p.m.
Monday, Aug. 3 through
Friday. Aug. 7, at the Hope
Baptist
Church
in
Middleport. Theme will be
"Boomerange
Express.''
Classes for all ages.
Saturday, Aug. 8
ADDISON Benefit

gospel sing for fall harvest
gospel sin!?. 6 p.m. at the
Addison F.W.B. Church.
Feature singers Randy
S~affer Family. New City
S mgers. and Brian and
Family Connections. For
more inforaton call 740985-3495.

Public meetings :
Wednesday, Aug. 5 ·
PAGEVILLE - Scipio
Township Trustees, regular
meeting,
6:30
p.m ..
Pageville To~ n Hall.
Thursday, Aug. 6
SYRACUSE - Syracuse
Village Council, regular
meeting. 7 p.m., 'illage
hall.
Tuesday, Aug. 11
DARWIN
Bedford
To\\ nship Trustees. regular
meeting. 7 p.m .. tov.;n hall.
POMEROY - Sallisbury
Township Trutees, 6:30
p.m. at Manning Roush
home, 32972 Johnson Road,
Racine, at Hidden Lakes.

Holzer offers lap band info seminars
GALLIPOLIS - Holzer
Weight Loss Solutions is
offering free informational
seminars regarding the Lap
Band System®. a surgical
alternative for weight loss.
The seminars will provide information for individuals interested in having
the procedure performed at
Holzer
Weight
Loss

Solutions, which is located
at Holzer Medical Center in
Gallipolis.
The System is an alternative to gastric bypass
surgery. It is an adjustable
gastric band designed to
help patients lose excess
body weight, improve
weight-related health conditions and enhance their

quality of life. The system is
approved by the U.S. Food
and Drug Administration.
The schedule for seminars.
all held in the conference
rooms at the Holzer Medical
Center in Gallipolis, is as follows: II a.m. Friday, Aug. 7:
noon Tuesday, Aug. 11:
II :30 a.m. Tuesday. Aug. 25:
noon Friday. Aug. 28. and

11:30 a.m. Friday, Sept. 4.
Tuesday. Aug. 25,and Friday
Pre-registration is required
for each seminar. Call 740446-5825 to register.
For information about
Hol-;.er
Weight
Loss
Solutions and the other ser·
\'ices offered by Holzer
Health
SYStems,
visit
~v~vw.Jzo/zer.org.

Stuarts hosting free outdoor concert
NELSONVILLE
Stuart's Opera House is
hosting a free outdoor concert on Thursday, Aug. 13 at
7
p.m. featuring the
Christabel and The Jons
from Knoxville, Tenn.
The concert will take
place in the Stuart's parking
lot and will feature an outdoor beer garden. The band

is currently on tour promoting their new CD "Custom
Made for You." Their music
blends multiple musical
styles from gypsy jazz to
country blues. Lead singer
Christa DeCicco enchants
audiences with her expres
sive lyrical style and laid
back. sultry stage performance.

Old suitcases and dressy
vintage costumes from the
1920s-1950s give the performance a torch singer,
speakeasy feel.
CB&amp;J has been performing their distinctive style
of folky swing since the
spring of 2005. They
released their first fulllength album. "Love and

Circumstances"
in
November of 2006. Their
second and most recent
album, "Custom Made for
You," was released on
Dec. I2. In addition to
headlining many shows.
Christabel and the Jons has
also performed at numerous festivals in the United
States.

4-H M I SCELLANEOUS TUDGING R ESULTS
PO:vtEROY - Judgmg
results of 4-H projects
falling into the miscellaneous category have been
announced.
The grand and reserve
champions in each category,
listed respectively. are as
follows:
Horseless Horse: Meghan
Short and Trenton DuVall.
From Airedales to Zebras:
Garrett Ritchie and Trystan
Dowell.
V2 All Systems Go:
Hannah
Hawley
and
Triffany Will.
V3 On the Cutting Edge:
Tyler Barber and Morgan
Russell with Erin Dunn
receiving honorable mention.
You're
the
Athlete:
Shawnella Patterson and
Morgan
Russell
with
Trenton Cook. honorable
.. mention
Staying Healthy: Meghan
Short and Kayte Lawrence.
First Aid in Action. Jamie
Card and Megan Short. with
honorable mentions to
Sarah.
Alcohol
Decisions:
Abigail
Houser
and
Rebecca Chadwell, with
Autumn Trussell, honorable
mention.
Tobacco and You: Nicole
Moodispaugh.
Self·Dctcrmined: Kody
Wolfe and Samuel Evans,
with Nathan Cook and
Trenton Duvall, honorable
mentions.
Self-Determined.
Fireman: Kyle Russell.
Self-Determined- quilts:
Victoria Goble.
Self
Determined
Scrapbooking:
Lindsay
Wolfe
and
Rachael
Markworth with honorable
mention to Erin Dunn and
Emily Dav1s.
Self Determines ~ One
on One: Abigail Houser and
Rebecca Chadwell.
4 H Club Teen Leader:

Erin Foreman and Nicole
Moodispaugh.
Multi-Level Teen Leader:
Kimberly Hawthorne and
Sarah Turner.
Get in the Act! Take I :
Andrea Buckley.
Growing on My Own:
Mallory Mcintyre.
Growing with Others:
Rebecca Chadwell.
Growing in Communities:
Kayte Lawrence.
Family History Treasure
Hunt: Sarah Turner and
Hannah Yost.
Becoming Money Wise:
Matthew Frank.
Money
Fundamentals:
Kayla Hawthorne and Sarah
Turner with honorable mention to David Frank.
Financial Roadmap for
Teens:
Kimberly
Hawthorne and N'athan
Cook.
Adventures in Home
Living: Megan Dyer and
Molly Dunlap. with honorable mention to Katie
Keller.
Designing
Interiors.
Kayla
Hawthorne and
Audrionna Pullins with
Kerri Lawrence honorable
mention.
Rockets Away: Elizabeth
Nease.
Radio
Controlled
Vehicles: Larry Dunn, hon
orable mention.
Bicycles Adventure 2:
David Frank.
Science Fun with electric
ity: Clayton Ritchie.
Investigating Electricity:
Ross Keller.
Rope: Tyler Davis and
Tristen Wolfe.
Crank It Up: Ashley
Buchanan and Logan Dunn.
Warm It Up: Lonnier
Westfall. honorable mention.
Tune It Up: Samuel
Evans.
Lawn
Care:
Daniel
Buckley.
Starting Up - Tractor I :

"

Sarah Lawrence.
Gearing Up -Tractor 2:
Brenna Holter.
Learning More- Tractor
4: Rusty Carnahan. honorable mention.
ATV Safety: Michael
Grueser.
Measuring Up: Joyce
Weddle
and
Mariah
Reynolds with Matthew
Werry, Katie Keller and
Danny Burton, honorable
mentions.
Making the Cut: Alex
Amos
and
Kourtney
Lawrence, with honorable
Nailing
it Together:
Kristin Fick and Justin
Morris.
Arcs and Sparks: Lonnie
Westfall and Randal Davis
with honorable mention to
Wyatt Westfall.
Focus on Photography 1
(Jumor) Amanda Crane and
Kristen Kmg with honorable mention to Hannah
Cremeans. Allison Seers.
Lindsav Patterson.
Focus on Photography
(Senior): Erin Patterson and
Audrionna Pullins.
Controlling the Image 2:
Mikayla VanMatre.
Writing &amp; Reporting for
Teens: Shawnella Patterson.
Creative Writing: Kayla
Dowell and Scott Trussell,
grand champiions: Joshua
Parker, with honorable
mention to Vanessa Crane.
Art as an Expression:
Michaela Hupp.
Let's
Explore
the
Outdoors I: Abigail Houser
and Kaleb Hill.
Tree Planting: Catherine
Wolfe.

The Vaughan Age11toy
,.,....,,..~&lt;4th't"-'t

505 Mulberl) llcighls
Pumervy, Oh10 4$769

Ohio
Birds:
Sophia
Carleton and
\1adalyn
Wood.
Fishing for Beginners;
Jacob Weddle and Daniel
Card with honorable mention to Caden Goff and Jake
Andrus.
Safe Use of Guns:
Morgan Russell and Erin
Dunn. honorable mentiion
to Taylor Parker.
Basic Archery: Kyli&lt;f
King.
Explore Insect World 1:
Emily
Sinclair
and
Savannah Abshire.
Explore Insect World II:
Shana Roush.
From Seed to Flowers:
Kayte
Lawrence
and
~1aegan Jewell.
Vegetable Garden
1:
Dakota
O'Brien
and
Matthe\\ Werry; honorable
mention to Tiffany Will.
Jacob Weddle and Katelyn
Chevalier.

Internet
ISERVINGliYOMtROYti

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�Page&amp;).

:The
Daily Sentinel
•
•'•

..•

••

The Daily Sentinel
111 Court Street • Pomeroy, Ohio

(740) 992-2156 • FAX (740) 992-2157
www.mydailysentinel.com

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
Dan Goodrich
Publisher

Charlene Hoeflich
General Manager-News Editor

Pam Caldwell
Advertising Director

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

iTODAY IN HISTORY
· Today is Wednesday. Aug. 5. the 217th day of 2009.
There are 148 days left in the year.
Today's Highlight in History: On Aug. 5, 1884, the cornerstone for the Statue of Liberty's pedestal was laid on
Bedloe's Island in New York Harbor.
On this date: In 1858, American businessman Cyrus
Field finished laying out the first trans-Atlantic telegraph
cable between Newfoundland and Ireland. (However, after
several weeks of use, the cable burned out.)
In 1864, during the Civil War, Union Adm. David G.
Farragut led his fleet to victory in the Battle of Mobile Bay,Ala.
. In 1924, the comic strip "Little Orphan Annie," by
Harold Gray, made its debut.
In 1933, President Franklin D. Roosevelt established the
National Labor Board, which was later replaced with the
National Labor Relations Board.
In 1953, Operation Big Switch began as prisoners taken
during the Korean conflict were exchanged at Panmunjom .
. In 1962, actress Marilyn Monroe, 36, was found dead in
~er Los Angeles home; her death was ruled a probable suicide from an overdose of sleeping pills.
In 1963, the United States, Britain and the Soviet Union
signed a treaty in Moscow banning nuclear tests in the
atmosphere, in space and underwater.
In 1968, the Republican national convention convened in
Miami Beach, Fla.
In 1969, the U.S. space probe Mariner 7 flew by Mars,
$ending back photographs and scientific data.
, In 1984, actor Richard Burton died in Geneva,
.Switzerland, at age 58.
Five years ago: New York City's director of ferries plead~d not guilty to 11 counts of manslaughter in the wreck of
a Staten Island ferry. (Patrick Ryan later pleaded guilty to
negligent manslaughter and was sentenced to a year in
prison.) Two-year-old twins from the Philippines, Carl and
Clarence Aguirre, born with the tops of their heads fused
together. were separated at Montef!ore Medical Center in
New York City. The Georgia men's basketball team was
placed on four years' probation for rules violations under
former coach Jim Barrick.
One year ago: President George W. Bush arrived in South
Korea to begin a three-country Asia tour. Seven firefighters
and two pilots were killed when their helicopter crashed on
takeoff while ferrying the crew members from fire lines in
the Shasta-Trinity National Forest in Northern California.
Jose Medellin, a Mexican-born condemned killer, was executed by the state of Texas for his part in a horrific attack
on two teenage girls in 1993 .
.. Today's Birthdays: Former astronaut Neil A. Armstrong is
J9. Actress Cammie King ("Gone with the Wind") is 75.
Actor Zakes Mokae is 74. Former football player Roman
Gabriel is 69. Actress Loni Anderson is 64. Rock singer Rick
Derringer is 62. Actress Holly Palance is 59. Rock musician
Pat Smear is 50. Actress Tawney Kitaen is 48. Basketball
Hall-of-Farner Patrick Ewing is 47. Rapper MCA (The
Beastie Boys) is 45. Country singer Terri Clark is 41. Former
baseball player John Olerud is 41. Tampa Bay outfielder Carl
Crawford is 28. Actor Brendan Ryan Barrett is 23.
Thought for Today: "What worries you, masters you." John Locke, English philosopher (1632-1704).

VVednesday,August5, 2009

Winds shifting on gay marriage
Not too long ago, conventional wisdom seemed to
dictate that gay marriage in
America was inevitable.
Conservatives, surprisingly,
would tell me this more
often than anyone. But
something has changed.
Carrie Prejean has had an
effect on us.
That's the argument made
by my friend, Maggie
Gallagher, president of the
National Organization for
Marriage, in the latest issue
of National Review.
After a series of judicial
usurpations, legislative victories, and public-relations
onslaughts, the gay-marriage movement took a
blow this past November,
when Proposition 8 was
passed in California. Voters
affirmed a ballot measure
that defined marriage as
"between a man and a
woman."
The sea change just may
have come when a pretty,
empathetic face came onto
the national scene. A young
beauty contestant was
asked about her position on
gay marriage, and she
answered honestly (and as
it turns out, bravely): "I
think that I believe that a
marriage should be between
a man and a woman." She
added: "No offense to anybody out there, but that's
how I was raised."
The fact is that however
you spin it, gay unions are
not marriage. And I write
this totally aware that bet-

Kathryn
Lopez

erosexual culture has not
done what it should to protect marriage. But our
falling short - individually
and culturally - is no reason to call the whole thing
off and erase a cornerstone
of civilized society.
Gallagher writes: "Samesex unions are really not
just
like
opposite-sex
unions when marriage is in
question . Celebrating all
forms of adult romantic
love equally is not a very
good justification
for
redefining a fundamental
institution whose public
purposes reach far beyond
of
the
affirmation
romance."
The New York Times,just
a day or so after Gallagher's
piece ran, confirmed that
something has changed. In
an article titled "Backers of
Gay Marriage Rethink
California Push," the paper
reported on how, discouraged by the political and
cultural climate, many gaymarriage advocates are scaling back efforts to overturn
Proposition 8. This, despite
the supposed inevitability of
which some of my friends

on the right were all but
convinced, not long ago .
And despite the shrill
assertions of the Prop-8
protesters. it's not impossible to find members of the
non-heterosexual community with an ambivalent
view of marriage.
After the recent release of
a documentary about his life
and career, fashion designer
Valentino Garavani was
asked if gay marriage
should be legal. He
answered: "For myself, all
these years, I never thought
about it in terms of changing the laws. (His business
partner and longtime companion
Giancarlo)
Giammetti and I found our
own way .:__ nothing conventional - and it was
always friendship first,
always the most important
thing: the friendship. I am
neither for it legally, or
against it, so I have no personal agenda here.''
Not particularly political, this answer can't be
taken as outright opposition to gay marriage. But
to these ears, there seems
to be an acknowledgement
of an inescapable truth:
There is something transparently different between
two men who decide to
spend their lives together
and a marriage.
And unlike the most strident advocates of gay marriage, who spent the time
during and after the
Proposition 8 campaign

AS LON6

A5 IT
DOESN'T
DlSTURgTHE

I'M

ALL FOR
CHANGE . .----

5TAT~~

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1

•

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Ohio Valley Publishing Co.

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intimidating and punishing
tho~e who supported the
measure, most of us who
oppose gay maniage are not
looking to exclude anyone
from any kind of happiness.
Carrie Prejean is now'
face of that kind of to!
ance. The contrast of he •
measured. mildly offered'
opinion to the angry, ugly
Internet response from
judge
beauty-contestant
Perez Hilton, who asked
Prejean the fateful question,
was striking. As Maggie
Gallagher puts it, Hilton's
Web video "reminded too
many people of what they
saw after Prop 8.''
According to a recent
CBS/New York Times poll,
support for gay marriage
has dropped nine percentage points from a 42 percent
historic high. According to
GaJJup, only 13 percent of
Americans believe that gay
marriage would make us
better off, while 48 percent
believe it would be change
for the worse.
While Republicans were
tripping over themselves to
pose with the party's Log
Cabin branch and join t.
march of inevitability,
beauty queen made it OK to
confidently acknowledge
reality, in a loving and beautiful and even tolerant way.
(Kathf}·n Lopez is the editor of National Review
Online (www.nationalreview.com). She can be contacted at klopez@nacionalreview.com).

A parablefor the (ages'
"Baby boomers," old man
Barker said at the weekly
canasta game. "Me, me, me.
My, my, my. They all act
like they'll never get old.
They think 60 is the new 16.
Always running, always out
power walking. Eating salads for brunch. They think
they're going to live forever. They won't live forever,
but with all that exercise
and rabbit fQod, it will just
seem like forever."
"I don't know what
they're thinking about half
the time," chimed in
Woodrow. ''They think
being married is like testdriving a car. Don't like it,
turn it in and buy a new one.
Feeling old, take Viagra. It
wasn't that way when I was
a kid, I' 11 tell you that.
When you got married, you
stayed married, no matter
how much you hated each
other. You did it for the
kids."
"That's right," Barker
said. "But these boomers,
they expect everything to be
handed to them on a silver
platter. They get upset if
everything doesn't go

Jim
Mullen

exactly their way. I'm not
saying we were the greatest
generation. but we stood up
when we were called, we
didn't move to Canada. We
didn't dodge our responsibilities. You did your job,
and you kept your mouth
shut. We didn't talk about it.
"Now everyone wants to
'share' feelings. everyone
wants to 'reach out.' Has
that made the world a better
place? Has it. Talk shows?
People sitting around talking. That's entertainment?
Please. Shut. Up."
Woodrow discarded a six
of clubs. "Boomers don't
know the value of a dollar.
When we were kids, you
worked
for
spending
money. Now I hear that parents pay their kids to do

..,

homework. Paying them to
do what they should be
doing in the first place! No
wonder this country's in
trouble. Everyone wants
something for nothing."
Barker played a seven of
hearts. "They smoke dope:
they think casual Friday~
are good business: they
take personal days; they eat
yogurt as if it were some
kind of yummy medicine.
They don"t cook - they
microwave stuff. They
think people owe them a
living; they drink lattes and
slurp gelatos. They use hair
gel. I wonder if we'd have
won the war with this
bunch?''
Woodrow laughed. "Do
you see that stuff they watch
on TV? Half-naked people
living on islands? Girls and
boys who think marriage is
about winning a game show.
What kind of people think
this stuff up? Remember
Betty Grable'? I used to
think that was the sexiest
outfit I'd ever seen, that
pinup picture of hers. Now
women wear outfits like
that to church socials."

"Remember when only
enlisted men used to get tattoos?" Barker asked. ··Now
everyone has a tattoo. Men.
Women. Children. What is
that aJI about? During the
war. I thought. 'Why not get
a tattoo? r might not be here
tomorrow.·
But
these
boomers -what's the most
dangerous thing they're
ever going to face? High
cholesterol food? Ohhhh,
I'm so scared. When we got
tattoos. we got the kind that
said we were tough.
Anchors. Flags. Insignias.
The symbol of boomer
fiber? A butterfly. That'll
scare the enemy to death .
their earrings don't."
Woodrow's son Harry
a divorced. earring-wearing.
health-nut boomer who just
turned 60 - had been listening to the conversation.
"So. let me ask you:· he
said. ''Who raised all those
horrible baby boomers?"
(lim Mullen is the awlzor
of "It Takes a Village Idiot:
Conlj;licating the Simple:
Life' and "Babv's First
Tattoo." You can ,:each him
at jim_mullen@myway.com) .

�l.

VVednesday,August5,2009

The Daily Sentinel • Page As

www.mydailysentinel.com

.Obituaries
Helen Burson
SHADE - Helen Jane Burson. age 77, of Shade died
Monday Aug. 3. 2009 at Huntersville Oaks Nursing Center,
Huntersville. N.C.
Born Aug. 7, 1931 in Pomeroy. she was the daughter of
the late Earl &amp; Teresa Thomas Renshaw.
A 1949 graduate of Pomeroy High School, she was a
'tchboard operator for the Pomeroy Telephone Co. She
her late husband operated Burson's Market on Rt. 33
. .ade for many years. She was a member of the Shade
United Methodist Church.
She is survived by two daughters. Christie King and Dr.
Jana Burson, both of Cornelius. N.C.; three sistersMargaret Dotson &amp; Earlene (Lany) Bumgardner both of
Mason, W.V. and sue (Leo) Searles of Circleville.
Besides her parents she is preceded in death by her husband. Fred L. Burson in 2004.
Funeral service will be conducted Saturday 11 a.m. at Jagers
&amp; Sons Funeral Home, Athens, with Rev. Dean Blackburn
officiating. Burial will be in the Shade Cemetery. Friends may
call Saturday one hour p!ior to the service at the funeral home.
A note of condolence may be sent to the family or sign the
online register book at www.jagersfuneralhome.com.

Deaths
Lois Ann (Chapman) Willis
FAIRBORNE - Lois Ann (Chapman) Willis. 72, formerly of Middleport, passed away on Friday, July 31, 2009
surrounded by family and friends in hospice care at her
home in Fairborne.
A memorial service will be held at 6 p.m. today at
Belton-Stroup Funeral Home, 422 East Dayton
Jlowsprings Road, Fairborne. Family will receive friends
or to the service from 4-6 p.m. today at the funeral home.
•

Local Weather
Wednesda-y •.. Showers
likely. A chance of thunderstorms ...Mainly in the
morning. Highs in the lower
80s. West winds around 5
mph. Chance of rain 70 percent.
night ...
Wednesday
Mostly cloudy. A chance of
showers with a slight chance
of thunderstorms in the

Local Stocks
AEP {NYSE) - 30.89
Akzo {NASDAQ) - 56.45
Ashland Inc. {NYSE) - 35.69
Big Lots {NYSE) - 23
Bob Evans {NASDAQ) - 29.01
BorgWarner {NYSE)- 33.73
tury Aluminum {NASDAQ)
0.37
mplon {NASDAQ)- 1.74
arming Shops {NASDAQ) 5.04
City Holding {NASDAQ) - 33.45
Collins {NYSE)- 43.77
DuPont {NYSE)- 32.14
US Bank {NYSE)- 21.70
Gannett (NYSE) - 7.48
General Electric {NYSE) - 13.82
Harley-Davidson {NYSE) - 23.31
JP Morgan {NYSE) - 40.21
Kroger (NYSE) - 21.53
Limited Brands {NYSE) - 12.87
Norfolk Southem {NYSE) - 44.44

f.

Arrest
medication, coins and around
$75 in cash being stolen.
Proffitt is investigatin~.
Donna Klein or 330
Mechanic Street reported a
stereo stolen from her porch.
Traffic accidents under
investigation:
Nathan E. Cook, Pomeroy,
was cited for assured clear
distance, when a vehicle he
was driving allegedly struck
ehicle driven by Jean J.
obrey, Pomeroy, on Nye
. .enue in front of the ParMar Store. No injuries were
reported. Sgt. Ronald Spaun
is investigating.
Robert J. Nance, Fort

Cincinnati zoo director helps with turnaround
Maynard and Terri Roth,
director of the zoo's Center for
Conservation and Research of
Endangered Wildlife, were
appointed interim co-directors. They worked with thenboard chairman Otto Budig
and Murray Sinclaire, the current board chair, to trim the
budget and eliminate about 15
positions.
Sinclaire, president and
CEO of the investment
banking firm Ross Sinclaire
&amp; Associates, describes it as
an "arduous period" of
deflated morale.
Eleven months after
Hudson's departure, the
board tapped Maynard for
the top spot in a leadership
team consisting of chief
operating officer David
Jenike, chief financial officer Lori Voss and Roth.
"Thane has been at the hub
of it," Sinclaire says. "He
has such a folksy style and
an easy way about him, that
he makes people feel comfortable. I think that's been a
critical element in seeing the
turnaround happen."
Now the zoo operates
with a $26 million budget
and has notched three consecutive years in the black.
Maynard refuses to take
credit for it. "No one I work
with or who knows me is
going to mistake me for an
accountant," he says. He
praises the zoo team, and
acknowledges strong oversight from the board. The
leadership team still meets
weekly with Budig and
Sinclaire.
"You run the zoo as a
business," Maynard says,
"apd you remember: Our
business is to inspire people
with wildlife."
With Maynard. the focus
always returns to animals.
He joined the zoo staff in
1977 as an interpretiv~ naturalist, and has spent his
entire career here except for
2000-2001, when he took a
job as founding director of
an outdoor learning center
near Seattle.
Since becoming zoo

B Y J OHN JOHNSTON
THE CINCINNATI ENQUIRER

CINCINNATI (AP)
It's an hour before gates
evening. Lows in the mid 60s. open at the Cincinnati Zoo
South winds around 5 mph in &amp; Botanical Garden, and
the evening...Becoming light the giraffe yard looks like
and va!iable. Chance of rain it's littered with oversized
40 percent.
Milk Duds.
Thursday...Mostly sunny
A trim, tanned worker
with a slight chance of wearing khaki shorts and
showers and thunderstorms. rolled-up shirt sleeves dutiHighs in the lower 80s. fully rakes the droppings
North winds 5 to 10 mph. into piles, then scoops them
Chance of rain 20 percent.
into a wheelbarrow. By the
time he tackles the elephant
house - whose residents eat
250 pounds a day and create
much larger messes - his
shirt is soaked with sweat.
Ohio Valley Bane Corp. {NASVisitors might not notice
DAQ)- 29.50
that the hard-working
BBT {NYSE) - 23.66
helper is executi\'e director
Peoples {NASDAQ)- 18.06
Pepsico {NYSE) - 59.06
Thane Maynard, but his coPremier {NASDAQ) - 5.90
workers certainly do. For
Rockwell {NYSE) - 42.12
the past year, he's devoted
Rocky Boots (NASDAQ) - 3.85
Saturday mornings to lendRoyal Dutch Shell - 53.65
Sears Holding {NASDAQ) - 69.87
ing a hand in different zoo
Wai-Mart (NYSE) - 49.85
departments.
Wendy's {NYSE) - 4.80
"It helps the morale," says
WesBanco {NYSE) - 17.86
elephant handler Val Nastold.
Worthington {NYSE)- 13.67
Dally stock reports are tile 4
"And it gives him an opporp.m. ET closing quotes of trans·
tunity to see what the grunts
actions for Aug. 4, 2009, providare doing. It's important,
ed by Edward Jones financial
because we are the front line.
advisors Isaac Mills In Gallipolis
at {740) 441·9441 and Lesley
"He's a great boss. He's
Marrero In Point Pleasant at
not
too businesslike. He has
(304) 674-0174. Member SIPC.
other peorle for that. All
around, he s an animal man."
Maynard, who was named
from Page At
zoo chief two years ago,
embraces the "animal guy"
Myers, Fla., was cited for label. But just as important,
assured clear distance when perhaps, is his ability to win
a vehicle he was driving people over with a perenniallegedly struck a vehicle ally upbeat attitud€i and
driven
by
Floyd
T. folksy charm.
•
Chapman, Syracuse on West
"It's fun to work with the
Main Street near Riverview animals, fun to be with the
Motors. No injuries were keepers, hear what's workreported. Patrolman John ing:what doesn't work," he
Kulchar is investigating.
says on a recent warm mornCraig M. Waybright, ing before hosing down the
Ripley, W.Va., reported indoor giraffe stalls.
leaving his 2001 BMW
Three years ago, it was
overnight at Bun's Party clear what needed work: the
Bun and finding it damaged zoo budget. Deficits in
the next day. The entire pas- 2003, 2004 and 2005 totaled
senger side received dam- several million dollars.
age and it appears the vehi- Then in August 2006, direccle was side swiped.
tor Gregg Hudson resigned
after five years to take the
top job with the Dallas zoo.

Candidates from Page At
the Redneck 4-H club, the
Rutland Volunteer Fire
Department Ladies Auxiliary,
the Meigs FFA, the Meigs
Maurader Band and its color
guard, and is statistician for
Meigs Wrestling. She has
enrolled at Hocking College
for the fall quarter.
Erin Patterson, 17, is the
daughter of Pauline and
James Patterson of Pomeroy,
and a five year member of
the Redneck 4-H Club. She
is a member of the Meigs
Marauder Band, the flag
corps, and student counciL
serves on the prom commit, and in her spare time
photography, scrapUU\J"'"'"', camping, softball,
photography, swimming,
reading and writing.
Haley Perdas. 17, is the
daughter of Mary Janeth
Perdas of Chester, and for the
past seven years has been
active with the Ba.-;han bunch.
She is a member of the
Eastern track team, plays with
the Eastern Concert Band, is
in the marching band, and an
active member of the Outer

AP photo

In this photo taken July 11, Thane Maynard, the director of the Cincinnati Zoo and Botanical Garden, helps clean up in
the the zoo's elephants area, in Cincinnati.

Limits
youth
group.
Swimming and hanging out
with friends are her hobbies.
Samuel Evans, son of
Marlin and Debbie Evans, of
the Racine area is the only
candidate for king. He is a
senior at Eastem High School
where he sings with the chorus, and has been a member of
a youth organization for four
years. His hobby is restoring
Minneapolis Moline garden
tractors, working to rebuild
engines, and taking part in
antique tractor pulls. Hunting
is his favorte sport.
Other candidates are
Jerrika R. Keesee, horse
princess; Taylor Parker, dairy
princess; Kayla Hawthorne,
swine princess; Courtney
Bauerbach and Nicole
Moodispaugh, beef princess;
Jacob Weddle, rabbit prince;
Julie Weddle, rabbit princess;
Sarah Turner,
Katelyn
Chevalier, Makya Milhoan,
Smith,
goat
Breanna
princess; Haley Bissell, poultry princess; MattheV:' T.
Brown, Jr., poultry pnnce;
Sarah Turner, rabbit princess.

If Maynard is worried, it
director, his mantra has been
"more animals, more fun," doesn't show. Thinning gray
and that has played out in a hair aside, at 55 he could
number of ways. Consider:
pass for I0 years younger.
• Giraffe Ridge, a $1.6
He keeps in shape by jogmUiion exhibit that houses ging and bicycling. He and
four
Maasai
giraffes, his wife, Kathleen. ride frequently on the Little Miami
opened in June 2008.
• In August, Sabu, a Bike Trail. After many years
10,000-pound Asian bull in the suburb of Wyoming,
elephant that was a favorite they moved to Anderson
attraction here from 1991 to Township two years ago to
1998, returned after a 10- be closer to the trail and the
year stay in Springfield, Mo. Little Miami River, where
• In June, the zoo wel- they canoe.
comed Klyde, its first black
His hopeful view of the
future extends beyond the
rhino since October 2008.
Next year, ground will be Cincinnati Zoo to the plane.t
broken on a new Cat Canyon as a whole, as listeners of
exhibit. And recent success- his "90 Second Naturalist"
es breeding cheetahs and radio show know. It's heard
Sumatran rhinos have helped on more than 100 NPR and
position the zoo as a world Armed
Forces
Radio
leader in conservation of Network stations.
those species, Maynard says.
One listener, though, "was
There's also an increased practically at war with me
emphasis on providing visi- over the show. She referred
tors with up-close encounters to me as a public nuisance,"
with animals such as snakes, Maynard says, and profrogs, alligators or a wallaby. nounced him guilty of gloss~
"It's so peo~le don't go ing over problems plaguing
home and say, I went to the wildlife. "She wanted me to
·zoo,' but (say), 'You would- tell more bad news and quit
n't believe this - here's a being so perky."
picture of me with a Red
Maynard says he prefers to
River hog!"' Maynard says. inspire people to take action,
Long-term, plans call for rather than frighten them.
the land-locked zoo to make "There are ample stories of
room for more exhibits by species making a comeback,
moving cars off the main specifically because people
zoo property. Historic Vine said, 'I'm gonna stand in the
Street Village, the new gap and help.' This concept
entrance that opened in that there's hope sounds
May, was part of that plan.
corny, but I think for conserSome glitches the open- vation it's vital.''
ing weekend created long
As for being perky, well,
waits, and there are still the guy is that even when
lines at crunch time on the pushing a wheelbarrow full
busiest days. But•overall, he of elephant poop.
In the bowels of the
says, ''Feedback's terrific.
Wildly complimentary ver- Elephant House on a recent
sus critical."
Saturday, he paused.
The parking lot near
''Here's the No. 1 quesGiraffe Ridge is "eventually tion people ask me: Are you
going to be a 4-acre African bringing hippos back?"
exhibit that's the biggest · "The down side is, there's
exhibit we've ever had. But a lot of cash (needed)
between here and there is a between here and there," he ·
little thing called the says. Then the ever-optiAmerican economy."
mistic animal guy chimes
The recession has stalled in: "But the answer's yes.
the zoo's $54 million capital We're gonna get 'em. We
campaign, which stands at just have a little economic
$40 million
slowdown to get through."

Lawmakers looking to rev up Ohio's auto industry
TOLEDO (AP) A
panel of lawmakers is
searching for ways to revitalize what has been Ohio's
largest and most important
industry yet there is some
skepticism even among
committee members about
how much they can help.
The new legislative committee studying the future of
Ohio's auto industry wants
to help automakers make a
ptofit, not saddle them with
cost! y regulations.
Two lawmakers - one a
Democrat, the other a
Republican - heading up the
panel say the goal is to help
the automakers stay competitive. and make Ohio more
attractive so that they will
retain and hire more workers.
"We don't want to do
more harm to an industry's
that's already been punched
in the gut," said state Rep.
Matt Lundy, a Democrat
from Elyria.
.
They have until the end of
September to come up with

I

I

ideas including proposals
for new rules and regulations aimed at helping the
industry and its workers.
Among the ideas are
increasing worker training
programs, examining incentives to attract businesses
and changing car dealer
franchising laws. A final list
of recommendations will go
to Gov. Ted Strickland and
leaders in the legislature.
Five lawmakers on the
committee met for the first
time Monday and heard
from a number of people
involved in the auto industry. More meetings are coming up in Lorain, Warren.
Dayton and Mansfield.
''A single state can't
change the industry," said
Sen. Mark Wagoner, a
Toledo Republican. "But we
can help with issues like
retraining workers.''
The auto industry remains
a big part of the state's economy even though Ohio has
lost nearly 90,000 auto jobs

t

tt

r

over the past decade. Ohio
has more jobs in the auto
supply industry than any
state and only Michigan produce more cars and trucks.
The jobs of about 5 percent of Ohio workers 371,100 - rely on the auto
industry, according to an
Ohio
Department
of
Development report released
this year. Detroit's Big 3
automakers have 15 plants in
the state although factories
in Mansfield and Twinsburg
are now slated to close.
''The first task of the committee is stabilizing the
patient. making sure we are
holding onto the jobs we
have," Wagoner said. ''Then
we can explore long-term
growth."
It's unlikely that Chrysler
Group LLC or General
Motors Co. will return to
employment or production
they were at just a few years
ago, said Bernard Swiecki.
director of market analysis
for
the
Center
for

,..

Automotive Research in
Ann Arbor, Mich.
Ohio's advantage is that it
already has a well-trained
work force, he said. ''Other
states spend a lot of money
turning farmers into auto
workers," Swiecki said.
He told the panel that for
Ohio to compete with other
states for auto jobs it must
help the car companies
with reducing their spending whether that means
helping train workers or
lowering taxes.

�IHIIE

Jhe Daily Sentinel

PageA6

i

\'\Tcdnesday, August 5,

Mortgage aid program
helping fraction of borrowers
BY

In this photo
released by Korean
Central News
Agency via Korea
News Service in
Tokyo, former U.S.
President Bill
Clinton, right. mee.
with North Korean
Leader Kim Jong I ,
left. front, in
Pyonggyang, North
Korea,Tucsday. At
Clinton's right is former White House
chief of staff John
Podesta, others are
unidentified Clinton
met Tuesday with
North Korean leader
Kim Jong II on the
first day of a surprise visit to
Pyongyang, holding
"exhaustive" talks
that covered a wide
range of topics.
state-run media
said.

ALAN ZIBEL

AP REAL ESTATE WRITER

WASHINGTON
The gm cmment's $50 oillion program to ease the mortgage crisis is helping only a tiny fraction of strusgling homeowners. and a list released Tuesday
showed wh1ch lenders arc laggard-..
.. As of July, only 9 percent of eligible borrowers had seen
their mortgage paymL·nt:-. reduced with modified loans. And
the first monthly progress report showed that 10 lenders
. had not changed a single mortgage.
•
The report indicated that lenders such as Bank of
America Corp. and Wells Fargo and Co. have lagged
behind government expectations. Both banks received billions in federal hailout money.
BofA modified just 4 percent of eligible loans. and Wells
Fargo 6 percent. Wachovia Corp .. which was taken over by
Wells Fargo in December, modified only 2 percent.
"We think they could have ramped up better. faster. more consistently and done a better job serving borrowers and bringing
stabilization to the broader mortgage markets and economy."
said Michael Barr. the Treasury Department's assistant secretary
for financial institutions. ''We expect them to do more.''
Wells Fargo says it plans to :-;peed up its efforts. signing
up most borrowers for the Obama plan with one phone call
and sending customers a trial offer within two days.
The report is "only part of the story'' because the numbers
do not reflect an additiona1220.000 loans that Wells modified
outside the Obama plan this year. a company executive said.
BofA said it would improve its "processes for reaching
those 111 need" and continue working with the Treasury
Department to help homeowners who fall outside the program's eligibility requirements.
Meanwhile, fort!closures continue to rise. About 1.5 million
households received at least one foreclosure-related notice in
the first half of this year, accon:iing to RealtyTrac Inc.
"There are cc1tainly more foreclosures going on in the country then there arc modifications - by a long shot:• said Bruce
Dorpalen. director of housing counseling at Acorn Housing. a
nonprofit hou-.ing group. He said his group has intervened to
prevent about 500 foreclosure sales in cases where borrowers
wanted to be considered for the Obama plan.
A housing counselor told 36-year-old Veronica Cassella
she should qualify for a loan modification. but Green Tree
Servicing LLC claims she does Mt. Cassella. who works at
a hair and nails salon in Visalia. Calif.. has seen her income
shrink with the economy from $35,000 to $25.000.
Her husband still works. but their income is not enough
to cover the $213,000 mortgage on their home. which has
lost roughly half its value.
"My life has been a standstill with these people for at least
half the year:· Cassella said. Green Tree, which modified 4
percent of eligible loans, did not return calls for comment.
., There are 38 companies participating in the government
program, and some noticeable holdouts that control 15 percent of outstanding mortgages.
HomEq Servicing, owned by Barclays PLC, and Litton
Loan Servicing. owned by Goldman Sachs, have yet to join.
Spokesmen for both companies said they plan to do so soon.
So far. banks have extended only 400,000 offers among
2.7 million eligible borrowers who are more than two
months behind on their payments. More than 235.000 of
those borrowers have enrolled in three-month trials
But the government is partly to blame for the languid start.
The administration rolled out the guidelines gradually this
year. Much of the program was not finished until mid-May.
and the guidelines were updated again in early July.
The White House maintains it is on track to meet its goal
of helping up to 4 million homeowners by 2012. Last week.
the administration extracted a verbal promise from the
mortgage industry to reach 500.000 borrowers by Nov. 1.
American Horne Mortgage Servicing and PNC Financial
Services Group Inc. were among the companie5 that had a
zero next to their names on Tuesday's report.
In a statement, American Home Mortgage Servicing
explained that it did not join the program until July 22 but had
modified nearly 37,000 loans in the first six months of 2009.
David M. Friedman, president and CEO, said executives
expect to help 60,000 customers, or about 40 percent of the
company's eligible delinquent bon·owers.
PNC. which owns National City Bank, began the process
in early July.
The best results among the large loan services came from
Saxon Mortgage Servicers Inc. One in four of Saxon's eligible
borrowers has a trial loan modification with a lower monthly
payment to help the homeowner avoid for~closure. Aurora
Loan Services LLC, GMAC Mortgage Inc. and JPMorgan
Chase all had one in five qualified borrowers in a trial loan.
"We've got feet on streets in neighborhoods where borrowers need help," said David Lo\\·man. chief executive of
the JP.Morgan Chase's home lending division.
For each homeowner who makes regular payments for
three months, the loan servicer collects $1.000 from the
government. The company is paid thousand of dollars more
if the borrower stays cun·ent for three years.

: Developer sends ground
zero impasse to arbitratio~
NEW YORK (AP) - A monthslong dispute over who
should pay to build office towers at the World Trade Center
site is headed to arbitration after a developer called
Tuesday for a binding ruling on a standoff that threatens to
~tall ground zero rebuilding.
.
.
Larry Silverstein is seeking September heann&amp;s m t_he
argument over a 3-ycar-old agreement that lets htm build
three office to~·c~:-;.
.
. "
He and the s1te s owner, the Port Authonty ot Ne\\ York
~nd New Jersey, have been negotiating for months over
Silverstein's lease and how to pay for the developer's three
planned towers. l3oth arc buildmg on the site.- the Port
Authority's piece includes the Sept. ll memonal and other
public projects - and their plans are interlaced through
underground utility infrastructure, streets and other features.
Silverstein says the Port Authority isn't rebuilding its parts
of the lower Manhattan site on time. throwing off the timing
And financing for his buildings - claims the agency denies.
... Unable to secure private money in the tight real estate marKet, Silverstein wants the agency to guarantee more th~ $3 bitlion in financing to build the first two towers. The thtrd tower
rs still planned but hasn't been a factor in recent discussions.
; "One way or another, we must resolve, once and for all.
the disputes that have arisen," Silverstein said in a statetnent Tuesday.
The Port Authority, which runs area tr"ansi~ hubs, has
agreed to back a tower currently under construction and put
up some money for the second tower if Silverstem c9mes
up with more than $600 million first. The agency says committing more of ib money to Silverst~in's private venture
would drain funds from other key proJects.
"It is clear (Silverstein) will accept nothing less than two
fully subsidized office buildings. and that is irresponsible
and unacceptable," Port Authority Executive Director Chris
Ward said.

2009

AP photo/Koreari
Central News Agency
via Korea News Service

AnaiVsis: Obama lets NKorea's Kim save tac~~t
I

BY STEVEN

R.

HURST

ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

WASHINGTON - The
Obama administration let
~orth Korean leader Ktm
Jong II save face by releasing two jailed Americans to
former
President
Bill
Clinton. The payoff maybe not right away - is
likely to be renewed dialogue with Pyongyang
about its nuclear weapons
program.
After
rnt!eting
with
Clinton. who made an unannounced visit to the N01th
Korean capital Tuesday.
Kim pardoned and freed the
young journalists who
allegedly cro:.;sed into the
country from China earlier
this year. They were serving
12-year prison sentences.
"It could provide an
opportunity to move forward on the nuclear tssue,
and that's not necessarily a
bad thing," said Victor Cha.
former Asia chief at the
!'iational Securitv Council.
"The history with the North
Koreans, as they have just
done tht! past few months, is
to put themselves out on a
ledge. And they always need
help getting off that ledge."
N01th Korean behavior ever an enigma - has
included in recent months
the withdrawal from nuclear
talks involving the two
Kon·as, Japan. Russia.
China and the U.S. The
regime also launched a
long-range rocket, conducted a second nuclear te-.t,
test-fired u barrage of ballistic missiles. and restatted its
atomic progmm in defiance
of international criticism
and the U.N. Security
Council.
Obama, while pushing
heavy sanctions against the
North for its re-ecnt nosethumbing of the international community, also has been ·
low key as he pur~ucs a
resumption of talks with the
Stalinist regime.
That's bel'n difficult
because the North is widely
believed to be embroiled in
a succession struggle after
Kim reportedly suffered a
stroke and began setting up
a 27-ycar-old son to take
power. Its saber-rattling \Vas
I widely believed to indicate
I that its military wanted to
show strength as a successor is chosen.
The White House has
taken pains since Clinton's
arrival in Pyongyang to play
the mission as a private one
designed only to win the
release of Laura Ling, 32,
and Euna Lee. 36, both with
former Vice President AI
Gore's CurTent TV media
venture. The) were captured while on assignment
to collect material for a
report about traffil·king of
Nmth Korean women into
China.
Danid Sneider. associate
director of research at
Stanford
University's
Shorcnstein Asia-Pacific
Research Center, said the
joumalis~s' r~lcase fo!Io:ved
weeh ot qtuet negotmttons
between
the
State
Department. at~d the !'llorth
Korean l n:uss10n to the
Umted Natu.ms.

Obama
admini-.tration's
desire not to expend diplomatic c.apital winning their
frccdom, Sneider said.
"Nobody wanted this to
be a distraction from the
more substantially difficult
issues we ha\ c "'ith Korth
Korea,'' he said. "There
was a desire by the administration to re.solve this quietly. and from the very
beginning they didn't allow
1t to become a huge public
tssue."
As a former leader.
Clinton was a good choice
to represent the United
States in the delicate deliberation'&gt;.
according
to
Sneider. He had the cache to
get an audience with Kim
but could claim to be acting

Clinton ''didn't go to
negotiate this, he went to
reap the fruits of the negotiation," Sneider said.
In photographs of Clinton
with Kim, the former president stood somberly at the
Korth Korean leader's side.
showing no signs of
warmth. The official photographs were obviously
intended for domestic consumption. Clinton is highly
regarded in the North and
his appearance with ' Kim
will bolster him at home.
Pardoning Ling and Lee
satisfied North Korea's
need to continue maintaining that the two women had
committed a crime \Vhilc
dispatching the former president as emissary served the

as a private citizen.
North Korean media said
Clinton had carried a message of apology from
Obama and that the former
president and Kim held
wide-ranging talks, but
White House spokesman
Robert Gibbs said those
c1aims were ·'not true."
Still. the diplomatic minuet was a success. more so
if Obama indeed cracked
open the door to resume
dialogue with North Korea.
whose nuclear program
stands to destabilize Asia
and compromise Obama's
promise to work toward a
world free of nuclear
weapons.
Just don't hold your
breath.

Once Again, The Daily Sentinel Will Have A
Special Meigs County Fair Preview Edition.
This Year's Edition Promises To Be One Of The
Biggest And Best Evert
Look For this Special Edition In Your
Friday, August 14th Paper
BE SURE YOUR BUSINESS IS A PART OF THIS YEAR'S FAIR
EDITION .•• CALL TODAY!
.

.

ADVERTISING :llEADLINE ...

FRIDAY, August 7th .
For More Information Call
Brenda Davis or Matt Rodgers 740-992·2155

The Daily Sentinel
•

�r

. . ..

0

L

Inside

F

------·----- ·- - - -·

_,_ ~..,,

Bl

The Daily Sentinel

Steelers hold Wnrd out, Page 82
Adams: 50 years of dcalmaking, Page 82
Atlanta her()('s reunite \\ith 8ro\\ns, Page B6

Wednesday, August S, 2009

Local Sports Briefs

Cubs hand Reds another loss, 6-3

· Southern basketball golf scramble
RACINE - The Southern basketball program will host
its second annual four-man golf scramble on Saturday,
August 29, at Riverside Golf Club in Mason.
The format is 'bring your own team' with only one player under an 8-handicap while maintaining a total team
handicap of 40 or above. The four-man scramble will be an
'8:30 a.m. shotgun start.
The cost is $240 per team ($60 per person) with optional
cash pot, skins and mulligan for purchase. Prizes of first.
second and third place finishes '"ill be awarded. as well as
prizes for longest putt, closest to the pin and longest drive.
. Beverages and food will be probided. To enter, please
contact SHS coach Jeff Caldwell ..at 740-949-3l29.

Eastern VOIIeybaII Camp

.

.

.

TUPPE~S PLAII\S - Co~ch Caldwell of Eastern Htgh

S~hool wtll be holdmg an Eagle Volleyball camp for all
gtrls entenng 7th, 8th, and 9th grade as well as all players
new to the 2010 volleyball program who have yet to play
under Coach Caldwell, on August 5-7 from 9 a.m. until
noon.
Staffing the program will be players and coaches from
2009 team .
he camp will feature fundamentals essential in a wing volleyball player that span across all levels of the
game .
The cost of camp is $30 pre-registration or $40 at the first
day of camp. This cost includes an Eastern Eagle \'Olleyball
T-shirt.
Checks should be mode payublc to Eastern Athletic
Boosters and should be sent to either: Coach Howie
Caldwell 40878 Old Seven Road, Reedsville, OH 45772:
or Eastern High School. Attn: Coach Howie Caldwell.
38900 SR 7, Reedsville. OH 45772.

1

BBYFL sign-ups
MIDDLEPORT - Big Bend Youth Football League will
be having sign ups Satuday, August I from 11 a.m. until
lp.m. for anyone wishing to play football or cheer. The
sign-ups will take place at the Middleport Stadium.
: There will be a mandatory coach and staff meeting fol
lowing sign-ups for anyone interested in coaching for the
2009 season. Camp will begin Monday. August 3. Campers
should arrive at 5:30 p.m.

SK race to kick off Racine's
"Party in the Park"
A ACINE - The inaugural Party in the Park 5K
~Walk Race will be held Saturday, Sept. 12 to kick off
Racine ·s Party in the Park event. and organizers are hoping
people come for the run , but stay for the part).
Registration will begin at 8 a.m. in downtown Racine
across from the post office. followed b)· the race at 9 a.m.
A Party in the Park parade will follow at 10 a.m.
The race begins. rain or shine , in downtown Racine and
includes Star Mill Park, the new Ohio River Boat Access,
residential streets and Southern Local Schools before ending downtown in front of spectators lining the parade route.
Overall and age-group awards will be awarded to walkers and runners at the finish line after the parade.
A chicken barbecue will be held at 11 a.m. followed by
entertammcnt and activities throughout the day at Star Mill
!;&gt;ark culminating with a concert by country music superstar
Joe Diffie at 6:30 p.m.
Pre-registration is $12 with race-day registration $15.
and donations are greatly appreciated. Proceeds will benefit the Southern Fitness Center. which is open free to all
community members.
For more information about participating or sponsorship
opportunities. contact Junie ~1aynard at 740-949-4222 ext.
1129. Registration fonns will be available at the Southern
Fitness Center. Southem Local Schools and many Racine
area businesses.

A

MYL Fall Ball sign-ups

~IDDLEPORT - The Middleport Youth League will
have Fall Ball sign-ups on Saturday, August 8. for all kids
ages 6-16 who are interested in the fall baseball and softball leagues from I p.m. until 4 p.m.
The sign-ups will be held at the Middleport ball fields.
Contact either Dave at (740) 590-0438 or Tonya at (740)
992-5481 for more information.

CINC INNATI (AJ&gt;) Tom Gorzclanny walked off
the mound in his hrand new
blue jersey, :;atisticd with
everything he had done in
his Cubs debut.
There was a surprise waiting before he got to the
dugout.
T he left-handcr got a
standing ovation from thousands of Cubs fans in the
stands after he allowed three
hits and drove in a run
Tuesday night, setting up a
6-3 victon· over the
Cincinnati Reds that kept
Chicago in first place for
another day.
j During his days in
Pittsburgh before the trade,
he never experienced anything like it.
"It shows how big this
team is, having more fans
here than the home team,"
said Gorzelanny, who tipped
his cap to them. ''It's definitely a different feeling
coming from wryere I came
from. It \Vas ntce. It was
definitely something I'll
remember for a while."
So will those C'uhs !a~s
who made up a loud maJonty of the crowd of 17:992.
The Cubs h~~v~ tnched
ahead of S~ . Louts m the NL
Central wtth a 14-5 spurt
since the All-Star break, the
best in the league. They got
and
Gorzelanny
( 4-1)
reliever John Grabow from
the Pirates in a five-player
deal Thursday.
Gorzelanny dominated a
struggling lineup during his
7 1-3 innings, giving up one
run. He had an RBI single
off Johnny Cueto (8-9). setting the Reds on course for
their 14th loss in ts games.
Cincinnati has dropped
eight straight- ali at home
- for it~ longest losing
streak in four vears..
~
"What a nice game
Gorzclanny pitched,'' Cubs
manager Lou Piniella said.
"A great way to break in
here. That was just what we
needed.''
Kosuke Fukudome and
Derrek Lee had solo homer;;
for the Cubs. Fukudome
opened the game with his
first career leadoff homer,
and Lee hit his I50th with
Chicago
Gorzelanny's hit knocked
Cueto out of the game in the
sixth. The 23-year-old
Cueto has gone 0-5 in six
starts with a 9.85 ERA. the
• deepest slump of his twoI year career. He fired his
glove down the dugout
walkway as he left the field
after
giving
up
Gorzclanny's first hit of the
se~s~n. .
.
· It s JUst a tough sttuation,'' Cueto said. "We're
not scoring man) runs, and
you feel like you need to be
perfect. Maybe:- I' m trying to
do too much . Physically, I
felt good. It's bad luck for
the whole team."
After drifting through the
first half of the season , the
Cubs have found direction
behind a pitching staff that

DAYS
AP photo

Cincinnati Reds left fielder Wla~limir Balentien can't reach a

LeBron, Shaq to
pay Christmas
visit to Lakers

CLEVELA0:D (AP) LeBron and Shaq will visit
Kobe on Christmas Day.
makes the ;nost out of the to keep him in the rotation
The Cleveland Cavaliers
mm1mum. The Cubs arc 54- for a few starts until Ted will visit the Los Anceles
15 when they score at least Lilly rctums from a :;ore left Lakers on Dec. 25. one of
three runs, the best record in shoulder later this month.
the marquee matchups
the majors. They reached
At least, that's the plan for announced by the NBA,
the mark in the sixth inning now.
\vhich released its 2009-10
on Tuesday.
"Ted is going be back schedule on Tuesday. The
With the bases loaded and soon," Gorzclanny said. "I game '"ill feature LeBron
two outs, Koyie Hill hit a just want to do my job until James and new teammate
sinking liner that eluded then, and I can go to the Shaquille O'Neal against
diving center fielder Willy bullpen an~ go from there." Kobe Bryant.
O ' Neal will make his
Taveras and rolled for a
NOTES: Chicago has
double, making it 3-0. With won stx straight against debut with the Cavs on Oct.
catcher Geovany Soto dis- Cinctnnati. improving to 8- 27. w·hen they open at home
abled by strained muscles in 3 against the Reds this sea- against the Boston Celtics.
his left side. Hill has :;on .... The Cubs put INF I Bryant and the world •
become the Cubs· everyday Andres Blanco on the DL champion Lakers will begin
catcher. He has started the with a strained left calf, defense of their title the
last 25 games. the longest opentng a roster spot for same n~ht against the crosssuch streak bv a Cubs catch- Gorzelanny. . .. .Reds 3B town clippers and rookie
er since oa'mon Berryhill Scott Rolen had a CT scan Blake Griffin . the No. I
started 25 in a row In 1989. that was normal. He was selectwn in this vear's draft.
on Christmas Day,
The newcomer was the beaned by a pttch Sunda) theAlsoEastern
Conference
Cubs· star. Gorzelanny had- and has missed two games . champion Orlando Ma!.!ic,
n't started for the Pirates ... Taveras snapped an 0-for- who added Vince Carter this
since last September. and 18 slump with a single, one summer. will host the
spent most of this season in of his t\\'o hits off Celtics in a rematch of last
the minors. The Cubs plan Gorzelanny.
season ·s conference finals.
base hit by Chicago Cubs' Mike Fontenot in the second
inning of a baseball game Tuesday in Cincinnati.
·

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Minor league pitcher
convicted of beaning fan
DAYTON (AP) - An
0hio judge has convicted a
minor league pitcher of
injuring a fan when he threw
a baseball that went into the
stands during an on-field
melee in Dayton last year.
• Montgomery
County
Pleas
Judge
t;:ommon
&lt;!:onnie Price on Tuesdu)
found Julio Castillo guilty of
felonious assault causing
ous physical injury. The
acquitted the 22-yeara second charge of
ious assault with a
deadly weapon.
• Price announced her deci~ion without comment.
• Castillo. of the Dominican
Republic. was pitching for
the Peoria Chiefs - a Class
A affiliate of the Chicago
Cubs - against the Dayton
Dragons when the benchclearing brawl broke out.
Castillo threw a ball that
gave a fan a concussion .

•

He faces a possible 2 to 8
years in prison when he is
sentenced Thursday. but the
judge could alternatively
sentence him to probation.
•·we are pleased that this
paves the way for some
sense of accountability for
what happenecl , and for the
victim to be recognized that
what happened to him could
happen to anyone," said
assistant county prosecutor
Tracey Tangeman.
Defense attorney Dennis
Lieberman said the verdict
contained both "good news
and bad news" but declineo
fu rther comment.
During last month's trial.
fan Chris McCarthy testified
that Castillo appeared angry
when he hurled the ball
toward the Dragons· dugout.
He said the ball came into
the stands. striking him in

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�Page B2 • The Daily Sentinel

www.mydailysentinel.com

VVednesday,Augusts,2oo9

Jomlin still holding Ward 50 years of football prove Adams is a dealmaker
: out of Steelers' work
NA~J !.V'Ll.~E.
(~P)
'term.

- K.S. Bud Adam!&gt; Jr. rs a

LATROBE. Pa. (AP) Hines Ward didn't appear at
the Pittsburgh Steelcrs'
afternoon practice until he
started running sprints with
running back Willie Parker
midway through the 2·hour
workout.
Four days into camp, the
four-time Pro Bowl receiver
has practiced once. Ward
said Tuesday he's not
injured. although he had offseason shoulder surgery.
' Ward said he's merely taking cro - coach's time
off.
Coach Mike Tomlin is
giving several experienced
Steelers considerable rest
early in camp following the
team's Super Bowl run,
including
safety
Troy
Polamalu
and
Ward.
Polamalu reported to camp
with a sore hamstring.
Parker didn't
practice
because of a shoulder problem.
' "I can't knock what coach
Tomlin is doing," Ward said.
"He's a proven coach, he's
won the Super Bowl. Yeah,
it looks a httle strange, me
not out there and people
wondering, but its his
team."
Tomlin's explanation for
the 33-year-old Ward's
extended summer vacation?
"Hines has money in my
emotional bank account. so I
take care of Hines,'' said
Tomlin. who had Ward sit
out every midweek practice
last season.
Ward, the Steelers' career
record-holder for receptions.
receiving yards and touchdown catches, probably
doesn't need a lot of work to
get ready for his 12th season. But he needs some. if
only to get back into a
rhythm with quarterback
Ben Roethlisberger.
The Steelers are relatively
thin at receiver. with second-year player Limas
Sweed and rookie Mike
Wallace the main backups to
Ward and Super Bowl MVP
Santonio Holmes. Tomlin

businessman who knows
how to make a deal - even
if it\ ri::.ky or unpopular.
The mere mention of his
name in Houston still riles
w i t h people who fed he stole their
Roeth
lis- beloved Oilers by relocating
NOTEBOOK
berger and the team to Tennessee back
backups in 1997. rn Tennessee. he's
Charlie Batch and Dennis the man who brought his
NFL franchise to the state Dixon.
"The last two or three and only agreed to rename it
days, we've gotten a majori- so he'cnuld woo fans in his
ty of the playbook in and it's ne\v market.
Adams is the guy who
a great opportunity for
struck
an early blow for the
Limas to get in there in full
upstart
AFL against the
p~ds and get some rapport
wtth Ben and the system," established Nf:L.luring Rilly
away from the .NFL
Ward said. "We are thin. If Cannon
in 1960 by doubling the
Santonio or m)self goes money the Rams offered.
down, we've got to have and cmching the deal by le.tguys step in and play."
ting the mnning back drive
With former ~o. 3 receiv- away in his wife'~ Cadillac.
er Nate Washington now in
Respected around the i':FL
Tennessee. the Steelers need today. Adams' contributions
Sweed - a second-round to professional football are
pick in 2008 - to take on a getting more attention these
bigger role. Sweed looked Qays. He was a co-founder of
lost in the offense at times as the American Football
a rookie and caught only six League with the late Lamar
passes. He also dropped an Hunt - an event whose 50th
apparent touchdown catch anniversary is being celein the AFC championship brated by the NFL this year
game against Baltimore.
- and the only owner of the
"But from last year to this Oilers-Titans franchise.
year, it's like night and day
AI Davis, Oakland owner
with Limas," Ward said. and former AFL commis"lt's important for him to get sioner, called Adams a P-rime
some reps. so I'm not going fighter for their clubs. · They
to sit there and argue with were scared to death of Bud,
the other league. because he
the coach."
Roethlisberger
com- beat them on Billy Cannon,''
plained his arm st:"ength was he said.
Now 86. mixin~ sports and
missing early in camp. but
that didn't appear to be aa deals is somethmg Adams
problem as he completed was born to do.
The son of an Oklahoma
several
deep
passes
oilman. he played football.
Tuesday.
"He was throwing darts." basketball and baseball at
Culver Military Academy
Ward said.
Tomlin wasn't worried and rugby and football in
when Roethlisberger said college. He finished as a letterman at the University of
his arm didn't feel right.
"He's our lead dog guy Kansas. served in the Navy
and we're going to ask him during World War IT and
to throw a lot of balls," found himself ~rounded by
Tomlin said. ''I would imag- fog in 1946 111 Houston,
ine through the initial phase where he decided to set up
(of practice), he wouldn't business.
Adams quickly expanded
feel great. He launched a
from
oi I to natural gas. transcouple of deep ones today
and that's what we're porting chemicals, car dealerships and farming and
expecting.''
ranching in Californra and
Texas. He also was involved
with pro baseball and boxwants the
o t h e r
receiYers
spending
lots of time

Buick ends 50 years of

sponsorships with PGA Tour
B Y D OUG FERGUSON
AP GOLF WRITER

: Buick ended more than 50
years of PGA Tour sponsorship Tuesday when it
announced that it no longer
will s~nsor golf tournaments
in Mrchigan and California
because of the court-ordered
of
parent
'restructuring
General Motors.
: The decision came two
days after Tiger Woods won
'the Buick Open in Grand
Woods
Blanc,
Mich.
acknowledged the end of the
tournament. which he won for
the third time. by heaving his
golf ball toward a massive
gallery after his final putt.
The additional blow came
with the end of the Buick
Invitational at Torrey Pines.
where Woods has won a
record six times. The Buick
Invitational is among the top
tournaments· in the early part
of the PGA Tour schedule
because it typically is the first
event on network TV and has
the highest TV rating because
of Woods.
"While this is disappointing

Beaning
from PageBl
the temple area.
McCarthy.
45.
of
Middletown, said the seams
of the baseball left a mark
on his scalp. and he suffered
a throbbing headache for
days. He said the swelling
in his head became so
severe that he couldn't wear
a hard hat required for part
of his job.
McCarthy did not attend
the verdict hearing on
.Tuesday. A message left at a
number listed for a Chris
McCarthy in Middletown
was
not
immediately
returned.
At trial, Montgomery
County prosecutor Jon
Marshall had accused
Castillo of throwing the ball
at Dragons' players. He
·a rgued that courts have
found that such objects as
rocks. bricks, pool cues and
baseball bats constitute
deadly
weapons,
and

.

news, both the PGA Tour and
Buick remain in discussions
regarding future sponsorship
possibilities,'' Buick and the
tour said in a statement.
The Buick Open will be
replaced on the schedule next
year by a new tournament at
The Greenbtier in· West
Virginia .. according to two
officials with knowledge of
the deal. They spoke on condition of anonymity because
the tour does not plan to
announce the new event until
Wednesday. Golfweek was
the first to report on The
Greenbrier gettmg a tournament.
Buick was the oldest. continuous corporate sponsor on
the PGA Tour and once had
its name on four tournaments
- the Buick Classic in ~ev.­
York, the Buick Challenge in
Georgia, the Buick Open and
the Buick Invitational.
The PGA Tour now has lost
four title sponsors this year Buick's two events. U.S.
Bank in Milwaukee and
in
Stanford
Financial
Memphis, which was played
in June without a sponsor.

ing. and sponsored amateur

and AAU teams in basketball
and softball. His ADA Oilers
finished third in the 1956
national AAU basketball
tournament.
He couldn't stay a\\ ay
from football. He wanted an
NFL expansion franchise.
then tried to buy the Chicago
Cardinals and move them to
Houston, only to be rejected.
That prompted Lamar
Hunt to get his brother.
Bunker, to set up a meeting
for him with Adams in
Houston. root ball dido 't
come up until Adams was
driving Hunt back to the airport for his flight to Dallas.
Both men had tried to buy
the Cardinals. and Hunt
asked if Adams would be
interested in forming a new
league.

AP photo

This Oct. 28, 1959, file photo shows representatives of the American Football League posing in New York City. Posing in the front row from left are, Robert L. Howsam, Denver,
Colo.; Max Winter, Minneapolis-St. Paul, Minn.; Lamar Hunt, Dallas, Texas, the League's
founder; and Bud Adams. Jr., Houston, Texas. In the back row from left are, Barron Hilton,
Los Angeles, Ca.; Ralph C. Wilson Jr., Buffalo, N.Y.; and Harry Wismer, New York.
Respected around the NFL, Bud Adams' contributions to professional football are legendary as a co-founder of the American Football League with the late Lamar Hunt in
event whose 50th anniversary is being celebrated by the league this year.
''I said. 'I sure would.' He won the first two AFL titles tomed out in Houston. for got out and said. Tll be back and played in two more ing him to pack up his Oilers
m touch:·· Adams recalled championship games that and hit the road in 1997
last week.
first decade. He kept fighting before his new. stadium was
On Aug. 3, 1959. Adams the NFL and signed end readv.
and Hunt announced in a Willard Dewveall away from · "He made everv effort he
. possibly could to sta), but he
news conference ~n Adams' the Bear~ in 1961. .
He also made ~1story m just didn ·t get any cooperaoffice the formation of the
AFL. Hunt would own the 1969 by makrng t~e tion:· said Titans coach Jeff
Dallas Texans ..Adams the A~trodome home to hts Fisher. Adams· winningest
H&lt;;&gt;uston franchrse. _Adams ~~~ers - the fir~t AFL or coach. now going into ~his
sard the calls poured m from ~FL team to play mdoors.
15th full season. "He wanted
others eager to challenge the
"I could see where t~e to stay there beca se th· t'
NFL.
NFL wa-; pretty well set m .
~
a, s
"That's when we finally their ways and that's the way \\her~ h~ sta~e~ thm~s. I m
got to what they became. the they wanted it and they did- sure lt ':':as \ er) · ver) tough
Foolish Club," Adams said n't want to change it. They 00 htm. _ .
.
.
of the first eight AFL own- had no reason to change it,"
Adams tn~d t~ ch!1g to hrs
ers.
Adams said. "I think we beloved . Otlers ntc~nan~~
Adams fired the first big forced some changes on before fmally agreemg m
shot at the NFL by landing them pretty quick to the 1998 to a ch~nge demanded
Cannon, the two-time All- things we were doing with by ~ans helpmg pay for the
stadrum. Part of that deal?
American running back at our teams."
LSU.
Peace between the leagues The NFL officially retired
The Los Angeles Rams finally c.tme when the AFL- the Oilers nickname after
already had drafted Cannon. NFL merger was announced that '98 season. another first
A~ams
called Ca~non 's June 8. 1966.
in league history.
tramer .. at LSU offenng to . Adams always has been. an
.on the field. Adams· ~ea.
pay t\&gt;.1ce as much. Cannon mvolvcd owner. consultmg wm - though never m
called Adams collect. and ~aily on dcci~ions and some- Super Bowl. His francl
they w&lt;?rked out a three-year trmes suffenng the conse- has 21 playoff appearance~
deal. wrth a plan for Cannon quenccs.
in 49 seasons - fifth among
to sign the contract after the
One heavily criticized t--:FL teams since 1960
Su1~ Bowl on Jan., I. 1960. m~':e came w~e.n he fired counting ~he AFI; years.
c~nnon als? \\anted a co.t~h Bum !'hrll~p!&gt;
fo!Adams franchtse has proCadrllac for hts father. So IO\\ t~g up t\\ o AFC ~hamp1- duced 65 Pro Bowl selec~dar:ns brought Cannon back onshtp gam~ losses m 1978 tions. one AFL and two NFL
to hts Houston home for a and 1979 wr_th an II-~ se.a- MVP and eioht Hall of
meal - and then gave the son and a qurck playof1 extt.
s .
::- .
.
running back the keys to his
Upset at being the second Fame mductees mcludmg
\vife 'scar.
tenant in the Astrodome to Blanda, Earl Campbell and
"She wasn't too happy baseball's Astros, Adams Warren Moon.
. .
Another Af,L on~mal
about that. We went out to ticked off fans again by flirtcelebrate Billy Cannon ing with Jackwnvillc in ?wner, Ralph Wtlson. Wtll be
because we were getting the 1987 and touring the Gator mducted .mto the Hall of
best player in the nation right Bowl. That got him luxury Fam.e th~s weekend and
there.'' said Adams. who boxes and new turf for the Dans thmks that Adams
replaced his wife's car with a dome "' ith new taxes to pay should be there. too.
blue Cadillac convertible.
the bill.
"I don't think (people)
It wasn't enough in the really know what happened
Bud Adams named his
football team the Oilers. NFL's smallest stadium. so in the merger." he said, ··who
With Cannon and quarter- Adams looked to Nashville \\ere the fighters. who
back George Blanda, they in 1995. Attendance bot- weren"t. who did what."

j

!or

WEDNESDAY TELEVISION GUIDE

.

Castillo is capable of throwing a baseball over 90 miles
an hour. ·
Castillo said he had been
having pitching control
problems earlier in the
game. became frightened as
the brawl began. and threw
the ball downward toward
the Dragons' dugout to try
to keep players from rushing the field. He said he did
not throw at an) opposing
p!ayer, nor did he intend to
htt anyone.
Video from the game
shows Castillo tnrowing a
ball. but doesn't show
where the ball lands .
Officials in the Midwest
League suspended and
fined 15 players and both
teams' managers for the
fight.
Castillo currently is on
the roster of the Boise
Hawks. also a Cubs affiliate. He has been benched as
the Cubs awaited the outcome of the trial.
Michael Lufrar.o. general
counsel for the Cubs.
declined
to
comment
Tuesday.

•

�;p;aap . .

VVednesday,August5,2009
:8f4i

.

.

~ . . . . ,·

f(l

4#

a;

The Daily Sentinel • Page 83

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WorcLAds

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Friday For Sundays Paper

All Dlaplay: 12 Noon 2
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Sunday Display: 1:00 p.m.
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Now you con hove borders and graphics
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Borders $3.00/perod

POUCIE8: Qtjo Valley PUbll.tlln; reeer~etU... rtglrt to edit, l'litd, or caralany ad at any tlmt. Errore must~ reported 011 the Ifrat day ol plilllca11011811d the
Trlbu.Sentlnei·Reglater will be r.-ponalble for no more than the colt of the epace occupied by the error and 011ly the flrct lnMrtlon. We shill not be liable lor
any Joel or e~CPtn• that r..ulta from the publlce~lon or omt•lon o1an advertt•mtnL Correetlon wtU be mllde In thllirct available edition. • eo~ numbef tdt
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enoraln an ad ~ken over the phone

KIT &amp; CARLYLE
200
Ohio Valley
Publishing reserves
the right to edit,
reJect or cancel any
ad at any time.
Errors Must

Notices

Announcements

Lost &amp; Found
MISSing July 30. 2 F Bea·
gtos lost near Bulav1Ue
Ad, Answer to Shyloh &amp;
Shadow, Do Nol have
collars, Could be any·
whero 446-9845

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.

Campers / RVs
Trailers

Home Improvements

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

Autos

SEPTIC
PUMPING
Gallia
Co.
OH
and
Mason Co. WV Ron
Evans
Jackson,
OH
800.537-9528
400

01 Intrepid SE 115,000
mi, clean title. good
cond.
power windows
locks. NC. $3,000 OBO
645·1072 or 388·9081

Financial

~,S"

Money To Lend
Services

I

,
•
•
•
•
•

•

C 2009 by NEA, Inc

I

CLASSIFIED INDEX
Legals ...........................................................100
Announccments .......................................... 200
Birthday/Annlvcrsary .................................. 205
Happy Ads .................................................... 210
lost &amp; Found ............................................... 215
Memoryffhonk You ..................................... 220
Noticcs ......................................................... 225
Personals ........................................... ,......... 230
Wanted ........................................................ 235
Services ....................................................... 300
nee Servlce ....................................... 302
atnrnn11ivA .................................................. 304
Materials ....................................... 306
ncss ...................................................... 308
Catering........................................................310
Child/Elderly Cnrc ....................................... 312
Computers ................................................... 314
Contractors .................................................. 316
Domestics/Janltorlal ................................... 318
Electrical ...................................................... 320
Financla1 .......................................................322
Health ...........................................................326
Heating &amp; Cooling ....................................... 328
Home Improvements 330
Insurance ..................................................... 332
lawn Servlce ............................................... 334
Music/Dance/Drama .................................... 336
Other Services.............................................338
Plumblng/Eiectrical .....................................340
Professional Services .................................342
Repairs ......................................................... 344
Aoofing .........................................................346
Security ........................................................ 348
Tax/Accounting ........................................... 350
Travel/Entertainment .................................. 352
Financial.......................................................400
Financial Services .......................................405
Insurance .................................................... 410
Money to Lend .............................................415
Education .....................................................500
Business &amp; Trade School ........................... 505
Instruction &amp; Trainlng ................................. 510
Lessons........................................................ 515
Personal ....................................................... 520
Animals ........................................................ 600
Animal Supplles .......................................... 605
Horses .......................................................... 610
Livestock......................................................615
Pets ............................................................... 620
Want to buy ..................................................625
culture ................................................... 700
Equipment.......................................... 705
&amp; Produce.......................................710
Seed, Grain ............................... 715
&amp; Land ........................................... 720
Want to buy..................................................725
Merchandise ................................................ 900
Antlques ....................................................... 905
Appliance ..................................................... 910
Auctlons ....................................................... 915
Bargain Basement....................................... 920
Collectibles .................................................. 925
Computers ................................................... 930
Equlpment/Supplles ....................................935
Flea Markets ................................................ 940
Fuel 011 Coal/Wood/Gas ............................. 945
Furniture ...................................................... 950
Hobby/Hunt &amp; Sport .................................... 955
Kid's Cornor.................................................960
Miscellancous..............................................965
Want to buy ..................................................970
Yard Snle .................................................... 975

~

www.comics.com

NOTICE Borrow Smart.
Contact tho Ohio D•v'"
siOn of Financaal lnst•tu·
Education
uons OffiCe of Consumer 500
Affairs BEFORE you refi·
Child I Elderly Care
nance your home or otr
Busineu &amp; Trade
tain a loan. BEWARE of
Will take care of the requests for any large
School
elderly in thelf home advance
payments of
call 304·675·3264,
Gallipolis Career
fees or insurance. Call
College
the Office of Consumer
Affiars
toll
free
at (Careers Close To Home)
1-866·278·0003 to learn Call Today! 740·446·4367
Home Improvements
1·800·214·0452
if the mortgage broker or
gallipohscareercollege.edu
lender is properly fl.
Small home repair, brush censed. (This Is a public Accredrted Member Accredrt·
1ng Councillor Independent
cutting &amp; lawn service. service
announcement Colleges and Schools 12748
Free Est 20 yrs exp. from the Ohio Valley
(740) 446·3682
Publishing Company)
600
Animals
300

Recreational Vehicles ............................... 1000
ATV .............................................................1005
Bicycles......................................................1010
Boats/Accessories .................. ~ ................ 1015
Camper/RVs &amp; Trailers ............................. 1020
Motorcycles ............................................... 1025
Other ..........................................................1030
Want to buy ...............................................1035
Automotive ................................................ 2000
Auto Aentalllease ..., ................................. 2005
Autos .......................................................... 2010
Classic/Antiques ....................................... 2015
Commercial/Industrial .............................. 2020
Parts &amp; Accessories ................--................2025
Sports Utility .......................... --.•...••.•......... 2030
Trucks................. --......................................2035
Utility Trailers .................... """"""'""""'"' 2040
Vans .......... --................................................ 2045
Want to buy __ ,................__ .......................... 2050
Real Estate Sales ........................ --......... ". 3000
Cemetery Plots ......................, ................... 3005
Commercial................................................301 0
Condominiums .......................................... 3015
For Sale by Owner..................."""""""""'3020
Houses for Safe ......................................... 3025
land (Acreage) ..................... --................... 3030
Lots ............................................................3035
Want to buy ................................................3040
Real Estate Rentals .....--............................3500
Apartments/Townhouses ......................... 3505
Commercial .................................., .............351 0
Condominiums .......................................... 3515
Houses for Rent. .... --.............. """"""""""'3520
land (Acreage) .......................................... 3525
Storage .......................................................3535
Want to Rent .............................................. 3540
Manufactured Housing ............................. 4000
lots.............................................................4005
Movers........................................................401 0
Rentals ....................................................... 4015
Sales...........................................................4020
Supplies ..................................................... 4025
Want to Buy •..... --....................................... 4030
Resort Property ..................... ,................... sooo
Resort Property for sale ...."·"····"""""""'5025
Resort Property for rent __ ..............__ ......... 5050
Employment............................................... 6000
Accounting/Financial ................................ 6002
Adminlstratlve/Professional ..................... 6004
Cashier/Clerk................ --........................... 6006
Child/Elderly Care ..................................... 6008
Clerical ..•--..................... --....................""'" 6010
Construction.............................................. 6012
Drivers &amp; Delivery " .........--........................ 6014
Education ................................................... 6016
Electrical Plumblng ................................... 6018
Employment Agencles ..............................6020
Entertainment ............................................ 6022
Food Servlces.................--...................•...•.6024
Government &amp; Federal Jobs .......""""""'6026
Help anted- General ...................""""""'" 6028
Law Enforcement ...................................... 6030
Maintenance/Domestic ..................""""··· 6032
Management/Supervisory ........................ 6034
Mechanics..................................................6036
Medlcal ....................................................... 6038
Musical ....................................................... 6040
Part-Time-Temporaries ............................. 6042
Restaurants ............................................... 6044
Sales ................. --........................................ 6048
Technical Trades ....................................... 6050
Textiles/Factory ......................................... 6052

&amp;

Houses For Sale

4BR 2.5 baths b1g fam•ly
room in the basement, 1
RV
Service at Cannichael car garage &amp; 1 car port.
b•g deck In the back. 229
Trailers
Circle
Or., · GallipoliS.
74(}446·3825
740.682.()8()2
RV SeMce at Canni·
chael
Trailers Mad•son Ave. Pt Pleas·
740·446·3825
ant, frame house on 2
lots. excellent location for
Motorcydes
2 future rentals, $14.000
740·645-0938
1960 Triumph PR6, 650
Blvd.
3BA
chopper in good cond. LeGrande
org.
parts
$5000.00 brick. hardwood floors.
FR, 2 full baths. central
304·894-4248.
air, 10X14 metal build·
ing, 5 m1ns from town.
Automotive $89,000. 740·709·1858
2000

Would like reasonable
Basement
offers on 163 acres(less
Waterproofing
Uncond1t1ona1 hfet•me
m•neral rights) m Spnng·
guarantee. Local refer·
f1eld
Township,
Ga!l18
ences fumashed. Estab·
County Oh1o by Septem·
ber 15 as follows: 1) lished 1975. Call24 Hrs.
740.446.()870, Rogers
Land with limber.
2) Land with limber re· Basement Watorproofmg.
moved.
3) limber only.
Other Services
4) Land With timber and
mineral rights.
Pet
Cremations.
Call
Fax acreage owner @ 740·446·3745
912-236·8782.
Profeuional Services

Losl Dog.
Black and
white Male Boston Ter·
ner weanng a stnped col·
far. Last seen Monday
night at 7pm at Jackson
Pike Shake Shoppe. If
Personals
found call John S1pple at
441·5161 or 256·8152,
SWM 47 wants to meet
fun loving SWF, N·S,
Notices
N·D
for
relationship.
Write to PO Box 624.
NOTICE OHIO VALLEY
Kerr. OH 45643
PUBLISHING CO. rae·
ommends lhat you do
Wanted
business w•th people you
know and NOT to send
money througt&gt; the ma11 Nice Family of 4 look•ng
until you have mvest•gat· for a rental home or mobile home. Please Call
mg the offcnng.
740-709-0181

I!

Graphics 50¢ for small
$1.00 for large

• All ads must be prepaid*

• Start Your Ad$ With A Keyword • Include Complete

JUST_SAY.
CHABG.E II!

Pets
AKC Yorkie puppies tails
docked. f1rst shots &amp;
wonned.
Parents
on
prem1ses. 2 males S600
each, 2 females S800
each 740.388·9121 or
740.388·1608
CKC M•n Pins pups Cho.
tails docked $300.
740.388·8788

srr

Free to a good home mix
puppies. 388· 9081
Lab puppies free to good
home 8
weeks old.
441-1006
Free 8 mo. old, Female
Rat Terrier, small, shots,
crate
trained,
740-992·3357
Poodle Super Summer
Sale· 3 F $275. 3 M
$225 each. white, cream
&amp; apr1cot, teacup, toy,
miniature,
CKC,
vet
checked,
lowest price
ever, ready to go, good
thru
August
1Oth,
740.992·7007

Farm Equipment
EBY,
INTEGRITY,
KIEFER BUILT.
VALLEY
HORSEJLIVE·
STOCK
TRAILERS,
LOAD
MAX
EQUIPMENT
TRAILERS,
CARGO EXPRESS &amp;
HOMESTEADER
CARGO/CONCESSION
TRAILERS.
B+W
GOOSENECK FLATBED
$3999. VIEW OUR ENTIRE TRAILER INVEN·
TORY AT
V.'WW.CARMICHAEL·
TRAILERS. COM
740-446-3825

AJsolute Top Dollar • sil·
ver/gold
co1ns.
any
10KI14KI18K gold jew·
ery, dental gold, pre
1935
US
currency,
prooflm•nt
sets.
diS·
monds. MTS Com Shop.
151 2nd Avenue. Gam·
Adorable Gennan Shep. polis. 446·2842
pups for sale, 4M-4F
Yard Sale
$400.00
AKC
papers
304·882·3781.
Large 5 family Yard Sale
AJg 6 &amp; 7 next to fire
Agriculture house in Chester Nas·
700
car, women's dress &amp;
casual clothes, jewelry,
Farm Equipment
dishes, books. videos &amp;
lots more.
1 John Deere STx38
lawn tractor $300.00. 1 Thurs. Fri, Sat 8:00 til ?
Troybuilt
walk·behind 4-409
Bulaville
Pike.
sickle
bar
mower Lamps. glassware, tires.
$600.00
call curtains, lots of misc. file
304·675·4920 after 6pm.
cabinet
AJg 8th Lots of items
start at 10:00AM at Vin·
too Full Gospel 418 Main
~
S:ree
_tVi
.•.
nt~
on..._o_H_..,._
Carport sale. Aug. 7 &amp; 8,
4 miles on 143, rain or
shine, Kings

House for sale, Crew
Rd., Pomeroy, S89.000.
740-992-3549

Jbr.656 )&gt;!anon Ct.close to
campus prk:Jng Hunmg. Mar·
1999 Dodge truck 2
'hall mov~-m cond.S59 900
wheel drive. V6, stan7-10-441·5708.
dard, $2600 OBO. 2001
4Dr
Neon
automatic
Real Estate
$2100 OBO. 2003 4Dr 3500
Renlals
Neon automatic $3000
OBO. 256-1233

Garage sate· August 6th
&amp; 7th, 8:30 am·4:00 pm,
located at the Weber
Res1dence across from
Belleville Locks &amp; Dam
on St At 124 1n Reeds·
Utility Trailers
ville, clothes. shoes, fur·
mture,
Playstaatlon, 2005 filth wheel two car
box
45'
trailer,inside
Home Decor &amp; morel!II
long,
white,
excellent
Indoor Sale, MHS cafete· condition, with three side
ria, Saturday August 8th, doors, electric wench,
9·5, Sponsored by Class Price $9,500 call for
of 2011, lots of nice more
infonnation
clean stuff
(740)949·2217

Mull• family garage sale,
Aug. 7·8 at Jeremy
ST1Hl Sales &amp; Service Roses' 1 m•le out CR 28
N~w Available at Canni· from Racine, double tw1n
chael
Equipment bunk bed, 1 complete
twin bed, lots baby fum•·
74(}446-2412
ture
(beds.
dressers,
high cha1rs, sw•ng) chair,
Merchandise
900
antiques, (wicker couch
over 80 yrs. old, trunk,
viCtrola) lots of ch~dren's
Miscellaneous
clothes, women's size 10
&amp; 12 (all name brand)
Jet Aeration Motors
toys, a lot of household.
repaired, new &amp; rebuilt
In stock. Call Ron
Multl·family
sale,
Evans 1·800-537-9528 8107·818. furniture, toys,
clothing, mise, something
16 1/2 horse Kabota. die· for everyone! Tuppers
set, 175 hOUI:&gt;, IJtllly Plains
behind
Bethel
mower,
back
blade, WorshipCtr
$7,000,
740-742·2498
Huge Garage Sale, Fri
anytime
8!7, 8am·12pm &amp; Sat
Free 2 heavy wood
8/8, Sam·?. Furniture,
doors,
commode
&amp;
household items, bed·
dresser 304·67 4·4628 or
ding, boys sizes 10·14,
304·812·0922.
mens sizes 34·36x32,
Hot Tub Outlet. Top Womens sizes 8·10 adn
Quality, Free Delivery, Lg.
tops,
Chnstmas
Save 50%. Tiki Tubs. decorations,
jewelery,
606-929-5655
v1deo games. etc. Rain
or Sh•ne, 740-446..()686,
WantTo Buy
105 Afln Drive, Gallipolis

Stolen Dog. $500 Re·
ward, supposedly turned
lose on Rt 681 between
Rl. 33 &amp; 50, Female
Walker
Coon
Hound.
black,
tan,
white,
(304)275·3309

Have you priced a John
Deere lately? You'll be
surpnsed• Check out our
used
at
1nventory
www.CAREQ.com.
Car·
miChael
Equapment
740.446-2412

Yard Sale

95 Chev. Blazer LT 4X4
$3000. 4 15 inch 6 Lug
camper wheel &amp; t1res
new
cond.
$400.
645-6835

4 bedrooms, 3 baths, !
car
garage
attached,
covered
front
porch,
basement. attic, adJacent
lot included, good neigh·_
borhood, dead end street
in Pomeroy. $120,000.
740·992·2475,
740.992-6949

Vans
========
1992 Dodge work van for
sale Ram 250- runs &amp;
drives good 3.9 LT S700.
Call441-1236
WantTo Buy
Want 10 buy Junk ears.
call 740-388-0884
3000

Real Estate
Sales

Commercial
Comm. Space 4 lease.
Prime
location,
busy,
highly visible. dwntwn
corner. 1400·2000 sq It
$900 mo. 2 months free
Rent 740·709·1960

Apartments/
Townhouses
..Move·ln special"..
$50.00 off 1st months
rent rent, must move
In by September 1st.
Rural Development
Property Currently rent·
ing 1 &amp; 2 BR units Spa·
cious floor plans. ranch
&amp; townhome style liv·
ing, playground &amp; bas·
ketball court. on-site
laundry facility. 24 hr
emergency mainte·
nance. qwet country fo·
cation close to major
facil•ties,
medical
phannac•es, grocery
store...just minutes
away from other maJOr
shopping In the area.
Honeysuckle Hills
Apartments
266 Colonial Drive #113
Bidwell, Ohio 45614
740·446·3344
Office Hours M, W, F
9AM
5PM

For sale Restaumna locaaed
aa the end of Hannan Trace
Rd call 304-593-4114 be·
aween 9am-5pm
I br.ground-lcvrl &amp;~ hr.ApL
near d" "'" n 1'1. Pleasant
Houses For Sale
uti!. pd !IUD a('(pt."\o peas
call ~0-1-360.0 163
+· 46 acres wl new 4 bed 1 and 2 bedroom apts ..
21/2
bath.
Poss•ble furnished
and
unfur·
owner finance 446·3570.
nished, ano hOuses in
2 bed 1 bath $249 Pomeroy and Midd epon,
Yard
Sale
secunty deposit requtred,
Aug.-6th·Aug.·8th 9·? ,6 month. 740-446-3384
no pets. 740-992·2218
m•lcs out Jerrys Run Ad 2br. 2 car garage. 1~,90
Applegrove
at
Rose comer 101 on Famie" Rd 1br. located at 2123 112
Conley
Slli.OOO bncoln Ave. no pets, ref.
Leonards lots of misc. Camp
req. $300,00 a mon.
$1.00 or less rain can· 304-67 5-66~8.
eels 304·576·2635.
3 bed 2 bath new con· 304·675·2749.
struct10n on +I· 5 acres 2br apl. Rodney area. No
Recreational
1000
$525 month. Owner fl· pets. Oep1Ref requ1red.
Vehicles nance
available. 740·446·1271
740·446·3570
2BA APT-Close to Hoi·
3
Bed.2
Baah
HUD zer Hosp1tal on SR 160
Boats / Accessories
homes!Onl) 199.'amon.•5&lt;;
CIA. (740) 441·0194
Area
98 dwn 15 Y"· at 8~ for lisl. ~~~~~~-~
Gallipolis
!!00·6~0-4CI46 ~~ n61.
CONVENIENTLY
LOSEa·Doo Bob bardly 6TI
&amp;
AFFORD·
hardly used, axe. cond. -~ Br.2BaHUD homes'Only CATED
ABLE! Townhouse apart
$2500 trailer Included. 238!amon'5%dwn.l5
yrs.at8%
.800-620-4946 ex ments,
and/or
small
513·289·4636
ROI9.
houses for rent. Call
740·441·1111 for appll·
15' boat w/trailer, 55hsp
cation &amp; information.
outboard, throttle control.
Free Rent Special Ill
runs
good.
$650,
2&amp;3BR apts $395 and
740·416·7997
up, Central Air, WID
Campers / RVs &amp;
80 Locust Sl. Gallipolis 2 hookup.
tonart
pays
story Vactorin home, 9 electric. EHO
Trailers
rooms, SBR, @BA. 5
Ellm VIew Apts.
2005 Sportsman byl&lt;z !~replaces. fenced •n bak
(304)882-3017
321~' 1 pullout. queen yard. Reduced $150.000.
lslanc:l
View Motel has
304·675·6363
bed never used 19.600. ca•
S35.00tNight
(June) or 740.441-1202 vacanc1es
388·0189, 208-8333
7 40-446-0406
(Kim)

�:Page 84 • The Daily Sentinel
Apartments/
Townhoufts

Apartments/
Townhouses

,.w1n R1vers rower IS acceptmg applications for
w8Jimg list tor HUD subSidiZed, 1·BR apartment
tor the elder'yldlS8bled,
can 675·6679

2BR apts. 6 m1 from Holzer some utilities pd. or
appliances
avaJI.
$400/r'IO
+
dep.
740-418·5288
or
988·6130

(!)
, BR stove &amp; refr-g turn,
2nd ' FL.
until
pd
$400/mo $400/dep 258
State St.. No Smoking,
No Pets. 740·446·3667
2BR &amp; Studio. Clean
renovated dwntwn. new
appl., lam. flooring, water
&amp;ewer &amp; trash incl. Stu·
d10
$325/mo.
2BR
S5251mo. 740·709·1690
3 room and bath down·
Stairs lirst months mnt &amp;
deposit. references reqwed, No Pets and
clean. 740-441-Q245

Apartments/
Townhouses

Manufactured
Housing

4000

SpaCIOUS
secondlthtrd
floor
apt.
overtook1ng
Gall polls City Park and
R•ver.
L.A. den, lrg.
Kitchen-&lt;fm•ng area With
all new appliances &amp;
cupboards, 3 BR, 2
MOVE IN READY Com· baths,
laundry
area.
ptotely ft.omashed 2BR. all S900 per month. Call
appliances,
TV,stereo 446·2325 or 446-4425
sys. linens &amp; complete
k1tchen ware $700/mo + ~---~~-­
elac S5001dep. 446·9585
Tara
Townhouse
Apartments • 2BR, 1.5
N•co 3BR Pt, · Gallipolis bath, back pat10, pool,
City Part. Fum. WID. playground, (trash, sew·
some util. 1nc1. No Pets. age, water pd.)No pets
$595/mo. 740·591·5174
allowed.
$4501rent,
Nice big 2 bd .. 1 bath, $450/sec.
dep.
Call
apt.,
Hud
approved, 740·645-8599
Pomeroy, 1ncludes water
Commercial
&amp; trash, $430 plus de·
poSit, 740·41 6-6622
Office/
Two 2 bedroom apart·
Warehouse/Storage
ments
In
Pomeroy. Great Location 749 Third
740.949·2311
ask
for
Ave., Gallipolis!
Donald
S399'month for 1800
~~~~~--­
Bcauuful 11.-r , 2 ba ape., sqft. Bulld·out negotiable
2000 S&lt;j fl ' S650.()1 per
Call Wayne
mon.. gas • \\lt~r. garba8~
404-456-3802
lndudrd. O\ er Huttoos C8r
\\ A.~h 304 372 6094
Houfts For Rent

~~~~~~~~
Rentals
3BR mobllo homo. DepoSit,
references,
no
pets. 339·0034 4PM to
8PM
2BR tailer Vinton area,
S3501mo $350/aep 2 ref·
erences no Inside pets.
388·0011 or441·7870
Older mobile home 1n
New Haven. WV, 2 br., 1
bth on rental lot, new
carpet, countertop, un·
derplnn1ng, plumbing, up
dated
electric,
new
porches, $3500. lot rent
$120
per
month,
740·416·6622
-------R20, 1991 2 bd., 1 bth
on rental lot In New Ha·
ven. WV, $420 per mo.
for 4 yrs. wl$800 deposit
•ncludes lot rent or sell
for
$11,500,
740.416·6622

:raklng appttcations for
modern 1 bedroom. No
Pets S2951mo 1ncludes
water
$200/dep. Beautiful Apts. at Jack·
son Estates. 52 West·
446-3617
WOOd Ur , trom $365 to
$560.
740-446·2568.
Happy Ad
Equal HouSing Opportunity. Tl'ts •ns!ltutJon is an
Equal Opportunity Pro·
vider and Employer.

3BR dble·wide furnished,
SR 143 • Pomeroy. $625
S199 mol 4 bed, 2 balh. mo. Incl. most utilihes &amp;
Bank Repo! 15% down. 15 lawncare. 740.591·5174
)C.lr', S% APR) for listings
800-620-49~6 ex R027
For rent
16x80 2br
2ba.on
Rt2
N.
304·895·3129.
3BR, 1 bath, stove &amp; refrig. furn. Gas heat, CIA, For rent 2000 14x70 3br.
No Smoking, WID hook 2ba.
Dowr· sta~rs apt. for rent up, No Pets. S6001mo +
304-675·7911
1n Pt. Pleasant 2 br.,w/ deposit. Nice location.
k1tchen appliances , AC/ Gallipolis. Call 446·3667
Sales
gas furnace
wl
WD
hook-up Lg. front porch 3BR 1.5 bath Brentwood 1983 Shuh1 I 4x 70 in Cump
$350.00
a
mon.
+ Dr.
living-room
ex·
Ref.
required. Conley
$200.00
dep.
$6751dep. r•ndo, Jbr., 2 l'ull bath, ,
S6751mo
304·675·6375
or
cell
front &amp; back de•k, Kood
740-446·4051
804·677-8621 .
cond.. gn:nl 'larter home

Happy

80th
Birthday
We Love You!

Gracious Living 1 and 2
Bedroom Apts. at Village
Manor
and
Rivers1de
Apts. In Middleport, from
$327
to
$592.
740.992·5064.
Equal
Hous•ng Opportunity.
Jordan Landing Apart·
ments
2,3,4, br available, all
electnc, no pets call for
details 304·674.0023 or
304·610.0776

Get Your Message Across With A Cady Senl10el

BULLETIN BOARD
13"'cotumn tnch weekdays
'22 column men Sunday
CALL OUR OFFICE AT 992·2155

VVednesda~August5,2009

www.mydailysentinel.com

2 bd., 1 bth, house
Racine, new bathroom.
full basement, garage,
fenced in yard, $415 per
mo., S415 deposit. references required. available
Aug. 1, 740-416-6622
Very nice 1 BR home in
Pomeroy. great ne1ghborhood,
large
yard,
odeal for 1 or 2 people,
new appliances. No m·
door pets, Non smoking,
Call
740·992·9784
or
740.992·5094 &amp; leave a
message

--~---~-3BR furnished, CIA and
heat, no pets. $5001rent
+
sec.
dep.
2027
Chatham
Ave.
740.441·0143
Newly remodeled 3br., 1
112 ba. prime location.
ref.&amp;
dep.
no
pets
304·675-5162.

INDOOR SALE

~8()()() .1XJ

no payJll('nl' c•'h

onl~'!

304-675-St6'1
304- ~93-200 I

or

~--~--~~

Country living· 3·5BR,
2·3 BA on property.
Many floor plans! Easy

Sales

"The Proctorvilfo

We are currently looking
for horne health BideS 111
the Gallia County area
Must be flexible Mth reliable transportatiOfl and
have a High Sct1ool dlpbma or GED Equ1va·
lent. We are also looking
for scmeone With experi6000
Employment ence as a manager.
Pease Apply at 740·
Ask
lor
288·7075
Rhonda or Ema•l: rhOn·
Cashier / Clerk
da_sbc@yahoo.com
Accepting
applications EOE
part·time
cashiers
for
must be available to AVON! All Areas! To Buy
work all shifts. Apply at or Sell Shirley Spears
Par Mar 43, 56 V1ne St. 304·675·1429
Difference·
S1 and a deed IS all you
need to own your dream
home. Call Now1
Freedom Homes
888-565-0167

MHS Cafeteria

Lots of nice clean stuff

YOUNG'S
Carpe nter Service
• Room Additions &amp;
Remodeling
• New Garages
·Electrical &amp; Plumbing
· Roofing &amp; Gutters
·VInyl Siding &amp; Painting
· Pallo and Porch Decks

wv 036725

or Par Mar 44. 2943 St Get that perfect part time
Rt 141, Gallipolis. No paying job working for an
Phone Calls Please.
o~ f~rm as a local agent
~~~~~~~= and earn more. Job re·
Education
quirements: Good com·
mumcabon sk•lls •n Eng·
fish, Internet access Any
Part·lime
instructors previOus working expen·
needed during the day ence could be an advan·
an:
mathematics,
eco- tage. Applicants should
nomics, and accounting. send theJr resume to Ja.
MathematiCS and eco- son Wheller ema• (ia·
nomic Instructors must sonwheller27 0gmaJI.co
have a masters degree m) lor more info.
In the discipline. If 111ter·
ested please email a reHirirng Long-Term
sume and cover letter to
Employees
J&lt;!amckl @gallipohscareercotlego.edu
We are currently seek·
Help Wanted • General
Assistant House Manager
Minimum
of
a
high
school diploma/GED required. Work evenings.
nights, weekends, and
holidays.
Experience
working with individuals
In crisis preferred. must
be able to pass back·
ground check, maintain
confidentiality and V/ork
well w1th others. Send resume to Ass1stant House
Manger P.O. Box 454
Gall•polis Oh10 45631 .

Financing! We own the ---~---bank.
Call
today! Courtside Grill now ac866-2 15·5774
ceptmg appltcatiOns for
expenenced
l•ne/gnll
14X70 2 bedroom very cook. Good pay m fast
good condition. S7500· paced environment. Ap·
6454·2353
ply •n person or call to
~~~
a~14
~x~7~~~ set up mterview between
78 EI~con
0 635
Paxton, Gallipolis good 8·10AM 308 2nd Ave.
shape you move.$7200 across from the park
740 441 9371
OBO
740·645·1646
'
'
740-446·2515
-------Licensed dock foreman,
The BIG Sale
also experienced person
Used Homes &amp; Owner
for loading coal barges.
Send resume to Sands
Financing· New 2010
Doublew1de $37,989
Hill Mining LLC, P.O.
Ask about $8,000 Re·
Box 650, Hamden, OH
bates
45634 or
call
(740)
mymidwesthome.com
384·4211 to request ap·
740·828·2750
plication.

ANSWER TO 7-31-09 SCRAMLET

Sat. Aug 8 - 9 to 5
Sponsored by Class of 2011.

Help Wanted · General

SCII.AM-.I.BTS ANSWERS 7f.JIJU9

V.C. YOUNG Ill
992·6215
740·591·0195
Pomeroy. Ohio
30 Years local Expcnence
FULLY INSURED

MICHAEL'S
SEK\'ICE n ::\ n :K
1555 ;\\'I-; A\C,
l'u m cr ll\, O U
• Oil &amp; falter change
•Tune Ups

• Broke Service
• AC Recharge
• Minor exhau~t
repair • Tire Repair
• 'I ntnsmis~ion l·ilter
&amp; 1-luid Change
• Gt:ncral :--.techanic

ilg dependable full and
part time employees to
help fulfill client needs.
You will take Incoming
and make Outgoing
calls for well known organizations.

work
(7~{))

Roofing, Siding,
Soffit, Decks,
Doors, Windows,
Electric, Plumbing,
Drywall,
Remodeling, Room
Additions
Local Contractor

740-367-0544

Hours

Free Estimates

7:00 am - 8:00 pm

7 40-367-0536

eafl Marcum Construction
Commercial &amp; Residential
• Room additions • Roofing •

~

Garages • General Remodeling •
Pole Barns • Vinvl &amp; "ood siding
MIKE W. MARCUM, OWNER
long Bottom, OH

47239 Riebel Rd.,
740-985-4141

1\ul alliliall-d " ilh \like \larnmt

992·0910

• Vinyl Siding
• Replacement
Windows
·Roofing
·Decks
·Garages
• Pole Buildings
• Room Additions
Owner:
James Keesee II
742·2332

Stop By and Complete
You Application:
lnfoCision Management
Corporation
242 Thud Avenue
Galhpohs. Ohio
Or Call and Schedule
Your Interview:
1-888-IMC-PAYU
ext. 2454
http://)obs.infoclslon.c
om
Part·time
retail
sales
clark needed, hrly wage
send resumes to CLA
Box 26 200 Main St. Pt
peasant wv 25550.

Sen icc
Gravel,
Limestone, Coal,
Compost. Top Soil
Call Walt or Sandy

Medical

740-992-3220

We

Ha?duDod tti?JJnstrv t1n4 Furr1ttur~
www.t:iJ:abercreekcabmetry.com

740.446.9200
2A59 St. Rt. 160 • Gallipolis

Haul

H~me

Health
Care
Agency seeking Home
Health Aides, no experi·
ence necessary, Reedsvi•le, Long Bottom, Ches·
ter, Pomeroy area, call
740.662·1222

Racine, Ohio 740-247-2019
Owners:

Cell: 740-416-5047

Jon Van Meter &amp;
Paul Rowe

jrshadfrm@aol.com

Help Wanted

E~IPLOY:\IENT

Meter Reader
&amp;
Maintenance
for Water
System
Preferred 3 yr. Work
EJtpericnce &amp; 2 Yr

J~ , De\ttfroun.bead,on

SlOper lb C:hh only
Pmt IS requ1re~ m ad\'lUlCe
Shipment' um'e ever)
other Frida,·

College KnO\\ ledge
of .\lachinel') /
Equipment, On -C:~ll
Rotation Experience.

Physicalll)rug
Testing! Background
Check. 90-Da)
Probationary Period
Benefit Package
Resume With

... THE
NEWSPAPER
HAS
SOMETHING
FOR YOU!!

References to
PO Box 188,
· Middleport, OH
~5760

Classlfieds

H&amp;H
Guttering
Seamless Gutters
Roof•ng , S•d•ng, Gutters

Insured &amp; Bonded

Dendline-

,_.._

..........,..
o-

:-iow Selling:

• Ford &amp; :--totorcraft
The Home National
Bank will auction the
following Item on Saturday, August 8, 2009,
at 10:00 a.m. at the
Bank's parking lot.
1996 Jeep
Lorado
1J4GZ58S2TC289497
The Home National
Bank reserves the right
to reject any and all
bids. All vehicles are
sold, as Is where Is,
with no warranties ex·
pressed or Implied. For
an appointment to see,
call 949-2210, ask for
Sheila.

(8) 5, 6, 7

01\l.WE

OM.Y

Run"

30 d"Y"

Ph" l'holn .l\ld
~I ()(I

onfYS1 0

Do-it-yourself convenience
Easy to use
Upload photos and graphics
Print and Online optior:ts
7 great packages to choose from

SEU.IT

SMART BUY DEALS ON

NOW

WHEB.Z

For prtvate
flit Jll'fVIttllll'lY
Cln, TI'IICIII,
For privata party
party
For private IAI'tr llllt'CII•IIII, 1
.........
R¥1,4-WIIIIIIrl,
mercllandlse, 1 merchaiUIIIe, 1 merdl8nlllta, 1
81001 811000 flc. 1 lllm .....
Item per ad ten ltefll per ad less
ltllll
4 ..... 1" IIIYI 4 llan, 41111YS
than StOO
than 8100 8600 $601-$1,000

'*'

a linea, a days

$2.99

4 ...... 7 daYt

S14.99

4lllel. 10 dlya

520.99

$29.99

5

45.99 ' $34.99

The Daily Sentinel
www.mydailysentinel.com

Commercial •
Residential

E., timatcs

(740) 992-5009

~ IJPI - ....~ IJIW: .. \..

t/
t/
t/
t/
t/

co.
Pomcro). Ohio

• free

Place n onll e d

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

H.-\NKS
CO~STRUCTIO~

740·653·9657

Augu't 24, 2009

1\ Do-it-yourself classified ads

email:

OPPORTU~ITY

~

}Jt;JN

RumKh•lin~l

Dump Truck

While lard up '\\ith a broken leg 1 &lt;Cllioovered a
wonderful thing,. We really discO\o'CC our fiicnd:; when
we 1'-:"F.ED THEM..

~

,\

S&amp;L
Trucking

Hammer- Inlet- Uooe~ - Offood - NEED THEM

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performance bonuses,
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more!

NO MATTER
WHAT YOUR
STYlE. ..

p

740-416-1834

Full) insured &amp; honding a\ailahlc
Fn·e estimates· 25+ )Ca r s cxpl•ricncc

Public Notice
IN
THE
MEIGS
COUNTY, OHIO COURT
OF COMMON PLEAS
Probate Division
In Re: Change of Name
of Chais Nicole Ro·
driguez
To:
Chals
Nicole
Michael
Case
Number:
20096036
NOTICE OF HEARING
ON CHANGE OF NAME
Applicant hereby gives
notice to all interested
persons and to Mr.
Ruben Rodriguez that
the applicant has flied
an
Application
for
Change of Name In the
Probate Court of Meigs
County, Ohio, request·
ing the change of name
of Chais Nicole Ro·
driguez to Chais Nicole
Michael. The hearing
on the application will
be held on the 9th day
of September, 2009, at

11 :00 am in the Probate
Court of Meigs County,
located on the 2nd
floor of the Meigs
County Courthouse.
Debra Michael
31633 Minersville Road
Racine, Ohio 45771
(8) 5

Public Notice
IN
THE
MEIGS
COUNTY, OHIO COURT
OF COMMON PLEAS
Probate Olvlslon
In Re: Change of Name
of Macle Alexandra Rodriguez
To: Macle Alexandra
Michael
Case
Number:
20096037
NOTICE OF HEARING
ON CHANGE OF NAME
Applicant hereby gives
notice to all Interested
persons and to Mr.
Ruben Rodriguez that
the applicant has filed
an
Application
for
Change of Name In the
Probate Court of Meigs
County, Ohio, request·
lng the change of name
of Macle Alexandra Ro·
drlguez
to
Macie
Alexandra Michael. The
hearing on the application will be held on the
9th day of September,
2009, at 11:00 am In the
Probate Court of Meigs
County, located on the
2nd floor of the Meigs
County Courthouse.
Debra Michael
31633 Minersville Road
Racine, Ohio 45771
(8) 5

·

Pan~

Cu,tom Home Bu1lding
Steel Frame BUJidmgs
Butldmg. R.-modchng
General repa1r
\\\1\\ .hank 'cdh

• Engines.

Transfer Case'&gt; &amp;
Tran~missions

• Aftermarket

Replacement Sheet
:\Ictal &amp; Components
h &gt;r All .\l~ke' ol \'eh1cb

ine.Ohio
/.ltl•-'1.:1''1.1956

Remodeling

LEWIS
CONCimTE
CONSTRlJCTION
Concrete Removal
and Replacement
All ~'llCS Of
Concrete \\ork
29 Years E\perience

740-992-1611

740-992-6971

ROBERT
BISSELL
CONSTRUCTION
·New Homes

• Garages

• Complete

Stop &amp; Compare

David Lewis
WV04,1S?

Replacement
Windo" s and
\'in) I Siding
Specialists. LTD
(7-tOl 1-J2-2563
• Siding • Yin~ I
Windows • :-Ictal
and Shingle Roofs
• Decks • \dditions
•Eit&gt;l'lrical

• Plumbing
• Pole Barns

hrured
Free bumalcs

Stanley TreeTrimming
&amp; Removal
* Prompt and

Quality

Work

*Reasonable Rat~~
*lnMareu
' E'lperieneeu
Referene~:s A' ailahk• 1

Call

Gar) Stanlc)

@

740·591 -~04-1
Plea~e leave

PSI CONSTRUCTION
Koom Additions. Remodeling. \Ictal ,'\:
Roofs. :\e" Home,, Sidin~:. Deck,,
Uathroom Remodeling. Uccn,ed ~ hN1rcd
Shin~le

WVI040954

Ce11740.416-2960

740.992-0730

•

�VVednesda~August5,2009

BLOND IE

Dean Young/Denis Lebrun

CROSSWORD
By THOMAS JOSEPH
ACROSS
DOWN
1 Cry like a
1 Paul
baby
Bunyan's
5 Tap
blue ox
11 Lotion
2 Astronaut
additive
Shepard
12 Angry rant 3 Loqua13 Naked
cious
14 Made
quality
blank
4 Gettysburg
Todav'sAnswers
15 Concluloser
sion
5 Exorbitant 19 BoisErnst
16 Average
6 Bucterous
33 Harbor
17 Bumbling
caneer
behavior 34 Spiked
19 Shred
7 Persia,
20 Inkling
club
22 Gauge
today
21 Nuisance 36 F1shing
need
setting
8 Ozone, tor 22 Mama's
24 Underone
mate
37 To boot
mine
9 Exalted
23 Saudi
38 Braille unit
26 Vicinity
verse
native
39 Memo27 Has debts 10 Slvgger
25 Act the
rable time
28 School art
Williams
nomad
40 Lamb's
staple
16 Singer
29 Contacts,
dad
30 Angry w1th
T11tis
in a way 41 By
31 Crunch
18 Tidy
30 Painter
way of
targets
NEW CROSSWORD BOOK! &amp;end $4.75 (chec!Vm.o.) to
32 Heat
lnomas Joseph Book 1, PO Box !:.3&amp;41~. Orlando, FL 328~3·u4t!J
home
34 Tailless
cat
35Jazz
group:
Abbr.
38 Bring to a
sudden
stop
41 Schnitzel
meat
42Wise one
43 Goddess
with cow
horns
44 Least wild
45 Concerning

YOU KNOW THAT FA!SHION
MAKEOVeR TV SHOW
'' WHATNOT TO WEAR''?

FUNKY WINKERBEAN

.

The Daily Sentinel • Page 85

www.mydailysentinel.com

Tom Batiuk

AGAR THE HORRIBLE

Chris Browne

THELOCKHORNS
William Hoest

HI &amp; LOIS

Brian and Greg Walker

Patrick McDonnell
~

WATER' AND 'IT'S A GL.ANDUL.AR CONDITION."'

@

(§)

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"MY WEIGHT FLUCTUATES BETWEEN 'I'M RETAINING

ZITS

Jerry Scott and Jim Borgman

~?.. 'Z

WAKEUP!!!

~

THE FAMILY CIRCUS

CONCEPTIS SUDOKU

Bil Keane

by Dave Green

Find solutions, new ways, libra

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10 o'clock!"

DENNIS THE MENACE
Hank Ketchum

1
5
2 4

axe a mru1. an identity cri~h. might not be a su.rprbc. for a
won1il!l, if you' rc single, this ,llso could mean a lll.'W relation·
~hip and/or a .-han~ein tht, rdation»hip with a man. Don't try
to plt'did what willurror, but ratht'r bt.&gt; rt'ady ttl dl:"ll .,.,;th lht'
unexpedl'&lt;l. Tf yvu art' ~mglt', ~11 n.&gt;Uibe your ~tatulo (\luld
(·hanw, and a new ~1pportunity v.;ll appt&gt;ar wht'n Yl&gt;U lea.,t
expt'(t il If yw an&gt; attamt'&lt;l, undt&gt;N:and a partn.,.-\ 1J1'11tity
aisi.~ if ynu ,w a woman. lf ynu ,,re ,1 man. d&lt;)n' t play oot an
identity ai~s in your relatinn.,h.ip. Work that throltgh fmt.
AQUARHJ'S prays devil's cldvocate.
nr,• Star,; 51r&lt;&gt;1t' tlh! Ki11d of Da.11 You·n Htr.x: 5-Dynawic; 4-

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the J")Wer nf your creativity ~l!ld ~metime-; UliLL&lt;;ttcll f.Mughg
in finding cl solution. Are you triggering someont? lUUlec~sar­
ily? Tonight: Enjoy the moment.
SCORPIO (Oct 23-Nov. 21)
*** YlllU depth ;1nd understanding will ~&gt;me into play.
How you dc.ll with a key pcr:;onal,;iluation in\·oh·ing d.itfer·
cnl pcoplt' could driinc the issue. Your ability to undt'rsland
another'; motive,. is key
Tonight: Hide .1way ,,t home.
SAGITIARI US (i'\(&gt;V. 22·
[k,.· 21)

***** You wuld bt.&gt;
vt&gt;ry ow•wht-lmt'() by "hat
xmwont' j, ~hann~ or th ..
nl.My people who ;;een, h)
'll.lddenly c;eek you oot If po5·
r.iblc, dctuch ,md -...~ P.'"' the
obvi,)tL' - (lther; c.um&lt;n right
nnw. Tnnight: Hanging out
could belivdr
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22·)iln.

Positir.'t'; J-A!'t'Tagt•; 2-»,;o: 1-Difficu/t
ARIES (March :?.1-J\prill9)
**** The Pull Moon cdip:;c wc.wCJ:&gt; iUl interc.'Sting danct'

lor ,liJ. You try to pU:ih crt'.ltivc

ide;~&gt;;

forwru-d. Bottom-out

issues with those who might not be f,mUJy, but who you love
deeply. A child a&gt;u.ld be,, playt•r here loo. Tonight: Hold on to
vour hat. Get ft'adv f&lt;lT manv rail!&gt; and wnwr,ati&lt;&gt;n~.
. 1AU RUS (Apri120·May '20)
*** J&gt;re,.,urt' kt-t-1"' builclin~. Othen. hvpt' yuu will taJ..t'
th~ l~acJ. YtlU will and l&lt;lll re-au,.- of your innallo talo:m~. Y(lU
m1h.-ht haw trouble juggling 311 thto innate Jt'TTlan&lt;h L'f the day.
Tonight; Say "no'' if need be.
GEMINI ().-lay 21-]tule 20)
* * * * You do a :;ees.1w all day, JU~gling i.•;sue~.
Conununkation of ,ill types floods your door. Your ability to
Let\) in on the bottom line could prove to be p.)werfuL Refuse
to :;cc silualioru; as either oL Torught: Don't react if p~:siblc.
Detad1 if you eM.
CANCER JtUlC 21-July 22)
*** Usc mulion with your Jin.m~~. If you c.1n avoid
m•1king ,, morcy dcci:;k&gt;l\ do. &amp;catL~, within On&lt;' week, more
information tl&gt;UlJ plav into !h.. ~ituation lhnlllgh anvther
&gt;C.&gt;urn• or J't'r.'(»". Tonight: Kt't'p &lt;\&gt;:&gt;ts dvwn.
LEO (July 2-1·Aug. 22)
***** JuAAling Wl&gt;rk, pt'Opl~ and I or ,;tuatitlll&gt; (\&gt;uld h'\l
hav wirt'. Th~ edip'&lt;' (lf.TUT!&gt; in your upp.1~itt' !&gt;ign, vet
demand~ ynu to hcUldle di!ferent intere-"11\. You h;we the skill.~,
but dn ynu hdve the eru?IID' to h,mdle a multi-,1re.1 high-vnltage Sl.:ene? Tnnight: Let som.!Me elc;e Je,ld.
VffiGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22)
* * * * You might want to renew a commitmomt that
involvCJ:&gt; your daily life, work and/ or your hc.llth. Your aw.lrcnCJ:i&lt;&gt; will be nro.~~try with c\·cnb now .-md in the ne.u futu.rc
Thus! YL&gt;tu ~ix.h scn...;c before acli.ng. Tonight: M.lkt• it ea~y.
UBRA (Sept. 2..1-0ct. 22)
***** D1g into your bag ol cr&lt;.'&lt;llivily iUld lind solution:&gt;
and n~w way,.H )"llU a~ on ((lp ~,f y(&gt;Ur );Srnt! yL&gt;U1l di:,o.lvt!r

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HAJ'J'Y BIKIHD.'\Y for W~.1y, Aug, :5, 2009:
This year, ch.mgcs could occur in an electric millmeL 1! you

ftfo/-11&lt;k/l&lt;-

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**** Your more~
'lJt' t'mt'JTI"' when dt'al·
m~ with t&gt;!h"'""· Yt&gt;U al'o
mightha,ean •n..~tin~1 tomt&gt;Vt'
,D
hmvarJ an~ nvt );&lt;'t hun); up
n;
on the dt'talb (&gt;f finan("&lt;"', pt'(&gt;ple .u1d ic,'lttes. S."&gt;Oner nr bter,
;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; \'OO will need to. Understand
what is mnuvating you.
T&lt;)llight. Take ,, hard look at the bilk
-AQUARIUS Uan. 20-Feb. 18)
Listen to feedback before you impulsh·c.ly g&lt;&gt;
down a p.1th or callbC a problem. The IWlcUl'C.h~ in your sign
.1d&lt;b to the emotion.ll .md impulsi\'e quality ol wh.1l vou do.
Even you mi~ll llcwe difficulty keeping yoUIS&lt;'Ii w1dcr ~·n­
lrol. Tonight Some actions .md wor&lt;b c;ulllol be undone.
PISCES (Feb. 19-M.m·h 20)
***** Yt&gt;ur ability to unJef!&gt;tand what j, g~1ing (&gt;11
bt.&gt;hmd th .. x·en...,i~tuneJ m, butnutnt•o•·,._-.arilvn~hh,n. Giw
yoUN'lf 'JAKt' tv make a Ut'li&gt;itm (lT 1\l work thl\lU~h a pn.lb·
lt&gt;m or in~ight. Time b your ally. Tonij;ht Chill!

'-4?.r//'J

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Ho 'OSCQP£
*****

BOR.'\ TODAY
A~tmMut Neil Ann~m:mg (1930),
dire..ior )ohr) HLL~ton (1906)

actres.~

KaJ&lt;'I (19i5).

/&lt;lrtjllt'iilk. Bi~:ar rs Olllltt lnfcnu•/
al hill':l/tvrt"&lt;UJ&lt;lrqurlinrbr~'tlr.rom

.mvdailvsentinel.com
I

�Page B6 • The Daily Sentinel

www.mydailysentinel.com

VVednesday,August5,2009

Atlanta hometown heroes Lewis; Davis reunited with Browns
BEREA (AP) - James
Davis cheered from the
stands as Jamal Lewis set
all the rushing records at
Frederick Douglass High
School in Atlanta. Now the
two are teammates with the
Cleveland Browns.
And Davis broke all of
Lewis ' prep records.
"I started for 3 1/2 years,
Jamal started for three
years, so I got a little bit
more playing time than he
did," Davis joked. "He 's
always talking about that
other year."
As Lewis approaches his
30th birthday later this
month and begins his 1Oth
year in the league, the veteran running back is eager
to play in new Browns
coach Eric Mangini 's runoriented offense.
Mangini has made it a
point
to
improve
Cleveland 's running game
- he bulked up the offensive line by adding center
Alex Mack in the first
round of April's draft. A
healthy Lewis could make
another run at 300 carries,
something he has done just
once since 2003. Counting
the playoffs, he enters this

season with quite a career:
2,529 carries, 10,533 yards
and 62 touchdowns.
Lewis, an observer for
summer minicamps as he
recovered from an offseason ankle injury, is healthy
and participating fully in
training camp.
He admitted even he is
surprised by how well he is
running at age 30, which
can be viewed as a milestone among NFL running
backs.
'Tm blessed to make it to
30 and still be out on this
football field," Lewis said.
'Tm surprised, but I owe it
to my offseason conditioning and what I do to prepare
for this game. To be where I
am at I0 years in the league,
it must be something that I
do special that obviously a
lot of other guys can't do."
Mangini dismissed the
idea that running backs fade
when they reach a certain
age or number of carries.
He has watched Corey
Dillon and Antoine Smith in
New England and Thomas
Jones in New York enjoy
great success after 30.
"Sometimes the wisdom,
combined with the ability,

produces
even
better
results," he said.
Now Lewis is sharing that
wisdom with a sixth-round
rookie out of Clemson, who
happens to come from his
own neighborhood.
When Davis comes to the
sideline after a carry, Lewis
is in his ear. When the team
is watching film, Lewis is
pointing out what Davis did
right and what he did
wrong.
So far, Lewis said Davis
is doing a lot right.
"I see something real special in him," Lewis said. "I
see a burst out of him and
an aggressiveness out of
him. We're from the same
neighborhood back home,
so he's got some fight to
him. I just ~ry to help him
out as much as I can
because I see the ability
there. I think he has a bright
future in this league."
Mangini has noticed
Davis making an impact on
special teams.
"He's done it since the
day he got here." Mangini
said. "There are multiple
drills where he's the first
one down on special teams.
There are 80 guys in camp

and it's easy to get lost in
those 80. It's important to
get noticed. You notice the
first one down. That's hard
to miss.''
Davis started four years at
Clemson, finishing second
on the school list with 3,881
career rushing yards. At 210
pounds, he was the power
component of a rotation that
included C.J. Spiller. Now
he is viewed as. the change
of pace speed back with
Lewis and the Browns.
Davis can only shake his
head and laugh that he is
now teamed with Lewis,
whom he spent his elementary school days idolizing in
Atlanta.
"It's very special,'' Davis
said. "Everyboqy back
home is telling me what a
great opportunity I have to
play with a guy from my
own backyard. lt's really
special getting to learn from
a guy who has already done
it.
"I just want to keep
improving. When you got
guys like Jamal saying,
'Hey. that's a better job than
what you did yesterday,'
that's kind of my motto.
Th4tt's what 1 want to do."

SALE
GOI
SALE ENDS AUGU.ST 10,2009

AP photo

Cleveland Browns running back Jamal Lewis catches a
pass during practice at the Cleveland Browns NFL football
training camp Sunday in Berea.

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