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_.........,.~ w-=-.•------....-~--- ----- ~------- - ----~

Capito addresses
'tea party' in
Mason County, As

St. Paul Lutheran Church
holds Shrove Tuesday
Pancake Supper, A3

ti

I

Printed on 100%
Recycled Newsprint

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio

OBITUARIES
Page AS
• Charles 'Dannie' Bissell
·Martha Ord

SPORTS
• Lady Warriors
end Meigs' season.

See Page 81

D ...

Men charged in Middleport break-in, assault
BY BRIAN

J.

REED

BREED@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

MIDDLEPORT - Two Columbus
men were charged with felonies for
allegedly breaking into a Middlep01t
home and assaulting a woman there.
Ronald B. Nichols. Jr.. 41.
Columbus. and Cary A. Gardner.
27. Columbus, have been charged
in connection with a crime on
Fourth Avenue. according to Police
Chief Bruce Swift. He said the men
allegedly broke into the home of
Lori Murphy, Fourth Avenue,
assaulted her and demanded money.
Nichols is charged with theft, a

Frequent
snows
add up
for state

felony of the fourth degree, and
aggravated burglary. a felony of the
first degree. Gardner is charged
with assault. burglary. a felony of
the second degree, and complicity. a
first-degree felony.
Swift said the department is
investigating a vandalism case
reported by the Department of Job
and Family Services. The tires on a
I 999 Ford Explorer were slashed
while parked in the agency parking
lot on Race Street.
Swift said the department is now
examining surveillance video taken
of the lot. and urged anyone with
infotmation about the case to con-

tuct the police department.
Jacob Well. South Third Avenue.
repotted that someone had slashed
the tires on his 1999 Honda while it
was parked in his driveway.
Swift repmted the following citations to mayor's court and arrests:
• Euva Stumbo. arrested and
served with a bench wanant for
failure to comply.
• Lawton Templeton, Pomeroy.
with a bench warrant for failure to
comply.
• Robert Stone. Sycamore Street,
for assured clear distance and driving under suspension following an
accident on South Second Avenue.

• Monica L. Staats, Point
Pleasant. W.Va., with possession of
a controlled substance and wrongful
entrustment.
• Julie Roush. Hartford. W.Va.,
with OMVI, driving under suspension. possession of marijuana and
possession of a controlled substance.
• Michael Blaettnar, Pomeroy.
with expired tags.
• Earl M. Craddock, Third
Avenue, with disorderly conduct.
• Jeanette Crane. Brownell
Avenue. has been charged with disorderly conduct.
• Timothy Shane. Broadway
Street. with no driver's license.

'Relay'
captains
wanted

Clearing up

BY BETH SERGENT
BSERGENT@ MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

BY BETH SERGENT
BSERGENT@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

POMEROY - Though
Meigs County has had its
share of snow emergencies
in the last few years, it hasn't seen the steady. frequent snowfalls of this
winter in awhile. all of
which have added up for
the Ohio Department of
Transportation.
Brett Jones, county manager for ODOT's Meigs
County garage. said the sheer
amount of supplies and man
• Even Congress
hours already consumed
reflects a costly winter.
sick of Congress;
··we have had some
moderates leaving.
storms more severe than
See Page A2
we've had this yea.r...storms
that
have disabled the whole
• Family Medicine: Cold
county and though we
sores treatable now; may haven't had anything that
compares to that, winter
be preventable in future.
conditions
this year have
See Page A3
been so frequent with those
• Tri-County March
one to two-inch snowfalls
that are just as expensive, if
for Babies kick off
not more expensive. than
set for Feb. 25.
large snow events:·
See Page AS
As of Feb. 11, Jones said
the
numbers for Meigs
• Columbia Gas
County break down as foladvises on meter safety.
lows: 2,168 tons of salt
used; 2,086 ton of sand
See Page AS
used (the sand is used in a
50150 mix with the salt for
• ~======= traction): 5,585 gallons of
• liquid calcium used which
WEATHER
is applied to the salt/sand
mix as it comes off the
truck to accelerate melting
of snow and ice.
There has been 22,730
gallons of salt brine used
which is what motorists
observe spraying from
tanks of ODOT's trucks.
The salt brine is basically
salt water and is used as a
preventative measure in
cold temperatures to keep
the snow from bonding
High: 30.
tightly to the roadway,
Low: Lower 20s.
making it easier for scraping. Also, there has been
2.340 man hours devoted to
removing snow and ice
from roadways. which
Jones said was more than
last year's totals. This sig2 SECTIONS- 12 PAGES
nificant amount of man
hours spent on snow and
Calendars
A3 ice removal makes it more
difficult for workers to do
B2-4 normal maintenance such
. ssifieds
as cutting brush. berm
Comics
Bs work. etc.
Jones
also
reported
33.099
miles
have
been
driEditorials
A4 ven on the 13 dump trucks
remove snow and ice
Sports
B Section that
from the road. There are 15
highway workers who drive
·c) 2010 Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
these trucks who can work
up to 16 hours before being
given a mandatory eight
hour break.

INSIDE

INDEX

li.I!IJIJ !I! I. !1!11

~

Please see Snow, AS

Brian J. Reed/photo

A crew from Hupp Landscaping had the benefit of a snow plow as they cleared the Sacred
Heart Church parking lot in advance of Ash Wednesday services this morning and tonight.

Soulsby recognized on 86th birthday
BY CHARLENE HOEFLICH
HOEFLICH@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

POMEROY - Special
recognition was given to
Jim Soulsby on his 86th
birthday by the Meigs
boys and girls basketball
team and the cheerleaders
at the Meigs-Athens game
last week.
He was at the game
working in the Meigs
Athletic Boosters refreshment booth - something
he's done for years at all
basketball games. His life
has
always
revolved
around young people and
sports and for more years
than he can remember he's
been actively supporting
athletic programs in the
schools.
In fact. the night of his
recognition. he was working in the refreshment
booth when he was called
to step out into the auditorium. He became a little
"ruffled" at being interrupt-

Submitted photo

Jim Soulsby, president of Meigs Athletic Boosters. was
honored on his 86th birthday.

ed because he was busy
popping popcorn.
Once out on the floor the
captains of the boys and
girls basketball teams along
with the cheerleaders pre-

sented him a bouquet or balloons. Tony Hawk read a
note congratulating Soulsby
on his birthday ami expressing appreciation for his

Please see Soulsby, AS

ROCK SPRINGS
Every team needs a captain
and for those who are leading a Meigs County Relay
for Life Team, a team captains· meeting has been set
for 5:30p.m .. Monday, Feb.
22 at the Rio Grande
Community College.
Team captains' meetings
are meant to not only organize teams who wish to participate in RFL but support
those teams with ideas on
their fundraising efforts.
During the meeting, information and the aforementioned support will be provided for both new and
returning teams. On-line
training will also be offered
in addition to light refreshments. door prizes and team
materials.
This
year's
Meigs
County RFL is set to begin
at noon on June I 2 and end
at 6 a.m. on June 13 at the
Meigs
County
Fair
Grounds.
According to local RFL
Committee
Co-Chair
Courtney Sim. everyday
loved ones, friends, coworkers and neighbors are
diagnosed with or dying
from cancer. Often people
feel helpless against this
terrible disease but Sim
said, at least locally. there
is something residents can
do to be proactive in the
fight against cancer Relav!
Organizations.
workplaces. families. friends
and neighbors form RFL
teams to raise funds for
and awareness of the
American Cancer Society
and Meigs County's battle
against
cancer.
Team
efforts can be in honor or
in memory of those who
are or have battled cancer
or who have lost their lives
to the disease.
According to Sim: '·RFL
is an excellent opportunity
for businesses. community
onwnizations.
churches.
families. etc. to turn their
concern for the health and
well-being of all Meigs
County
residents
into
action."
Teams can sell candy
bars and luminaries and/or
participate in "Daffodil
Days" sales. which are
fund-raisers coordinated by
the Meigs RFL Planning
Committee.
Otherwise.
teams are free to choose the
fund-raising activities of
their choice.
·'Team creativity makes
Relay very interesting and
fun," Sim said.
For more information or to
forn1 a team, call Sim at 9921158,992-6626 or444-2141.
Contact Sim via email at
courtney.sim@odh.ohio.gov.

�Page.A2

The Daily Sentinel

VVednesday,February17,20to

Even Congress Ala. prof's story begins with brother's 1986 death ·
sick of Congress;
moderates leaving
BY JAY REEVES
AND GREG BLUESTEIN
ASSOCIATED PRESS

BY LAURIE KELLMAN
AND HENRY C. JACKSON
ASSOCIATED PRESS

WASHINGTON - The
moderate middle is disappearing from Congress.
Evan Bayh is just the latest :-;enator to forgo a reelection bid. joining a growing line of pragmatic. finda-way politicians who are
abandoning Washington.
Still here: ever-more-polarized colleagues locked in
gridlock - exactly what
voters say they don't like
about politics in the nation's
capital.
Politics runs in cycles.
and the Senate has seen
flights of self-styled centrists before. In 1996. for
example. 10 senators who
could boast strong bipartisan credentials chose to
retire rather than re-up.
Many of them complained
how lonely a place the middle ground of American politics had become. But to
some. the center has
become even lonelier.
· More than their feelings
are at stake. The moderates
in the mjddle are the ones
who tend to make deals and
sometimes resolve standoffs
blocking decisions that
affect programs - not to
mention taxes - that touch
virtually every American.
Former Sen. William
Cohen says what's happening now is a continuation of
the "hollowing out of the
middle." An article he wrote
when he left his Senate seat
in 1996. lamenting partisan
gridlock. could just as easily be reprinted now. subbing
his name for that of Bayh.
the Indiana Democrat who
announced on Monday he
won't run again.
"There is this sort of purging in both parties.'' Cohen
said in an interview. 'They
insist on moving to the left
or moving to the right. and I
think you're seeing over the
years the moderates have
disappeared and continue to
disappear."
The few left in the middle
can gain outsized power to
decide the fate of closely
fought issues. But that
comes at a price more and
more of them say is too
high: crushing pressure to
conform, shrill media barbs
and the increased fight for
cash to shape one's own
campaign narrative.
"I simply reached a conclusion that I could get
more done to help my state
and the American people by
doing something in the private sector:· said Bayh. the
two-term senator and former governor. on ABC's
Good Morning America on
Tuesday. "Real accomplishments in a real way."
That's an extraordinary
statement on the anniversary of the $787 billion
stimulus package that was
supposed to energize the
economy. Rather than heed
President Barack Obama's
appeal for pragmatism.
Congress is losing its value
as a problem-solver and
becoming more unworkable. according to Bayh.
Polls say voters hate that
about national politics.
Lawmakers profess to dislike the polarization, too,
but they still engage in it, on
the House or Senate floor. in
. private meetings, or both.
And on the campaign trail.
the truth is there's cash to be
made by taking sides and. in
effect, becoming a dependable brand.
''If you're on either fringe
of the party. you have an easier time raising money," srud
one who would know, Sen.
Arlen Specter. who left the
GOP for the Democrats when
he found he could not win a
Pennsylvania Republican primary. "I have to work a lot
harder than somebody who
has an ideological base."
Calling from a fundraising
swing through California.
Nevada.
Arizona . and
Tennessee. Specter said
sticking around awhile three decades in his case can produce a brand of independence he is hoping fits
the public's populist streak.
"I think the independents
are going to be in a position

•

to pick the v. inners and
losers," he sa1d.
And
moderates?
An
endangered species'7
Moderates. said Darrell
West. vice president and
director of !!overnance studies at the Brookings
Institution. are "going the
way of the dinosaur."
"Soon we're going be
able to go to museums to
the see the skeletons of the
centrists and learn about
what they were:· West said.
It could be argued that
fresh blood may be a good
thing for an institution
many view as broken.
But some fresh faces are
turning down the chance to
run, even after being asked
by the president.
ln lllinois. a would-be
strong candidate, Lisa
Madigan. spurned Obama 's
pressure to run. That could
reflect Obama 's lack of pull
- one year into office but it also says something
about the desirability of
serving on Capitol Hill
given the public's disdain
for Congress.
The lament of partisan
gridlock IS a well-worn element of lawmakers' farewell
speeches.
Former
Republican Senate leader
Bill Frist of Tennessee. a
physician. lectured his colleagues about it on the way
out the door in 2006. Forn1er
Republican Sen. Trent Lott
of Mississippi appeared with
f01mer Democratic President
Bill Clinton and former GOP
House
Speaker
Newt
Gingrich earlier this year to
urge the parties to get along.
But
tellingly.
no
Republicans were present in
the Senate when Democrat
Paul Kirk. turning over the
seat held by the late Sen.
Edward
Kennedy
to
Republican Scott Brown
earlier this month. spoke
about the lack of comity in
the chamber.
Not so long ago. Senate
seats were among the most
sought-after positions in the
land. They meant power and
prestige. some posturing but
also some significant problem-solving.
.
Now, many bcheve the
$174,000 salary just isn't
worth it.
Besides the personal costs
- being a lawmaker means
being screamed at during
summer town hall meetings
and vilified around the clock
in multimedia fashion - the
more polarized Congress
becomes, the less its members can accomplish.
There's "too much nan·ow
ideology and not enough
practical problem-solving"
on Capitol Hill. Bayh said as
he announced hb retirement.
"I do not love Congress."
Veteran Rep. Barney
Frank. D-Mass .. said Bayh
could do more to change
that by staying.
"I don't understand how
you make things better from
the outside. I share the frustration. but I would have
hoped he would have stayed
around."
Plenty of lawmakers are
still hoping to do that. But a
long and bipartisan list of
Senate leaders who have
chosen to fight for re-election
~
from Senate
Majority Leader Harry Reid
of Nevada to California
Democrat Barbara Boxer
and Sen. John McCain. the
GOP's nominee for president last year - are feeling
the anti-incumbent squeeze.
Others are saying the congressional life is simply not
worth it. and the list of casualties is bipartisan.
Bayh
and
veteran
Democratic
Sens.
Christopher
Dodd
of
Connecticut and Sen. Byron
Dorgan, D-N.D., are choosing to retire. So is Sen. Judd
Gregg. R-N.H. Rep. Lincoln
Diaz-Balart, R-Fla.. and
other GOP House members
from Michigan. Indiana.
Arkansas and Arizona have
announced retirements.
Vice
President
Joe
Biden's son. Beau. chose
not to run for a legacy seat
in Delaware. No Kennedys.
let alone political heavyweights of any sort. ran for
the Ted Kennedy's seat in
Massachusetts.

HUNTSVILLE. Ala. When a young woman in
Massachusetts killed her
brother with a shotgun blast
in 1986. authorities waited
more than a week to question family members and
the death was ultimately
ruled an accident.
Now, a quarter-century
later. Amy Bishop is
accused in another shooting
- an attack that killed three
fellow biology professors at
the University of Alabama
in Huntsville.
In the days since Friday's
shooting. revelations about
Amy Bishop's past have
raised questions about
whether much of the violence could have been prevented. In the latest twist,
police said Tuesday that
Bishop had also been
charged with assaulting a
woman in 2002 during a
tirade over a child's booster
seat at a restaurant.
The story started more
than two decades ago when
police were called to the
Braintree. Mass.. home
Bishop shared with her parents. Authorities found her
18-year-old brother, Seth,
dead of a shotgun wound to
the chest.
Bishop's father later told
police he and his daughter
had a disagreement and she
went to her room. She said
she had wanted to learn to
load a shotgun her parents
had bought after a recent
break-in.
Bishop said she accidentally fired the gun in her bedroom as she tried to unload
it, then went downstairs to
ask her brother to help,
according to a police report.
She said the gun went off
again as Seth. a Northeastern
University freshman and a
virtuoso violinist. walked
across the kitchen.
She told police she
thought she had ruined the
kitchen, but did not realize
she had hit her brother. She
said she ran away and
thought she dropped the
gun. which went off a third
time. She did not remember
anything else until she was
taken to a police station.
But police and witnesses
say she fled with the gun to
a car dealership, where she

pointed it at employees and
demanded a getaway car.
She told them her husband
was going to come after her
and she needed to flee.
She was caught but never
charged. Police said it took
II days before they could
interview family members
because they were so distraught. When they finally
did, authorities decided to
let her go. declaring the
whole thing an accident.
John Polio. who headed
the Braintree police force at
the time. at first defended
the handling of the case.
The
87-year-old
said
Tuesday that he recently
read a 1987 report on the
investigation written by a
state trooper. At the time. he
had not seen the document.
But now, he says. "I would
have wanted a lot more
questions answered."
The Norfolk County district attorney at the time was
William Delahunt. now a
Democratic congressman
from Massachusetts. He was
traveling in the Middle Ea'it
and did not reply to repeated
re4uests for comment.
The current district attorney. William Keating, said
Tuesday that newly found
police reports show there
was probable cause to arrest
Bishop in 1986 on charges
of assault with a dangerous
weapon, carrying a dangerous weapon and unlawful
possession of ammunition.
But. Keating said. the
reports do not contradict
accounts that the shooting
was an accident.
Also Tuesday, police said
Bishop was charged with
assault. battery and disorderly conduct after a 2002 tirade
at the International House of
Pancakes in Peabody. Mass.
Peabody
Capt.
Dennis
Bonaiuto said that Bishop
became incensed when she
found out another woman
had received the restaurant's
last booster seat. Bishop hit
the woman while shouting.
''I am Dr. Amy Bishop.''
according to the police
report.
Bonaiuto said Bishop
admitted to the assault in
court. and the case was
adjudicated - meaning the
charges were eventually
dismissed.
Bishop and her husband,
James Anderson. graduated
from Northeastern in 1988

with biology degrees. In
I 993. Bishop earned a doctorate in genetics from
Harvard.
That same year. she and
her husband were questioned
in another unsettling episode:
Two mail bombs were sent to
a Harvard professor she
worked with at Children's
Hospital Boston. The explosives did not go off.
Anderson
told
The
Associated Press he and his
wife were among a number of
innocent people questioned
by investigators who cast a
wide net. He said the case
"had a dozen people swept up
in this, and everybody was a
subject, not a suspect:·
"There was never any
indictment. arrest, nothing.
and then everyone was
cleared after five years.'' he
said.
Anderson also said his
wife had been writing a
novel at the time that was
reviewed by law enforcement. The Boston Globe.
Citing a law enforcement
source it did not identify,
reported that it was about a
woman who had killed her
brother and was hoping to
make amends by becoming
a great scientist.
But Anderson said the
novel was not autobiographical.
"It was just a novel. A
medical thriller is the best
way to describe it," he said.
In 2003. Bishop and
Anderson
moved
to
Huntsville, where they were
raising their four children.
Bishop appeared to be a rismg star at the university she developed a new type of
portable cell incubator and
won $25,000 in a statewide
business competition in
2007. She appeared, smiling. on the cover of a local
tech magazine that touted
her advances.
But she was denied tenure
by the university. and she
was vocal among colleagues about her displeasure over being forced to
look for work elsewhere
after this semester.
Bishop also filed a complaint last year alleging gender discrimination by the
university. The university
denied the allegations.
which are in a complaint
pending before the Equal
Employment Opportunity
Commission. The complaint

itself. filed Sept. 15. was not
immediately available.
Joseph Ng. an associate
professor who worked with
Bishop in the biology
department, was in the
cramped faculty conference
room when gunfire erupted
Friday aftern?on durin~
monthly meetmg.
About a dozen teacH
and staff members were sitting elbow-to-elbow at a
long table when Ng heard
the .. pop-pop-pop'' of a 9
mm handgun.
He watched several of his
colleagues go down. starting with the ones close to
Bi;hop. He and the rest of
the survivors dived under
the table desperate for
cover. Three people were
wounded.
Within seconds. the shooting stopped. During the lull.
Debra Moriarity. a biochemistry professor. scrambled
toward Bishop and urged her
to stop. he said.
Bishop aimed at Moriarity
and attempted to fire. but the
gun did not go off. Moriarity
then led the charge that forced
Bishop out the door into a
hallway. Her colleagues barricaded themselves in the
room. and Bishop was arrested moments later outc;ide.
building.
"Moriarity was probably
the one that saved our lives.
She was the one that initiated the rush," Ng said. "It
took a lot of guts to just go
up to her."
On Tuesday. the 44-yearold Bishop was under extra
guard at an Alabama jail.
Students and victims' telatives want to know how
someone with such a tortured
past could ever have been
hired at a state university.
·'Do they not do background checks on teachers?
How did all this slip
through the cracks?" nursing student Caitlin Phillips
asked.
University
President
David B. Williams defended
the decision to hire Bishop.
He said a review of her personnel 'file and her hiring
file raised no red flags.
Police ran a crim
background check Mon 1
after she was charged
one count of capital murder
and three counts of attempted murder.
"Even now. nothing came
up.'' Williams said.

Climber's body recovered in St. Helens crat~r
Bv MANUEL VALDES
ASSOCIATED PRESS

SEATTLE - The body
of a veteran climber who
fell 1 ,500 feet into the
crater atop Mount St.
Helens was recovered
Tuesday after he spent
more than a day in the
snow. authorities said.
Clouds and wind had
hampered efforts to reach
Joseph Bohlig. 52, who
was posing for a picture
Monday on the rim of the
dormant crater when a
snow overhang gave way
and he fell into the volcano.
"We're sorry that he's
gone. that he didn't make
it,'' said Richard Bohlig, the
climber's
84-year-old
father. "He was doing something he enjoyed very much.
That's all I can say."
Family members had
gathered
in
Bohlig's
hometown
of
Kelso.
Wash., to await word on
the search.
Earlier in the day. Bohlig
said his son was an avid
mountaineer
who
had
climbed peaks in many
countries. but Mount St.
Helens was his home mountain.
"He used to go up even
before the eruption as a
child. play in the snow and
that,'' he said.
A Navy helicopter found
Bohlig on its second pass of
the day at the mountain.
The weather cleared long
enough to spot his body.
which had been partially
covered
by
snowfall.
Skamania
County
Undersheriff David Cox
said.
Cox said an autopsy
would be conducted to
determine if Bohlig died of
injuries. hypothermia or a
combination of factors.
Bohlig had taken off a

layer of clothing to cool
down after reaching the
summit and likely wasn't
protected against subfreezing overnight temperatures.
Cox said.
Two attempts to reach
Bohlig by helicopter were
turned back Monday by
winds and fading daylight
after crews spotted him.
He had reached the summit with his friend Scott
Salkovics after a four-hour
hike. Bohlig took off his
backpack and some clothing
then decided to pose for pictures.
Salkovics told KGW that
Bohlig handed a camera to
another hiker and was backing up when the snow gave
way and he fell. The hiker
threw
himself
toward
Bohlig but couldn't catch
him.
"Boom. it busted off and I
saw him clawing for the
edge with a startled look on
his face, and then he disappeared," Salkovics told the
TV station.
Salkovics threw a backpack down to his friend. but
Cox said Bohlig was not
able to reach it.
Bohlig was alive and
blowing a rescue whistle
soon after the fall. He had
climbed the volcano 68
times before the accident.
Cox said.
The volcano. about 100
miles south of Seattle.
exploded in a massive eruption in 1980 but has been
quiet in recent years.
The U.S. Forest Ser\'ice
said the climbing route provides views of the crater.
lava dome and eruption
area. Most climbers can
complete the round trip in
seven to 12 hours.
The trail reaches an elevation of 8,365 feet. Climbers
are advised to stay well
back from the;! rim due to its
instability.

North
Country
Emergency
Medical
Services
Chief
Tom
McDowell. who has been
with ·the local emergency
agency for 39 years. said
the only other time a person fell from the rim was in
2008 when a sno\V cornice
gave way under a snowmobiler. who was rescued by a
helicopter and suffered a
knee injury.
About 13.000 people
climb the mountain each
year.

Emergency Medical
Technician

(EMT Basic)
Nurse Assistant
(STNA)

l'Vt1agazine
8r-u~~.C Cu f/'d~ bff

~iamoncf.s-9\{_-y oft£
•A unrq:..e se.ectlon .A tJadding
sets and engagrnent rings
•Financing
•Purcnase tracking
•D1amond Upgrade Policy
·Bridal Party Gifts
•E ngrav:ng
·Complimentary Ring Cleaning
·Exclusbe Heans Oo Fire
Retailer

Sifver rJ3ritfge P[aza
fjaffipofis,
740-446-

Proud to be apart of your life.
Subscribe today • 992-2155

�TIHIJE

The Daily Sentinel

She worries about jobless
husbands mental state
BY DR. JOYCE BROTHERS

Dear Dr. Brothers: My
was laid off from
s job in middle managet a few months ago. At
first he had a positive attitude. He got a resume
together. did some networking and all that stuff. But he
hasn't had but two interviews. and his prospects
still seem very bleak. We
are tapping into our savings.
He told me last night that he
just wants to sleep all day
today. and I shouldn't get
him up. Is he heading for
trouble? I don't know what
to tell the kids about what is
"wrong" with their daddy.
-D.B.
Dear D.B.: It could very
well be that your husband
has run out of steam - that
is. that all his earlier optimism has been replaced by
the grim reality that there
may not be a job for him
until months from now. and
even then. the job he lands
is likely to be one that is less
estigious and lucrative
an the career he is used to.
ome prognosticators are
even saying that we won't
recognize the American job
market anymore when this
recession is all done - that
the lifelong career path is a
thing of the past. So your
husband. you and the children all have some adjusting to do. and I won't kid
yo"'u into thinking it will be
easy.
A recent survey released
by the National Alliance on
Mental Illness and Mental
Health America has found.
not surprisingly. that peopie without jobs are four
times as likely to undergo
severe mental-health problems. Worse yet. more than
one in 10 report seriously
considering self-harm. And
those who have kept their
jobs but have been made to
take pay or work-hour cuts
so were at increased risk
r mental illness. If you
e able to afford it, your
mily should avail itself of
some counseling so that
) ou all can learn some
strategies for keeping hope
alive. Your husband should
try not to succumb to the
''sleeping all day" escape
syndrome. Many in his
boat have used the opportunity to start doing their own
thing - with encouragement from home.
U:'\l)(tlllu

,

,
•
·
'·

.
•
'
-·
•
.
"
•
•

~

'

,
•

'

l
"

..
·:
..
·

•••

..

~l

•,

Dear Dr. Brothers: 1 try
to be a good woman. I have
a very close knit and loving
family. and I have strong
bonds with both of my
brothers. One is older. and
one much younger. The
problem is. both of their
wives are jealous of me! My
brothers have both admitted
as much! I don't feel as if I
can spend any time alone
with either of them anymore. because one wife or
the other will be complaining to them. They are decent
to my face, but I wonder
how long that will last. -

'•

Dear C.P.: Well. let's try
to look on the bright side
first. You come from a loving family. and obviously
no one wants that to
change. The difficulty is in
incorporating others into
the family unit and making
them feel just as special and
welcome as you guys can
make them feel. And this
may be where you (and
your brothers) may have
fallen down on the job a bit.
When I see jealousy within
the circle of in-laws, I see a
failure to make the in-laws
feel special compared with
the original member~ of the
family. So. rather than react
to their bouts of jealousy which I kno\\ must be a
temptation for you - I
would bend over backward
to include them and extend
a warm hand. This may be a
difficult task for you, but it
will pay off - big time in the end.
Girls who become jealous of their sisters-in-law
often are a bit immature
and insecure themselves . .
But that is not to sa) that
perfectly '·normal'' young
women don't sometimes
find a threat within the
family, after they triQuestion: I am 20 years
umphed over all the other old. and I have gotten cold
potential rivals. It may sores all of my life. While I
seem silly to you to be con- know they are no big deal.
sidered a threat - but any they are annoying. not to
female who takes up her mention ugly. Will I ever
new husband's time and outgrow these? Why did I
attention is frowned upon start getting them in the first
by this type of individual. place? My friends . don't
She probably has a problem seem to have them. Is there
with her mother-in-la\.\. any treatment for them?
too. If you truly have your
Answer: Cold sores. also
brothers· happiness at called "fever blisters'' are a
heart. you might even common viral skin eruption
admit a bit of jealousy on that affects about 50 percent
your part and try to let go a of the national population.
bit. Sometimes you have to This vims. called "herpes
be the grown-up.
simplex type I." often
{c) 2010 by King Features infects the mouth in childSyndicate
hood. Once this initial
infection has occurred, the
vim:s remains in your system. but usually in a dormant. or inactive form. Any
time the virus reactivates. it
causes another cold sore.
wmds 5 to lO mph. Chance
Reactivation of this virus
of snow 20 percent.
can be triggered by stress.
Friday
through !llness, fever. sun exposure.
Saturday...Partly cloudy. menstruation and other
Highs in the mid 30::;. Lows causes. When the reactivaaround 20.
tion occurs. a lesion-like
Saturday night ...Mostly blister appears. usually on
cloudy. A chance of !'now in the lip. Without treatment, it
the evening. Cold with lows generally takes about seven
around 20. Chance of snow
30 percent.
Sunday and Sunday
night .•.Mostly
cloudy.
Highs in the upper 30s.
Lows in the lower 20s.
COLUMBUS (AP) -The
Monday...Mostly cloudy. Ohio Supreme Court i~
A chance of snow and rain weighing the claim of a
in the afternoon. Highs in woman who says she missed
the mid 30s. Chance of pre- a deadline for suing over sexcipitation 40 percent.
ual abuse because she only
Monday night ...Mostly recently recalled the assault.
cloudy. A chance of snow in
A 2006 law allows victhe evening. Cold with lows tims of child sexual abuse to
around 20. Chance of snow file claims until they turn
30 percent.
30. or 12 years after becomThesday...Mostly cloudy. ing adults.
Highs in the upper 30s.

Beth SergenVphoto

Family Medicine

Cold sores treatable now; may be preventable in future
to 10 days from the initial
outbreak until the sore is
completely healed and
gone. Many people also
notice pain or sensations of
itching. tingling or burning
on the lip ~hile the blister is
there. and even up to two
days before the cold sore
actually appears. If you do
notice pre-blister lip pain.
that is the optimal time to
treat the cold sore.
There are se\ era! overthe-counter top1cal medications available at drug
stores. but more recently
prescription antiviral medications - both oral and
topical - have proven very
effective in shortening the
course of cold sore outbreaks. Researchers are
developing a promlsmg
vaccine. but the studies are
still in early stages. so the
vaccine has not yet been
approved for the general
public. Also under development is a potential oral
anti viral medication that
might help prevent cold
sore outbreaks.
For people who get cold
sores due to sun exposure.

the use of sunscreen on the
lips can dramatically reduce
their frequency. The bad
news is that. so far. this is
the only known preventive
method !'or cold sores. and it
only applies to !'&gt;Un-induced
outbreaks. The good nev..•s is
that. as I mentioned above,
coming years may see a
\'accine or preventiYe medication.
The herpes simplex type I
virus can be spread by direct
contact any time bet\\een
the beginning of the preblister phase to when the
sore i!-&gt; completely healed.
Avoid kissin~ someone \Vho
has an acti\'c cold sore. and
if you have a cold sore.
avoid touching the blister.
Most people with cold
sores gel about six outbreaks~per year. After the
age of 35. the recUITences
do become less frequent.
and the lesions tend resolve
a bit faster. So while \ ou
will never completely outgrow this condition. it will
improve as you get older and hopefully. so wJII the
treatment options.
Family Medicine@ IS a

weeklv column. General
medic:al questiom ca11 be
sem to Martha 1L Simpso11,
D.O.,
,M .B.A.,
Ohio
Unil·asin
College
&lt;~f
Osteopathic
Medicine,
Commu11icatio11
Office,
A1hens. Ohio .:1570 I. or familrmedicine@ OIICOIII.ohiou .e

di1. Pll•ase do not smd letters askinr.: Dr. Simpson to
diagnose a condirion or suggest a treatment plan.
Aledical iJ!formation in
FamilY Medicine® is prm'ided &lt;I\
educational sen·ice
onlv am/ does not replace
thejudgmenr ofyour personal phrsician. ll'ho should be
relied on to diagnose and
raommend trealment for
nmr medical conditwns .
Past columns are al'ailable
online at ll'lt'Wfamily111edicincnelt s .org.

em

Ohio court weighs repressed memories abuse claim
The case before the court
Tuesday involves a claim
filed by a 33-year-old
woman in 2008 after she
sa)S she recalled the abuse.
The woman says a 1994
state Supreme Court ruling
allows abuse claims to
star1 \vhen a \ 1ctim recovers repressed memories of
the abuse.
The
Greene
County

Community Calendar

Local Stocks
AEP (NYSE) - 33.70
Akzo (NASDAQ) - 57.96
Ashland Inc. (NYSE) - 45.02
Big Lots (NYSE) - 31.00
,
b Evans (NASDAQ)- 28.13
rgWarner (NYSE) - 37.02
.
.ntury Aluminum (NASDAQ)
1
' - 13.36
1_ Champion (NASDAQ) - 1.38
:: Charming Shops (NASDAQ) I
5.97
• City Holding (NASDAQ) - 30.84
: Collins (NYSE) - 54.13
• DuPont (NYSE) - 32.74
US Bank (NYSE) - 23.86
" Gannett (NYSE) - 14.80
General Electric (NYSE) - 16.04
Harley-Davidson (NYSE) - 24.08
JP Morgan (NYSE) - 40.07
Kroger (NYSE) - 21.58
Limited Brands (NYSE) - 20.83
Norfolk Southern (NYSE) 49.89

Pomeroy's St.
Paul Lutheran
Church hosted its
annual Shrove
Tuesday Pancake
Supper Tuesday
evening. The wintry weather
couldn't keep the
faithful away from
"chef" Frank
Ryther and his
wagon wheel
pancakes. What's
the secret to
Ryther's tasty
cooking? The
apron, of course.

C.P.

Meigs County Forecast

,•
• Wednesday ... Cloudy
: with scattered snow show.: ers. Cold with highs around
:'· 30. West winds 10 to 15
~) mph. Chance of snow 50
"• percent.
~
Wednesday
night ...
a
loudy with scattered snow
~owers. Cold with lows in
- the lower 20s West winds
: 10 to 15 mph. Chance of
' snow 40 percent.
Thursday ... Mostly
· cloudy with a chance of
· snow showers in the morn, ing ...Then partly sunny with
a slight chance of snow
showers in the afternoon.
Highs in the mid 30s. West
winds 10 to 15 mph. Chance
of snow 30 percent.
Thursday night...Mostly
cloudy with a slight chance
of snow showers in the
evening ...Then
partly
cloudy after midnight. Cold
with lows around 20. West

Wednesday,February17,2010

Pass the syrup

ASK l)R. BI&lt;..OTHERS

..

PageA3

JD)

Ohio Valley Bane Corp. (NASDAQ)- 21.37
BBT (NYSE) - 27.41
Peoples (NASDAQ) - 13.22
Pepsico (NYSE) - 61.31
Premier (NASDAQ) - 7.61
Rockwell (NYSE) - 52.83
Rocky Boots (NASDAQ) - 9.32
Royal Dutch Shell - 55.75
Sears Holding (NASDAQ) 92.68
Wai·Mart (NYSE) - 53.56
Wendy's (NYSE) - 4.79
WesBanco (NYSE) - 13.99
Worthington (NYSE)- 15.73
Daily stock reports are the 4
p.m. ET closing quotes of transactions for Feb. 11, 201 0, provided by Edward Jones financial advisors Isaac Mills In
Gallipolis at (740) 441-9441 and
Lesley Marrero in Point Pleasant
at (304) 674-0174. Member SIPC.

,,

Church events
VVednesda~Feb.17

POMEROY - Trinity Congregational Church, Lenten
breakfast, 7:45 a.m., fellowship hall, call Peggy Harris at
992-7569 with the number of persons to attend.
POMEROY - St. Paul Lutheran Church, 7 p.m., Ash
Wednesday service, imposition of ashes available to those
who want them.

Common Pleas Court and
the Second Ohio District
Court of Appeals both dis
missed her claim, saying
she should ha\ e filed the
claim no later than her 30th
birthday.

~tiio&lt;
l.«oiNet.

740-992·62£0

�.-------------~--~----~----~-~---~-

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

-

---- --·--._ ------------~-------

PageA4

The Daily Sentinel

The Daily Sentinel
111 Court Street • Pomeroy, Ohio

(740) 992-2156 ·FAX (740) 992-2157
www.mydallysentinel.com

'Vednesday, February 17, 2010

PERSPECTIVE

Moral issues strong in Ohio elections
BY JULIE CARR SMYTH
ASSOCIATED PRESS

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
Sammy M. Lopez
Publisher
Charlene Hoeflich
General Manager-News Editor
Pam Caldwell
Advertising Director
Congress shall make rro law respecarr.f! au
esrablislrmerrt of religiorr, or prolribitiug tire free
exercise tlrereo_fj or abridgiu~~ the freedom of speech,
or of tlrt• press; or tire right of tile people peaceablr
to assemble, tmd to petition tire Got•emmerrt
for a rt•drt~ss of grier•arrces.
The First Amendment to the U.S. Constitution

T()J)AY IN HISTOIZY
Today is Ash Wednesday, Feb. 17, the 48th day of
2010. There are 317 days left in the year.
Today's Highlight in History:
On Feb. 17, 1897, the forerunner of the National PTA.
the National Congress of Mothers, convened its first
meeting m Wash1ngton.
On this date:
In 1801, the U.S. House of Representatives broke an
electoral t1e between Thomas Jefferson and Aaron Burr,
electrng Jefferson president; Burr became vice president.
In 1809. the Oh1o legislature voted to establish Miami
Umversity in present-day OXford. (The school opened in
1824)
In 1864, dunng the Civ11 War, the Union sh1p USS
Housatomc was rammed and sunk in Charleston Harbor,
S.C • by the Confederate hand-cranked submarine HL
Hunley, which also sank.
In 1865, Columbia, S.C., burned as the Confederates
evacuated and Union forces moved in. (It's not clear
wh1ch side set the blaze.)
In 1904, the origrnal two-act version of Giacomo
Puccini's opera "Madama Butterfly" was poorly received
at its premiere at La Scala in Milan, Italy.
In 1909, Chiricahua (chi-rih-KAH'-wuh) Apache leader
Gerommo (also known as Goyathlay, "One Who Yawns")
died at Fort Sill, Okla., at age 79.
In 1947, the Voice of America began broadcasting to
the Soviet Unron.
In 1959, the United States launched Vanguard 2, a
satellite which carried meteorological equipment on
board.
In 1964, the Supreme Court, in Wesberry v. Sanders,
ruled that congressional distncts within each state had to
be roughly equal in population.
In 1972, President Richard M. N1xon departed on his
h1storic tnp to China.
Ten years ago A House panel said in a report that the
program to inoculate all 2.4 million American military
personnel against anthrax was based on "a paucity of
sc1ence' and should be suspended; the Pentagon
defended the program and vowed to continue the inoculations
Five years ago: President George W. Bush named
John Negroponte (neh-groh-PAHN'-tee), the U.S.
ambassador to Iraq, as the government's first national
intelligence director. Iraq's electoral commission certified
the results of the Jan. 30 elections and allocated 140 of
275 National Assembly seats to the United Iraqi Alliance,
g1ving the Shiite-dominated party a majority in the new
parliament. Actor Dan O'Herlihy died in Malibu, Calif. at
age 85.
One year ago: President Barack Obama signed a
mammoth $787 billion economic stimulus package into
raw in Denver; he also approved adding some 17,000
U.S. troops for the war in Afghanistan.
Today's Birthdays: Football Hall-of-Farner Jim Brown is
74. Actress Mary Ann Mobley is 71. Actress Rene Russo
1s 56 Actor Lou D1amond Phillips is 48. Basketball Hall
of Farner Michael Jordan is 47. Actor-comedian Larry,
the Cable Guy is 47.

Treatment of' the tiniest political
miscalculation by the leader of the
Ohio I louse last week showed wedge
issues arc as powerful as ever this
election year.
The decision by Democratic
Speaker Armond Budish to deny
recognition on the legislative floor to
a teen who had won a National Right
to Life Ol"'dtory contest snowballed
from a routine show of leadership
muscle to a cable news-si~:ed gaffe
within a matter of days.
~
The nnti-abonion group's cries of
protest over the move - distributed
through an incisive PR effon - were
joined by Republicans and lawyers at
the American Civil Liberties Union.
generally a friend of more liberal
causes.
"When you see Right to Life and
the ACLU on the same side. there's a
good chance you made the wrong
choice," said Grant Neeley. a political
science professor at the University of
Dayton.
think it would have been a
non-event had she received it."
Instead, by Thursday the snubbed
teen, 19-year-old Elisabeth Trisler of
western Ohio'&lt;&gt; Shelby County. ana
her mother were appearing on Fox
News' "The O'Reilly Factor."
Budish reversed his decision by
week's end. He said he wanted to correct any misinterpretation that he was
censoring an anu-abortion viewpoint
in favor of his own position supporting abortion rights. He said he'd only

··r

wanted to avoid a potentially divisive
issue.
But Neeley said Budish miscalculated how the instantaneous deli very
of information can combmc with the
might of a 24-hour cable news network to bring attention to a seemingly minor political choice.
"It shows the power of communications and the ability to take something that 1s a small 'tory in the state
of Ohio - and one that really has no
policy consequence \vhatsoever and use it to highlight a partisan division," he said.
John Green, director of the
University of Akron's Ray C. Bhss
Institute of Applied Politics. said the
way the issue ballooned over the
course of a week is a good indicator
of how other, similar wedge issues
may play across the country this year.
He said Ohioans concerns about
moral issues haven't been wiped out
entirely by their economic concerns.
"In and of' itself. this incident is not
terribly important, but it is a real good
indicator of the nature of our politics
today," Green said. "We have a whole
bunch of these controversial issues
that never go away and that's happening in the context of a highly polarized political environment."
Floor honors have traditionally
been reserved for achievements that
lack a partisan edge, such as humanitarian awards. scout honors. sports
victories and retirements. State Rep.
John Adams. the Republican lawmaker who sought Trisler's recognition,

tested the envelope on the is&lt;&gt;ue
Green said.
''None of this is b) accident,"
sa1d. ''What's going on here j..,
struggle for attention and adva
The goal here is to get attention,
get reaction. Activists on one side
the other need each other to create
that conflict, that controversy. We call
them friendly enemie&lt;&gt;."
Thomas
Roepke,
a
former
Republican political operatJ\ e who
has become an evangelical minister.
said those sorts of predictable
exchanges tend to substitute for deeper discu~sions of tough moral issues.
'·Government tries to \\ alk through
it, but they're reall) ill-eqmpped,''
said Roepke, who runs the youth ministry at New Hope Community
Church in Loudom ille. "These are
good men and women but it's a deeper issue than they can address because
of where we are cultural!)."
Neeley said it remains to be seen
whether this or future judgment sn.tgs
can
be
mounted
up
against
Democrats eager to retain their c:on·
trot of the Hou~e and four of lhe
statewide offi~s. including governor
"This is going to be a rough election for the Democrats in Ohio unless
the economy turns around," he said
"In that sense. b. the handling of
honor for an oratol') award gomg l
be the thing that brings dO\\ n the
Democrats? I don't thmk u \\ill be.
But it's certainly a fortuitous turn of
events for Republic.ans that It happened."

r.

TlJATS lll£ W~ BJmT, SWEETIE,

rrs cAU.ED REAL LIFE.

Thought for Today: "Life resembles a novel more
often than novels resemble life." - George Sand,
French author {1804-1876).

LETTERS TO THE EDITOR
Letters to the ed tor should be limited to 300 words. All letters are
subJect to ed1t1ng, must be s1gned and 1nclude address and telephone
l'lumber No unsigned letters will be published. Letters should be in
good taste addressmg 1ssues. not personalities. "Thank You" letters
will not b ace pled for publication.

The Daily Sentinel I
Reader Services
Correction Policy

(usPs 213-960)
Ohio Valley Publishing Co.

Our me. :1 co cc n In all stones 1s to Published every mornmg. Monday
be accurate If you know of an error tllrough Friday 111 Court Street,
a story c.: 1the newsroom at (740) Pomeroy Oh10 Second-class postage
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Our main number is
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Reporter: Bnan Reed, Ext 14
Reporter: Beth Sergent, Ext. 13

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GUEST VIEW

Ohio 5 passenger rail debate
Over the next fC\\
months. debates will focus
on revamping a passenger
rail
system
between
Columbus,
Cincinnati.
Dayton and Cleveland.
which will stan in 20 12 and
require a state subsidy of
$17 million. The train is
proposed to ha \ e a top
speed of 79 mph and an
average speed of 39 mph,
...., ith travel time between
Cincinnati and Cleveland
expected to be 6 1/2 hours.
During discussions in the
House
Finance
and
Appropriations Committee,
the Strickland administration claimed that Ohio's
passenger rail service was
terminated approximately
40 years ago. but that new
demand
has
emerged.
However. they had not conducted an) studies or presented an) empirical e\ idcnce to suppon their claim
that demand has indeed
resurfaced.
Other than heanng propo-

Clyde
Evans

nent testimony from e.xperts
who were sponsored by the
administration, I couldn't
find a compelling reason to
support the rai I project.
Unlike many other legislators who live outside of the
proposed rail corridor. I
belieYe that we must foster
projects that will improve
the state as a whole. For
instance. the 87th House
District recci vcs considerable ~tate funding for transportation. local government. schools and health
care from the state. and a
strong state revenue o;ource
can provide a better quality

of life for my constituents.
While forming a decision
on an issue. I comader all
available information to
make the best educated
decision that Will benefit
my constituent . I felt that.
in regards to renewing
Ohio·s rail svstem, we
needed to make sure that ..... e
were not making a mistake
by quick!) rejecting the
Strickland administration·~
proposal. However, based
on the information (or lack
thereof) provided hy the
administration. I voted
against the projel:t as it
came out of the Finance and
Appropriations Committee
and again when it reached
The
the House floor.
Senate opposed the concept
but agreed to conduct a
study to determine \\hether
demand tor passenger rail
does ex1st. which I feel is a
sensible approach to this
enorn10us financial undertaking.
It is of the utmost impor-

tance that we ha\e objecttvc
ev1dence that the benefits of
resurrectmg passenger mil
out\\ eigh the financial
strain ol1 taxpa)er . For this
rea!'-on. I \\as disappointed
to find that the study \\as
conducted
b)
\mtr.tk.
which "ill manage the
operation of the track and
direct!) benefit from the
revitalization of the rnit ...ystem. As a result, all objecti" it\ \\a~ eliminated and I
still-have not found Jmpdr
tial data that supports a
decision to implement t.
tracks; con~equcntl). I
not have adequate objecth e
data to ~upport fundmg for
the project.
If you have questions
regarding thic; J!lsue or any
other policy matter. I may
be reached b) calling 111)
office at ( 614) 466- I 366 or
b)
"ntmg
me,
Representative
Cl) de
E\an... , at 77 S. High St.,
13th Floor. Columbu", Ohto

43215.

�Wednesday,Februaryt7,2010

The Daily Sentinel • Page As

W'\W. rnydailysentinel.com

Capito addresses 'tea party' in Mason County

Obituaries
Martha Ord

BY ANDREW CARTER
MOTNEWSOMYDAILYTRIBUNE COM

.Martha Loui e Ord. 63, of Middleport. passed away on
Feb. 15,2010. at Pleasant Valley Hospital.
She , ...a. born March 4. 1946, in Pomeroy, daughter of the
late William Sherman Buckley and Martha Ann
McCumber.
She is sun ived by her: children, Terry (Max) Michael.
Darrell .\1ichael. Sherry Sands, Katherine (Scott)
ucser. Richan.l Michael and Alicia Ord: grandchildren:
rrell. Bo, Justin. Sarah. Jonna. Taylor. Gage. Max and
ler; great grandson. Braxton: sisters. Sharon Buckley,
Sandy Darst and Frances Manley: brother. Gene
- Buckle): son-in-law. Darrell Sands; and several nieces
and nephews.
Besides her parents, she was preceded in death by her sisters and brothers: ~lary l..ou Buckley. Carolyn Klein. Paul
Buckley. Fizz Buckley and Carl Buckley.
At Martha's request, there will be no public services. A
registry is a\ ailable on-line
ww.andersonmcdaniel.com.

at''

Charles Daniei~Dannie' Bissell

Andrew Carter/photo

U.S. Rep. Shelley Moore Capito talks with a local resident during a "tea party'' Tuesday in
Henderson. W.Va. Capito addressed a variety of issues and answered restdents' questicns.
been silenced, quite frankly,
and I think the) feel
silenced," she said. "As a
Republican. I think this
meshes with the Republican
message of consenative,
traditional values. conservative economic policies and n
strong national defense. so I
think we have a lot of the
same fundamental principles. It's good and J think
the more active people are
the better they feel about
their frustrations."

Local Briefs

Tri-County March for Babies kick off set for Feb. 25
BY HOPE ROUSH

Dinner canceled
MIDDLEPORT - The community dinner at Heath
United Methodist Church has been canceled for this week
due to inclement weather.

For the Record
Foreclosures
P0.:\1EROY - Actions for foreclosure were filed in
Meigs County Common Pleas Court by Ohio Valley Bank.
Gallipolis, against John P. Roderus, Gallipolis. and others:
Onewest Bank. Pasadena. Calif., against Roger A. Balser.
Tuppers Plains, and others.

Dissolution
.

POMEROY -An action for dissolution of marriage was
filed in Meigs County Common Pleas Court by Terry E. :
Hysell. Pomeroy, and Shclia C. Hysell, Pomeroy.

Marshals posting fugitives
on Ohio billboards
CLEVELAND (AP) - Fugitives wanted by the U.S.
Marshals will soon have their photos displayed on billboards around Ohio.
Clear Channel has announced the free postings of the
fugiti\eS pictures on its digital billboards in Akron,
Cleveland and Columbus.
The photos of the wanted individuals will flash between
normal advertisements.
Clear Channel already posts photo. of !&gt;Uspects wanted
by the FBI and also uses the billboards to issue Amber
Alerts.
Cleveland PBI spokesman Scott Wilson says the billboard program has been a succes:- and has led to several
arrests.

e

Soulsby from Page At

many years of dedicatiOn and support to Meigs High
School athletics.
While Soulsby retired oftlcially many years ago. after
\\ orking at Kroger, the Pomeroy Post Office and in the
sheriff's department, he has never really stopping working on a job or in the community. His latest employment
was as a parttime guard at Gavin. He was laid off a few
weeks ago.
While now 86 years old, Soulsby has no plan for retiring
now - from either \\ork or life. He says his only plan is to
"keep on keeping on." And there's every indicatiOn that's
what he'll do•

•

i':e\\ letter" and maintain an
accompanying Web 5ite.
sitc:s,googlc .com/stte/thcendeavorsite. Jim Butler said
he and his wife hecame
involved in the "tea pa11)"
movement in 2009 unu al'&gt;o
started
publishing
the
monthl~ newsletter last year.
He said their gatherings
hme attracted people from
Gallia • .Meigs, Jackson and
Athen' counties in Ohio m
addition to local re idents
from Ma on Count).

The congresswoman said
she is hearing ba!-.ically the
same message from the
public wherever she make$
an appearance.
''People arc upset with the
spending.'' Capito said.
"That's the main thing that I
keep hearing about. ·Stop that
'pending in Washington.'"
The
Henderson
"tea
party" '"as organized by
Mason County residents Jim
and Anna Maria Butler.\\ ho
publish
the "Endeavor

HROUSH@MYDAILYREGISTER COM

GALLIPOLIS - Those
wishing to participate in the
Tri-County
March
for
Babies arc encouraged to
attend the kick off. slated
for noon Thursday, Feb. 25
at the Holiday Inn in
Gallipolis, Ohio.
According to Terry Eller.
community director of the
Tri-County
March
for
Babies, anyone intere ted in
fom1ing a team, becoming a
sponsor or volunteering to
help should call 304-6756029 to register for the kick
off. A team can consist of
two or more people representing a family member.
school, community organi-

zation or a business.
"Your fundraising figure
need not be extreme every dollar helps. I often
hear a team captain say 'I
don't know if people will
help me or how much we
can raise.' Usually. once
people see you \vorking
toward a goal. they will
help:· Eller said.
She added that all mone\
rabed with .\1arch for
Babies goes tO\\ ard the
~1arch of Dimes organization. Accordin!! to Eller.
the March of- Dimes is
vital because of all the
things it doe!-. to help
babies. including those
with premature births. In
addition, those who have
receh ed a polio vaccine as

''ell a~ babies "ho ha\ e
received lung surfactant
therapy to treat respiratory
distress svndrome have
been helped b) the organization. Those \\ ho are
aware thut alcohol, street
~!rug' and tobacco use durmg pregnancy may cause
serious hirth defects; that
folic acid may help prevent neutral tube defects
of the brain and spinal
cord: and tho&lt;;c who know
the signs of prc-tem1 labor
and \\hat to do if it happens also have been aided
by the March of Dimes.
The 20 I 0 Tri-Count)
March for Babic Walk is
~lated for May 2 and will
take
place
at
Point
Pleasant's Krodel Park.

Registration is set for I p.m.
with the walk scheduled to
follow at 2 p.m. According
to TeiT) Eller. communit~
director for the T1i-County
March for Uabic~. 26 reams
and 325 patd walh.er~ from
.:\1ason, Gallia and .\1eigs
Countic') participated in last
year's walk. which raised
$35.000.
For more infom1ation on
the March of Dunes and TriCount) March for Babies
\\alk. contact Eller at 304·

720-2229. 304-675-6029 or
'ia e-mail at teller678@ suddenlink.net. More infonnntion on the March of Dime
also is a' ailable on the \\eb
sites,
"W\\ .marchforbabies .com and ''\\"".marchofdimes.com.

Poi'ICe arrest man in Cincinnati homeless beating
C I NCINNATI (AP) Authorities say the suspect
in the brutal beati ng of a
homeless man in Cincinnati
is on his way back from Las
Vegas after his arrest there.
Police say 38-year-old
Michael Taylor has been
charged with felonious

assault in the Jan. 24
assault. ·
Police say Taylor. who goes
by the nickname "Madness,''
picked up 56-year-old Robe11
~leehan. slammed him to the
ground. punched him, and hit
him over the head with a beer
bottle.

Snow from Page At
As for the snowfall that
accumulated
Monday
evening into Tuesday, Jones
estimated it would typically
take a around 150-160 ton
of salt and 150-160 ton of
sand mix for ODOT workers to treat state roads.
In addition to the cost of
supplies and labor. Jones

said a harsh winter accumulates
expenses
in
guardrail repair and pot
hole patching. As for the
tlnal price tag for the ''inter of 20 lO'? That probably
won't be known until the
spring of 2010 when the
snow finally stops: if it
finally stops.

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

Police trying to tlgure out
what happened have said
acquaintance:-. of Taylor
defend him. sa) ing he must
have been provoked if he
did anything.
Meehan io;; in a long-term
treatment facility after 18
da) s in a hospital.

Adum 1\lcl.&gt;l\nlel
&amp; Jnmc" Anderson
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PageA6

The Daily Sentinel

Wednesday, February 17, 2010

Ohio chef cooks for thousands on USS Nimitz Columbia Gas advises
BY

ROBIN DAVIS

What it takes to feed the
crew of the USS Nimitz

THE COLUMBUS DISPATCH

COLUi\tBUS (AP)
The USS Nimitt is known
as one of the largest w~lr­
ships in the \\Orld, from
which high-performance
aircraft take otT on a vari\!ly
of mission~.
Yet the aircraft carrier,
deployed to the Gulf of
Oman in support of the war
in Afghanistan, also provides a home to 4,600
troops
including
Anthony Lambert, a graduate of the Fort Hayes
~1etropolitan
Education
Center in Columbus.
As a culinary specialist
with the title "CS3." he
numbers among about 200
sailors responsible for
preparing food on the
Nimitz.
''Every job on the ship is
essential," said puhlic
affairs
officer
David
Bennett. "But the culinary
specialist!-&gt; have the direct
line to everybody else on
the ship."
When he enlisted in the
Navy after graduating from
high school. Lambert initially looked to the job of an
electrician.
Then he changed his
mind.
"I cooked as a Jdd, so I
thought I'd give this a try,"
he said.
Lambert, 23. credits his
QlOther. grandmother and
father - a 12-)ear ~avy
veteran - with teaching
him how to cook.
None of their training,
however, could completely
prepare him for how and
what he cooks today.
The galley crew makes
18,000 to 20.000 meals a
day. serving four times:
breakfast. lunch. dinner and

The volume of food consumed each day on the USS
Nimitz compared with the amounts eaten daily on the
cruise ship Carnival Destiny:

USS Nimitz
•
•
•
•
•

4,600 service personnel on board
2,880 eggs plus 60 pounds of frozen egg products
301 pounds of coffee
3,600 pancakes
2,160 slices of French toast

Carnival Destiny
• 3,692 people on board (2,642 passengers plus 1,050

crew members)
6,000 eggs
257 pounds of coffee
840 pancakes
688 slices of French toast

•
•
•
•

Sources: USS Nimitz; Carnival Cruise Lines

''midnight rations." a meal
at I a.m. for sailors on duty
through the night.
The ship houses three
kitchens to accommodate
the three mess halls: one for
the officers: one for the
enlisted personnel: and
another. called the chief
mes~. for everyone.
''The food is pretty much
the same in all the messes,"
said Lambert. who works in
the chief mess. usually for
lunch and dinner.
The menu changes daily,
he said. but some items.
such as cheesebur2ers and
french fries. are~ al\\ ays
available.
Other staples include
meatloaf. mashed potatoes
and gravy. spaghetti and
salad.
Desserts are offered. too
- from a variety of cakes.
pies and doughnuts to the
cookies that the culinary
specialists bake every day.

Chief Warrant Officer
Loreto Lagrisola, the top
food-service ofticer on the
Nimitt, designates specialoccasion menus.
Thursday means piuaand-wings night. which
Lambert calls the most popular meal of the week. And
brunch - with pancakes.
waffle8 and salmon - is
served C\ cry other Friday.
No\\ anJ then. Lagrisola
creates themcd menus
such as surf and turf, with
~teaks and lobsters grilled
on the deck.
The sailors, of course,
also celebrate holidays such
as Thanksgh ihg.
A few months ago, the
culinary specialists cooked
turkey. ham and Hawaiianstyle roasted pig as well as
traditional side dishes.
Keeping the crew wellfed. Lambert said, represents one of the most difficult parts of his job.

Fla. executes killer of wildlife officer
STARKE, Fla. (AP) - A
Florida death row inmate
was executed Tuesday for
the ~laying of a state
wildlife officer more than
25 years ago.
.Martin
Edward
Gro~sman, 45. died at 6:17
p.m. at Florida State Prison,
a spokesman for Go\.
Charlie Crist said. Earlier
Tuesday. the U.S. Supreme
Court refused to block the
execution.
Grossman was convicted
of first-degree murder in the
death
of
26-yeur-old
Margaret "Peggy'' Park.
who was shot v. ith her own
gun Dec. 13. 19g4,
Before the execution began,
Grossman made a brief statement: "I would like to extend
my heartfelt remorse to the
victim's family."
After expressing regret.
he added. "I accept re:-;ponsibility."
He prayed briefly in
Hebrew. then closed his
eyes. He was pronounced
dead 15 minutes later.
Grossman was the 69th
person executed in Plorida
since the death penalty was
reinstated here in 1979. He
was the 25th by lethal injection. the fifth executed
under Crist and the first in
2010.
Authorities
said
Grossman heat Park with a
flashlight and shot her in the
back of her head after she
found the then-19-year-old
and 17-year-old Tha) nc
Taylor with a ~tolen handgun
while
she
was
patrolling a wooded area in
Pinellas County. Grossman,
who was on probation for a
burglary, asked Park to not
turn him in. but she radioed
the sheriff's office.
Park managed to tire a

wild shot with her gun and
kick Taylor in the groin, but
Grossman wrestled away
the gun and fired a shot into
the back of Park's head.
1\vo week." later. authorities arrested Grossman and
Taylor.
Grossman was convicted
in October 1985 and sentenced to death. Taylor was
convicted of third-degree
murder.
The victim's sister, Betsy,
witnessed the execution.
along with her 79-year-old
mother. Peggy Park, and
brother. Stephen Park.
Afterv.:ard, reading from a
statement. Betsy Park said.
"We came here today hoping for closure and an end to
the years of reminders of
how Pegg) died overshadowing our memories of how
she lived. I belie\e we realized that hope today."
Park's mother said she
thought Grossman's execution was long overdue. She
compared his quiet death to
"some of the children in
Haiti who died under concrete and rubble. dark,
scared. hungry. They had
hardship. and I think he had
it easy."
Betsy Park said their family had been receiving
phone calls from anti-death
penalty activists.
''We were harassed over
the last week. and I think
that's reprehensible to do that
for any cause." she said.
"Twenty-five (years) is an
excruciatingly long time to
haYe the way she died
brought up over and over and
over again in great detail."
Abo present to witness the
execution \\ere a rabbi. an
attorney and ~ome current or
fanner wildlife officers.
Crist signed Grossman's

death warrant Jan. 12. Since
that time, hb office has
received thousands of letters.
telephone calls or e-maib.
according to a spokesman.
Oro sman ate a chicken
sand\\ ich, cookies and fruit
punch Tuesday. Florida
Department of Corrections
spokeswoman
Gretl
Plessinger said. All the
items \\ere from the inmate
canteen: he had not requested a last meal.
Before his scheduled execution, Grossman visited
with his aunt. Rosa! Melton.
and two friends for several
hours. Plessinger said.
Earlier this month, the
Florida Supreme Court
refused to halt the execution. rejecting claims that
Grossman wa~n 't given a
fair chance to prove his trial
lawyer had been ineffecth e
nor allowed to present certain mitigatin ' evidence
against a death sentence.
The high court also ruled he
was premature in arguing
that he might be mentally
incompetent.
As the execution date
neared, some called for
another clemency hearing
for Grossman, saying he
didn't deserve the death
penalty for the crime.
"Martin has shown deep
and profound remorse over
the years, and is no longer
the same wild reckless person he was 26 years ago,"
Rabbi Menaehem Katz of
the Florida-based Aleph
Institute said in a statement.
Kat1 spent a few hours
with Grossman on Tuesday
and ~aid he was "strong,"
and at peace. He said
though Grossman accepted
responsibility for the cnme,
the inmate didn't believe he
deserved the death penalty.

Hospitals face shortage of pediatric specialists
COLUMBUS (AP) - A
shortage of pediatric specialists at U.S. children's
hospitals is frustrating parents who sometime~ wait
months to get medical
appointments.
Doctors who ~pecinlizc in
neurology.
development
and behavioral problems.
diabetes, lung disease and
intestinal disorders are in
the highest demand.
Ohio is home to six children's hospitals. meaning
most specialists are within
a couple of hours' drive for

parents. But the situation role in Owen's procedure
isn't ideal. especially for recently were recruiteJ to
parents seeking treatment Columbus.
for complicated or rare illDoctors in high demand
nesses.
and those who rl!cruit thl!m
Katie and Doug Lt!cdy of sav the situation is difficult.
suburban Columbus went to They bl~1me several factors:
Cincinnati
Children's a limited number of pediHospital.\\ here surgery was atric residencies and fellowan option for their baby, ships, long training for pediOwen, who had a problem atric subspecialties and low
that led to pervasive and reimbursement for certain
potentially deadly seizures. types of care.
The Leedys spent three
Many experts would like
week~ in Cincinnati in
to see more training slots
2008 and 2009. T\\ o neu- open up throughout the
rologists who pla)ed a key country.

on meter safety

Mo~t of the dishes made
on the ship, he said, arc
cooked from scratch by following recipe cards created
COI.l MBUS
As
for the volume needed to Ohioan~ continue to dig out
feed so mnnv sailors.
after several major ::.now"Everv nn\v and then. I'll storms, Columbia Gas of
change the recipe up n little Ohio is reminding cu~;­
bit to make it ta~te better," tomer~ to keep the1r natural
he said. "I don't like to cat gas meter and venting free
the same thing all the time." nf sno\\ and icc.
The amount of food con1 hi! outdoor natural ga~
sumed each da) is stagger- meter is designed to withing, and n well-stocked -.;tand winter \\Cather conkitchen is critical.
dillon&lt;&gt;. However. hca\) or
In the ~ummer, when It hard-packed snO\\ and icc.
deployed. the ship wa::. iciclc5. falling from hmldloadcd '" ith enough food for ing caves. or water drip70 day~.
ping from a roof and freeLMonths later. tt is 'isited ing on natural ga" meter
about every other week by n vcnttng could present a
suppl) ~hip
which condition that temporanl)
restocks ever)thing from stops the flow of natural
fresh meat" and vegetables gas or creates a potential
to basics o.;uch a ... rice, flour safety h&lt;~t.::trd.
and pasta.
To help avoid thc~;e probLambert learned such lems. custome1 s arc ur~ed
details on the ship. Most of to follow some basic tip;:
the training he rcceh ed
• Keep the gas meter clear
regarded food safety.
of ice ,md snow.
''We have to make sure
• NEYhR kick 01 hit a
we maintain the clcanli- natural gas mctc1 or its pipness of the kitchen.'' he ing with a hammer to break
said. "We can't have any- away built-up snow or icc.
1 Remove the SilO\\ or ice by
one get sick.
''Tl1ey teach you a few hand.
cooking things. but a lot of ' • Make sure the natural
the people come in know
gas meter is vi 1ble at all
ing some cooking. You times and accessible to
learn more and more dif- C(llumbm Gas of Ohio serferent \\ ays to cook on the
.ship."
Lambert hasn't decided
whether to make a career of
the Navy: '' ith his tour up
in March. he has re-enlisted
for two more years.
For now, he is happy to
contribute to the well-being
of the other smlor~ on the
Nimitz.
"Knowing that I'm giving them the energy they
need to support the troops
in Afghanistan means a lot
to me."

\ice personnel and meter
readers. as well us emergency re~ponders.
• Keep natural gas vents
unobstructed and free of
debris. Some direct vent
high efficienc) applin
ha\ e side wall \ cnts and
intake:-. that could become
obstructed during a hcav)
snow fall.
If you 'imell gas or su::.pect a leak:
ln:-.ide - Get out immediately. Don't light a match or
candle. or operate anything
that could cau e a spark.
including cell phones, lights,
appliances. flashlights and
power tools. Don't open the
\\ indows or doors in an
attempt to \entilate.
Ou~ide Turn off and
abandon any motoriled
equipment you might be
using. Leave the area quick!)
and warn others to stay away.
From a safe place. call
Columbia Gas of Ohio's
emergenc) number at 1800-344-4077 and vour tire
depa11ment or pol(ce. Stay
nearby until a gas company
representati\ c arrives they will require access to
)OUr home or building if t.
odor of ga8 b indoors.

, Subscribe today:
992-2155

Big Fooze
Scholarship Fund

DaSh lor
During Intermission
Tickets available
at the door
All proceeds will
benefit the
Big Fooze Scholarship Fund
Sponsored by:

HOME
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fiM 992-6333 • Syracuse, OH Lifliiii
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r

s

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- ·r ---------·- ----~~--·---·------.

Bl

The Daily Sentinel

Inside
Rio \\Omen·s hoops. Page B6

\Vednesday, February 17,2010

RedStorm baseball starts season in big way Bulldogs

A sch dule ol upcom1ng high
var611y 6pOrllng even!&amp; 1nvo1v.ng toam&amp;
M01gs, Mason ond Gllllla caunt1eS

less innings.
Freshman
Mark Parent (New Albany.
01 I) pitclwd a scoreless seventh.

BY MARK WILLIAMS

WedniUiil.AY, february.! Z

SPECIAL TO THE SENTINEL

Boys Basketball
Whoolersburg at Gallla Academy 6 p m
Girls Basketball
Hannan at Po nt P easant 5 45 p m

DAYTON, Tenn. - The
Uni\ ersity of Rio Grande
RcdStom1 baseball team
began the 20 I 0 season with a
15-3 victor) 0\er Bryan
College on Frida) night.
The game was shortened to
sc\en innim!s because of the
10-run merC) rule.
Rio Grande (1-0) scored
first when senior catcher
Plumpton
Tyler
(Peterborough. o~n led off
th~ game with a solo home
nm. Plumpton wm, 1-for-4
on the dav.
Junior· pitcher Angel
Santiago (Santa Isabel, PR)
started the game for the
RcdStorm and lasted three
innings. He ga\e three runs
in the fourth~ inning before
being pulled. trailing~by a 3-1

Ib.w:sdBy, F..ebru.nry 18
Boys Basketball
Rtver Valley at Eastern 6 p.m
Wayne at Po nt Pleasart, 5 45 p m

EddliY,.&amp;b!WIIY.J..9

Boys Baskotball
Ironton Sl Joe at South Gal a 6 p m
Eastern at Waterford 6 30 p m
Gal a Academy at W ·ren, 6 p m
M er at Southern 5 p m
Me gs at Nels·York 6 30 p.m
StSSonvtl e at Po nt Ploasant, 6 p m
Buffalo at Hannan 7 30 p m
Girls Basketball
Ravenswood at Point Pleasant, 5 45
prn
Buffalo at Hannan, 6 p.m

Satu.rdliY. l'e.bcuar.y 20

Boys Basketball
South Gallla at BuHalo. 6 p.m.
Federal Hock1ng at Eastern, 6 p.m.
Gallia Academy vs Rtver Valley at URG,
6p.m.
Wayne at Wahama, 6 p.m.

GIRLS BASKJ-;J'BAU.

score.
The Rio bats came ali\e in
the fifth inning, scoring three
runs to take a 4-3 lead and
then erupted for II runs in the
sixth inning.
Junior shortstop Brad
Konrad (~laumee. OH) was
the top offensive pla)er for
Rio Grande. He ''ent 4-for5 .,... ith a pair of doubles ami
four RBI's. Junior second
baseman Christian Frias
(Salinas. PR) added two hib
with a double and three
RBI's.
Junior Michael Lvnch
(Lyndhurst, OH) went 1-for-3

and drove in a run. senior
centerfieldcr R\ an Yakura
(Pickering,Of\IT) \'.as 1-for-2
and scored three runs while
junior
first
baseman
Francisco
Ramirez
(Columbus. OH) produced
t"'o RBI's d~pite going 0for-3 at the plate.
Senior outfielders Chris
Mahon (Hamilton, OH) and
John Store) (Wheelersburg.
OH) also had hits in the
game.
Sophomore Ryan Chapman
(Racmc, OH) picked up the
victory in relief for the
RedStom1. Chapman ( 1-0)
pitched three scoreless, hit-

REDSTORM SPLITS
DOUBLEHEADER WITH BRYAN

DAYTON. Tenn. - The
lJmvers1ty of Rio Grande
RedStonn baseball team split
a doubleheader on Saturdav
at Bryan College but still
managed to take the opening
series of the 20 I 0 season. t\l. o
~ames to one. Rio won the
l1rst game on Saturday 8-4
and dropped the second
game, I 0-8.
Rio Grande (2-1) scored
four runs in the fifth inning to
bn:ak open a 3-3 tic. Three
of the runs came on a three-

Please see Baseball, 86

SECilONAL ToUR."\A:\tE.""'r
SCHEDULE._"
•

Wednesday, February 17
Division II - At Alexander HS
Metgs·Warren wznner vs (1) Manetta 8
pm.
Division IV - At Athens HS
(10) Southern vs 7) Symmes Val ey, 8
Jtffi.
Thursday, February 18
Division II - At Alexander HS
(Ill Ga Ita Academy vs (3) Sheridan,
615prn
Division IV - At Athens HS
SectJonal Final
(5) South Gall a vs (4) South Webster,
615 p.m.

p.m

Division Ill - At Wellston HS
Sectional Final
(6) R1ver Valley vs (3) Valley, 1 p.m.
Division IV - AI Athens HS
Sec/ional Final
Southern·Syrnmos Val ey Winner vs (2)
Eastern, 2 45 p.m

BASKETBALL

Pleasant at Poca, ppd.
Wahama at Buffalo, ppd.
Hannan at OVCS. ppd.
S Valley at Southern, ppd.
Nels-York at Eastern, ppd.
R Valley at Chesapeake, ppd.
S Gallia at New Boston, ppd.

Bryan Walters/photo

Lady Marauders' head coach Carl Wolfe talks with his team during a first quarter timeout on Tuesday evening as Meigs
faced the Warren Lady Warriors in a Division II sectional tournament game.

GIRLS BASKETBALL

Lady Marauders fall to Warren, 58-27

Warren 58. Meigs 27
Eiannan at OVCS, ppd.

AP Girls Poll

BY BRYAN WALTERS

252
216
196
t85
120
111
99
92
82
32

Others receivtng 12 or 'Tlore points: 11
Cin. Ursuhne 22. 12 C1n. Pnnceton 19.
13, Warren Harding 16 14, Warren
Howland 13

DIVISION II
18·0
16·2
17·2
17·1
16-1
15·4
18·2
14·2
18-2
18·1

T

234
218
181
174
148
131
100
87
61
43 •

h

BY MARK WILLIAMS
SPECIAl lO THE SE~NEL

e

seeded
L a d )
~1arauder~

(10-11)
connected
on just 23
percent of
the1r field
g o a I

DIVISION Ill

attempt~

•

252
228
216
189
146
110
86
74
46
36

rs receiving 12 or More points: 11,
Manchester 25 12 Andover
fYrl'latunlng Valley 14

DIVISION IV
;), OttOVIlle (24)
2 Berlin Htland (2)
s, c. Wtn Harvest Prop
II. Delphos St Johns
p;. Bucyrus Wynford
~Ka da
7 Waterford
s. ReedsV' e Eastern
9 Cle Lutheran E ( t)
30 Pandora-G boa

19..()
17·2
19·1
17·2
17·2
16-3
17-3
18·2
15-4
16-2

267
223
184
157
117
109

n

69
62
60

,'p!hers receMng 12 or ITIOre poNs 11
(lie) Kirtland Mar a Sto n Mar on local
112 13 Holgate 18

•

placing in
the top five
their
in
weight
c I a s s .
Michael
Little ( 189)
placed
t h i r d .
B I a k e
C r o w
(215} and
Zachary
Sheets
(285) both
p I a c e
fourth. and Jeffery Roush
(160) placed fifth.
Little wa~ 3-2 at the tournament. \\ ith \\ins over
Roger Over (Trimble),
Brandon ·
Bauerbach
(Waterford), and Derrick
Loudermilk
(Wellston).
Crow was 2-3 \\ ith victories over Zackary Lucas
(Alexander) and Carl
Williams
(Trimble).
Sheets also went 2-3 at the
tournament with wins
against Rav McDaniel
(:'ielsonville:York)
and

RedStorm
track competes
at Kenyon

n i n t h •

Others recerv ng 12 or more points 11
(tie) Wauseon, Cambndge 16 13,
Mnerva 12

1 ftn Ltberty-Be,ton (14)17·0
2. S Eucld Reg a (10) 16-2
3.. Oak H1ll (2)
20-0
4. M1d n Madtson (1)
20·0
5 Millbury Lake
17·0
~Loudonville
18·1
74 Zoar. Tuscarawas Valloyt9·1
a-.Anna
17-2
9 Defrance Ttnora
16·2
10. Cols. Afncentnc
15·5

ATHENS - The Athens
Bulldogs took first place at
the TVC wrestling meet on
SalUrda) at
Athens
H i g h
School.
Meigs,
the
lone
local competitor,
took home
a seventh
place finish in the
n1ne team
field.
E i g h t
weight
classes
competed
in a round
robin forwith
f o u r

Please see TVC, 86

THE PLAI~S - The
only thing colder than the
"'eather outside of Athens
High School on Tue:&gt;day
night wa~ the ~hooting
touch of the Meig~ girls
basketball team inside
~tcAfee Gymnasium during a 5g.
27 setback
to Warren
in
a
Division II
sectional
quarterfinal
in
Athens
County.

DIVISION I

1, T1flin Columbian (14)
2, Cuy. Walsh Jesuit (6)
3, Kettenng Alter (3)
4, Ttpp C Trppccanoc (~)
5, Sandusky Perkins
6, Hathaway Brown (3)
7, Ctn lnd an H II
8, Cham nade·Ju tenno
9. Can S
10 Ctl iCOthe UntOto

BY SARAH HAWLEY
SHAWLEY 0 MYDAILYTRIBUNE COM

SWALTERSOMYDAILYTRIBUNE COM

How a state pane of sports wnters and
broadcasters rates Otllo high school
grrls basketball tearrs rn the weekly
Assocrated Press poll of 2010 by
OHSAA dlvtSJOns with won·lost record
and tots. po nts (first-place votes tn
parentheses)

19·1
18..()
16-0
18 1
18·1
16-2
15-3
17·1
16-2
14·3

Meigs ji11ishes 7th

~1arauders

Saturday, February 20
Division II - At Alexander HS
SectiOnal Final
Meigs·Warren·Manetta wtnner vs
Fairfield Umon·New Lex1ng1on wmner 1
p.m.
Galila Academy-Shoriaan wt!'mer vs
Vinton County-South Point wtnner. 2:45

1 Picl&lt;enngton N (19)
2, Dresden Tn.Va ey (4)
3, Manon Harding (2)
4. TWinsburg (1)
entor
.Walte(1)
I. Start
•
s. Upper Arlington
9 Can. McKrnley
10. Youngs Boardman

winTVC
Wrestling
Tourney

1

and went
the openBarnes
ing 10:25
of the first half without a
field goal, allowmg the
eighth-seeded
Lady
Warriors (9-12) to establish a 12-5 advantage after
eight minutes of play.
WHS - which led wireto-wire in the contest extended its lead to 16-5
at the 5:50 mark of the
second canto. but the
~laroon and Gold countered 16 seconds later with
their first field goal of the
game as Morgan Howard's
short jumper in the lane

Please see Meigs, 86

Bryan Walters/photo

Meigs' senior Tricia Smith dribbles past Warren's Grace Proctor during the Division II tournament contest at Athens High School. The Lady Marauders concluded thetr season as
they fell to Warren by a final of 58-27.

,

GAMBIER
The
lJni\'ersitv of Rto Grande
RedStorri1
men's
and
women's indoor track and
field squads were in competition on Friday at the
Kenyon
College
InvitationaL Thts was a
non-scoring meet.
Rio senior sprinter Chris
Woodfork (Chillicothe. OH)
\\as able to build on ::-olid
perfom1ances in the pre\ ious meet "'ith a first place
finish in the men's 55-meter
dash. Woodfork's time was
clocked at 6.62. Junior
Mike Green (Columbus.
OH) also came awa) '' ith a
first place finish in the long
jump. His best effort \\as
21 feet. 2 I/4 inches.
Freshman Jay Butler
(Cincinnati, OH) finished
third in the 200-meter dash
\\ ith a time of 23.73 and he
''as si\th in the 55 (6.7X).
Senior David Croom
(Heath, 0H) earned a fifth
place finish in the 55-meters
(6.74). He also finisheu
16th in the shot put \\ ith a
best thrm\ of 39 feet and 1/2
inch .
On the women's side,
~ophomore Ka) Ia Graves
(Chillicothe. OH) had the
best da), coming a\\ a) with
two second-place finishes,
in the 55-meter (7 .73) and
the 200-meter~ (27 .78).

Please see Track, 86

�www.mydailysentinel.com

Page 82 • The Daily Sentinel

Wednesday, February 17, 2010

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newspape
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200

Notices

lost &amp; Found

DR. Danny Westmo·

• RewarJ. Blk &amp; Wht Bos· reland Is placing 1 of
ton Terrier Female. Lost his larger pieces of
Feb
7
Speedway·Ka· jewelry on sale with

-.na~u~g=a~
. 7~4~0~
·4=4~6·~6=25~4~~ 10% going to the vic-

Notices

NOTICE OHIO VALLEY
PUBLISHING CO. rec·
ommends that you do
bus1ness with people you
know, and NOT to send
money through the mall
until you have lnvestigat·
ing the offering.
GUN SHOW Chillicothe
Sat, Feb 20, 9·5 &amp; Sun
Feb 21 , 9-3, St At 35 to
St At 104, Ross Co Fair·
grounds Adm $4, 6' Tbls
$35,
740·667·0412,
Ohiogunshows.net

Pictures that
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must be picked
within 30 days.
Any pictures
that are not
picked up will be
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Sunday In-column: 9:00a.m.

Sunday Display: 1:00 p.m.

Friday For Sundays Pap_,r

Thursday for Sundays Paper

• All

tfms of Haiti.
He IS selling a beautiful
2.49 CTW solitare prin·
cess cut ladles cocktail
ring the recommended
retail
price
is
over
$60.000
and is be1ng
sold for $6,000.00 &amp; tax
the ring is size 6.5 &amp; a
lifetime
once
in
a
daytime
call
chance.
or
PM
304·773·5000
304·773·6000
The jewelry will only be
made available to leg•ti·
mate buyers.

300

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RV
Twin R1vers Tower IS ac·
Service at Carmichael cepting applications for
Trailers
waiting list for HUD sub·
740-446-3825
Sidized, 1-BR apanment
for the elderly/diSabled.
RV Service at Carmi· call 675-6679
chael
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®

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Apartments/
Townhouses

Automot1ve

BR and bath. first
months rent &amp; deposit.
references required, No
Pets
and
clean .
740-441-0245
MIDDLPORT,
1 BED·
ROOM
APARTMENT,
APPLIANCES
FURNISHED.
NO
PETS,
NON SMOKING, NICE,
740·856·8863

N. 4th Ave., Middleport.
We have a full tnventory 2 br. furnished apt., dep.
ol cars &amp; trucks starting &amp;
ref..
No
pets,
at
S1700.
Cavaliers. 7 40·992·0165
Sunf1res, Buicks, Saturns
2 BR
&amp; more! Cook Motors,
328
Jackson
Pike.
(740)446·0103.

Other Services

'

&amp;

98' Mustang GT 5 sp.,
110,000 miles Black/Sil·
ver racer stripes, lots of
xtras. Asking lor payoff.
Need to sell now. Call
740·416·4915
or
740·992·3956.

Basement
Waterproofing
Unconditional lifetime
guarantee. Local references furnished. Established 1975. Call24 Hrs.
740·446·0870, Rogers
Basement WaterproOfing

Recreational Vehicles ............................... 1000
ATV ............................................................. 1005
Bicycles......................................................1 010
Boats/Accessories .................................... 1 015
Camper/RVs &amp; Trailers ............................. 1020
Motorcycles ............................................... 1 025
Other ..........................................................1030
Want to buy ...............................................1 035
Automotive ................................................ 2000
Auto RentaVLease ..................................... 2005
Autos .......................................................... 2010
Classic/Antiques ....................................... 2015
Commercial/Industrial .............................. 2020
Parts &amp; Accessories ..................................2025
Sports Utlllty .............................................. 2030
Trucks •..................•..........•.•......................•. 2035
Utility Trailers ............................................ 2040
Vans ............................................................2045
Want to buy ............................................... 2050
Real Estate Sales ...................................... 3000
Cemetery Plots .......................................... 3005
Commercial ................................................3010
Condomlnfums .......................................... 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
Commercfal ................................................351 0
Condominfums .......................................... 3515
Houses for Rent ........................................ 3520
Land (Acreage) .......................................... 3525
Storage .......................................................3535
Want to Rent .............................................. 3540
Manufactured Housing ............................. 4000
Lots.............................................................4005
Movers........................................................401 0
Rentals ....................................................... 4015
Sales ........................................................... 4020
Supplles ..................................................... 4025
Want to Buy ............................................... 4030
Resort Property ......................................... 5000
Resort Property for sale ........................... 5025
Resort Property for rent ........................... 5050
Employment..................•...........•...............•6000
Accounting/Fi nanclal ................................6002
Adminfstratlve!Professfonal .....................6004
Cashier/Cierk ............................................. 6006
Child/Elderly Care ..................................... 6008
Clerical ....................................................... 6010
Construction ..............................................6012
Drivers &amp; Delivery ..................................... 6014
Educatfon ................................................... 6016
Electrical Plumbfng ................................... 6018
Employment Agencfes .............................. 6020
Entertainment ............................................ 6022
Food Servfces............................................6024
Government &amp; Federal Jobs .................... 6026
Help anted- General .................................. 6028
Law Enforcement ...................................... 6030
Maintenance/Domestic ............................. 6032
Management/Supervisory ........................ 6034
Mechanfcs •.....•.............•.............•...•...•...•... 6036
Medical ....................................................... 6038
Musical ....................................................... 6040
Part·Time-Temporaries ............................. 6042
Restaurants ............................................... 6044
Sales........................................................... 6048
Technical Trades ....................................... 6050
Textiles/Factory ......................................... 6052

Campers/ RVs
Trailers

Autos

Home Improvements

Pet
Cremations.
740·446-3745

I

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errore In an ad taken over the phone.

SETTLEMENT

CLASSIFIED INDEX
Legals ........................................................... 100
Announcements .......................................... 200
Birthday/Anniversary ..................................205
Happy Ads .................................................... 210
Lost &amp; Found ............................................... 215
Memory/Thank You ..................................... 220
Notlces ......................................................... 225
Personals ..................................................... 230
Wanted ........................................................ 235
Services ....................................................... 300
Appliance Service ....................................... 302
Automotive .................................................. 304
Building Materfals ....................................... 306
Buslness ...................................................... 308
Catering ........................................................310
Child/Elderly Care ....................................... 312
Computers ................................................... 314
Contractors .................................................. 316
Domestics/Janftorial ................................... 318
Electrical ...................................................... 320
Flnanclal .......................................................322
Heafth ........................................................... 326
Heating &amp; Cooling ....................................... 328
Home Improvements 330
lnsurance ..................................................... 332
Lawn Service ............................................... 334
Muslc/Dance/Drama .................................... 336
Other Services ......................•......................338
Plumblng/Eiectrfcal .....................................340
Professional Services .................................342
Repairs ......................................................... 344
Roofing ......................................................... 346
Security ........................................................ 348
Tax/Accounting ........................................... 350
TraveVEntertafnment .................................. 352
Flnancial. ......................................................400
Financial Services.......................................405
Insurance .................................................... 410
Money to Lend .............................................415
Educatlon .....................................................500
Business &amp; Trade School. .......................... 505
Instruction &amp; Training ................................. 510
Lessons........................................................515
Personal ....................................................... 520
Anlmals ........................................................ soo
Animal Supplles .......................................... 605
Horses ..........................................................610
Llvestock...................................................... 615
Pets............................................................... 620
Want to buy .................................................. 625
Agriculture ...................................................700
Farm Equfpment..........................................705
Garden &amp; Produce.......................................710
Hay, Feed, Seed, Grain ............................... 715
Hunting &amp; Land ........................................... 720
Want to buy .................................................. 725
Merchandise ................................................ 900
Antlques ....................................................... 905
Appllance ..................................................... 910
Auctlons ....................................................... 915
Bargain Basement. ......................................920
Collectfbles .................................................. 925
Computers ................................................... 930
Equlpment/Supplles....................................935
Flea Markets ................................................ 940
Fuel 011 Coal/Wood/Gas ............................. 945
Furniture ...................................................... 950
Hobby/Hunt &amp; Sport .................................... 955
Kid's Corner.................................................960
Mlscellaneous..............................................965
Want to buy ..................................................970
Yard Sale ..................................................... 975

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Business &amp;Trade
School
Gallipolis Career
College
(Careers Close To Home)
Call Today! 740·446·4367
1·800·214·0452
gall pohscareercollege.eou
Accredrted Member Accred 1·
lng Counc11for Independent
Colleges and Schools 12746

600

Animals

Livestock
Two
registered
Angus
bulls for sale, s~res easy
calving calves. Records
available, proven sires.
can see some of their
offspnng.
call
John
740-667·3267.
Rice, 51429 Rice Run
Rd.,
Reedsville.
Oh
45772

Farm Equipment
For Sale By Owner
Have you pnced a John
Deere lately? You'll be 12 Unit Apt. Complex.
surprised! Check out our 446-0390.
1nventory
al
used
Car·
www.CAREO.com.
Houses For Sale
michael
Equipment
4 BR 2 BA approx. 3000
740·446-2412
sq. ft .. hardwood floors, 2
STIHL Sales &amp; ServiCe car
gar.,
SR
7
S
Now Available at Carmi· $149.900
(740)
chael
Equipment 339·2108.
740·446·2412
For sale by owner 3.23
Hay, Feed, Seed, Groin acre farm w/ double w1de
in
Leon
569.900.00
Ground ear corn. $8.00 a 304-458-2234.
100 lbs, bring your own
bags, 740-992·2623 or
land (Acreage)
304-991-6011
Look1ng for 100·400 acr·
4x5 Round Bales of Hay.
Stored In Barn. 520 ea. ers of hunt1ng land for
lease.
Jeff
_ _
740 245 9443
Paul
- - - - - - - - - 304·984·9358,
304-549-1589
900
Merchandise
Real Estate
3500
Rentals

I

I

Fuel Oil Coal /
Wood/Gas

Seasoned firewood.
Pets
All Hardwood.
740·853·2439
Free
Beagle/Blue
tick
740·446·9204.
mixed puppies. 8 weeks
old. 740·949-2700
Miscellaneous
3yr old male cat free to
Call
good
home.
740·645·3090 tv. mess.
Free Puppies,Golen Re·
tretver/Australian
Shep·
herd. 6 wks old. Can be
seen. (740)256·1832.
700

Agriculture

EBY,
INTEGRITY,
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HORSE/LIVE·
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CARGO/CONCESSION
B+W
TRAILERS.
GOOSENECK FLATBED
$3999. VIEW OUR EN·
TIRE TRAILER INVEN·
TORY AT
WWWCARMICHAEL·
TRAILERS.COM
740-446·3825

NOTICE Borrow Smart.
Contact the Ohto Divi·
sion of Flnanctal lnstitu·
t1ons Off1ce ot Consumer
Affairs BEFORE you refinance your home or ob·
tain a loan. BEWARE of
requests lor any large
advance
payments
of
fees or Insurance. Call
the Office of Consumer
AH1ars
toll
free
at
1·866·278-0003 to leam
1f the mortgage broker or
lender is properly h·
censed. (This is a public
serv1ce
announcement Brand new 6 ft.
from the Ohio Valley hog·$500
740-441-7889
Publlsh•ng Company)

Apartments/
Townhouse1

or 1 and 2 bedroom apts..
furnished
and
unfur·
nished, and houses 1n
Pomeroy and Mlddlepon.
security deposit reqUired.
2 1/2 Dollar Indian Solid no pets. 740·992·2218
Gold Com. 1927 $275.:
Also 3 Morgan Carson 1 BR Cabin appliance
utilities
pd.,
City.
Silver fum1shed
1882, Th1urman area also 2 BR
Dollars·2·1890.
740·286·5789
or
$375. Hurry, won't last apt.
740·441·3702
long' 740·533·3870
Jet Aeration Motors
repaired, new &amp; rebuilt
In stock. Call Ron
Evans 1-800-537-9528

Farm Equipment
2005 John Deere 790
Tractor
equipped
w1th
front weights. 5 It blade,
stereo, 60·in mower. roll
bar, 6·ft y~rd rake. and
rake
Cyclone vacuum
Excellent cond1t1on w1th
only 190 hrs of use Calf
740-441-7880

Real Estate
Sales

Want To Buy
Absolute Top Dollar - silver/gold
coms.
any
10KI14KI18K gold JeW·
elry. dental gold, pre
1935
US
currency,
proof/mint
sets.
dl8·
moods, MTS Co1n Shop.
151 2nd Avenue. Ga II·
polis. 446·2842
1000

Recreational
Vehicles

~~~~~~~~~
I

Campers RVs
Trailers

&amp;

1993 Dutchmen Class1c
33 foot camper with ex·
pando &amp; awntng. Price ts
negotiable.
Call
740·441-7889

1999 29' Rockwood Ultra
lite Camper, Make Good
A•verbank
Camper
or
Set Up In Campground,
Everythtng
Worked
Last
When Winterized
brush Fall, 4 New T~res May
Call ·06,
$3500?
740·992·2679 Eves

Gracious Living 1
Bedroom Apts. at
Manor
and
Apts. in Middleport, from
$327
to
$592.
740·992·5064.
Equal
Hous1ng Opponunity.
Jordan Landing Apart·
ments
3 br available all elec·
tric, no pets ' Ask About
Our Rent Specials • call
for details 304·674·0023
or 304-610·0776
Modern 1BR
740·446-0390

apt.

Call

Spnng
Valley
Green
Apartments 1 BR at
$395+2 BR at $470
Month. 740·446·1599.
Tara
Townhouse
Apartments • 2BR, 1.5
bath. back patio, pool,
playground, (!rash, sew·
age, water pd.)No pets
allowed
$450/rent,
5450/sec.
dep.
Call
740-645-8599
Apart..
1BR
Upsta•rs
$475 mo. + depos1t. all
utilities
paid.
740·446-3870
•
Houses For Rent
2 &amp; 3 BR houses for rent
in Gallipolis. 1 Small dog
OK 1n some locations
References &amp; secunty
deposit
required.
740-446·3870
4 Rms T Ba. Stove &amp;
fridge. 50 Olive St. No
pets. $450/mo + dep.
446·3945.

5 BR. 3.5 BA utility, car·
port. large detached 2
car gar pool. central H
&amp; A. close to hospilal.
Rent S1000. Dep $1000.
238 1st Ave. Lg. Upstalfs Pets w 1dep.. Ref. Reo. ,
apt.
overlook1ng
nver. Call740·446·3481.
Fum. kitchen . 2 persons. Clean 3BR Bnck. Galli·
$525..utll Dep. req . Ref. polis. $650/mo+dep. No
Call 446-4926
pets or smoking. (740)
2BR APT.Ciose to Hoi· 446·9209
zer Hospital on SR 160
Manufactu~ed
4000
CIA (740)441·0194
Housmg
CONVENIENTLY
LO·
GATED
&amp;
AFFORD·
ABLE! Townhouse apan·
lots
ments,
and/or
small
houses for rent. Call Mobile home lots avail·
740-441·1111 for appli· able $130 mo. 1ncl. wa·
1&amp;2 BR Apts . close to
hospital + new schools,
clean &amp; quiet. Ref+Dep
req. 740·794·0831

-ca~h-o_n_&amp;_m_w_r_m_a_lio_n_.___ 740-992·5639
~te~~~se~w~e~~~~~~s~h~,~~·
Call

Free Rent Special f!.l
2&amp;3BR apts $395 and
up. Central Air, W;D
hookup.
tenant
pays
electric.
Call between
the hours of 8A·8P.
EHO
Ellm View Apts.
(304)882·3017
Beautiful Apts. at Jack·
son Estates. 52 West·
wood Dr., from $365 to
$560.
740·446·2568.
Equal Hous•ng Opponu·
nity. This 1ns11tution 1s an
Equal Opportunity ProVIder and Employer.

Rentals
2 BR Mob•le Home, No
pets. Water, sewer. trash
•ncluded. At Johnson's
Mobile
Home
Park.
740.446·3160.
2 BR Tra11er for rent.
$500/mo.
446-4060 or
367-7762
2BR, 2 bath, Excellent
location. No Pets. Rei,
Sec.
DepoSit.
$495/month. 446·2423 or
446·3994

•

�,....------------------------~------:-"'--:-----.,.-------- ----- - ---

MAR

''

••
••

.•
•

Rental•

Help Wanted· General

"
:

2BR. Ideal for 1 or 2 peo·
pie, $300/month,
Refernces. No Pets. NO
CALLS
after
7pm
740·441·0181

Great Company, Great
Causes, Great Career!
Make calls for the con·
servat1ve politiCal organi·
zations that are mean·
1ngful to you I

•

-t

•

•

•
•

•

••
•
•
•

•
•
•
••
•
•..
•
•
:
•
:

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•..

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Nice 2 bedroom, $325.00
per month. No pets. Call
Ray 740·992·5639
Mobile home for rent,
Hud accept. call before 9pm
304-675-3423.
Own a New 3BR, 2 BA
w/1 acre. 5% down. S525
mo. WAC. Near Holzer.
740-446-3570.
Sales
AA New 4 Bedrooms
O.nly $44,970
2010 Singlew1de
Incredible $19.995
mym1dwesthomes.com
740.828.2750

lnloCislon offers:
Professtonal Work Environment
Excellent Benefits Package
Pa1d T•a1n1ng
Weekly Pay and Bonus
Opportumties
Call and Schedule Your
Interview:
1-888-fMC-PAYU ext.
2321
http:lljobs.lnfoclslon.c
om

Industrial Workers
AMERICAN
ELECTRIC
POWER I MOUNTAINEER POWER PLANT IN
NEW HAVEN , WV
Abandoned
14x70 SEEKING TEMPORARY
Handyman spec1al. Free WORKERS.
or
best
offer. seeking
people
1nter·
740-992·5639
ested in the Operations
Department position (s),
New3BR. 2BA
40Hr. work weeks , 12
as low as $241.68
hou'r rotating shill work
per mo. and 1563.00
required. Two year Dedown. WAC
gree preferred.
740-446·35 70
Entry level wage rate @
•rhe Proctorville
approx. $13.00 per hr
Dtfference·
Moderate benefit pack$1 and a deed IS al: you
age being offered.
need to own your dream
Interested
candidates
home. Call Now!
are to submtl resumes by
Freedom Homes
fax 614-716·2272.
888-565-0167
Ten positions need
Trade 10 your old single·
filled by next weeki
wide for a new home. 0
No sales! No collections!
money down. 446·3570.

•

6000

Employment

Drivers &amp; Delivery

•

•
T

J'

t

,

LiQUid Asphalt Drivers
needed. tn Pt. Pleasant
area must be 21 yrs. old
or older, must haveCiass
A COL With Hazmat Endorsement
and
good
MVR, local trips
call 1-800·598-6122 for
more 1nfo.
Help Wanted- General

Recruit volunteers for
non-profit organizations.
Get paid to make a dif·
terence!
Full and Part-time Positions
Weekly Pay and Bonus
Incentives!
Call TODAY!
Interview TOM OR·
ROW !I
Work NEXT WEEK!I!
1-888-IMC·PAYU
REMEMBER EXT. 1921
http://jobs.infoclslon.c
om
Management /
Supervisory

AVON! All Areas! To Buy
or Sell Shirley Spears
Program DirectorEchoing
~
304-675·1429
Meadows
Residential
Center
a
Christian
CAREER
OPPORTU- based 36 bed ICF·MR
NITY!
Finance D1rector, facility for developmenOh10 Valley Reg1onal De- tally disabled adults. is
resumes and
velopment
Comm1sston, accepting
Waverly,
OH applications for Program
,, $40,000·$47,500:
visit Director. This position
Prowww.ovrdc.org for de- w1ll oversee the
Department
• tails. "An Equal Opportu- gramming
and IS a member of the
nity Employer"
Leadership Team. Pos1·
tion reqUires a BacheCosmetologist
Booth tors Degree 1n Social
Services,
Rehabilitation
• Rental
•... Currently look1ng tor mo.. or Human ServJces re' tivated hair stylist to JOin lated field or a Degree
our hair shop in Mason, and Licensure as a Regas a Booth Renter WV Istered Nurse. Prior man·
h
Cosmetolog1st
License agement
expenence
Required
call and two years prior ex~
304-773-5081
or penance worktng with
304-674-5400 leaye a persons with
develop·~ message we will call you mental
d1sabiht1es
re·
back
qulred. CPR and Certnication in First A1de will
-H-ar-ri-s-S~te-a~k~H-ou_s_e-no-w be required prior to or
accepting
applications w1thtn 60 days of hire.
304-675·9 726.
PosttJOn requires a demonstrated
Christian
background and a demonstrated ability to fulfill
the mission and purpose
of the M1nistry. Position
also requtres a valid
Ohio Drivers License and
a baste knowledge and
abiltty to operate Micro·
sott office products, the
internet, email and gen-

I

I.AC
Announcements

Management /
Supervisory
oral office equipment.
This is a salaried pOSitiOn
that offers a full benefit
package. Interested ind1·
vlduals should submit resume w1th
cover leiter
and salary reqUirements
or an appllcabon to
Echoing Meadows Res1·
dentiat Center, 319 West
Union
Street.
Athens
Ohio, 45701. Resumes
and apphcalions will be
accepted
until
2·25-10.Echolng
Meadows, a part of Echomg
Hills Village, Inc. 1s an
equal opportunity employer

-

Medical
Taking applications for
HHA, LPN, &amp; AN for the
Gallia
&amp;
Proctorville
area. Call 740-446-3808
or 1-800·759-5383

Get A Jump
on
SAVINGS

• Hometown News
• Area Shopping
• Local Sports
• Community
Calendar
... and much more.

&lt;Ballipol is iBnilp m;ribunr
~oint ~leasant l\egister
The Daily Sentinel
~unbap ~itnes -~entinel

Announcements

FRANCHISE
OPPORTUNITY

THE
•cLASSIFIEDS

You may qualify toO\\ n

aren't only for
buying or selling
items, you can use
this widely read
section to wish
someone a
Happy Birthday,
provide a Thank
You, and place an
ad ''In Memory"
of a loved one.

PETLAND GALLIPOLIS
• A Great Location (Next to Walmart)
• Complete Training
• ExcJu.,ive Product'
• Financtng A... sl:;.tance for Quahlied
Candidate.,

Call (800) 221-5935
for more information

MAKE
SOMEONE'S

Director of Mamtenance
Echoing Meadows Resi·
dential Center, a Christian
based
36
bed
ICF-MR facility for developmentally
disabled
adults, is accepting re·
sumas and applications
for a Full Time Maintenance Director. This po·
sitton will oversee the
Maintenance Department
and is a mamber of the
Leadership Team. Posi·
lton reqUJres a High
School Diploma or GED.
A degree or certiiJcatJon
1n engineenng, drathng.
archttecture, construct1on
or related field preferred.
Basic engmeering sktlls
such as blueprint readIng, schematic reading.
equtpment manuals, and
Instructional
materials
and demonstrated aptitude w1th HVAC, electn·
cal, plumbing and gen·
eral construction skills
reqUtred.
Demonstrated
knowledge and expenence with Standard Precautions, lnfeclton Control.
Environmental
Safety,
OSHA.,
Fire
Safety. City, County and
State buildmg code inspection rules and facility
systems required. Prior
supervisory
experience
also required. Prior experience working is a
health care environment
and/or
wrth
disabled
adults preferred. A valid
Ohio Driver's license and
good driving record is re·
quired. Must have cureen! COL or able to obtatn
w1thins
90
days.
Copmputer literacy also
required. Th1s position ts
a salaned postlion and
offers a full benefit package. Interested indJvtduals should submit re·
sume With cover leter
and salary requirements
or an apphcat1on to
Echo1ng Meadows Residential Center 319 West
Union
Street,
Athens.
Ohio. 45701, Reusmes
and qpplications will be
accepted until 2-25·1 0

- - - -- --- ---

The Daily Sentinel ·Page 83

\!tribune Sentinel l\egtster
CLASSI FlED

•

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,'

·.,-~-- ---- --~--

www.mydailysentinel.com

_ Wednesday, February 17, 2010

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•..

-- -------

For more information, contact your
local Ohio Valley
Publishing office.

www.petland .com

DAY!
There's
Something
For
Everyone
. . _. _"""""__...._
In
The•••

®nlltpolis tJBnilp U!:ribune
(740) 446-2342

The Daily Sentinel
(740) 992-2155
~oint ~Ieasant

3aegister

(304) 675-1333

IPU.:.LIC
IWOTICES
Sheriff Sales
Case Number 09cv1 03
Home National Bank
Plaintiff
VS

Patricia Durst adm. est.
Ralph Durst et al
Defendants
Court of Common
Pleas, Meigs County,
Ohio.
In pursuance of an
order of sale to me di·
reeled from said court
In the above entitled
action, I will expose to
sale at public auction
on the front steps of
the Meigs County Court
House on Friday, February 26, 2010, at 10
a.m., of said day, the
following
described
real estate:
The
following
described premises situ·
ated In the Township of
Letart, County of Meigs
and State of Ohio:
Situate In Section 16,
Town 1, Range 12,
Letart Township, Meigs
County, Ohio and be·
ginning on the south
line of the public road
leading from Apple
Grove to Letart, at the
southwest corner of
the Jonas Roush half
acre; thence east with
said Roush south line
to the Ohio River;
thence
southwardly
with said river to the
northeast corner of
Reefer's Tract, formerly
G. W. Pilcher's; thence
with
said
Reefer's
north line to the public

road; thence with the
south line of said pub·
lie road northeasterly
to the place of beginning, containing two
and fifty-two one hundredths acres (2.52)
more or less.
Reserving to the State
of Ohio, however, all
oil, gas, coal and other
minerals with the right
to enter for the purpose
of prospecting for, de·
veloping, producing or
operating for the same,
and the right of occu·
pancy in so far as the
same Is essential to
such prospecting, developing, operating or
producing; and reservIng to the State of Ohio
the use of streams
flowing through said
lands or abutting upon
the same, and so much
of the banks thereof as
ma be necessary for
such enjoyment, and
the protection of such
streams from erosion,
contamination or deposit of sediment.
Excepting an Easement
to the United State of
America as is recorded
in Vol. 235, page 361,
Deed Records, Meigs
County, Ohio.
Subject to all leases,
easements and right·
of-way of record.
Reference Deed:Vol·
ume 92, Page 585.
Meigs County Official
Records.
Auditor's Parcel Number: 08·00033.000

Your

Property
Address:
49615 State Route 228,
Racine, OH 45771
Current Owner: Ralph
Larry Durst
Appraised at 565,000
Terms of Sale: Cannot
be sold for less than
213rds of the appraised
value. 10% down on
day of sale, cash or
certified check, balance due on confirms·
tlon of sale.
The appraisal did not
Include an interior examination of the house.
Robert
E.
Beegle,
Meigs County Sheriff
Attorney for the Plaintiff
Little, Sheets &amp; Warner
211-213 E. Second St.
Pomeroy, OH 45769
740·992·6689
(2) 3, 10, 17

Public Notice
Legal Notice
In The Court Of Common Please, Meigs
County Ohio
Case No 09DLT001
Oron Dungee, Dana
Dungee, State of Ohio
Dept.
of Taxation,
Ronald
Manning,
Sharon Manning, Glen·
don Mynes, Catherine
Mynes. John/Jane Doe
1-3 will take notice that
on November 30, 2009
plaintiff Peggy Yost,
Meigs County Trea·
surer filed a petition for
tax foreclosure against
them In the Court of

I..C.i~ht

Public I'Ooti&lt;.·(.'-. in !'-Ot.•,,.·~pap(.'I'"·
to Kncnv. Dclivet·&lt;-·d J~ight to Vcnu· J&gt;oor_

Cammon Pleas, Meigs
County Ohio third floor
of the County Court·
house the same being
Case No. 09DLT001 in
said Court, praying that
plaintiff be found to
have a good and valid
first lien on certain
premises taxes, assessments and penal·
ties,
that
all
defendants, be re·
quired to set forth their
claims or be forever
barred from asserting
them, that plaintiff be
paid within a reasonable time. to be named
by the Court, the equity
or redemption of defendants, be foreclosed
and Order of Sale issued to the Sheriff dl·
reeling him to sell said
premises In the manner
provided
by
R.C.
5721.19. ParceiiD # 05·
00161.000. A complete
legal description can
be found at the Meigs
County Recorder's Office at Volume 283,
Page 61 of the Meigs
County Records.
This cause will be
heard on April 26, 2010
at 11 :00 am or as soon
thereafter as meets the
convenience of the
Court. Interested par·
ties have 28 days to re·
spend to the Complaint
for Tax Foreclosure.
Answers are to be filed
with the Meigs County
Clerk of Courts, Third
Floor of the County
Courthouse. Pomeroy,

OH 45769
2/10, 17, 24, 3/3/ 10. 17

Public Notice
Sheriff Sale
Case Number 08CV078
US Bank FWA
Flrstar Bank
Plaintiff
vs
Robert E. Boring Et al
Defendants
Court
of Common
Pleas, Meigs County,
Ohio
In pursuance of an
order of sale to me di·
reeled from said court
In the above entitled
action, I will expose to
sale at public auction
on the front steps of
the Meigs County Court
House on Friday. Feb·
ruary 26, 2010 at 10
a.m., of said day, the
following
described
real estate:
Exhibit A- Legal De·
scription
Situated in the State of
Ohio, County of Meigs
and in the Village of
Harrisonville:
PARCELNO. 1:
Being Lots Numbered
Seven (7) and Eight (8)
of Dunlap's Addition, to
the said Village of Harrisonville,
Meigs
County, Ohio.
PARCEL No. 2:
Lot No. Nine (9) In Dun·
lap's Addition to the Vii·
lage of Harrisonville.
Also the following
being In Fraction 7,

Town 7, Range 14, In
the Ohio Company's
Purchase, beginning at
the northwest corner of
Lot No. 9 in Dunlap's
Addition to the VIllage
of Harrisonville; thence
North 69 West 100
feet; thence 21 East
75 feet to the place of
beginning, containing
one-half acre, more or
less.
Current Owner: Robert
E. Boring et al
Property at: 38397
State At. 684
Pomeroy, Ohio
PP# 17·00427.000, 17·
00426.000,
17·
00428.000,
17·00425.000
Prior deed reference:
Volume 107, Page 555
Appraised at 535,000
Terms of Sale: Cannot
be sold for less than
213rds of the appraised
value. 10% down on
day of sale, cash or
certified check, balance due on confirmation of sale.
The appraisal did not
include an interior ex·
aminatlon of the house.
Robert
E.
Beegle,
Meigs County Sheriff
Attorney for the plain·
tiff
Lerner Sampson &amp;
Rothfuss
PO Box 54801
Cincinnati, OH 45201·
5480
513-241·3100
(2) 10, 17, 24

WEDNESDAY TELEVISION GUIDE

�Wednesday, February 17, 2010

www.mydailysentinel.com

Page 84 • The Daily Sentinel

~~~
PUBLIC
NOTICES

Publk Notic~' in Ne~\spaper!'&gt;.
Your Right to Know, Dclhered fUght to Yom· Door.

Sheriff Sates
Case Number 09CV013
Bruner Land Company.
Inc.
Plaintiff
vs
Everett L. Gilmore Et at
Defendants
Court of Common
Pleas. Meigs County,
Ohio
In pursuance of an
order of sale to me directed from said court
In the above entitled
action, I will expose to
sale at public auction
on the front steps of
the Meigs County Court
House on Friday, February 26, 2010 at 10
a.m., of said day, the
following
described
real estate:
EXHIBIT A
Situated in the Town·
ship of Olive, County of
Meigs. and State of
Ohio:
And known as being In
the Northwest Quarter
of Section 8, Range 11
West,
Township
4
North, of The Ohio
Company First Purchase:, and being
bounded
and
described as follows:
Commencing for reference at an iron pin set
at the Northwest corner
of the Northeast Quar·
ter of Section 8 and
being at the Southeast
corner of 160 acre Lot
1166, and being at the
Southwest corner of
100 acre Lot 104 (Note:
Reference bearing on
the North line of the
Northwest Quarter of
Section 8 and the
South line of 160 acre
Lot 1166 used as North
86 deg. 47' 43" East.
Thence, with the North
line of Section 8, South
86 deg. 47' 43" West a
distance of 312.62 feet
to an Iron pin set being
the true point of beginning for this description;
Thence, from said point
of beginnjng and leav·
ing the section line,
South 03 deg. 57' 15"
East a distance of
692.47 feet to an Iron
pin
set,
passing
through an iron pin set
at a distance of plus
379.00 feet;
Thence South 87 deg.
06' 34" West a distance
of 1,059.47 feet to a
point In the centerline
of Township Road No.
274 (Little Forest Run
Road), passing through
two iron pins set at distances of plus 929.47
feet and plus 1,029.47
feet, respectively;
Thence, with the centerline of Township
Road No. 274. the following two courses:
I. North 36 deg. 00' 00"
West a distance of
396.00 feet to a point;
2. Thence North 31 deg.
00' 28'' West a distance
of 399.89 feet to a point
in the North line of Section 8;
Thence, leaving the
road with the North line
of Section 8, North 86
deg. 47' 43" East a dis·
tance of 1,451.41 feet to
the point of beginning,
passing through an
Iron pin set at a distance of plus 30.00 feet;
20.017
Containing
acres, more or less.
Subject to all legal
right-of-ways,
easement,
restrictions.
reservations, and zonIng
regulations of
record.
Subject to the right-of·
way of Township Road
No. 274.
Subject to the 100· Year
Flood Plain restrlc·
tlons, If applicable.
Subject to a 50.00 feet
wide easement being
reserved
unto the
grantors (Bruner Land
Company. Inc.), their
heirs, and or assigns,
forever. Said easement
being for the purpose
of running utilities to
other parcels of land on
or near Township Road
No. 274. Said ease·
ments r.uns In a North·
South direction across
the West end of the
above-described property with the West line
of said easement being
the centerline of Township Road No. 274.
Containing 0.914
acres, more or less, of
easement.
All iron pins set are
518" x 30" rebar capped
and labeled "Claus
6456".
A plat of the above de·
scribed survey has
been submitted for tile
at the County Engl·
neer's Office.
The bearings In this description are for angle
calculations only and
are based on the North
line of the Northwest
Quarter of Section 8
and the South line of
160 acre Lot 1166 used
as North 86 deg. 47' 43"
E11st.
Tne above description
prepared by Roger W.
Claus, Registered Sur·
veyor No. 6456, based
on an actual field survey of November 24,
2003; said survey being
subject to any facts
that may be disclosed

In a full and accurate
title search.
aka 38780 Little Forest
Road, Reedsville, Ohio
45772
PPN 09-0067.0000
EXHIBITS
BRUNER COLEMAN
FARM
PROTECTIVE
COVENANTS
1) The following protec·
tive covenants are
covenants running with
the land, and shall con·
tlnue In full force and
effect until January 01,
2075 (through lnjunc·
tlon or otherwise) by
any owner acquiring
any part of the land ac·
qulred by the under·
signed
In
Olive
Township by Deed
recorded in O.R. Vol.
182 Pg. 3 In the land
records
of
Meigs
County, Ohio.
2.) No more than two
residences per tract
shall be permitted.
3.) Any mobile home
placed on said property
shall be 5 years or less
at time of placement
shall contain a mini·
mum of 700 square feet
and shall be under
skirted at time of placement.
4.) No inoperative or
unlicensed
vehicles
may be placed on said
lot. No accumulation of
dlscarcted personal ef·
fects, debris; waste,
garbage or any unsightly objects or matter will be permitted on
any lot.
5.) No noxious or offensive activity shall be
carried on upon any lot.
6.) Before Occupancy
of any house Or mobile
home, a sewage dis·
posal system shall be
Installed In conformity
with the minimum stan·
dards required by the
of
County
Board
Health.
7.) Before any construction takes place,
purchaser must con·
tact the local govern·
ment authority to make
sure they are in compli·
ance with the local
laws.
8.) No swine shall be
permitted on the above
premises. Larger domestic farm animals
(Including but not lim·
ited to horses, cattle,
sheep, goats' and lla·
mas) are permitted. The
pasture shall not be
over grazed but shall
be healthy and thick,
and weeds shall be
controlled. Noise and
odors from any animal
shall be controlled so
that neither shall be of·
fensive to adjoining
neighbors.
9.) All lots are for residentlal, agricultural or
recreational purposes,
(though the lot owner
may store equipment
and material used in a
business in a well con·
structed
enclosed
building on the property). The property is
not to be used for commercia!
enterprises
(with customers coming and going) with the
exception of churches,
riding stables, horse
farm, cattle farm, or
truck farm (fruits and
vegetables.)
10.) Dogs, cats and
other household pets
shall not be bred or
maintained for com·
mercia! purposes. 11.)
No shack, tent, camper,
school bus, or recreatlonal vehicles shall
be used as a residence,
either temporary or
permanent.
12.) Any residence
erected on said lots
shall be at least 700
square feet of Indoor
heated area (excluding
-basement and garage)
and shall have a finlshed siding such as
rustle wood, frame,
brick veneer, press
board, or contempo·
rary siding.
13.) Any building or
structure placed on
said property shall be
set back a minimum of
75 feet from the center
of the existing road unless a lesser set-back
Is requested by public
authority.
14.) Where protective
covenants and Meigs
County of Olive Township Zoning
Ordlnances are In conflict,
the stricter requirement
will prevail.
15.) Invalidation of any
of these covenants by
Judgment of court
order shall, in no way
affect any of the other
provisions, which shall
remain in full force and
effect.
16.) Nothing contained
herein shall be conslrued as creating any
obligation on the part
of Bruner Land Com·
pany, Inc., to enforce
these
Protective
Covenants.
17.) The purchasers of
this farm, for themselves, their heirs and
assigns, by the accept·
a nee of the conveyance
of this farm, agree to be
by
the
bound
covenants contained
herein and are the prl-

mary enforcers of
these covenants.
Prior deed reference
Vol. 182, page 459,
Meigs County Official
Records
Land Installment Con·
tract Vol., 198, Page
459, Meigs County Official Records
Current Owner: Everett
Gilmore etal
Property at: 38780 Lit·
tie
Forest
Rd.,
Reedsville, OH
PP# 09.00670.000
Prior Deed References:
Volume 182, Page 459
Volume 198, Page 459
Appraised at $20,000
Terms of Sale: Cannot
be sold for less than
213rds of the appraised
value. 10% down on
day of sale, cash or
certified check, bal·
ance due on conflrma·
tlon of sale.
The appraisal did In·
elude an Interior examination of the house.
E.
Beegle,
Robert
Meigs County Sheriff
Attorney for the Plaintiff
David Bennett· Attorney
126 N 9th St.
Cambridge, OH 43725
74().439-2719
(2) 10, 17, 24
--------

Public Notice
Sheriff Sales
Case Number 08CV151
LaSalle Bank National
Association
Plaintiff
vs
Angela S. Spires et al
Defendants .
Court of Common
Pleas, Meigs County
In pursuance of an
order of sale to me dl·
rected from said court
in the above entitled
action, I will expose to
sale at public auction
on the front steps of
the Meigs County Court
House on Friday, Feb.
26, 2010 at 10 a.m., of
said day, the following
described real estate:
Situated In Rutland
Township,
Meigs
County, Ohio, bounded
and described as fol·
lows:
Beginning at a point In
the West side of Side
hill Road, which is also
the northeast corner of
the 100 acre tract
owned
by
these
grantors from which
this parcel Is taken;
said point Is also the
northeast comer of the
A.H. Plummer land as
stated In the deed from
Nicholas Grueser and
Margie Grueser to Ray·
mond 0. Lambert and
Lucille Lambert; thence
south 205 deg. 270 feet;
thence south 180 deg.
70 feet; thence In a
westerly direction 270
deg. 440 feet: thence
290 deg. 900 feet at
which point it inter·
sects with the old Earl
Warren property line;
thence along the old
Earl Warren boundary
and the Raymond 0.
Lambert boundary in
an easterly direction
1526 feet to the place of
beginning, containing
8.5 acres, more or less.
Prior Instrument Reference: Deed dated October 4, 2006, flied
October 10,
2006,
recorded In Official
Records Volume 242,
Page 429, Recorder's
Office, Meigs County,
Ohio
Current
Owners'
Names:
John M. Spires and Angela S. Spires
Property Address:
36741 Dye Road, Rut·
land, OH 45775
Parcel
Number:
1100600000
Appraised At:
S55,000
Terms of Sale:
10% of the appraised
value and that failure to
complete the sale will
result In the forfeiture
of the deposit.
Current Owner: Angela
S. Spires et al
Property at: 36741 Dye
Rd.
Rutland, OH
PP# 11·00600.000
Prior Deed References:
Volume 242 Page 429
Appraised at $55,000
Terms of Sale: Cannot
be sold for less than
2/3rds of the appraised
value. 1Oo/o down on
day of sale, cash or
certified check, batance due on conflrma·
tion of sale.
The appraisal did not
Include an Interior examinatlon of the house.
Robert
E.
Beegle,
Meigs County Sheriff
Attorney for the Plaintiff
Manley Deas Kochalskl
LLC
PO Box 165028
Columbus, OH43216·
5028
614·222-4921
(2) 10, 17, 24

tllrlo ".,,..,

Plaintiff
vs
David L. Cottrill et al
Defendants
Court of Common
Pleas, Meigs County,
Ohio
In pursuance of an
order of sale to me dl·
rected from said court
In the above entitled
action, I will expose to
sale at public auction
on the front steps of
the Meigs County Court
House on Friday, March
5th, 2010, at 10 a.m., of
said day, the following
described real estate:
Street Address:
31330 Painter Ridge
Road, VInton, OH 45686
Parcel
Number:
1301064MOO
and
1300422002
Legal Description: Situated in the County of
Meigs. Township of
Salem, and State of
Ohio:
Being a part of land
that Is now or formerly
in the name of Ronald
D. and Judy A. Hagerty
as recorded In Official
Record 103, Page 731
of the Meigs County
Recorder's Office, said
being situated In the
Northeast quarter of
the southwest quarter
of Section 25, T-8-N, A·
15- W, and bounded
and described as follows:
Beglnning for reference on set 5/8" Iron
pin with a plastic identification cap, taken to
be the northeast comer
of the southeast quarter of Section 25;
thence along the east
line of the Southwest
quarter of Section 25,
S. 9 deg. 42 min. 17
sec. W. a distance of
768.56 feet to a 5/8"
Iron pin with a plastic
identification cap set
being the principal
place of beginning of
the tract herein de·
scribed; thence contln·
ulng along the east line
of the southwest quar·
ter of Section 25., S. 9
deg. 42 min. 17 sec. W.,
a distance of 342.00
feet to a 5/8" Iron pin
with a plastic identlfica·
tlon cap set; thence
leaving the east line of
the southwest quarter
and with a line through
the grantor's property,
N. 80 deg. 18 min. 58
sec. W., passing a 518"
Iron pin
with a plastic identifica·
tion cap set at 883.16
feet, going a total distance of 933.16 feet to
an Iron spike set (60
penny nail) in the cen·
ter of Painter Ridge
Road (County Road I);
thence along the center
of Painter Ridge Road
the following two (2)
courses: 1.) N. 2 deg. 14
min. 1 sec. W. a distance of 283.87 feet to a
point, and 2.) N. 3 deg 4
min, 22 sec. E. a distance of 64.68 feet to an
Iron spike set; thence
leaving the center of
Painter Ridge Road and
with a line through the
grantor's property, S.
80 deg. 18 min. 58 sec.
E. passing a 5/8" Iron
pin with a plastic identlfication cap set at
50.00 feet, going a total
distance of 999.35 feet
to the principal place of
beginning. Containing
7.606 acres, more or
less, and being subject
to the right of way of
Painter Ridge Road
(County Road I) and all
other easements of
record. Being a part of
Tax Parcel No. 1300422·000. All 518" iron
pins with plastic identl·
flcatlon caps set are
stamped "SHARRETT8019.'' All iron pins are
set being 5/8" by 32
Inches. All bearings
based on the east line
of the southwest quar·
ter of Section 25, being
S. 9 deg. 42 min. 17
sec. W., and are for the
determination of angles only. The above
described tract was
surveyed by Paul R.
Sharrett, Ohio Professlonal Surveyor No.
8019, May 18, 2000.
Current Owner: David
L. Cottrll et al
Property at: 31330
Painter Rdg. Rd.
Vinton, OH 45686

&lt;I

PP# 13·0164MOO
13·00422.002 Mobile
Home and Land
Prior deed references;
Volume 185, Page 337
Appraised at $75,000
Terms of sale: Cannot
be sold for less than
2/3rds of the appraised
value. 10% down on
day of sale, cash or
certified check, bal·
ance due on confirmation of sale.
The appraisal did not
Include an interior ex·
amlnatlon of the house.
E.
Beegle,
Robert
Meigs County Sheriff
Attorney for the Plain·
tiff
Manley Deas Kochalskl
LLC
POBox 165028
Columbus, OH43216
614·222-4921
(2) 10, 17, 24

• Vinyl Siding
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Windows
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Owner:
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742·2332

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WV036725

V.C. YOUNG Ill
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1

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MIKE W. MARCUM, OWNER
47239 Riebel Rd., Long Bottom, OH
740·985·4141
740·416-1834
Full) in~urcd
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Public Notice

Haf4wbod Cabinnry And Fu?ntiure

SHERIFF SALES CASE
NUMBER 09CV052 THE
BANK OF NEW YORK
MELLON PLAINTIFF VS
RICK &amp; LUNSFORD ET
AL
DEFENDANTS
COURT OF COMMON
PLEAS,
MEIGS
COUNTY, OHIO. IN
PURSUANCE OF AN
ORDER OF SALE TO
ME DIRECTED FROM
SAID COURT IN THE
ABOVE ENTITLED ACTION, I WILL EXPOSE
TO SALE AT PUBLIC
AUCTION ON THE
FRONT STEPS OF THE
MEIGS
COUNTY
COURT HOUSE ON
FRIDAY, MARCH 5,
2010 AT 10 AM, OF
SAID DAY, THE FOLLOWING DESCRIBED
REAL ESTATE: Street
Address:
Parcel NUMBER:
Legal Description:
29610 Sharon Hollow
Road, 0 TR 134 Sharon
Hollow Road, Portland,
OH 45770 .'
0700307000
and
0700307001 Parcel No.
1:
Situated In Lebanon
Township,
Meigs
County, and State of
Ohio: In Section 35,
Town 2, Range 11 and
being part of 160 Acre
lot 1177 and being
more particularly de·
scribed as follows:
Commencing at the
northeast comer of
said
Section
35;
Thence West 1600 feet,
more or less; thence
South 2025 feet, more
or less, to a point in
Township Road 134
(Sharon Road); thence
leaving the road N. 32
deg. 45' E. 166.06 feet
to an Iron pin found;
thence s. 82 deg. 30' E.
617.93 feet to an Iron
pin set (passing an Iron
pin set at 387.76 feet);
thence N. 53 deg. II' 03"
E.
131.3 3 feet to an iron
pin set at the point of
beginning of the tract
herein
described:
thence N. 53 deg. 11'
03" E. 191.41 feet to an
Iron pin found; thence
S. 0 deg. 35' 11" E.
292.13 feet (passing an
iron pin set at 254.73
feet) to a point in the
center of Sharon Road;
thence along the road
S. 65 deg. 15' 44" W.
106.75 feet; Thence S.
52 deg. 49' 46" W. 70.98
feet;
thence leaving the road
N. 0 deg. 35' 11" W.
264.98 feet (passing an
Iron pin set at 25.00
feet) to the point of beginning,
containing
0.9686 acres.
Parcel No.2:
Situated In Lebanon
Township,
Meigs
County, and State of
Ohio: In Section 35,
Town 2, Range 11 and
being part of 160 acre
lot 1177 and 'being
more particularly de·
scribed as follows:
Commencing at the
Northeast comer of
said Section 35; thence
West 1600 feet, more or
less; thence South
2025 feet, more or less,
to a point In township
road
134 (Sharon
Road); thence leaving
the road N. 32 deg. 45'
E. 166.09 feet to an iron
pin found; thence S. 82
deg. 30' E. 387.76 feet
to an Iron pin set at the

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Mason. WV 25260
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Public Notice
point of beginning of
the tract herein de·
scribed; thence contin·
ulng S. 82 deg. 30' E.
230.17 feet to an Iron
pin set; thence N. 53
deg. 11' 03" E. 131.33
feet to an Iron pin set;
thence S. 0 deg. 35' 11"
E. 264.98 feet to the
center of Sharon Road;
(passing an iron pin set
at 239.98 feet); thence
along the center of the
Road S. 52 deg. 49' 46"
W. 83.15 feet; thence N.
87 deg. 53' 12" W.
187.71 feet to an Iron
pin set; thence N. 77
deg. 00' II" W. 117.51
feet to an Iron pin set;
thence leaving the road
N. 7 deg. 52' 44" E.
235.42 feet to the point
of beginning, containing 2.0000 acres. Be the
same more or less, but
subject to all legal
highways.
CURRENT
OWNER:
RICK E LUNSFORD ET
AL PROPERTY AT
:29610 SHARON HOL·
LOW RD. TR 134
PP#0700307.000
0700307.001
PRIOR
DEED REFERENCES:
VOLUME 113, PAGE
333 APPRAISED AT
S85,000.00 TERMS OF
SALE: CANNOT BE
SOLD FOR LESS THAN
2/3RDS OF THE APPRAISED VALUE. 10%
DOWN ON DAY OF
SALE, CASH OR CER·
TIFIED CHECK, BAL·
ANCE
DUE
ON
CONFIRMATION
OF
SALE.
THE
AP·
PRAISAL DID NOT INCLUDE AN INTERIOR
EXAMINATION OF THE
HOUSE. ROBERT E.
BEEGLE,
MEIGS
COUNTY SHERIFF AT·
TORNEY FOR THE
PLAINTIFF MANLEY
DEAS
KOCHALSKI
LLC P.O. BOX 165028
COLUMBUS OH 43216·
5028 614-222-4921
(2) 10, 17, 24

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-------Sheriff Sales Case
Number 08cv148
Chase Home Finance,
LLC

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----------~----------'!---------'!'-~----~------·--

Dean Yeung/Denis Lebrun

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WHAT'S THE GENERAL
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.

The Daily Sentinel • Page 85

CROSSJ¥0RD
By THOMAS JOSEPH
ACROSS
45 Meaty diSh
1 Castle
circler
DOWN
5 Redeem
1 Jerry
11 La Scala
Herman
song
mus1cal
12Acropolls
2 Exam type
3 DISCUSSing
goddess
13 Collabo
openly
4 Pnce
rator With
adcJition
TodaV's Answers
Engels
5
Packed
up
19
ratigUing
cobbler
14 Form6 Finally
20 Crumb
34 Salon
fitting
7 Pack and
carriers
sound
15 Yale
send
21 Nuisance 36 Pay to
student
8 Brood
22 Some
play
16 Bound
watcher
primates 37 Catty
17 Is lackmg
remark
19 Designate 9 Quill need 23 Collected
10 Opposing
stones
38 Gloss
22 Pond
vote
25 ''Very
spot
growth
funnyr•
39 Low b1ll
240wned by 16 V1ctor at
Fredericks- 29 Ohio city 40 Simile
thee
burg
30 Drtppmg
center
26 Destitute
18 Tombstone 33 Prepared 41 Xenon, for
27 Liberal
lawman
for the
one
study
28Biow
NEW CROSSWORD DOOKI Send S4 75 checkfm o to
one's top
Tho~ Joseph Oook • P.O Bo~ 536475 Ortanoo Ft 32853 6475
30 Bridge
forerunner
31 Harden
32 Mermard's
horne
34 Place tor
a coin
35Whalc
group
38 Car from
a repair
shop
41 Vanished
42 Confiden-

Mort Walker

BEETLE BAILEY

•

-----------------~----------------~

www.mydailysentinel.com

Wednesday, February 17, 2010

·

---·

TI41!Y'RE TRYING TO
GET SOME IDEAS TO
DOWN ON WASiED
TIME IN CAMP

FUNKY WINKERBEAN

Tom Batiuk

HAGAR THE HORRIBLE

Chris Browne

•

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43 Lot buy
44 Ch•nesefood
veggie
2-17

THELOCKHORNS
HI &amp; LOIS

William Hocst

Brian and Greg Walker

Patrick McDonnell

"GUE66 WHERE I BOOKED US FOR VACATION! ..

Jerry Scott and Jim Borgman

ZITS

Po '::lou THINK

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I-4AVE ' TIGER' IN
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Bil Keane

CONCEPTIS SUDOKU
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Y&lt;m arc able tu mobtlizc another pcr.&gt;~m'.,

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eneq;y well. Try to detddl and look at n situation as tf
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CFMINI (M~} 21-Jurn•20)

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CANCER Ount· 21-Jul) 22)
** * Vo \'our work, but also d~tlv court someone's fa\•or. 6n 'iomc k.'\ L-1 you might be ·n.~'Tltful fur
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1.00 (July :?3-Aug. 22)
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SAGIITARIUS (:-..'ov 22-Dl'C. 21)

*****You are m prune sh.1pe Md re.1dy total\to ,;tand What you pei'O:'ive many do m'l )bu na..ocllt'
be e.\pliot about '' h.1t vou ,w '!eelllf, .u1d the ~t10n
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AQUARIUS (Jan 20-fl'b 18)

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and \i!U \\Ill be

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PISCES {Feb 19-March 20)

* *** Opt&gt;n up to 'lt w ~tbihll'S. l"'J'l'CI I \ If
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fn~quentl~ \\ i!lCn \\nat \lUI.In! dotng ,wd f&lt;llfl)\\ \ Ollr
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1

�Page B6 • The Daily Sentinel

www .mydailysentinel.com

\Vednesday, February 17,

2010

RedStorm women fall to .500 in MSC
BY MARK WILLIAMS
SPECIAL TO THE SENTINEL

RIO GRANDE - The
University of Rto Grande
RedStorm women's basketball team played host to
NAIA No. 8 Campbellsville
on Saturday afternoon at the
Newt Oliver Arena. The visitors came in with a 17-gamc
winning streak and had not
been beaten within the MidSouth Conference.
Rio
Grande played well early.
despite accumulating a high
number of turnovers. but m
the end the RedStorm fell
short 79-67.
Rio Grande ( 14-12, 5-5
MSC) fell to .500 in league
play with the loss.
The game started well for
Rio Grande as the RedStonn
surged out to an 1l-3 lead.
Campbellsville (25-1. I 0-0
MSC) overcame a sluggish
start and battled back to take
a 30-29 lead in the final lO
seconds of the first half.
Rio's
Jenna
Smith
(Bellefontaine,
OH)
answered with a hoop just
before the buzzer to give Rio
a 31-30 lead at halftime.
Rio shot well from the field
overall, connecting on 25-of56 (44.6 percent) attempts.
but struggled from threepoint land, making only 5-of15 (33.3 percent).
The
RedStorm committed 24
turnovers and were plagued
by foul trouble for the second
consecutive game.
Smith led the RedStorm in
scoring with 19 points and
was the only Rio player to

TVC
fromPageBl
Tommy Palmer (Trimble).
Roush was 0-4 in matches
with one bye.
The
remaining
six

Track
fromPageBl
Freshman Kim Strunk
(Milford, OH) claimed third
place in the shot put with a
top toss of 37 feet. eight
inches. Freshman sprinter
Hayley
McSurley
(Plumwood. OH) ran third
in the 55 (7.78) and 12th in
the 200 (29.32).
Sophomore
thrower
Tracie Brown (Logan. OH)
finished seventh in the shot
put (33 feet 11 1/2 inches)
and junior Hillary Haines
(McConnellsville. OH) was
7th in the 500-meter run
(1:38.05).
Other RedStorm women
results: freshman Amy
Lower (Lancaster. OH),
II th in the 1,000-meter run
(3: 37 .05) and 13th in the 1mi1e run (6:04.24): junior
Beth Hysell (Pomeroy.
OH), 16th in the 1-mile run
(6: 15.45) and sophomore
Cory Crutcher (Eaton, OH),
20th in the shot put (30
feet).
REDSTORM MEN TIE FOR
11TH AT ALL-OHIO;
MATTIA BREAKS SCHOOL
RECORD

BOWLING GREEN -A

Baseball
fromPageBl
run home run off the bat of
senior third baseman Tyler
Schunk (Cincinnati, OH).
Schunk hit two home runs in
the game and drove in five.
Senior left fielder Chris
Mahon (Hamilton, OH) had
a big day at the plate as well,
going 3-for-3 with a double
and a run knocked in.
Junior
Michael
Lynch
(Lyndhurst, OH) went 3-for4 with two doubles and two
RBI.
Senior catcher Tyler
Plumpton (Peterborough,
ONT) added two hits and
junior shortstop Brad Konrad
(Maumee, OH) had one hit
in the game for the
RedStonn.
Junior
righthander
Desmond
Sullivan
(Scarborough, ONT) started
the game and lasted 3 2/3
innings. giving up three runs
(one earned). Freshman
Ryan Robertson (Waverly,
OH) picked up his first collegiate win tn his first appearance in college. Robertson
J

have any success from long
range as she hit 3-of-7 from
outside the arc. She also
pulled down six rebounds.
Junior point ~uard Bre Davis
(Marietta, uH) added 14
points. five rebounds and
seven assist~ before fouling
out late in the game. Junior
forward
Leah
Kendro
(Strongsville, OH) chipped in
12 points and hauled in seven
caroms.
Junior center
Ashley Saunders (Amanda,
OH) matched Kendro with
seven rebounds.
Rio did manage to outrebound Campbellsville, 4137.
Campbellsville erupted out
of the locker room. scoring
the first eight points of the
second half to gain control of
the game. The Lady Tigers
did not trail after halftime.
MSC Player of the Year
candidate Whitney Ballinger
had a monster game for the
Lady Tigers as she produced
a game-high 29 poi~ts. She
nearly recorded a tnplc-double with 13 rebounds and
eight blocked shots to go
along. with her 29 points.
Wendt Messer added 18
pomts (I 5 in the second halt).
Messer nailed 4-of-6 from
beyond the arc in the second

half. which provided the visitors with a huge lift.
The free throw line proved
to be a monumental factor in
the game as Campbellsville
out-scored the RedStonn by
11 points at the charity stripe
(23-12).
"The big difference in our
game wa~ the fact of their
depth and our lack of depth,"
srud Rio Grande head coach
David Smalley. "That was
the complete difference in the
game.''
"We just had some kids that
in the last three or four minutes were completely out of
gas." he. added. "I thought
Bre Dav1s played a tremendous game, did a great job,
did the things that we needed
her to do. but when you put as
many minutes on some of
these kids that we're r.utting
them on against a cahber of
team like a Campbellsville.
the wear and tear ts going to
show down the stretch."
Rio Grande will travel to
St. Catharine on Thursday
(February 18). Tip-off is set
for 6 p.m. Stretch Internet
will have play-by-play coverage beginning at 5:50p.m.
Rio defeated the Patriots
84-66 at the Newt, January
21.

weight classes competed in
pool format.
Meigs
wrestlers Chris Hysell
(145), Cody Oliver (171),
Billy Duvall (140). and
Nick Hudson (152), competed in the pool matches.
Hysell, Oliver, and Duvall,
were 1-2 in matches wrestled. Hudson advanced on

two byes while Hysell,
Duvall, and Oliver each
advanced on one bye.
Meigs will compete in
sectionals on Feb. 19 and
20 at Jackson High School.
Complete results from
the TVC tournament can
be
found
at
www .baumspage .com.

few select members of the
University of Rio Grande
RedStorm men's indoor
track and field squad competed at the All-Ohio Indoor
Championships on Saturday
at Bowling Green State
University's Perry Field
House.
The RedStorm tied for
11th place with eight points
at the meet.
The distance medley relay
team of junior Matthew
Spencer
(Pickerington,
OH).
senior
Chris
Woodfork
(Chillicothe,
OH), sophomore Lucas
Murphy (Grove City, OH)
and red-shirt freshman Nick
Wilson (Fleming. OH) finished 4th overall with a time
of 10:45.24.
Woodfork, one day after
competing
at
Kenyon
College. also ran the 200meter dash and finished 6th
with a time of 22.87.
For the women, Rio
Grande junior Cassie Mattia
broke her own school
record in the 600-meter run
on Saturday at the DePauw
Invitational and in so doing
improved her standing in
the event for the NAIA
National Indoor Meet.
Mattia, a native of West
Chester, OH, was the onl:y
RedStorm participant at the
meet and finished runner-up
in the 600 with a time of

1:38.98. She scored eight
points in the process for Rio
Grande which allowed them
to finish 13th as a team.
Mattia's time broke her
own school mru·k in the 600,
which she set at Findlay on
January 30.
Her initial
record-breaking time was
1:41.92. She qualified for
the NAJA Indoor National
Meet in Johnson City, TN.
March 4-6 with that time
and has no doubt improved
her standmg with the showing at DePauw over the
weekend.
Rio also had two performers
at
the
All-Ohio
Championships at Bowling
Green State University on
Saturday.
Freshman thrower Kim
Strunk (Milford, OH), one
day after placing 3rd at
Kenyon College, finished
I Oth overall in the shot put
with a throw 39 feet. 5 3/4
inches. She impro\ed her
best throw by nearly two
feet.
Sophomore Tracie Brown
(Logan, OH) also competed
at BG and finished 18th in
the shot put (31 feet. 4 1/2
inches) and 17th in the
weight throw (37 feet, six
inches).
Rio Grande will be in
competition next weekend
(February 20) at the Kent
State Tune Up Meet.

(l-0) fired 3 113 innings of
relief, yielding only two hits
and one run, a solo home nm
in the seventh inning. The
southpaw entered the game
with the score tied in the
fourth inning and snuffed out
the Bryan College (4-3) rally.
Game two was a wild
affair with both teams producing plenty of offense.
Bryan scored first with three
runs in the third inning. Rio
rallied with two runs in the
fourth to cut the Jeficit to 32. Bryan added four runs in
the fourth to push its lead to
7-2.
The RedSt01m would not
go away quietly as they
responded with six runs in
the fifth frame to take an 8-7
lead. All six runs were
scored with two outs.
Bryan rallied to salvage
one game in the series by
scoring three runs in the sixth
inning~ on a three-run home
run.
Sophomore
Ryan
Chapman (Racine. OH) took
the loss in relief for Rio
Grande. Chapman ( 1- I )
pitched 2 1/3 innings and
gave up the game-deciding
three-run home run.
Junior lefty Jesse Brown

(Mt. Pleasant, NC) started
the game for the RedStom1
and struggled with his control. He allowed four earned
runs in three innings on the
hill.
Konrad led the RedStorm
offense with a 4-for-4 game
at the plate. Among the
four safeties, Konrad had a
triple and drove in a run.
Plumpton went 2-for-4 and
senior center fielder Ryan
Yakura (Pickering. ONT)
went 2-for-4 with a home
run and four RBI's.
"We hit, I was very
pleased with our offense. I
had us left for dead in the
second game and we battled
back." said Rio Grande head
coach Brad Warnimont.
"We just had too many
walks (eight for the game)
and gave up two three-run
home runs."
Both teams tallied I 0 hits
in the second game.
Rio's game versus NAJA
pre-season No. 5 Lee
University. scheduled for
Monday (February 15) ha'\
been postponed and is rescheduled
for
Sunday
(February 21) with a time to
be determined.

Bryan Walters/photo

Meigs' senior Meri VanMeter guards Warren's Dashara Morgan during Tuesday evening·s
Division II tournament game at Athens High School. Warren defeated the Lady Marauders

58-27.

Meigs
from Page Bl
cut the deficit to 16-7.
The Howard basket also
ended a 5:14 scoreless
drought for Meigs.
The Blue and White.
however. countered with
an 8-2 run to take their
biggest lead of the first
half at 24-9 with I :59 left
in the stanza. Both teams
traded baskets to end the
half. allowing Warren to
take a commandin!! 26-11
lead into the intermi:-sion.
Meigs was just 3-of- I 6
from the field in the first
half, including 0-for-4
from three-point territory.
Howard scored nine of
Meigs' first half totaL
including a 5-ol'-6 effort at
the free throw line in the
first half.
The Ladv Marauders hit
the openin-g basket of the
second half to cut the
deficit in half at 26-13 just
32 seconds in. then went
scoreless over the next
four minutes as WHS
extended its lead to 35-13
with 3:45 left in the third.
Meigs ran off three
straight points to pull
within 35-16 with 2:08
left in the period. but the
Lady Warriors clo~ed the
third on a 4-0 run to take a
39-16 cushion into the

finale.
MHS closed to \\ tthin
20 points on three separate
occasions early in the
fourth, but never came
closer than 43-23 with
5:56 left in regulation.
Warren took its biggest
lead of the night with less
than a minute remaining
after cstablishin!:! a 58-25
lead. Meigs s;ored the
fti'al points of the game to
wrap up the 31-point outcome.
With the victory, \Varren
advances to the D-2 sec
tiona! semifinals todav at
Alexander High School.
WHS wil1 play~top-seeded
Marietta at 8 p.m.
Meigs connected on 8of-35 field goal attempts,
including 1-of-9 from
three-point range for II
percent. Meigs \\as also
outrebounded by a 33-18
margin and committed 25
turnovers in the seasonendtn!! setback.
Howard led Meigs with
II
points
anJ
-;ix
rebounds. follov.ed bv
Tricia Smith \Vith six anj
Miranda Grueser with five
marker~. Micki Barnes
and Shanalle Smith rounded out the respecli\'e scoring with three and two
points. MHS was also I 0of-13 at the free thro\\ line
for 77 percent.
Taylor Dolak paced
Warren with a game-high

17 points, followed by
Jordanna Rauch with nine
and Randi McKenna with
eight markers. WHS which connected on 24-of.
54 field goal attempts fo
44 percent - also hit I 0of-15 charity tosses for 67
percent.
It was the final !:!ame for
MHS seniors Tricia Smith,
Shanalle Smith, Micki
Barnes
and
Meri
VanMeter in the Maroon
and Gold.
DIVISION II SECTIONAL
QUARTERFINAL

58,

WARREN
(9) Meigs
(8) Warren

5

MEIGS

6 5

11 12 14 13 19 -

I

Team stallstlcs 1/ndwldual leaders
Fteld goals: M 8·35 ( 229). w 24·54
( 444). Three·potr&gt;l goals M 1-9
(.111 ). W 0·2 (.000): Free throws: M

10·13

( 769) ,

w

10·15

(.667),

Rebounds M 18 (Howard 6). W 33
(Wnite 6 Rauch 6, Poage 6); Asststs
M 2 (VanMeter. T Smtih). W 11 (White
3): Steals: M 6 (VanMeter 2, Barnes
2), W 13 (Dolak 3): Turnovers; M 25.
W 15: Personal louts: M 13, W 15.

Subscribe today.
992-2155

FLU

27
58

MEIGS (10·11)· Mtck, Barnes 1 '·2 3
Men VarMeter 0 0·0 0 Tncta Smitt&gt; 2
2-2 6 Emalee Glass 0 0·0 0. Kelsey
Shuler o 0·0 o. St&gt;analle Smitn o 2·2
2. Mi·anda Gruese• 2 0·0 5, Morgan
Howard 3 5·7 11. Chandra Stanley 0
0-0 0 Alaine Arnold 0 0·0 0. Jazzman
Fish 0 0·0 0. TOTALS 8 10·13 27.
Three·point goals: 1 (T Smith)
WARREN (9-12) Randt McKenna 4 0·
o 8 , Batley Poage 2 0·0 4, Kylee Carl
0 0·0 o, Alii Bloommgdale 1 0-0
Kasey While 2 2. ·3 6. Grace Proctor
0·2 0, Dashara Morgan 2 0·0 4. Tayl
Dolak 7 3·4 17. Hannah Zimmerm
' 0·0 2, Katie Farley 0 2-2 ~
Jordanr•a Rauch 3 3·4 9. Emma Ryan
2 0·0 4 TOTA-.S: 24 10·15 58. Three·
point goals· None

MORE LOCAL NEWS. MORE LOCAL FOLKS.

Be a

27

'·

F GHTER

Knock Out HlNl

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        <description>The type of object, such as painting, sculpture, paper, photo, and additional data</description>
        <elementTextContainer>
          <elementText elementTextId="11799">
            <text>Newspaper</text>
          </elementText>
        </elementTextContainer>
      </element>
    </elementContainer>
  </itemType>
  <elementSetContainer>
    <elementSet elementSetId="1">
      <name>Dublin Core</name>
      <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
      <elementContainer>
        <element elementId="50">
          <name>Title</name>
          <description>A name given to the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="11798">
              <text>February 17, 2010</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </elementSet>
  </elementSetContainer>
  <tagContainer>
    <tag tagId="3283">
      <name>bissell</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="3577">
      <name>mccumber</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="3354">
      <name>ord</name>
    </tag>
  </tagContainer>
</item>
