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Criminal probe
is launched in Conn.
plant blast, A2

Cardiologist speaks
to women at
O'Bleness, A3

•
l'rintcd on 100%
Rec,Hied l"e~sprin l

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio

O BITUARIES
Page AS
• Dorothy Boyer
• • Larry Gene Mitchell
• Rodney Riggs
• Raymond Russell
• Alan E. Sayre
• Jeffrey L. Thornton

e

Pomeroy approves new fees
B v BETH SERGENT
BSERGENT 0 MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

SPORTS
astern holds off
Wahama. See Page 81

PO:\tEROY - Most people are
used to paying more than they used
to for everything these days and
now at least some \Viii be paying
more in fees to the Village of
Pomeroy.
Last night the third and final readings were approved for amendments to the housing and building
code ordinance in relation to rental
inspection fees as well as increa:-.ing
building permit fees , and an

increase of the permit fee to operate
a garbage and collection sen ice in
the village.
As previously reported. currently.
landlords in Pomeroy are already
required to pay an annual $25 rental
inspection fcc p!.!r property. Each
time a tenant moves 1t1, the landlord
must pay a $25 fee to inspect the
propcrty cvcn if the rental property
has already been inspected (and the
annual fcc paid) in that calendar
year. The amendment also allows
for a $15 rc-mspcction fee to be
charged for additional visits to

It's 'cr

prope11y by the code enforcement
officer to ensure an existing problem, which had previously been
noted on a prior visit, had been
fixed. This $15 re-inspcction fee is
to be charged in these situations to
reduce and recoup the cost of multiple visits to the same address for the
same problem. Councilman Victor
Young voted against approving the
amendment.
Council unanimously passed an
additional amendment to the housing and building code ordinance
which increased the building pern1it

•

fee to a non-refundable S25 for a
home improvement or new building
project under $1.000 with $2 added
for every additional $1,000 the project is estimated to cost. This fee is
not to exceed $350. The ordinance,
which had not been amended since
I 974, previously charged $6 for a
home improvement or new building
project under $1.000 with S I added
for every additional S I .000 the project is estimated to cost.
Young previou:-.ly suggested the
Please see Pomeroy, AS

Vacancy on
Syracuse
Council

'

Girl Scouts kick off $49K cookie sale
BY BRIAN

J.

B Y BETH SERGENT
BSERGENTOMYDAILYSENTINELCOM

R EED

BREED@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

INSIDE
• Conservation funding
available for Meigs
County. See Page A3
• Mom panicked about
ending maternity leave.
See Page A3
• Local Briefs.
See Page AS
• Outreach Center in
Gallipolis in need of new
roof. See Page A6
• Community control
violations lead to prison
time. See Page A6

WEATHER

High: 36.
Low: 20.

RUTLAND Hear that
"crunch?"
That's the sound of Girl
Scouts getting ready for their
annual Girl Scout Cookie sales
- and they will be selling nearly $49.000 worth of Tagalongs,
Thin Mints and other favorites
soon.
Meigs County Girl Scouts
kicked off their 20 I 0 sales campaign at an annual event held at
the Meigs Elementary School
last week. Not only did they
have an opportunity to sec the
prizes they might win for their
salesmanship; they also enjoyed
some cookies and participated in
other activities.Girls were able
to make a cookie milkshake. a
muskal instrument. a puppet
and a necklace. and learn some
new Girl Scout cookie songs.
All age groups - adults
included - enjoyed a cookie
eating contest. Winners were:
Morgan Hook and Grace
Butcher. Daisy Troop 1106;
Hannah Damewood. Brownie
Troop 1061, and Katlin Pick.
Brownie Troop I 217; Ashley
Bateman Lee, Troop 1208, and
Joyce Romines. Troop 1208,
representing older Girl Scouts.
Little sibling~ winning the
contest were MaKayla Bareswilt
and Chloe Kunkel. Austin Little
and Justin Deem were winners
among the brother!'. attending.
and Jerrena Ebersbach, and Amy
Heldreth were winners in the
adult competition.
Sales of the cookies should
bring in around $8.388 in proceeds for local scout troops.
according to Shirley Cogar, Big
Bend Service Unit's Sales
Chairperson.
For those keeping track, the
county scouts ordered 238 cases
of Samoas. 237 cases of
Tagalongs and 235 cases of Thin
Mints, alone with other cookies
in the line. So far. 25 girls earned the
''Inspire by U" patch pin award
for selling at ·least 200 boxes by
Jan. 25.

Oct. 18-23, and the vouth
deer-gun season NoV. 2021. The regular statewide
POMEROY - The Ohio muzzle loader season \viii be
Wildlife Council will estab- Jan. 8-11, 20 II.
lish hunting !'&gt;easons for
A statewide hcuring on
2010 and consider a higher proposed rules will he held
bag limit for counties in at 9 a.m., J\.larch 4 at the
northern Ohio in April, Division of Wildlife in
according to the Ohio Columbus. After considerDepartment of Natural ing public input, the Ohio
Resources Division of Wildlife Council will vote
Wildlife.
on the proposed rules and
The 20 I 0 deer-!!un season season dates during its April
will be Nov. 29 ~to Dec. 5 7 meeting.
and Dec. 18-19, according
A proposed change to the
to a schedule proposed to deer zones includes moving
the Ohio Wildlife Council. seven northwest Ohio counArchery season will be ties from Deer Zone A to
Sept. 25-Feb. 6. 2011. Zone B. The counties are
Special area muzz.leloader Defiance, Fulton. Henry.
hunts are tentatively set for Lucas, Paulding, Van Wert
SENTINEL S TAFF

.

2 Sf.CfiONS -

..Calendars
.

sifieds

MDSNEWSOMYDAILYSENTINELCOM

12 PAGh'i

A3
B3-4

~omics

Bs

·Editorials

A4

Sports

SYRACCSE - Syracuse
Village Council has a
vacancy to fill after
Councilwoman Joy Bentley
I resigned her scat due to
health reasons.
Bentley submined her
resignation in writing to
Mayor Eric Cunningham on
Jan. 25. Cunningham submitted Bentley's re~ignation
during the mo~t recent
meeting of Syracuse Village
Council. Bentley wrote: "I
am resigning my P.osition
on Svracuse Council effective 'immediately due to
health reasons. Thank you
for the opportunity to serve
the village these past four
years."
Bentley's resignation was
, accepted with Councilman
Mike Jacks acknowledging
Bentley's work in the village and that "it would be
hard to replace her."
Cunningham said those
villa~re residents who have
an ~interest in filling
Bentley's seat should drop
off a letter of intere~t :-.tating
their intent at Syracuse
Village Hall by noon on
~1arch 4. Cunningham and
council wiJJ then con~ider
the candidates with council
voting on who ultimately
will fill Bentlev's ~eat and
complete her term.
Syracu:-e Fire Chief Bill
Roush reported ~1 illcr

Above: Girl
Scouts of all
ages check out
some of the
prizes they can
win for selling a
lot of cookies in
this year's sale.

Please see Syracuse, AS

left: Girl
Scouts participate in a craft
project as part
of last week's
Girl Scout
Cookie Crunch.

I

B Section

© 2010 Ohio \'nile!)· Publishing Co.

Thomas
appointed
lead director
of OVBC board
SENTINEL STAFF

Submitted photos

MDSNEWSOMYDAILYSENTINELCOM

GALLIPOLIS - David
Thomas has been
appointed lead director of
the Ohio Valley Bane Corp.
board of directors, accordinc to a news release issued
b):- the company.
Thomas JOined the board
in
2007,
using
his
years
of
experience
as a bank
examiner to
serve as a
member of
the executive
Thomas
and
audit
&lt;.'ommittees.
··Dave Thomas's cxperlise in the field of banking
and hi~ intricate knowledge of the bank supervisory
and
regulatory
process made him a perfect
fit for this position." said
Jeff Smith, chairman of the
board and CEO.
W.

Council to consider hunting regulation changes

INDEX

a
D.,.

and Williams.
A proposal to eliminate
the requirement that hunters
must purchase a regular
deer permit before purchasing antlerless deer permits
was heard. The sale of
reduced priced antlerless
permits v.·ould cea!-&gt;e after
Nov. 28. so hunters need to
commit early to buying and
using the extra reduced-cost
permits to take full ad\ antage of thb opportunity.
Under the propoc;al.
hunters could again buy
antlerless deer permits at
reduced pnceo; for hunting
in an urban zone. participating in a Division of
Wildlife-authon:zed controlled hunt or hunting dur-

ing the Sept. 25-Nov. 28
portion of the deer season.
Me1gs Count) is in Zone
C. The maximum number
of deer that a hunter may
take in Deer Zone C is six.
Prior to Dec. 6, hunters
may take up to six deer in
Zone C. three of which
mny be on $15 antlerlcss
deer pcnmts. Begwnmg
Dec. 6. hunters may take
onlv three deer in Zone C
anci antlerless pern1its may
not be used.
Either a $15 antlerles~
deer permit or $24 deer permit and a 'alid hunting
licen e arc reqmred to hunt
deer in Ohio. A hunter may
take only one buck in Otuo,
Please see Hunting. AS

~
j

Please see Thomas. AS

�PageA2

The Daily Sentinel

Tuesday, February 9,

2010

Haitians confront
new threat:
deadly spring rains
B Y PAISLEY

Oooos

ASSOCIATED PRESS

PORT-AU-PRINCE.
Haiti - Survivors of Haiti's
catastrophic
earthquake
have had one saving grace:
There's been no significant
ram since the disaster. But
that won't last.
The rainy season in Haiti
is deadly even in a good
year. Now, in a devastated
capital city, the early spring
rains threaten to cause landslides and bring about
health problems in the
makeshift camps where
more than 500.000 people
are living.
Rain is already falling in
some parts of the country,
but Haiti's shattered capital,
where most of the quake
damage occurred. has been
spared so far - a rarity for
this time of year, when
afternoon showers are common. Steady rains could
come as soon as the end of
the month, and hurricane
season begins in June.
Workers are racing to
move victims outside of
flood plains and into tents.
They are also trying to clear
tons of debris from ravines.
canals and riverbeds, so rain
does not turn the survivors·
encampments into breeding
grounds for disease.
"There will be health concerns," said engineer Mario
Nicoleau of the U.S.
Agency for International
Development's office in
Haiti. ''The risks will be
enormous. and it is difficult
to contemplate the unforeseen consequences."
Haiti's government said it
needs more money or tents
if people are to be moved.
"We are going to have a big
problem when the rainy season starts," said Interior
Minister Paul Antoine BienAime. "We don't have $60
milHon to buy 100.000 tents."
Haitians are fearful.
Jeanne Marceus, 40, is
camped out with hundreds
of others under plastic tarps
just feet from the Bois de
Chene River. On one side,
dozens of houses lie flattened from the quake. On
the other, a dozen dwellings
that slid off the mountain
during 2008 rains are piled
in a mound.
"Every day we look at the
sky for clouds," she said.
"My house is gone, and now
I'm wondering whether I
will be swallowed by the
river.''
Hurricanes,
tropical
storms and floods are a constant threat in Haiti.
[n 2004, some 3 ,000 people died in the northern city
of Gonaives after Tropical
Storm Jeanne. Following
the storm, more than $70
million in aid was collected,
but little of that was used for
flood control. Gonaives
flooded again in 2008.
killing nearly 800 more.
Before the earthquake. aid
groups were already trying to
mitigate risks to flood-prone
areas: building walls to stabilize hills, installing drainage
systems and working with
farmers to plant crops with
root systems that help hold
water. Much of that work
was suspended after the
quake, when aid groups
shifted into emergency mode
to help survivors.
"We are now considering
the setting up of some hazard-resistant or hurricaneproof type of shelter,'' Kim
Bolduc, the U.N. deputy
special representative and
humanitarian coordinator in
Haiti, told reporters at U.N.
headquarters in New York
during a teleconference
Monday.
But she said the structures
are heavy and there needs to
be a port opened to get them
to the country. The capital's
port is still not fully functioning.
"We are trying to identify
some sites outside of Port-

au-Prince so that people
could be evacuated when
the rains come," Bolduc
said.
The J\o. 2 official at
USAID. Anthony Chan.
said the organization's Cash
for Work program has
employed 6.000 Haitians,
many of whom are cleaning
iiTigation canals in anticipation of the rain.
Demolition crews and
workers are piling rubble
into designated places, but
there's still no long-term
plan for debris disposal, and
the rains may come before
the government settles on
one. Engineers are studying
how the piles of rubble will
shift water flows during 1
flooding.
Haiti's government has
talked of trying to relocate
earthquake victims to organized camps outside the
capital, but so far none has
been built.
Oxfam surveyed more
than 100 people at one
camp last week in the suburb of Petionville and found
that fewer than a third
would be willing to move to
alternate camps. But conditions in the 315 makeshift
camps scattered throughout
the rubble are increasingly
unsuitable.
"Many of the current sites
will not be suitable due to
the coming raining seasons
which. without adequate
drainage and sanitation.
threatens to wash away
shelters and cause health
hazards," said Oxfam 's
Haiti emergency chief.
Marcel Stoessel.
Another problem is that
some transport routes that
opened up between the
Dominican Republic and
Haiti are now gradually getting flooded due to rains
and the rising of the level of
the lake. according to
Bolduc, the U.N. official.
She said when it rains the ·
lake floods over roads at the
crossing point between
Jimani and Malpasse. She
said the road is normally
good for light traffic but since
it became the main road into
Haiti after the earthquake, the
heavy vehicles have caused
road damage.
The U.N. mission and the
U.S. Army are considering
an alternative road that
could be strengthened to
handle the influx of trucks
with relief supplies, she
said. Another possibility is
using a small road that
bypasses the lake and was
used in the past by smugglers, she said.
Another problem is safely
removing human waste and
garbage.
Justine Lesage. an Oxfam
relief worker. said the group
recently removed 7.000
cubic feet (200 cubic
meters) of waste created by
45,000 people at one of the
city's camps in just a week.
"We're also working very
hard to make plans for relocating people. but the
Haitian government's plan
for this is not clear yet.'' she
said.
Many in the camps are
already complaining of illnesses. With so many people living outside and using
water from buckets, doctors
say malaria is on the rise.
The coming rains and limited sanitation could also lead
to other diseases such as
dengue fever, measles and
cholera.
For people like Marceus,
it's not a question of if the
rain will come. but when.
''It took me years to save
enough money to build my
house here," she said, looking at the ruins of her former home. "Despite all the
dangers. I have no plans to
leave."
(Associated Press writers
James Anderson in Port-cwPrince and Edith Lederer in
New York contribwed to this
report.)

..._-"~~---o.iii........----'

Bettina Hansen/Hartford Courant!Mctr

Union workers talk outside the Local 777 Union Training Center on Monday in Meriden, Connecticut. Workers had a closefj
meeting about Sunday's explosion at the Kleen Energy Systems plant in Middletown.
:

0

~~~~!.~:.!.£~ M~~to~~s .!~~h~~hM~n?.y j~ :,~~~ cP.t~?~~tpa~~~~
1

police, Patrick McMahon, by local authorities, who identify the cause of the
said police had ruled out any said they would have access explosion and contributing
MIDDLETOWN, Conn. mtentional act and were once criminal investigators factors, such as constructioll
- Authorities launched a focusing on whether there had cleared them.
prot-lems, worker safety
criminal
investigation wao.; negligence.
The town's chief building issues and licensing or perMonday into the cause of an
O&amp;G mspector. John Parker. said mttting matters. The other,
Workers
for
explosion that killed five Industries, a Torrington- there were ··a lot of eyes'' on panel of state agencieS.
people at a power plant based general contractor. the Kleen Energy project as local officials and expert~,
under construction. saying were clearing the gas lines it was being built. His office will be charged with deterthey couldn't rule out negli- of air when the explosion conducted numerous build- mining whether change;.s
gence.
happened just outside the ing inspections over the need to be made tb
''If everything went right, building, between two of the years - at times daily. He Connecticut laws, state qr
we wouldn ·t all be here generators. Giuliano said.
said third-party inspectors local regulations or building
right now." Middletown
During the procedure. often were on hand.
or fire codes.
Mayor Sebastian Giuliano local officials said. equipParker said it appears the
O&amp;G said about I
said. "There's a point where ment such as welding workers were performing workers for nine subcmtnegligence raises to the machines and electricity the purge by sending nitro- tractors were on the site at
level of criminal conduct, should
be shut off. gen through the line fol- the time. It said six workeis
and that's what we're inves- Santostefano said officials lowed by natural gas to were still hospitalizoo
tigating.''
don't know if all equipment clear out any moisture. Monday.
:
The powerful explosion was shut down before the which he called "an acceptMiddlesex
Hospit~l
blew apart large swaths of blast, and Giuliano said ed and approved method.''
spokeswoman
Melis~
the nearly completed 620- investigators will look into
Parker said he could not Brady said all the injured
megawatt Kleen Energy whether any equipment was recall any recorded building were expected to survive. :
plant as workers for the on or anything that could code violations involving
Kleen Energy Systems
construction
company, have ignited the gas was at the project.
LLC began construction 0}1
O&amp;G Industries Inc., were the scene.
Investigators from the the phmt in February
purging a gas line Sunday
Santostefano said workers Occupational Safety and on a wooded and hilly
morning. The blast tore were at the site Sunday, a Health Administration were acre parcel of land overlo apart sheet metal that cov- few hours before the Super also at the site.
ing the Connecticut River. :a
ered the plant's sides and Bowl. because they were
OSHA records show there few miles from Wesleyap
left parts of the complex so trying to get the plant. slated was a planned inspection on University. It had signed -a
unstable that rescuers were to open in the middle of July 28, 2009. for work deal with Connecticut Ligtit
unable to work Monday 20 10. open on time. He being performed by O&amp;G and Power for the electrici~
because of the danger of added: "It wasn't like they Industries. There was one produced by the plant. whicp
collapse.
were working in a frenzy.''
violation relating to record would be one of the biggest
The mayor said rescue
Officials from United keeping and reporting. built in New England in t11e
crews had been unable to get Association Local 77, OSHA spokesman John last few years.
:
to all areas of the plant and which represents plumbers Chavez said records show
The plant would producy:
he could not say for certain and pipefitters who work at O&amp;G settled the matter energy primarily using na!that no more victims would the site, did not comment informally by paying a ural gas. which accounts for
be found. But authorities Monday on what happeneq $1 ,000 fine.
about a fifth of the nation!s
also said everyone who was to cause the explosion. A
"Relatively
speaking. electricity.
•
assigned to work at the plant spokesv,roman for Energy they do appear to have a
(Associated Press writers
at the time of the explosion Investors Fund. a private pretty
clean
record,'' Susan Haigh and Pat
was accounted for.
equity fund that indirectly Chavez said.
Eaton-Robbin Hartford mid
Deputy Fire Marshal AI owns a majority share of the
Also Monday, Gov. M. Chen/ Wittenauer in St.
Santostefano said the death power plant, would not Jodi Rell ordered a review Loui.\· contribwed to this
toll should stand at five.
comment.
of state safety codes. She report.)
The U.S. Chemical Safety
"We needed ·omething to
lift spirits around here. and Board. a federal agency that
that definitely did it," he investigates serious chemical accidents. last week
said.
The men who died were issued urgent recommendaidentified by police as Peter tions that national fuel gas
Chetulis, of Thomaston: codes be changed to
Ronald J. Crabb, 42, of improve safety when gas
CALL NOW and g e t an advocate on your side!
Colchester;
Raymond pipes are being purged.
Spokesman
Daniel
Dobratz. 58. of Old
• Avoid bankruptcy and mointoin
• We're ~ al negohotmg
Saybrook: Chns Walters. Horowitz said the board's
your dignity
reduchoos wilh the credit cord
42, of Florissant. Mo.; and investigators v. ill need to
determine
which
federal
companies
Roy Rushton, of Hamilton.
• Have an advocate deol with
safety standards apply to the
your creditors
Ontario.
• We con arrange one
Walters was the safety Kleen Energy plant. He said
qffordqble monthly payment
supervisor for Keystone the fuel gas code has an
•
Sqve
mq n ey • Gel out of
If you hove
Construction, the power exemption for power plants.
debt FASTER thon you con
Safety
board
investigators
over $ 12,000 in debt,
plant's electrical contractor.
on your own
whose job was to make sure have done extensive work
CALL NOW!
everyone complied with fed- on the issue of gas line
eral work safety rules. his purging since an explosion
FREE Consultation
widow, Fran Walters. told last year at a Slim Jim factoc:!&gt; No Obligation
The Associated Press. Crabb ry in North Carolina killed
four
people.
They've
identic:!&gt; Confidential
was a foreman. his brother
Carl Crabb told the News- fied other explosions caused
by workers who were
Tribune of LaSalle. Ill.
unsafely
venting gas lines
A representative of the
inside
buildings.
local
Plumbers
and
r'-J
..,,,j,.
A team from the board on
Pipefitters union. Michael
Rosario, broke down crying
as he talked about the men
on Monday.
"We hug our families,
The Meios Countv Commissioners have ~SP federal funds that are being used to deYelop a building site that
kiss our children,'' he said.
"We go to work. and we will allow the Gallia:Meigs Commw1ity Action Agency to build a ne.w 3 bedroom home at 980 \laple Street in '
want to come home at the ?,.1iddleport. Ohio. This home is being offered for sale upon completton to a home buyer household
end of the day. safe. That who meets the income guidelines.
The selling price of this home will be $107.250.00 ~he ~teigs _Cout~)' awarded fed.eral f~nd~ will pro~1de a
didn't happen for a few people yesterday:·
bu)down in the amount of S40.000, making the home aftordable wtth a ~67.250.00 selling pnce. Funds wtll also
It was still unknown what
be available to pay for closing costs.
caused
the
blast.
The ~teigs County Grants office v.ill provide applications for this houst!l£ a~sistance to interested ho~sehol.ds
on 'Dlursday, February .t. 20 I0 thru Thursda). Febt1l31')' II, 2010 at the .\le1g~ Annex at 117 East Memonal Dnre.
Pomeroy. Ohio from 10:00 a.m. to 3:00p.m. each da).
. ·
Applicants who meet the income guidelines and pro\lde veritication of appron·d financing for the home. wdl
be entered mto a drawing at a regular board meeting of the ~teigs Conuniss10ners to determine the bu)er of this •
hllme
Picture~ and plans for the new home construction will~ provided with the application. The approximate
completion date for the home is June, 2010. Any que~tions l'an be addressed to
Jean Trussell, Grants Administrator at740.992-7908.
ASSOCIATED PRESS

.·-E-mail us your community news and photos!
mdsnews@mydailysentinel.com

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21

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Debt Problems

1-877-266-0261
~1

h•.il

fl •Ill \'CH•

NOTICE TO HOMEBUYERS!

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PageA3

The Daily Sentinel

Tuesday, February 9,

2010

ASK DR.. BR.OTHERS

Mom panicked about
ending maternity leave
BY DR. JOYCE BROTHERS

Dear Dr. Brothers: I am nearing the end of my sixk maternity leave, and all the plans my husband and
l have made :-ccm to be falling apart. We had assumed
that we could hire a nanny. but I've loved being with
my chtld, and all the candidates we've interviewed have
just not been up to p.tr in various ways. I refuse to put
him in day care, Jnd 1 don't have a relative to lea\e him
with. We agreed that I \\Ould go back to work: my boss
is getting \vorried. and I am feeling depressed. - l'J.A.
J)c.ar N:A.: Sometimes the bcM-laid plans go aVvry.
and there ts nothmg ) ou can do but regroup and tf) to
rcsohe the situation based on the facts as they nO\\
stand. Although I don't know the particulars of your
' agreement \\ ith your employer, or the financial con
straints ) ou rna) be operating under with your husband.
we can If) to look at some general principles. You arc
\Cry concerned that )OUr "on get the appropriate kind of
care. which an ) our nund i&amp; someone lh ing in your
home, gi' ing him one-on-one attention while you work.
Perhaps you could arrange for a flexible work schedule
so that you could hire a part-time baby-sitter instead of
a nanny. It is not always easy to find the emotiOnal
~pace for a stranger to live in one'&amp; home, and you may
have some pretty impossible standards for thi~ "substitute mnm.''
It'&amp; ,tlways a &amp;hock when mothers realize that they just
don't want to leave their bapies and go back to work they \\ere &amp;o sure it wouldn't be an issue, until the baby
born and changed everything! If you and your buscan afford it, tf) talking honestly among )Ourabout you &lt;&gt;ta) ing home, at least part time, to care
for your child for a certain period of time. It might pro"e
to ben much more sathfying mo've than finding the right
nann), and you might even save some money.
Sometimes the old plan has to be scrapped; go for it.

•••

Dear Dr. Brothers: l'\e never been one of those
people who crawls O\er the bad.s of others to get to
the top. I ha\e alway&lt;&gt; \\Orked hard, and although I
ha-ven't gotten \er) far up the career ladder, I have
been OK with that. But now, there have been a bunch
of layoffs on my work team, and someho\\ 1 have
ended up in charge of people, \\ ith a new title and a
rmse to go along with it. I know l am qualified and can
handle the JOb easily, and everyone seems fine with it.
Why am I so uneasy'? - GJ.
Dear GJ.: It is not an unusual thing for a person to
somehow feel that although he or she has worked hard.
achieved success and is accepted as the leader, supervisor, bos:) or what have you, to feel somehov.· as though
he or ~he were a pretender about to be unmasked. This
has been called the "impostor syndrome.'' and it generall) points to a lack of self-esteem and self-confidence.
It ts surprisingly common among very high-achieving
\\Omen who find themselves very well respected by
others but who can't seem to believe that they deserve
their \\ell-earned spot at the top of the heap.
Complicating your &amp;Ituation io; the fact that times are
ard and so many of your fellow employees have been
go or arc ,uffering with pay cuts, part-time work,
lack of up\\ ard mobility in their careers and so forth.
You pride yourself on not being the cutthroat type who
elm\ s your way to the top, yet you find }Ourself in the
same position as those who do operate that way. Your
fellm\ workers don't seem to resent )OU. so you can
build on that feeling of good will to try to make your~clf feel more worthy of their respect. One of the hardest things for some people who have succeeded is to be
able to relax and enjoy their success. So work a little
harder - not at your job, but at the concept of giving
yourself a well-deserved pat on the back.
(c) 2010 bv King Features Syndicate

.
1

•

•

•

..Community Calendar
Public meetings
Tuesday,Feb.9
RACINE Salisbury
• Township Trustees, 6:30
p.m., home of Manning
Roush, 32972 Johnson Rd.,
ine.
•
HESTER Monthly
, meeting
of
Chester
' Township Trustees, 7 p.m.,
: Chester Town Hall.
SHADE
Bedford
:Township Trustees, 7 p.m.,
:town hall.
I

I

Clubs and
organizations
Tuesday,Feb.9
POMEROY Meigs
: County
Chamber
of
: Commerce, business-mind·
•,.cd
luncheon,
noon,
~omeroy Library, larry
~oodford, deputy director
"Uhio
Department
of
~ransportatlon District 10
speaking, Grow's KFC
~catering, RSVP 992-5005 or
:michelle@ meigscounty1 chamber.com.
: POMEROY
TOPS
:(Take off Pounds Sensibly),
5 p.m. at the Mulberry
~ munity Center.
. ,IDDLEPORT- Special
meetit~g
of Middleport
Lodge 363, 7:30 p.m., work
work In Fellowcraft degree.
Thursday, Feb. 11
CHESTER
Shade
River Lodge 453 will meet
7:30 p.m. at the hall.
Refreshments following the
meeting.
SYRACUSE - Wildwood
: Garden Club, 6:30 p.m. 6:30
: p.m. at the Syracuse
1

....
I

..

Community Building.
POMEROY - Alpha Iota
Masters, 11 :30 a.m., New
Beginnings
United
Methodist Church. Jean
Powell and Ruth Ann Riffle
are hostesses.
HARRISONVILLE
Harrisonville O.E.S. #255
will meet 7:30 p.m. at hall.
Refreshments at 6:30 p.m.
TUPPERS PLAINS Tuppers Plains VFW Post
9053, 7 p.m. Dinner at 6:30.

Church events
Friday, Feb. 12
LONG BOTTOM - Dave
and Debbie Dailey to sing at
7 p.m., Faith Full Gospel
Church.
Saturday, Feb. 13
REEDSVILLE
St.
Valentine's Day spaghetti
dinner, 5 p.m., Reedsville
United Methodist Church.
Donations accepted.

Youth events
Thursday, Feb. 11
HARRISONVILLE
Harrisonville Youth League,
organizational meeting, 7
at
the
Scipio
p.m.
Firehouse. Public invited.
For more information call
742-1042.

Birthdays
VVednesda~Feb.10

POMEROY - Frances
Carleton will observe her
85th birthday on Feb. 10.
Cards may be sent to her at
32741 Rose Hill Road,
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769.

Cardiologist Vipin B. Koshal, DO, speaks about heart health to more than 50 women at O'Bieness Memorial Hospital during Go Red for Women week. Koshal practices fulltime in O'Bieness' Cornwell Center for Cardiovascular and Diabetes
Care. He is associated with MidOhio Cardiology and Vascular Consultants, ~n affiliate of OhioHealth.

CardiQiogist speaks to women at O'Bieness
ATHENS - Cardiologist
Vipin B. Koshal. DO. was a
recent speaker to more than
50 women about heart
at
O'Bleness
health
Memorial Hospital.
During Koshnl's presentation, "Heart Disease: Not
Ju~t a Man's Affliction'' he
talked about the differences
in cardiovascular disease
between men and women.
The program v.·as part of the
observance this week of Go
Red for Women, an
American Heart Association
observance of the effort to
fight heart disease in
women.
Koshal sa1d women are
more likely to die from
heart disease than from
stroke, lung cancer or
breast cancer - about one
in five \\Omen in the United

States has cardiovascular the resources to regain good
disease. Women who have health, Koshal said. They
other underlying medical may not have transportaconditions, such as dia- tion, financial resources and
betes, are at a far ereater emotional support. Because
risk. Koshal said. ~
not as many women are
One problem for women entered into clinical trials as
is that symptoms for hean men, data from the trials
disease can be very different tends to provide better medthan they are for men. ical solutions for men than
Koshal said that often for women.
Koshal
warned
that
instead of the classic chest
pain, women may feel dizzi- women who smoke arc at a
ness. nausea. indigestion much higher risk for hea11
and/or fatigue. Pain may be disease than men who
located in an arm or hand. smoke. "A woman who
Because these symptoms smokes one pack of cigamay not signal an impend- rettes a da) is at twice the
ing heart attack, women risk for heart disease than a
often may not be diagnosed man who smokes a pack a
ru&gt; early as men. or they may day," Koshal said.
even be misdiagnosed.
The key to a healthy heart
Women who have been is to maintain an ideal bod)
diaf!nosed with cardiovas- weight. Ko hal &amp;aid. He. reccular disease may not have ommends a diet that empha-

sizes fiuits, vegetables. whole
grains and low-fat dairy products as well as a low-sodium
intake, limiting alcohol to
one or less drink a da) and
exercising every day.
"Physical activity IS very
important to a healthy heart
- by just walking briskly
30 to 45 minutes every day
of the week you will reduce
your risk of cardiovascular
disease
significantly,"
Koshal said.
Koshal practices fulltime
in O'Bieness' Cornwell
Center for Cardiovascular
and Diabetes Care. He is
associated with MidOhio
Cardiology and Vascular
Consultants, an affiliate of
OhioHealth. Guests at' the
presentation enjoyed a free
heart-healthy lunch prO\ ided by OhioHealth.

I Conservation funding available for Meigs County
SENTINEL STAFF
MDSNEWSC MYDAILYSENTINELCOM

POMEROY - Over $11
million in financial assistance is available to Ohio
agricultural producers to
apply conservation practices on their farms through
the Environmental Quality
Incentives Program (EQIP).
To be considered for the
fir~t round of funding selections, farmers must apply at
the (your county) Natural
Resources
Conservation
Service (NRCS) office by
Feb. 16. EQIP is offered
through a continuous signup, but NRCS periodically
makes funding selections as

program dollars allow.
EQIP offers technical and
financial assistance to
install conservation practices. This voluntary program aims at conserving.
protecting, and restoring
soil and water quality, air
quality. and habitat for
plants and animals. A variety of conservation practices are used to achieve the
natural resources management goals of the producer.
An environmental ranking score is developed for
each applicant from a conservation plan which considers national , state. and
local natural resource concerns.

When the application is
scored, it is compared to
other applications and
ranked according to the
environmental benefit of the
conservation
plan. To
improve the chance of funding for special categories of
natural resource concerns or
crops, a number of unique
EQIP subgroups have been
developed. These include:
• Specialty crops
• Livestock
• Cropland and pastureland
• Forest land
• Forest land, imasive
species control - Adam~.
Athens, Champaign. Clark.
Fairfield. Fayette, Franklin.

Gallia, Highland, Hocking,
Jackson.
Lawrence.
Madison, Meigs, Morgan.
Perry. Pickaway, Pike,
Ross. Scioto, Vinton, and
Washington counties.
• Air quality - Adan1s.
Ashtabula, Belmont. Butler,
Clark. Clem1ont. Clinton,
Coshocton.
Cuyahoga •
Dt!lawure,
Fairfield,
Franklin. Gallia, Greene,
Hamilton, Jefferson, Lake,
Lawrence, Licking. Lorain,
Medina,
Montgomer).
Portage, Scioto, Stark.
Summit,
Warren,
and
Washington counties.
·For information or to
apply for EQIP. go online to
W\\ \\ .oh.nrcs.usda.go\ I.

Meigs County Forecast
Tuesday: Snow and
freezing rain before noon,
then rain between noon and
5 p.m., then rain and snow
after 5 p.m. High near 36.
East wind between 3 and 7
mph. Chance of precipitation is I00 percent. New ice
accumulation of less than a
0.1 of an inch possible. New
snow accumulation of I to 2
inches possible.

Thesday night: Snow.
Low around 20. Northeast
wind between 8 and 14
mph. Chance of precipitation is 80 percent. New
snow accumulation of I to 3
inches possible.
Wednesday: Sno\\ likely,
mainly before 4 p.m.
Clou"dv. with a high near 27.
Northwest wind between 15
and 18 mph , with gusts as

ILoCal Stocks
AEP (NYSE) - 32.82
Akzo (NASDAQ) - 56.76
Ashland Inc. (NYSE) - 40.70
Big Lots (NYSE) - 29.20
Bob Evans (NASDAQ) - 27.27
BorgWarner (NYSE) - 35.36
Century Aluminum (NASDAQ)
- 10.83
Champion (NASDAQ) - 1.59
Charming Shops (NASDAQ) 5.29
City Holding (NASDAQ) - 30.53
Collins (NYSE) - 52.23
DuPont (NVSE)- 32.19
US Bank (NYSE) - 23.49
Gannett (NYSE)- 13.68
General Electric (NYSE)- 15.60
Harley-Davidson (NYSE) - 22.23
JP Morgan (NYSE) - 37.70
Kroger (NYSE) - 21.13
Limited Brands (NYSE) - 20.01
Norfolk Southern (NYSE) 46.31

Ohio Valley Bane Corp. (NASDAQ)- 19.30
BBT (NYSE)- 27.13
Peoples (NASDAQ) - 12.45
P,epslco (NYSE) - 58.96
Premier (NASDAQ) - 7.31
Rockwell (NYSE) - 47.71
Rocky Boots (NASDAQ) - 8.32
Royal Dutch Shell - 53.85
Sears Holding (NASDAQ) 89.93
Wai·Mart (NVSE) - 52.93
Wendy's (NYSE) - 4.47
WesBanco (NYSE) - 13.93
Worthington (NYSE)- 14.04
Dally stock reports are the 4
p.m. ET closing quotes of transactions for Jan. 29, 2010, provld·
ed by Edward Jones financial
advisors Isaac Mills In Gallipolis
at (740) 441-9441 and Lesley
Marrero In Point Pleasant at
(304) 674-0174. Member SIPC.

high as 28 mph. Chance of tation is 40 percent.
precipitation is 70 percent.
Thursda): A slight ch.mce
Wednesday night: A of snow showers before I
chance of snow showers. p.m. Most!) cloudy, \\ith a
Cloudv, with a low around high near 31. Chance of pre
21 . \\iest wind around 14 cipitation i 20 percent.
mph. \\ ith gust'\ as high a"
Thursda) night: Partly
25 mph. Chance of precipi- cloudy, with a low around 15.

Support The Pomero) Volunteer
Fire
The Pomero} \ olunteer Frre Depanmentt~ sponsoring
a fund ratsing program to support the depmment and
aid tbe commumt) In the coming \\eeks all homes in
the area \\ill receM arequest for a mail m
contribution
The firefightm \I ish to thank e\ fl) 0ne for thw
donation by gh ing acomplimental) 8X 10 Color
Studio Portnut to be taken at the fire station. Thb
fund ratstng program is legitimate and The Pomero)
Volunteer Ftre Depanment asks for )Our ~uppon II
do not recet\e the fire depanmem mruling. please~~~
all the 'tatJOn at "'4{).992 6617 for futher Cetatb L:

P.O Box U" • Pomero). Ob

740-992-6617

�PageA4

.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.
Sammy M. Lopez
Publisher

2010

WE INTERRUPT ll-IIS

CONTROVE~SI.AL

SUPER BOWL

·PRO- LIFE AD.w
TO BRJN&lt;5 YOU

COMME:~IALS

MORE ACCEPTABLE
TO WOMEN'S

Charlene Hoeflich
r

Tuesday, February 9,

0ROUPS'"'

General Manager-News Editor

Pam Caldwell
Advertising Director

Congress shall make uo fall' respectitr&lt;l! an
establishmettt of religiou, or prohibiting the free
exercise thereof; or abridgitrg the freedom of speech,
or of the p1·ess; or the right of the people peaceably
to assemble, and to petition tlte Government
for a redress of grievances.
The First Amendment to the U.S. Constitution

TOI)AY IN HISTORY
Today is Tuesday, Feb. 9, the 40th day of 2010. There
are 325 days left in the year.
Today's Highlight in History:
On Feb. 9, 1960, Adolph Coors Co. chairman Adolph
Coors Ill, 44, was shot to death during a botched kidnapping attempt while on his way to the family brewery
in Golden, Colo. (Coors' body wasn't found for seven
months; the man who killed him, Joseph Corbett Jr.,
served 19 years in prison. Corbett committed suicide in
Aug. 2009.)
•
On this date:
In 1773, the ninth president of the United States,
William Henry Harrison, was born in Charles City
• County, Va
In 1825, the House of Representatives elected John
Quincy Adams president after no candidate received a
' majority of electoral votes.
In 1861, Jefferson Davis was elected the provisional
president of the Confederate States of America.
In 1870, the U.S. Weather Bureau was established.
In 1942, daylight-saving "War Time" went into effect in
' the United States, with clocks turned one hour forward.
In 1943, the World War II battle of Guadalcanal in the
southwest Pacific ended with an Allied victory over
_ Japanese forces.
In 1950, in a speech in Wheeling, W.Va., Sen. Joseph
McCarthy (R-Wis.) charged the State Department was
riddled with Communists.
In 1971, the crew of Apollo 14 returned to Earth after
. man's th1rd landing on the moon.
In 1984, Soviet leader Yuri V. Andropov died at age 69,
less than 15 months after succeeding Leonid Brezhnev;
he was succeeded by Konstantin U. Chernenko (chehr. NYEN'-koh).
In 2002, Britain's Princess Margaret, the high-spirited
and unconventional sister of Queen Elizabeth II, died in
London at age 71.
Ten years ago: Hackers stepped up their "denial of ser' vice" attacks on popular Internet sites, zeroing in on such
' targets as ETrade and ZDNet, inconveniencing millions
of Web users and unnerving Wall Street. Boeing Co.
• engineers and technical workers began a 40-day strike.
Five years ago: Hewlett-Packard chief executive early
Fiorina was forced out by board members, ending her
nearly six-year reign. A new postage stamp honoring
President Ronald Reagan was issued in ceremonies
across the country.
One year ago: President Barack Obama used his first
news conference since taking office to urgently pressure
lawmakers to approve a massive economic recovery bill.
All-Star third baseman Alex Rodriguez admitted to taking performance-enhancing drugs, telling ESPN he had
used steroids while with the Texas Rangers for three
years. Lindsey Vonn won the downhill for her second
gold at the World Championships in Val D'isere, France,
becoming the second American woman (after Andrea
Mead Lawrence) to win two golds at a worlds. Playwright
R'obert Anderson ("Tea and Sympathy") died in New York
at age 91.

Thought for Today: "What we call ptogress is the
• exchange of one nuisance for another nuisance." Havelock Ellis, English psychologist (1859-1939).

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

The Daily Sentinel
Reader Services

(usPs 213-9so&gt;

Correction Policy

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.

Our main concern in all stories is to Published every morning, Monday
be accurate. If you Know of an error through Friday. 111 Court Street.
in a story. call the newsroom at (740) Pomeroy. Ohio. Second·class postage
992·2156.
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Member: The Associated Press and
the Ohio Newspaper Association.
Our main number is
Postmaster: Send address correc(740) 992-2156.
tions to The Daily Sentinel, PO. Box
Department extensions are:
729. Pomeroy, Ohio 45769.

News
Editor: Charlene Hoeflich, Ext. 12
Reporter: Brian Reed, Ext. 14
Reporter: Beth Sergent, Ext. 13

Advertising
Advertising Director: Pam Caldwell
740-44C-2342, Ext. 17
Retail: Matt Rodgers. Ext. 15
Retail: Brenda Davis, Ext 16
ClassJCirc.: Judy Clark. _Ext. 10

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Circulation Manager: David J. Lucas.
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Freedom &lt;fpolitical speech
BY DR. JOHN

A.

SPARKS

CEWER FOR VISION AND VALUES

Suppose you were arrested on criminal charges because you ~ere the
head of an organization that had produced a film critical of the wife of a
former political leader. who was now
running for office herself. What
country would have such a Jaw?
Cuba. Myanmar, China? None of
these. Actually, you would be talking
about the United States of America.
Fortunately. on January 21. 20 lO.
by a nanow 5-4 majority. the U.S.
Supreme Court changed that law by
rendering its decision in Citizens
United
v.
Federal
Election
Commission. What is even more
interesting. and astounding. is that
President Obama does not like the
decision one bit - as was evident in
his State of the Union address.
The case dealt specifically with a
90-mjnute documentary produced by
an organization called Citizens
United. The group,, a non-profit advocacy corporation, put together a production called "Hillary: The Movie,"
which urged viewers to oppose the
presidential campaign of Hillary
Clinton. However, fearing that such
programming might be viewed as
illegal
under
the
Bipartisan
Campaign Refom1 Act (also known
as "McCain/Feingold"), Citizens
United asked for a judicial ruling on
the matter. The provision that concerned Citizens United was 44lb,
which prohibited a corporation from
communicating to the electorate
about a candidate within 30 days of a
primary election or 60 days of a general election, and under threat of
criminal prosecution. The oase went
all the way to the U.S. Supreme
Court.
The Court's majority found that
McCain/Feingold restrictions on corporate speech were unconstitutional
under the First Amendment, which
prevents the government from
abridging freedom of speech. In
deciding as it did, the Court strengthened one of most important liberties
that citizens, individual or corporate.
can exercise: the right to criticize the
existing government. its office hold-

ers, or those aspiring to office. The
Court minced no \.VOrds in pointing
out what the federal law limiting corporate funding of political documentaries, book,g, or other communications really meant. Justice Kennedy
said candidly: "The :aw before us is
an outright ban backed by criminal
sanctions. Section 441 b makes it a
felony for all corporations - including nonprofit ad\'ocacy corporations
- either to expressly advocate the'
election of or defeat of candidates or
to broadcast electioneering communications within 30 days of a primary
election and 60 days of a general
election.''
Kennedy gave examples of actions
that would be considered felonious
under the law. Sien-a Club officers
would be felons if they ran an ad m
the prohibited timeframe disapproving of a Congressional candidate
"who favors logging in national
forests." In like manner. added
Kennedy.
the
National
Rifle
Association ·s officers could end up in
jail if that organization published ··a
book urging the public to vote for the
challenger because the incumbent
U.S. Senator supports a handgun
ban.''
The defenders of such restrictions
argued that the restrictions on corporately financed speech were necessary to prevent well-financed corporations and unjons from replacing a
true democracy of the people.
Corporate money would dominate
and "distort" the political process. ·
The Court rejected that argument in
a flurry of cogent rebuttals both in the
majority opinion and the concurrences. As Justice Scalia pointed out
in concurring, the First Amendment
"is written in terms of "speech" not
speakers. Its text offers no foothold
for excluding any category of speaker, from single individuals . . . to
incotporated associations of individu-

•

York Times, those news stories or
broadcasts would not put CBS or
Times executives in violation. So, in
effect. as the Cow1 correctly discerned. 441 b allowed the established
print and electronic media corporations to hawk their views with
impunity right up to election day due
to an exemption in the law. \Vhile
business and labor entities viere
silenced by th·e threat of prosecution
if thev did the same. Therein is the
key to the political left's unhappiness
with the Court\ holding.
The disapproval of this decision
comes from the liberal stde of the
political spectrum, including by
President Obama. The reason'?
Section 441 b. in effect. sheltered the
political speech of news outlets pa11 of the liberal-leaning L .S. media
- while other corporate points of
view. potentially more moderate or
conservative, were criminalized by
the legislation. Now. the threat of
prosecution under 441 b for these t,.
merly marginalized corporations
gone, swept away by the Robel ,
Court. In essence. the right to preelection political speech for all persons, corporate and otherwise. has
been reestablished.
Will the political marketplace now
be crowded with new corporate
entrants? Probably. but voters will
likely do what they do with the
claims. assertions, and arguments of
commercial vendors. The} will weigh
them. accept some and reject others.
and. in the end. make their determination for or against candidates. That is
\\hat the Founders intended when
they penned the freedom of speech
portion of the First Amendment. And
that is what was restored bv the Court
in its Citizens United dcci~ion.

(Dr. John A. Sparks is dean of the
Ca/derwood School of Arrs ana
Lerter.s ar Grove CiT)' Cnllege in
Grm·e Citr. Pa., where he reaches
als."
The Court discovered a glaring busines., !all' and cmzstiflltionallzisrucontradiction in the exemption of ')'. He is a Fe/loll' of Educational
"media corporations'' from 441 b. If Policy H'ith The Cemerfor Vision afl(J
·'electioneering communications" \~tlues. a practicing laH')'el: and a
close to the time of the primary or graduate of Gro1·e City College
election were disseminated by media the Unh•ersiry of 1Hichigan L
corporations like CBS or the 1'\ew School.)

t.

�--------------------..------~-~--,---~----·-----·------

Tuesday, February 9,

Obituaries

Local Briefs
Raymond Russell

Offices closed

Raymond F. Russell, 86, Zephyrhills. Fla., formerly
of Middleport, passed away February 5, 2010, in hospice care.
Surviving are daughters. Cathy Bauer and her husband,
Tim, of North Carolina, and Betty Cox and her husband,
Bill, of Florida; grandchildren: Tim. Anise, Amanda. Patty.
and Megan, and 14 great grandchildren .
Raymond was an honorary member of the Middleport
Fire Department, and was retired from Foote Mineral.
Services will be announced .

- The Meigs County Health Department
County TB offices will be closed on Monday.
Peb. 15 for President's Day. There will be no TB test given
on Friday, Feb. 12.

Jeffrey L Thornton
Jeffrey Lee Thornton. 49,
passed away at 12: 12 p.m.,
Saturday, February 6, 2010,
at home in Racine, Ohio.
after a lenf.!thy illness.
Born November 17. 1960.
Mason. W.Va., he was the
n of John Bernard
•
Thomton and Florence
. Cummins Thornton. He was
a member of the Racine
First Baptist Church and a
1979 graduate of Southern
High School. He served
four years as a member of
Racine Village Council, fol. lowed by eig.ht years as
Jeffrey L. Thornton
Mayor of Racme. He then
served 12 years as Meigs County CommissiOner from
1996 through 2008.
He is survived by his mother. Florence Cummins
Thornton. Racine: father, Bernard Thornton. Washington:
brother and :-ister-in-law. Rex (Chrystal) Thornton. and
three half brothers, John. Craig and Brent; very special
aunt and uncle Hazel and Bob Roy: aunts and uncles.
George Cummins. Jack (Vicki) Cummins. Russell
(Coralee) Cummins. Lan·y (Nancy) Cummins. Evelyn
Stewart. Jack (Pauline) Bostick and Joanne Vaughn; and
numerous cousins.
He was preceded in death by his grandparents. Floyd and
Addie Cummins and Chester and Ruth Thornton.
Services will be held at 2 p.m .. Thursday, February 11.
2010. at the Racine First Baptist Church with Pastor
Ryan Eaton and Pastor Don Walker officiating. Interment
will follow in Letart Falls Cemetery. Body will lie in
ate one hour prior to the service. Friends may call from
4 p.m. and 6-8 p.m. Wednesday at Cremeens Funeral
orne, Racine.
Online condolences may be sent to the family by visiting

4

www.cremel?n~funeralhomes.com.

Rodney Riggs

Dorothy Boyer
Dorothy L. Boyer, 87.
1 went to be
home wim the Lord on
February 8, 2010. at Holzer
:\ledical Center, Gallipolis.
She was born on August
2 I. 1922, in Meigs County,
daughter of the late Joseph
Wilbur Wines and Lorna
Little Wines. She was a
homemaker and a member
of the Zion Community
Church. The Plains.
Besides her parents. she
was preceded in death by her
husband, Rev. Eddie Boyer;
an infant son. Rohert Royer;
Dorothy Boyer
brothers, Lonnie Parley and
Earl Winl.!s: a sister. Lucille Yeauger: and daughter.
Carolyn Triplett.
She is survived by sons. Jim and Debbie Boyer,
Gallipolis, and Jimmy Smith. Middleport; daughters.
Linda and Don McDade. Cheshire: Mary Lou and
Eugene Hawkins. Middleport; sister, Ruth Fink,
Cheshire; grandchildren: Brian and Angela Wamsley.
Westerville; Julie and Scott Short. Gallipolis; great
grandchildren: Olivia and Mason Wamsley and Carlin
and Jalvn Short.
Service will be held at ll a.m. on Friday. February 12,
2010. at the Anderson McDaniel Funeral Home in
M'ddl
·hp
s L' 1 ffi · ·
• 1 eport wit astor teve Itt e 0 ICtatmg.
Burial will be in Gravel Hill Cemetery.
Visiting hours will be from 6-8 p.m. on Thursday at the
funeral home. An on-line registry is available at
www.andersonmcdaniel.com.
Middlepor~

R0 d ney R .tgg ... , 64 • pomeroy, passed away on sun day,
February 7, 20 I0.
He was born on August 25. 1945. son of Betty (Bratton)
Riggs Musser of Rutland and the late Earl Riggs. He was a
graduate of Rutland High School, sened in the US Air
Force. and was employed for over 30 years at Philip Sporn
Power Plant.
• In addition to his Mother. he is survived by: wife of 40
Years. Carolyn (Malone) Riggs; daughter, Courtney Denise
Riggs; son, Stephen Justin (Stacy) Riggs; grandson.
Quentin: granddaughter, Makayla; brother. Roger (Helena)
Riggs: sisters, Karen Ridenour (Jim Hawthorne), Sharon
Riggs. Missy Kisner (George Adkins). Mindy (Rodney)
Butcher. Also surviving are: sisters-in-law, Patricia (John)
Larry Gene Mitchell. 69. Gallipolis. died Saturday. Feb. 6,
Moore, Rose (Mark) Zwolinski, Pegg)· (Mike) Grueser.
2010.
in the Emergency Department of Holzer Medical Center.
Irene (Paul) Lambert: several nieces. nephews. great
In
keeping
with Larrv's
request there will be no funeral
nieces. great nephews. aunts and uncles.
..J
services
or
visitation.
Cremation
services will be provided
In addition to his father. Rodney was also preceded in
death by his step-father, Robert ~fusser, and brother-in-law, by Cremeens Funeral Chapel.
'J .B. Rt' denour and mother-in-law Glon·a ~~.ralone.
Expressions of sympathy may be sent to the family at
1
A funeral service will be held at 2 p.m. on Wednesday, www.cremcensfuneralhomes.com.
bruary 10, 2010, with military funeral honors presented
Drew Webster Post 39 of the American Legion at
•
Anderson McDaniel Funeral Home in Pomeroy. Officiating
Alan E. Sayre of Mason. W.Va .. 62. passed away Feb. 4,
will be Rev. Tom Curtis. Burial will follow at Riggs
Cemetery. Friends may call from 2-4 p.m. and 6-8 p.m. on 2010 at his residence.
Visitation is from 5·8 p.m., Tuesday. Feb. 9 at Foglesong
Tuesday, Feb. 9. at the funeral home.
An on-line registry is available at www.andersonmc- Tucker Funeral Home, Mason. W.Va. A graveside service is
daniel.com.
1 set for 1 p.m .• Wednesday, Feb. 10 at Graham Cemetery.

Deaths

Larry Gene Mitchell

Alan E. Sayre

Rep. John Murtha, voice for veterans, dies at 77
HARRISBURG. Pa. (AP)
- Rep. John MUI1ha. the
tall, gruff-mannered former
Marine who became the de
facto voice of veterans on
. Capitol Hill and later an
outspoken and influential
critic of the Iraq War, died
Monday. He was 77.
The
Pennsylvania
Democrat had been suffer. ing complications from
gallbladder surgery. He died
at Virginia Hospital Center
in Arlington. Va., with his
Aroily at his bedside, the
spital said.
In 1974 Murtha. then an
officer in the Marine
Reserves, became the first
Vietnam War combat vctcr, an elected to Congress.

Ethical questions often
shadowed his congressional
service. but he was best
known for being among
Congress' most hawkish
Democrats. He wielded
considerable clout for two
decades as the ranking
Democrat on the House
subcommittee that oversees
Pentagon spending.
Murtha voted in 2002 to
authorize President George
W. Bush to use military
force in Iraq. but his growing frustration over the
administration ·s handling of
the ....·ar prompted him in
November 2005 to call for
an immediate withdrawal of
U.S. troops.
"The war in Iraq is not

going as advertised. lt is a
flawed policy wrapped in
illusion," he said.
Murtha's opposition to the
Iraq war rattled Washington.
where he enjoyed bipartisan
respect for his work on military issues. On Capitol Hill.
Murtha was seen as speak·
ing for those in uniform
when it came to military
matters.
Murtha "wus the first
Vietnam veteran to serve in
Congress, and he was
incredibly effective in his
service in the House.'' said
Rep. David Obey. a
Democrat and chainnan of
the House Appropriations
Committee. "I le understood
the misery of war. Every

person who serves in the
military has lost an advocate and a good friend
today:·
Rep. Ed Markey. DMass.. said that in part
of
~turtha,
because
'·America is now on track to
removing all combat troops
from that country by this
summer."
President Barack Obama
called Murtha. who was
known in his home state for
helping bring money and
projects to areas depressed
by the decline of the coal
and steel industries. "a
steadfast advocate for the
people of Pennsylvania for
nearly 40 years" \\lith a
"tough-as-nails" reputation.

Pomeroy from Page At
ordinance'li original wording was "too harsh" and
. possibly unfair to home. owners who wished to make
minor repairs to their homes
·without purchasing a per. mit. The ordinance commit"tee changed the wording of
·the ordinance to reflect
:what improvements require
:a building pennit. Council
·passed the first of three
~required readings of the

•

•
•
· Commumcattons
would be
·installing a new village
· siren at the tire house with
: village insumnce paying for
: all but the $5CXl deductible.
· The bill to install the new
siren is $9,665. Roush said
the siren should be installed
in about five weeks. The
siren was damaged during
an electrical surge follow: ing a windstorm.
Cunningham
reported

The Daily Sentinel • Page As

www.mydailysentinel.com

2010

revised amendment which
reads:
"Each person. firm or
corporation that desire:- to
erect. construct, move,
enlarge, alter or demolish
any building or structure
IS required to obtain a separate building permit for
each building or structure
from the code enforcement officer. No permit
shall be required for minor

interior or exterior repairs.
alterations, or replacements in-kind or in buildine which do not involve
an)· change in their supporting walls, members or
structural parts, or in their
stairways, elevators or fire
escapes."
Council also unanimously approved the third and
final reading of an amendment or ordinance 445

which raises the annual fcc
required for those in the
trash pick-up sen·ice to pay
$100. Previously, the permit cost $50 for those wishing to operate a trash or
garbage pick-up service in
the village. There arc currently nine independent
trash collectors legally
operating in the village.
The ordinance had not been
amended since 1974.

Syracuse from Page AI
Clerk·Treasurer
Sharon
Cottrill spoke with a representative of the SyracuseRacine Regional Sewer
District who told her the
district had decided again~t
implementing the automatic
rate increase for 2010.
Cunningham and Jacks had
previously planned to meet
with the SRRSD Board to
find out why the raise was
being considered.

Council gave Grants
Fred
Administrator
Hoffman permission to
request capital improvement
money for a new slide for
London Pool. Cunningham
then
reported
Rose's
Excavating had donated
$500 to help sponsor the
pool's operation this year
and Hol1er Medical Center
had expressed interest in
also becoming a sponsor.

Roush reported the fire
department is considering
having an Easter Egg Hunt
on April 3 at the Syracuse
Ball Fields. The department
will also be :-.elling chicken
barbecue. Council approved
Roush's request.
Council approved transferring S20,000 of e:-.tate
money left to the village
into the London Pool fund
for operating costs.

PO~tEROY

ami

Mei~s

President elected
RUTLAND- The Leading Creek Conservancy District
recently held their organizational board meeting and elected Fenton Taylor. president and Randy Butcher. vice presi·
dent. Regular board meetings are held at 5 p.m., the fourth
Tuesday of every month.

Square dance
COOLVILLE - There will be a square dance beginning
at 7 p.m. Saturdy at the Coolville Lion Club room. Music
will be by the 4 Hits and a Miss and the cost is $5 each.

For the Record
Foreclosures
POMEROY - Actions for foreclosure were filed in
Meigs County Common Pleas Court by Green Tree
Servicing. Carmel. Ind .. against Shannon S. Pierce.
Racine. and others, and by BAC Home Loans Servicing.
Simi Valley, Calif.. against Francisco Eugene Althouse.
Alhany. and others.

seats at a premium
• on

planes, tral·ns out of D.C.
WASHIKGTON (AP) - A S20 cab ride to the airport
skyrocketed to the "snow rate" of$100 in the nation's capital. and those travelers \vho could get to the airport or tram
station still had to hag}!le or wait in long lines to escape the
snowbound .Mid-Atlantic.
The rno~t pressing matter: get out before another foot or
more of snow comes Tuesday.
''I'm done \Vith city. urban snow life," said Chris
Vaughan. a Washington resident who was able tore-book a
flight to go skiing in Utah. He dodged the pricey cab fare
by having a friend drop him off at the airport - in
exchange for a bottle of wine.
The region had nearly 3 feet of snow in some areas. One
scientist :-.aid if all the snow that fell on the East Coast were
melted. it would fill 12 million Olympic swimming pools
or 30,000 Empire State buildings. Philadelphia and
was h'mg ton eac h need JUS
· t a l'ttl
th an mne
· me
· hes to
I e more
·
th
·t·
th
·
·
t
· t
·
1884
gtvc e Ct res etr snowtes wm ers smce
• th e fitrs t
e
ec
d
e
k
t
Y ar r or s w re ep ·
· t
t d the snow wou ld start Tuesday aft er"'~1eteoroJogts
s pred'ICe
noon and continue into Wednesday. Between 12 and 18 inches
was forecast for Philadelphia. the nation ·s sixth-largest city and
· 1e effiect o f traveI prou...
a trave1hub - wh'IC h couJd cause a npp
!ems for the rest of the Northeast. Airlines warned travelers
more flights would be canceled, and the new stonn was expectcd to hit a wider area, affecting New York and Boston.
Sharon Lewis of Bowie. i\ld .. was desperate to spend
time with family in Trinidad. She bargained for an hour and
got a flight to New York's Laguardia Airport. But it came
with ~avcat, she would then would have to ~rive .across
1 town m rush hour traffic to make a connectmg fltght at
John F. Kennedy airport within an hour.
"I don't know how that's going to happen,'' she said.
''It'll be a disaster."
On Craigslist, owners of four-wheel drive vehicles were
selling rides to residents in northern Virginia and the
Maryland suburbs. One classified ad read: "Stay safe on icy
streets - 4x4 Tahoe available."
Union Station was bustling with long lines as many passengers decided to try Amtrak after flights were canceled.
Manuel Bernardo, 30. of Bethesda. !\1d .. was on his way to
Barcelona. Spain. He bought a ticket to New York and was
hoping to make it there in time to catch his flight to Madrid.
"Until this morning, I was happy as pie, because I love
~now," he !'laid.
Others prepared for yet another stonn.
"Getting around is a pain right no\\ as it is, so slushy and
sloppy." "aid .Meghan Garaghan. 28. as she stocked up on
staples and sweets at a Philadelphia supermarket. ''I don't
want to think about what it's going to be like with another
foot and a half of snow dumped on top of this mess.''
The stonn clo:-.ed schools and some 230.000 federal workers in Washington had Monday and Tuesday off. Power was
:-.till out for tens of thousands of homes and businesses.

Hunting from Page Al
regardless of zone. hunting method or season.
A proposed change during the Dec. 18-19 portion of the
deer-gun season would allow other legal game species in
season to be pursued by hunters meeti ng :-pecified
requirements. such as the hunter orange requirement for
deer-gun season.
During the 2009-2010 season. which concluded Feb. 7,
hunters \Vere expected to bag a record total of about
260,000 deer.Approximate1y 475.000 people hunted whitetailed deer in Oh1o this year.
Open houses will be held on March 6 in each of the
~tate's five wildlife districts to provide the public an oppor·
tunity to view and discuss £roposed hunting and trapping
regulations with state wildlife officials.

Thomas rrom Page At
According to the press release. the lend director presides ut ~til llll.!etings of the independent directors and
serves as an ex-oflicio member of all standing committees
of the corporation.
Thomas will be able to make recommendations on mat·
ters for consideration bv the board of directors. oversee
C\'aluations and perfom1ance of members of the board of
directors, and oversee the corporation's shareholder communication policies and procedures.
Ohio Valley Bane Corp. common stock is traded on the
NASDAQ Global Stock Market under the symbol OVBC.
The holding company owns three subsidiaries: Ohio Valle)
Bank. v. ith 16 office... in Ohio and West Virginia; Loan
Central. with six consumer finance offices in Ohio, and
Ohio Valley Financial Services. an insurance agency based
in Jackson. Ohio. Learn more about Ohio Valley Bane
Corp. at www.ovbc.com.

�PageA6

The Daily Sentinel

Tuesday, February 9,

Trash shipments to Ohio decrease
AKRON (AP) -Ohio
still has a welcome mat out
for other states' trash,
though officials say the
amount has declined due to
the trouble in the economy.
The state's landfills
accepted 3.4 million tons of
out-of-state garbage in
2008, down from the peak
of 3.7 million tons in 2006,
according to the Ohio
Environmental Protection
Agency. Most went to seven
of Ohio's 4llandfills.
The drop means less revenue from fees imposed by
the state and local garbage
districts.
When the economy falters, people and businesses
tend to produce less waste,
said Ohio EPA trash expert
Andrew Booker.
Most recently, rubbish
from other states comprised
about 16 percent of the
garbage going into Ohio
landfills.
Ohio received trash from
20 states in 2008, Booker

Ohio landfills that received the most out-of-state
trash in 2008:
• Apex Sanitary Landfill, Jefferson and Harrison counties, eastern Ohio, 1.3 million tons
•Carbon Limestone Landfill, Mahoning County, northeast Ohio, 660,046 tons.
• Sunny Farms Landfill, Seneca County, northern
Ohio 577,660 tons.
• American Landfill, Stark County, northeast Ohio,
198,140 tons.
• Central Waste Landfill, Mahoning County, 157,257
tons.
• Williams County Landfill, northwest Ohio, 132,312
tons.
• Rumpke Landfill, Hamilton County, southwest Ohio,
111,136 tons.
(SOURCE: Ohio Environmental Protection Agency.
Information
from:
Akron
Beacon
Journal,
www.ohio.com)

said. The biggest sender was
New York, which sent 1.1
million tons, about 32 percent
of the out-of-state trash. New
Jersey was second, sending
852,300 tons, about a quarter
of the imported trash.
Out-of-state waste takes

up landfill space and could
create environmental and
health p~·oblems in Ohio,
Booker said. He said states
choose Ohio for dumping
because it has low dumping fees and landfill space
to accommodate 30 year's

worthoftrash.
Ohio's average dumping
fee of about $35 per ton,
compares with $80 to $100
along the East Coast.
In 2006, the state was
fourth among those receiving out-of-state trash,
behind
Pennsylvania,
Michigan and Virginia.
Booker said Ohio would
support a ban on sending
trash out of state, but it's
considered interstate commerce, which is protected
by the U.S. Constitution.
Of the Ohio landfills
receiving out-of-state-trash.
Apex Sanitary Landfill in
Jefferson and Harrison
counties took the most, 1.3
million tons. The company,
which is served by a rail
line, plans to expand to
accept more trash.
Ohio sent about 1 million
tons of its trash to neighboring states in 2008. The Ohio
EPA does not have data on
trash sent to non-neighboring states.

Fede~al officials to
commit $78.5M to try
to halt Asl·an carp'
Bv JOHN FLESHER
AND MATIHEW DALY
ASSOCIATED PRESS

WASHINGTON
Navigational locks and
gates in Chicago-area
waterways may be opened
less frequently than usual in
a stepped-up campaign to
prevent Asian carp from
overrunning the Great
Lakes, federal officials said
Monday.
The plan falls short of
closing the navigational
structures entirely, as
demanded by Michigan and
five other Great Lakes
states. They fear the locks
will provide an opening to
the lakes for the giant carp,
which some scientists say
could
devastate
the
region's $7 billion fishing
industry.
But the Obama administration described the plan
as part of an effective strategy for keeping the
mvaders at bay while longterm biological controls are
developed. The governincome and fire victims, pay ment said it would spend
utilities and maintenance $78.5 million and take 25
costs for the building," actions to slow the advance
Halley said.
of the carp, which can
Several local residents, reach 4 feet long and 100
businesses,
churche , pounds.
schools and other groups
Invasive species have
donated funds and food hammered the Great Lakes
items during the holiday for decades and the Asian
season to help provide for carp threatens to be particfamilies in need. Outreach ularly damaging, Nancy
Center volunteers com- Sutley, head of the White
piled food boxes and dis- House
Council
on
tributed them to several Environmental Quality,
local families.
said after talks with severFor information about the al governors from the
Outreach Center or to make region. "Today, we have an
a donation, call 446-7555. opportunity
to
work
The Outreach Center is open together to prevent envifrom 9:30 a.m. to 4:30p.m. ronmental and economic
Monday through Friday.
damage before it happens,'' she said.
Bighead and silver carp,
Asian species imported to
cleanse fish farms and
sewage plants in the Deep
breaking and entering case. South, have been migrating
According to the indict- up the Mississippi and
ment, Williams was origi- Illinois rivers for decades.
nally charged with breaking They have infested rivers
and entering into the and canals near Chicago,
Courtside Bar and Grill and their DNA has been
manager's office With the detected in Lake Michigan
intent to steal. He pled itself.
The Supreme Court last
guilty to the charges on Jan.
15, 2009, and was sen- month refused Michigan's
tenced to 24 months com- request to order the locks
and gates closed, a move
munity control.
Following his guilty plea opposed by the Obama
to community control viola- administration and Illinois.
tions, Williams was sen- They argue that closing the
tenced to prison for 11 locks would cause millions
months.
in losses for barge operators and could lead to
flooding.
Michigan last week asked
the high court to reconsider

:outreach Center in Gallipolis in need of new roof
BY ANDREW CARTER
MDSNEWS@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

GALLIPOLIS
Officials from the Outreach
Center in Gallipolis are still
seeking funds to perform
repairs on the building,
which is located at 275
State Street.
Betty Halley, a member
of the board of directors
and a longtime volunteer at
the Outreach Center, said
the most pressing need is a
new roof.
"A separate fund has been
set aside for this project,"
Halley said. "The center is a
large building and we're not
giving up. We hope to get

enough funds to get th1s project under way by spring."
According to Outreach
Center board member Phyllis
Fowler, the agency lost
numerous pieces of merchandise last year due to the
leaking roof. She said the
economic downturn of the
past year has resulted in a
decrease in financial support.
The City of Gal1ipolis
donated $5,000 to the center
during a special meeting on
Nov. 13, 2009. The city
commission voted that
evening to add the Outreach
Center to the list of local
agencies and organizations
the city supports on an
annual basis with proceeds

collected from the bed tax.
In 2009, the b~d tax generated $60,000 for the city,
which donated $6,000 to
each of the following organizations: Ariel-Ann Carson
Dater Performing Arts
Centre, French Art Colony,
Gallia County Historical
Society, John Gee Black
Historical Society and Our
House Museum.
According to Halley, the
Outreach Center is a nonprofit organization that
operates by selling used
household goods, clothing,
books and other items at
reduced p1ices.
"The money is used to
pw-chase food for the low

.Community control violations lead to prison time
BY MICHELLE MILLER
MDTNEWS@ MYDAILYTRIBUNE.COM

GALLIPOLIS - Three
Gallia County residents face
prison time after being
arrested for violating community control sentences.
Douglas K. Bloomer, 46,
248 West Cook Road,
Gallipolis, was sentenced to
a total of three years in the
Ohio
Department
of
Rehabilitation
and
Corrections after failing to
complete his community
control sentence in two dif-

ferent felony DUI cases.
In addition, Bloomer's
driver's
license
was
revoked for a period of 10
years and he was ordered to
pay fines and court costs.
Jason M. Johnson, 28,
5671 Ohio 325, Patriot, was
found guilty of community
control violations stemming
from a previous guilty plea
of theft and possession of
drugs.
Johnson pled guilty in
May 2008 to the theft of
trailer axles from MJW
Towing and metal shelves

and crossmembers for Ohio
Contractor Supply. He also
pled guilty to possession of
20 lOmg Oxycontin tablets
and was sentenced to 24
months community control.
Following his guilty verdict, Johnson was sentenced
to ll months in prison for
each count to be served consecutively for a total of two
years and nine months.
Christopher E. Williams,
32, 57 Green Terrace,
Gallipolis, pled guilty to
community control violations stemming from a 2008

Cleared DEA agent hopes to return to duty
BY THOMAS J. SHEERAN
ASSOCIATED PRESS

CLEVELAND - A federal drug agent acquitted of
framing 17 suspects in a
2005 investigation hopes
to return to regular duty
soon, the attorney defending him against civil lawsuits in the botched sting
said Monday.
Agent Lee Lucas expects
to be cleared in the civil
lawsuits filed by victims of
his paid informant's madeup evidence in Mansfield.
said the attorney, Joel
Kirkpatrick.
There are more than a half
dozen civil lawsuits filed
against Lucas and fellow
agents and law-enforcement
officers and reflect complaints by about 20 people
that their civil rights had
been violated in the sting.

They seek monetary damages, including $5 million
in one lawsuit.
Lucas, who was acquitted
Friday in U.S. District
Court of all 18 charges that
he helped the informant
frame suspects, has been on
administrative leave.
"Lee looks forward to
returning to duty with the
DEA as quickly as possible," Kirkpatrick said in a
phone interview.
The regional office of the
U.S. Drug Enforcement
Administration,
where
Lucas' work includes stints
in Bolivia and Miami,
referred questions on his job
status to the agency's
Washington headquarters.
The offices were closed
Monday except for a skeletal staff as the capital dug
out of a weekend snowstorm.

The U.S. attorney's office
in Cleveland d clined to
comment
Monday
on
Lucas' status. Because the
office had worked in the
past with Lucas, his trial
was handled by federal
prosecutors in Pittsburgh.
Kevin Durkin, a lawyer
for a framing victim who
has sued Lucas, said the
acquittal wouldn't affect the
ci vii case. Those suing
Lucas and other officers
could benefit from a lower
standard of proof than the
criminal case, he said.
In a criminal case, the
jury most believe a person
is guilty beyond a reasonable doubt. In a civil case,
the standard of proof is the
preponderance of evidence,
Durkin said.
Kirkpatrick predicted the
trial wouldn't harm Lucas'
effectiveness as a prosecu-

2010

and is pushing ahead with a
separate lawsuit that calls
for permanently severin.
the century-old, man-mad
linkage between the Great
Lakes and Mississippi
River
basins.
Joining
Michigan in the dispute are
Minnesota,
Wisconsin,
New York, Ohio and
Pennsylvania.
The Obama administration's strategy. announced
Monday, calls for modifying operations of the navigational structures by
April 30. It says four scenarios are being considered, including opening
two primary locks for just
three or four days a week,
or closing the locks one
week per month or every
other
week.
Another
option is continuing to
operate them normally.
Officials said a $10.5
million contract will be
awarded to build a third
electric barrier in the
Chicago Sanitary and Ship
Canal, a crucial link wit.
Lake Michigan. The tw
existing barriers emit
pulses designed to repel
the carp and give them a
non lethal jolt if they
don't turn away.
Also pledged was $13.2
million for construction of
barriers to prevent the carp
from bypassing the electric
devices by slipping into the
canal from the adjacent
Des Plaines River during
flooding.
An additional $9.5 million will be spent to promote commercial fishing of
carp, research chemical
treatments to kill off tbe
carp if the electric barriers
fail, and study other control
techniques such as preventing carp from spawning or
developing poisons that
would kill the carp but not
other fish.
Agencies also will speed
up their analysis of DN.
samples
and contin
exploting the waterways i
hopes
of determining
whether Asian carp have
actually gotten past the
electric barriers - and if so,
how many.
The carp battle involves
the U.S. Army Corps of
Engineers, which operates
the navigational structures;
the
Environmental
Protection Agency; the Fish
and Wildlife Service; and
the Coast Guard. State and
local agencies also are talcing part.
(On the Internet: Federal
Asian carp working group,
www.asiancarp .orgl)

tion witness in drug trials.
"I don't think anyone is
going to have any trouble
with Lee Lucas," he said.
"Lee Lucas is probably one
of the - if not the - hardest-working DEA agents
that Cleveland has ever
seen and will continue serving the community in his
fight to prosecute drug
dealers," he said.
Lucas might be willing to
discuss the trial ordeal at
some point, Kirkpatrick
said. After the verdict,
Lucas only commented
briefly that the truth had
emerged after years.
The jury deliberated for
two days. According to
signed
verdict
forms
released Monday, the jury
reached "not guilty" verdicts on the first seven
counts Thursday and the
final 11 counts Friday.

For a limited-time get:

Ohio Briefs
Police: Ohio girl
dies after fall
into snow bank
ASHLAND (AP)
Police say an 8-year-old
Ohio girl has died after
falling into a hole she dug
while playing in a snow
bank in front of her family's
home.
Ashland police Sgt. Joel
Icenhour (EYEZ' -en-bower) says that Emily Kramer
was playing alone Sunday
afternoon when she fell

head first into the hole and
could not free herself.
He says the girl's father
had been outside with her
earlier and returned to pull
her out of the snow and fmd
her unconscious.
The girl was taken to
Samaritan Regional Health
System, where she was pronounced dead.
Icenhour says the girl's
waist had blocked her access
to air, and that she had
kicked off one of her boots.
She dug the 12-inch to 15inch-wide hole with a larger

shoveL and a small sand
shovel was found inside.

Veteran regulator
appointed to
utilities post
COLUMBUS (AP)
Ohio Gov. Ted Strickland
has promoted a veteran staff
member at the Public
Utilities Commission of
Ohio to one of the agency's
appointed commissioners.
Stiickland named Steven
Lesser to a commissioners'

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The 57-year-old Lesser of
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Columbus is currently chief
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been an employee of the
agency in different capacities for 30 years.
The PUCO regulates natural gas. electric, phone,
truck, rail, waste and waste
water companies in the state.
Lesser will earn $120,000
a year. He replaces outgoing
comfl).issioner
Ronda
Hartman Fergus.

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Inside

Bl

The Daily Sentinel

0\'CS tops Fairhaven. Page B2
Wahama girls beat CLC, l,agc n2

ORTS

Meigs outlasts Belpre in OT. Page H2

Thesday, :February 9, 2010

Local teams fare well at girls tournament draw 1 Lady EaQies
-~ ~~Od~~~!:!o~hogn
tenons

SChool varsoty sportong ovcnts lnvolvong
from Gallla Mason 8Pd Meigs

countloa

BY BRYAN WALTERS
BWALTEAS@MYDAILYTRIBUNE.COM
Boys B11sketball
Jackson at Gallta Academy. 6 pm.
Vinton County at Meigs, 6 pl"l.
JACKSO:'\ - The high
Symmes Valley at South Galha, 6 pm
school
postseason is just
RIVer Valley at Eastern 6 pm
Point Pleasant at Herbert Hoover. 6 pm around the corner. but the
Hannan at Cross Lanes Chnst an, 7·30 roads for the southeast di:spm.
tnct tournament were
Girls Basketball
OVCS at Grace Christian. 7 p.m.
Hannan at Cross Lanes Chrlstoan, 6 paved Sunday afternoon at
Jackson High School durp.m
ing the 2010 OHSAA
Wednea.d.nY.£ebniiUY.J.0
Southeast District Girls
Boys Basketball
Chapmanvt e at Point Pleasant. 6 pm Basketball
Tournament
Girls Basketball
selection
meeting
in the
Portsmouth at Galha Academy. 6 pm.
Apple City.
lbuwtay...&amp;tuuary.11
Six area schools - Gallia
Boys Basketball
Academy. South GaiJin,
Hannan at Calwry, 7 30 pm.
Girls Basketball
River
Valley,
Meigs,
Waterford at Eastern, 6 pm.
Eastern and Southern M1Uer at Southern, 6 p.m
RtVOr Valley at South Point, 6 p m.
now knoY. who and where
Alexander vs Mo1gs, 6 p.m.
their
opening games will be
Po1nt Pleasant at Buffalo. 5:45p.m.
against. Half of those halfHannan at Calvary, 6 p.m.
Wrestling
dozen programs - RVHS.
Point Pleasant at Ropley. TBA
SGIIS and EHS - will
Tuuday. February .S

~tartthl! 2010 po. . tseason in
a ~ectionaJ final fac' ' a
win-and-in
ch.tl'
at
advancing to distrk .
Eastern (17-1) - which
earned the highest seed of
any of the Ohio Valley
Publishing programs
will be a No. 2 seed in the
Division IV bracket and
will also be looking for its
fifth consecutive sectional
championc;hip when it takes
on the winner of the
Symmes Valley-Southern
game on Saturday. Feb. 20.
at Athens High School at
2:45 p.m.
South Gnllia ( 10-7) also a D-4 program earned the No. 5 seed and
will piny fourth-~ecded
South Webster ( 13-5) at
Athen::. High School on

Thursday. Feb. 18, in a . . ectiona! final at 6:15p.m. The
Lad) Rebels will bl! aiming
for their fourth consecutive
sectional championship.
Southern (3-15) - the
remaining D-4 program
from the area - earned the
10-seed and will play in a
sectional semifinal against
No. 7 Symmes Valle) (610) at AHS on Monday.
Feb. 15. at 8 p.m. The winncr will play Reedsville
Eastern in the sectional
final.
ln Division liJ. River
Valley (7-11) earned the
...,ixth-seed and will open
tournament play in a sectiona! final at Wellston
High School on Saturday.
Feb. 20. against No. 3
Lucasville Valley (12-4) at

sweep Miller

I p.m.

The road will he a little
harder for Division II programs Galli a Academy (98) and Meigs (8-9). as both
teams will have to play at
least twice to get out of the
sectional bracket.
The Blue Angels earned
the sixth-seed and will take
on No.3 Sheridan (15-4) in
a sectional semifinal at
Alexander High School on
Thursday. Feb. 18, at 6:15
p.m. The winner "ill take
on either South Point.
Athens or Vinton County in
the sectional final at AHS
on Saturday, Feb. 20 at2:45
p.m.
The Lady Marauders
earned the ninth-seed and

~

HEMLOCK
The
Eastern girls basketball
team captured its ninth consecutive
victory of
the season
-and kept
its league
title hopes
alive in the
proce s during
a
convincing
68-22 victory over
ho~t Miller
on Monday
night in a
Tri-Valley
Conference
Hocking
Division
matchup in
P e r r y
County.
The visiting Lady
Eagles
(18-1. 8-1 TVC Hocking)
- ranked seventh in the
Division IV AP poll had little trouble with the
Lady Falcons ( 1-8 TVC
Hocking). leading wire-towire in the 46-point triumph.
EHS stormed out to a
13-3 advantage after eight
minutes of play, then went
on a 21 ·6 second period
surge to take a comfortable 34-9 cushion into the
intermission.
The Green and White
kept that rh) thm going
into the second half as the
!!Uests went on a 21-6
charge in the third for a
commanding 55-15 edge
headed into the finale.
EHS outscored the hosts
13-7 down the stretch to
''rap up the . . ea:son sweep
of MHS.
Eastern - which i:s currently one game behind
(9-0 TVC
Waterford
Hocking)
can only
clinch a share of the

Please see Tourney, Bl

IRLS BASKETBALL
Eastern 68, M11ler 22
Meigs 55, Belpre 43 OT
Wayne 48, Pt Pleasant 40
Wahama 67, CLC 50
Southern at Fed Hock, late

BOYS BASKETBALL
Wahama 85, CLC 44
Chillicothe 33, Gallia 21
OVCS 65, Fatrhaven 34

0HIOAPBOYS
BASKEfBALL POLL
How a state panel of sports writers and
broadcasters rates Ohoo high school
b9)'s basketball teal"ls on the weekly
Assoc1ated Press poll of 2010, by
OHSAA dovlsions. w1th won·lost record
ahd total points (frst·place votes In
parentheses)·
DIVISION I
Cols. Northland (25)
2. Gahanna L.ncoln
S Mansfield Sr
4 Warren Hard ng
5 Ctn La Sale
't

1~

250

16.() 212
13.() 169
13-2 120
14·2 114
14·2 102
13·2 62
12·2 69
9
11·3 50
10 Con Moe er
13-3 44
Othel'8 receiving 12 or more points:
11 WestervUie S 42 12 Mass1llon
Jackson 32 13 Lakewood St Edward
29 14, Tol St Johns 25 15, Can
McKonley 18 16, Cln. Pr nceton 12
DIVISION II
Day. Dunbar (14)
11·1 246
2, Akr. Buchtel (11)
14.() 233
3, Cots. DeSales
15·2 181
4, Poland Sem1nary (1)
13·1 146
5. Day. Cham-Julienne
14·2 142
6, Port Clinton
15-0 123
7, Cle. Benedictone
13·3 81
8, Akr. SVSM
9-4 75
9, Defiance
13·2 64
tO, Circleville Logan Elm 13·2 52
Othe1'8 receiving 12 or more points:
11 (t1e) Athens Dover 14
1

DIVISION Ill
1, Ftnd!ay Lib-Benton (22) 15-0 253
2, Middletown MadiSon (2) 16-0 226
3, E. Can.
1~ 173
4, Plymouth
14.0 167
5. Oak HII (1)
15-0 141
6, Ctn. Taft
12·2 111
7, Coldwater
11·2 87
8, Card ngton-Llncoln
14·1 67
9, Peebles (1)
1~ 54
10, Ironton
13-2 28
Others receiving 12 or more points:
11, Cle. VASJ 19 12 (lie) Cols
lew Hts. Campbell Memorlal17
Leavittsburg Labrae. Newton
•

J

DIVISION IV
!,-Newark Cath. (19)
14·0 251
2, Continental (1)
15·1 214
3 McDonald (1)
15·0 197
4, S Charleston SE (1)
14·1 160
5, Ft. Recovery
13·1 122
6, Day. JeHerson (2)
12·3 116
T7, Reedsville Eastern (1) 14·1 83
T7, Berlin Holand
12·2 83
9, Shadyside
13·0 55
10, McComb
13·2 45
Othe1'8 receiving 12 or more points:
11, C.n Seven Ho Is 20 12. Kahda 18
13, Youngs Chnsuan (1) 14 14, Russia
13

Bro\vns release
WR Stallworth
CLEVELAND (AP) D!mte · Stallworth ""ill get
the chance to reo;urrcct his
NFL career, but it Y.on't
happen in Cleveland.
The Browns released the
troubled ""ide receiver on
Monday, wasting little time
after NFL Commissioner
er Goodell said I•riday
Stallworth would he
•
remstated following the
Sypcr Bowl.
.. .Stallworth ""as suspended for the 2009 season by
Gtlodell after he pleaded
guilty to killing a pedestri~ while driving drunk in
1-Torida. He spent 24 days
ifl,;jai I.
-Stallworth, 29, spent
Qne season with the
Bfowns. catching 17 passCS" for 170 yards and one
tt&gt;uchdown 1n 2008.

'

Eastern's
Brayden
Pratt, far
right,
makes a
pass down
to the baseline while
be guarded
by
Wahama's
Matt Arnold
during
Saturday
night's nonconference
boys bas1
ketball
game in
Mason,
W.Va. Also
pictured are
Eastern's
Titus Pierce
(21) and
Wahama's
Tyler
Kttchen,
left.
Sarah Hawley/
photo

I

Eastern holds Off Whl.te FalCOnS, 55-52

BY BRYAN WALTERS
BWALTERSCMYDAILYTR!BUNE COM

league titlenight's
headedSenior
into
Thursday
Night showdown with the
' Lady Wildcats.
.
I ~aterford won its 45th
st~a1ght league contest a~d
c!mche~ -~ :share of :ts
slxth-.stl a•=~t
. T\ C
~ockm~ t1tlc Wit~ nn
1mpres:s!ve 74-45 VICtory
oyer Tnmble on Monday
mght.
_The Lady Eagles had 1.0
dtffer~nt playe_rs score 111
the VIctory. '~ 1th Beverly
M_axson leadmg ~he way
WJ~h _ a ga~e-htgh I 7
pomts .. Kas~) ~urley w.as
next :"'lth I) PO!nts. wh1le
Audnonna Pulhns posted
a double~douhle effon of
1 pomts and I 0
'reboun~s.
Emen Connery added
se\'en markers. followed
by Hayley Gillian and
Brooke Johnson with four
apiece. Allie Rawson contributed three markers.
while Brenna Holter,
Ashle\
Putnam
and
Kelse)• Myers all rounded
out the :.coring with two
points each.
,\1egan Vogle~ong paced
Miller '' ith seven points.
follov.cd
by
Haley
Crawford and Abb) Toth
with six markers each.
Daravn Wood and Lauren
Thonip. . on tounded out the
scoring with two points
apiece.
Eastern will make its
home finale on Thursday
ni!!ht \\hen it takes on
Waterford in a TVC
Hoc:king matchup at o
p.m. Waterford - ranked
I Oth in the D-4 AP poll "on the first conte...,t by a
55-50 margin.
1

BY SARAH HAWLEY
SHAWLEY@MYDAILYTRIBUNE COM
.MASON, W.Va. - The
Eastern Eagles held off a
late rally by the Wahama
White Falcons (9-7) in
1 Saturday evening's contest
between the future league
I opponents.
The White Falcons scored
first, going ~p 3-0. before
Eastern took 1ts fir!)t le.ad at
4-3. Wahama and Eastern
traded baskets, before the
White Falcon..., went on a 5-0
run to stretch their lead to
11-6. Wahama Jed 18-12
with I :30 remaining in the
first quarter. when the
Eagles began a 20-1 nm that
would cover the remainder
of the first half. The lone

Johnson

Whitlatch

Wahama point came on a
free throw by Trenton Gibbs
with 2:30 remaining in the
se~ond quaner. After trailing by three at the end of the
first quar1er, Eastern led by
II . .30-Jl), at the half.
Wahama scored the first
five points or the third quurtcr to cut the Lady Eagles'

lead to six points. The
White Falcons got back to
within si~ on four occasions
in the third quarter. with neither team scoring' in the final
nearlv two minutes of the
quarter. Eastern Jed b) six
36-30 at the end of the third
quaner.
The founh quarter staned
the way that the third ended
as neither team scored for
the first minute, before
Wahama cut the lead to four.
One minute later. the Eagles
had stretched the lead back
to 10 points at 44-34. The
White Falcon~ scored fhe
stmight to cut the lead back
to five. Wahama got to
within one on free throw..., by
Elijah Honaker and Ryan
Lee in the final seconds of

the game, hefore Eastern
took the 55-52 lead on two
free throws by Mike
Johnson to end the game.
The Eagles won b) a final of
55-52.
The game had two ties.
both in the fir t half. before
Eastern took the lead ""ith
6:45 remaining in the :second
quarter and would not trail
again. The largest lead for
the Eagles came at the half.
with the II point margin,
and Wahama had their
largest lead in the first quarter. as they led by six poinh.
on two separate occasiOns.
Eastern was led in scoring
by Mike Johnson with 20
poinh, including a 10-14
~

Please see Eagles, Bl

Point falls to Wayne
BY SARAH HAWLEY
SHAWLEY@MYDAILYTRIBUNE.COM
POINT PLEASA.'\'T, W.Va.
- The Point Pleasant Lady
Knights (6-11) fell to the
Wayne Lady Pioneers by a
score of 48-40 on Monda)
evening.
The Lady Kni!!hts and
Wayne traded points in the
first quarter, and Point
Pleasant took an 11-10 lead at
the end of the first. Wavnc,
with a go&lt;XI dcfensi\'e effort,
hdd the Lady Knights to only
seven JX1ints in the second
quarter. Wayne scored 13 in
the qmu1er, to take a 23-18
lead at the half.
Wayne
continued
to
increase the lead. as they out
scored Point Pleasant 17-10 in
the thinl qumter. Wavne led
40-28 at the start of the fourth
quarter. The Ladv Knights
rallied in the fourth, as they
cut the Wayne lead, but could
only get to within eight.
Wayne won by a final score of
48-40.
The Ladv Kniehts were led
by Kohl Slone v.~th 12 points.
Andrea Porter scored nine

points, Katie Bruner added
eight
points.
Ashle)
Templeton had six points. and
Amanda Roush scored five
points.
Wa) ne ''as led by Sam
Queen with 13 points. Kristen
Stiltner had II points. Paige
Childers scored 10 points,
Erica Kitchen added five
points. Paige Kelley had four
(X)ints. Ashley Willi:. scored
three points. and Tosha
Maynard added t\\ o (X&gt;int...,.
'I11e Lady Knights retum to
the cou11 on Thursda) a . . they
travel to Aulfalo.
WAYNE 48,
POINT PLEASANT 40
Wayno 10 13 17 8 - 48
Point
11 7 10 12 - 40
WAYNE (8·8)' Kayta Wallace 0 0.0 0,
Erica Kitchen 2 1·5 5, Poigc Childers 5
0.0 10 S m Queen 3 5-5 13, Ashley
Willis 0 3·6 3 Tosha Maynard 0 2-4 2
Patgo Kcl y 12·4 4 Knsten StJIIner 3 58 1t TOTALS 14 18·32 48 Th·ee-pomt
goals 2 (OueC:l)
POINT PLEASANT (6·11) Andrea
Porter 4().() 9 Kohl Slone 4 2·7 12. Kat1e
Bruner 24-4 8, Cassandra Cook 0 ().() 0
Amanda Roush 2 ().() 5, Ashley Burns 0
0.0 0, Skytar Dawl&lt;tns 00·0 0 Elizabeth
LMngston 0 ().() 0 Ashley Templeton 1
4·4 6 Megan Dav11; 0().() 0 TOTALS 13
10.15 40 Throo-poant goals 4 (Slone 2
Porter Roush)

1

Sarah Hawley/photo
Point Pleasant'~ Elizabeth Livingston, left, looks to make a
pass past a pa1r of Wayne defenders during the frrst half of
Monday night's Cardinal Conference girls basketball game
· t PI
a t Potn easant.

I

EASTERN 68, MILLER 22
Eastern 13 21 21 13 - 68
Mer
3667-22
EASTERN (18·1 8·1 TVC Hock ng)
Bren:1a Holter 2 Beverly Maxson 17
Audnonna Pu ns 12 Hayley G 18n 4
Kasey Turley 15 Emer Connery 7
4
~~ ~a=a~ iels~;x'J;e.:;nson
MILLER (1·8 we Hocking) Ha ey
Crawtord 6 Mogan Voge song 7 Abby
Toth 6 Darayn Wood 2, Lauren
Thompson 2

�- - --

...........---·-

---·~~--~-~--~~----

- --

- ~---

Page 82 • The Daily Sentinel

-

www .myd a ilysentine l.com

Tu esd ay, February 9 ,

•
2010

Lady Marauders outlast Defenders end skid, top Fairhaven 65-34
Belpre in OT, 55-43
B Y B RYAN WALTERS

BWALTERSOMYDAILYTRIBUNECOM

B Y BRYAN W ALTERS

CHARLESTON. W.Va.The Ohio Valley Christian
boys
basketball
team
returned to its winning ways
on Monday night during a
convincing 65-34 victory
over host Fairhaven during
non-conference matchup in
Kanawha County.
The
Defenders
(6-8)
snapped a four-game losing
streak during the wire-towire triumph. establishing a
12-11 advantage after eight
minute:-. of play against the
Comets.
aves continued its early

BWALTERS@MYDAILYTRIBUNE.COM

BELPRE - The Meigs
girls basketball team needed
overtime. but the Lady
Marauders were able to end
a four-game losing streak
Monday night during a 5543 victory over host Belpre
during
a
Tri-Valley
Conference Ohio Division
matchup in Washington
County.
The Lady Marauders (9-9,
6-5 TVC Ohio) were able to
climb back to .500 on the
season due. in large part. to
their ability to hit clutch free
throws down the stretch.
MHS was 23-of-26 at the
charity stripe over the final
12 minutes of play, including 15-of-17 at the line during the ovenime session.
Both Meigs and the Lady
Golden Eagles (4-14, 2-9)
were tied at 38 after regulation. but the Maroon and
Gold went on a 17-5 surge
in the extra sesston to wrap
up the season sweep of
BHS. Meigs also defeated
Belpre by a 44-33 margin
back on January II at Larry
R. Morrison Gymnasium.
The guests took a small
14-11 advantage after eight
minutes of play. then traded
points (c;;ix apiece) with
Belpre in the second canto
for a 20-17 edge at the intermission.
Belpre went on a 9-6 run
in the third period, tying the
contest at 26-all headed into
the finale. Both teams traded
12 points apiece in the
fourth to end regulation
knotted at 38.
Tricia Smith scored all II
of her points in that extra
session - including making
her last nine of 10 attempts
- to help the guests finish
out the 12-point triumph.
Morgan
Howard
led
Meigs with a double-double
effort of 25 points and 25
rebounds, both of which

T. Smith

Howard

were game-highs. Howard
scored 16 of those after halftime. including six in the
overtime session.
Miranda Grueser was next
with 12 points, follmved by
Smith with l l and Jazzman
Fish with four markers.
Chandra
Stanley
and
Shanalle Smtth rounded out
B Y B RYAN W ALTERS
the respective scoring with
BWALTERS@ MYDAILYTRIBUNE.COM
two points and one point.
MHS was 27-of-35 overall at the free throw line for
MASON. W.Va. - The
77 percent. Meigs also post- night went about as well as
ed team numbers of 48 Taylor Hysell. Deidra Peters
rebounds (22 offensive). 10 and Kayla Lanier could have
steals, nine assists and 22 hoped for Monday evening.
turnovers in the decision.
as
Wahama
celebrated
Regina Leftwich and Senior Night in style with a
Allison Flowers both paced comincing 67-50 victory
Belpre with 12 points over visiting Cross Lanes
apiece. followed by Kelsey Christian during a non-conCrislip with eight markers. ference matchup in Mason
The ho~t~ were also 7-of-11 County.
at the charity stripe for 63
The Lady Falcons 02-8)
percent.
' ~adually got better ~s the
Meigs returns to action , ~tght progressed after JUmptonight when it hosts River mg ou~ to a s!nall 11-8 lead
Valley in a non-conference after etght mmutes &lt;.?f play.
makeup game at 6 p.m.
WHS then extended Its lead
with a 17-12 run in the second
canto for a 28-20 advanMEIGS 55, B ELPRE 43 OT
Meigs
Belpre

14 6
11 6

6
9

12 17 12 5 -

night at the free throw line.
Titus Pierce scored eight
points. before leaving the
game with a right leg injury,
grabbed six rebounds. and
led the team in steals with
three.
Jake Lynch added seven
points. Devon Baum and
Kelly Winebrenner each
scored five points, Brayden
Pratt had fou r points, Tyler
Hendrix
added
three
points, and Kyle Connery
had one point.
For the White Falcons,
Zach Whitlatch had 19
points and Ryan Lee scored
17 to lead the team. Isaac
Lee. Matt Arnold, and
Honaker each scored four
points. Tyler Kitchen had
three points. and Trenton
Gibbs had one point.
The Eagles out rebounded Wahama 29 to 23 in the
contest. with Winebrenner
and Pierce each grabbing
six boards for Eastern, and
Ryan Lee having seven
rebounds for Wahama.
Eastern was 16-51 ( .313)
from the field, while
Wahama was 20-53 (.377)
in the contest. The Eagles
went 18-27 (.667) from the
free throw line. with

Tourney
from Page Bl
will take on No. 8 Wan·en
(8-11) in a sectional quarterfinal at Alexander High
School on Monday, Feb. 15.
at 8 p.m. The winner will

rhythm into the second
canto. going on a 19-11
surge to take a 41-22 cushion~into the intermtssion.
The guests never looked
back from that point on.
going on a pair of I 2-6 runs

OVCS

ovcs

65,

22
Fairhaven 11

FAIRHAVEN

19 12 12 11 6
6 -

34

65

34

OVCS (6-8). Peter Carmen 17, Jonathan
VanMeter 10, Dantellrw1n 10. Paul M1ller
8, Chance Burleson 8, Kyle Scott 2. Ben
Tillis 2. Josh Scott 2.
FAIRHAVEN (n/a) M•chael Cantrell 19,
Kalab Elliott 10. Jonathan Stepp 4,
Austin Miller 1

Hysell

Wood

tage headed into the intermission.
CLCS made its biggest
charge of the night during
the third quarter, but was
still outscored by a slim 1715 margin - allowing the
Red and White to take a 4535 cushion into the finale.
Wahama closed regulation

on a 22- 15 surge to wrap up
the 17-point triumph.
Hysell led Wahama with a
double-double effort of 31
points and 10 rebounds. both
of which were game-highs.
Alex Wood and Karista
Ferguson were next with 12
pomts apiece, followed by
Kelsey Zuspan with I 0
markers.
Paige Gardner rounded
out the scoring with two
points. WHS was 13-of-25
at the free throw line for 52
percent. Neither Peters nor
Lanier scored in the contest.
Rebecca Linville paced
CLCS with 26 points, followed by Erika Beller with
13 and Emily Shaffer with
10 markers. The guests were

8-of-12 at the charity stripe
for 67 percent.
Wahama will return to
action on Monday when it
hosts St. Mary's in a nonconference matchup at 7
p.m.
WAHAMA 67,
CROSS LANES CHR.
CL Chr
Wahama

8
11

12 15 15 17 17 22 -

50
50
67

CROSS LANES CHRISTIAN (n/a):
Rebecca Lmv111e 1 t 2·2 26. En.ka
1-2 13. Emily Shaffer 3 4-4 10.
Lowery 0 1-2 1 Heather W1lhams 0
TOTALS: 20 8-12 50 Three·po•nt goals· 2
(Linville 2).
WAHAMA {12·8): Taylor Hysell 10 10-1 1
31, Alex Wood 6 0·2 12. Karista
Ferguson 5 1-5 12. Kelsey Zuspan 4 2-7
10. Paige Gardner 1 0-0 2. Deidra Peters
0 0-0 0, Kayla Lamer 0 0-0 0, Mackenzie
Gabritsch 0 0-0 0, Kelsey Billups 0 0-0 0,
Whitney F1elds 0 0-0 0, Kat1e Dav1s 0 0-0
0. TOTALS: 26 13·25 67. Three-point
goals: 2 (Hysell, Ferguson).

8.1

55

43

MEIGS (9-9, 6-5 TVC Oh•o): MICIU
Barnes 0 0-2 0, Tric1a Smith 1 9-10 11.
Shanalle Sm1th 0 1-2 1, Miranda Grueser
2 8-8 12. Morgan Howard 9 7-10 25,
Chandra Stanley 1 0.1 2, Alaine Arnold 0
0·0 0, Jazzman Fish 1 2·2 4. TOTALS · 14
27·35 55. Three-point goals: None.
BELPRE (4-14, 2·9 TVC Ohio): Brianna
Harley 2 3-6 7, Kelsey Crislip 2 2-2 8,
Tara Ruth 1 0-0 2. Allison Flowers 5 0-0
12. S. Boso 0 0-0 o. Brandi Fitch 1 0-0 2,
Brooke Kapple 0 0-0 0, C. Hall 0 0·0
Regina Leftwich 5 2·3 12. TOTALS: 16 711 43. Three-point goals: 4 (Crislip 2.
Flowers 2).

o.

White Falcons win on Senior Night, 85-44
BY S ARAH H AWLEY
SHAWLEY@MYDAILYTRIBUNE.COM

MASON. W.Va. - On
Senior Night, it \vas the lone
White Falcons' senior leading the way as Wahama
defeated
Cross
Lanes
Christian 85-44.
Zach Whitlatch had 21
points to set the pace for the
red and white in the victory.
Wahama led in the first
quarter by a score of 24-18.
The
White
Falcons
outscored
Cross
Lanes

Christian 22-6 in the second
quarter. as Wahama took a
46-24 half time lead.
The White Falcons continued to increase their lead. as
they outscored CLC 17-12
in the third quarter. Wahama
sealed the victory in the
fourth as they scored an
additional 22 points. The
White Falcons won by a
final of 85-44.
Wahama was led by
Whitlatch with 21 points.
Ryan Lee and Matt Arnold
each added 14 points, Elijah

Honaker had eight points,
Anthony Bond scored seven
points, Isaac Lee added six
points, and Hunter Oliver,
Trenton Gibbs. and D.J.
Gibbs each had five points.
Cross Lanes Christian ..vas
led by Grant Humphrey with
15 points and Blake Moore
with 11 points.
Wahama and Cross Lanes
Christian play the rematch
on Thursday at Cross Lanes
Christian. and Wahama
hosts Point Pleasant on
Friday.

WAHAMA 85,
CROSS LANES CHR.
CLC
Wahan•a

18 6
24 22

12 8 17 22 -

44
44

85

CROSS LANES CHRISTIAN (n/a):
M•cah Mark 4 0-1 8. Chris DeBoard 1 00 2. Anthony Mahairas 1 0-0 2. Blake
Moore 4 2-2 11, Donald Roberts 0 2-2 2,
Grant Humphrey 6 2·5 15. Garrett Hogg
1 2·5 4. TOTALS: 17 8-15 44. Threepoint goals: 2 (Moore, Humphrey).
WAHAMA (10.7): Hunter Oliver 2 0-0 5,
Elijah Honaker 4 0.1 8, Anthony Bond 3
1-1 7, Austin Jordan 0 0-0 o. Trenton
Gibbs 2 1·1 5, Ryan Lee 6 0-0 14, Zach
Whitlatch 8 3-3 21. D.J. Gibbs 2 0.0 5,
Isaac Lee 3 0-0 6. Tyler Roush o 0-0 0.
TOTALS: 36 6-9 85. Three-point go.
(Ryan Lee 2, Whitlatch 2, Oliver, A
D.J. Gibbs).

White Falcons sweep county rival Hannan, 82-30
B Y BRYAN W ALTERS
BWALTERS@ MYDAILYTRIBUNE.COM

Sarah Hawley/
photo

fromPageBl

VanMeter

14 pt!rcent. Burleson also
had a team-high six steals.
Michael
Cantrell
led
Fairhaven
Christian
Academy with a game-high
19 points. followed by
Kaleb Elliott with I 0 and
Jonthan Stepp with four
markers. The hosts were 9of-17 at the stripe for 53 .
cent.

Lady Falcons beat CLCS on Senior .Night, 67-50

Eastern's
Titus Pierce.
right, soars
toward the
basket while
Wahama
defender
Ryan Lee,
left, tries to
block his
shot during
Saturday's
boys basketball contest in
Mason.

Eagles

Carman

in each quarter of the second
half to wrap up the 31-point
decision. The Defender~ also
led 53-28 at the end of the
third period.
Peter Carman led the Blue
and Gold with a double-double effort of 17 points and II
rebounds.
followed
by
Jonathan VanMeter and
Daniel Irwin with 10 markers apiece. Both Paul Miller
and Chance Burleson also
added eight points each to
the winning cause.
Kyle Scott, Ben Tillis and
Josh Scott rounded out the
scoring v;ith two points
apiece. aves was just 1-of7 at the free throw line for

Wahama going 7-12 (.583).
Eastern won the JV game
by a score of 54-51. The
Eagles were led by Max
Carnahan with 21 points
and Wahama was led by
Austin Jordan with 15
points.
Eastern. \vho are currently ranked No.7 in the Ohio
AP poll. host River Valley
in Tuesday in a game that
had been postponed three
previous times. The White
Falcons
hosted
Cross
Lanes
Christian
on
Monday.
E ASTERN
Eastern
Wahama

55, WAHAMA 52

15 15 6
18 1 11

19 - 55
22- 52

EASTERN (14-1 ): Mike Johnson 5 10·
14 20, Jake Lynch 3 0·2 7, Kelly
W•nebrenner 1 2·2 5, Brayden Pratt 1 2·
3 4, Titus Pierce 3 2·2 8, Tyler Hendrix 1
0-Q 3, Kyle Connery 0 1·2 1. Devort
Baum 2 1-2 5. TOTALS: 16 18-27 55.
Three-pomt
goals:
3
(Lynch,
Wmebrenner, Hendrix).
WAHAMA (9·7): Zach Whitlatch 7 1-2
19. Melt Arnold 2 0-0 4, Anthony Bond 0
0-0 0. Elijah Honaker 1 2-2 4. Tyler
Kitchen 1 1-3 3, Ryan Lee 7 2-3 17,
Isaac Lee 2 0-0 4, Trenton G•bbs 0 1·2
1. TOTALS: 20 7-12 52 Three·po1nt
goals: 5 (Whitlatch 4. Ryan Lee).

Team statlsticsllndividuaflesders
Field goals: E 16-51 (.313), W 20-53
(.377); Threo-pomt goals: E 3·11 (.273),
W 5-17 (.294), Free throws: E 18-27
(.667), W 7-12 (.583): Total rebounds. E
29 (Winebrenner 6, Pierce 6), W 23
(Ryan Lee 7), Offensive rebounds: E 17
(Winebrenner 4). W 9 (Whitlatch 3);
Ass1sts: E 8 (Connery 3), W 5 (Ryan Lee
3); Steals: E 9 (Pierce 3), W 5 (Isaac lee
2); Blocks. E 2 (Pratt. Pierce), W 1
(Arnold); Turnovers: E 16, W 16; Team
fouls: E 17. W 21. JV score: E 54, W 51.

face top-seeded Marietta
( 14-3) in a sectional semi final on Wednesday. Feb. 17.
at 8 p.m . The sectional final
will be played at AHS on
Saturday. Feb . 20. at I p.m.
All of the 20 I 0 OilS I\ A
Southeast District Girls
Basketball
Tournament
brackets arc available on the
web at www.seodab.org

ASHTON.
W.Va.
Wahama led wire-to-wire and
had 11 different players reach
the scoring colunU1 on Friday
night during a convincing 8230 victory over host H&lt;mnan
in a non-conference boys basketball matchup in Mason
County.
The visiting White Falcons
(9-6) stormed out to a 15-5
advantage after eight minutes
of pla&gt;·· then went on a 25-3
sw·ge 111 the second canto for a
cornfortable 40-8 cushion at
the intem1ission.

The Wildcats (1- l 4) made
their strongest charge in the
third period, but were
outscored I 7-13 during that
frame as Wahama took a 5721 lead into the finale. WHS
closed the game on a 25-9
su~ge. wrapping up the 52pomt outcome.
The Red and White also
defeated HHS by a 92-20 margin in Mason back on January
'19. with Friday's outcome
completi~~.the season sweep.
Zach Whitlatch led the
Falcons with a game-high 17
points. followed by Trenton
Gibbs with 13 and Ryan Lee
with 10 markers. Hunter

Oliver and Matt Arnold both of-1 0 at the free throw line for
added nine points, while 40 percent.
Anthony Bond and Isaac Lee
contributed seven and six
WAHAMA 82, HANNAN 30
points to the winning cause. Wahama 15 25 17 25 - 82
Hannan
5 3
13 9 - 30
respectively.
Tyler Roush had four points WAHAMA (9-6): Hunter Oliver 3 1-2 9,
and Austin Jordan added three Elijah Honaker 1 0-4 2. Anthony Bond 2
7. Matt Arnold 3 3-3 9. Austin Jordan
for the guests . Elijah Honaker 02·23-4
3. Trenton Gibbs 6 1-2 13. Ryan
and Tyler Kitchen rounded out Lee 3 3-3 10. Zach Whitlatch 5 4·4 17.
th~ scoring with two JJ9ints D.J. Gibbs 0 0-0 0. Isaac Lee 2 2·4 6,
Kitchen 1 0·2 2. Tyler Roush 2 0-0
aptece. W AS was 19-ot-32 at Tyler
4 TOTALS: 28 19·32 82. Three-point
the free throw line for 59 per- goals: 7 (Whitlatch 3. Oliver 2. Bond. A.
Lee).
cent.
HANNAN (1-14): Jared Cobb 1 0·0 3.
Derrick Akers paced the Jacob
Taylor 2 2-7 6, Tyler Jenkins 0 0·0
Blue and Gold with II points. 0, Matt Randolph 0 0-o 0, Brad Fannin 1
followed by Alex Facemyer 0.1 2, Derrick Akers 4 0·0 11 Daniel
Black 0 0-Q 0, Austin Akers 0 0.0 0, Alex
with eight and Jacob Taylor Facemyer
3 2·2 8. TOTALS: 11 4-10 30.
with six. markers. HHS was 4- Three-point goals: 4 (0. Akers 3, Cobb).

TUESDAY TELEVISION GUIDE

�--------------------__.,~--~~-:-~-~~-~~--,---~---~-----

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

-rr;--------~----~---------

www.mydailysentinel.com

Tuesday, February 9, 201 0

--- --

The Daily Sentinel· Page 83

"!
';c.~

~ribune

- Sentinel - l\egister
CLASSIFIED

'

Meigs County, OH

'I
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PLUS ·y_ouB AD NOW ONLINE

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l\egi~ter
~H~JG~~~
(740) 446-2342 (740) 992-2156 (304) 675-1333 •

To Place

Your Ad,

Call Today...

or Fax To (740) 446-3oos

or Fax To (740) 992-2157

Or Fax To (304) 675-5234

0IHI.d~irl4' .

GET YOUR CLASSIFIED LINE AD NOTJCED
Now you can hove borders and graphics
added to your classified ads
_s ~
Borders $3.00/perod
E!i1
Graphics 50¢ for small
$1.00 for Iorge

Display: Ads

Monday thru Friday
8:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m.
KO.W

:ro WRITE AN AD

Successful Ads
Should Include These Items
To Help Get Response...

Dally In-column: 9:00 fl.m.
Monday-Friday for Insertion
In Next Day's Paper
Sunday In:.Column: 9:00a.m.
Friday For Sunday5 Paper

l&gt;esc:rlptlon • lnc:lude A Prlc:t • Awld Abbreviation•
• lnc:lude Phone Number And Addras When Needed
• AdJ Should Run 7 Days

«POLICIES
Ohio Valley
Publishing reserves
the right to edit,
reject or cancel any
ad at any time.
Errors Must B
Reported on the firs
ay of publicatio
nd the
Tribune
ntinei·Register will
e responsible for n
more than the cost o
he space occupie
y the error and onl
he first insertion. W
hall not be liable fo

THE
CLASSIFIEDS
aren't only for
buying or selling
items, you can use
this widely read
sedion to wish
someone a
Happy Birthday,
provide a Thank
You, and place an
ad "In Memory"
of a loved one.
For more informa·
tion, contact your
local Ohio Valley
Publishing office.

MAKE
SOMEONE'S
DAY!

Mi.scellaneous

Announcements

3·Morgan •carson City'
Silver
Dollars.
1881,
1879,
1892.
Scarce
$475; Also Elgin Hunters
Case,
Pocket
Watch,
gold
filled,
7·Jewels
w/Simmons chain mce
$150 ca11740·533·3870.

Lost &amp; Found
Found in the 218 area.
Brown &amp; white long hair
&amp; short tail australian
shepard
or
springer
spaniel. Has collar - no
name.
Call
740-256·1695.

51 Silver Dollars. Com·
mon Dates. $18 ea. Also,
169 Silver Dimes $1.55
ea. These are niCe.
740-533·3870

Lost male Schnauzer Thurs.
on Jell)' Run Rd Sil,·er &amp;

Gr-.ty

needs

medicatiOn

304·576-2154.

Want To Buy

Reward· lost Engli'h Bull·

miSSIOn
of
dvertisement.
orrections will
In the firs

(740) 992-2155

.t)Ieasant l\egister

(304) 675-1333

seen Sunday
eyenmg 02·07· 10 by the Je·
hovah 's Witness Church 1/4
mile from Pauls Ex~on on
Rt 2 call 304-675-8805 or
3~-674·5-197.

Notices

1000

Real
dvertisements
ar
ubject to the Federal
Fair Housing Act o
1968.
newspape
ccepts only hel
anted ads meeting
EOE standards.
We
will
no
nowlngly accept an
dvertisement
I
iolatlon of the law.

CLASSIFIED INDEX
Legals..............................................: ............ 100
~ Announcements .......................................... 200
Birthday/Anniversary ..................................205
,. Happy Ads ....................................................21 0
Lost 8c Found ............................................... 215
Memory/Thank You ..................................... 220
Notlces ......................................................... 225
Personals ..................................................... 230
Wanted ........................................................ 235
Services ....................................................... 300
Appliance Service ....................................... 302
Automotive .................................................. 304
Building Materlals ....................................... 306
...................................................... 308
...............................................310
~hll..tll'=l..t&lt;&gt;rlv Care ....................................... 312
• Computers ................................................... 314
Contractors ..................................................316
Domestics/Janitorial ................................... 318
'- Electrical ...................................................... 320
1' Flnanclal ....................................................... 322
Health ........................................................... 326
Heating 8c Coollng ....................................... 328
Home Improvements 330
Insurance ..................................................... 332
Lawn Service ............................................... 334
Music/Dance/Drama .................................... 336
Other Services ............................................. 338
Plumblng/Eiectrical ..................................... 340
Professional Services ................................. 342
Repairs .........................................................344
Roofing .........................................................346
Security ........................................................348
Tax/Accounting ........................................... 350
Travel/Entertainment ........... - .....................352
Flnancial .......................................................400
Financial Servlces............................: .......... 405
Insurance .................................................... 410
• Money to Lend............................................. 415
Education ..................................................... soo
Business 8c Trade School ........................... 505
Instruction 8c Training ................................. 510
Lessons ........................................................515
Personal ....................................................... 520
Anlmals ........................................................ 600
Animal Supplles .......................................... 605
Hotses ..........................................................610
- Livestock......................................................615
Pets ...............................................................620
Want to buy ..................................................625
Agriculture ................................................... 700
Farm Equipment.. ........................................ 705
- Garden 8c Produce.......................................710
Feed, Seed, Grain ............................... 715
8c Land ........................................... 720
to buy..........\' ......................................725
Merchandise ................................................ 900
Antlques .......................................................905
Appliance ..................................................... 910
Auctions .......................................................915
Bargain Basement....................................... 920
Collectlbles .................................................. 925
- Computers ................................................... 930
Equlpment/Supplles ....................................935
_ Flea Markets ................................................ 940
Fuel Oil Coal/Wood/Gas ............................. 945
Furniture ...................................................... 950
Hobby/Hunt 8c Sport.................................... 955
Kid's Corner................................................. 960
Mlscellaneous..............................................965
Want to buy .................................................. 970
Yard Sale ..................................................... 975

Absolute Top Dollar · s1l·
ver/gold
coins.
any
10KJ14K/18K gold j9W·
elry, dental gold, pre
1935
US
currency.
proolim1nt
sets,
dia·
monds. MTS Coin Shop.
151 2nd Avenue, Galli·
polis. 446·2842

la\t

Recreational
Veh1cles

rate card

The Daily Sentinel

.......

200

Diesel,

(740) 446-2342

__ _

POLICIES: ONo 'llllley Publltllllng rttii'Vea 11w nght to «&lt;it. rejec:l. or c:enceleoy ad at all)' lime. Error• mlllll ~ reported on tne flrst day ot piJbllcatlorl and the
Tl1b~nllnei-Reglltec will be r"POntlble tor oo more than the ooe1 of the apace occ.Jpled by the «ror end onlrthe flrwt lneertlon. We ehell no1 be Ueble !of
any I08e or I)(J)enee that retullt from the publfc:etlon or omlaelon ol an ad\ltttieemem C¢neellon will be m~de In the llflll eva Hable tditlon • So~ number edt
are alwaya confidential • Current rate card applies. ·All rllll ettate ICIVertlsememe are subject to the Federal Fair Houalng Act of 1968 • Th._ ,_~per
~CCeP~• onlv l"&gt;&gt;lp wa~ edt mHtlng EOE 81andardc We will not knowing!) a~pt any advettl81ng •n violation or the lew. WIN not be responsible 101 any
errore In an ad liken OYtf the ptlone.

dog an'wef'o to the name

®allipolis i!lailp ~ribune

~oint

All Dlsplayt 12 Noon 2
Business Days Prior To
Publication
Sullday Display: 1:00 p.m.
Thursday for Sundays Paper

*All ads must be prepaid"

• Start Your Ad5 With A Keyword • Include Complete

m

Recreational Vehicles ............................... 1000
ATV ............................................................. 1005
Blcycles......................................................1010
Boats/Accessories .................................... 1015
Camper!RVs 8c Trallers ............................. 1020
Motorcycles ............................................... 1025
Other ..........................................................1030
Want to buy ...............................................1035
Automotive ................................................ 2000
Auto RentaVLease .....................................2005
Autos .......................................................... 2010
Classic/Antiques ....................................... 2015
Commercial/Industrial .............................. 2020
Parts 8c Accessorles ..................................2025
Sports Utility ..............................................2030
Trucks.........................................................2035
Utility Trailers ............................................ 2040
Vans ............................................................2045
Want to buy ...............................................2050
Real Estate Sales ...................................... 3000
Cemetery Plots ............•........•..........•......... 3005
Commerclal................................................3010
Condomlniums .......................................... 3015
For Sale by Owner.....................................3020
Houses for Sale ......................................... 3025
Land (Acreage) .......................................... 3030
Lots ............................................................3035
Want to buy................................................3040
Real Estate Rentals ...................................3500
Apartments/Townhouses ......................... 3505
Commerclal ................................................3510
Condomlnlums .......................................... 3515
Houses for Rent ........................................ 3520
Land (Acreage) .....•..•...............•................. 3525
Storage .......................................................3535
Want to Rent .............................................. 3540
Manufactured Housing ............................. 4000
Lots.............................................................4005
Movers ............•...........•...............................4010
Rentals ....................................................... 4015
Sales ...........................................................4020
Supplles ..................................................... 4025
Want to Buy ............................................... 4030
Resort Property ......................................... sooo
Resort Property for sale ........................... 5025
Resort Property for rent. .......................... 5050
Employment...............................................6000
Accountlng/Financial ................................6002
Admlnlstratlve/Professlonal .....................6004
Cashier/Cierk ............................................. 6006
Child/Elderly Care..................................... 6008
Clerical ....................................................... 6010
Construction ..............................................6012
Drivors 8c Delivery ..................................... 6014
Educatlon ................................................... 6016
Electrical Plumbing ...................................6018
Employment Agencles ..............................6020
Entertainment ............................................ 6022
Food Services............................................6024
Government 8c Federal Jobs .................... 6026
Help anted- General .................................. 6028
Law Enforcement ...................................... 6030
Maintenance/Domestic ............................. 6032
Management/Supervisory ........................ 6034
Mechanlcs .................................................. 6036
Medlcal ....................................................... 6038 '
Muslcal....................................................... 6040
Part-Time-Temporaries ............................. 6042
Restaurants ............................................... 6044
Sales ........................................................... 6048
Technical Trades ....................................... 6050
Textiles/Factory ......................................... 6052

Home Improvements

Tax / Accounting

Basement
Waterproofing
Unconditional lifetime
guarantee. local references furnished. Estab·
lished 1975. Call 24 Hrs.
740·446-0870, Rogers
Basement Walerproofing.

AMERICAN TAX
BELIEF

GUN SHOW Chillicothe
Sat, Feb 20. 9-5 &amp; Sun
Feb 21, 9·3, St Rt 35 to
St Rt 104, Ross Co FairOther Services
grounds Adm $4, 6' Tbls
$35,
740·667-0412, Pet
Cremations.
Cali
Ohiogunshows.net
740·446-3745
I. Gates A. Penick am
not , nor never was near
DIRECTV
death. Nor do I plan to
For the best TV
be soon. Only the good
experience, upgrade
Lord knows when.
from cable to
OirecTV today I
Pictures that
Packages start at
have been
$29.99
placed in ads at
1·866·541-0834

the Gallipolis
Daily Tribune
must be picked
within 30 days.
Any pictures
that are not
picked up will be
discarded.
300

Services

Computers

DISH NETWORK
Save yo to 40% off
your cable bllll Call
dish Network today!
1·877-274-2471

Lifelock
Are You Protected?
An identity Is stolen
every 3 seconds.
Call Llfelock now to
protect your family
free fo 30-daysl
1-877-481-4882
Promocode:
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per weeki No credit
check! Guaranteed
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1·888-282-3535

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

Financial

CREDIT CARE
BELIEF
Burled In Credit Card
Debt?
Call Credit Card
Relief for your free
consultations.
1-877-264-8031

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

Repairs

.D.E.fU

USA
We solve debt
problems!
If you have over
$12,000 In debt
CALLNOWI
1-877-266·0261

Financial

400

Money To Lend
NOTICE Borrow Smart.
Contact lhe Ohio Divi·
sion of Financial lnslitu·
lions Office of Consumer
Affairs BEFORE you reli·
nance your home or ob·
tain a loan. BEWARE of
requests for any large
advance payments of
fees or insurance. Call
the Office of Consumer
Affiars
toll
free
at
1·866-278·0003 to learn
if the mortgage broker or
lender is properly li·
censed. (This is a public
service
announcement
from the Ohio Valley
Publishing Company)
500

Education

AOI
Free Home Security
$850 Value
with purchase of
alarm monitoring
services from AOT
Security Services.
Call1-888-274-3888

Have you priced a John
Deere lately? You'll be
surprised! Check oul our
used
mvenlory
at
www.CAREQ.com.
Car·
michael
740·446·2412

Equipment

Hay, Feed, Seed, Grain

;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;A;;;;ut;;;;o;;;;s;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;
99 Buick Century. 105K
mi. All power, v6 $2500
OBO
446·4879,
645·7634
-------We have a full 1nventory
of cars &amp; trucks slarting
at
$1700.
Cavaliers.
Sunfires. Buicks, Salums
&amp; morel Cook Motors,
328
Jackson
Pike.
(740)446·0103.

Ground ear corn, $8.00 a
100 lbs, bring your own
bags, 740·992·2623 or
304·991-6011
-------Hay tor sale. Round - - - - - - - Real Estate
bales, good clean hay, 3000
Sales
barn kept. 740·256·1634.
$25/bale.
900

Merchandise

For Sale By Owner
12 Unit Apt. Complex.
446-D390.

Business &amp;Trade
School
Gallipolis Career
College
(Careers Close To Home)
Call Todayl740-446·4367
1·800·214·0452
gall poilscareercol~edu
Aocr&amp;dlled Member Accredit·
1ng Councollor Independent
Colleges and Schools 12748

600

Animals

Pets
AKC Golden Retreiver
pups, MIF $350 each,
ready
now.
740-696·1085

qmall home repair, re·
modeling.
and
winter For sale 6 Shlh·Tzu
brush cult1ng. 20 yrs exp. puppies $300.00 each
certified (740)446·3682.
304·593-4705.

Security

SETTLEMENT

Settle IRS Taxes for
a fraction of what
you owe. If you owe
over $151 000 In back
taxes call now for a
free consultation.
1-877-258·5142

'95 30 Motor Home, A1r·
stream Land Yacht 454
Gas Motol'.i 48,000 m1.
EBY,
INTEGRITY,
M1chelin tires in good
KIEFER BUILT,
shape.
Needs
some
VALLEY
HORSE/LIVE·
work. Ph 11 446·9385,
STOCK
TRAILERS, Cell740-645·5142
LOAD
MAX ' EQUIP·
MENT
TRAILERS, - R - V - - - - - - CARGO EXPRESS &amp; Service al Carmichael
HOMESTEADER
Trailers
CARGO/CONCESSION
740-446·3825
TRAILERS.
B+W
GOOSENECK FLATBED RV Service at CarmiTrailers
$3999. VIEW OUR EN· chael
TIRE TRAILER INVEN· 740·446·3825
TORY AT
WWW_CARMICHAEL·
2000
Automolive
TRAILERS-COM
740·446·3825
Farm Equipment

Appliances
Houses For Sale
Sewing machine (Bern·
1na) model 1080, $350, 4 BR, 2 112 bath hOuse·
740-992-4543
lor sale in New Haven,
WV overlooking the Ohio
Equipment/ Suppliel River on 1/2 acre. In·
eludes altached garage,
gas
lireJim·s Fp Equip. Inc., outbulld1ng,
2150
Eastern Ave., place, pellet stove and ail
$118.000
Gallipolis, OH 45631 appliances.
MF 1500 &amp; 1600 Se- Call304·882·2478.
nes Tractors 0%·60
For sale by owner 3.23
mo. Lurnted t1me offer
acre farm w/ double wide
Syr. ext. eng. &amp; pwr
In
Leon
$69,900 00
tra1n
warranly.
See
304·458·2234.
dealer lor comp!ele
details. huge 1nventor
land (Acreage)
y of 3pt. rolory tillers
4·, 5', 6' &amp; 7'·made 1n Looking lor 100·400 act·
USA
Call ers of hunling land for
740-446·9777
lease
Jeff
304-984·9358.
Paul
~~~~~~~~ 304·549·1589
Fuel I Oil I Coal I
Wood/Gas

Great Pyrenees Puppies. Seasoned firewood.
$200. 740-441-0955
All Hardwood.
740·853·2439
700
Agriculture 740·446·9204.

or

Miscellaneous
Farm Equipment
STIHL Sales &amp; Service
Now Available al Carmi·
chael
Equipment
740-446-2412

Rea l Estate
Rentals

3500

Jet Aeration Motors
repaired, new &amp; rebuilt
in stock. Call Ron
Evans 1-8()().537·9528

Apartments/
Townhouses
1 and 2 bedroom apts.
furnished
and
unfur·
mshed, and houses m
Pomeroy and Middleport
secunty deposit ,equ;red,
no pets. 740·992·2218
Modem 1BR
740-446·0390

apt.

Call

�Apartment$/
Townhouses

' BR Apt. All elec. Clark
ChaP,el
Rd.
S350'mo.
Water
&amp; sewer inc.
445-6848 or 339·3224

MIDDLPORT,
1
BED·
APARTMENT
ROOM
APPLIANCES
FUR·
NISHED.
NO
PETS.
NON SMOKING, NICE
238 1st Ave Lg. Upstairs 740-856-8863
apt
overooking
nver
Furr kttchen. 2 persons N. 4th Ave., Mlddlepon.
$525+uttl Dep. req. Re~ 2 br furnished apt. dop.
Call 446·4926
&amp;
ref.,
No
pets.
2BR APT.Ciose to Hoi· 740-992·0 165
zer Hospital on SA 160 Beautiful 2 BR apt. for
CIA. (740)441 0194
htghly quahfted person or
fur- couple. W/D hookup &amp;
2br
stove/refr
nished. CiA $385.00 a dishwasher h•c. water
mon
t
dep. sewage &amp; trash. Central
heating &amp; atr. No pets.
304-675-7783.
Kelly
CONVENIENTLY
LO· $525/mo.
GATED
&amp;
AFFORD- 740-645·9096
ABLE! Townhouse apan- Beautiful Apts. at Jack·
ments.
and/or
small son Estates. 52 West·
houses lor rent. Call wood Dr from $365 to
740-441-1111 for appli- $560.
740·446-2568.
cation &amp; tnformalion.
Equal Housing Opportunity. This inslitution is an
Free Rent Special !!I
Equal Opportunity Pro·
2&amp;3BR apts $395 and
vider and Employer
up, Centra• Atr, WiD
hookup,
tenant
pays Brand New Apt. 2 BR
ei9Ctric.
Call between Rio/Jackson
area
$525/mo + dep. and ulii.
the hO!.rS of 8A-8P
EHO
No pets, CaiiG45·1286
Ellm VIew Apts.
Clean 1 br. turn. apart·
(304)882-3017
ment, Dep &amp; Ref req. no

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Page 84 • The Daily Sentinel
Apartmenb/
Townhouses

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_

r""""'_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _

Apartmenb/
Townhouses
Jordan Landing Apart·
ments
3 br. available all alec·
tnc, no pets • Ask About
Our Rent Specials ' call
for details 304·674-0023
or 304·61 0·0776

Rentals

Help Wanted· General

Nice M.H. All elect., big
lot. SR160 N of Holzer
+
dep
$470/mo
441 ·5150 or 379-2923

Industrial Workers
AMERICAN
ELECTRIC
POWER I MOUNTAIN·
EER POWER PLANT IN
NEW HAVEN , WV
SEEKING TEMPORARY
WORKERS.
seeking
people
lnterestod 1n the Operations
DepartJ'rlent position (s).
40Hr. work weeks . 12
hour rotating shtft work
requirGd. Two year De·
gree preferred.
Entry level wage rate @
approx. $13.00 per hr.
Moderate benefit pack·
age bemg offered.
Interested
candtdates
are to submit resumes by
lax 614·716-2272.

Own a New 3BR 2 BA
w/1 acre 5% dowf'. $525
mo. WAC. Nea1 Holzer
740-446-3570.

Spring
Valley
Green
Sales
Apartments
BR at
$395+2 BR at $470 2001 Clayton 14 X 50, 2
Month. 740-446·1599.
BR. 1BA. Xtra Clean
Tara
Townhouse Call
740-446-n20
or
Apanments • 2BR, 1.5 740·645-3927
bath, back patto.' pool.
AA New 4 Bedrooms
playground, (trash, sewOniYStuZO
age, water pd.)No pets
2010 Singlewtde
$450/rent,
allowed.
Incredible $19.995
$450/sec.
dep. • Call
mymidwesthomes.com
740·645-8599
740.828.2750
Houses For Rent
1 &amp; 2 BR houses Galhpo·
lis, Oh, rent starting @
$275 por rnlh . plus utili·
ttes.depoSII staning
@
S275 depostt, no pets.
256·6661
2 BR House. All alec. In
Btdwell,
$550/mo.
InC.
water &amp; sewer. 339·3224
or 446·6848

New 3BR, 2BA
as low as $241.68
per mo. and 1563.00
down. WAC
740-446-3570
"The Proctorville
Dtlference•
$1 a'ld a deed is all you
need to own your dream
home. Call Now'
Freedom Homes
888·565-0167

Trade in your old single·
smoktng,
call 4 Rms + Ba. Stove &amp; wide lor a new home 0
fridge. 50 Olive St. No money down. 446-3570.
304·593-5125 alter 4pm
pets. $450/mo + dep.
Gracious Living 1 and 2
446-3945.
Bedroom Apts. at Village
6000
Employment
Manor , and
Rtverstde 5 BR, 3.5 BA utility, carApts. in Middleport, from port, large detached 2
$327
to
S592. car gar., pool, central H
Child/Elderly Core
740-992·5064.
Equal &amp; A, close to hospital.
Housing
Opponunity.
Rent $1000. Dep $1000. Health Care worker tor
: 1 BR and bath. first
• months rent &amp; deposit.
Pets w/dep , Ret Req .. elderly tema1e if' Gallia
New 2BR Log Untt. Por, references reqUired, No
Call740·446·3481
County. 30+ hrs/week;
ter area. HP/Cent Atr.
am and pm positions
• Pets
and
clean.
$500/mo. Ret &amp; Dep.
740-441·0245
needed. $8.00/hour
to
446·2801
Manufactu~ed
4000
assist with daily living
Housing
needs. Must provide ref·
erences and agree to a
background check. SubLob
Ject to drug testing. Call
Mobile home lots avail· 740·339·0414 after 5pm
able. S130 mo. incl. wa· and/or leave a message.
' Twm Rtvers Tower Is accepting applications for
• waiting list for HUD subStdized, 1·BR apartment
lor the elderly/disabled.
call 675·6679

tit
.......

tar/sewer/trash,
740·992·5639

Call
Food Services

Rentals
Accepting resumes lor
exp. FT Subway Mgr. @
new location in Gallipolis
Ferry, WV.
Salary &amp;
Bens @ lntervtew. Send
resume to Mgr. @ 24968
2 BR Tratler for rent. Lashley Rd ..Quaker City,
$500/mo.
446-4060 or OH 43773 or apply on
line
@
www.parmar367-7762.
stores.com
2BR
Trailer
S4001mo
$400 dep. HUD Ac·
cepted. Ret. Req., No
Help Wanted· General
Vinton
area.
pets.
388·0011
2 BR Mobile Home, No
pets. Water, sewer, trash
1ncluded. At Johnson's
Mobile
Home
Park.
740-446-3160.

2BR, Ideal for 1 or 2
pte, $300/month,
fernces. No Pets,
CALLS
after
740-441-0181

peo·
ReNO
7pm

Gallipolis Boat Club has
an opening tor the posl·
tion of dockmaster. Call
(740) 446·7379 for an
applicattor
Senous in·
Nice 2 bedrooM, 5325.00 quiries only.
per month. No pets. Call
Ray 740·992·5639

Now Hiring Full nme
Employees!
Make Calls lor Conservattve Political Organiza·
lions
lnfoCision offers:
Professional WorK Environment
Excellent Benefits Pack·
age •
Weekly Pay and Bonus
Opportunities
Call and Schedule Your
Interview:
1·888-tMC·PAYU ext.
• 2311
http://jobs.infoclslon.c
'om
Ten positions need
filled by next weeki
No Sales! No Collec·
lions!
Recruit volunteers lor
!JOn·proftt orgamzatlons.
Get paid to make a dif·
terence!
Full and Part·Ttme Positions
Medical, Denta., EAP,
401K
On-Site Doctor
Weekly Pay and Bonus
Incentives'
Call TODAY!
Interview TOMOR·
ROW!IWork NEXT
WEEKI!!
1·888-IMC·PAYU
REMEMBER EXT. 1914
http://]obs.tnfoclslon.c
om
Tree Trimmer/Bucket op·
era tor
Knowledge of rigging
Climbtng expenence re·
qui red
Tree ID knowledge
CDUhelpful
Call or send resume
Tree Care Specialists
88 Thivener Road
Gallipolis. Oh 45631
740-446-2015
sswatn@ treecaresouth·
ernohio.com
EOE

Tuesday, February 9, 2010

J&amp;L
Construction
·Vinyl Siding
• Replacement
Windows
·Roofing
·Decks
·Garages
• Pole Buildings
• Room Additions
Owner:
James Keesee II
742-2332

• Room AddltJons &amp;
Remodeling

• Room additions • Routing • (,aruges
• General Rcinodcling • l'olc &amp; Hor~c
Barns • Vinyl &amp; Wood Fcndng
Foundatinns

· New Garages
• Elcctrlcol &amp; Plumbing
• Roofing &amp; Gutters
·Vinyl Siding &amp; Painting
• Patio ond Porch Oeckc
036725

MIKE W. MARCUM, OWNER

wv

47239 Riebel Rd., Long Bottom, OH
740-985-4141
740-416·1834
Fully insured
Jo'rcc estinu1tcs • 25+ years experience

V.C. YOUNG Ill
992-6215
740·591-0195
Pomeroy, Ohio
30 Years Local Experience
FULLY IN URED

Clint affilinlt-d "ilh \likt• Marcum Roullng &amp; RcmudtlinJ: I

.Home

Insurance

(USTOM ~BiNETRY
Hardwooa CCJbinetry Arld Fui~nf1ure
www.timberc:l'ftekcabhte'try.c:;m

Great coverage and
superior service

740.446,9200

(that's easy on your wallet)
Hometown Insurance Center

2A59 St. Rt. 160 • Gallipolis
CALL FOR FREE ESTIMATES

H&amp;H
Guttering
Seamless Gullers
Roofing, Siding. Gutters
Insured &amp; Bonded
740-653-9657

Discount Auto Body
Repacement Parts
The Auto Doctor

304-675-3600
SUNSET
(ONSTRUOlON
Remodeling,
Roofs, Garages,
Pole Buildings,
Siding, Decks,
Drywall, Additions
and New Homes.
Insured- Free
Estimates .

740-742-3411

llet'eaa@hometownlnsurancecenter.com

304-773-1111

ROBERT
BISSEll

BErie
~ lnsurancee

CONSTRUCTION
• New Homes
• Garages
• Complete
Remodeling

740-992-1671
Stop &amp; Compare

Total Construction

-

~~­
One Call to Do It All
Qy,ner

Pole Barns/r-.letal Roofs
Fire &amp; Water Damage
Drywall/Repair

\my Veteran

Tom Wolfe

740-416-2575

Rev.lacemcnt
Windows and
Vinyl Siding
Specialists. LTD
(740) 742-2563
• Siding • \'in) I
\\ indows • l\letal
and Shingle Root:~
• Decko; • Additions
•Eiectritlll
• Plumhing
• Pole Bams

Racine, Ohio 740-247-2019
Cell: 740-416-5047

Owners:
Jon Van Meter &amp;
Paul Rowe

email:
jrshadfrm @aol.com

Law Enforcement
The
Middleport Police
DepartMent is accepting
applica1tors !or a part
bme officer and par+ tiME"
Dtspatchers. Aprlicabons
can be picked up • •no
Mtddleport
Polic.e
De·
partment at 237 Race
St., MtCldleport, Orto. Ap·
plicants for Pollee Officer
positions must have current OPOTA certiftcation

Mobile horre·for rent.
Hud accept. call before 9pm
304-675·3423.

YOUNG'S
Carpenter Service

Get A Jump
on
SAVINGS

R.L. Hollon
Trucking

Room Addiuon~. Remodelmg ~leta! &amp;
Shingle Roof~ • ."Jc\\' llome~. Siding. Decks,
Bathroom Remodelin£. Licensed &amp; Insured

Dump Truck

Sl•nirc
\Ve do drhc\\a)s

Rick Price· 17) rs. Experience
WV#040954 Cell740-416-2960 740-992·0730

J.imestone • Gra,cl
Top Soil • Fill Dirt

740-985-4422
740-856-2609
Cell

Stanley TreeTrimming
&amp; Removal

Ponll'rll), Ohio

"'Prompt and Quail!)

Classifieds

Commercial •

Work

Residential
• Fret' Estimates
(740) 992-5009
Custom Home Bu ldmg
St~~l fora."le Bttildmg'

I"' Rea~ona ble Rates
ar

Shop the
Classifieds!

*ln~ureu

"Experienced
Reference~

Available!

Call G&lt;lr) Stank)' €1
740-591-l-l0-44

Jj~tJ
I\ Do-it-yourself classified ads
Save time and money. Go to www. mydai lyse~t, nel.com
and click on Classifieds and follow the user-friendly steps
to place your ad.

v
v
v

v
v
ONliNE
ONLY

Doiit-yourself convenience
Easy to use
Upload photos and graphics
Print and Online options
7 great packages to choose from

SELL IT
NOW

U·SRL IT
For priVate

SUPEH
SAVER

For private party
party
for private party
Run&lt;, 30 days met'charullse, 1 11181'cl1andlse, 1 merchandise, 1
Item
per
ad
lliSS
Item
per
ad
less
n11111per
!'lu• P'wtil ,,'d
than StOO
tflan $100$500 $501·$1,000
') (MJ
3 Hoes, 3 days 4 Unes, 1 days 4 lines, 10 days
5

()niY

10

s2.99

S14.99

SMART BUY DEALS ON

YARD SALE

for priVate party

For private party

WHE&amp;Z

merchandise, 1
Cws, TruckS,
Item per ad
RVa, 4-Whe81ers,
$100185000 Etc. t Item par ad
4111181, 14 days 4 linea, 4fi daye

S2Q.99 $29.99

Single and munlflllllty lllel
4 linea, 3 tlaYI

$45.99 ' $34.99

The Daily Sentinel
www.mydailysentinel.com

Public Notice

Please leave message

NOTICE OF LIEN SALE
The personal property
and contents of the fol·
lowing storage units
will be auctioned for
sale to satisfy the lien
of Hartwell Storage.
The sale will be held at
the Hartwell Storage
facility, 34055 Laurel
Wood Rd., Pomeroy,
Ohio at 10:00 a.m. on
February 25, 201 0.
Unit 20 and 43
Jerome Howard
37676 SR 143
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
(2) 9, 16

ROUSH STREET
STORAGE

• Forti &amp; ~1otor~mft
Parts • Engine~.
Tr.msfcr Cast:s 6:..
Tn111smts~ions

89 Roush St.
::\ta~on, WV 25260

• Aftermarkel
Replacement Sheet
\ldal &amp; Component~

Size, 5x 10 to 10x2ll

!·or \II \13ke' nt \eh•de&gt;

30-J-773-560 l

7411-949-1956

Advertise in
this space for
$35.00per
month

Hill's Self
Storage

Ra.:ine, Ohio

740-949-2217

NOTICE TO BIDDERS
STATE OF OHIO
DEPARTMENT OF
TRANSPORTATION
Columbus, Ohio
Office of Contracts
Legal Copy Number
100100
Sealed proposals will
be accepted from prequalified bidders at the
ODOT Office of Con·
tracts until 1 O:OOa.m.
on February 25, 2010.
Project 100100 is lo·
cated in Meigs County,
SR-681-2.58/5.39,
PART 1;
MEG-681·
17.77, PART 2 and IS a
BRIDGE
REPLACE·
MENT (3 BRIDGES)
project. The date set
for completion of thts
work sha I be as
t
forth ,.. the
proposaL Plans
nd
Specifications are on
file In the Department
of Transportation.
(2) 2, 9 2tc

SERVICE CE:\TER
1555 NYE A\c.
Pomeru\', OH
• Oil &amp; filter change
• Tune Lps • Brake ..Sen IC&lt;!
• AC RedlJrgc
• 1\1 inor ex ,aust
repair •1 tr&lt;l Repa~r
• Transmissicm Filrt•r
&amp; rluid ChJnge

• Geuerul :\led1anil.

work
(740} 9112-0910

LEWIS

Sizes 5' x 10'
to 10' x 30'

CO~CKETE

Concrete Removal

and Replacement
All Types Of

Concrete \\'m•k
2Q \cars I \per•cnn

Da" id Le\\ is
740-992-6971
lnsUI,d

wv 2182 Free bllm&lt;ilc'

"11"

Free Estimates for
• Backhoe • Trenching
• Brush Hogging
• Portable BandmiU
Tree Trimming • Setting
Poles &amp; Trusses

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

Hours

7 40-367-0544

7:00 am • 8:00 pm

7 40-367-0536

m

I

Free Estimates

Nt•w Construrtion and

icoN;:;;~~·=~~:;;;;;;~,

1

&amp; MANUFACTURING, UC
AND SIDING INSTALLATION

1

II" \pu /G/1·• If' RtJ'I&lt;ICttloC Ill ll'mdo.n
1-ut Ohler 1/omc &lt; &amp; Trto•lc r~
Vo eHru, ht•r(1c to rrplc•te Jl( 1!/lrll'nli' 11 mdou'

=

,

CONSTRUCTION

Buikhng, Remodeling
General repair
.bankscclb.com

Call740·992·9572

29625 Bashan Road
Ractne, OH 45771

MICHAEL'S
Public Notice

Sell!ng:

N"OI\

E Rkhard
Co·O\Iner \
(

ie(

Prc'1•1ent

Frt&gt;&lt;;h '\'urth Carolina
..,IIUI\1P
7-l 174.! .!%.1
l.dl'):.'-'•lkh:t

7~fl-tJ67-tUU6

~rnith

rrwt: ''· ht'"Jd\llll

:S I 0 p.:r lb C'.n,h onl}
l~m'' '.!qUire.! in ,,J,olllce
Ship01cnts arrhc e\ery
nther Fn,tav

Ac&lt;..cpting "'c\\
'ltudenr'
Pimw

Ke~ bnard

June \'an\ ranken
Pom cro~·.

OH

7-'0-992-9752

�......

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~

,.-

------:..----~---:----...---,--

www.mydailysentinel.com

Tuesday, February 9, 201 0

BLONDIE

Dean Yeung/Denis Lebrun

. FUNKY W IN KERBEAN

Chris Browne

WW.T6 "'Il! ,.. :!1/.t. NEVER
i'~'T

MAJtE ANGeL.

'?

Wl~fNit/E

f 51-JOW AG.AIN/

....

:f.!l!1~!!::"--

.'

-.-1-r-f; ~~-

The Daily Sentinel • Page 85

THELOCKHORNS
HI &amp; LOIS

- - - ---

By THOMAS JOSEPH
ACROSS
41 Happen1 Implied
mg
6 Old Nick 42 Work
11 Atmosbreaks
pheric
43 Challenlayer
ges
12 Make
blank
DOWN
1 Musical
13 Edie
sounds
Falco
2 Bright
series
blue
14 Baby-food 28 Exchange
15 Pitcher's
3 Deep pink
buys
30 Enjoys
stat
4 T hey hold 19 Gloss
the mall
16 Woolen
power
targets
31 Dead
cap
5 Seesaws 22 Morning
duck
17 Finale
6 Clothes
time
32 Without
1 8 Peter of
lines
23 Shoulder
help
''Being
7 Pendulum
muscle
33 Lab work
There"
path
24 Weaver of 38 Plopped
2 0 Gusher
myth
down
8 Some fast
flow
food
25 Doubled 39 Gardner
21 1040 org.
9 Foolis h
trios
of
22 Sahara
1 0 Pestered 26 Restau"Mosight
rant VIP
gambo"
23Coarse
NEW CROSSWORD BOOK! Send $4.75 (checklm.o.) to
files
Thomas Joseph Book 2 PO. Box 536475. Orlando. FL 32853-6475
26 Beat at
chess
27 Metal
sources
2 8 Carpentry
tool
2 9 Price
addition
30 Try to hit
34 Play part
35 Boater or
bowler
36 Flamenco
cheer
37 Edie
Falco
series
40 Uke bar
beer

Tom Batiuk

AGAR THE HORRIBLE

- - - -~--- - -

CROSSWORD

IT'6 SURE NICE AND
QUI ET WHEN SARGE
16 GONE ...

.

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T HE FAMILY CIRCUS
Bil Keane

CONCEPTIS SUDOKU
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" Yo u d idn't b rush your teeth! I still
smell pean ut b utte r!"

DENNIS THE ME NACE
: Hank Ketchum

Otfficulty l.c,cl

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**

HAPPY BIRTHDAY for Tuesday, Feb. 9, 2010:
you ~hake up the l~?e of your life and
update it to reflect the person you are right now.
Many times we forget how much life hus to offur. We
forget to revic;e our goal&lt;; to refltK-t the changing per";&lt;m. 'TI-K: mmc often vou touch bao;c v.1th your mx.'Cls,
the more sucressful tbis year will be. Your finances
could .,wing wildly, hopefully to the plu'&gt; side. If you
are single, you make waves where~er you go; Just
check out a new suitor mort' carefullv. b ht&gt; or she tht&gt;
pen;on he or she projects? lf you are attached, you'll
grow and become much do::;er becau~ of time away
together. CAPRJCOR.\l readc; you cold.
Tiu! Stars Slurw the TGml af Dm1 You '/l Httt'l.': SV}fllmllic; 4-Positive; 3-kvcrasr: z·-s~; 1-D!fficult
ARIES (March 21-April19)
****Srep up to the plate.md getre&lt;idy to move
pa'&gt;t a difficult ao.,.&lt;;&lt;&gt;Ciatc or partner. This pt:N&gt;n has a
lot of negativity right now and caru10t help the way he
or slw looks at variou~ ~ituatil1ns at the moment. '\our
inc;lincts guide you with a higher-up. Tonight: Go till
the WL'C hours.
Thi~ year,

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TAURUS (April20-May 20)

***** Kt'(.'P- reaching nut for others. Make timt•
to complete a diiticult project and simultaneously
'&gt;Cht'Clulc t'Xtra time for a loved one or frit'l"ld who j.,
cklSe to you. Give YOlU"Se!f the spat"e to take a leap of
faith. Tonight Under-;tand what is going on by
detadling.
GEMIZ...'I (Mav 21-June 20)
* * ***You -might want to work ~-tly with a
partner on an individual leveL Yll\1 might find that
your creativity is somewhat less than dynamic. lliteJl
to what others '&gt;hare, but spt'Cifically a kt')' partner.
Tonight: Sort out your options.
CANCER Ounc21-July 22)
**** .Evaluatt&gt; news that comes out when dealing with a chtld orlowd one. Cn.•ativity could be
stymied by a tamily member. Be can&gt;ful with spending, L&gt;:-pecially a-. \'OU are ~ly to take out y01.u· anger
thi~ way. Tonight: Your treat.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22)
* Your actions speak louder than your words.
let another pt•rson follow through on what he or she
knows will work. Listen to news about a projed with
an eye to revio;ing the ba'&gt;i!'. ~~fa -.umnmding agrt'\.~
mt-nt. Tonight: Having tun.

**

VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22)
H HHHH Your im&lt;tgination goe; haywire. You
might debate JlL"t how much you would like to s~
with !&gt;&lt;lmt'\lne you c.art&gt; ilbout who i~ very cl~. Be
sen.'&gt;ttive to the pos.'iibilitie.&lt;. that surround a child or
new frimd. Tonight Let your hair down.

LmRA (Sept. 2.3-0ct. 22)
* *** * You might want to move mountain-; and
do something very diffurently. Howe\ er, the ba5ics do
count, and you might need to give more time to a
family member. Do a better job of Jio;tening and. sharing. Tonight: Don't push too hard .
SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21)
***** You might \\ant to undt-rstand what is
happening witllin a conversation. Juggle the pros and
a&gt;n!-. uf a .,ituatinn. Know what work" for yuu, but
also discover what anotl1er's needs are. Tonight:
Han~;ing 11ut i'&gt; fun.
SAGffiARIU5 (t\o\: 22-0ec. 21)
*** ** lntrin~ically, you head in a TWW direction
and do ~mething 'ery different. You might wonder
ilbout your ch(liCL-s. A fri~.'lld or n1l'Cting block., one uf
your ideas. Trust that it might be for the better.
Tonight \:\'here the action is.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-jan. 19)

***** Yom Vt!-.ion a1uld change, a., you "L'Cm to
be runnillg into ditt1cult people witll very different
idea..,./\ positiw attitude and a brainstom1ing st"''&gt;ion
point to a new din&gt;o..iion. You might ,.,·onder ·why you
didn't~ this opportunity before. Tonight: A.; you

like.
AQUARIUS (jiln. 2(}-fcb. 18)
*** Know when to take a back St&gt;dt or not insist
un pla\1ng the .,.,me mle. y,,u could be baftk'Cl b)
everything that is happening, and quite quickly at
that. Yt•u could bt• rethinking a ..ituation more carefully. as you have mol't' fact:;. Tonight: Get much J.{ and
!{ ,\S you can . you are gomg ton~ it.
PISCES (feb. 19-March 20)
* *** * Zero in on what you'' .mt "'ithout worl)ing about the pro, and am~ of a situation. \\~'lrking
with people, meeting.. and networking will be succt5sful. You du better with others. Tonight: A must
appcar.:mcc.

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allllll&gt;:(lu&gt;Uru· iarrp1dmebtj?r1r.ro11~

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