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                  <text>Post-quake chaos,
looting wound
Chile's pride, A2

Ribbon cutting, A3

I

tin
Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio
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.) o CENTS • Vol. 59, No. 130

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~qU
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3, 2010

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OBITUARIES

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ww,v.mydailys~ntincl •.c~'m

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County ponders use of $250K grant

Page AS
• Robert L. Cushner

Will likely be used to equip new outpatient facility
Bv BRIAN

J.

REED

BREE'D@MYDAILYSENTINEL COM

SPORTS

P0~1EROY rvteigs County
Commissioners sllll have access to
over a quarter-mtllion dollars for
health care cquipm.::nt, and will
must determine thb year how it can
be spent at the new federally-qualified health clinic to he built at
Rocksprings.

• Eagles, Tornadoes
advance to districts.
See Page 81

Family Health Care. Inc. b about
to clo\e on the purchase of land
near Meigs High School to build a
$3 million, 10,000 square-foot clinIC on land no\V owned by the Meigs
County Community Improvement
Committee. Const1 uctiun is expected to take about a vcar.
Family Health · Care currently
operates a family outpatient clinic
in :vtiddleport, but has outgrown

that space and another office in
Pomeroy it occupied before moving
to its current location. The new
facility \\•ill allow two phys1cians
and a nurse practitioner to see more
patients and provide other outpatient services. including dental services, than arc nO\V possible.
The organization provides general family pracuce service and
other medical sen·ices to patient~

regardless of insurance status or
income. Fees arc based on a sliding-scale fee, because the opera.tion receives federal assistance for
its services. It operates several
clinics in southeastern Ohio from
1ts base in Chillicothe.
Commissioner Mick Davenport.
who worked to secure the appropri..
ation through then-U.S. Rep. Ted
Strickland, said Tuesday the board
will work with Family Health Care

Please see Grant, AS

I

Community
involvement
crucial
to grant
BY BETH SERGENT
BSERGENT@MYOAILYSENTINELCOM

INSIDE
• Local Tea Party
rs success story.
Page A3
• Jenkms earns
professional certification.
See Page A3 ·
• College Notes.
See Page A3
• Local Briefs.
See Page AS
• For the Record.
See Page AS
• Music museum
expands reach
with archive, library.
See Page AS
• Deliberations
recess in Ohio
cyanide-murder trial.
"See Page AS
•• Ohio Briefs.
: see Page A6

• =====--====
WEATHER

RACINE - If you live in
Racine. maybe you· ve dri' en by an old abandonea
house vou wished was tom
do\\ n. ·or wished for even
more improvements at Star
.Mill Park, or for ne\\ sidewalh in your neighborhoo&lt;:l
- these wishes could come
true. if vou get involved.
That Involvement doesn't
take longer than filling out a
simple SUrYC)' at a ~larch 15
meeting held by the Village
of R&lt;lcine which b appl) ing
for a $300.000 Communitv
De\'elopment Block Grant.
. The meeting is at 7 p.m. at
Southern Elementary.
The last of three mandator) meetings on the
CDBG grant was discussed
thi-; '"eek bv members of
Racine Viliage Council.
Clerk Treasurer David
Spencer reiterated communitv invol\'ement is crucial
to the \'illage being awanled the grant '' hich~ is to be
Submitted photo
used st~·ictl) for neighborBryan Hoffman of the Meigs Wellness Center leads Meigs fourth graders through Zumba movements.
hood imprO\ cmenb. In the
past si.\ vears. villa!!es uch
a-. ;\.liddclport. Pomero)
and la\t year Syracuse
recei' eel the grant to
finance everyth ~1g frorc
type dance movements in an introduc- s)X'cial for them." ~aid Piincipal Darin Please see Community, AS
BY CHARLENE HOEFLICH
HOEFLICH@MYOAILVSENTINELCOM
Logan. adding thai ··zumba shows stutor~· progmm at the school.
He took the ..;tudents through tht• dent... they can become more physically
POl\1EROY - Everybod) 's doing Zumba movements of multi-cultural fit and have fun at the same tune.''
the Zumba .
In fact. according to Hoffman, one
dances including salsa, menngue.
Even fourth grade students at the calypso. and hip-hop. "'It's motivating hour of Zumha can burn 500-800 caloI :vteigs Intermedi~tte School recently got enough to make you want to move.'' ries (or more) depending on hod)
in on the Latin-in~pired dance aerobics commented Hoffman. as he encour- structure and intensitv leYels: He said
1
the 1\leigs Wellne:-s ·center makes ..
crate which is sweeping the nation.
aged the students to pa11icipate.
Meigs Wellness Center Director
The Zumba class came as a re\\ m·d to Zumba {It e\'en one\ fitness le\ el."
''Zumba - \\-:ell it\ more than ju\t a
Bryan Hoffman. \Vho introduced the students who had taken the National
Zumba to Meigs County, gave the Assessment of Educational Pro!!rcss that workout. it's a party." concluded
SENTINEL STAFF
fourth graders a lesson in the Latin- moming. ·•t wanted to do something Hoffman.
MDSNEWS CMYDAILYSENTINEL COM

I

Getting fit, having fun

Meigs County
receives septic
system funding

1

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~

PO~tEROY

Meigs deer Kasich: 'I want this state to be great again'
total up from
'09 season ,ROCK SPRINGS
BY BETH SERGENT

BSERGENT@MYDAILYSENTINtLCOM

High: Mid 30s.
Low: Mid 20s.

SENTINEL STAFF
MDSNEWS@MYDAILYSENTINELCOM

INDEX
2

SEcnoNs- 12 PAGES

Calendars

A3

.as~ifieds
comics

B3-4

Editorials
Sports
,c

:.tOIO Ohio

Bs
A4
B Section

Valley Publishing Co.

liJJIJI,I !I!I. !I!II

I

POMEROY
Ohio
deer hunters broke a record
during the past deer season, bagging a total of
261 ,3 14 deer.
This season's tout I surpasses the 2008-09 record total of
252.017, including 4,824
deer were killed in Meigs
County. La~t se~1son, .4.60 I
deer were ktllcd 111 Me1gs.
"Ohio deer hunters had
another great year and continue to play a vital role in
managing Ohio'~ deer herd.
They've embraced regulation
changeli
which
increased th~ harvest of
antlerlcss del'r and they've
donated
a
significant
mnount of Vl'nison to feed

Please see Deer, AS

There's one reason why
John
Kasich.
RWestervillc. is running for
governor - "I \Vant this
~tate to be great again."
Kasich spoke before
nearly 350 peopll' who
attended last night's Meigs
County Republican Party's
Lincoln Day Dinner. articu•
lating his '"new day, new.
way"' campaign slogan to
the GOP faithful.
Kasich. who is taking on
Gov. Ted Stnckland for
governor,
pulled
no
punches, saying Ohio had
been drifting the last fev.·
years and is curreiuly in a
ditch.
"Thank God for the ditch
or Ted \\ould'vc driYcn us
right orr a cliff." Kasich said
to much applause.
•

Please see Kasich, AS

8SICh

Ta

Ollit
aslt fer 11 tt

Beth SergenVphoto

John Kasich, A-Westerville, speaks at the Meigs County
Republican Party's Lincoln Day Dinner. Kasich. who is
seeking to unseat Gov. Ted Strickland in November, told a
packed house what a Kasich administration would mean to
Meigs County.

I

!\1elgs
Count\ has been a'' arded
$49 .7R7 111 stimulu-. f!Jnd~
for improvements to 10 septic svstems affecting 4.000
galk)ns per day. according
to an announcement from
the Ohio EPA.
The money to 1\leig$
1 Countv comes from mor~
than S3.3 million from the
American Recm erv and
Reinvestment Act and Ohio
EPA's Water Pollution
Control
Loan
Fund
(\\'PCLF) counties. cities
and ' illages across Ohio to
allow h01l1eO\\ ncr~ to repair
or replace failing home septic s\ stems.
Tt1c Ohio EPA adm1111sters
the funding. and awards
ARRA assistance to counties
and municipalities \\ ho then
assist local homeowners.
ODH facilitates and assists
kx:al health distticts '' hich
in llllll \\'Ork: \\'ith local residt'nh to determ~ne eligibilit)
and installation requirements, accordi1ig to a ne\\ s
rekase from the Ohio EPA.
1

Please see Septic, AS

�PageA2

TI1e Daily Sentinel

\Vednesday, March 3,

2010

Obama cites GOP
ideas as he preps
health care plan
BY CHARLES BABINGTON
ASSOC ATEO PR ::.S

\\ ASI II~ G1 ON - Prestdent Bat ,u;k Obama embraced n
llandful of Republican hc.thh c.ttc tdcas Tuc'&gt;day to lure
\Otcs of Democrats wary of a more parll!&gt;an approach a~ he
pn:p.u-ed to '&gt;pdl out h1s final p.1cka~c for a sharp!) d1\ ided House and Senate. where It'&gt; late t'&gt; unsure
Jn 1 btt of pohll~o:dl sleight of hand, Obama said he nught
mcludt= lour GOP -;pon&lt;;ored 1deas 111 hts pl.m, eHm though
'trtu.lll) no one m Congre!'.s or the \\ httc House thinks 11
v.111 procutc a single Republic,m \Ole.
fhe mo'c I'&gt; aamed mstcad at \\,1\Cnng Democrats, e-;pc
ctall) m the House. Some ot them m1ght find i~ e.1ster to
\Ott: lot the health t:nre pad:age 11 the) can tell constituents
It had blpartt&lt;;,m clements that Republicans should hnve sup
portt.:d. '\ et thetc JS no guat an tee th.tt Dcmoc1~tic leader'&gt;
~111 incorporate Obam.1's suggestions in re\ ised l.::gislauon.
Sen.\tc Rcpubllc.-n lc.1dcr Mit~.:h McConnell \\arned that
i)cmocrats \\all enact thear he.tlth ~::.1rc plan at their O\\ n
poht1c.11 pen I. 'O\\ ing to m.tkc at an tssue in C\ et) con
•ressaotl.tl ra e thts fall.
In remarks at the \\ h1te House on \\ ednesda), the prest
dent "all de&lt;&gt;l:nbe the fmal element~&gt; of hts prcposal and
then tsk. ( ongre&lt;&gt;s to en.1ct it. atdcs s~ud. Obama '"as
expected to reiiernte wh) changing the S)'stem is ::.o unporrant ,mel .tg.tin expl,un wlhlt his plans \\Otlld me&lt;m to fami
~.c . . c~nd bu-;me::.'&gt;es. The .ttd~.:s also expected Obama to talk
about the Repubhcan tdl'""' he ",mt-; WO\en mto the
De moe aats · pl.ul&lt;..
He t&lt;. expected to lea\ e no doubt that. b,uring an unex
pected change m Republic.tn t.tctacs, he \\ants Congres&lt;. to
pa's the lcgtsl.ttlon usmg budget teconc1liation rules,\\ hach
prohthtt Senate filibusten.. Ob.una IS unhkel) tc use tho e
exact \\Ords. n&lt;&gt; Democratic leaders are empha'illng the)
\\ant to pass a b1ll with .-,imple maJority \Ole'- in the House
and cnate.
"He'll uq;e Congress to mo\e S\"lfll)' to\\ard \Otcs on
tht legi'&gt;l.ttton ... s.tid a Whttc Hou::.c offitial \\ hQ described
Oham.t 's remark on condation of .tnon) mit) to a\ oid
upstngmg the pres1dent.
It take.., 60 'otes to halt ..t filibuster. and Dewocrats can
count on onl) 59 111 the 100-member Senate.
In ,, letter to congre-. ional le,tders fuesda). Obama sa1d
he \\ ould cons1der four ideas floated b) Repubhcnn Ia\\mc~kers.
cnd111g 111\e ... tigators da-;g~t;;ed as pauents to
unco\ er fraud and \\ aste m ~1edacare and Mcdtcatd.
cxpandm ptlot progrnms to bnng more predtct.tbtltt) to
med1cal malpracuce lrm su1t&lt;&gt;. mc.reasing pa\ ments to
Medacatd ptO\tders: and expandmg the usc of he.tlth s,l\
mg . . , ccounts
th tt l"d contmue to draw
Is ad throu hout tht'i proc.
from both pa 1 c
1 I m pen &gt;
n the b .... t d
p
I
t p nt Ob
" t
I
200
c....
!I
pc\: I dea t
1 Ju. t= d' a t
be
\,;
Ill r
da nd oth r st t 'i t
d "' l'Tltlc..:t&lt;.n
&lt;)en John ~k( am. R-Anz.
But Ob.tmJ am reJeCted Republican appeals to restart
thl' hc,tlth c..:are debate or dram.tticall) ~cale ba~k h1s pro
po al..,
"Paeceme.tl refom1 IS not the best wa\ to eflccti\el)
reduce premium-;. end the exclu'iltlll of people v. ith pre
eXt!&gt;l n c nd•twns or offer Amcncan-; the securtt) of
kn \\Ill t t the) v.tll ne\cr to c co\era e.· hi&lt;&gt; letter 1d
Hou~t: Spc kcr ·:-.;anc) PeltN !o.atd the letter "bnngs us
u...t n th ...tcp clo ... r to pas mo the btll." She atd .,he
hope 1 nco po te &lt;,Om of the GOP tdea .
Rep bite n , meanv.1l1le made 1t dear the pre adent'.,
O\ rtur~o:'i \\all not \\tn thetr he rt or \Otes.
Sen 1om Coburn, an Oklahoma Repubt tc.tn '' ho proposed
orne of the notions ObamJ i&lt;&gt; \\eJghmg. l'.aid that "merely
tJlCnrporntmg these adeao; mlo the deep!) flawed House und
Senate bill.., "all not bnng us an) closer to real refonn.''
In ,, letter to Obama. Coburn noted that upmion poll~
shm-. ex:ensl\e oppo.-..ition to the Democratic plan. "An alior nothmg rcconcthation o;trdtcgy \\all gi\e the American
people nothmg,'' Coburn \\TOte.
\\' hlle How~~.: chaef of staff Rahm I manuel. after meettn
w llh tO{' Democrats m the Capitol. told reporters·
"Rec.:oncalt twn i&lt;&gt; a \Ch1cle that's been used man) tunel'&gt;.
Tht' ,., a normal procedure.'
The Dcmocmttc package would ecw;tend health coverage
to ~0 mallton umnsured American'i O\er 10 )ears. '"ith a
ftrst time m,mdate for nearly C\~o:J)One to btt) insurance. It
\\auld prO\ ide subsidies to help low-mcomc pt:oplc buy
msurnnce, and it would impose sc\eral new reqUirements
n msurer and emplo)er&lt;&gt;
It \\til be less expenc,i\ e than the health care b1ll the
ous n.:trro\\ ) p.l$ ed m f\0\ember. and will {Ontatn no
go,t:rmnent run msur.mce prooram to compe•e wtth pn\ ate msurers.
Those change.-.. m1ght appeal to some of the three doLen
:DemocratiC House moderates \\ho opposed the NO\ember
\ersaon of the b1ll. The revJsed ball may die afnone ot those
Dt.:mocl ats 'ote for 1t, because some De moe rat&lt;&gt; appc.u
lik ly to s\\ itch from ) es to no b('C.tuse of ,, dispute mer
ab011 ion I undi ng rcstrictJons.
Obama ::.ig.naled a willingnec;s to take a sm.tll step l&lt;~r­
ther mto the contcntiou&lt;.. t~suc of linutmg lawsuits that
allege medtcal malpractice J&gt;l,unt1ffs' law)er'&gt;. a ke)
tundrat~mg source for De mOl. I ,tts, :.t.mnchl) oppose ::ouch
ltmat 13ut Rcpubh,ans and man) doctor.;; ha\e demanded them for \cJrs.
Qb,una 's letter said he"' •I open to appropnatmg an extm
$50 nul !ton lor palot prog1atm that expcnment \\ ith. spe
Ctdlll:e(l health courts rather than JUt) tna s. A JUdge
steeped m medical matters \\OUid hear cvtdence at~d render
verdict for patients allegmg tnJuncs from \HOng1ul nets.

Michael Robinson Chavezllos Angeles TlmesJMCT

Residents of a Concepcron, Chrle, neighborhood form therr own defense squads to guard therr homes from roving bands
of th1evos and looters on Tuesday.

P s -quake chaos, looting.
wound Chile's pride
BY MICHAEL WARREN
ASSOCIATED PRE.S.

C'O~CEPCIO:-.J. Chtlc
Chile's pre-;ident defended
her cit Tue~day a!!ain t
chaage' of gO\ernmcnt
mcompetence m a dt aster
th.tt not on!) shattered h\t=s
.md property but challenged
the naC10n' 'CJ) 1dentll).
A ~Ol:tet) butlt on pnd
111 th \\.!alth and ordcrlt
n ,.., ound 1tsclf !o.Uddenl
fa .. m •

r

Dri er in doghouse after
walking pet while in car
I ON DON (API
An I nglish dog·O\\ net has been
fmed alter t,1kmg hts pet tor a !:&gt;troll \\ hile drivmg next to
htm in his car.
Ptn,ccutors satd P,IUI Rnilton was spotted drh ing at hl\\
speed .tlnng a count!) lane in Dt.:ccmbcr. holding hi'&gt; d~!g's
leash through the car windO\\ as the ,uumal trot.ted ·~long ... rdc.
Rnilton pieaded guilty Monday to not bcang 111 ~roper
control of a chicle. Hts law yet, P,ml Donoghue, .-.md 2'
) car old Rat ton ackno\\ Iedged "it was a sill) thm&amp; to do
and there \\a un clement of lttzmcss" \\hile exercts111g hts
lurchcr, ,, t) p of crossbred !itghthound.
Rrulton \\as ordered b) m.tgl&lt;,tratt=s m Consett. northc.l'it
Engl,111d. to P·l,Y a 66 pound t&lt;ii 100) fine. rlus costs ..
He ,tl&lt;;o recc 1.,ed three more penal!~ pomts on h1s ltccnse
und 1s no\\ barred from drt\ mg for stx month~.

scaf\..h nd rescue t .tm nd
20 doctor:. to Hat!J uftea the
e.trthquakc there found
Itself s ekmg erne t:lll.\
aad It om o her LOlli tne
In Lota a former lOt
minm • toy,n ti 30 noo
Ion the he.1 tl) d ma cd
coa'it \1a)'Or Jorge \cnep,as
... md Tuesda)' that a "P")
t.h( ,.., ·had taken hold
A g.as st"tton ' cnt up 111
flames, gunhre rattled
through the mght and rest
dl..'nl'.
guarded
streets
agamst ro.tming band;; of
looters, he told Rad1o Bto
Bto He ~aid 2,000 home . .
had been dcstro) ed. thou
and-. "ere II\ mg m the
treets and people \\ere
\\ ieldin guns. tron bar and
long . . ttck&lt;; to protect thetr
po es tons.
"It's urgent that the ,lfm)
reach our dt) :· \ cncga ...
ple.tdcd.
"It's a collectn e h\ ste
t i.1." satd Francic;co Sunt.l
Cruz. 20. an aid \\Otkcr c.lrmg for 56 familtes In a
c.tmp lor the ntm I) home
Jc.,... m San Pedro, auu~s the
13Jo Rio Rl\er from
( onccpcaon. the b1 gcst
ctt) 111 the quake Lone.
I akc \ enega 111 I ota.
Sant.l Crul &lt;.,ud he he.1rd
gunfire throughout the
night.
''The) used to cull us
(Chlle,llls) the pgu.trs ol
South AmencJ.'" he .,,ud.
u""'l! Chilean lang fot
p10ud, nd '&gt;trong "Aut nm"
\\e kno'' that '"e'rc not
C\en close to that ··
Prestdcnt
M tchclle
B.tchelet '"as on thr ck:fcnSI' e against a -;tot m ot
claims that the go\Crtl
mcnt's re::.portsc to the dis
uo;tcr w,ts a failure.
l a Tl!tcera, an mllucntt.ll
d,til). sa1d the lootm• and
v10leocc sho\\ed "tn~.:om
ptehen'ilble \\e, kne ~ and
slo\\ nes&lt;." b) , uthoriues.
El l\lercuuo, ,t con-,cl\ a
11' c publication man) con
s1der Chile"s paper of
re~ord.
called
on
Prc..,tdent-elect Scba,at.m
Pincta. \\ho take!-. l)fiJcc
Mmch II. to "restore
hope" to Ch1le.
I he
go' crnmcnt
on
Monda) 1mpo..,ed an X p 111
to noon curfc\\ and !&gt;ent
14 000
troop..,
to
Concepcton and surround
mg areas to stop \\ tdespread
loottng
after 'munll)
1 cvct y market in the ctty had

been sacked. On 1 uesda)
the curfe\\ "a' extended to
begin at 6 p.m.
''People probabl) are
al\\ a) s gomg to feel th.tt \\ e
could have done thing~ better," Bachelet m::.t::.ted
before
recel\ mg
l S
Se,retal) ot State Htllary
Rodham Clinton. \\ho
promtsed Amencan atd.
"But the reaht) is ""en the
extent (ot de~tructton). tt
ctl""&gt;"" \\til be tn-;ufhcient
fhe de. t toll '0., to 796
d
t r h
rol

ness.
"I'm shocked," Sand()\al
said. "~ot onl) criminal::.
but well-off people are
!".tealing:·
Leonardo
Sanhucza
lamented m the lltima
Nouca.lS
nev. spa per
a
'&lt;,Octal di ... intcgratton" in
the \\ealth) countf\ that has
led some people slmpl) "to
look out for the1mehcs and let th&lt;' n•st l'.tt I ikC'
dogs··
,
Some Chilc.ms "ere so
troubled that e\en long.held
ct' tc be I iefs \\ere shaken.
SiaKe the blood) dlctatorhtp of Gen. Augusto
Pmochet ended 20 ) car!\
ngo. Cmlean~ ha\e pre ..
!erred that l'&gt;Oidiet·s sta)
u\s1dc their bannck:-,.
But police were com
pletcl) outnumbered ''hen
looting bcgan afte~ the
lJUake.
nnd
rcstdcnts
I uesd.t)
cheered
an
armored troop con\O) .md
the arrh al of a miht.tf\ C
130 in Concepcion dclh ermg did supplie
· The cconom\ also took a
sc\ ere blo\\ n1 a 11.1tton ot
17 million whose industl).
neghg•ble innation .mel stable democracv arc the Cll\'
ol Latin America.
•
Buonun!! copper re'
enuc::. and prudent Ii. . c,tl
policacs helped the gm etnmcnt reduce po\Crt) ftom
4'i perl:cnt in 1990 to I~
pen.:ent toda&gt;. ,md more
than triple per c.1pit,1 annu
'nl income to 14,000 in
that &lt;&gt;pan.

But a huge \\ calth gap port~ damaged b) the
extsts: A ~tud) b) the quake: Bachelet has said
\\ orld Rank se\ era! ) ears 230 ton~ of relict was on 1ts
ago showed the go' ern- \\ay to Concepcion.
Argenuna flew in a Cment spent I .3 percent of
tt re\ erue on the poore t l )0 "ith much of a hospital
10 percent of Ch1lean.-.. and - includmg a o;urg1cal and
40 percent on the nehe&lt;,t I 0 intenshe care unit. ambupercent \1un) socwl com- lance and laboraton mentator&lt;. h,,, e noted the three \\ ater tre,ttment
quake expo5ed ane\\ the plant::. and po\\ er generaphght of Ch1le'&lt;&gt; poor, tion umts. the militar)
among the \\ orst aftectcd announced. Fhe more
planeloads of aid \\ere to
b) the d saster.
Presadent-clect Pmcru, ,, nmvc by Tuesda) night.
Brazil said it was ending
'' e
btlhonaJTc,
ed on promt&lt;oe to atd and an arm) field ho :J&gt;Iono
h) 6 pcr- tal Peru said it was endmg
1\ n trun form u hospital. doctors and 15
th best count!) tons of blankets and tents.
d •
Chma offered I milhon in
aid.
-. hope&lt;&gt;. hO\\e\er, lrumamtanan
t.!mpered b) the Gene\ a. the lnternnti
Red Cross a ... ked donors
~IR \\orld\\ 1de. ,,
b.1seo consultmg $6.5 null ion for\\ atcr.
e')timated economtc and other relief.
The l.J .i'\. said Chile had
lo .._,could ~urpass $15
b1lhon (7 9 billton Chilean told it the count!) doe n't
pe&lt;.or.,). About 2 mill ton peo- need food or water but
ple "'ere injured. made rather tempor&lt;~f) bndge .....
homeJe s or ~SUffered other field ho..,pital • atellite
phones, electric generators.
mnJOf IO'i'ie~S .
Destru&lt;.:tton \\a \\ide- dama~e assessment teams.
spread and food ~carce all ,.. arer~ purification '&gt;)stems,
along the coa~t
tn tO\\ n' field kitchens and dial)::.is
ltke Talca and Cauquenes. center~.
"The government is
Cuneo and San Jm 1er.
In Curunipc. the local expecting that the e need~
church scr,cd as a \\ill be filled larceh
morgue. In Cauqucnes, through bilateral arrangepeople quick!) buried ment..... and \\ c need to sta)
the1r dead bccau e the \\ ithm the parameters of
funeral home had no elec- \\hat the count!) ha a ked
trictt). Clo&lt;.e to 80 percent for. and not to end an)of Talcahu.mo 's 180.000 thing that the) d1dn 't a . . k
people are homeless. ats for:· U.N. deput) emergenc) relief coordinator
port de'\lro)ed.
International aid ha.-, st.lft- Catherine Bragg ...aid in
New York.
cd pouring 111.
There \\Cre ~mall::.igns of
Clinton said the Cmted
State~ i~o; ending s.ltdlite
normalc) in Concepcio.
phones, \\ hich Chile identi- 1l1e go' ernment began d
fied as a high pno1 it). a... tributing food ba ket m
\\CII as \\ater purification '' ater, and orne gas tat ion . .
") tem~. generators and reopened.
Order!) line-; fonned outmedical equipment. It
pledge more help. includ .-,ide a supennarket - the
tn~ a field hospital Clinton on I) one 111 the cit) that hadn·t been sacked.
o;nad JS "read) to go."
As ,·ociated PreH writer.,
··we ha' e these things m
our' countn. but hO\\ can "e Federico Quiludran in
g.et thcJU to the people if" e Samiago, Edith M. Lederer
don't ha\ e bridges and at the U11ired 1\mion'l. Peter
and
Bill
road ...?" said Bnchelct. Most Prcm~aman
,ud de j, erie~ ''ere being Cormier COlli I tbuted 10 thi~
flo'' n from
.md to
air- storr.

�.....

•

0

•

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Page A:

The Daily Sentinel

'\\Tednesday, March 3,

Smith celebrates
85th birthday

201&lt;)

Ribbon cutting

Submitted photo

lbert Smtih of Racine, celebrated his 85th birt~day Feb.
25 wtth hts wtfe. Ruth, and famtly and friends at Bob
Evans Restaurant.

College Notes
Carnahan makes Dean's List
R '\CJI'\f·
James A. "Rust)" Carnahan of Racine has
made the Dean's hs.t lor the Janu.tl') 2010 c;ession in the
College of Technologtes at the Unn ersit) of North\\ estern
Ohto. J ull t1me -.tudents must rccen e a grade point 3\ erage
of 3 5 or better to be named to the Dc.lll'b List.

\

Submitted photo

Assoc1ates of 0 Bleness Memonal Hospttal gathered for a nbbon-cuttmg event for the O'Bieness Wound Care Center®,
Monday at O'Bieness West, 444 W. Umon St The center offers advanced 5 ec1ahzed treatment for chrome or non-healeng wounds that have reststed other treatments. For some conditions the P. an of care may mclude hyperbanc oxygen
therapy From left m the photo IS Clifford Young, O'Bieness' ch1ef execut1ve off1cer and some of the healthcare profesSIOnals who wdl care for patients, John Ortman, MD, Mark Rothstem, MD, med1cal d1rector of the wound care center·
and Jackte Lather CNP

Local Tea Party hears success story
Martindale ~aid the letter ''bragged
about shutting down Christian acu" itJC of pra) er. B1ble dt5tribution, creation m~truction. and ~hO\\ ing the
mo,Je ··racing the Giants."
~ext meeting of the Tea Part\ \\Ill
be 7 p.m. Tuesday. March 9 at the Rm
Metg" Center. For more inform.ItiorJ..
the
2roup
contaC't
concerning
Martindale at 740-416-7338.
~

MeKelvey on dean's list

ASK DR.. BR.C)THER.S

Jenkins earns professional certification
Boyfriends an.:x:iet)i
a
attacks leave lLer co11jused
Bv DR. JOYCE BROTHERS

Dear Dr. Brothers: I am m my thtrd year of h\ mg '' tth m)
bo) fnend lie struted out 'el) "macho" and independent
\\htch 1s whaJ attracted me. But dunng lhc past yc,tr or so, he
ha..., de.,elopcd some kind of nnxiet) issue. and he lla" anxiety
01 ramc .tttack'i e' ery couple of months. He expect~ me to take
care ol h1m and make sure he doesn't freak out. I feel son) for
hun. or course. but I don't \\ant to be a nursemaid. Thts is realh bothcnng me. How do 1 cope\\ tlh all this? - A.R.
• Dear A.R.: Li' ing \\ ith someone \\ ho ha~ a mental illness
wh~eh '' ould mclude a\ ariety of nnxiet)-related is!-.ues.
ts nb ptcmc Before you go on. you should try to o;tep outs1de
th relatumshtp for a minute and figure out if lhi perr.on 1s
someone )OU \\ant to de,otc )OUr life to takmg care of e\en
\\hen he \\On't do an) thing to help h1msclf. If the ans\\er 1~
)es. )OU c.m let h1m kno\\ that you \\111 be there for htm ac;;
h1s crutch It rna) or ma) not help tum to kno\\ lh1s - but it
probabl) won't help )OU ha"e a happ) life. In fact. )OU
.tlreadv arc suffenng the effect of h1s refusal to get help.
\\'hat ) ou ma) ,.,ant to do is talk to h1m eriousl) \\hen he
not 111 the throes of an) kind of attack. Let him knO\\ that
Jme htm and want to help him. but that )Oll can't glos~
O\cr the fact that he has changed and that he need~ to seek.
protess1onal help for his problems. You can be as supportive
as po!-.stblc
offer to go \\ 1th him. s.t) you will do couples
therap) tf he hkel&gt;
but let him kno\\ that going on as )Oll
ha\e been bn'l one of the options. If he truly care:- aboul
)OU, he willundcrl!tanl_lthat.his beha,ior i~ taking a to.ll_on
you and on your relationship together. It should be latrly
ca~) to dec1Je if he 1s willing to help him ...etr after you set
do'" n &lt;.omc clear boundaries und sec \\hat happen&lt;&gt;.

•••

RIO ORA~ Dl
C) nthta Jenk.m-.
rect:ntl) dt:monstratcd profe s10nal
competcnc} b) successfully completing the ccrtafied arbonst utilit) 5pect.!ltst C\.tmmation admtnt!-.tcrcd
through the lntcrnauon.tl Soc1et) of
Arboricuhure (IS\) and the local
Chapter ot the; ISA
·n,c purpo c of the ISA Certification
Program .., to unprO\e the leH·l of
kno" ledge and !-.tnndnrd of practice
within the tree care profession. 1t is
designed to .tssi-.t the pubhc in idcntlf)ing those prote-.ston.II~ m arboriculture

"ho ha\e demontmtcd. through a
pro~~ s1onall) de' eloped examination
and cducat on pro
gram. a thorough
knowledge of tree
care
prc~cttce..,.
Certificatior 1s 'alid
for three )Cars. The
Jenkins
1St\ pr~~gn•m !e ~s
and ce111fiC"- an 111d1, idual'5. knowledge in the field of
Arboriculturc.

The International Souet)
of
Arboriculture ts cientific .md educa
uonal orgamzatton de\ oted to the di
!)Cmmauon of information m the care
and presen at ton of c;hade and Ot'iamental trees.
ISA', CertificatiOn Progr.1m ,.,
de5igned to promote the profess1onat
deH!lopment of tho'e im oh cd 111 the
field ot arboriculture or tree care.
C) nthta and her hu!-&gt;bnnd. Stc\ c..
re~ide m Jack--on. She is ,m emplu&gt; ec
ofBucke&gt;c Rural Electrit Coopcratl\c.
Inc. of Rto Gmnde, Ohio.

Community Calendar
Public meetings
Wednesday, March 3
HARRISONVILLE
Sc1plo Township Trustees,
6:30
p m.
at
the
Harnsonv1lle Ftre House.
POMEROY
Me1gs
County Board of Health,
regular meetmg, 5 p:m.,
conference room, Meigs
County Health Department.

Clubs and
organizations

Grange wtll meet with
Officers Conference at 7
p.m. followed by meettng at
7:30 p.m. at Star Grange
Hall.
Saturday, March 6
SALEM CENTER - Star
Grange 778 and Star
Junior Grange 878 wtth a
potluck supper at 6:30 p.m.
.followed by meeting at
7:30p.m.
RACINE
Southern
United Methdist Church
Charge ·men's group will
have a prayer breakfast, 8
a.m. at the Morning' Star
Church.
Sunday, March 7
POMEROY
Team
Jesus' Sunday worship serVICe is at 11 a.m at 333
Mechanic Street, Pomeroy.
Pastor •s Eddie Baer.

Dcat· Dr. Brotht•t'S: l jomed a writing group a few months
ago and IM\e enjo)ed \\orking \\ith t~e.m as we tl) to develThursday, March 4
op our sktlls. But pmt of the group al'ttVtty IS to read our \\Ork
TUPPERS PLAINS tp each other. I reall) hate pcrfonning like tlus. I am not a g~
rc.tder. and I think it takes a\\ay from m) \\riting.l am gettmg The Tuppers Plams Auxthay
\-el) ,mory at being forced to tand up and re_ad e.:ch ''eek. wetll meet at 6:308 p.m at
when I just \\,mt to pass my \\Ork out and ha\e ll C11t1qued. Do the hall.
1 ha\-e ~orne kind of complex? No one under&lt;.tands.- L.C.
Dear L.C.: I can s) mpathite \\ ith ) ou \\hen it com~ to
standmg up m front of a room of people to read )OUr \\Otten \\ ords. I 1r;t of all. you mu t cope \\ tth one of the most
Thursday, March 4
common of all phobms - the lear of public speaking, C\ en
"Sealed
RUTLAND Tuesday, March 3
1f 1t is only in front of a small group of fellow writers. That'~ w1th Love' women's conferhard cnou"h for most people. But then ) ou can ddd to i~ the ence, Rutland Church of
CHESTER Chester
tdc.l that thuse who listen to it arc not onl) your compamons God, March 4, 5 and 6, 7 Ball Association s1gnups
in public speaking. but ajul') ofyo~r peers. as it \\~re! b\e~ p.m. each ntght. Speakers for softball, 5-8 p.m.,
though
,tre accustomed to ha"mg )OUr \\Ork JU~ged. 1t Ashley Hepperly, Elizabeth Chester fire department.
a dilfercnt feeling to knO\\ that you are t.1lkmg to a Gerow, and Jess1ca Haggy $30 registration, bring birth
\\hose job 1t is 10 tell you all about ):our~df!
respectively. For more Infor- certificate. Christt Casto.
:;,o can under~tand why you are gelling I ru~trated 416-5416.
mation call 4 16·8203
)our gond writing lllfl) be drag¥cd do\\ n ~) :t poor ~pol\en
Saturday, March 6
Friday, March 5
presentation, and it just Joe~n I seem fatr. Although )CHI
RACINE - Racine Youth
SALEM CENTER
wunt your words lo be strong enough to carry )OLI through, Meigs CoLmty Pomona League signup, 8 a.m. •
it's not unreasonable to acknowledge 1hat )Oll can undcrmtne them by doing ,, bad job of reading It sounds as
To see more newsphotos
1hough if you \\ant .1 level pia) ing field. you'l~ ha\e ~o
pr.tctice 111 lrotll of a mirror or take a cou1'(e 111 publtc
fmm our. photographers go to
speakmg. Confront your fears head-on. It would be won
ww~ .Ill) dailyscntincl.com
dc1 ful for your career und you• s-elf-esteem 1f) ou could pwt
You
can order reprints and
it all together to deliver a pe1 formance you can be proud of.
photo
gifts of your favorite
You can al\\.Jys find n \\ftler's group that doesn't read, but
1t \\Ould not expand your horizons like tillS one.
photos there too.
tc) 2010 b) Km~: leallires S)lldicare
L-~~--------------------------------~~

Other events

Youth events

noon, Southern ElementarY • 11. Cards may be sent to
her at Darst s Pnvate Care
School
Home, 33164 Chtldren sHome Road Pomeroy, Oh10
45769

Card showers

Monday, March 8
POMEROY Nathan
Biggs w11 be 90 years old on
March 8 Cards may be sent
to h1m at 38960 SA 124,
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769 The
gather at
family will
McDonalds on Sunday from
4 to 6 p.m. to celebrate tt1e
occasion Friends are tnVJted to stop by
Thursday, March 11
POMEROY
Mane
Hauck w1ll be 93 on March

EnJOY Great Savings. Serv1ce and Benefits ..
w1th the
AARP Auto &amp; Home Insurance Program
from Tre Hartford.
Call The Hartford Toll-Free Today
to Request Your FREE Quote· •

1-877-487-7796

~~~~~====~~~----~----~----~~

�PageA4

The Daily Sentinel

..

\t\7ednesday, March 3,

2010

The Daily Sentinel
111 Court Street • Pomeroy, Ohio

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

STUCK
A-CCELERATOR

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
Sammy M. Lopez
Publisher
Charlene Hoeflich
General Manager-News Editor
Pam Caldwell
Advertising Director

~RY

~TTlJAT

CottJtrt~ss shall trwke rw law re.spectin.i! '"'
estaMisluuem of rel(fticm, or prollillitiu.f! tilt' free
e.\'ercise tl~erecif; or abrid.s:iug tire Jrt•edom of speech,
or of tire Jlrt'ss; or tire right of tire people peaceabiJ'
to assemMe, aud to prtitiou tlu~ Gol'ermuertt
fM a redress of griet,arrces.

The First Amendment to the U.S. Constitution

T () I ) A Y 1 N 1-1 I S T 0 I{. Y
Today 1s Wednesday, March 3, the 62nd day of 201 o.
There are 303 days left in the year.
Today's Highlight in H1story:
On March 3, 1931, President Herbert Hoover s1gned a
measure making "The Star-Spangled Banner" the
national anthem of the United States.
On this date:
In 1845, Florida became the 27th state.
In 1849, the U.S Department of the lntenor was estab·
I shed.
In 1894, Bnt1sh Prime M1nister William Gladstone sub·
m1tted h1s res1gnat1on to Queen V1ctoria, ending his
fourth and frnal premiership.
In 1918, Germany, Austna-Hungary, Bulgaria, the
Ottoman Emp1re and Russ1a signed the Treaty of Brest·
L1tovsk, wh1ch ended Russ1an participation in World War
1. (The treaty was rendered moot by the November 1918
armist1ce.)
In 1940, Artie Shaw and h1s orchestra recorded
"Frenest" for RCA V1ctor
In 1945, the Allies fully secured the Philippine capital
of Mantia from Japanese forces dunng World War II.
In 1960, actress-comedian Lucille Ball filed for divorce
• from her husband, Des1 Arnaz, a day after they'd finished
f1lmrng the last episode of 'The Luci-Desi Comedy Hour"
("Lucy Meets the Mustache") on Arnaz's 43rd birthday.
In 1969, Apol o 9 blasted off from Cape Kennedy on a
m1ss1on to test the lunar module
In 1974 a Turk1sh A1rllnes DC-10 crashed shortly after
takeoff from Orly A1rport 1n Pans k1 ling all346 people on
board
In 1991 motonst Rodney Krng was severely beaten by
.los Angele!=: pollee offtcers rn a scene captured on amateur v1deo. Twenty·f1ve people were k1lled when a Unrted
A1rllnes Boemg 737 ·200 crashed wh1le approaching the
Colorado Spnngs a1rport.
Ten years ago Former dictator General Augusto
P1nochet returned to Chile a free man 16 months after
he was deta ned tn Bntarn on torture charges. Bob Jones
.Unrvers1ty a fundamentalist Chnst1an college said 1t was
I ft ng 1ts ban on rnterrac1al dat1ng. (Unrversity pres1dent
~b Jones Ill ITUlde the announcement on CNN's "Larry
K1ng L1ve )
F1ve years ago President George W. Bush VISited CIA
headquarters, where he prom1sed agency employees
they would retarn an mcred1bly v1tal" role rn safeguarding
the nat1on's secunty desp1te the creation of a new post of
national d1rector of rntelligence. Millionaire adventurer
Steve Fossett became the f1rst person to fly around the
world alone without stopp1ng or refueling, touching down
in central Kansas after a 67-hour, 23,000-mile journey
One year ago: U.S. Secretary of State Hillary Clinton,
during a vistt to Israel, promised to work w1th the incoming government, but sa1d movement toward establish·
ment of a Palestrn an state was "inescapable" GuineaBissau's parliamentary leader Ra1mundo Pereira was
sworn in as the country's new president, following the
assassrnat1on of Joao Bernardo ''Nino" Vieira. Sydney
Chaplin. Charlie Chaplin's son and himself a Tony-winnrng actor, d1ed in Rancho M1rage, Calif. at age 82.

Thought for Today: "We. are creatures of the
moment; we live from one little space to another; and
.. only one Interest at a time fll/s these."- William Dean
Howells, American author and editor {1837-1920).

Student loan problem
You ma) ha\e seen the recent tory
about the 41 ) ear old doctor \\ ho
graduated from medical scl'lool m
2003 '' ith student-loJn indebtedness
of $250.000 that has smce swelled to
more than $555,000. She IS now
scheduled to pa) $990 per month
until she is 70-\ear old. Ouch!
1111S IS dll extreme example of a
w1de~prcad problem. Onl) 40 percent
of the $730 billion of outstanding student loano; are &lt;~Ctively being repaid.
This i~n 't health) fur financial institutions and it 1~n 't health) for man)
)Otmg American&lt;&gt;. Just as \\aS the
case with the ongomg mortgage f1 sco. there t&lt;; plent) of blame to
around for thts ~On') state of af1 If')
It's e.ts) to !'.a) that tho e "hn bor
ro'' to pursue their post- econdary
education bear the primary respon~•­
bilit). The first rule of sun n al in a
market econom)' 1s ca\ eat emptor
("let the buyer bev.arc"J. obod
forced an)one to go mto debt.
Still, tt •~ '-Jgmficant that almo t a
&lt;student loan~ ure taken out b)
Amen can&lt;.; too ) oung to knov. "hat it
takes to pa) their bills and make a It\
ing on their O\\ n. Undoubted!). some
un.,crupulou&lt;; "Students
boiTO\\
mone) with e\ef) intention of avOiding
repa)ment: hO\\e\er. I belie\C that
most borrowers s1ncercl) mtend to
full) rcpa) th~ir debt. The pro_blem is
due to lhetr lack of mmuntv and,
)C-.., intellcclu.JI tkvclopnK·nl _: they
literally hm c no ide.t hm' hard it can be
to repay $50.!XXl or $1(Xl,O(Xl of debt.
l\1) \\ifc and I recent!) enterlained
t\\ o of her former college student~ intelligent. talented young ludic-..
laden '' ith considerable debt. The one
ov.es O\er $100.000 and has a bachelor's degree in theatre She ha::. an
entf)'·IC\ el position '' ith a buo;me •
and no reahstic pro pcct of repa) ing
her debt before she turns 40. Much
\\ iser now at age 23. ~he realize-.. the
gr.l\ it) of her pred1cament. She mo ...t
emphaucall) \\ ouldn 't ha\ c su-..tained
such debt if he had knO\\ n then what

''ill

Mark W.
Hendrickson

~he

knm' s nov., but nov. she'&lt;; stuck.

Like many young adults in her
position. the pnce for her indebtedness ts more than monetar) There are
'ef) fe" youn men out there \Vho
re \\111m t
xly v.1th
') x-fi
d
er ankle.
(AJX
C
lltiCS OUt
there, but th t the v. )
"'.) Here
)OU ha-.e som one \\ho c tronge&lt;;t
desire ts to be a v.tfe nd a mother,
t ll"akes her a
but her c;tudent lo r
leper to most me
the marrbge
market. Sad.
I ha\ e heard people sugge&lt;;t that
college&lt;; and uniH~rsrtie-, prm ide debt
counseling to students so the) don't
get m too deep M) emplo}er, Gro\e
Cit\ College, requires students to
attend debt management seminars as
a requirement for participatmg in its
privatel)-fundcd loan program. That
.... a wonderful program, but the realit) )... that colleges are businessc&lt;; and.
like all businc:sscs. are hungr) for
re,·enuc. E:-..pecting them to counsel
stude;:nh to drop out or tran~fer to an
mexpe;:n~ive junwr collc~e is like
expecting a fox to \\al1l chickens not
to go into foxholes because the)
might be eaten. It just isn't the nature
of the beast.
That Iem e the lenders. A v. as the
case "ith defaulted mortgages.
lender protest that the) explained the
dollars aQd cents of the tudent loan
thorou!!hlv. And again. it is safe to
a-..sume that some of them real I\ did.
just a ... some of them reall) di"d not
alert stall') -e) ed. na'1\ e ) oung&lt;&gt;ters 10
the pitfall~ inherent in taking on large

debts. Let's face it. if loan officers
profit from Jssuing loans. the) ha\e
e\ef) mcenti\e to "rite as man) a
the) can.
Normall~. I v. ould sa) there i
nothing objectionable about that. but
in this case, I belie\ e that public polic) once again i-.. guilty of having
altered nonnal market incenti\es. I
refer to Ia\\ s that make it almost
impossible for student loans to be
erased through bankntptC).
No\\ don't get me \\'rOng - I
believe strongly that debts should be
repaid. A society that make~ it too
easy for indi' iduals to walk awa)
from their financial obligations docs
not sufficient!) uphold the foundation
of economic progress - propert)
rights - and consequent!) jeop~r­
dizes economic progress. But in tne
student-loan market. go,emment created moral hazard: Knowing t
go' emment ''ill take extraordina
measures (e\en garn1shing unemplo) ment checks) to sec that student
loans are repaid, 1~suers of student
loan feel bulletproof. and proceed to
cran~ out as mam loan-.. as the\ can ,
If the) kne\\ that they might lose their •
loan~ through normal bankruptC)
proceedings. the~ \\Ould do v.hat prudent lenders alv. U) s . hould do:
As~ess risk 'cr) carefully and i sue
fe\\ et· loan ... to ~tarr) -eyed kids who
want to pa) :&gt;30 .000 per year for n
degree "ith minimal market value.
I don· t pretend to know how to get
out of the current mes-... It would ha\ e
been much preferable had v.c never·
gotten Into it. I do behe\ e. though ...
that it isn't right for financiAII) •
incompetent ) oung Americans to be
penalized for decades because no
adult '' ho kne\\ better ... topped them
from making a fooli ... h financial mi"·
take. Let'-.. ha\e some mere) here.

.

(Dr. Mark \\~ Hendnckson is an
adjunct faculty member. economist,·
and comributillf! ~clwlar u·ith The
Cmter for \Ision and \~lue5 at
Citv College.)

:· LETT_E_BS TO THE EDITOR
~· Lette•s to tho ed1tor should be t m1ted to 300 words. AD letters are
\. subJeCt to ed•tmg, rrust bo s1gned and mclode address and telephone
• ·number No uns•gned letters w1ll be published Letters should bo 1n
• good taste addressing Issues not persona'.Ires. "Thank You· letters
will not be accepted for pubhcat•on.

.'
•

f

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CliCKA

Cl'CkA
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Gro.

�\\'cdncsday, March 3,

The Daily Sentinel • Page As

www.mydailyscntinel.com

2010

Obituaries

Deliberations recess in Ohio c·yanide-murder trial.
J:

S~JEERAN
ASSOCIATto PRr.:ss

Bv THOMAS

Robert L. Cushner
Robert L. Cu hner. 87. Pomeroy. died Sunday, h!h. 28.
2010 at Walnut Creek Nursmg Center.
Bob \\as bom on Apri11, 1922. m Bnstol. Conn. to the
lnte J?hn .A. and Alma Giguere Cu-;hneJ. Bob served a~ u
~ot 111 U.S. Na\) and later l.S. Atm) Au Corp 'dunng
orld War II. He \\Orkcd ns a salc~man and lat r ,.;ales
n.tgcr "ith Wallace B.mles/Associated Spnng in Bnstol
Da) ton. lie retired as a sales rep from the Wall.~e
Steel Di' ision.
oh enjoyed golf and wus a long tunc membc of the
B.P.O.E. Lodge 1010.
lie ~as preceded m death b) hi~ whes. Puultne (bddy)
Cushner and Pearl (Ha\\ k) Cushner and his brother. John
W. Cushner.
Bob is suf\ 1ved b) his si&lt;&gt;tcr. Mar&gt;uente Kondztolka of
Bristol: his daughters and their spouses: Ellen (Jun)
Knickle of Kettering and J&gt;aul.1 Cushner and Ste\ e
Callahan of We) mouth Mas-;.; stepsons. Jack (Paul,l)
f
u lk
\ .,c cr o Pomero). Joe (Sharon) \\ elker of Auberry.
~alif. and Jctry (Kim) Welker of I resno Calif.; h1s st&lt;&gt;ter
m-Id\\. Sa~a C~llum::. and brothcr-m law Robert (Ramona)
Hav. k: tus mec~::.. JuJ) I Rogc1) Reese nnd Sail)
Kondziolk.t se\ en gmndchildrcn: Ellen and Danwl
Callahnn, Kristen (Dm id) Pologtuto, Joshua (Stcphamc)
Dougl,lss, Brian (Ltsa) Kniclde. Bmd (I .turcn) Knickle .tlld
~rctt (Shellc)) Knickle: o;ix grcat-gmndchildren. Emily,
Kate. han. Retd. Ree e and PcrrC); h1s II step grandch1l·
drcn and 13 step great gmndchildren.
Friend may call from II a.m. to 12:30p.m.onSaturda)
at Anderson-McDaniel Funeml Home. Pomero).
A Mass of Christian Bunal "til be held at 1 p.m. at
Sacred Heart Church, Pomcro).
1-riends may abu call \1ondny at the Tobias hmcral
H~m1c-Fnr Hills Chapel, Dayton, where d prayer -;e 1, 1cc
\\til be follo\\ed by entombment at Da' 1d's Cemcter)
~1ausolcum. Kettering.
Memonal contribu~tions may be made to St Jude's
ldrcn'::. Rc~earch Ho pita!, P.O. Box 1000. Dept. 142,
mph is Tenn. 38148-0142 or to Sacred Heart Church,
•
Pomeroy. Condolence at \\\\W. tobta!'.funeralhome.com.

CLhVELAND -A jul)
on Tueo;da) began dcltbcrat
mg the aggra\med murder
c.~se against a phil,mdenng
doctornccusedofkjiJinghi
"ife with cya:mide
Dr. Ynzeed Essa. 41, who
kept a mo~~ly somber look
during the trial. snulcd
lightly as jurors left the
• Cuyahoga
County
lommon Pleas couttroo 11
to deliberate.
Jwor::. ~~eJiberated throu h
the da). rcce%ed for 1 1e
mght a,nd must return

~005

w

cE"dne.,day.
ssa is on tf'ial in the

BY THOMAS

J.

SHEERAN

ASSOCIATED PRE:SS

C'll·\ E~l p ND

~

_

Local Briefs

Gospel, bluegrass concert

-

O\ erlooking

Lake bne to
the ne\\, lo\\-kC) building
1\\0 miles a\\ a).
The items also mclude
such
gems
as
Jim
Morri on's first poem,
'ideo from the I 981-82
Rolling Stones tour and pcr~onal letters from the
Grateful Dead. Whitney
Houston, Patti Smith and
others. Posters of Alan
heed. the DJ credited \\ ith
coining the phm e rock 'n ·
roll. and aging 1 P records
also "ill find a home in thl:
$12 million building. The
records will be digitalized
and a\ailable for hstening.
The libra!)' will be the
most comprehensive repositOI') of rock history. with
materials donated by hall of
fame
inductees
and
\\&lt;.mnabcs \\hO see it as a
Wfl)' to presen e thetr storie'&gt;.
said
Deborah
Campana, librarian of the
Oberlin Consef\ aton of
Music.
•
Beyond its research value

POMEROY
An actton for dl\orce '"a~ filf.:td m Metgs
Count) Common Pleas Court b) Kc\ln Allan Philhp . Jr..
. again t Brittney Lee Phtlhps. C'ra1g. c..~olo.
1\0rcc .... as granted to Lt..,a McDamel from Tro) D.
1.

Dissolutions
POMERO'l - Dts oluuons "ere granted m Metg&lt;&gt;
Count)' Common Pleas Court to Holht: M. Case) and
M1chael J. Case). Ton) a J. Bogee and J mes P. Boggess,
and Shem A Smnh and ~om1an Patnd Smtth.

- A complaint for ju lgment \\as tiled in
Common Pleas Court by GregO!)' o· Brien.
Shade, agamst ~is::.an Not1h Americn. Inc., Columbus.
A complaint filed b)' National G•t~ Bank agamst Robet1
Montgomer) and other::. was dismt cd.
A CJ\tl complaint filed b) c;l,tJdin M. Lyons against
D) Iy nn R. Keese nnd others v. af, C.i nm ed.
A foreclosure v.as granted to the 'United State&lt;&gt; of
Amenca against Scott B. And&lt;;rson. and others.

Appo1~nted
POMEROY.- Joy Aentt.e;y. S&gt; rncuse, wa-. ~'PJ?ointed ~o
the Ruard of 1 m~tees of tl11! Metgs Count) D1stnct J&gt;ubl1c
l ibm!)'. Her term \\ill c,n.pire l)ec 31. 2016. She was
.
omted b) Common Pleas Court Judge Fred\\'. Cro\\ Ill

Kas:ich from Page AI
As for why people m Meig County should \Ole for hun,
Kas1ch spoke about his support ol a common ~~~~~e regulatory proces~ that atl,racts and promotes Industry. smull government.lcs~ taxe,~. and his expetience in both the husincss
world and as a f91rmer Congressman from Ohio. Kasich i~
a former chainn ,,n of the House Budget Committee in the
US Congress w),ich is one of the reasons wh)' he feels he is
competent to b&lt;Jianc;e Ohio's budget.
"We do not nave the right to put our children into debt,"
Kasich told t'nc audtence. citmg h1s \\Ork on federal budgets which ;,ncluded a $250 h1llion surplus when he left
office in 2&lt;yoo to go back into p• i\ ate life
Kasich ~.ammercd awa) at the Strickl,md administration,
citing 30() .000 jobs lost in the l,tst four years and an exodus
of Oh10 ~nmilics. Ka-.,ich spoke about politicians\\ lw need
to take rJCrsonal rc::.ponsibility and not go "begging" toothers ''like this governor has dont:" "hen it comes to pulling
Ohio l".&gt;ut of its financial woe~.
"If we can improve thts en' 1ronment, people \\ill stu:&gt;
here," he added.
Kn ich then said the Republican 1\trt) needed to elect
p~ople from the cout1house to the statchouo;c and he hoped
election in No\ember \\ould be the begit ning ot a
ution to save the state of Ohio." Ue said getting electtneant it w.~s time to get the job done.
After his speech, Kasich told I he Daily Sentin~l. his philosophy of a modcmizcd nnd eflicienl g0\e111ment, lmH'I'
taxes and a better regulatot; process would benefit the peo
pic of Meigs Count), not JUst the residents of larger .1rcas
such as Cleveland and Columbus. Kasich reiterated C\en if
elected. "we've got to get the JOb done:·
Kas1ch wa&lt;&gt; introduced b) ~1cigs Count) Republican
Party Cha1rman Da\e Warner \\ho noted \ariou.., GOP
elected ofticials in attendance. At the pod1um. Kasich noted
Statc Sen. Jimm) Stcw.111 (R Alban) 1 who \\US also in
attcndance. Mcig~ Count) Auditot l\lmy Byer-llill. \\ho is
running fo1 reelection in Novcmhct, al o spoke briefly.

to scholars. the librarv
should app&lt;:al to rock fan~.
Campana said.
"The) 've grO\\ n up IO\mg it and \\ hen the) sec the
&lt;~rtifacts as· ocinted with 11,
it takes thei apprecHttion to
a whole new le\ el .'' she
sa1d.
Architect
Robert
Madison de~igncd the
building th nt will house the
librar)
: nd
,uchl\ es.
Madison. v ho collaborated
.... 1th J.M. Pei on the rock
hall design . satd there wa-;
ne\er a ~oal to create
another ro k shnne.
The library will not focus
on mdivid~ al artist'\ m rock
history. ~111di~on said Its
I is to provide a
primary
plc~ce whe re visitors can
"study the istory and the
philosoph) of the people
\\ho li,ed in that period."
he sa1d.
.
The rock hall and commumt) collc~ge plan collaborations. SliCh as training
student mte.ms ho\\ to pre-

go;

serve half-century old
recordings.
Students may have a
chance to expenence the
excitement of finding a hidden treasure when they
open a box of donated items
for the first time, sa1d Andy
Leach, director of the
libral"\' and archives.
''It can be daunting. but it
can also be very thrilling to
see ~orne of these things for
the first time that are going
to reall) help people and
educate people about rock
'n' ron:· Leach said.
Tracy Marie . 34. a
Cu) ahoga
Commumty
College recording an~ student and
profes~ional
singer. said she hopes the
rock hall-college collaboration wiiJ encourage ) oung
ani~t.., to aspire to ha\ e their
campus
studio
work
enshrined in the nrchi\ e.
"E' entuall) the stuff
\\e·re making there is
going to be archhed someday.'' she smd.

stor er hope that spent by the end of 20 I 0 or
to see 1f the funds can as'\l~:ot the \eteran
ultim tel:&gt; be home lost He- ~aid it is possible
eqmppmg the new fac.tlt- Ho pttal. \\ htch '
to a I rger h ~alth care oper- that the grant could be used
ty. Con&lt;&gt;truction of the ne\1. 1999. The county s
clinic \\ill be finan ed, in care steering commtttee ntton to inc \ude nt least a to help off et the cost of
equi~ping Fa~il) Health
learned building nnd cqutp- 24 hour emergency room.
p.trt. b) federal fund
( ommtssu ncr secured Care s ne\\ fac1ht), and posu\\ arded
through
the ping \\ s not the pnmaf)
$235.00~ grant award ~ibly making funds a' nil
American Reco\er¥. and obstacle they faced. J·mdme
r
m
the U. . Department able for other needs there.
omeone
to
operate
11
ts.
Reinvestment Act.
The new facilit' \\ill be
1 he ne\\ Family Health of Health and Human
Strickland secuted the
ba~ed
largely on ·an office
to
urcha!'.e
nece
Services,
funds on the count) 's beh.tlf Care clinic" ill be bu1lt on a
at a ttmc commtssionets \\ere 13-acre s1te on Pomeroy sal) medical equipment for bUJit three ) ears ago in
hospital
Ho\\ e\ er, McArthur. but .... ill be a bit
constdenng option~ [i r open- Ptke, at the inter::.ection of a
id
n
mu t be larger.
Davenport
U.S.
33
and
Oh10
833.
mg a nc\\ hospital to replace
111

Community rrorp Page AI

Civil
P9~1EROY
Me1g~ County

that chore done hy her staff
or a deputy.
In her instructions to the
JUry, the judge reminded
them that a defendant has
the right to kip testif) ing,
as Eo:sa did. The defendant
not testifying "must not be
considered for any purpose," the judge sa1d.
Essa, a Detroit nattvc
whose family is from a
Palestinian territory, was an
emergency room doctor at
Akron Gcnc1 al Mcd1cal
Center and fled to Lebanon
after police cued drug bottles at his home. He gave up
nn extradition fight and "'as
returned from C) prus to
Ohio last year.

Grantrrom Pagc4 1

·,.....--

Divorces

tablet and c1 ashing her SliV
into an ona:&gt;ming car ncar
the couple's suburban
home.
Judge De cna Calabrese
told the four alternate jurors
that she wasn't going to dts·
miss them and instead
would keep them in the
courthouse I uring deliberations. The move could allow
a replacement if a jUt or cannot remain with the ca~c.
The judge also said jurors
can. tf needed, inspect the
C) nnide-laa ed
capsules.
The defen e objected to
ha\ ing a po icc 111\estigator
be a\ ailabl e to brmg the
bottle to tht JUry room and
the judge greed to have

Music museum expands reach with archive, library

1here·~ alw:l)S been rom
at the Ro ·k nnd Roll all
of hune and Museu for
I the. exciym.&amp;, most popular
relics. /. ltkc
1\hdwcl
' .lncks&lt;t: ·., "Thnller" mask
and J ,Jm Lennon\ Sgt.
Peppe uniform. But most
of
the
'not-so- ash)
menv!nto!&gt; v.-ere tucked
awa,, m torage.
V • itors "''"get a chance
to ee those hidden anafacts
b~~!lnning later this yc&lt;~r.
\\ r1en the museum Opef!S its
lj!prary and archives m a
r·~ccntly completed righlcch building it shares'' i!h
Cu)ahoga
Comn umt~
College's creathe an pro•
gmms.
POMEROY - A free conce11 featuring go pel and blu The mu eum has begun
gras mu~tc \\ill take place at 6:30 p.m., Saturday, March 6 mo\ ing photos. recordmg •
at The Mulbe!T) Communit) Center. The concert featu .:s· album!'. and covers. oral htsStroight E-.:dge Bluegross Band of Manetta, Delhered Go ocl toncs, &lt;&gt;crap book and
Bluegrass group from Reed \tile. C'oncc s1ons a\ ailable
other packed material from
its iconic glass p) ramid

For the Record

death of hi&lt;&gt; 38..-year
old wife, Roo;cmarie . If
convicted. he fnces a maxi
mum sentence of life in
prison, wnh parole possible
after 20 years.
Prosecutors argued that
the defendant was determmed to escape a lo\eless
mamage ,md av01d a costly
and embarrassing divorce.
which
The
defense,
acknowledged that bssa
hdd "countless" affairs.
suggested that a m1stress of
the doctor might ha\e ktlled
the v1ctun and .... anted to
marl) h1m.
Rosemarie Essa died Feb.
24, 2005, after lakin~ a
cyan1de-Jaced
calciUm

p.1ving. to park i lprovemcnts, to sidewalk Ulstallation to the demo Jtion of
old homes. The communit'
chao es how the mone)
\\Ill be u~:oed b) f hng OUt
the sune)'· The proJects
that recene the m st '&lt;Otes
are funded.
f 'ouncil also di cussed :
Racme Patrolman Sh,me
Bdl who several councilmen complimented, saytng
Bell had been patrolling the
~trcets regular!) and that

~everal

citations for speedhad been is5.ucd.
Spencer said at this pomt
Bell ha~ collected more
mane) in the p.tst t\\ o
months in Citation than
ha\ e been collected 111 the
last I\\O years. Councilman
Tom Reed -.aid ticketing
-;pecder~ i. the only way to
get them to ~tow d0\\111
~1nyor J. Scott 11111 suggested council discuss
adopting a cmk enforcement officer/ordinance.
lllg

s1milar t) the one in
Pomeroy. lO monitor and
v. rite cita~i ns for code
violation~ • uch as high
gra~~. unta~ ged \Chicle •
tra-,h. etc.
Reed also mentiOned he
had recent!) seen :-.1cig
Count) Dog \\arden Tom
Proffitt in the 'illage,
issuin£? citatl nli toO\\ ner
of dogs who \\ere running
loose. Rl'ed aid he appreciated Pro f1tt's .. , igilancc.''

Deer from Page At
the lc s fortunate in Ohto
through the Farmers and
llunter~
F~.:edmg
the
llung1) prograo1.'' sa1d
D.t' id ~l. Graham. chief of
the Dh ision of Wildlife.
Coshocton C(,lunt) nne~
Tuscarawas Coupty repm1edthetnostdcercheckedin.
"ith 9.635 and 9.009.
respecth el).
Licking.
Guern ey.
Hnrrison nnd Muskingum
\\CI'C abo in the top eounlle~
for deer harvested. Athens
Count) reported 5,577 &lt;kcr
harvc&lt;&gt;ted. and Gallia.
3,998.

White-tailed deer 1 the
most popular game animal
in Ohio. freljuentl) pur ucd
by generation~ of hunt~.:rs.
Ohio ranks eighth nationally m annual hunting-related
sale&lt;&gt; and tenth in the number of job as ociated with
the hunting-related mdustr) .
Each year. hunting has an
$859 million economtc
impact in Ohio through the
ale of e-quipment. fuel.
food. lodging and more.
Open houses will be held
on Saturda' in each of the
state ·s fj, e \vildlifr distncts
to prO\ ide the public an

Septic from Page A1
Counue~. cities or '11luge that apphed for and
received ARR1\ . uhsidi~s
through a W.PCLF In\\intere-;t loan agreement. I&lt;'
finance 75 pet:t:ent of ca&lt;:h
homco\\ncr's faihng lwme
septic S) stems mclude:
Qualifying ap,Piicants had
to submtt a P,rDJCCt nomma
uon form to Oluo hPA. estint.~tmg the number of ~ys­
tems to be rep.tired ot'
I 1epluced. cosu. per upgrade,

a map of the general locations for upgmdes and the
ll'l'al cntit) that \\ illo\ erscc
the work. Local matches arc
to be pro\'idcd hy homcO\\ ners receh ing federal
subsidies.
Por more 11l]'ormation
abour the pro~:ram. , 1~1t
Ohio EPA 's· wmulus fimd
itl!;

\Veb

SltC

~~ ww.epa.olzio.g(J\'/arra .asp

A

or contact the lot a/ health

cll'pa rtmmt

opponunit) o ne'' and discuss propos•wd hunting and
trapping r gulations \\ ith
state \\ ildl ifr: ofik·1als.
A state\\ ick hearing on all
the propose~ n.Jies \\ill be
held at 9 .111., Thursda).
March 4 at the '' ildhfe dh ision' Distdct One Office.
located nt 1500 Dublin
Road in 0 ltJmbu After
considering public input.
the Ohio \ 1 ildlife Council
.... ill 'ote o 1 the propo::.ed
rules and s~·a on date~ during us April 7 mct•ting.

Hill brought council'~
attention to the general
fund which i curren tl y
under $10.000. Hill said
more attention needed to
be paid in cutting expen es or "\\ e 're going to be in
the red.''
Hill \\ cnt on to a\ that
"If ''e don't change·:;ome
~ings we'll ha\e to reduce
hour~ or ha\ e I:\) offs ...
,,.c·ll have no choice. \\'e've
got to ~lay f'inancially
re.,pon~ible."

�PageA6

The Daily Sentinel

Wednesday, March 3,

2010

Ohio court: Contrac1tor must pay back pay and fines · 2 more ai~e~ to ex-Ohio
Bv JOANNE VIVIANO
ASSOCIATED PRE.SS

court
~aid Monarch
Constlllctron Co i-; required
to p.t) about S,368,000 in
b,td. wc~ges to 36 \\orkcrs.
as \\CII ns a pcnalt) of about
368,000. Tlw \\Orkcrs.
who helped bt ild student
housing
at
Minm1
L:nh ero;lly, ued in 2006.
AllolnC) Gnrg Rogers,
who rcprL'sent~ !\lonarch,
said hL' had not !Hiked with
his client since the ruling
\\as issued Tue day moming and did not kr.ow what
tep would be taken next.
He satd the employee"
\\ orked for a su bcontmctor
\\ho submitted fal~c payroll
1nfunnation to ,Monarch.
TI1e subcontractor. Don
Sal)l'I"S ~lar,onr~ • has gone
out of husiness and cannot
111ake pa) ments, according
to the court.
The Intent of the law i~
not to pumsh &lt;~ontractors.
but to get \\OI'ker their
back pa). said A Jan Ross, n
lawyer for the Northern
Ohio chapter of i'\c;sociated
Btulders &amp; Contt. ctors Inc
and ARC of Ohid Inc.
"Whether )Oll' e a union
or nonuni(ln coni actor. thi'&gt;
n1.1kes workmg on a pre-

\diling wage job a prett~·
treacherous undertakin~. '
o;,,ud Ross. who filed a bnef
on behdll of the industn
groups m support of
Monarch's pOl&gt;ltion.
"It's either going to dmc
the cost of public construetron up because everybody
now is caught in thi" ugl;
si tuation," he ::.aid . "Or, if 11
doesn't drive up the cos!, it
tdkes bidders out of the
.1rena; they're not gomg to
\\£1111 to bid on the work
bccau.,e it's just too risk).''
But Attorne&gt; General
Richard Cordray iso;ued a
statement sa) ing the penalties help construction wo1kers as \\ell as small husi
nesscs.
"Ohio's houri) workers
arc struggling to make ends
meet m these tough fi n.mcial times. Our small bu~1nesses arc fighting to sur\i\c and must have a level
playin~ field in the marketplace,' said Cordray. whose
office filed a brief on behalf
of the state m support of the
workers position. "'I' his
decision underscores the
unportance of prevailingwage ),two; to con ... trucuon

workers across Ohio Hnd
\\Ill ,1ssist the effort-; of the
state to conttnue to protect
the wages of these h.lrdworl. . ing Oh10bns."
Ohio Depn)rtmcnt of
Commerce
spokesman
Dennis Gmt) s ~·d that such
penalties already \\ere bcmg
a essed in mo t cases in
which employ cs C{llll·
pl;dned tl) the department
and that the) \\il continue
to be assessed. [~ nployces
whb feel the) h~ ve been
dcn)cd pre\ ailing\ , ge h,l\C
the opt1on of filing a compla1nt with the department
or filing a 1.&lt;1\\suit.
Messages seekmg com·
ment were lt.ft with lawyers
for the cmp)oyces and for
the 9,hio St. e Buildlllg &amp;
Cun~truction
Trades
Cmu,cil. '"hi filed .1 hrief
in stlpport of the cmplo)
ees' p.osition.
J01 ing Cupp in the decisron were Chi~f Justice
111o01as Moyer d Justices
P,IUI Pfeifer.
Maureen
O'Connor
am~ ~ Judith
Lanzmger. Dic;sentl ng were
Justic s E\elyn Lttndherg
Stratton
and
rl rrencc
O'Donnell.

AG face cnmlnal charges

Guuerrez \\ere shanng the
condo
with
Dann.
J11\ estigations turned up
COL MBUS - 1v.o eddence the three men
more t p aide&lt;&gt; to former hosted
) oung
female
Attorn
General Marc stt~ffers on the premis
))ann v.ere crinunally sometimes for alcoh,)!-1
charged l'uesclay in the piua parties. One of.
wake ot investtg.ttions that ,dleged harassm~.:nt 111Cl·
tullo\\e~ Dann's resigna dents took place there.
tron m JOOS.
Gutierrez. Dann·~ (ormer
D.um' former ch1cf of general service5 chief,
staff Edsar Simpson and pleaded guilty in August to
former commumcauons theft in office. unauthochlef co Jenmngs face riLed use of property,
arraignment Thursdny 111 attempted workers' comF-ranklin County on charges pensation fraud and other
alleging they improperly charges
that
largcl)
handled
supplemental mvolved allegations related
income.
to his former husineo;s,
Simpson is charged \\ ith ~1TV Construction of
fatting to report on required Youngstown. He \\Us senstate financial di-.clol&gt;ure tenced to 45 drt)S 111 ja1l.
form-. '5150 he recc1ved
Jennings b also charged
from Dann 's campa1gn with failing to proper!) discommlttQC and about $800 close $21.000 he recei\ ed
he recei\~ed from the com- from the Ohio Democrauc
mittee Dann fanned during Part), $4.335 he recei' ed
hi.; transition mto office.
from the Dann transition
Jennin•'s is charged with a~count.
S I .310
he
acceptinlf
more
than received from Cromwell &amp;
$15.000 in supplemental Co .. and $692 in hotel and
mcome from the 1\\o Dann meal reimbur ements he
committees and subsequent
recei\ ed from the Dann
Jy funneling the mone) to campaign. He al o never
~---------------------Dann
aide
Anthon\ disclo~ed to state eth .•
Gutierrez who "as pre';_ officials the name of ,
ousl) convicted. in the form busme l&gt;.
Progressive
of 14 months of lodgmg Solutions Group. the comCOLL'MBL S tAP) - A and her parents, Mohamed inf01 mat ion on any pcndmg other as the best \\ rl) or expense:. at a Columbus plaint filed b) Franklin
CountY Prosecutor Ron
condomiruum.
Judge ch1ded a di\ ided fam - and Aysha Daf) to \\Ork cruninal charges against the each tq reach their goals.
Dann aamitted ha\mg an O'Brien allege".
"Havmg your law)c .,
ll) tor filing le~al mouons wJth mdividual counselors ministers and pass that on to
affair wtth a subonhnnte
~lessages seekin&amp; commstead of talkmg to one and to try to attend joint the family's coun~clors
come to court &lt;~nd fil
The counselor-. must then moti~.lll::.. is n~lt encouragin~ and later re-,igned following ment were left wuh the
.mother, then pu hed a rec- counseling.
,
a sexual harassment candal offices of Simpson·~ attaronciliation plan back on
l uesda) 's deal patched up draw up recommendations that, &lt;!;tll satd.
ne)
~like
Close
in
tr .tck l ue'&gt;da) between n a short-li,•ed January agree
for an)' poc;sible contact
Gill told the parents he in his office.
At the time the ~candal Columbus and Jenmngs'
Muslim couple and the1r men! that fell ~ part ''hen after talkmg to Rifqa and recognized their frustmt10ns
teenage d,wghter who the pa1ents smd their daugh- her parents.
with the process but belie\ eel c~e to hght, Jennmg~s_a_n_d__a_n_o~
rne~ Martm Ya,orcik.
Columbu
pohce and that the best course \\a to
cla1med he feared for her ter ''a'\ bemg nllowed to
hfc tor coll\erting to contact Christi n pastors count) pro~ecutors are mo'e ahead '' ith coun eling
Chmt1amt) .
\\ho allegedly helped her ill\ e~;tigaung whether an)- to heal the famil).
Both the g1rl , R1fqa Bary. nm a\Hty to Fl01•ida m Jul) . one broke the Jay, helping
"The 1onl) indi' iduals tiM!
md her p.uent agreed to The couple belie e that con- Dar) lea\e Oh10 for Plorida. nrc goi~g to be able to repair
.lu\emle Court Judge it .1re t~1e three of )OU. \\ith
folio\\ ,, counseling plan tact '' .ts hurting their
E.hzabeth Gill lectured both profes ional help." Gill
around 5 mph.
dr.w•n up b) the Franklin chance for reconciliation.
1 he arr.mgehl~nt left Ba1) and her parents. "ho -.a. d.
Friday... ~ostly sunny.
Count\
chrld
\\clfare
Highs in the upper 30s.
Poll e
1 ) I st ) l:M to tf) to open the posstbilit} of o;uch sat on opposite sides of ..
Friday
night
and
1l
h f mtl) 'c; con
contact, but added a ne\\ .,nl.lll courtroom and drd not Columb
Saturday...Mostl) clear.
o;pc. k to ne unother. th.tt de c
reqUirement: The child wei
I
n rcq 1reo;; the grrl f rc ngency ''as to gather communtc.ating "'1th e.11.;h hnn
'"aa~
night ••• Lo\\s in the lo,,er 20s.
High:-. in the upper 40 .
t 1 -,cattcrcd 110\\
Saturday night ...~lostl)
'' e . C\i» ld "1th low s 111
the nud 20c;.
orth\\est clear in the e\emng ...Then
5 to h mph. Chance becoming part!~ clou
Cold wnh lows 111 the
\ 50 p~ r cent.
hursda " .. Mo II) 20s.
l
"de found to
Ken ud.y on Tue.,day ag&lt;tin blocked tody of ~6 hor
Sunday...Mo::.tl) sunny.
d
) I solatei s.~1ow :-.ho''Ohio University
t:.tr"l outs1de
the ! enate from extendmg the bene- be rnalnouri'&gt;hl:d
cr-. 111 the mon111* Highs in Hi~hs around 50.
night ...l\lostl)'
Sunda)
fits o Amencans. saymg it would of·loh:do.
the mtd 30'. North\\est
skilled workers OK add
10 brlhon to the budget defictt.
Police in F.lmo~S.l) H.~rd..,l ha"
\\ md~ 5 to 10 m h Chance cloud\. Lows in the mid 30s.
new contract
Monda)
through
A a result. people \\ho exhau&lt;.ted been on unpatd .td mic.tratt\e lea\C
of snow 20 perce lt.
theu benefits Saturda) can't '&gt;eek an smce Dc~o.ember o er an unrelated
Thur da) nigl \t .... 1o.,tl) Tue~da) ... Mostl) cloud)
tn\ est1gation
\Tilf.'\;S
t \PJ
Ohro exte sion.
c.loud\ in the e\ent 1g ...Then \\ ith a 30 percent chance
L Ill\ e~ n, mamtenance employee&lt;;,
TI Ohio Department of Jub and
becoming partI) cloud). of rain ::.hO\\ers. Hi~h5 111
g ound k epers and ~ooks ha\ e F-am I) Sen 1ces s.ty ~ C\ en if
Cold
'' ith Joy, s m h e IO\\-Cr the mid 50.,. Low 111 the
City expresses
appt O\ d .. ne\\ contract \\ ith the Con! re"" later act&lt;; to restore the
20s. Northwer;t
\\ md~ upper 30~.
..... hool JU'&gt;t after a strike deadline mea~,ures. thousands ofOh10ans will
'regrets' in Web
pa '&gt;cd.
see
lapse m benefih, beginning
disp~te
'I he umon for more th.111 600 with .4:0,000 people thio; \\eek and
-;killed tr.1dc workers nt the univcrsi- abou 24,000 each week after that.
CONNhAUT (AP - An Ohio
t) h.ts \ oted b) ,, near!) I0~ I r.ttio to
A~ ~1ut 432.000 people receh e
uner plO) ment benefits in Ohio. community '" makin J public "tate
K~o.ept • threc-)ear deal th&lt;tt uruon
Ohio Valley Bane Corp. (NASAEP (NYSE) - 34.12
\\ h1~ h has an unemplo) mcnt rate of men! of regret to a \\oman \\ ho \\ J
lcad~rs ""&gt; oflef'&gt; JOb se~.:unty.
DAQ)- 23.60
Akzo
(NASDAQ)
52.51
asked
to
remO\
e
Ci
'
Hall
contact
It ..''&gt;o mdude" no r.lJ'&gt;C 111 the first I 0 9 percent.
BBT (NYSE)- 27.81
Ashland
Inc.
(NYSE)
....
49.58
mfom1ation lrom he Web s1te
) ar. a I percent increa~e m the secPeoples (NASDAQ)- 15.08
Big Lots (NYSE) - 33.94
Kttlle
Sch\\
arl!
tied
a
federn
Pepsico (NYSE) - 63.80
ond ) eM and a 1.75 percent htke 111
Bob Evans (NASDAQ) - 29.80
ourt: Company
Premier (NASDAQ) - 7.59
ID\\'&gt;Uit
la!&gt;t
)&amp; r claimmg
Borg Warner (NYSE) - 38.66
th~.: thud ••md 1t mcreasel. the \\orkRockwell (NYSE) - 55.65
Century Aluminum (NASDAQ
Conneaut
official
'iolated
her
cr&lt;,' out ot pocket insurance ~oSt5.
0' es workers both free-speech rights ''ben the) sent a
Rocky Boots (NASDAQ) - 8.35
- 13.44
The 'ote came late \1~mda) afterHoyal Dutch Shell - 55.71
Champion
(NASDAQ)
1.34
letter urging her to lake do\\n the
Sears Holding (NASDAQ) tack wages, fees
noon. about a half hour after the
Charming Shops (NASDAQ) "1
matcnal. The) had shid some peo~'6'.95
6.39
tune the union had threatened to
City Holding (NASDAQ)- 31.97 Wa·I-Mart (NYSE) - 53.59
C Ll'MBUS (AP)
The Ohio ple might be confu ea into thmkm~
-.t 1ke '"hen its old contract expired.
w,,hdy's (NYSE) - 4.93
Collins
(NYSE) - 58.75
Sup erne Court has ruled th.H her site \HIS the official Web site
We~Banco (NYSE)- 15.67 •
DuPont (NYSE) - 34.03
for
thl!
ci
I}.
\\
h1ch
IS
65
miles
Woa11'lington (NYSE)- 16.29
emp O)ers \\ho y,rongly den) preUS Bank (NYSE) - 24 74
Meth conviction
General Electric (NYSE) - 15.90 Dall)' stock reports are the 4
" aili 1g wage to '' orkers on public northea-.t ol Cle\ el.md.
p.m. ,-c:. T closing quotes of trans1l1e ~tntement read during a Cit)
Harley-Davidson (NYSE) jobs must pa) fin.mcral pen.1lties
to cut cost
action6· for Feb. 11.2010, pro24.92
Council
se.;;c;wn
Mon
a)
is
part
ot
.1
calle for under Oh10 1,1\\.
vided ll\t Edward Jones finanJP Morgan (NYSE)- 41.62
In ,, 5-2 deci!;ion Tue da), JUStiCC5 settlement of the h1\\ it. It -.ays cit)
cial ad11lsors Isaac Mills In
on fuel plant
Kroger (NYSE) - 22.68
Umtted Brands (NYSE) - 22.43 Gallipolis at (740) 441-9441 and
d1sag ecd with a Jm,er coun\ deci- officials are commttted to free
Lesley M.t rrero in Point Pleasant
speech
.md
regret
if
Sch\\
.trtt.
Norfolk Southern (NYSE) I ISB0:'\1 tAP) - Authontics m sion ha' trial courts should ll&lt;t\ e disat
(304) 6·,7 ,4·b174. Member SIPC.
52.71
northe.1"t OhiO ha\c allo\\ed the creti( n O\ er \\ hether to asliel.S :;uch viewed all\ criticism " a person.tl
•
l\eadhm: to cxprre on purchasing penal i{!s \\hen employers wrongly attack.
Attorneys
say neifher side IS
a1~out .1 third of the property needed deny ~\orkcrs pre\mling \\age- the
on a pubhc job. .tdm1tt111g it \\ll'i at fat It m the disto build a S6 billion coal-to-h4uids gomg union r.1tc
The t ig3 court said the penalties are pute.
pl&lt;t nt along the Ohio RJ\ cr.
1 llll1) -.e'en-) car-old Peter Bar1a laid ut in the law and must be
~---2lg:C.
H. tt \C O\\ ner of the 146-acrc par eel. asses ed in all but exceptional cal.es.
Ohio couple gets 4
l,;nj er state Jay,. employefl&gt; who
,, ,,s 1 -ccentl:r &lt;.,entenced to pnson tor
f5rua#'.ic £. •?'uu D'ff
years in deaaly fire
pay pre' ailing "'age owe
druc L har •e-. that included runmng a fail t
meth I tb at the property. He mu'&gt;t \\Ork~ rs a 25 percent penalt) on the
:VIARJO:"&gt;J (AP)
Calling thc1r
sum and ov.c the state a 75
forfcll the propert).
t penalty. I he state uses its conduct 'mcxcu~able ... an O hm
Cohln •hwna
County
Port
Authority ,officials s.ty the) hope to ~;hare to pa) for prcHtiling wage JUdge ~as entenc~d a coup!e to fo~r
vcars rn pnson tur aJhm mg thcrr
enfon emcnt.
pun:hase t1'lc property at. an upcom
h\o )Oung chrldren to die in a fire.
me sheri II\, tuctron. sa\ mg mos-t ot
'DzafftondS-!J\[:9 ~rtf
~1arion Count) Common Ple.1s
the 'iiI 45 1111 Ilion anticipated cost.
O·fficer
denies
Judge
Robet1
Dm
idsOJ'
on
Mond.t)
·A
ur. q e se
d~og
r he -.tate g.~antcd the port authon
ignored tt recommen ation from
sets ana engagme t r g!i
t\ a ~4 5 m11l it ?n to purchase the 650
F:a,cebook threat
prosecutors that he gi\e D.lllicl
·Fmar.c rg
·1cres needed .trom Barta and 16
Barrett
.md ( he) cnne Tackett just 30
!Qainst
group
•P...rrOhase tracK ~g
othe1 l,mdownc rs to build a plant
da) ~ 111 JQil.
•D1ant.. rad Upgrade Pc CJ
that \\Ould ct'mvert coal and
The) h.td pleaded gm)t) to child
EL?I ORb (AP) -A police officer
•8nd., Part; G1f1s
biO\\ astc" mto d1e &lt;;el and jet fuel and
in nor hv.est Ohio ha'&gt; been charged endangenng m a fire Ia t Ma) th.tt
,, chcmtc.ll for the 1olastics indu ... tr)'.
·Engra1 ng
wllh making a thrc.tt on hi.s killed 2-ycar-old Jacoh Tackett nnd
•Comphrpentar; R.ng Clean '19
Faccb1 o k page against au .mimal 8-mon.th old ~1udisol' Barrett.
•Exclus 1e Hearts On Free
Unemployment
In\ l.'st•gutnrs satd thl.' blaZl' wao;
rescue group .
Retailer.
ritie-. &lt;;ay hi more pt1lice offi- started b&gt; another chi(d pia) m g
·benefits ent1ing for cerMrtti
Sif1Jer r.Britfge P[a.za
Sh un Harder wrote online that \\ ith n lrghtct· "hilc the parent~
the An bian Rco;cuc M1ss1on .. nl!cds \\ere slccpm~ at the famiJ) 's apart
some Ohio,ans
mcnt m Manon. 42 mik:; no1th of
to be s aughtered hke li\estock.''
Har&lt; er ple,tded not guilt) on Columbu ....
COl L \1BL S
(AI')
740-446Prosecutors -..tid the COIJple often
l nempiO)Cd Ohioan-. arc b-ct•m ning Monda to ag~ra\ atcd menacing.
The' fficer 1s a 'oluntecr with the stmed up late and slept duting the
to lt&gt;'-C thctr joble5s benefit!; because
human soc ret\ . which has heen da). IC.I\Illg the children unsupcr
of .t -.tdcmate 111 Congres~.
Republrcan Sen. Jim Bunm ng of batt lin! wrth re~cuc group mer cus- \iscd.

COl L MBL S
Contractors may be reluc
h1nt to b1d on publlc jobs
.tftcr the Ohio Supreme
Colll1mlcd the) must pa.) .1
100 p~;;rcent pcnalt) if workers .u cn't p:nd union w.tgcl&gt;,
.1 lc~w vcr fo1 n builders ::tl&gt;&lt;;oCI.tllu;, &lt;;,lid 1uc. da).
In ,a ~ 2 deciswn. justices
d15.~ •reed \\ 1th a lower
court\ decision that trial
courts ha\ e di cret1on on
w hethcr to assess the penallie'&gt;, wh1ch &lt;1rc outlined in
OhiO 1,1\\ rhe penalties must
be tbsc ..sed 111 all but exceptional cases, the high court
o;md, sending the cn~e back to
~he 11 i&lt;~l court to rcCl)llsider.
l'nder &lt;;lute law. cmplo)e1~ \\ho t,ulto pay the going
umon r.ttc
known as
''pre\mhng \\nge"
must
repa) \\ orkers the unpaid
sum along '' 1th 25 percent
111 pcn.llt) and must pa) the
state a 75 percent penalt).
The state 1s to u'&gt;e ll5 share
to pa) for pre\ ailmg wage
en I OJ cement.
In the dcci&lt;;ton \\ritten by
Just1ce Robert Cupp, the

Bv JULIE CARR SMYTH
A~OCIATED PRESS

.

Parents, teen convert agree to continue ccounselir~g

I

IV~'"eigs

County Forecast

I

'

(f;lr;,~~

~~b~

gampofis,

�Inside

Bl

The Daily Sentinel

Raider full to Fairland, Page 82
1'he 0\ P Sroreboard, Page U2

Bucke)cs top Illinois, Pngc B2

\\'ednesday, l\Jarch 3, 2010

Bryan Walters/photos

Eastern coach Howie Caldwell, center, talks with his Eagles before the start of Tuesday
~ght's Division IV sectional final basketball game against Symmes Valley at Wellston Hrgh
W::hool. The Eagles defeated SVHS by a 47-36 margm to advance to distnct competition.

Southern players (from left) Colby Roseberry, Dustin Salser, ~arcus Hill, T~ylor Deem and
Andrew Roseberry celebrate the team's 51-49 victoryover P1ke Eastern m the 0 ·4 sect,onal final on Tuesday evening at Wellston High School

Eagles shut down Symmes
Tornadoes
outlast
Pike
Valley, advance to districts Eastern, advance to districts
BY BRYAN WALTERS

BWALTERSCMYDAILYTR BUNE COM

BY BRYAN WALTERS
BWA TERSCMYDAILYTRiffi.JNE COM

WELLSTON. Ohio The) sa) defense \\ins
championships.
You'll get no argument
(rom Eastern High School
......-----..., on that one.
l·or the
third consecuthe
postsea on
and
the
14th time

Southern
senior
Sean
Coppick
(12)
releases
a shot
attempt
over a
trio of
Pike
Eastern
defenders during the
f1rst half
of

WELLSTON. Ohto When the going got tough,
the tough got going.
For the third consecutive
post:sea~on nnd the 24th
- - - - - ' l i m e in the
progrnm'o;

Eastern
senior
Jake
Lynch
(1 0)
releases
rllu~tnous
a shot
ht&lt;.tOr).
th
attempt
Sou the
over a
bn
Symmes
ketb
Valley
team '' I
defender
I be 1110\JnO
durmg
on to dts
the ftrst
trict com
half of
Rees
pet i t 1o n
Tuesday
after capntght's
mnng a narrm' 51-49 'tetoD1vls1on
n O\ er Prke Ea tern on
IV secTue da) night dunng a
tional
Di' is10n IV sectiOnal final
contest at Welbton High
fmal at
Wellston ,School m Jackso~ Count).
The
thtrd-seeded
Htgh
Tornadoe:s 116-4) led all but
School

m the pro-

gram's histhe
tOr).
_w....______;; E a s t e r n
bO)S basketball
\\til be moHng on to
dtstnct competation after
captunng a 47-36 'ictory
O\ er S) mme
Valle) on
Tuesda\ mght auring a
Dt\ tston I\ secuonal final
contest at \\ellston High
School m Jackson County.
The top-seeded Eagles
(20-1) gave another stellar
defensive effort during its
latest tournament triumph.
limiting the fifth-seeded
Vikings ( 13-7) to just 2R
percent shooting ( 14-of-50)

Tu~sday

nights
D1v1s1on
IV sectional
final at
Wellston

H1gh
School.

14 seconds of the 32-minute
contest \\ere also up b) as
many a~ 11 pomts m the
fiN half, but the secondseeded Eaglrs ( 16-3) dtd

Bryan
Walters/
photos

Please see Southern, 86

Please see Eastern, 86

Vikings top Meigs in
season finare, 81-40

LoCAL SCJmoULE
upc:o:nmg "'gh
spot'mg ~ts Involving learns

POMEAO'f - A KMOI.

achool va

,,., MelliS M

of

Wahama's
EliJah
Honaker
BY SARAH HAWLEY
(12) shoots
SHAWLt.=YOMVDAILYTR SUI';_ COM
the ball
dunng the
ROCKSPRINGS, Ohio first half of
J"he Metg~ Marauders basTuesday
kctball season came to an end
evening's
on Tucsda\ C\ening a the
Class A
Vinton Count) Viking:s
sectional
defeated Meigs 81-40.
tournament
Vinton Count\ scored earl~
and often. outsco1ing Meig~
contest
1 llJ-2 in the fiN qmu1er. Seth
agamst
Huntington 1 Wl•lls scorl'd till' lone haskct
St. Joseph I for the ~1aruuder~. Meig~
JXW. ercd back in 1~1e second
at Point
1
quarter
ouhconng . the
Pleasant
1 Vikings
15 12
Vmton
Htgh
Count) led b) a score of 31School.
17 at the halt.

n and Ga ia CO&lt;Jnlies

Ib.UWillY.~

Boys Basketball
Chesapeako at Souther., 6 p m

OVI' SECJIONAI.
~~KETBAI.I. TOURNA.Ml:l\"'1

_--

Somnm.ES

BOYS BASKETBALL

I

W.lldnc.&amp;IUV. March.3

Class AA-At Rlploy HS
(3) Rotc!l e County vs (2) Potnt
Pleasant 6 p m

OVP

DIS' I RIG I'

BASKETBAI.I. TOllRNA:\-IENI

Scmmmr:s
GIRLS BASKETBALL
W~tdnesstay.

Mnrc.IL'J

Division IV·At Convo
Dostrlcl Fmats
(4) South Webster vs (2) Eastern 6 15
pm

BOYS BASKETBALL

I

Sarah
Hawley/
photo

I

liteida)', Maim 9
Division IV·At Convo
(3) Southern vs (1) South Webster,
615 pm
(;i) Manchester vs (1) Eastern, 8 p 111

Falcons end season at sectional tourney

S11.tllrdJty, .MMch 13
Division IV-At Convo
DtstriCI Fmats
fkuth Webster Southern w1rner vs
Eastern/Manchester Winner. 3 p rn

BY SARAH HAWLEY
SHAWLEYOMYDAILYTRIBUNE COM

POINT
PLEASANT.
W.Va. - The Wahama
White Falcons (12-10)
ended their season in the
s~ctional semi-finals on
'Fa1rland 52. Rtvor Valley 38
ru c~day evening agai~st
'vtnton Co 81, Metgs 40
Hunt ington St. Joe at Po111t
Pleasant High School.
Division IV Socttonal Fmals
The White Falcons fell
Eastern 47, Symmes Valley 36
behind
15-8 by the end of
Southern 51, P1ke Eastorn 49
the first 4uaraer of the contest Wahama battled back
Class A Socttonal Semt.final
Hunt. St Joe 72, Wahama 56 1 in the second &lt;tuarter.
outscoring HSJ 20-18 and

result~

L----------'

I

cutting the lead to fh c
pomts ,11 the half.
.
II S.l came back strong 111
th~ second h,li f. scoring 17
and 22 point~ in the third
und fourth quarters respl'Cti\•l'ly. Wahama ~~:or~~.!. 14
points in end• of the ltnal
two periods, !Is ~ IS.I \\ cnt
on to the 72-56 \ t&lt;..'tory.
Wahama ":h led hy Whitlatch
Arnold
1-.lijah llonaker Wtth 15
poutts. Matt Arnold added point:s, and T) ler Kitchen
13 points, R)an Lee hnd scored four pt&gt;lllts.
nine
points,
Zach
.Nate Hedrick led HSJ
Whitlatch had eight pomts. Please see Wahama, Bl
Isaac Lee added se\ en

.

The second half \\as dominated b) \ inton Count&gt;. The
Vikings outscored Metgs 2411 ana 26- I2 in the third and
fourth quarter:s re pecth el~.
Meigs "as led in conng
b) Jesse Smith \\ ith 15
pomts. Colton Ste\\ art had
nine points. \\cll:s and Darrel
GoiTeach cored four pomh,
R) an Ta) lor and Cod)
:\lattox each cored three
)oint . and Jon i\tcCnrth)
lad t\\ o pomts.
Men:~ senior Tanner H) ~ell
pia\ etf his final ~a me for the
'~tai.1u~krs hut dtd not scot\'.
Vinton Counl) \\as kd h).
Ethan Alkn and Ll'\ 1
La\\ lll·ad '' ith lJ points.
Ste\ en 'llllunpson and D) Ia~
Guthtie ettch scored L ..
points. \dam \\ard .had II
point:s, ,md \nd) Gnllo had
se\en points. R)nn Ches er
and Ill) lor Reed e~1ch scored
three pomts. \\ hile Jason
Wi-.eman. Joe) Bate). and
1 .B. Rem) each had t\\ o

Hysell

Smith

points.
StC\'rnrt and Smith led the
i\ larauder~
"ith
eight
rebounds. Ta) lor led in
assists "ith four. ''bile
.McCarth) led in blocks "ith
l\\0.

Vinton Count\ \\on the JV
game b\ a score of 44-2 I.
Vinton Count) \\a~ led by
Justin Bache,er \\ tth I0
points and Meigs \\ac; led b)
Darrel Goff '' ith C\ en
point-..
VINTON
V•rtor
Mags

Co 81,

19
2

MEIGS

12 24 26 15 i~ 12

40

81
40

VINTON COUNTY (15·5 1Cl-2 TVC
OhiO) Mdy Gnllo 3 1·1 7 Justifl

Brenoser 0 1·2 1. Ryan Chesser 1 Cl-0 3
Taylor Reed 1 0-0 3 Ethan Allen 6 1.0
13, Jason Woseman 1 Cl-1 2. Bobt1y
Walton 0 (}.0 0, Joey Batey 1 0-0 2
Adnm Ward 4 2·2 11 Lev1 Lawhead 5 3·
7 t 3. Steven Thompson 4 2-4 12, Dylan
Guthrie 3 5·7 12, L B Remy 1 0·0 2
TOTALS 30 15·27 81
Three point
goals. 6 (Thompson 2 Guthrie Ward
Chesser. Reed)
MEIGS (1·20. Cl-12 TVC OHIO) Darrel
GoH 2 0-0 4 Ryan Payne 0 0-0 o Jesse
Smith 7 0-0 15 Ryan Taylor 1 0-0 3
01jaun Rob1nson 0 0-0 0 Cody Mattox 1
0-0 3 Colton Stewart 4 1·2 9 Mochaet
Davis o 0-0 0 Heath Detwi er 0 0 0 Q
Seth We s 2 0-0 4 Tanner Hyso 0 0-4
o Connor Swartz 0 0-0 0 Jon McCarty
1 Cl-02 TOTALS 181-640 Thtoc-ponl
goats 3 (S:'l th Th.ylor Matto..X)

�----------~---~~~-· - _,__~-~-~-

Page 82 • 11le Daily Sentinel

www. mydailysentinel.com

'Vcdnesday, March 3,

2010

River Valley falls to James files papers to switch from No. 23 to No. 6
Fal•rland l•n season fl•nale
,

Bv SARAH
SHAWL

•

HAWLEY

OM ilA

Bll)\\ I l l , Ohio
llle
RH cr \ ,1lle&gt; Ra1dCJ'- fell to
Ftml.md m the ltnt~l ~ame of
the sedsOn fm the Rmdcr by
a score of S2 ~H.
l•auland led b\ 11. 16 5,
at the end of the fu st qum1cr.
R•her \,tllry outscored the
MeAvena
Smith
Dragons 12-10 in th~.: second
qllaller. r a ul.llld took [I 26
17 lead tnlo the h.tlfllmc lour pomts, John Holbrook
mtem11~s10n
.tdded three po1nts. and K) le
Faul,md scor d I 3 pomts I aubenhetm 1
Anthony
in each of the fin,tl t\\o qua1 Dtllurd. and Enc Rile) e.tch
ter&lt;&gt; to flm..,h of1 the •ame. c;cor d tv. o pomts.
\\ htle Rt \ er \, lie\ ..,cored 8
Thts v.as the final g.1mc
and 13 m the thm.J and for Rtver Va le) semors
tourth qum1el"i respeCtl\el) Kctth Sl..idmore, Cody
Fmrland \\on h) a tm,ll McA\ell.l.
fmJ
Parker
score of :12 38
Hollul~s\\Orth.
Rn er \aile) ''as led b)
( od) Smtth \\ tth II pomts.
FAIRLAND 52,
( od) M~.,.l\,ena had et ht
RIVER VALLEY 38
16 10 13 13
52
pomt.-..
Parker
5 12
13 - 38
liollm ·~v.o th,
Aaron
H.tmson, tnd Domtmque
Peel.. ca h -.~.:ored four
pomts, Ke1th Sktdrno1c und
.Kyle Br) .1111 e·1...h .tdded
three pomt!., and \ustrn
Le\\ 1~ sco1 ed one point.
I .tirland \\ ns led b) h\ .111
Salyers '' 1th 20 poull"i. Matt
Bloomfield had 10 pointe;.
Jon B,u..,c scored nrne
pomts. Bl.une r uller had

IN J) I p [ N ()I !'I ( I •
Oh1o tAP)
fhL· numbct
on LeBron J me.,· back
v.tll be dlflerl!nt next f&gt;CaC lev el,md
son
I he
( Jvaltel ~ cc~n on I} hope
the logo on the llont of h1s
JCI sc) 1em.un-. the ....une
JumC!-. h 1S lied pt~pcrwork \\ 1th the
BA to
ch.tnge hts un1f01m num
ber next sc,t-.on to No. 6
from No 2~. the h:aguc
-cunfumed Tuc-;day. James
satd cc~rllcl thi-; o;cason he
would be \&gt;vtltn' to gl\e
up No. 2 ~ in an effort to
ht~ve the NBJ.\ rct1rl: tt in
honor of Michael Jordan
Papel work had to be
IJied th1 \\cek to rcqueo;t
a numb~.;:r ch, gc for next

season.
"All
1t
doc
1s
back
up
L e B 1on's
b cIt c r s ...
Cavs conch
M 1 k e

B r o w n

'&gt;aid. "He'
a
loyult)
James
guy. When
he believes
111 something, he sticks to
lw; guns and he belie,es
wholche.trtedl) in v.hat
he"-. d01ng.'
Jamc'&gt; can become .1 free
&lt;~gent th1s summer. He
\&gt;vould on y need the
lea ue·~
approval
to
change numbers tl he

pointe;, 12 rebounds and fhe
a&lt;&gt;sist!.. "That \\as cool •·
Alter the game. fans
c;v.anned onto the court and
... heercd v.htle several pia)
e ran 0\er to their famihes
to celebrate v. tth them.
The cro\\d chanted "One
More Year! · for Turner. a
front-runner for national
pl.t) er of the ) ear \\ ho has
not dcctded f he wtll gh e up
hi.., senior season to jump to
the l'\BA.
I don "t e'en kno'' \\hut to
sa). satd Turner. who
tnl"&gt; ed 4 I 2 '' eeks '' tth bro
l..en bones m hts back while
th~.: Buckeyes lost three of
their fir.-.t four Btg 1en
g.1me-. ... All thts hard work
\\e put m \~C alv.a•" per •
v red thr ugh tou • t1me
Th tuf
dtd d1.1 m t

54

OHIO

"'The ftrst thmg I thtnk
of is Dr. J,'' Brown satd.
Jame~ \\Ore No.6 v.nh
the U.S. Ol)mpic team
and \\ears it every da~ m
practice He tsn't the fir~t
superstar to change numbers mid-career. Among
others. Jordan briefly
wore No. 45 after com mg
out of retirement with t
Bulls . .tnd Kobe B1yan
more recently switch
from No.8 to No. 24.
··we remember the 8 on
Kobe, but we also know
the 24." Ca,aliers pomt
guard Mo Williams saad
"After a year or t\\O peopie will look past the old
number and let it rest v.Jth
Jordan··

Diebler, Turner lead :O. 6 OSU past Illinois

T e OVP scoreboard
Thcsda) scores

rema.ns 111 Cleveland
Should he '&gt;tgn wuh
another
team.
Jamcr.
would he ullowed to
choose .my av uti able numbcr
.... Jthout
needtng
appiO"Val.
He diSillls-;cd a question
about lu future shortly
t~fter the Cavaliers beat
the
Kntcks
124 lJ3
Monday n1ght.
''I stopped &lt;~ll'&gt;Wcring
free agent question-; n
long time ago." he '&gt;Utd.
James, who declined
llltcn icw 1equc~ts on
Tueo;day. is go111g from
one famous number to
,tnother Julius En ing and
Btll Ruo;~cll both v.orc No .
6

ba

Sn11th prc..ented the Btg len
champ10nshtp troph) to the
players
11 ''a the c;chool's
18th tjtlt:
v.hile the band
pla)ed. The Buckeyes v.JIJ
be the top seed 111 the Btg Ten
tou1 nament, Lifter t&lt;1k1ng a
nine da) rest. and '' 1ll like!\
be .t high seed in the ~C AA
tournament.
Wtllium Buford added 17
point!'.. se\en rebounds and
five as..,ist~ but 1t v. :1!. Da' id
I i¥ht). who ftmshed v. tth 15
pomt~. v.ho mtght ha\c pro\ tdcd the btggc t spark for
the Bucl..eye Ill the e&lt;.ond
half
l"he lc.td hO\ ered around
four point&lt;&gt; until ub K) Ie
Mad.,en htt .1 ha!.ehne
JUmper and. attcr an Illinois
turno\ cr. Ltght)' took one
qmck .-.tep to the b.t-;l..et .md
..,l:ored on u left-handed
la)up v.htle llhm big man
~ltkc lt dale pi1..k~.:d up h1
thild foul I 1ght) \ threepomt pi I) pushed the lead to
58-49 wtth 9 minutc5 left.
· Co.tch ( fhad Matta) v.as
tcllmg us to dnve and
•tttack," l1ght) &lt;&gt;atd "(PO\\Cr
forv. ard M tke) Da\ •~ \~as
utrd1n me and he'!. a ltttle
bll I
r than me .1 ju t
1\1.:

16

·They can use their athleticism to spread us out,"
Illinois coach Bruce Weber
atd ... When Diebler shoot.-,
like that. it reall) puts you m
a bind.'"
Diebler never took a shot
in&amp;ide the arc. hitting half of
hts 14 attempts
•
..The gu) s tiad confidence
in me:· satd Dtebler, who
wa~ just 3 of 17 on 3-poi nt·
ers the last two ~ames.
"The) v. t:re collap mg o.A
ET. Will and Da' e and the~
\\ere driving. It just left open
hots for me. I \\a&lt;; fortunate
to knock them dO\\ n
tonight··
DeMetn McC'ame\ had 18
pomts for the lllm( {18- I 2.
10-7), who ha'e lost tv.o
strmght and four of fi\e.
lllinms nO\\ mu t v. in it
sea on finale at home on
Sunday against No. 15
Wiscon~in to clinch a topfive seed in the Big Ten tournament and a ilr t-round
bye.
"'The !-.hark got one leg.
now it"s !!Ot another.'' Weber
'aid. "It's pulling us under.
We' II ~ee if \\ e can get
a\\ a):·
Echoing his star player's
sentiment . ~1atta said the
Buckeyes still ha\ e ome
unfini,hed bu&lt;&gt;ine in the
conference and 1'\CAA tournaments.
'"In coaching l''e beel
blessed: this is 12 nngs m 1
\ears." ~latta said. "I sa1
ihe mos.t important nng 1 the
next one:·

Ochocinco among new 'Dancing With the Stars' cast
I

I OS A Gl U S &lt;AP)
Chad Ochoctnco ,.., puttm~
on ht'- d,m~.::mg shoe" tor 1 \.
Known f01 hts touchdov.n
cclebrat10ns m the end zone.
the Ctncrnn.tlt Beng.ds \\ide
re&lt;.el\1.:1 IS taking h1' .tel
from the g11dnnn tn the
stage as a ~..ontC'st.lnt on the
upcommg
sca..,on
of
··D.m~.::1ng \\ tth the Stars"
Gold medal figure k.tter
E' an l &gt;sacek nd sport!.caster E1 m ~ndr~.:v. w1ll

also compete.
L)'acek recentl) became
the first American man
s1nce Bri,tn Bottano to v.in
the Olympic gold in
VancoU\er. Andre\\ s is an
f~SP~ repOrler \~ho \\as Ill
the headlines la~t )Car ,tfter
•l man 5hot nude \ idc.os of
her througn a hotel room
peephole and posted them
OchocinCO
online.
"Dancing With the St,m,"
returns March 22 \\ ith n ca!.t htt ho\\. w1th

h a t
tnclude5
modelactre s
Pamela
Anderson
cllld astronaut Buzz
\ldrin
Athlete!.
h,l\e t)plcally done
v. ell on the
Hall of Fame
t

Emmitt
running
back
Smith, 01) mpic speed
skater .Apolo Anton Ohno.
Jnd) Car dri \ er
Helio
ca~trone\ es. figure skater
Krbti Yamaguchi and g) mnast Sha'' n Johnson all
''inn in§! in pre\ iou... seasoth. Former ~FL tar~
Jerr) Rice , and Warren
Sapp. and current Mtami
Dolphins defen-,1\e end
Jason J"aylor ha\ e also been
runner,-up.

WEDNESDAY TELEVISION GUIDE

Sarah Hawley/photo
Wahama's Tyler K1tchen shoots the ball over a HSJ defender an the ftrst half of the secttonal tournament contest at
Point Pleasant Htgh School

Wahama
from Pagl' HI

pointers

the contest.

HUNTINGTON Sr. JOE
WAHAMA 56

72,

8 20 14 14
15 18 17 22 -

56
72

Warart1a

._.s.,

with 27 points. Aaron
Williams addl!d 21 points,
Kyle Shcffteld had 13
po111ts. Lance West had s1x
pointo;, t~nd Joc;h PJCrson
h.td fh e pomts.
fh1s V.cls the fm.tl bas
k.ctball game for W.thama
senior Zach Wl11tlatch.
who made two three-

111

WAHAMA (12·10) Elijah HonaKer 5 5-6
15 Anthony Bond 0 ().() 0 Mall A, r&gt;old 5
22
Tr{;rton G1bbs 0 o-o 0, Ryan Leo

412
Zach W'1 tla tch 3 o-o 8 Isaac
l
2 3 3 7 Ty er K t hen 1 2 2 4
TOTALS 20 13·15 56
T~ree pont
s 3 (Wh t atcto 2 Arnold)
HUNT NGTON ST OSfPH (n/a) Kyle
Sh If ld 6 1-3 13 Aaron Wi
ns 6 6
10 21 Josh P e son 2 1 2 5 Nate
Hedrick 107·1027 LanceW 114 86
Pork rSrrlhOQ.OO TOTA S 2519
72 Thtce-po nt goats 3 W1
3)

g

�----

Wednesday, March 3, 2010

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any

200

land (Acreage)

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Lost &amp;

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Loo ;19 I
'QQ-40() acr·
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lease
Jet!
304·984·9358
p
304·549-1589

For
Everyone

Real Estate
Rentals

3500

In

The...

MAKE

1 and 2 bedroom apts
fum shed
and
u fur
mshe:l and hou s n
Pomeroy and Middleport
sea. ty depc:; I requ red
no pets 740-Q92·2218

SOMEONE'S
DAY!

1&amp;2 BP Ap'
hOsp •

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CLASSIFIED INDEX
Legals ...................................p . . .. . . .. . . . . . . .. . 100
Announcements .................................... ...... 200
Birthday/Annlversnry ..................................205
Happy Ads ............................................. _,210
Lost &amp; Found .. ............................................215
Memory/Thank You ..................................... 220
Not1ces .............................................- .225
Personals ...................................................230
• Wanted .................................................... 235
Services ....................................................... 300
Appl1ance Servlce ....................................... 302
Automotive ................................................_ 304
mg Materials ....................................... 306
rt1us1 ness ................................................... 308
Catenng. •... •• •..........................................310
Child/Elderly Care ....................................... 312
Computers .................................................. 314
Contractors .................................................316
Domestics/Jnnitor lal ................................... 318
Elcctricol ...................................................... 320
Anancl al .......................................................322
Health ........................................................... 326
Heating &amp; Coollng ....................................... 328
Home Improvements 330
lnsuronco ..................................................... 332
Lawn Servlce ............................................... 334
Muslc/IJance/Drama ..................................336
Other Sorvices .............................................338
P!umblng!Eioctrical .....................................340
Professional Sorvicos ................................. 342
Repairs ...................................................... 344
Rooting .......................................................346
Securi ty ..................................................... 348
Tax/Accountlng .......- ......._........................ 350
TraveVEntertalnmont ..................................352
Financial ....................................................400
Financial Services ..................................... 405
Insurance ..........................................- ........ 410
Money to Lend ............................................. 415
Educatlon ..................................................... 500
Business &amp; Trade School .......................... 505
Instruction &amp; Trolnlng ................................. 510
Lessons .......................................................515
Personal ................................................... 520
Animals ....................................................... 600
Animal Supplies ......................................... 605
Horses ..........................................................610
Livestock .....................................................615
Pets...............................................................620
Want to buy....... ...........................................625
Agriculture ..................., ............................... 700
Equlpmont .......................................... 705
&amp; Produco.......................................710
Seed, Grain ............................... 715
&amp; ltlnd ........................................... 720
Want to buy, ................................................. 725
Merchandise ............................................... 900
Antiques ...................................................905
Appliance .................................................... 910
Auctions ...... ................................................915
Bargain 8osoment.......................................920
Collectibles ............................................... 925
Computers ........... . .................................. 930
EqulpmonVSuppllos ....................................935
Flea Markets ... ........................................... 940
Fuel 011 Coa11Wood/Gos ............................. 945
Furniture ........ • •• ................................ .. .. 950
Hobby/Hunt &amp; Sport....................................955
Kid 's Corner .. ..............................................960
Mlscellaneous..............................................965
want t o buy . ................................................970
Yard Salo ................................................. 975

F"tnaneial

400

Recreational Vehlcles ............................... 1 000
ATV ............................................................ 1005
Bicycles ......................................................1 010
Boats/Accessories .................................... 1015
Camper/RVs &amp; Trailers ............................ 1020
Motorcycles .............................................. 1025
Other ····-··-···-································"""""'"1030
Want to buy ..............................................1035
Automotive .............................................. 2000
Auto RentaiA.ease.................................... 2005
Autos .....- ................................................... 2010
Classic/Antiques ....................................... 2015
Commerclatl!ndustrlal .............................. 2020
Parts &amp; Accessories .................................2025
Sports Utlllty..............................................2030
Trucks.....- ..................................................2035
Utility Trailers .................................. "I"'" "" 2040
Vans ...........................................................2045
Want to buy ............................................... 2050
Real Estate Sales ...................................... 3000
Cemetery Plots .......................................... 3005
Commercial ..,_..........................................301 0
Condomlnlums .......................................... 3015
For Sale by Owner..................................... 3020
Houses lor Sale ......................................... 3025
Land (Acreage) ......................................... 3030
Lots ............................................................ 3035
Want to buy................................................ 3040
Real Estate Rontals ................................... 3500
Apartments/Townhouses ........................ 3505
Commerclal................................................3510
Condominiums ......................................... 3515
Houses lor Rent. ....................................... 3520
ltlnd (Acreage) ...............- ....................... 3525
Storage......................................................3535
Want to Rent ............................................. 3540
Manufactured Housing ............................ 4000
Lots .............................................................4005
Movers......- ......................., ................... .. 4010
Rentals................................................... .4015
Saies •••.•- .....................on . . . . . . . . . . . .. . .. . . . . . . . . . .4020
Supplies .................................................... 4025
Want to Buy ............................................. 4030
Resort Property................................ .. .... 5000
Resort Property for sale ........................... 5025
Resort Property for rent .................... .... . 5050
Employment....................... ............... ...... 6000
Accounting/Financial ................................ 6002
AdmlnistrotiveJProlessionat .....................6004
Cashier/Clerk ............................................ 6006
Child/Elderly Care ..................................... 6008
Clerlcal ....................................................... 6010
Construction ................................. ............. 6012
Drivers &amp; Delivery ................................. 6014
Education ...................................................60t6
Electrical Plumbing ................ ..... ............ 6018
Employment Agencles .............................. 6020
Entertainment........................................ 6022
Food Servlces............................................6024
Government &amp; Federal Jobs .................... 6026
Help anted· General ...................... ........... 6028
Low Enforcement .......................... ........... 6030
Malntonancc/Domestic ............................. 6032
ManagemenVSuporvisory ....................... 6034
Mochonics ..............................................60~6
Medical .................................................... 6038
Musical.................................... ........ •.. •... 6040
Port·Time-Temporaries ........................... 6042
Restaurants ............................................... 6044
Sales........................................................... 6048
Technical Trades ....................................... 6050
Textiles/Factory ........................................ 6052

I

300

Services

Building Materials

700

Agriculture

Money To Lend

Farm Equ!pmenl

~OTICE: Borrow Smart
Coolact tile Oh o 01V1
61011 of F~t~anctal lostltu·
tlons Qlf,co of Consumer
A!' a rs BEFORE yo~ rc'
nancc your 'lone or obt8Jr1 a loan 6EWARE of
reQuests tor ary large
advance payme:1ts of
toes or rs;.mmco C8 I
the OlfiCe ol Consum
Aff~ars
toll
I ee
at
1·866-278..()()()3 to learr&gt;
f the mortgage broKer or
lender IS properly
censed (Th s IS a p;Jbllc
servce
arnounceMont

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TRAILERS.
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$3999 V EW OUR EN
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1NWW CARMICHAE'l
TRAILERS CO•.~
74().446-3825

currency
proof m t
sets
diB·
monds MTS Coin St'op
151 2'ld Avenue Ga •
pols 446-2842

238 1Sl Avo Lg Upsta rs
apt
overlookml!
FuM kitchen 2
'110
S525Tut Dep eq Rei
Cul446-4926

2BR APTCiose to Hoi
- - - - - - - zer Hosp11a on SR • 60
WANTED
Rerr ng!ol' CA. (740) 441..0194
SOL '30..06 R fie CONVENIENTLY
LO·
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&amp;
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ca
304-675·64,1
ask 'or Ooi e
illS
Yord Sole

'lO:JSOS

f

€ I

740-441·1111 for
5-6 ca1100 &amp; nlonati

Mar
9·5 old De
Grooery Free Rent Specisllll
M " St R:.rtiand across 2&amp;38R apts $395
tte Ol"lo Valley - - - - - - - - 1om F sPizza
up
Cer:
A:.
Hi)
Pub! shltlg Con'pany
Have you poced s
hookup
pa
Occ:e lat ly? You
be -----~.....,- e tr1c
be
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C.:
Ellm View Apts
Business &amp; Trode .
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I
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;=:;:;:;:;::§:::;:;::=::;, •·(Xll
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1-866-352..()469.

School
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careers Close To Home!
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1-800.214..()452

Child / Elderly Care

ga polliC8reerco 1390 edu
Accredi od Membe Ace~

Child&lt;::: e Openings M·"
Link approved 23 yrs
exp 304 ..,93·5795.

ng Counc~ fo&lt;lnd pendent
Cotegesand Schools1274B

600

Animals

Home Improvements
Basement
Watorproofmg
Uncoml t onal let me
oua tee. Loca r fer·
enoos turn shed Estab·
'led 1975 Ca 24 Hrs
74().446..()870 Rogers
Bascmer t Wet IJll'ool ng

Recreational
Vehicles

1000

900

Merchandise

Uvestock

•

carrr chael

1 &amp; 2 yr old Angus Bulls
after
5prr
740.288·1 460

c:: I

Pets

Boxer pups 6 weeks old
Autos
... &amp; dewclaws re
Other Services
noved
worned ~;;;;M;;;isce;;;;l;;;la;;;neo=u:;;;s::;,;;;;;; 2003 M star&gt;g GT Ex
74(}.742·3123
• cond • on S7700
Jet Aeration Mdtors
4o 446-6783 or 740
CKC Yorll. e puppieS 2
repa red, new &amp; rebuilt 794.()() 17
lcma o 2 m les
In stock Cell Ron
Real Estate
'=~~""====~ 304-812...COOO &amp; leave Evens 1.S00-537-g528
3000
Professional Services
mes;age
Sales

=;;;;;;;;=====

Female
St
Bc:'lllrd
Puppy 3 1f.! 1110 old
5275 (7 40) 446- 1783 or
(740) 794..QOII
Free to a gOOd homo Lg
Black Malo Cllt I yr old
SEPTIC
PUMPING 740.446·3552
Gnll1a Co
OH and Male Beagle M1X good
Mason eo
WV Ron w/ chlldrCI' &amp; pets
go\"ld
Evans
Jackson
OH Found,
needs
hoMe 740.256-9291
800.537·9528
TURNED DOWN ON
SOCIAL SECURITY SSI
No Fe Unless We Win 1
1~8 582-3345

Carpet S
lr&gt;
13hon on spoo I o d rs
Drtv a 1 ttlo save a lot
Mol ohan Carpet 2:.!1.l
Eastem Av~. Gall polis
OH (740) 446·7444

==;;;;;;;;;;;;;~~~ 8))1:
zer SOI"e
$

~

Commercial
S4001mo
or
===:.;;;;;===;;; 74().4 1 8·~288
CoMrn Spac-e 4 lease 1!88-6130
(Rota I or olf ce
Pnmo
ocatiOn
tx: y
h~gh y
v Sible dwntwn comer
Federal Rescr11o Nole. 1400·2000
sq
II
US
Cu rcrcy
One $7001 0 74(}.{09·1960
.;..;,;;.,;;,;;;;..,;;..;.;,;;~-~~.
ThOL'&gt;Ilnd
Doll
81!1
t934 Series $1 600 A so
For Sale By Owner
ove• 350 p ecc 01 u S
S1lvc Coins, P a e Ca I 12 Unll Apt. Complex.
for Pnces 740.533 38 70
446..0390

Sale

Somer

land (Acreage)
2 acres 011 Rodf'lOnd ..:.;,;;,;;;.;;;;.;;..;;...:~.;....-- ·
A ctge ~'&lt; consider land
contract .l04 675-4893 or
304 593 3707

�Page 84 • The Daily Sentinel
Apartmenb/
Townhoulea

ncy apt lor
N

www.mydailysentinel.com

Rentals
2 BR 1 BA 14 X 60 lor
ent n r Tycoon Lake
rei &amp; d p req Ca
74(). '388-9081

25 Oayshlft Posltlona
need filled by next
Weeki

No Sales No Co
2BR ld I lor 1 or 2 peopl
S300t'll0 t:
Rt:r
I r.lC s N
PetS NO
Groclous Living 1 and 2 CALLS
alter
7pr:~
Bedroom Apt nt v ago 74().441..()161
Manor
end
A versldo
Apts In Mldd port lrorr T ra or tor r nt tn toW!l
S327
to
S59" Ractne 2 br, 1 bath all
740.992·5064
EQual clcctnc
carport
argo
Hous.ng Opportumty
front porch
Close to
Apt school hbrary &amp; park
Modern
1BR
$425 per month water &amp;
446·3736
garbage InCluded
NO
Moderr&gt; 1BR apt Call Pots Avtulable lor move
740.446-0390
In March 1 2010, Marvtn
740-949·2217
Sp ng Valley Gr n
Apartments 1 BR at _ M_o_b-tlc_h_o_m_e_to
_r_r_
c n- t-.
$395+2 BR at $470
Month 740 446-1599
Hud accopt cal be·
fore 9pm
_
Tara
Tov.nhou c
304
675 3423
Ap:7tmcnts
2BR 1 5 ....- - - - - - -

ba
back patio pool
playg ound (t sh sew
age water pd No petS
a owed
S45Q,re '
S4 sec
d P
Ca
740-645-8599

Own a Now 3BR 2 BA

.ass

2-3BR H
on~

Nope

St

a Dep req
740.368-B2n

~~----~-

ec·

lion:;

Recruit VOlunteers for
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~=~~===~ Ave Ga po s OH has
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lllCfeased pay rates v Si1
us today tor more to
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Also accepllng oew Cl
OnlyS!UZQ
ents
740-441-13n
201 s nglew'de
EOE
tncr d ble S19 995
myll' ctweslhorrcs carr
140826 2750

16R 1BA Apt at 210 5th - - - - - - - St New H v n VN
New 3BR 2BA
S350 3BR 1BA Houst •
as low as 5241 68
813 Shoostnng Rtdg
por rro and 1563 oo
Gall pohs
OH
$575
dowl'l WAC
3BR 2BA Tretter at 1362
740-446·3570
Hei!T'a~
Ad
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OH $450 All rcq Dep
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740.256-6004

S500I:no

Wednesday, March 3, 2010

dorscmont
and
MVR local trips
ca 1·800.598-6122
more nfo

SHOP
CLASSIFIEDS

Account
Resolution
Spoclatlst
FT In Ga po is Exp with
aged Clld den ed cia ms
as ,.,e as wrt ng appeals as neces ry E~p
w
n payers pr fer ed
Must l"ave great co:11 unlcat n kend pnor
mEldiC81 btl ng oxperl
once Great p y ond
benet ts Please lorw :'d
resumes
to
cal!oa b!loder b.J!J.st·
li!W.!~ or laK to
614·367·2400

Protect Your Gun
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Mallo callS lor the NRA
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Sooklng temporary work·
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lab work 40hr work
Management/
week ant c paled Over
Supervi1ory
t me may bo requ rod
Cosrretolog S1
rr~ost have m r&gt; mum or 8 M nag ng
2 yr 8SSIC ate dogroo n Needed 740.992-2200
chcm stry physii:S biOI
MedicoI
ogy or equlva or: Must
hava a moderato dogr o
of
knowledge of
n
sary to p elorm work WI!t1
stand3rd
boratory
chemteal
analyZIOg

YOUNG'S

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

'= ======•

()C)eratJOr of ~~-~~~:;]
treatment equip- II
en• and coal
ping
El'lry level wago r t 0
approx $1600 por 11r
w tt1 moderate bonelt
package be rg offered
Read your
lnterestod
cand datos
newspaper
and learn
·e to subM•t re ume to
something today!
614-716·2272
equ pmant
wale

• Room Addltlona &amp;
Remodeling

• New Garages
• Electrical &amp; Plumbing
· Roofing &amp; Gutltra
• VInyl Siding &amp; Palntong
• Patio and Porch Oecka

www.tbnbercree'kcabhletey~

WV036725
Wl·hl1~ 740-~'1 1 .()19~

Pomoroy, Ohio
30 Ycara local Experience
~

Winter S

lals ~

SEAL IT

SUNSET
(ONSTRUCilON
Remodeling,
Roofs, Garages,
Pole Buildings.
Siding, Decks,
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Call Drnnioo; Bo) d
740-991-1029

Har Jood abinriry And Furniture

V.C. YOUNG Ill

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

740-742-3411

~~.com

304-773-1111

Advertise your
business on this page
.for as low as

35.00
per month!

tor

CARPENTER
SERVICE

ROBERT
BISSEll
· New Homes
• Garages
· Complete
Remodeling

Total Construction
011c Call to Do It All

740-992-1671

Pole Barns Metal Roof&lt;&gt;
F1re &amp; \\ ater Damage
Dl') ''alL Repair
-

Stop &amp; Compare

Am)

Ov.ner
\cternn

rom \\olfe
740-416-2575

Replacement

\\ indo"s and
\in) I Siding
Spccialbt!'; , Ll D
(740) 742-2563
• iding • \in~ I

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Racine, Ohio

nnd Shingle Roofs
• l&gt;t~ks • \dditions
•I lt~·Jricul
• Plumbing
• Pole Barns

Can out Toll Free
866-564-8679

LUV HOMES

R.L. Hollon

992-2155

~Insurance"

CONSTRUCTION

BAD CREDIT?
NO CREDIT?
BANKRUPTCY?
We can help!

The Daily Sentinel

Ill Erie

Trucking
l&gt;ump lhlck

Sen ire
\\ c do drhc\\ n~ s
Lime itonc • Gru\el
1b p Soil • Fill l&gt;irt

740~247~2019
Cell: 740-416-5047

Owners:
Jon Van Meter &amp;

Paul Rowe

email:
jrshadfrm@aol.com

MIKE MARCUM
ROOFING &amp; Rf:f\IODHING Co.
I
1

Rubber Roofing, Room Additions, Decks. Shingles.
Siding, Windows, Pole Barns, Garages.
Insurance Wack, Residential &amp; Commerctal
7 40-245-043 7

Ucensecl &amp; Bonded
Free Estlma\es

30 Years

Experience

PSI CONSTRUCTION
Room Addmon • Remodehng. Metal &amp;
Shmgle Roofs. Ne\\ Homes. Stdmg. Decks.
Bathroom Remodehng Ltcensed &amp; I ured
Rick Price · 17 ) rs. Experience
WV1040954 Cell74o-416-2960 740.992..0730

740-985-4422
740-856-2609
Cl'll

Taste of Home Magazine
Cooktng School
March 16, 2010 7:00pm
Me1gs High School
Pomeroy, OH
Tickets $15
Purchase at all Farmers Bank
Locations
Home National Bank Ri}ctne,
or www.wyvk.com
or call 740-992-6485 or
1-866·655-37 4

Help Wanted

Help Wanted

fJIRartland Publications LLC.
a fnst gJO\\Jng newspaper public;hing
com pan) in the Oh1o \alley v.1th a
regmnal accounung office in Gallipolis,
Ohio I!&gt; scekmg .tppltcallons for the
pos1t10n of C'trculauon BJ!Img Clerk for
tmmedmtc emplo)mcnt
A suc~.:ec;sful c ...ndidate '' 111 have
nccountmg expcnence and be prohctent 10
Excel and \\ ord !&gt;Oft,, arc. Rcspons1bllittes
v.•ll mcludc ctrculauon b1lhng for
multiple locat1on~
Positron offers nil ~ompan) benefits
mcludmg health and life inr;ur,lncc. 401k,
paid \ .tc.tllon ,wd hohdays
I or imm'cdwte COIISI(k:J.tt ion, end your
rc~umc .md references to
dkh1ll(t• ltc.u tlandpublications.tom

htl' to 740· t4 1 0578. 01 nldll

to:

Dianl' Hill
Gallipolis ))ail) 'J'rihunc
P.O. Box 4t•9
GalliJ)Oiis, OH 45631

INVITATION AND NO·
TICE TO BIDDERS
NEW DUMP BODY,
SNOWPLOW
Sealed bids will be
recetved by the Board
of County Commls·
sl oners
of
MEIGS
County, Ohio at the of·
flee of the County Com·
missi oners, 100 East
2nd Street, In the City
of Pomeroy, Ohio until
1:10 o'c lock p.m., prevailing local time on
the 17 day of March,
2010 and then at 1 :10
p.m. at said office
opened and read aloud
for the furni shing of
two (2) dump body and
snow plows for the
MEIGS County Engl·
neer.
B id documents may be
secured at the Engl·
neer's office at 34110
Fairgrounds
Road
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
between
8am-3pm
Monday-Friday.
Phone 740-992·2911
QUANTITY
The number of units
being purchased wlll
be t wo (2) dump body
and snow plows.
Each bid shall be accompanied by a satls·
factory
bond
or
certified check on a
solvent bank equal to
five percent (5%) of the
bid submitted for the
vehlclb and cond l·
tioned that the bidder
shall, if h is bid Is accepted, execute a contract In conformity to
the Invitation and bid
within 10 days after notice of the award of the
contract to them.
The blds shall be
submitted on the at·
tached forms In a
sealed envelope plainly
marked
" Tandem
Dump Bodies and
Snow Plow".
The County reserves
the r ight to accept or
reject any or all bids or
portions

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 AC·
TION, 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, Portl and,
OH 45770 .'
0700307000
and
0700307001 Parcel No.

1:
Situated In Lebanon
Townsh ip,
Mei gs
County, and State of
Ohio: In Section 35,
Town 2, Range 11 and
being part of 160 Acre
lot 1177 and being
more particularly described as follows :
Commencing at the
northeast comer of
said
Secti on
35;
Thence West1 600 feet,
more or less; then ce
South 2025 feet, more
or less, to a point In
Townsh ip Road 134
(Sharon Road); thence
leavtng the road N . 32
deg. 45 ' E. 166.06 feet
to an Iron pin found ;
thence s . 82 deg. 30' E.
617.93 teet to an Iron
pin set (passing an Iron
pin set at 387.76 feet) ;
thence N. 53 deg. II' 03"

E.

131 .3 3 feat to on Iron
pin set at the point of
beginning of the tract
hereln
described;
thence N. 53 deg. 11 '
03"
191 .41 foot to an
Iron pin found; thence
s. 0 dog. 35' 11 " E.
Public Notice
292.13 feet (passing an
SHERIFF SALES CASE Iron pin sot at 254.73
NUMBER 09CV052 THE feot) to a point In the
BANK OF NEW YORK center of Sharon Road;

e.

thence along the road
S. 65 deg . 15' 44" W.
106.75 teet; Thence S.
52 deg. 49' 46" w. 70.99
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
Ohi o ; In Section 35,
Town 2, Range 11 and
being part of 160 acre
lot 1177 and being
more particularly de·
scribed as follows :
Commenci ng at the
Northeast comer of
sai d Section 35; thence
West 1600 teet, more or
leas; thence South
2025 teet, 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
dag. 30' E. 387.76 feet
to on Iron pin sot at the
point of beginning of
the tract herein described; thence continuing 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.
II"
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, contain·
lng 2.0000 acres. Be
the s:~me 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

oo·

w.

DEED REFERENCES:
VOLUME 113, PAGE
333 APPRAISED AT
S85,000.00 TERMS OF
SALE: CANNOT BE
SOLD FOR LESS THAN
213RDS OF THE AP·
PRAISED VALUE. 10%
DOWN ON DAY OF
SALE, CASH OR CERTiiFIED CHECK, BAL·
ANCE
DUE
ON
CONFIRMATION
OF
SALE.
THE
AP·
PRAISAL DID NOT IN·
CLUDE AN INTERIOR
EXAMINATION OF THE
HOUSE. ROBERT E.
MEIGS
BEEGLE,
COUNTY SHERIFF AT·
TORNEY FOR THE
PLAINTIFF MANLEY
DEAS
KOCHALSKI
LLC P.O. BOX 165028
COLUMBUS OH 43216·
5028 614·222-4921
(2) 1 17, 24 thereof.
(3) 3, 10

o.

Public Notice
LEGAL NOTICE
The 2009 Annual Finan·
cial Report for the
Meigs Soli and Water
Conservation Di strict
for the year ending December 31, 2009, l s
complete and avdllable
for review at the Meigs
SWCD office.
VIcki Morrow, Admlnls·
tratlve Assistant
(3) 3

Public Notice
The Village of Middleport Is offering for sale
a
1998
Chevy
Cheyenne 3500 duel
rear wheel pickup. The
village will
accept
sealed bids starting
March 1. Minimum bid
$3,000.00. Sealed bids
must be delivered to
the Middleport Water
Department and tho
deadline for bids Is
March 22 at 1:30pm.
The Village has tho
right to accept or reject
any or all bids. Phone
992·5571 for more de·
tells.
(2) 26, (3) 2, 3

Stanley TreeTrimming
&amp; Removal
•Pmmpr

d Quail!)

\\ork

*Rea or. ble Rat~

H&amp;H

BAI\1\S

Guttering

CO~STRt..:CTIO~

Seam ess Gutters
Roof ng S ding Gutters
Insured &amp; Bonded
740-653-9657

*Insured

•E,penen,cd
Referen•es A\:ulable 1
Call Gal) Stanle~
740-591-

0~-'

co.
PomcrO) , Ohio
Commercial •

Residential
• Free F otimalcs
l740) 992-5009

"&amp;-,dot? ,_ 1/«d"
NO\\

Selhng

• t:ord &amp;. Motorcralt
Pans • E.ngtne$,
fransfer Ca;;es &amp;

S9 Roush St.

Mason. \\ V 25260
Strcs s~ 10 to tth::o
.'04·773-56111

Tran.,nussiOns
• Aftennarket
Rcplncerncnt Sheet
M etal &amp; Components
frAil \I cst-f\~hde&lt;&gt;

RaLIOe. Ohio
7-t0-949-1956

Advertise in
Hill's Self
this space for
Storage
$35.00per , 29625 Bashan Road
month
Racme OH 45771
MICUAEL'S
SE K\"IC. ' E &lt;·t :,TEK

740-949-2217
Sizes 5' x 10'
to 10' x 30'

15SS ' ' t: \ H•.
l'umenn. Oil
• Otl &amp; filter ch nrc

Hours
7 :00 am - 8:00 pm

• rune t;ps

f1'lc EstimateS loP
• Blckllce • Trendlq
• Brush Hogging
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�Wednesday, March 3, 201 0

www.mydallysentinel.com

BLOND IE

Dean Young,JDenis Lebrun

CROSSWORD
By THOMAS JOSEPH
ACROSS
DOWN
1 Furniture
1 Dachsurtace
shund
7 Gooey
doc
cheese
2 Caln
11 Change
ra1ser
over time
3 French
12 Long
refusal
swtmmcrs 4 Cow of
13 Reacts to
com mer
a threat
c1als
141nqu~res
5 Smooth
19 Contm15 All told
6 Tako it
gency
170n this
easy
plans
spot
7 John or
21 Ma1ler's
20Stralght
Paul
need
beater
8Ava1lable 22 Baseball's
23 Before, to
assets
Wagner
Byron
9Kind
24 Assesses
24 M.entton
10Curvy
25 Ram's
26 Rambow
letter
mate
shape
16Hold
30 Cone
27 Reverout
un1ts
ence
17 Center
33 K1tchen
28Palnt buy 18 Shp
come-on
29 Farm'
alarm
31 Cassowary

Mort Walker
Ht:'S L•TE FOR EVERVTHII-IG
BUT HIS GOLF GAMES

FUNKY WINKERBEAN

The Daily Sentinel • Page 85

Tom Batiuk

35 Wilson's
predecessor
36 Contlnualy
37 Cobbler's
tool
38 Zodiac
cat
40 Funny
fellow
41 Actor
Wallach
42 Last mo

COUSin

•

32 Armtst1cc
33Nile
reptiles
34 LISt of
players
37 Not to
ment1on
39Swore
43Show
sorrow
44 Like
mares
and fillies
45 Red-1nk
amount
46Like
·Hamlet

HAGAR THE HORRIBLE
Fl~~T, "!t&gt;IJ

m~EN"r

WoUI.. D

A MUCH

6MALL~I&lt; TA~GeT

To YO!J~ E'NEMY

\

THE LOCKHORNS

William Hoest

and Greg Walker

KNEW IT WAS OT~ER THAN FOR
MENT
THAT YOU WAN~ED A LOCK OF MY HAIR"

Patrick McDonnell
ZITS

Jerry Scott and Jim Borgman =

THE FAMILY CIRCUS
Bil Keane

-

f-

3
.5
.,....... f -

19 7 {l
~

' 7

3

1-

"This Is the desk where Dad makes
up naugh~ words."

DENNIS THE MENACE
Hank Ketchum

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HAPPY BlRTIIDAY for \\'edn 'Sda, Mardll
2010
llus year ) ou'll 1\a, e man~ opportumhes to bla7.t.&gt;
a ne'' trail or head m a ne" dlll'l.."'tion
of \ ou
mll opt to go to school or to lr.l\ el Some o ) ou w-111
Llke c;errunarc; or meet fore1gner&gt;. Whate\ er .ut'a of
your life you choose to open up, }ou '' 111 be stunned
b\ the dtfterenre A p.trtner or de.1r fnt&gt;nd oould be
m._qrumental m thts proct"&gt;s If you are smgle \ u
could meet c;omeone '' ho ~ qutte uruque and d1fter
ent Rom.mre \\111 flounsh tf you truke the nght
ch ICE'S If vou .1re attached, the h\ o of you might
plan that spectal, long alked about tnp SCORPIO
helps your nund gro''
The St 'i
tl Kr d ( Dav )
H I)
Dt! 111 .,. P &gt;z
~ A
1g 2·So-so 1 D ftl
I
ARIES (March 21 ApnJtq)
'*'**"* Communtcation tlounshe.c; and ~ou see il
btg dtfferl:'nre Be open to lUldersto~ndmg ,,here o!h
ers are 1.'0rrung from A m~eting 1 enhghtenmg and
gJ\ t''&gt; 1 ou subst.mti,tl ft?edb.tck. A pc1rtner dem md~
more time. fonight. II) dmnerfor h\0.
11\l.JRUS (Apnl20 \l..tr 20)
*"*"* focus on one prOJect at a hme Clear!} a
!x1s,c; doesn't see a sttuation ,h you do Cunstder
someone's seemmgl} great tdea that looks to bt'
um\ ,,rkable Wh) not .Jsk. tht~ person to figun out
the logistJ~? Tonight. Be~~ 1th c1 fa\ onte }'lCT'!Ol'
GUUNI (Ma) 21June 20)
'*"*"*'*'* let )OUr trroJgmatlon doMtnate Al&lt;so II)
to look p.1st the ob\IOUS You mtght \'Oant to hnd
someone '' ho s clh expert at probl~em~1h IllS. Then•
.1re ..tn~" ers and\ ou "tllllnd th.,rn. s..-,oner r.1ther
than later lorught. Run t:rr.md-; hrst
CA:-.crn Qune ~1 Juh 22)
"*"*'llrlt"* Yo¢ mtght wanrtounderst; nd "h t 1
mob\ atmg c;orneone close E'en "hen ou
qu
tton:, d1rectl} thrs person c1ppears 'H\ 'ague l
}Ourresouin"fulne&lt;&gt;S, and don't \~OTJ) c;o rrouch
,,bout !he othe,r part' fomght Relt ,,,th a fr end
LEO Ouh 21-Aug 22)
**"*"* Keep t.1lks mm mg Don t g. ~d n 1
pomt, or you ''til lose your mflut&gt;nce nd \our dt
enre Someone' ou relc1te tots ~xtn:mel) 1dt&gt;ll tiL
focus on vour pnonttcs. knm' 1111; th. t 1! som pomt
you realh wtllnt.~i to buckle dOl\ n and handle
.mother issue. Tomght He.ld on h•)mt:

M.mr

VIRGO Aug 23-Sept. 22)
•
'*"*"* Be d\\ o~re ol the cos b. of d new tdea, dtet or
health routme It ought sound 'ei") health\ but 1t
rould be a finanoal problem ultimate!\ causmg }ou :
undue f&gt;tress Be realistic about' our cf!otce&lt;;. Check
m "tth someone m the kno''· Tonight Meet friends •
for rrounchies.
, LIBRA (St&gt;pt 23-0ct 22'
'*"*"* * l:&lt;.e the da\ hght hou~ to the max )ou
nlldt ''ant to find someone 'ou tru~t to gt' e) ou
feedback. Together }OU wtll gJm ~et another mprev
st~ ln d bramstorm.mg s1tuo~tion 'ou gam many
more option-;. Tonight )our tre,1t.
SCORPIO (Oct. 23-1'\o\ 21)
*"* ( ontmue '~ t!h the preparatton pha.o;e of a pro- •
,ect ) ou kn&lt;&gt;'' what you "ant and where }ou are
gomg Touch bao;e \\ tth a farrul) member you trust
This pE'TSOn has a l;pectd! perspecti' e. Tomght Go lor
\\hat\ ou want
SAGITI'AIUUS (~m 22-Dec :m
* * '* '* Open up to suggestion-.. A meetmg could
be MOre tmpurtant th,m you realize Rt'ach out for
mure informallon. Someone nught not ~he) ou a
l'hanet• nus person ha ... a lot to -..3)'. lbnight Get
some extra R .md R.
CAI'IUCOR.'II (Dec. 22 Jan 19)
**'** '\o one L •.m quesbon your mtention
:\e' erthdess. a problem ocrur- tf \ ou are not gtven '
the facts. BcKk up and go O\-er \-our informati&lt;'n
ag m Mc1ke sure) ou o~re intonned 'lou\\ tll greet
success then Tomght: Fmd }OUT frtends
AQUARIUS Q.m 2o-Feb lS)
***'*"* Yourst\ih sense tell" \OU that there
rrught be more gomg on than meets the e\ e roliO\\
thrOuj;h on an tdc.l "Fccdba.:k comes from those ~ ou
"ork '' tth Encourage others to ~"\'i ''hat the~ thmk. :
Torught Could be l.tte
PISCES (Feb lq..Marc:h Z\1)
'*""* *"*"*" Deal \\1th others on an mcb \1du 1l )e\ t.&gt;l
'lou kno1~ ''hat\ ou \\ant but so does another pam
l\e ohat and don tlet a TOS\ per&lt;;pectt\ e tog your
JUdgment. 11 \ ou want to ~"UCI.":\'ed. look at what
somt'l.&gt;ne dOt...:.n t &lt;..1\ forught Put on a f l\ onte
mm e

�Page H6 •

ThP Daily Sentinel

www.mydailyscntincl.com

Wednesday, March 3, 2010

UTEP beats Marshall, wins
CUSA title
.

Hl ;'\ 1'1:\G I'ON. W.V.1.
( \Pl
Texas-1•1 Pa~o coach
1 ony Barbee paused fo1 a
second '"hen a~ked h(l\\ long
the 24th-ranked Minl'r:.
thdr
would
celebrate
Conference US/\ championship

'"it's ours," Barbee satd.
"\\e'•c gom~ to Cll.JO~ it.
Hm\ much tm1e that ts. I
don't kno\\. We c,m't feel
comfortdblc with ''here
we're at."
Rand\ Culpepper ~cored
32 point:. to lead U'll~P to an
80-76 'ictor) m cr ,\tarsh!lll
on ruescla) nt~ht. clinching
the ~1iner.., · l1rst outright
Conference USA tttle.
UTEP (2J-5, 14-1 l broke
into the Top 25 on Monday
for the first time ::.incc
f&lt;ebnHll) 1992 and is riding a
13-game ''inning streak.
With an uutomatic bid to
the NCAA tournament .It
stake in next week'~ conf~r­
ence tournament in Tulsa.
OJ... Ia ., there's still a lot of
work ahead for the Miners,
and if there i' no &lt;;l·cond
~CAA bid for Conference
l SA, L: l'E-.P might hm e to
settle for a berth in the
~at tOnal
111\ ilc~tion
Tournament.
''111ere 's no other guarantees at thi' point, so we've got
business to take care or:·

Barbee said.
Culpepper. the confl.!rence's third leading scorer at
18.1 points. has the two highest "coring game.., 111 the
league this season ami
,\ tarsh,tll did little to stop him
111 the &lt;&gt;ccond half. \\hen he
scored 22 point:-..
Culpepper hit a J-pointer at
the halftime buucr, then
mad~.· three more in the first
2:2R of the second half, plus a
free throw, to erase a IO·point
clelkit and put the Miners
ahead 41-38.
"Going into halftime.
Coach Barbee told me to
keep it up.'' Culpepper satd.
"Once I hit the first couple of
s. Julyan Stone, our point
guard, said he'd keep coming
back to me. That's exactly
what happened."
U'l EP had to overcome
games
from
monster
~ tarshall's Tvlcr Wilkerson
and Hassan Whiteside to tic a
school record with its seventh
strais.ht road win.
Wilkerson came out of a
two-game 'coring ..,Jump to
lead ~ Iarsh all (22-8. I0-5)
\\ ith 22 points and 16
rebounds in hi~ final home
g.um:. White-..ide. a freshman.
had 20 poinb, 14 rebounds
.md six blocked shots.
"There·s no way you win
on the road in the places we

win without being mentally
tough and I thought we
shO\\ed that .tgain tonight."
Rarbee s.lid. ·'Tough place to
play. Tough place to \\ m .tt.
But we·,e got one of those
type of tewns.''
Culpepper followed " soaring, onc-hand-:d dunk with
another 3-pointer that gave
{II EP its largest lead. 6:!-51 ,
\\ ith 9:25 left.
Despite Culpepper's show,
l\1ar!'!hall surged ahead by
going after rcbuund:.. The
Thundering llcrd made three
baskets after missed shots in a
2-minute span ami Damier
Pitts' 3-pointer wtth 4 minutes left ga\e Marshall a 7268 lead.
The !\liner" 11eeded a strung
fim~h from Derrick Camcter,
\\ho scorl'd 10 or his 18
pnints in the lin;tl 5 minutes.
His layup with 31 seconds
remaining put the t\1iners
ahead 78 76.
\\'ilkcrM)n missed a jumper
and the ball went out of
bounds with 8 seconds left.
Culpepper comf1letcd {he
sconng with two ree throws.
Claude Britten added 14
points for UTL!P.
Marshall, which saw ih
seven-game winning streak
snapped, was coming off a
121-115 win in tnplc overtime over Ccntml Horida on

Saturday
"When you play n '&lt;CI)'
good basketball team, there's
not a lot of nxHn for emH·;'
~larshall cmtcl' Donnie Jones
~uid. "It's a game of ,\djustments and tomght it went
thc1r way. It\ been a long
wee~. f:.lot of minutes nla~'ed
on Saturday. No excuse~.'
~tarshall scl&gt;red 49 firsth.tlf p{1ints in that game but
didn't ~tm1 out on that pace
Tuesday.
Mar~hall missed eight of its
first I 0 shot:-. and fell behind
16-10, but u-;ed a 10-0 mn
1,\le in the first half tp go
ahead. Pitts• jumper in the
lane put Marshall ahead 3626 with 45 seconds left until
halftime.
Whiteside \\a&lt;; comin~off
his third triplt:-double o the
-..ea~on on Saturday. indo ing
I~ blocked shots.
Barhee ..,aid the 7-foot
Whitl'side reminds him of
~!arcus Cambv. Rarbcc \Hls a
graduate
assbtant
at
Massachusetts when Cru b)
was the A.,~ociated Pn~ss
player of the )Car in 1996
''They could be twins f1 m
a defensive standpoint,''
Barbee said. "Whiteside is
light years ahead of .Marcus
in terms of offense. It could
he scary where his ceiling
could be."

Reds RHP Arroyo's ca·rpal tunnel has subsided
COOD\ EAR. Ariz. CAP)

- Bronson Am&gt;\O i., read\ to
gi\C up the guual· again. •
The Cincinnati Reds righthander has caJFUI tunnel "' ndrome in his pttchmg hand. It
got so bad dunng pnng tminmg last )Car that he had to
wt!.tr a brace \\hen he wasn't
pitching. He wru,n't allowed
to write or pl.t) the guitar.
The weakness he felt in hts
hand started affecting his
pttche'&gt;. g1' ing the Red:. a
huge scare heading into the
sea~on The problem eased
w1tfi corti -;one shots and
:\rr \O got better as the can \h!nt .llong fim,hmg "ith
... 0 ER \ 111 hi., la'&gt;t 16
tdrt'i
fhen. he had to make a
d~•.,ion He could have had
-;urge!) to tr\ to fix the problem. In~tc.td. he decided to

Southern
from Page Bl
C\el")thmg but Ia) d6\\n in
the o;e~ond half to make
things very mteresting
dO\\ n the stretch.
Staring at a 40 32 deficit
ut the 6:04 mark of the
fourth period. Pike Em.tem
exploded for a 17-6 mn
O\ er the next 3: 17 to take its
onl) 1c.1d of the night at 4746 with 2:47 left m regulatiOn.
The Purple and Gold.
howe\ cr. answered at 2:33
with a trifectn from ,\lichael
Manuel. wh1ch ~parked a 40 run and ga\e SHS a 50-47
edge wtth 17.9 seconds
remammg.
Jordan 1 horns berry cut
that defictt to withm 50-49
with 6.5 seconds left, but
Pike Ea!&gt;tern never came
closer the rest of the wa).
Scan Coppick split a pair
at the stnpe \\ ith five ticks
left lor a 51-49 lead, and the
Eagles' desperation heave at
the buucr came up short
allowing Southern to punch
its ticket to the Convo ne~t
\\Cek.
After\\ ard third-year SHS
coach .Jeff Caldwell commented that the triumph
wasn't pe1fect or even pretty. but he and his troops
were more than happy to
accept the final outcome.
"In tournament pia).
someumes you just win
ugly and that's definitely
what we did tonight. Hut we
advanced. and that's the
most important thing··
Caldwell said. •· t told the
kids coming into the game
that if we could hold them
under 50 points. we'd win.
fhen 1 told them during the
game to just find a way to
win. and they did. They
• stepped it up in the face
.tdversity and they got it
done, and I'm real proud of
them for that:·
The Tornadoes stormed
out to a 6·0 lead just I :OJ
into regulation, which
helped the guests c~tahlish a
16-11 advantage arter eight
minutes nf play.
Southern continued that
rhythm 1nto the second

the same r.::gunen.
He linuted his guitar playing
in the ol fsea-.on and will give
st up again \\hilc he\ pla)ing
baseball, hoping that gets him
through another season with·
out an l&gt;peration.
"111e last 16 game.., of the
se.;N&gt;Il \\ere just too good to
take a chance." Arroyo said
·f\1c:-.day. "I didn't want to
come into camp being twothird.., read\ bccau ...e nw hand
got cut on "and I "asn 'i up to
par."
Mustc is Arro) o 's second
passwn
he began pcrformmg while !laym!! w:ith the
Boston Re Sox and continued pursuing his career ,,. 1th
the Reds. Stmmming the gllltar contributed to the cmpal
tunnel problems. which first
cropped up \\hen he wa.., with
the Red Sox.
sta) \\ ith

canto. gomg on a 10-4 :)urge
O\er the opcmng 5:55 to
take a 26-15 edge \\ ith 2:05
left in the first half. fhe
ho ts. howeH~r. held SHS
scorele~s the rest of the ''H)
while scoring once to enter
the intcm1tsS10n trailing 2617.
The Engles and 'Doc~
traded baskets up to the
3:05 mark of the third.
\\ hich resulted 111 a 32-23
lead for Southern. EHS,
howe\er, countered with a
6·0 spurt over the next I :46
to cut the deficit do\\ n to
one pos~e.sion (32-29) with
I: I 9 remaining in the third
stanta.
SHS retaliated with a 3-0
run to clo-..e out the period
with a 35-29 cushion. then
opened th~: fourth with a 5-3
111n to take it' final threepo~session lead of the
evening with 6:04 left in
regulation.
The game was filled with
mishaps. as both te:uns
combined to commit 35
turnovers in the contest.
Southern also didn't help its
own cause late in the game
by missing 7-of-13 free
throw attempts in the fourth
yuartcr.
Southern connected on
19-of-JH field goal attempts
for 50 percent. including 2of-8 from three-point range
per~:ent.
The
for 25
Torna(loes were also outrehounded 25-24 overall.
including a 12-8 disadvantage on the offensive g!a ... s.
Coppick Jed Southern
with a game-hi&amp;h 17 points.
followed
hy
Michael
Manuel with 12 ~1110 Cvle
Rees with 10 markers.
Taylor Deem and Zach
Manuel rounded things out
with -;ix points apiece. SHS
was 11-of-21 overall ut the
charity stripe for 52 percent.
Eastern - which won the
Southern Ohio Conference
Division I title this winter
- connected on 20-of-56
field goal attempts for 36
percent, including 3-uf-17
on three-point attempts ror
IS percent.
Thornsberry paced the
Eagles with 14 points. followed hy Doug McVey with
12 and Kole Wheeler \\ ith
cight markers. EHS was 6of-1 0 at the charity stripe

So, strumming and writing
have their limits for the next
seven months.
"I can't pia) the guitar or
write too much, but that"s the
way it goes," he ~aid. "This is
my ba...eball season.''
Anoyo is encouraged b)
how his hand feels with
spring training games about to
begin. He's hoping that any
problem.., can be handled with
medicatilm.
"Worst-case scenario is that
I get through the season with
cortisone like I did last )Car;·
he satd.
Arro) o led the Reds in wins
(15), ~tarts (33). complete
gamec; (3 &gt; .md shutouts !2)
last ~eru,on. He has led the
team in starts each ot his four
s~a~on:. since coming O\ er in
a trade with Boston He's

entering th~ final guarantee(!
) ear on his Jeal. Arroyo \\ill
make $11 million this :.cason.
l-Ib contract includes a cluo
option for 20 II at $11 million
with a $2 mrllion buyout.
Last year, the Reds were in
contention in Jul\ until
injlllies drained the lillCUp ana
led to a free fall. E' ery JX)"Ition plrl\ er except seconCi
ba'&gt;eman· Brandon Phillips
wound up with a disahling
injury. The Reds kept the
team intact, thinkin!?. it could
stav in contentio~n much
longer tf it "t..1ys health) tlus
ea on
Arrovo ts a\\-..lre he could
a ent ter lhe
end up a
se. -..on
'Thi'\ nuoht be
chance to ha e a good oppor
tunit' wtth ,1 lot of \etcran
guys· around.'' he ..aid.

Bryan Walters/photo

Eastern's Titus Pierce (20) releases a shot attempt over
Symmes Valley defenders during the first half of Tuesday
night's Division IV sectional final at Wellston High School.

Eastern
from Page Bl
and a meager 4-of-21 effort
from three-point territol).
The Ea£!les also limited
SVHS setilor Kris Tibbs a 1,000-pomt career scorer
to just t\\ o point..,
through three full quarters
of pla) while eo;tablishing
theu biggest lead of the
llll!ht ut 34-22 headed into
the finale.
T1h
cored e1ght of hio;
(I p
h .tfter the 4.42
k t the fourth period,
whtch helped the Vike.., pull
to w ithm five on t\\ o different occasion - the last of
'"h h came at 41-36 '"ith
remaming m regula-

Ihe Green and \\'h1te,
howe\ er. clo ed the contest
on a 6-0 surge to wrap up
the 11-pomt- deci~ion and
also allowed this group to
become the first 20-win
~cam at EHS :-.in~.·e the 200405 campaign.
It wasn't perfect. but
llth-ye.tr
EHS
co.tch
liowJe
Cald\\ell
\\a~
nleased lO get out .of
Welbton High School \\ tth
His ninth ...ectional crown
,and 20th 'icton of the '"inter. And. oh \eah. that next
game at Ohio Unl\ ersit).
··we ha\ en "t ~hot the ball
rq&lt;tl \\ell late!). but one
thing the:se kids can do 1s
defend. They sa) defen..,~
\\ins a lllt of games &lt;llld 1t
h&lt;b \\On us 2ll.'' Cald\\ell
said. "I've said thi.., before
and 1"11 -..a) it again. \\'hen
ynu win :!0 game~. you
ha~ e ~omething ... pec•al.
· \\inning th1.., ...ectional
luhn't been~ cas\ for u:-. The
exP,ectation~ are so high and
1 c\ .Jn one has taken their
best·shot at t~'&gt; becau~e "c
are ~tate-ranked and league
champions .•md l think \\e
ha-.e played a littll' uptight
bee use of it. I abo think
the ~ll) ~ "ill be ahk to
rela:t a little bit nO\\ a~ we
head back to the Cmno:·
S mme~
Valle)
led
bric(h in the conte~t at 2-0
.mel i-1. but a trifecta from
Tyler ~kndrix at the 5:20
Bryan Walters/photo
marl{ of th~ tirst ga' e the
Southern's Zach Manuel, right, releases a shot attempt Eaglb the lead for gooJ at
over a pair of P1ke Eastern defenders during the first half of l.l-2. he triple also sparked
Tuesday night's Division IV sectional final basketball con- a I R-~ nm mer the final
fh e-phls minutes. allowing
test at Wellston High School.
P.HS to take a 19-10 edge
(3) SOUTHERN (1n·4) Cyle Rees 2 5·6
for 60 percent.
10. Taylor Deem 3 0·2 6. Sean Copplck
n:fter eight minute.., \)r pia).
Southern advances to the 6 5·8 17. Colby Roseberry 0 0.0 0.
The Viking' ''cot on the
Andrew RosebflfCY 0 0·0 0. MIChael
D-4 district semifinals on Manuel
5 1·2 12. Zach Manuel3 0·1 6
lh~fen-.ivc in the ...ccond
Tuesday. March 9. at the TOTALS 19 11·21 51 Thrce·p0111l canto. holding Ea..,tern
Convocation Center in goals· 2 (Rees. M. Manuel)
:-.co,)r les:-. mer the opening
(2) PIKE EASTERN (16-3) OAkola
At hen~. where it will take Hawks
0 0-0 0 Chad Lands 0 0-0 0
J:35 of the quark'r "hile
on South Wehster at 6: 15 Morgan Crsco 0 0·0 0. Jordan go !nf on a 6·0 surge to pull
Thornsberry 6 1·1 14. Derek Lawhorn 3
p.m. South \Vebster defl.!at- 0·0
7 Jordan Solbce 1 0·0 2, Doug
\\ i~:h1n 19-16 ut the 5:20
ed Fairfield 50-43 on McVey 4 3-3 12 Kola Wheeler 4 0.2 8. mar~. The Eagles. hlm e\ cr.
Tuesday night in a 0 -4 se~:­ Kevrn Montgomery 2 2-4 6 TOTALS 20 closed the final 4:25 of the
6·1 o 49
Three·pom1 goals. 3
tional final at Lucasville (Thornberry.
L11111horn. McVey)
fir~t half on a snhlll 4~3
Valley lligh School.
~put1 to take a 23-19 lead
statJst,CSt7ndiVfdual leaders
Southern \\ill abo host F1eldTe11m
goals S 19·38 (.500). PE 20·56
into thl' intl'rmi.....,ion.
Chesapeake on Thursday in ( 357). Three·pomt goals S 2·8 {.250)
a non-conft•rencc makeup PE 3·17 ( 176). Free thtOWS S '11·21
(.524). PE 6·10( 600) Tol;'ll rebounds· S
game at 6 p.n •.
24 (Z Manuel 9). Pt 25 (Wneeler 10)

!

SOUTHERN 51,
PIKE EASTERN 49
Southern
P1ko E

16
11

to

6

9

16 12 20

'51
49

OffensiVe rcbO~nds S 6 {Z Manuel 3)
PE 12 (Wheeler 5); ASSists· S 15 (Rees
B) PE 7 (Wheeler 3): Steals S 8 (Z
Manuel 3). PE 10 (ThOrnsberry !3)
Turnovers S 18 PE 17 TeRm louts· S
13, PE 21

Eastern'-,
defense
answered the bell to start
the :-.econd half. as the
Viking.., went more than six
minutes without scoring
while the Eades increased
their lead to 29-19 with 3:19
left in the third quarter.
SVHS final :-.cored at the
I :51 mark to pull within
se,·en (29-22). but the hosts
closed the third on a 5-0 run
to take a 12-point cu~.hion
into the stretch run.
The Ea~les connected on
14-of-37 lJeld goal attempts
for 38 percent. including a
4-of-16 effort from thrt!epomt range for 25 percent.
EHS also outrebounded the
Vikings by a 26-20 margin,
with both teams hauling
...ix offen-.ive caroms.
Jake L\ nch led Easte1
with a ~~:aine-high 13 points.
followed bv Titth Pierce
\Hth nine' and Kelt\
Wmebrenner '' ith eight
marker~. Tvler Hendi-ix
added six 'poinb, \\ hile
:\1ike Johtbon chipped in
fi,e poinh.
K vic Connerv rounded
out ·the winning· score with
three points. EHS was 15of-23 ut the free thro\\ line
for 65 percent o,·crall.
indudin!! an 11-of-16 effort
at the stripe in the fourth.
Michael Perris paced
SVHS with 12 poinb. folIo\\ ed b\ Tibbs with 10 and
Luke T&lt;t) lor with -.i.x markers. The Vikings \\ere abo a
mere 4-of-13 from the charIty 'tripe for 31 percent.
mcludin!! an 0-for-6 effort
at the !ii)e during the fourth
period.
Ea:-.tern - which \\on its
14th ... traicht contest •
ud\ anee.., tt~ the D-4 dbtr
-..cmifinals on Tuesda\.
:\larch
9.
at
the
Cmn ocation Center in
Athens. \\here it will take
on ~1anchester at 8 p.m.
~ tm1che-.ter
defeated
Sciotovillc East 77-54 on
Tuesdav night in a D-4 sec·
ttonal ·final ut Lucas' ille
Valle~ High School.

il

EASTERN 47,
SYMMES VALLEY
S Valley
Eastern

10
19

9
4

3
11

36

14 36
13- 47

(5) SYMMES VALLEY (13-7) Drew
Brock 0 0-0 0. Justm Payne 1 0~ 2 Kns
T1bbs 4 ().() 10. Luke Taylor 3 0·2 6.
Hunter Johnson 1 0.2 2 Josh Craft 1 2·
54 M1chael Ferns 4 2-4 12 TOTALS 14
4·13 36 Three·polnt goals: 4 {T1bbs 2
Ferns 2).
~
(1) EASTERN (20·1). M1keJohnson 213 5 Jake Lynch 3 6·7 13 Kelly
Winebrenner 2 4·6 8 Brayden Pratt 1 ().
0 3 Titus P1crce 3 ~6 9, Tylor Hendnx 2
0·0 6, Kyle Connery 1 1-1 S. Devon
Baum 0 0~ 0 TOTALS 14 15·23 47
Tt&gt;re~rpoml goals 4 (Hendnx 2. Lynch,
Pratt).

Team statistiCs IndiVIdual leaders
F1eld goals· SV 14-50 ( 280), E
( 376). Three·polnl goals SV
{.190). E 4·16 ( 250) Free throws
13 ( 308). E 15·23 ( 652).
rebounds SV 20 (Taylor 6) E 26
(Johnson 7) OHens1ve rebounds SV 6
(Ferns 3). E 6 (Hendnx 3): Ass sts: SV
10 (Payne 4) E 10 (P1erce 3); Steals SV
7 (Taylor 3), E 8 (Lynch 3). Bloci&lt;S· SV 1
(Tibbs). E 3 (P1erce 2) Turnovers: SV
17 E 15: Team fouls. SV 21 E 16 •

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