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                  <text>HeartWorks program
contributing to
patient's health, A6

Bobcats win
MAC tourney, Bt

e ti
Printed on 100''
lil""

~-r-~

so CENTS • V:ol. 59, No. 137
I

_.

•

TUESDAY, MARCH 116,

•

20101..

. :. ~ ·

. -.
-

OBITUARIES
Page AS
• Vernon J. Holley
• Gary Jordan
·Paul Kauff
• William 'Keith' Kincaid
• Connie Morris
• George Woodrow Nash
• Vera Anna Weber
• Etta Louise Will

~P9RTS

~

RcQcled !l.c~c;print D~

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio
•

www.mydailysentincl.com

•

Bond set in Hill homicide, drug case
Defendant released from Ohio prison in time for April trial
BY BRIAN

J.

f\fED

BRE'ED@ MYDAoLYSENT[NEL.COM

PO~IEROY - A former
Pomeroy woman facing an
April jury trial appeared
bond hearing
fur a
~londay. on charge~ she
killed t\\O 111 an accident
'' hile 5.he wrts under the
influence of drugs.

Brantl1 HJII, 26, also
known as Brandi Hicks, is
scheduled to face a jury in
April on charges she was
driving while high on
cocaine, resulting in .an auto
accident on Ohio 143 that
killed two. including a passen~er in her own StJV.
Smce her indictment last
year on two counts of

Hill has retained Charles
aggravated \ ehicular homicide, poscssion of cocaine Knight of Pomeroy as her
and two counts of operating attome). She was recentl)
a motor vehicle under the released from custody. and
influence of cocaine, Hill appeared before Judge Fred
has been in custody of the W. Crow Ill ~1onday. She
Ohio
Department
of was released on a personal
bond
of
COJTections on • charges recognit.ancc
from another county mli·e- $1,000. A $25,000 appearlated to the April, 2009 dou- ance hond and $10,000 suret) bond were also ordered.
ble fatality.

A pre-trial hearing on a
motion to supres~ evidence
was continued until !Vtarch
29, allo\\&lt;ing Knight to
re\ iew doments in the case.
Robert W. Hamson II, 40,
Pomeroy. and Stephanie J.
English. 38. Middleport,
were killed on April 26,
Please see Case, Al

Ohio River
crests
throughout
tri-county

• Southern falls
to Greyhounds.
See Page 81

B Y BETH SERGENT
BSERGENTOMYDAILYSENTINELCOM

Submitted photos

Todd Wolfe, 4-H advisor, assists a 4-H'er in bUilding a bird feeder using recycled material .

INSIDE
• Emergency HEAP
ends March 31.
See Page A2
• Champion guitar
player coming to Fur
Peace. See Page A3
• Free fun on the
Easter Train.
See Page AS

•-=-

WEATHER

High : Mid 50s.
Low: Upper 30s.

INDEX
2 SH~TIONS -

.

12 PAGI:.S

Calendars

A3

ssifieds

B3-4

Comics
Editorials
Sports

Bs
A4
B Section

, :wto Ohio Vnll&lt;•y l'uhli~hing Co.

li.IJIJI,I!I!I.! 1!11

4-H kickoff features
fun, finances and more
BY CHARLENE HOEFLICH
HOEFLICf-I@MYDAILYSENTINE'- COM

POMCROY
Everything fi·om launching
rockets to lcaming period
dances took place at this
year's kickoff for \1eigs
Count) 's 4-H activities.
About 200 4-Hers. potential members .and their families, and volunteer leaders
gathered at Meigs Elementary
School to celebrate Ohio's 4H Week and check out what's
happening here for the youth
of the county.
Participants built bird
houses, launched rockets
made from recvcled materials, leamed a Civil War period dance, were taught &lt;;ome
basic sewing skills, and
spent time learning about 411 acti' itics and programs.
There were refreshmenb
including over 350 Clovershaped cookies baked by 20
teen leaders the night before.
Other accomplishments
and activities planned by
I::.xtension 4-H Educator
Cassie Turner and advisor"
during the observance of 4H Week included training
live new advisors, arranging

an ice skating outing for the
teen leaders. conducting a
Meigc;; after-5.chool program
for students called "Fishv
Science," and directing 3b
Meigs High School seniors
through the "Real \1one),
Real World" 4-H project
with the cooperatiOn of Des
Jeffers of Farmers Bank.
The same financial program
will also be carried out in
the weeks ahead at Eastern
High School.
Coming up are 4-Il \\orkshops on livestock quality
assurance. and special programs for Eastern kindergarten and Southern afterschool students on chick
embryology 4-H project~.
":--:m.v is the time to get
involved in 4-H ," said
Turner, "because community clubs will be accepting
new members until April 1."
To be a Cloverbud children
must be 5 years of age anti
in kindergarten up to 8 years
old and in the second grade.
Those 8 years old and in the
third grade can catTy out
projecb. she noted.
Turner can be contacted
for more information at the
Extension Oflice, 992-6696.

PO~IEROY - Like the
uninvited houseguest who
wore out their welcome, the
OhiO River began to recede
into its banks throughout
the tri-countv area Mondav
aftemoon. ·
•
Though earlier prediction~ put the crest at or
above flood stage in Racine
and Pomeroy, that was not
the case, but just barely.
Personnel with the Racine
Loch and Dam said the
Oh10 River crested at 39.88
feet at 3 p.m. on ;\1onday,
just shy of flood stage
which is 41 feet. The hanger
gates will remain open until
the water level drop~ below
33 feet to prevent damage to
equipment The gate~ are
lifted when the upper and
lower pool at the dam
become the same )e\'eL
In Pomero) . the river
crested just abo\e 44 feet
Monday afternoon, t\\0 feet
be)O\\ flood ~tage '" hich \\as
a relief to se\ eral bu,ine-.~
owner-. along l\1,1in Street.
The ri-;ing '' ater became
&lt;;ome\\ hat a toun~t attraction '' tth spectators stopping
Please see River, Al

ot

One of the young people at the 4-H k1ckoff event enjoys
face painting done by Amber Moodispaugh.

Phillips holds
two of four
Meigs 'listening
tour' meetings
BY BRIAN

J . REED

BREED@ MYDAILYSENTINEL COM

t\IIDDLEPORT
-;mall groups in
small communities throughout her Ohto House Distrkt,
State Rep. Debbie Phillips
i~ halfw:n· throuc.h her
"Listening %four.'' ~
Phillips. D-J\thens. \ isited Rutland and Middleport
I last week a... part of the
tour. She said common
theml's at all the communitv-based meetinc.s include
the need for jol) creation
Des Jeffers of Farmers Bank guides a Meigs semor through and '' orkforce deYelopment, t&gt;:-.panding access to
the "Real Money, Real World" 4-H program.
internl't broadband. and
school fundinc. is ... ues. .
~1et•ting

911 : Remove batteries when retiring cell phones ·ri;:~~,~~~:~~~~:i~~:~~I!
BY BRIAN

J . REED

BREEOC MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

POMEROY - Children
playing with discarded cellular telephones are creating problems for 911 operatw·s, because those phones
automatically connect to a
dispatch center when they
an: dialed.
911
County
Meigs

Director Douglas Lavender
said parents have begun to
give their old ccllphones to
their children, who use them
as toys. Howe\'er. as long as
there is a batter) in the
phone, it dials into &lt;1 911 call
center. Lavender said. Often.
it happens multiple times.
The automatic 911 calls
occur regardless of whether
the telephone is connected

to a working cellular service plan or whether there
is a SIM card containing
personal data in the phone.
Lavender said. The telephone service provider is
still required to cUlT)' the
telephone number on ih
system and place the emergency call~.
While the unused phones
might be acceptable as toys.

they should onl) be gin~n to and what truh matters to
a child a... a play.thing once . people most." Phillips said.
t!1l' battery pack ts removed
Phillips noted the meetfrom the back of ~he tek- ings ha\e also serwd to
bting ltx:al elected ofticiab
phone, Lawnder s~ud. .
The same auto-call pol~cy closer to their con~tituent~.
&lt;tppltes to regular land-ltne sitK'C tlh)SI.' tO\\ nship tJUstees
tl'l_cphones, too, L:n ender and Yillage officials ha\'e
~:mi. En•n when a telephone attended n'leetin~s 111 order to
~S CO~llleC~Cd !O a !lOll-WOrk- share theit 0\\'11 COI1Cell1~.
mg ltne, It dtab rnto a 911
Please see Phillips, Al
\.'enter if numbers are dialed.

•

�PageA2

The Daily Sentinel

Tuesday, l\1arch 16, 2010

Cake conundrum
At1ction to benefit 'Meals'
BY BETH SERGENT
NT MYOA V

lilT NE' COM

PONII•RO'I
\ c.1Ke 1s more than just tlour and
Wdtet. espcc1.1lh \\hen It comes to the Meals on
Wheeh C .ike Auct1on at the !\1c1gs Countv Senior

.

~~~

A c.1kc .\1 the Me.ll" on Wheels Aucllon tran'\lates

!nto money whtch keeps the p1ogram funded. Entry
mto the cont •.,t '" fr~t: .111d c.tkeo; need to be at the
Me1gs Sen ( entct h) ~ p m on 1 hursda), March
25. Jud 111 I 111., at 5·~0 pm. \\inners \\ill be
announc
t ( 15 p m wtth tlw auctton begmnmg
at

6·~0

p

11

The t; k
Mc..tl., S
M..trch :!
are 6 11
ch1ldren I , 1
Debbt (
Centd •., I
'' luch 111 t
of mont')
mone) ft
meal pto 1 1
~rhe ~.:, J... •
1 c.,t .,pon~otcd b) Rock&lt;,prmgs Rehah.
'' 1ll ollt:r ltr.t , nd !'leconddt. c~.: U\\ ard ... m each cate
g~f) \\ 1th ,, c 1. mpton .tn rc'\CI 'c champton recog
111/..Ccl t10m the ttr~t pl.t~.:e cake~ C'.1ke categories are:
Chocol.it c.tkcs (an) c.1kc made wtth chocolate),
cake1o m.tdc.: '" th fruit 01 \e et.tblco; (example, catTot.
apple, .~pplc u...e or "1't~;c); decorated cakes: nn) yello" or\\ htt "' J...e cottcc. crumb or pound cake
Cake&lt;, m )" b" ...m•lc or double la)'crs. All entries
must h i\ t 1 •ntt tnt's n.tm on hottom of the plate or
pan "&gt;O It "' n &gt;t shl "Ill to the pubhc. Orgamzero; arc
..tl'\O .t"-klll I r 1 sl 11 dcscnptton of cake to be read ut
c,tke nutt &gt; I ht.• ~nkrm ~xhtbttor should make all
b.iked goods c\11 h ked •oods should be on or m a dt..,pos. blc .. ,mt Ill ·r. ,,.., th~) '' 111 be. ucuoned after JUdg
mg and all p oc ds \\til go to ~l.1rch for ~1eals.
Cakes \\Ill he JUdged b) the foliO\\ mo pomt &lt;;CJie.
30 po nts. ppe. r.llll: m pomts. tex.ture. 40 ~tnh
taste De~.:ornted ~.:.tke' are JUdged d1tferently w1th 60
pomt'\ tor pp r, nc nd or dlffKult) or destgn and
40 pomts fo t .,, \II JUdge-;' dects1on., arc final.
There ts 1 o hnut on the number of caJ...es entered
b) .m exh1b1tor J·or more informahon call Jones at
992-:! 161 Other C\ cnl'&gt; for the C\ cning. of MJrch
25 are 5 4S p m . Rl\er Cit) Player:&gt; perform. there
\\tll be prtt. dr.l\\lng and B1ll)' Goble \\ill ,\Uc
tton th c.tk ..,

Understanding Medicare
Most people are ~ome­
''hat
t.tmillar
wnh
Medicate, o;mcc it'~ likely
the) or a hum I) member are
already co,ered b) the gm.
ernment ptovtdcd health
insutance progr&lt;~m But
wtth 11' alphnbct l&gt;Oup ol
optious and I.:Oill(&gt;lex rules.
~tcdicare c:111 be daunting to
the uninitiated.
If you'tc .tppro.tchin~ 65,
here Me some Medtcarc
bal)ics you'll need 10 know:
Medicare prm 1deo; benefit to people age 65 rmd
older and tho e under 65
,., ith cenain disnbiliti~ or
end ~ta):!c renal disease.
Most people's mitml enrollment period 1s the se,en
months begmnmg three
months before the month
the) tum 65 If you nuss that
\\Indo\\. )OU may enroll
between Januar) I nnd
M.1rch 31 each ) car, "ith
co,ernge beginning July I.
Medtc.u'C offerc; numerous plans and co.,er.1ge
opttons. mcluding:
Part A helps cover in
patient hospital, nursing
faciht) and hospice ser' ices, and home health care.
~lost people p.1y no monthly premium .md arc automuticall) enrolled upon

Jason
Aldennan

turnmg 65. or after receiVing Social Security disability benefit~ for 24 months.
Part B helps CO\ er doctor·~ services. outpatient
care and some preventhe
~en 1ces. It's optional and
has a monthly premium.
Most people are automaticall) enrolled at the ~ame
time as Pan A. To opt out,
folio" the tn tmctJonc. that
accompanied
your
Medicare card (mailed
about three months before
yo~r 65th birthday). We1gh
opt1n~ out carefully because
there s often a sizeable
penalty if ) ou enroll Inter.
unless you're currently covered by an employer's plan.
Part
C
(Medicare
Advant&lt;~ge) plans are prh·ately run Hl\10 or PPO
l\ ledicare plans that provide
co' erage similar to Parts A
and E. but may also include

Eme~gency
CHI SHIRl
Gnllm
Me1gs C'.A.A.'s l•mergcnc)
HLAP Pro ~ram \\Ill end
!\1arch 31 • accordmf' to a
rclea&lt;.,e
from
Sandra
[~d" ards,
~ mergency
Sen 1ccs D1rector.
"\\c conttnue to take
calls for .1ppomtment~ on a
d.lily basts. bookmg LPp to
t\\o \\Ceks m advance m
order to nddrcss the emeran
How \er
)

n

d ut I t'
nu t

additional benefits ~uch as
prescription drugs, dental and
vic.ion coverage In exchange
for lower out-of-pocket costs
and additional benefits,
you're usually required to use
the plan's provider network.
which may he more restrictive than providers )OU could
acce::.s through regular Parts
A and B.
Patt I) help::. cover prescnption dJUgs. It's opt1onal
and carries a monthly premium. These privately run
plan vary "idely in terms
of co t and medications
CO\ered. A with Pan B,
you rna) be charged a lateenrollment penalty if you
don't sign up "'hen first eligible and later decide to
enroll. If you're in a Part C
plan with drug co,erage.
you don't need Pan D.
Many f!People purchase
additional Medigap (or
Med icarc Supplemental)
insurance. wh1ch is offered
by private insurers and follows strict government covel age guidelines. Medil!ap
helps pa) for many items
not covered bv Medicare.
including
deductibles,
copayments, coinsurance
and. ometimes, coverage
when traveling abroad.

Medigap coverage is
alread) included m Pan C
Medicare Advantage plans:
plus some employers and
umons offer it to their
retirees. Medigap plans can
vary widely in terms of
covered benefits and
participating so compa
your option~ carefully.
Understanding and choosing the right Medicare
options for your individual
situation can be a complicated process. For assistance, call J-800-633-4227
or visit www.medicare.gov,
where vou'll find:
• Helpful publications,
including ''Medicare &amp; You
2010"
• Tools to compare prescription drug plans. hospitals. nursing homes and
Medigap plans in your area
• A resource to find local
doctor::. and other health
practitioners who participate in Medicare
• Service~ covered by various Medicare plans
• Enrollment mstrucuons.
(Jason Alderman directs
Visa j- financial education
programs. Sig11 up for Iris
free monthly e-Newsletter
www.practicalmoneyskills.
om/newsletter.)
'

a.

HEAP ends March 31

gallons)
for
,., hich has been increased (200
this program ) ear, and ''ill propane bottled gas or fuel
oil. Clients heating "'1th
ass1st more clients.
Emergency HEAP pro- wood or coal w11l be a sistup
to
$350.
' ides assistance to house- ed
holds that have had utilities Homeo\1. ners or renters
disconnected, lace the may qualif).
Edwards I is ted income
threat of disconnection or
have I 0 da) s or less supply levels b) household size
of bulk fuel. The program being used to determine eliallo\\ s ~ one-t1me pa) ment gibilit). These income
of up to ~ 175 per heating guidelme represent the
season to re~tore or ret llll 200rc calculatJon and are
rc\ ts d annuallv Allowable
home he m se ' ce fo
I nco me·for a I perAF.P or ( lumbt G. s
hold 1 $21.660,2
BR (
29.140. 3 per~ons
F
4
per ons
and tuel I c e
per~ons
5
ment rna) be up

$51,580. and 6 per ons
$59.060. Households "ith
more than six members
should add an additional
$7,480 to the yearl)
income.
Both Emergency HEAP
and Regular HEAP apphcauon~ can be completed at
the Gallia C.A.A. Heap
Office. 859 3rd Avenue,
Gallipolts. Central Office,
80 I 0 '\ SR 7, Che-.hire, or
the
\teigs
C.A .A.
HMG IHeap Office at 122
N 2nd Street. Middlepon.
For further information,
comact the Cheshire Office
at367-7341 or 992-6629 .

.

•

Brian J. Reed/photo

Ph1ll1ps at a L

n ng Tour stop m Middleport last week.

hillipSfrom Page AI
On Man.h II Phtlllps met April 10 at the Chester
people at t Rutland I tre Counhou'\e.
The meetmgs began on
house ,md th" M1ddleport
depot mcct1n • room She March 4 in McConnelsville
will meet \\ 1tl rcstdenb 111 .md w 111 cond ude April I7
Alban) at 7 p
I hur.;,d,ty m Bnnlett - 26 communi!)
at the comnHinll) center. meetmgs and four count)
and at 4 p.m ,md 7 p.m. on roundtable~ later.
The community meet~1arch 25. .tl Southern
ings
ha\ e an open-toptc
Elemcntar) School and the
Pomero) \lllage Hall. format for residents to
~hare their concerns and
respecti\cl)
Phillips .tlo;o \\til host .1 prionties with Phillips.
quarter!) JOundt.lblc dt~cus 1 he roundtables. accordm£
sion at I p m. on March 30 to Phtllips. will continue to
at the Pomero) I tbntr). and sene as a forum for local
hold Ll!&gt;tenm • Tour se., clttzens. elected officwls.
de' elopment
sions at 10 am. on Apnl 10 t&gt;conomic
at the 1 upp rs Plams le.1dero;, education leaders
Firehouse, .md at I p m on and other oflicwls.

Case from Page A1
2009. in .111 auto .1Cc1dent on Huntington. W.Va. for
Ohw 143. Fngh~h \HIS a injuries she sustained.
A specification in thC'
passenger in an S l \ uff 1
char~e
~)f yosscss!on of
cwls later determined tlill
cocwne
mdtcatcs IIIII was
was driving.
in
po::.session
of less than
llill allegedly st1uck·l\\O
vehicles w.titin' to make five grams of cocaine. but
left-hand tum..,, then \\ent had a concentration of the
left ol center mto the path of drug in her blood and urine
nt the time of the four \chiHanism1's tt uck I he truck ctecmsh.
burst mto flaml!c;. on IIHpact.
Hill \\fl" scheduled 10
with Harrison t1Upped inside.
appear
in Crow's coun on
Others "'ere mjured, .m March 10.
but was not preadult and two ju,.emlcs. Hill
herself wal&gt; flown to o;ent.

•

Beth Sergent/photo

The 01110 R1ver returned to visit the Pomeroy levee Monday, closing down the upper and lower parking lots downtown.
The water crested at JUSt above 44 feet Monday afternoon, nearly two feet below flood stage. Spectators are shown takmg photos from the parktng lot's central gazebo surrounded by water.

River from Page At
to take pictures of the 'tll.tgc
p.trkmg lot "h1ch "a clo ed
to traffic. makmg p.trkmg
do" lllO\\ n e\ en more of a
ch,tllenge.
One place the Ohto RJ\er
dtd crest above tlood ~tage
was,Point Pleasant, W.\a ..
''here the "ntcr rc.1ched
4 ~.6 teet ~lund") afternoon, more th.lll thtee fe-et
abo\e flood st.tgc. ·1 he ris
it_tg '~&lt;Iter felt much of the
1 nvertront
park
and
am ph it heater undCn\ !Iter
Sunday nnd Monda).
'I he Ohto River crested nt
47.5 teet ,11 the R.C. B)rd
I ocb nnd Dam ut G.tllipolis
!•err). \V.Va .. \\hich \\as
.1lmost three feet bclo''
llood stc~gc. Also. the Ohto
Rhcr at the Belle\ 1lle I ocks
and Dam at Reed 'illc

reported a ri\er cre ...t at 32.8 Sen ice in Charleston. W Va.
feet. \\ell belo'' flood ::.tnge The NWS blamed the recent
flood C\ ent on a storm ") ,_
which i 45 feet.
With the exception of the tem dropping significant rain
readmg at Racine and in om hem Pcnnsy h ani a
Pomcro), all other ri" er crest and westem Mary land O\ er
numbers \\.ere reported b) the "eekend a \\ell a~ that
The ~auonal Weather area':; melting now pack.

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�Page~)

The Daily Sen tinel

T u esd ay, March t6, 2010

Champion guitar player Sonshine Circle plans service projects
Com .lng to Fur Peace RAC'INI~

POI\H~RO'a
fhrcctllll .. USi\ N·, 111.l 111 ,11 Gttl't,'lt'
'
champion is ~.:oming to
Count) m April 10

k~.~~n\rfo~~1r ,It~~~~

RaSnt~1,1 e' 11

K,tuiJlliltl ,, 1.11 be
here" from AJml 23 26 condut.:tmg a \\Ork!.hop and
~erforming in concert on
aturd.t) night. It begm
Frida) ,tfternoon "lth a l'c\\
hours of cl.t~s "hich continucs all \\eekcnd and concl udes Monda) morning
unle othem 1se dec1ded at
the Ranch.
I he aii-Je,el 11atpicking
gut tar workshop ''ill CO\er
core ptckmg skills .md techmques, repertoire and build-

iKng

fbloc~ . 1or gro\\th.

au man " 111 also cove1

nght &lt;~nd left hand technique, drills ,md !&gt;kills, and
man) other \aluablc aspects
of flatpickmg guitar.
Small groups nnu some
indhidual Ultention \\ill
make thi \\Orkshop valuable for flatp1c~ing gui
t.mst at allle\els of expericnce. Those attending "ill
sta) on grounds in cabins
"ith gourmet meals prepared on the grounds. This
1 a total immersion ex periencc. Class Si1.e is limited
to 10 ,md registrations are
current I) being taken. There
is a $100 discount card
'' hich can be obtained by
calling the Ranch.

ASK DR.. U R.C)T H E R.S

Can she trust big
brother to help?

.y

DR. J OYCE B ROTHERS

Dear Dr. Brothers:

~I)

youngest !-.011 ts starting
h1gh chool m the fall. I
kno\\ he tne to put hi
game face on. but I can tell
he'" kind ot freaked out b)
the "hole thmg. His brother
i enrolled there nlread).
and the) "ill spend one
year together as fre hmnn
and semor. The oldest ha
.tl\\a)~ been big man on
clas ol ficcr and
campus
a JOCk
and I hope thi.;,
doesn't mtmudate m)
)OUn est I'm concerned as
to ho\\ Ill) on "rll react to
all tim. HO\\ worncd should
I be - 8.\\.
Dear H.\\.: It II depend!'.
t
I t n'&gt;htp bet\\een
s Ch: nee are
t
st on h s spent
mo t of h1" llfc somev.hat
d1s.tant from his younger
• as four )Cars apart
1te u chasm at that age.
he tr) to take care of h1
httl brother') Some gu) s
re\ el m that role, \\h1le others hke nothmg better than
to t n tantly one up the
"httl
brat · Doe the
" un er one adm1re h1s b1g
brother. or 1s he stmpl)
mllmld:lted? It !&gt;Ounds like
he nught not ha\ e the same
leader!&gt;hip or athletic kills,
and rna) not ''ant to be
compared to h1s older brother. That's more than understandable. But your older
son can do much to ease the
wa). 1f he cares to.
If )Oil can it dm"n \\ith
the "b1g hot" nnd ask him
to help ea e the ) ounger
nne'&lt;; JM'&gt;Sage to high
school. 1t would be ~real.
Let h1m be proud of h1 little brother - e\ Cl) one will
nottcc. And It surely "ill
sohdtf) the1r relationship.
They ha\e no renson to be
mpetitlve in high school,
your older on hould
. . ., a;~; and be kmd and helpful. I he ) ounger son can be
encouraged to de\clop hi!&gt;
O\\ n talents and interests the) probabl) "on 't be the
same ac; his brother's.
Encourage the boys to
spend orne time together
before school starts just
talking abou: high school
and what it's like. Dishing
all the info on the different
teachers \\Ould be a good
starting point, and the) can
branch out from there.

t

l·ncoumge the lllteraction!

•••

Ser.ICC pro
jects geared to helping those
less fortunate \\ere dbcussed at a 1ecent meeting
of the Sonshme Circle ut
Bethan) Church
The month!) donation to
the Meigs County Council
on Aging was made and
members \\ere reminded ol
tI1e d'mnet to I&gt;e he ld .tt the
Senior Ccntet on March 26
for the home-dehvered
meal r.rogmm. A cake con
test wtll be held that night
and members were asked to
bake cakes Jor the contest
and auction.
·1he members pro' ided

de&lt;;$Crt for God's Net. and
made plan') for collecting
food
for the Meigs
Cooperative hlOd Pantry at
their Apnl meeting. as well
as school supplies for
Southern Local Elementary
School teachers. Kath•yn
Hart pres1ded &lt;1! the meeting
with of11ccrs' repons being
·
hy.M ary Ball an d Ann
~tven
Zirkle. Edic Hubbard read
thank )OU notes from Lena
Hewitt, W1lma Casto, Violet
Fisher, J11n and Sandy
Codner, Charles Uush, and
Maralyn Capretta.
Hubbard reported he had
mailed 20 cards during the

month. The group l&gt;igned 82
cards dunng the e\ening.
Hart read thank you note~
from Patty Shain, Bethany
Church
and
Avary
Muggr.tge. The group
accepted donations from
Casto, Hew1n and 1-tsher.
Bernice 1beiss having the
opening ptaycr .md teading
Legcn d o f •St.
"'I he
Patnck.'' Plans \~ere rn.tde
for the mother-daughter
dinner on May 6. The birthdays of Lillian Hayman and
Ann Zirkle were celehrdted.
Jackie White \\On the St
Patnck'!&gt; game and Hart
won the door prize.

Ltlltdn Ha)'man r ad. fh
Wemmg of the Green' and
Ruth Simpson n.:ad 'Th~
lmpossihle Dream"
·1 heiss. Simp-.on and
Ha)man served p1z1.a and
dnnkl&gt; to Ann Z1rkle. Mar)
Ball. Lvelyn J on::man
Mabel Brace, Mtldred Hart
J..oui&lt;&gt;e
hank.
K,uhY,
Mc f) .u11c
· I . J ac kte Wh ttc
Ltnda Rusc.ell, Letha Proffitt.
Hazel McKehey. Blonden,
Ramer. WJima Smith. Edt
lluhbard and Kathryn Hart.
Next meeting t':t Apnl 8
\\ith a potluck dmncr. Edt
Hubbard and Blonden
Ramer" 111 ha\e the prograw.

Play auditions set at Parkersburg Actors Guild
PARKERSBURG. W.\a.
Auditions for Charlie
,llld the Chocolate l ·.~ctory
"iII be held at the
Parkersburg Actors Guild at
724
Market
Street.
Parkersburg. W.Va.
The cast w11l mcludc four
adult women, five adttlt
men, 5- 12 children, eight
years to 16 years old.
Children's audttons will be
held on Saturday. March 20

at 2 p.m. at the Acto!'l' Guild
of Parkersburg Reheat sal
Hall, located at 724 ~1 arket
Street CComer of 8th St and
Market Street)
Women' and men's auditiOn&lt;&gt; will be held on Sunday,
March 21 , and ~ l onday,
.\larch 22 at 7 pm in the
Guild Rehearsal Hall located
at 724 Market Street.
The stor) is about an
ecccntnc chocolatier. Wtllie

\\onka. and Churlie. a
good-hear1ed boy from a
poor lamily who lives 111 the
shadow of Wonka '!&gt; cxtr.lordinal) factory. Long •~alat­
ed from his O\\ n fam1h.
Wonka launches a worldwide contest to select an
heir to his cand) empire .
Fhe lucky children.
includmg Charlie, dra\\
golden t1ckets from Wonka
chocolate bars and \\ m a

guided tour of the legend· ry.
c,md)-making facJitty that
no outsider has 11een 111 IS
~ear&lt;.. Dauled b) one
amazmg sight after nother.
Charlte i'&gt; drm\ n mto
Wonka\, fantastic \\Orld.
Production dates arc June
11.12.18.19,20.25.26.
For further m(ormauon
contact direc 101 \fe/od
Carson ar melotl\dramat
icmk([t )a/wo.com

Dunham to speak at Grace
Church, 7 p.m., as part of
Meigs
Ministerial
Assocratlan's community
Lenten program continues

Umted Methodist Church
free communtty d~nner,
4.30-6 p.m., spaghettr,
Texas toast
desserts
refreshments

Other events

Public meetings

Wednesday, March 17
POMEROY
Communrty dmner at New
Begmnmgs
United
Methodtst Church. 112
Second St., Pomeroy,
4·30 to 6 p.m.
baked steak,
potatoes green
d dessert. No
a
Thursday, March 18
MIDDLEPORT - Heath

Tuesday, March 16
POMEROY
Informational meetmg on
proposed three-mrll contmu,
ous fire protection levy fot
Bedford Townshrp 7 p.m.
Carleton
Church
on
K~ngsbury Road
Monday, March 22
RACINE
Southern
Local Board of Education
regular meetrng 8 p m
tugh school med a room

Dear Dr. Hrothcrs : I

know parents al\\ a) s talk
about "hat rchg10n to raise
their children
cspeciall)
1f the) come from two different faiths
but mv hU!.·
b.111d and lha\e a different
problem. He i&lt;t a dyed-inthe-\\ool
consenati\e,
'' hlle 1 ha\e al\\ D) been
and ah\a) \\JII he a proud
progress I\ e liberal. ~ow
that our two dnughters arc
gt0\\111~ up, \\C'\e been
\\ onden ng "ho gets to
dec1de \\hat the1r political
phllosoph1es should be.
R1ght or left'l - P.D.
Dear PJ).: I ha\e a novel
ide
''h) don t you let
I d 1 ~ r th
the
he K d
nt I
h e to be md c t n t
mto \\hate\er postuon thetr
p.trents hold. and, as many
b.1by boomers "ho came
out S\\ ingmg again t their
parents back m the '60s'' ill
tell ) ou, rebel !ton is sweet
to a young
person.
Whale\ er stnpe parents
happen to ''ear, there ''til
be ktds "Who aren't part1cu
J, rl) mtere ted an polittc
but \\Ill oppose anything
thetr folks want them to
belie\e, just .ts n matter of
pnnc1ple. Others \\Ill sla\lshl) tollo\\ \\' h.tt their parents teach them. at least
until they lea\ e home and
ha\ e the opportunit) to
fonn their O\\ n 'ie" s based
on their O\\ n life experiences and philo ophie .
Thts 1s an mterc ting famllv
if your girl ha\e \\itnes-.cd he.lted politieal
debates all their li,e-., the)
rna) he mto politics, or may
be turned off b) "hat the)
pcrcei"e as a source of friction bet\\ een their parents.
Hut today, yo~ng people arc
much more mJluenced b)
the medta and their friend
and ocinl networks, so )OUr
attempts to push them left or
right might not be as successJul as you "ish. l think
)OU should include them in
polittcal discus ions if they
are mterested. and let the
ch1ps fall \\ here they ma).
Whether they'll hen chip off
the old blo~;k
and which
one- remains to be seen.ln
any case. they'll ha\e at len t
one parent on their side!
(t) 2010 b\
Syndicate

Km~

Community Calendar
Clubs and
organizations
Tuesday, March 16
CHESTER - Daughters
of America, Chester Council
323, 7 p.m. at the hall. Good
of order to have refreshments and auctton. Take
1tems for auct1on.
POMEROY
Drew
Webster Post 39. d1nner celebrating 91st annrversary 7
p m All leg onnatres spouses
guests
nv ted
eg onna re of the Vi r
award to be presented
SYRACUSE - Syracuse
Commumty Center Board of
D1rectors 7 p.m nt the ccntor.

Wednesday, March 17
CHESTER Special
meeting of Shade Rrver
Lodge, 7 p.m., to confer
Entered Apprenttce Degree
on three candidates All
Masons
mvlted
Refreshments follow.

Church events
Thursday, March 18
POMEROY
Community Lenten serv1ces
contmue w th a Passo er
observanc 7 p
Ti
Churc
S
s
Me1gs
Assoctatlan
Thursday, March 25
POMEROY - Rev Bnan

Just i
STOCK
ESTS
[•erfect for e:dra storagt•
medium oak finish

SALE

RECliNER SAlE

.$89
$119

All Hcrkllm: &amp; FlcxsiCci - Po\\er rcchncrs • Lilt Chairs·
Rocker Recliners - \\alia\\ a) recliners- B1g !\tan Recliners

$409 .............................................................. Sale $309
$549 .............................................................. Sale $419
$609 ............................................................... Sale $459
$839 ............................................................. Sale $629
$1029 ............................................................. Sale $779

BUNK BEDS

259 4 or 5 Deep Ora\\ er

299 \\anlrobe ... ..... ..

209
239

$31 9

MATTRESS SAlE
Free remoml ofold beddin~

R&lt;!~ton1~ 1 QW1ll' Qu&lt;!en Set . . . . . . . . . . .
R\!Stomc Argent Queen Set ....... .

$399

SALE

$399 Standard Bunk bed .. $319
$479 Bookcase Bunk bed.$379
$679 Twin/Full Bunk bed ... $539

$889 Stairway Bunk bed .• $709

Features
L

WASHER - DRYER
SAlE

SEnLE IRS TAXES

Pedestall'able SALE
4 chairs
$379

Buy the

For a f raction of what you owe

WASHER

8 C)clc. 2 speeds,
hca\) dUI)

sal:e~J99
~ale Ptice~

pair for
only
$728.00

DRYER
l feet 01) cr. XL Capau!).
5 C)Ck. hea\) dut),
' temp~ Reg. 41 q

sate

$379

On ••• • Dil:hwSJ!:h~N:

Free drlil'l'') and remmal
of old applm11rcs

• RangM
• RP.Ftin,
o
t"tots
•
f=teezet!l
o
q

Reg.
$1029

4 Chairs
t'rer Dcil'c Q !

�PageA4

The Daily Sentinel

Tuesday, March 16,

The Daily Sentinel

..

2010 •

-

11 1 Court Street • Pomeroy, Ohio

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

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
Sammy M. Lopez
Publisher
Charlene Hoeflich
General Manager-News Editor
Pam Caldwell
Advertising Director
Con,(!ress sl1all make lUI law respectiu.~ au
t•staMisluneut of religion, or prohibiting tile free
£':.\'t•rdse tl~rrt'tif; or abritf.l!iug tlll'.frt•t•tlom ofspach,
M '!(the prt•ss; or tilt· ri.l!ht '?f tht• l'~'''l'le peaceabl)'
ltl •ISS&lt;'III Mt•, ami to pt•titiml tht• Govcrmne11t
for a redn•ss &lt;?f.s:riel•tr llct•s.
The First Amendmen t t o th e U.S. Con stitution

T'C) l )AY I N Hl STO l~Y
Today is Tuesday. March 16, the 75th day of 2010.
There are 290 days left m the year.
Today's H1ghlight rn History:
On March 16, 1850, Nathaniel Hawthorne's novel "The
Scarlet Letter" was first published.
On th1s date:
In A.D. 37. Roman emperorT1benus d ed, he was succeeded by Caligula.
In 1751, James Mad1son, fourth president of the
Umted States, was born rn Port Conway, Va.
In 1802 Pres1dent Thomas Jefferson stgned a measure authonzrng the establishment of the U.S. Military
Academy at West Point, N Y.
In 1915, the Federal Trade Comm1ss1on began operations.
In 1926, rocket science pioneer Robert H. Goddard
successfully tested the f1rst liqUid-fueled rocket, in
Auburn Mass.
In 1935 Adolf Hitler dec1ded to break the military
terms set by the Treaty of Versailles by ordenng the
rearmrng of Germany
In 1968, dunng the Vietnam War, the My La1 {mee ly)
Massacre of V1etnamese c1v1 1ans was carried out by
U S Army troops: est1mates of the death toll vary
between 347 and 504.
In 1978 Italian pollt1c1an Aldo Moro was kidnapped by
left-wmg urban guerrillas, who later murdered him
In 1984 W lllam Buckley the CIA stat1on ch1ef 1n
Be1rut w s k1dnapped by terronsts (he was tortured by
p• rs and k I ed l"l 1985)
h
Terry Anderson ch ef M dd e East corresponT
A ooated Pr ss w s abducted '" Be rut
sed n Dec 1991
Ti n years ago Independent Counsel Robert Ray sa1d
he found no cred b e ev1dence that Hallary Rodham
Cl nton or sen1or White House off1c1als had sought FBI
background f1les of Republicans. Thomas Wilson
Ferebee, the Enola Gay bombardier who dropped the
atom1c bomb on Hiroshima, d1ed 1n Windermere, Fla. at
age 81
F1ve yea s ago· A Jury 1n Los Angeles acquitted actor
Rob rt B ake of murder rn the hootmg death of h1s w1fe.
Bonny Lee Bakley four years earlle• {A c1vil court JUry
at r ord red Blake to pay Bakley s four cha dren $30 mlln an award that an appeals court subsequently cut 1n
half Bake has declared bankruptcy.) A judge tn
Redwood C ty Calif. sent Scott Peterson to death row for
the slaymg of h1s pregnant w1fe Lac1. Norway's Robert
Sorlie won h1s second ld1tarod Tra•l Sled Dog Race in
one of the closest races 1n years.
One year ago: Joimng a wave of public anger,
Pres1dent Barack Obama blistered msurance giant AIG
for "recklessness and greed'' for hand ng 1ts executives
$165 m1lhon 1n bonuses after takmg billions in federal
baalout money British actress Natasha Richardson, 45,
was fatally InJUred in a skung acc1dent at a resort in
Quebec she d1ed two days later at a Manhattan hospital Austnan Josef Fritzi pleaded gUilty at the start of h1s
tnal to 1mpnsoning his daughter for 24 years and father..
mg her seven ch1ldren
Thought for Today : "Nearly all our disasters
com e from a fe w fools having the 'courage of
th eir c onvictions."' - Coventry Patmore, English
poet ( 1823-1896).

oN SECOND

~Q~~Tua

Zero tolerance for federal mandates
BY BEN B OYCHUK
THE HEART LA... INSTill..TE

Federal education mandate&lt;; alwa) s
Crul) unintended con!&gt;equences. and

\\ell-intended. top-do\\ n rules often
lead to ab urd outcomes. Keep that in
mind a~ President Barack Obama and
Congress overhaul the No Child Left
Behmd Act to gi\e the federal government unprecedented pO\'Yer to dictate \\hat chtldren learn
To apprect te JU'&gt;t h \\ ml h hilllll
ood mtent10n c n d
ook
~ ther than )OUr toe
.:hoot dt.,tnct
'1ero-tolerance" poll c).
Eve!) state and school distnct m
America has stnct rule again t \ lO·
Iencc and drugs on campuc;, fhut'-. a
it hould be. But that common en&lt;oe
pohcy shouldn't reqmre a federal law.
Ne\ertheles&lt;.., in I 994 Congte-;
pas cd and President Ball Chnton
sagned the Gun-Free School Act in
respon!'.c to a rash of school shooting . The la\\ reqmred every district
to establish a zero-tolerance polic)
tor guns or rbk losang federal funds.
Any student caught '' ith a gun on
campu face~ a mandator) onc-)car
expulsion and possible prosecution.
Most districts toughened their mles
after the Columbine l l igh School
massacre in 1999 (\\ hich in itself
shov. s htm poorly the federal law
worked). Q, er time, zero tolerance
expanded to drugs. kni\cs. sexual
a ault, gang paraphcrnaha, and
cxplosi' es - all of '' hich \\ere of
cour-..e alrcad) illegal.
Fearful of not being strict enough.
man) schools ha\C gone further sti ll.

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banned c nd) aleo; m
pa11 of a dJstnct-\\Jde "v.elllt~). so the school
dered
d) contmband
ns1ble
tolerance rules p
ch
administrators in an
possi.,le band while gtHng petty t)rnnts
CO\er for their abuses. Mo t states
allow httle or no di cretion in the v. ay
principals mete out discipline.
Twent) ) e.!.rs ago, the remedy for a
'ast majorit) of the~e case:-. \\Ould
ha\e been s1mplc: Confbcate the
offending item. call the parents,
explam the problem, and extract a
promio,e from the student to leave it
home next time.
0:o\\ the fir 1 phone call is often to
the police . .Nc'' York City police
marched
e\enth-grader
Alexa
Gonzalez out of her middle school in
handcuff last month for doodling on
a desk. Vandalism is \\rong. and
Gonzalez should ha\e been pumshed.
But handcuffs and a mugshot'!
Outrageous.
h&lt;~d

(Ben Boyclwk is managing editor oj
1'l1e Heartland fmtitute's School

Reform Nell's. E-mail him at bboy- •
clw/.:.@heartland.org.J
1

GUTS!..

Our rna n concern n a 1 s·or es s 10 Pub! shed Tuesday trrough Friday lll
be accurate If yoiJ know of an error Court Street Pomeroy, Ohio Second·
n a story callt: e newsroom at (740) class postage paid at Pomeroy
992·2156
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Postmaster: Send address correc·
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t1ons to The Da11y Sentinel, PO Box
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Editor: Char ene Hoef11ch Ext 12
Reporter: Br n Reed Ext ~4
Reporter: Beth Sergent Ext 13

ool

GUNS
AND

The Daily Sentinel
(usPs 213-960)

t
e

Similarly. 17-year-old M atthe\\ •
Whalen wa:. ~uspended from his
up tate ;-..;ew York high school lnst
)ear for having a two-inch knife as
part of a survi' at kit he kept in his car.
Hi principal called the police. I t
turns out a two-inch knife isn't considered a weapon in Ne\\ York state,
but the district superintendent su~­
pcndcd the Eagle Scout for 20 days
an) way.
Nobod) but a school bureaucrat
enou I) thinks a t\\O-inch knife or a·
bag of candy i~ a threat. In tead ot
keepmg students afe. such mmdless
officaousne::.s
onl)
undermines
respect for discipline.
We can be thankful ~ome
are willing to ri~k incurring the federal go' crnment'~ wrath b) being sensible. The school board in Pm1land.
Oregon lao,t month voted to relax the
dio;trict's zero-tolerance polic) after~
an eight-year-old was suspended for
po ession of a four-inch tO) gun
meant for an action figure.
Texas la\\makers, \\hO ha\c long
bucked pressure to confonn to man)
federal education mandates, last )Car
passed a law allo\\ ing dh.tricts to
consider
..extenuating
circumstance~ ... such a~ the student\ intent
and disciplmary his tOt'). \\henaddrcssm!l zero-tolerance violation:. .....
Other:. '\vould do \\CII to reintroduce a bit of common sen e and di cretion into the classroom. One- izefit -all di ...cipline docsn 't '' ork.

~D,

L tt rs to the ed tor ~hou d be I m ted to 300 words All letters are
sub ect to d • :~g must be s gned and Include address and telephone
nu"Tlber No uns gned Uters Will be pub 1shed Letters should be In
good t to add•ess1ng 1ssues. not porsonah!les. "Thank You· letters
w 11 not bo accepted for publ1cat1on

Reader Services

banning anything that even \ aguely
resemble a \\capon or a drug.
Student across the countr) ha\e
faced suspension or expulsion for
\\caring t-c;hirt with pictures of guns;
bringing tiny. unrealistic toy guns to
,chool; packing common kitchen
utensils in lunch bags; and po::.sessing
cand).
Yes, candy. In 2008. school offi... ials m ~e\\ Hmen. Conn .. suspend;!d
hth radc h n r student
Ma
I Sh r d
ped h of
er

0

�Tu esday, Mard1t6,

The Daily Sentinel • Page As

www.mydailysent inel.com

2010

Obituaries
6

William Keith' Kincaid
William "Keith" Kincaid, r----- -------.
?4: pas~ed away after a
hnet til ness on l\londa).
l\tarch
8,
2010.
in
Sacramento, Calif. A retired
US Air Force colonel. he
ved our countr) with
for more than 27 years.
was hom in llJ 15 in
Middleport, the ~on of John
William, a New York Central
Railroad Yardmaster. and.
&lt;;ec!l, a homemaker. Fl) ing
tascmated him and. at the age WL-.U......E.I~Bibii
of J2, he helped a local barnstormer restore a Curtbs "Jenny." He then tried to build his
ov-. n airplane. which crashetl llfl its first takeoff v-. ithout
mjuring him. fortunate!\'.
'
Keith \Vas always an ~tvid reader and an oubtanding student who was appointed to attend the US Military Academy
at West Point. After graduating in I 93X, he entered the
Army Air Corps Basic and then Advanced Flying schools,
fulfilling his dream of becoming a pilot. During World War
~ I , he helped e-.tablish tl) ing schools for the Air Corps durmg the earl) years of the war and then served as Wing
Commander in ltah, leadmg hundreds of B- J7 bombers on
missions over Gcniwny. ~
Col. Kincaid then sened nt various locations and leveb
?f respon-.ibility . v-. hilc continuing his education and helpmg shape the 1111'-SIOII of the newly formed United States
Air Force. He scned ai-l the ~aha, Okina,,a, Air Base and
Wing Commander of two fighter squadrons during the
Korean War. He served as the Commander of the Naha.
Okinawa. Air Base and the \Ving Commander of its' t\\O
fighter s4uadrons during the Korean \Vur.
After sen ing as the Commander of the Command
ntrol Defense Djvision in Boston, Col. Kincaid was the
ng Commander of the Satellite Test Wing. Space
•
SyMems Divbion, in Sunny\ ale. Calif. In this role, he was
instrumental in helpmg to establi:.h the US Air Force as the
\\Orld's prem1er space force. He retired from the USAF in
Augu~t -&gt;f 1965.
During his distinguished and honorable career, Colonel
Kincaid had many positions of increasing respon::.ibilitv:
Command Pilot, Air Commander, Rc~earch mid
Development Director, and Organizational Chmmunder.
He v-. as awarded the followin~ decorations and citations
\\hile in the United States A1r Force: Legion of I\1erit
"ith First Oak Leaf Cluster, Distinguished Flying Cross,
Air Medal "ith 3 Oak Leaf Clu~ters. Air Force
Outstanding Unit A'' ard.
After retirement from the Air Force. Keith continued to
\\Ork for several \Car~. He v-.as the Manned Orbital
Laboratory Operations Director at General Electric Space
Systems in Valley Forge, Pa. and the Director of a planning
and inve tment department at a large bank in Philadelphia.
Pa lJ pon his full retirement in 197 3. he and his loving" ife
of 70 years. MarJOrie, chose to lhe in California. He has
trul) appreciated life and In ed e\ ef) da) to its fullest.
enJoymg hio; famil).lll pa sion for golf. a 10\e offine dmmg. tnnehng, readmg and mvestmg.
Interment '\\'111 take place at Riven Jew Ccmeter).
ag~

maker and a member of the Hickory Hills Church of Christ.
She is survived by two sons, Charles and Judy Weber and'
Keith and Marcella Weber; a daughter, Vida and Doug
Johnson: several grandchildren: several great-grandchildren; and a brother, Howard Larkins.
In addition to her parents, she was preceded in death by
her husband, Norman Weber: twp brothers, Raymond
Larkins and Freddy Larkins; and two sisters, Donna
Bogard and Mae Kathryn Newlund.
George Woodrow Nash, 79, Pomeroy, passed away on
Private graveside services will be held 2 p.m., Tuesday,
March 14,2010.
March 16,2010 at Sandhill Cemetery, Long Bottom, Ohio
He was born in Middleport, Ohio, on Aug. 18, 1930, with Michael Moore officiating.
son of the. late Henry J. Nash and Edith Elizabeth
There will be no visitation. A memorial service will be
(Gerlach) Nash.
held at a later date .
He was a veteran of the U.S. Marines. He retired from the
You can sign the online guestbook at www.whiteAEP Philip Spom Plant after 37 years of service. He was a schwarzelfuneralhome.com
member of the Gallipolis Christian Church.
In lieu of flowers, donations can be made to Hickory Hill
In addition to his parents, he was preceded by his sister, Church of Christ.
Betty Martin.
He is survived by his wife of 55 years, Martha Fay
(Webb) Nash: a brother. John (Mildred) Na&lt;.h, Middleport,
and a sister, Ethel Shank. Pomeroy.
Services will be held on Thursday, March 18.2010, at 11
Gary Jordan, 62, of Reedsville, passed away Thursday,
a.m. at Anderson McDaniel Funeral Home in Pomeroy. March 11 , 20 lO at his residence.
Officiating will be Mike Lynn. Military fu neral honors will
He was born July 15, 1947 in Boyd County, Ky.. son of
be pre~e nted and burial will be in Meigs Memory Gardens . the late William and Ruth Carter Jordan. He was an Army
Frienqs may call on Wednesday, March 17, from 6 to 8 p.m. veteran of the Vietnam War. and a lifelong resident of this
at the funeral home.
area where he had many friends.
A!l on-line registry is available at www.andersonmcHe is survived by two daughters. Sara Lorraine Jordan
damel.com.
and Samantha Jordan; two brothers, Gerald David Jordan
and Brian Jordan; and a sister. Juanita Jordan.
In addition to his parents. he was preceded in death by
two brothers, William and Phillip.
A memorial service will be held II a.m .. Wednesday,
Paul E. Kauff of Middleport passed away on March 13,
March
17. 2010 at White-Schwarzel Funeral Home.
20 I 0 at the Overbrook Center in Middleport. .
Coolville.
He was born on June 30, 1933, son of the late Cecil and
There will be no visitation.
EvaBell (Foley) Kauff. He was a veteran of the Korean
You can sign the online guestbook at www.whiteConllict and was a retired employee of Meigs Local
schwarzelfuneralhome.com.
School District.
In addition to his parents, he was preceded by a brother:
Jim Kauff, and a sister, Freda (Kauft) Bing.
He is survived by his wife of 38 Years, Frances Kauff;
:.ons: Mike and Debbie Kauff: Tim Kauff: Kenneth Rife:
Connie B. Morris. 59. of Letart Falls/Racine, passed
Steve and Rhonda Rife; Joe and Mellessa Rife; away at 7:31a.m. Saturday. March 13.2010. in the Holzer
Daughters: Sherri (Kauff) and Robert Tobin; Mary Medical Center. Gallipolis.
(Kauff) and Art Tobin; Tina CKauff) Rayburn; sisters:
Born March 19, 1950, in Letart Falls, Racine. she was the
Helen (Kauff) Capehart; Pauline (Kauff) and Chester daughter of the late James Arnold and Wilma C. Teaford
Sheppard; Hazel Jean Kauff: 15 grandchildren; 26 great Anderson. On September 27. 1969. in Portland. Ohio she
grandchildren.
Married Wallace M. Morris, whom survives her.
Services will be held on Wednesday, March 17, 2010 at 1
She was a homemaker and a member of the Antiquity
p.m. at the Anderson McDaniel Funeral Home in Baptist Church.
Middleport. Officiating will be Rev. James Keesee. Burial
She is survived by her husband. Wallace M . Morris and
v-. ill be in Middleport Hill Cemetery. Visitation will be held son. Willis Morris. both of Letart Falls/Racine. one Sister.
twp hour:- prior to the funeral service.
Lori Ann Anderson; and an aunt. Martha Meadows, both of
An on-hne registry is available at www.andersonmc- Portland and several nieces and nephews.
daniel.com.
In addition to her parents. she was preceded in death by
two sisters: Brenda K. Anderson and Bonnie Brewer.
Funeral Services will be held at 11 a.m. on Wednesday.
March 17, 2010 at the Cremeens Funeral Home. Racine,
Vera Anna Weber. 85, of Tuppers Plams, Ohio passed with Pastor Don Walker officiating. Interment will follow
away Saturday, March 13,2010 at Arcadia Nursing Center. m the Letart Falls Cemetery. Friends may call at the funeral home Tuesday from 6-8 p.m.
·
Cooh die, Ohio.
On n condolences may be sent to the family by visiting
She was born Jan. 5, 1925 in Lon~ Bottom, daughter
meensfuneralhomes .com .
the late Fred and Ruth Branch Larkms. She "Was a home W\\ v-.

Middleport. on March lO, 2010 at 10 a.m. William Keith is
survived by hi:- wife, and his sons, William K. Kincaid Jr.,
a!1d Thomas R. Kincaid; his brother, John .P. Kincaid; his
s1:.tcr. Pauley Anne Beaver: four grandchildren and five
great grandchildren.

George Woodrow Nash

Gary Jordan

Paul Kauff

Connie Morris

Vera Anna Weber

.Free fun on the Easter Train
NELSONVILLE - The Children under three years
annual Easter Bunn) Tram old always ride for free
kicks off the Hockmg ''hen the) sit on a lap.
The event includes a 10Valle~ Scenic RaJ!,, ay's
2010 season. Rides depart mile round-trip train ride
from the Nelsom illc Depot with a ~top for a large egg
at 10 a.m. and 1 p.m. on hunt. Most eggs are filled
"ith candy and prizes:
Saturday. April 3.
eggs
arc
T"Wo children, ages 3-12. selected
for
larger
can nde for free with every redeemable
one adulr ticket purchasetl. :.tuffcd animals. toys and

pnzes. The hunt is di\ ided
into four age groups.
The Easter Bunny will
greet ) oung riders a~ they
depart from the train and
pose for pictures with
them. New this year. the
We tern
&amp;
Southern
Financial Group in Logan
'"'ill offer free child ID kits
with fingerprinting to help

keep ch1ldren safe.
Reservations for the
Easter train~ are suggested.
It has been a family
favorite since it started five
years ago.
For more information or
to order tickets, visit
www.hockingvalleytrain .or
g or /em·e a message at 800967-7834.

Local Briefs
Office closed
POMEROY
The
Meigs County Board of
Elections will he closed
Frida). Staff wi II be attending a meeting out of tO\\ n.

•

Egg hunt

TUPPERS PLAINS
Tuppers
Plains
fire
Department will hold an

6.62

City Holding (NASDAQ) 34.44
Collins (NYSE) - 60.30
DuPont (NYSE) - 35.48
US Bank (NYSE) - 25.90
General Electric (NYSE) -

Visit us
online at

Easter egg hunt at I :30 p.m.
on April 3 at the Tuppers
Plains schoolhouse. It is
free to children through 15.
Free hot dogs. chips and
soft drinks arc to he served.

March 26, at the Family Life
Center. Doors open at 4:30
p.m. ~tenu is baked ham.
cheese potato casserole.
gr~en beans and dessert.

Road closed

Free dinner
MIDDLEPORT
:Middleport Church of Christ
will serve its monthly free
community dinner. 5 p.m.,

RACINE - The Meigs
County
High,.,.ay
Department reports County
Road 24. Tornado Road,
will be closed a few days for

slip repair~. The closing
began yesterday and will
continue through Friday.
March 19.

Vernon Julius Holley. 93, Gallipolis, Ohio. died Saturday.
March 13,2010. at St. Mary's Medical Center. Huntington,
W.Va. Funeral services will be held at 1 p.m .. Thursday.
March 18. 2010, at Cremeens Funeral Chapel. Officiating
will be Rev. Alfred Holley assisted by Rev. Andrew
Parsons. Interment will be in Mound Hill Cemetery.
Friends may call from 5-8 p.m. Wednesday and one hour
prior to the funeral service on Thursday at the funeral
chapel. Expressions of sympathy may be sent to the family
by visiting www.cremeensfuneralhomes.com.

17.29
Harley-Davidson (NYSE) 26.50
JP Morgan (NYSE) - 43.07
Kroger (NVSE) - 22.30
Limited Brands (NYSE) 23.71
Norfolk Southern (NYSE) 54.56
Ohio Valley Bane Corp. (NASDAQ) - 24.67
BBT (NYSE) - 30.78
Peoples (NASDAQ) - 16.25
Pepsico (NYSE) - 66.15
Premier (NASDAQ) - 8.23
Rockwell (N YSE) - 54.99
Rocky Boot s (NASDAQ) -

9.14
Royal Dutch Shell- 57.93
Sears Holding (NASDAQ) 104.06
Wai·Mart (NYSE) - 55.42
Wendy's (NYSE) - 4.83
WesBanco (NYS E) - 15.97 .
Worthington (NYSE) - 16.90
Daily stock reports are the 4
p.m. ET closing quotes of
.transactions for March 15,
2010, provided by Edward
Jones financial advisors Isaac
Mills In Gallipolis at (740) 441 9441 and Lesley Marrero in
Point Pleasant at (304) 674·
0174. Member SIPC.

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Ena Louise Romine Lemle) Will died on Saturday March
13, 2010. Arrangements are incomplete and will be announced
by the Anderson McDaniel Funeral Home in Pomeroy. An on
line regisny is available at www.andersonmcdaniel.com.

· ATHENS-MEIGS EDUCATIONAL SERVICE CENTER
Contact Person: Michael Barnett. Curriculum Supervisor Phone: 740-742-2666
Mejgs County Kipderganep apd Preschool Registration and Screening for
Easterp Local. Southerp L9cal. apd Mejgs Local Schools
Children who will be 5 years old on or before August Ist. 2010 are eligible to attend kindergarten
during the 2010-20 II school year.
The kindergarten registration and screening schedule is as follows;
Eastern Local;
April 29th &amp; 30th

www.mydailysentinel.com

Your oti/i..tze·· .·
source for neivs

Vemon J. Holley

Etta Louise Romine Lemley Will

Local Stocks
AEP (NYSE) - 34.39
Akzo (NASDAQ)- 56.14
Ashland Inc. (NYSE) - 53.06
Big Lots (NYSE) - 35.99
Bob Evans (NASDAQ) - 32.1 1
BorgWarner (NYSE) - 36.87
Century Alurninum (NASDAQ)
- 14.49
Champion (NASDAQ)- 1.23
Charming Shops (NASDAQ) -

Deaths

Eastern Elementary

985-3304

Mejgs Local;
April 20th, 21st, 22nd, and 23rd
Meigs Primar)
742-3000
*Additionally. Meigs Local is having a Preschool registration and screening on May 3, 2010 at
Bradbury Learning Center. You can make appointments by calling 992-2165.
Southerp Local;
April 8th &amp; 9th
Southern Elementary
949-4222
*Additionally. Southern Local is having a Preschool registration and screening on May S, 2010 at
Southern Elementary School.
• Piea~t call or visit one of the above listed :;chools ~ arrange for an appointment for kindergarten
registration and times. Parents or guardians must bring their child who is enrolling to
registration. For safety measures, parents are asked to provide proper identification. proof
of residency, and any other applicable information showing legal guardianship.
• Please bring the child's birth certificate, social security dud. and immunization record. The
birth certificate must be the "original'' or "live" birth certificate.
• The child should have had 5 OPT. 4 Polio (4th dose of Polio must be administered on or after the
4th birthday regardless of the number of previous do~es), 2 M~tR. 3 Hepalltis B, and I TB Skin
Test w1thm a year before entering school. Beginning 2010-20 ll. lo..im.le•gartner:; must ha"c 2 doses
of the varicella (chickenpox) disease vaccine. In order to be considered valid, the lst varicella
vaccine must have been administered on or after the child's first birthday .,., ith a second dose
administered before entrv into kindergarten. In addition. the Ia" states that. "A pupil who has had
natural chkken pox. a~d presents a signed statement from the pupil's parent. guardian. or
physician to that effect, is not required to be immunized against chicken pox". ORC 3313 .67 I
(B )(3).

• School nuf).CS will be present at registration to answer any of) our questions concerning your
child's immunization requirements.
• School personnel will assess the speech. fine motor skills. gross motor skills and language
abilities of children who are being enrolled. lnfonnation about each child's perfonnance will be
provided to the parent/guardian.
• Information obtained during the registration and screening process allows school staff members
to plan activities that will make the child's first year of school successful and enjo)able. Please
call your school as soon as possible and make an appointment to register your child for
kindergarten. We look forward to working .,., ith you to prO\ ide the best educational opportunities
for your ch1ld.

�----~~~----~--~--------------~----------~~~----

PageA6

The Daily Sentinel

Ohio Briefs

Tuesday, March 16,
1

2 010

HeartWorks program contributing to patient's health
Bv LINDSAY C ASTLE

Nuclear plant in Ohio faces
new repairs to reactor

OU STiJDcNTVOLUNTE'I=R
ATOBLE'"'E"SS

t\ li ii;Ns
f'ardi:H.:
OAK HARBOR (AP)
CnK·h ha\e been found in the rehahilitat10n makeo; .t big
nozz.les of a nuclear reactor head at a plai1t that \\ ns closed d1ffcrence in the quaht) of
life .111 individual can
from 2002 to 200--+ because of nn acid kuk.
Two cracks appear to shO\\ :-oigns of leaking acid at thl! achic~c during rccmery
Davis-Bes:-.e plant just ea~t of "Ji)ledo, the U.S. Nuclear from a heart .lttack. clllg,lna
(chest pain), reart \ahe
Regu latory Commission said Monda).
Plant operator FirstEncrru COJ]). appears to ha\ e caught the replacement or repair,
problem in its early stages and said thattht.: cracks can be tix~.:d. angioplac;ty, coron,u) artery
The problems arc in the reactor head that replaced the hypao;~ -;urgery or H hear1
one where the acid leaks were fo und in 2002 "I hat discov- twnsplant.
·
ery led the go\'ernment to beer up inspection~ and training
HeartWorks Cardiac and
PulrniHKtl') Re,1ahilitation
and a record S2S million in fines against Firstl!nergv.
The Akron-based utilit) ~aid t\ londny that a dozen not- Program, a sen ice offered
zles could oe cracked and that 1t ha~ not yet completed by O'B lenes5 Memonal
checks of20 of the 69 control rod nouleo;.Jnspcctions \\ill Ho~pital 111 cnnjuncuon
co ntinue throughout the \\ eck.
\\ ith Well Works at Ohw
"We have begun a comprehensive invcsttgat1on to deter- Cniversity (Ot;), offers carmine the underlying cause," said Barry Allen.u FiNEner&lt;•y
diac and pulmonary rehabJI0
vice president in charge of Davrs-Besse.
itution scrvtces to patients
Unlike eight years ago. FirstEnergy \\as qt11ck to notify of all ages.
regulators.
Tom Murra), an exercise
T he damage found in 2002 was the most extensive cor- physiologht .mtl director of
rosion at a U.S. nuclear reaclllr. The NRC said then that Hcru1Works, ha~ a team thnt
FirstEnergy delayed a report and \\ aited three months to includes a medical director,
noti fy regulators that its new findings about the damage a registered cardiac nurse, a
had contradicted earlier conclusions.
regi~tered dietit1an, a graduThe plant returned to full ptmer in 2004 after FirstEnergy ate !&gt;tudent Ill the health
spent $600 million making repairs and buying replacement psycholog) program at OlJ
power because of the ~hutdm' n.
ami eight graduate students
in the c)inicP.l exercise
physiolog) program at OU.
" lndiv1duab who complete the 36 ret:ommended
cardiac rehabilitation sesCOLUMBVS (AP) - Police in Ohio haw brought more ~ions at HeartWorks can
charges against a Walmart shopper accused of punchin.g 1 reduce their risk of death
children in the head for kicks.
from a second heart attack
Columbu~ Police Sgt. John Hurst says t\' o more assault by as much as 30 percent,"
counts were filed Sunda) against 68-year-old Ralph .\1urray ~aid. It 1s a program
Conone He was arrested at a \\'almart "tore last week on facilitating patient recovery.
two similar misdemeanors after police said he smacked a enhancing qualit) of life.
woman's sons with a key sticking out of his fist.
Identifying risk factors. nnd
Hurst sa) s the new counts invoh e a 2-year-old boy struck erH.:ou raging
necesary
the same Wa) in I\\ o scparute incidents M the ~tore on Feb. 28. life~tyle changes.
Investigator~ say Conone told them it was exciting to hit
Factor~ that ma) conchildren with their parents close b)
'"'
tribute to heart di~ea~e
Conone remained jailed on $150,000 bond Monday on the include a poor diet, high
fir~t charges. His attorne),Tml)aA:.kew,declined comment.
blood pressure, ~moking,
diabete&lt;; and family medical
history.
Patients complete three
sessions per week for 12
weeks. They engage in
COLL'MBUS (AP) - Hundreds ha\e turned out on the supervised exercise and
Ohio State Uni\ ersit) campus to t;hO\'-' support dunng the bur- several asse sments The"
tal proces ion of an emplo) ee gunned do'' n by a ubordmdte also participate in a once-aFort)-etght-}ear-old buildrng set"\ ices manager LuiT) \\eek l~ture thJ.t CO\ers a
\\ alhngton v. as kJilcd earl) last Tuesda) in a unn ersit) range of topic&lt;; o;uch as Idenmaintenance building by a janitor about to be fired tifying risk factors as v.ell
f'athaniel BrO\\ n also shot and wounded another of his as strategies and tool&lt;; to
help modify their current
bosses before takmg hi~ own life.
lifestyles and stress.
Wallington·~ funeral was Sunday. For Monday's procesare
When
patients
sion, Ohio State had encouraged students, faculty and others to line the route, and the crowd stood three deep in spots. referred b) their ph) sicl.tl!"
The hearse v,ound through campus on its way to the ceme- to HeartWorkc;, tht!y partitrtery, passmg by two sites the university aid Wallington pate m ph)' sicaI ex.en.. be
education for a healthter
loved: the Ftsher College of Business and Ohio Stadium.
Iifest) le, nutrition coun~el­
ing and a stress management program to meet mdividual needs. Empha&lt;;t~ ts

More charges in alleged
child-punching at Walmart

l

Procession honors slain
Ohio State employee

Cop dies of 'cardiac
incident' after chase

CLEVELAND HEIGHTS (AP) -The coroner\ office
a "cardiac incident" as the tentative cause of death for
a Cleveland area police officer \\ ho collapsed while run- 1
ning after a suo;;pect. ·
Thirty-year-old Thomas Patton II \\as rushed Saturday
COLUMBt;s (AP)
night to a hospital, where he died. lie was the ~on of state Puhlic dis~ussion of u.:~:u:-oa­
Sen. Thomas Patton and had served on the Cleveland tion~ of religion~ di..,criminaHeights police force for seven years.
tion, harassment and retaliaPolice Chief Martin Lentz sa\~ several officers were tion bv three fired state
chasing a person on foot around 8:45 p.m. Saturday when worker~ against their former
Patton stopped suddenly and doubled over, then began run- boss \\ ac; cffecth elv stlenced
ning again before collapsmg.
Monda) \\ ith a iegisl.lti\ e
Cleveland Heights ~ Ia) or Edward Kelley says Officer panel'~ creation of a subPatton died a hero.
committee over p~r..,onnel.
Funeral home calling hours arc scheduled forTuesda) and
After near!\ three hours
Wednesday, with a funeral f-. lass set for Thursda) morning. behind closed doors. member~ of the Ohil) Workers'
Compen~ation
Counctl
'oted unanimous!) to create
a five-member subconunittee on personnel and
COLUM BUS (AP) - Ohro gasoline prices nrc up 4 cenh I promptly adjourned. The
from last week, continuing a stead) climb that the govem- three dismissed employee~
ment says will take pump prices beyond. the ,$3 mark. .
-- attorneys Kim Finle)
A survey from auto club AAA. the Orl Pncc Informahon and Shadya Yazback and
Service and Wright Expre.,~ put!'&gt; the statewide average for executive assistant Sue
regular-grade gasoline at $2.72 per gallon , compared to Jr\\ in
left the room wrth$2.68 last Monday.
out having a chance to
Prices at Ohio pumps are 23 cents higher than. they were speak. The three \\orked for
a month ago but arc 7 cents below the current natrona! aver- the council, whil'h was creage of $2.79.
ated to look out for the seeuThe federal Energy Department said last week .it expects rit) of Ohio\ insurance
gas prices to surpas~ $3 per gallon as more motonsts hll the fund for injured workers.
road this spring and summer.
.
.
State
Sen.
Stephen
A year ago, gas was almost a dollar cheaper 111 Oh10. Buehrer. who chairs the
averaging $ 1.84 for regular.
council. declined to ~!abo­
rate. on what the personnel
committee's role would he,
if any, in resolving the
employees'
aile gat tons
against their supen isor.
Thesday...Pattly sunny. Highs in the 1rtid 50s. North \ 'lrginla Mcinerney.
Committee
member
.
winds around 5 mph.
Robert
Kcndis.
a
Thesday night ...Partly c~oudy. Lov.:~ 111 the upper ~Us.
workers·
comCleveland
North wi nds around 5 mph 111 the evcnmg ...Bccormng hght
pensatio n attorney who
· and variable.
Wednesday...Mostly sunny. Highs around 60. North proposed the idea. said the
subcommittee
would
winds around 5 mph.
.
.
review
admi ni~trative poiJ Wednesday night ...Partly cloudy. Lows 111 the n11d 30s.
cie~ and personnel dealings
Northwest winds around 5 mph .
.
.
over
an unsp~cified time
Thursday through Friday...Mostly clear. H1ghs 111 the
period . He said it "wasn't
mid 60s. Lows in the upper 3Ch.
.
Friday night and Saturday.••Par1ly cloudy. Lows 111 the necessarily a solution" to
the fl ap over the firings.
.
upper 30s. Highs in the mid 60s.
The thrcl' employees
Saturday night ... Mo!-&gt;tly cloudy w1th a --tO percent
allege that ,\ lclnl'rnl').
chance of showers. Lows around 40 .
Sunday...Cloudy wi th a 50 percent chance or shO\vers. acti\e in an C \ angelical
megachurch northeast of
Much cooler with highs around 50.
.
Sunday night and Monday... Mo~t ly cloudy. Lows 111 the Columbus and an occasional
guest on "The 700 Club,''
lower 30~. Highs in the upper 40s.

Submitted photo

Gerry Stotts, wearing an EKG monitor, walks on a treadmill as part of his rehabilitation at
HeartWorks Cardiac and Pulmonary Rehabilitation Charlie Jones, a graduate stude nt in
a c mical masters deg ee program at Ohro University, measures his vital signs.
pl.tced on ,\ re_u r e en:.
routme uild permane
hfestyle dl;mge tor the
patient "Pauents tla\ ~ the
opuon of graduatmg to a
ma nten ce program at
Wei \\
Ol or conttn
umg t H rt \\ orh :· o;ard
Murr..t}
Heart\\ orks also proHdes
a pulmonal) rehubilitation
program that is especmll)
helpful for people with a
kilO\\ n lung d1seac;e such as

... th'11
nroruc bronchiti5,
mph} t.ma or chronic
ob ,trul-11\ e pulmonal) &lt;.li~­
ense (COPD). Indtviduals
\\Jtt other medical condisuch as bronchiecta ts,
naJ) fibrosis or who
had a lung transplant
J.rt: , J..o eligible for
Heart\\ork5
In the pao;t year. both
HeartWorh programs had
more thdn 5,000 \isits
from more than I 00

patients ranging in age
from 19 to 8~L A maximum
ot six patienb are seen durIn{! eHch class in order
pro' ide the best care
each patient.
For more 111jormatwn
about
HeartWorb'
Cardiac and Pulmonan
Reha!JI/ttatwn ProRram;,
call (740) 593-2278 or
(740J 592-9457 or comacr

your primary care
dan.

phr~i­

Discrimination claims by fired workers in limbo

list~

AAA: Ohio gas prices
up for 4th week in a row

Meigs County Forecast

held the executt\ e ..,e.,sion
because per~onncl mutters
and pending litigation are
both confidential. He ..,aid
Mclnerne\ .,.. ill contmue m
her role exceUtl\ e du-ector.
"'Ibe director h .t capable
profes~ion.tl '' 1th the right
"kill et to can·) on the dutie&lt;.
of the office,'' he said.
In re ... ponse to a que ... tion
by Buehr-er. legal coun el
John W11liams told the
counctl that ~baring det.tih
from the closed-donr -,cssion "'ith the public could
cost tho::.e members \\ ho are
attorneys their Ia\\ lken ~es.

led the staff regularly in
p1 :t) cr. prm tded them with
copies of "God at Work"
COs to ti&lt;;tcn to. and encouraged one to read a book she
\\rotc, titled "Single not
Separate: How to l\1ake the
Church a htmtl) ."
In letter~ sent March 2 to
council members. the three
alleged the) \\ere \HOngfully d1s..:harged and asked
to ch,mge the term~ of their
tem11nation&lt;. from .firings to
a settlement. Mclncrne)
has said all their alkgation~
are false .
Buehrer said the council

as

\1clnerne\ c1t in on the
first portion· of the 13 mem
ber committee·., executi\l~
ses:-oion. pre~umabl) to pro' ide a '-) nopsis of the
C\ents that led to the finn!!
of her staff Ia t month. She
spent the ren1c1inder of the
clo~ed-door meeting sittmg
.!lone 111 the Statehouse.
Before the executt' e ~e.., ­
~•on. counctl member Dan
Dodd, chmrman of t.
Hou~e
lm.urun
Ct.Hnmittee, announced t
'' ould hold heanng.., on the
council'~ operations in the
\\ ak.e of the firingo.,.

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The Daily Sentinel

ll l'O\\ ns Sl'C

Bl

Delhommens' eterun, Page B2

NC \ A Men' BrackN, Pngc H6

Tuesday, l\farch 16,2010

SEODAB honors John
Scott for 45 years with
RV, KC high schools
B v B RYAN W ALTERS

BWAL.TERSCMYDAILYTI'IJBUNE COM

Bobcats
win MAC
tourney

A"l HENS, Ohio - After
45 year&lt;; of runmng the
scoreboard for both K)ger
Creek and River Valle)
high school&lt;;, John Scott
earned a well-deserved
da) off at the Coil\ o on
Saturday.
CLbVE..LAND (AP) And that wasn't all he
Annon Bassett "alked into earned.
the intervie\v room lugsing
Scott. who has been the
the
Mid-Amencun offictal t1me-ke~per for
Conterencc championship football and basketball at
troph) under his ann. After both KCHS and RVIIS
sliding into his chair on the.
dais, Ohio's stat guard ~&gt;ince h1s high school days,
proudly propped the trea- was recognized by the
sure on the table in front of Southeastern Ohio District
Athletic Board this past
l.
le wasn't letting it out of weekend with the f'nend
of Youth Award.
sight.
The honor, which was
"l'\c got a tiqht grip on
it," Bassett smd with a
mlle. "1 can't bchcvc it."
Ohio. gi' en little chance
of winning the MAC' title
''hen the tournament began,
capped a &lt;&gt;tunning run
through the top of the field
Saturda) night b) beating
defending champion Akron
81 75 in O\enime to cam
(he Bobcats the league's
automatic NCAA bid.
Bas&lt;&gt;elt scored 25 and
freshman DJ. Coo(&gt;Cr had
2 ~ and made three btg pia)'
in O\ ertJme d~ the ninthseeded Bobc.Jts (21-14)
bec.m1c the lov. est-seeded
team to v.tn the league title.
After v. mnm at Ball State
111 th
pen111 round they
camt: t (')e\ eland and
top seeded
kn c k~d ( t
Kent &lt;itate, fourth- ceded
•am1 tOhto) and finall)
thml seeded Zip (24-

tf

presented to Scott during
halftime of the Div1sion IV
district
championship
game between ~lanchester
and Southern, goes to an
mdh idual that has provided long and dedicated scr' ice as timers. announcers,
scorekeepers, team physician/medical trainers or
chain crew volunteers.
Scott begnn running the
clock at the now defunct
Kyger Creek while still in
lugh school, then continued his endeavor at RV HS
\\hen it opened in the fall
of llJlJ I .
Scott, who started in
1965, has taken in over
I .000 ga111es as the scot ekeeper for both of those
schools.

Buckeyes
win Big Ten
tournament
I~DIANAPOLIS (AP)-

- -=
.

Sarah Hawle.y/photo

SEODAB secretary Dan Bnske.r, left, pr~sents th.e Fnend of
Youth award to John Scott, nght, dunng halfttme of t~e
Southern-Manchester contest on Saturday at the Convo tn
Athens, Ohio.

l)

[J

'It v. n't eas),.. c;aid
Oh10 LO ch John Groce.
F r th Bob&lt;.ats, nothmg
\\ s
T t'&gt; v. sn t

be th tr "

uppo ed to

.u. )et the) Oh:r-

Sarah Hawley/photos

111 JUnes, pla) er u.,.
pcn~tom. and a rash of do!&gt;e

l:

m

Members of the Southern boys basketball team pose for a picture after recetvtng the 2010 DtVISton IV dtstnct runner-up
trophy at the conclus1on of Saturday's contest against Manchester at the Convo in Athens Oh1o

south ern falis to

l&lt;hse., to v. m thctr first
MAC cr0\\11 smce 2005.
"\\c \\ent through a lot Of
~tlf th1s \car and we all
Mll)ed
together," s.tid
Bns,ett. v. ho began his college careet .lt Jnd1.ma, but
'
lelt in the wake of coach 1
BY SARAH HAWLEY
Southern scored lirst in
Ke]\ in Sampson's dl~- SHAWLEVCMYDAILYTFI BUNE COM the second quarter. cutting
mt&lt;;sal. "A lot of teams
the lead to 3 points just 13
\\Ould have thro\\n in the
ATHENS. Ohio
The seconds into the period on a
towel. but we kept working late founh quaner rally b) Coppick 1\\0-pomter. The
hard. All 12 guys came to the Southern Tomadoes Tornadoes got to within
practice with their hard hats came up JUSt short on three again at the 4:44 mark
on.''
Saturdn), as the Manchester \\ ith a score of 13-10 on a
Bu &lt;;ett v. as named the Grey hounds
defeated ba ket by Cyle Rees. A 5-0
toum,tment M\ P. finishing Southern 69-59 in the db- run b) the Gre) hounds took
v.ith 116 potntl&gt; in Ohio's trict final. The \tctory ga'e the lend to eight, before
four \\Ill!'. O\ cr an unforget the Greyhound" (I 5·9) thetr Southern scored consecutive
"even-da) ~tretch.
first district title in 60 years. ba~kcts b) Michael Manuel
Conyers led Akron
Southern ( 17-6) began the and Rees to mare the score
v. 1th
points and 12 game missmg its fit-&lt;.t six 18-14 with 2:39 remaining
Chns shots from the field and in the half. An 8-2 run b\
rebounds.
and
McKnight scon;~ 1,8 \\lth committing four turnovers .Manchester to close out the
lO ~oard~. The Ztps fourth in the first four minutes of half gave the Greyhounds a
strmght title game appear- the
contest.
while I0 point lead. 2fi·l 6. at the
ance ended with another Manchester took a 7-0 lead. intermi::.sion.
tough loss. Three years ago, Southern's fir.st po nts came
Manche:-.ter scored the
they were beaten on a last- at the 3:50 mark of the first first four point::. or the secsecond bank shot hy Miami quarter on a Scan Coppick ond hal r to take a 14 point
(Ohio)
two-po111ter.
Manchester lead. Southl!rn scon:d its
This time, they lost to a took an 11-3 lead before first points or the hal r on a
Andrew Roseberry hit a basket and frCl~ tlmm by
team on a mission.
"We haw notlun~ to be three-pointer to end the first M ichdel
Manuel. Southern senior Colby Roseberry (20) releases a shot
attempt during Saturday's 0·4 distnct final against
embarrass.ed about,' Akron qunrter with .Manchester
Please see Southern, 81
Manchester at the Convo in Athens, Ohio.
coach Ketth Dambrot sntd. leading by 5 pomts, 11-6.
"We fought our behinds off.
We tried. That's all thnt matters to me."
I
The Zips couldn't con tam
Bnssett and Cooper. who
combined for 48 points. 13
State,
the 65-mcmber national in 2009-10 - with Texas, Michigan
B v J IM O ' C o NNELL
rebound::.. eight ,1 sists and
ASSOCIATED PRESS
media panel and \\as on top Kentucky and S)racusc al o Georgcto\\ n .. Tennes~ee,
~even 3-pointcrs.
BYU.
for the second straight reaching No. I for a total of \\ l'iCOnStll,
"fhey rc unbelie\ able."
Kansas \\as on top of the v.eek. The Juyhawks were four week-.
a record 53 Pittsburgh. B.t) lor and
McKnight said. "You can't presenson poll and the No. 1 in the pre cason poll teams were ranked at orne Mat)land.
give them uny space or the Ja) hawks were in the same and for thy first eight ..., ecks point in the sea..,on. That
The last fh e ranked team-.
ball i'&gt; goin~ up. And if it's spot m the season's final of the season until losing at broke the record of 49 teams \\Crc Vanderbilt, Gonzaga.
· up. it s going 111.''
Tennessee. Till')' had anoth- in 2007-08.
Tcxa-. A&amp; :\1, Richmond and
25.
is almo't alwa)::. the Top
l'he
Jayhawks,
the
overall
er
four-week
stretch
at
No.
I
Kentucky.
Duke
and
Xavier.
. the MAC linal delivI
seed
in
the
NCAA
No.
Texas mo\ l'd into the 1'\o.
by
a
lo'&gt;s
at
Oklahoma
Svmcuse.
the
other
No.
I
ended
ered.
tournament.
were
a
unaniwere
second
through
I
for the..· fiN time..' in :-.ehool
-.ecds.
State.
'fherc \Vere 13 tics, 24
motls
pick
Monday,
their
fourth
this
week.
This
was
history
iu Januar) and
This
is
thl!
second
time
lead change::., countless cru·
cial plays and five extra 15th week this ::.cason on top Kansas was No. I in the the 13th time in the la~t 14 stayed there for two Wl'c..'ks
minutes of heart-pounding of the rankings. That match- final poll. In 1996-97. thl' seasons Duke \\as mnkcd in before starting a 'l'.lsones Knnsas in 1996-97 und Jayha\\ks went into the the top 10 in the final poll. ending run that :-.:m the
action.
Ohio State was fifth fol- Longhorns go 7-lJ after a 17Bassett's two free throws lllin&lt;,is m 2004·05 for the NCAA tournament as the
ga'e Ohio a 68 65 lead wtth most weeks at No. I in a top·ranked team and 1he) IO\\ ed b) West Virginia. 0 start. fhc) bcc.unc the
J 3.5 seconds to go in regu- season since Duke ran the lost to Arizona in the round Kansa:-. State. ~e'' ~ t exico. fifth team to hold the No. I
Villanova and Purdue.
ranking and then drop out of
of I6.
tation. but just as he did in table in 1991-92.
Butler led the second 10 the poll 111 the same sea~on
Knnsas (32-2) received all
\Vh1le the top of the poll
the Zips' douhle-overtimc
Alabanld \\Us the last to
the firsf place votes from didn't change much at No. I followed
by
Temple.
Please see Ohio, 86

Grey h0 U ndS 69• 59

1

i

E'\an Turner didn't need
an) late-game heroics on
Sunda).
When it appeared there
v. U'!&gt; nothing more he could
dQ to make his Big Ten tournament performance better,
the junior had 31 points and
II rebounds to lead No. 5
Ohio State over Minnesota
90-61 in the championship
game.
'furner hit a 37-foot shot
at the buzzer to beat
Michigan in the quanerfinals, then scored 12 of his
31 points after regulation in
a double-overtime win
1 against Illinois in the semifinals. He topped it hy setting the tournament record
for points in a championship game and was the
ob\ ious choice as the tournament"... most outstanding
player.
Ohio State (27-7) made
nine 3-pointers in the sec·
ond half to pull awa) after
leading by just three points
at halftime. Da' td Light)
::.cored 20 points and Jon
Diebler added 19 for the
Buckeve::.. v.ho tied the
record- for largest -.ictory
margin in a Big Ten tournament ~arne.
Ohio State coach Thad
Matta said Turner's weekend was as good a.;; he has
seen. The point guard averaged 27.7 point::.. 8.0
rebound~ and 6.7 as-.ist~ in
three games.
,
Matta told Turner to take
over the game, and he
responded \\ ith 22 points in
the second half.
"When 'ou look at the
bod) of "work me: the
'" eekend, 1 mean. thi has to
go dov.n a-. probabl) - I
knO\\ I'' c been 111 this
lea~ue for ''x \ears:· Matta
saul ··r,e ne\er seen an)thin!! Jike it."
Ohio State recel\ ed a No.
2 ~eed in the l\1id\\eSt
Regional. The Bucke) es
will pla) Cal-Santa Barbara
111 the fir~t round of the
NCAA tournament on
F·rida) in :\111\\ aukee. Ohio
State \\as a team man)
expen-. thought could draw
.1 i\o. 1 ~eed. but the
Buckeye-. d1dn't nund
\\here they ended
"It'~ a good dra\\. ·Turner
said. "We're close to home
in l\hh\aukec. \\e'\e just
got to go out there and take
care of busines'). II) and
handle \\hat v.e c.m control."
La\\ renee
\\est brook
scored 17 points and De\ oe
Joseph added 14 for the
Golden Gopher' (21 13 l.
'' ho had beaten Purdue by
27 on Saturda\.
Mmne:-.ota recei' ed an atlarge bid. and the lith-seeded Golden Gophers ''ill
play ~o. 6 :-;eed X a\ ier in
the \\'c-.t Regional on Friday
in ~1ilwaukee. The team
gathered in a room at
Con ...eco Fieldhou:-r, Ull!&gt;Ure
if it would get a bid. The
Golden Gophers might ha\ e
per:-.uaded the ~election
committee b) beating No.
II :0..1ichtgan St.Jte and No.

ur..

Please see OSU, 86

Kansas closes as the unanimous No. 1 in AP poll

'

'

do it in 2002-03.
Ken tuck\ spent one \\ eek
on top and the \\ ildcab
\\ere a unanimou pick that
"eek. S)f'dCU'e mO\ed to
~o. 1 for one \\eck, the
Orange'.s fir:-.t time on top
since 1990.
Kansas.
Kl·ntucky.
Villanova and Duke spent
the entire sea...on in the top
10. \tichigan State. Purdue,
West Vir2:inia. Tennessee
and George to\\ n '''l're the
other team:- to be ranked all
season.
Five schools
~otre
Dame.
Portland,
i'\onh\\ e'tem, Miami and
Please see Poll, 81

•

�-----~ - ~----~ ~

-

. --

~-

Page B2 • 'l11c Daily Sentinel

~

www.myd ailysentinel.com

Tuesday, March 16, 2010

Browns see QB Delhomme as veteran presence
· B l~REA. Ohio (AP) Mike HolnH!r~n kno\\~ Jakl·
Delhomme i~ 35 ) car~ old and
coming utr the '' t 1rst season of
his career.
It's his 92 suuis. Pw Rm\ I
season nnd Super Bowl
appearance that appealed to
the president nf thl' Ck\ eland
Bro\\ ns.
"~ l v O\\ n bchet b thi' team
needs an agin~ veteran."
Holmgren saill. · Il1ey need a
guy tnnt is going to grah
evcrvbody b\ the throat and
say. "'Follow "me throuch that
door.' I don't look at hii11 as an
aging veteran. I look at him a'
the leader I wanted."
The Bro\\ ns completed a
two-vcar contract
with
Delh'lmune on Monday
desp1te his eight touchdowns
and IS interceptions last ~a­
son with the Carolina
Panth...:rs. I k lost his Marting
job after II rames and WiL'&gt;
unexpecteoly released la~t
week even though the
Panthers still owe him S12
million for next -;ec~son.
Delhomme tool,. f.trt in the
B~?" ns · ti~t del\ o \ ol.untal)
ott season
"orkout-.
on
Monda).
"lie called me first thing in
the moming ''hen he made
the decision to s1gn." Browns
coach E1i.:: !'\h.ngma l&gt;aid.
"Better than cotke the way he

lclt. His excitement to be here.
that rejuvenmion. that p&lt;t'&gt;sion
that he\ had for so many
\Cars, it Wa~ fun to hear from
~l head coach's perspective."
Holmgren was still deciding
whether to keep Brady Quinn
\\hen Delhomme bcl'ame
.tvniluble. making the decision
much easier. Quinn was traded
Sunday to the Denver Broncos
for fullback Pcvton Hillis. u
20 II si.\th-rour1J draft pick
and a conditional pick in 2012.
The Browns didn't stop
there. trading linebacker
Kamerion Wilnhky to the·
Oakland Raiders on Sunday
for a third-round pick in
April's draft.
'll1e
move
to
sign
Delhomme and trade Quinn.
though. completed a "hirlwind \\-eek for the Bro\\ ns in
which Holmgren made h!s
biggest impact during his brid
tenure in Cleveland. He wa~
trying to moid the dilemma
that cngultcd Mangini last
)Car. when Mangini couldn't
decide bctw&lt;;en Quinn and
Derek Anderson a~ his stru1ing
quo.rtcrhac k.
Now both arc gone:
Anderson w:to,; rclensed last
week. In their place are
Delhomme
and
Seneca
Wallace, acquired in a trade
IQst "eek w1th Seattle. The
Browns also ha\e Brett

IV PJ.1yer of the Year Blake
Ble\ ins scored 16 points,
Travis Combs had 14
from Page Bl
points, and Daw-,on Little
scored 10 points. Dylan
Manchel&gt;tcr took its largest Ricketts had nine points and
lead of the conte'\l at the Eli Schwartt scored two
4:03 mark of the thtrd pen- points.
Blevins
added
16
od. going ahead 38 19. The
rebounds
to eam a double~
Greyhound&lt;; \\Ould lead by
19 points on t\\-O other occa- double for the game.
sions in the conte-.t. A 5-0 Combs and Little each had
run b\ Southetn cut the lead three assists for the
back 'to 14. but Manchester Gre\ hounds. and Little led
answered with a 5-0 run of the· \\a) in steals with
its O\\ n to tegain lhe 19 seven.
Southern out rebounded
point ad\ ant,tge
The
Tomadoes dosed to within ~1anchester 37-25 in the
14.45-31. at the end of the contest. but .Manchester
Michael won the turnover battle b)
third penod
ManOel scored 12 of :.ix Manchester was 2 ~-58
Southern's 15 pomto,; 111 the ( ~97) trom the field m the
third quartc
game "Ith Southern going
~anchester ..ored first m
23 63 ( .365)
Each t~am
the final qu..t.rto.:r .md led Ci2- made fout three-pomters,
33 at the 5 21 mark of the wtth Manchester attempttng
period. A Reec:. t]lrec-peint- 14 and the Tornadoes :.hooter at the 5: 10 mark -.tal1ed ing 21 . Manchester \\as 19off a 20-6 mn by the Purple 30 ( .633) from the free
and Gold that brought them throw line and Southern
back to within five points. was 9-13 (.692).
58-53. at the 1:40 mark .
Ylanchester led for the
Rees had 12 points dUring entirety of the contest. with
the run. ~ Ith the Tornadoes Southern pulling to '' ithin
abo gettmg ke) pomts from three points at the 7:46 and
Colb) Roscberr). Michael 4:44 mark-. of the second
1anuel. and Dustin Salser. quarter. Manchester had
Manchester stretched the previouslv
defeated
lead back out in the tina! Southern fn the 2008 district
minutes, scoring their final semifinals by a -,core of 6313 points at the free throw 49.
The Ton1adocs concluded
line. The Grevhounds did
not make a field !!Oal in the thdr season just one same
final three minute" of the shy of last season's reg10nal
conte~t. Coppick and Sat ... er tournament appearance. ''I
made basket&lt;; clown the just thought it was really
stretch. but it wa" not tough to get back here to
enough a::. Manchester held this point With what we lost
off the Tornadoe" for the from last year, four pretty
impo11ant players. It was a
69-59 ' ictory
''We got more aggrcsivc little tougher road this year,
offen~ivel\ on our break. we had to beat two higher
we were taking the ball to seeds than u-., in the secthe hole ,md we didn't do tional champiomhip (Pike
that fort~ o and a half quar- Eastern) and in the fir~t
I
think they round of districts (South
ters.
(1\lfanchester) got rattled a Webster)." stated Caldwell
little btl becau-,e we are not of the return trip to the disnormally a fuli cou11 pres- trict final. "These guys
sure type of team. We had accomplished a lot. I'm
some gu) s out there scrap- reallv proud of them."
This was the final game
ping and battltng and pl~ly­
ing, that was a rreat eflo11 for Southern seniors Cyle
out of our gu)l&gt;," Southern Rces. Dustin Sal-.er. Sean
coach Jeff C,tid\\ ell l&gt;aid Coppick . .Michael Manuel.
Roseberry. and
about the o;econd half come- Colb)
Taylor Deem. When talking
back.
Southern w.t., Jed 111 scor about his seniors. Cald\\ ell
ing by Michael Manuel with said, "It's a great group. We
18 point&lt;~. Rccs .tdded 16 onh returned two starters
points. Coppid. had s1x from last year. some of
point~,
and
Andrew them came otT the bench for
Roseberry and Z.tch Manuel us last year. and olf the JV
team. So for those guys to
each scored fiH! pomts.
and
Colhy come together and play as
Salser
Roseberry each scored four well t~s they did down the p
points with T.1ylor Deem stretch was great. The thing
added one point to round about them is that they are
out the ~cot ing for the all really good kiLh and I'll
mio;s that about them. I told
Tornadoes.
Ree-.,
Coppick.. ami them. you set th'c bar p1cll)
Michael
Manuel
each high for us to be back here
grabbed seven rebounds to in the Jistnct championship
lead
the
Tornadoes. two years in a row. and the
Andrew Rosebcrr) led the younger guys have a lot or
way on the offensi\ c glass \\Ork to Jo."
with three hoards. Rees had
MANCHESTER 69,
four assists followed by
SOUTHERN 59
Michael Manuel \\ ith three.
11 15 19 24 69
Michael Manuel JeJ in M'chester
Southern
6
10 15 28 59
steals with three. while
MANCHESTER (15·9) Eli Schwartz.
Rees.
Salser. Andrew (3)
1 0·0 2. Travts Combs 4 5·6 14. Dylan
and
Zach Ricketts 4 0·1 9. Kyle Adams 0 0·0 0
Roseberry.
Manuel each had t\o,o. Rccs Dalton West 0 0·2 0. Blake Blev10s 5 5·
6 16. McKenzte Smtth 0 0·0 o, Dylan
and Andre\\ Roseberry each Hanson
7 3 5 18. Dawson Ltltle 2 6·10
took charges for the Purple 10 TOTALS· 23 19·30 69. Three·potnt
goals· 4 (Combs. Rtcketts. Blevtns
and Gold.
Hanson).
Manchester was kd by (3) SOUTHERN (17·6): Cyle Rees 6 3-4
Dylan Hanson with 18 16, Dustin Salser 1 1·2 4, Taylor Deem
points. Southca~t Ohio D- 0 1·2 1, Sean Copptck 3 0·0 6, Colby

Ratliff, who served as their
third quarterback last season.
While Holmgren concedes
that Quinn·~ 12 -.tarts with the
Brov.ns Vvcren 't enough to
make a fair as~cssmcnt. he
thought it was time to start
over.
"l didn't want to go into
traming. camf) w1th the type of
llllCei1amty l 1at they went into
training camp "'ith Ja~t yem·."
he said. "I don't think it\ a
health) thing for the team.''
When Holmgren reviewed
tapes of last sea-.on, he saw an
offense that sputtered with
both quru1crbacks. Anderson
and Quinn combined to complete about half their passes
while throwing II touchdowns and 17 interccptiOit&lt;;
''When your qu&lt;u1erbad;s
play the "ay they played,.it's
pretty hard to win games in
this league;· he ~aid. "I just
f...: It I wasn't ooin~ to be doing
my job if I ilion t attack that
situation."
In Delhomme. the Browns
are !:!etting a quru1erback who
led the Panthers to an NFC
championship in 2003 and
made the Pro Bowl in 2005.
But hl' has al~o thnmn 23
interceptions in his last I 2
games, mcluding live in a
playoff gmnc in 2008 and four
more in lao.,t season's opener.
Mangini ' was on the

Patriot..,' defensive staff when
Dclhornme nearly rallied the
Panthers to a victory over
New England in the 2004
Super Bowl. He threw for 323
yards and three touchdowns in
Carolina's 32-29 loss to the
Patriob..
"He's a proven. consistent
winner.'' Mangini said. " I
do~'t think it's uncommon for
a guy to have a bad year.
When you look at his body of
work. I know what his touchdowns/interception~ ratio was,
but there were a lot of good
plays on that tape. too. Guys
do go through bad years. He's
been very consistent in tenns
of his production and ability to
\\in games."
Holmgren made no promises to Delhomme that he will
start. but it's certainly the
intention. That increases the
chance Cleveland will draft a
'qual1crback
this
year.
Holmgren said he really likes
Oklahoma's Sam Bradford.
but admits Cleveland will
have to trade up from it~ No.7
po!-.ltion to select him. The
Bro\\Ib now have 12 picks in
April's draft.
Mangini said the Browns
were ~ willing to trade
Wimbley. who led the team
with 6 1/2 -;acks. because he
liked the depth behind him at
outside linebacker.

Southern

Big East Conference to
remain in Providence
PROVIDENCE. R.I. (AP)
The Btg East
Conference is staying in Providence, the league's home
for more than 30 years. Mayor David Cicilline
announced Monday.
The nation's largest Division I athletic conference has
been headquartered in the city since the Big East w~
founded in 1979. But the league was forced to give
its current location to make way for the new Brow
University medical school building, and was courted by
other larger cities.
The conference decided to remain in Providence, but
will move from its current location in the city's Jewelry
District to another building downtown. It signed a 10year lease as the signature tenant in its new building.
said Big East Commissioner John Marinatto.
The conference employs more than 30 people in
Providence and is important to the city's struggling
economy. helping support restaurants. hotels and offering some national attention, Cicilline said.
"It's a constant marketing tool for our great city to
have the Big East here.'' Cicilline said.
Marinatto said it has always been his preference to
remain in the city.
The conference includes I 6 schools. including
Providence College. Eight were selected Sunday
evening to participate in the NCAA men's basketball
tournament.
Providence is hosting first and second round games of
the tournament on Thursday and Saturday.
..The city's going to be alive this week," :viarinatto
said.

Sheets pounded for 10 runs
without getting an out

e

GOODYEAR. Ariz. (AP) - Ben Sheets was battered
for 10 runs without retiring a batter in his latest poor
showing, and the Cincinnati Reds beat the Oakland
Athletics 13-5 Monday.
Sheets signed a one-year. $10 million contract with
Oakland after missing last season with elbow problems
that required surgery. He gave up eight hits and a walk,
and another batter reached on an error.
Chris Dickerson ended Sheets' day with a two-run
homer iP his second at-bat of the first inning.
Sheeb has allowed 18 runs in 4 1-3 innings over his
first three spring outings. He said afterward that he's
not discouraged.

.

•

Sports Briefs

Brewers' Gallardo sharp,
hopes to get opening nod
PHOENIX (AP) - Yovani Gallardo wants to start on
opemng day for the first time. He's making his strongest
argument yet.
G
do ~ruck om fh.e in four solid innings and
ol
lcides Escobar knocked in his ninth run of the
spnn:-:.1Jfting the Mtlwaukee Brewers to a 5-4 win over
the Cle\eland Indians on Monday.
Gallardo is almost the forgotten starter in B
p thi;; spring. The 24-year-old right-hander went I
llh a 3.73 ERA last season. but Mi1waukee's rota- ·
ended the year in shambles with a league-worst
~7 ERA among starters.

Poll
fromPageBl
Sarah Hawley/photo

Southern's Michael Manuel shoots the ball over two
Manchester defenders during Saturday's district final contest at the Convocation Center in Athens, Ohio.
Roseberry 2 o-o 4, Ethan M;~rhn 0 0..() 0.
Arldrew Roseberry 2 0..0 5 Mtchael
Manuel 7 3-4 18, Marcus Hill 0 0-0 0
Zach Manuel2 1·1 5. TOTALS 23 9·13
59. Three·potnt goals. 4 (Rees. Sals&lt;&gt;r
Andrew Roseberry, Michael Manuel).

Team stahStlcsf/ndiVIdualleaders
Fteld goals: M 23·58 ( 397), S 23·63
(.365) Three-point goals: M 4-14 (.286).

S 4-21 ( 190); Free throws M 19·30
(.633), S 9-13 (.692); Total rebounds: M
25 (Blevins 16). S 37 (Coppick 7. Rees
7. Michael Manuel 7): Offenstve
rebounds· M 9 (Blevins 6). S 14 (Andrew
Roseberry 3): As~tsts: M 10 (Combs 3.
Uttle 3). S 11 (Rees 4); Steals: M 10
(Ltttle 7), S 13 (Mtchael Manuel 3);
Turnovers. M 15. S 21; Team fouls: M 13.
S22.

Wake Forest - were oneweek wonders
More than half of the pteseason Top 25 weren't in
the final poll. matching the
worst predicting job by the
panel ever. In 1990-91 and
2001-02. 14 teams also
failed to make the final poll
after starting the season as a
ranked team. Included in

this

year's group \'v'ere
North Carolina.
Connecticut. Washington
and Michigan. all ranked in
the top 15 in the preseason.
The Big East matched its
own record with nine teams
being ranked at some point
in the season with the
Atl$1ntic Coast Conference
and Big Ten next with
eight. while the Big 12 had
seven.
Twelve of the 31 conferences had at least one team
ranked this season.
Texa~.

TUESDAY TELEVISION GUIDE

~-:!;~~~~~~~H~~7?.C~~=-tc=:;T.~~~S~~.!!!!!.~~--:~.J..:!.:::..:....:.:=.:~;;;;;;i~~~~;;;;;-;~=~""i

--------· ~--------·-------

'

1

I

�..

...............,.....______________

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

Tuesday, March 16, 201 0

www.mydailysentinel.com

The Daily Sentinel ·Page 83

..

m:ribttne Sentinel - l\e

.

~

CLASSIFIED

Meigs County, OH

In One Week With Us
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errors In an lei taken ov• the pllono

Campers I RVs &amp;
Trailers

Lawn Service
H B s L.llwn Care Harvey
Brown 74o-388.a586 or
339.()024 Insured Free

Estma

Other Services
Pet
Crematlon
74().446-3745

Finonciol

There's
Something
For
Everyone
In

B.EUEE

Automotive

2000

Autos
Quality Cars &amp; Trucks
wlwc.rrarty all pnced 10
sell, 15 yrs. tn bus ross
Cook Motors, 328 Jack·
son P ke
Gal pollS
OH
74().446-0103

Save up to 4 0'le off

your cab e bll l can
d sh Network today I
1-877·274-2471

1ctures t at
have been
placed in ads at
the Gallipolis
Daily Tribune
must be picked
within 30 days.
Any pictures
that are not
picked up will be
discarded.

We solve debt
problemsI
If you have over
512,000 In debt
CALLNOWI
1-877-266.0261

Home Improvements
Basement
Waterproofing
Uncond tionalllfet•me
guarantee Local refer·
ences turn1shed Estatr
bshed 1975 Call24 Hrs
740446.()870. Rogors
Basement Waterprootong

Are You Protected?
An Identity Is stolen
every 3 seconds
Call llfel ock n o w to
protect your family
free for 30-daysl
1-877-481-4882
Promocode·
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3000

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CLASSIFIED INDEX
Legals........................................................... 100
Announcemonts .......................................... 200
B lrthday/Annlveraary.................................. 205
Happy Ads ....................................................210
L ost &amp; Found ............................................... 215
MemoryfThank You .................................... 220
Notices ...................................._ ................. 225
Personals ................................- .................. 230
Wal\led ....................................- ................ 235
Services ................................................... 300
Appliance Service ...................................... 302
Automotive .......- ...... ~................................ 304
ong Materlals ................................. - •• 306
'JUtl!nt!SS .............................................- .. 308
:atc:rmg ..........................................................310
,. ,, .. ,.,,• • IU Caro ....................................... 312
Computers ................................................... 314
Contractors................................................. 316
Domestlcs/Janltorlal ................................... 318
Electrical ...................................................... 320
Fi nancial......................................................322
Health ........................................................... 326
Heating &amp; Coollng ....................................... 328
Homo Improvement s 330
lnsurance ..................................................... 332
Lawn Service ............................................... 334
Muslc/Donce/Drama .................................... 336
Other Servlces ............................................. 338
Plumblng/Eieetr lca1.................................." .340
Professional Servlces .................................342
Repalrs ......................................................... 344
Roofing .........................................................346
Sccurlty ...............~........................................ 348
Tax/Accoun tlng ........................................... 350
TroveVEntertainmcn t .................................352
Fl nancla1 ....................................................... 400
Financial Servlcos ....................................... 405
Insurance .................................................... 410
Money to Lend.............................................415
Educatlon .....................................................500
Business &amp; Trade School ........................... 50S
Instruction &amp; Tralnlng ................................. 510
Lessons ......................................................515
Personal ............................................... ..... 520
Ani mals ....................................................... 600
Animal Supplies .......................................... 605
Horses .......................................................... 610
Livestock ............................................ - .......615
Pets ..............................................................620
Want to buy.................................................. 625
"""""'""~ re ................................................... 700
pment ..........................................705
Produce .......................................710
Feed, Seed, Grain ............................... 715
untlng &amp; Land ........................................... 720
want to buy ..................................................725
Merchandlse ................................................ 900
Antlques .......................................................905
Appllance ..................................................... 910
Auctlons ....................................................... 915
Bargain Bosement .......................................920
Collectlbles .................................................. 925
computers ................................................... 930
Equlpment1Supplles ....................................935
Flea Markots ................................................ 940
Fuel 0 11 Coai!Wood/GIIs ............................. 945
Furnl turo ...................................................... 950
Hobby/Hunt &amp; Sport .................................... 955
Kids Corncr .................................................960
Mise llanoous ..............................................965
wa nt to buy .....................................:.... .......970
Yar d
le ...................................................975

;

Recreational Vehicles ............................... 1000
ATV ............................................................. 1005
Bicycles ......................................................101 0
Boats/Accessorles .................................... 1015
CamperiRVs &amp; Trallers ............................. 1020
Motorcycles ............................................... 1025
Other ..........................................................1030
Want to buy ...............................................1035
Automotlve ................................................ 2000
Auto Rentalllease .....................................2005
Autos ....- ...................................................2010
Classic/Antiques .......................................2015
CommerclaV1ndustrlal .............................. 2020
Parts &amp; Accessorles ..................................2025
Sports Utlllty..............................................2030
Trucks .........................................................2035
Utility Trallers ............................................ 2040
Vans ................. .......................................... 2045
Want to buy ...............................................2050
Real Estate Salea ...................................... 3000
Cemetery Plots .......................................... 3005
Commercla1 ................................................3010
Condominlums .......................................... 3015
For Sale by Owner.....................................3020
Houses for Sale ......................................... 3025
Land (Acreage) .......................................... 3030
Lots ............................................................3035
Want to buy ................................................3040
Real Estate Rentala ................................... 3500
Apartments/Townhouses ......................... 3505
Commerctal ................................................3510
Condominiums .......................................... 3515
Houses for Rent ........................................ 3520
Land (Acreago) .......................................... 3525
Storage ...................................................... 3535
Want to Rent .............................................. 3540
Manufactured Housl ng ............................. 4000
Lots.............................................................4005
Movers........................................................4010
Rentals ....................................................... 4015
Sales........................................................... 4020
Suppllos ..................................................... 4025
Want to Buy ............................................... 4030
Resort Property .........................................sooo
Resort Property tor sale ........................... 5025
Resort Property for rent ........................". 5050
Employment...............................................6000
Accounting/Financlal ................................ 6002
Admlnistrative/Protesslonal .....................6004
Cashler/Cierk ............................................. 6006
Child/Elderly Care .................................~•• 6008
Clerical ....................................................... 6010
Constructlon .............................................. 6012
Drivers &amp; Dellvery ..................................... 6014
Education ...................................................6016
Electrical Plumblng ...................................6018
Employment Agencles ..............................6020
Entertalnment ............................................ 6022
Food ServicP.s............................................6024
Government &amp; Federal Jobs .................... 6026
Help anted· General .................................. 6028
Law Enforcement ...................................... 6030
Maintenance/Domestic ............................. 6032
Management/Supervisory ........................ 6034
Mechanics ..................................................6036
Medica1 ....................................................... 6038
Muslca1 ....................................................... 6040
Part·Time-Temporarios ............................. 6042
Restaurants ............................................... 6044
Sales ...........................................................6048
Technical Trados ....................................... 6050
Textiles/Factory ......................................... 6052

c

Apartments/
Townhouses

RV
ServiCe at
Tra ers
740-446-3825

Sales

Llfelock
QE6I
SETTLEMENT
USA

Rul Es1ate
Rentals

3500

RV SeMCe at Ca
chae
Tra ers
740446-3825

The•••

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Description • Include A Prke • Awid Abbre111atlons

Su«cssful Ads
Should Include These Items
To Help Get Response...

200

Oally In•Colunml ShOO a .m.
Monday - Friday tor ln$C!rtton
In Ne)(t Day's PajKlr
Sunday In-Column s ihOO a .m .
Friday For Sundays Paper

GET YOUR CLASSIFIED LINE AD NOTICED

SIFIE

L-............~........._--------~----------------------------~

Commercial
Comm

Space

4

Reta; or off:ce
b~

locatiOI'

~~

~~

14(10.2000

lease catiOn

Pnme

highly

Free Rent Special !I!

rom~ 2&amp;3BR

SQ

It

c

Professional Services

Hoy, Feed, Seed, Grain 5700t'Tl0 74().-oo-1960

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

Sq
baled hay·$2 50
For Sole By Owner
each round hay bales
Ellm View Apts
$10 00
eact: 106 Mabel.::10 Dr Ga •
pollS 2BR 1
BA Fun
)882·3017
740-949 2660
Basemerot
Remode
od _ _(304
_;....
_ _ __

Uvestock

2 Reg Angus Cows w
SEPTIC
PUMPING calves by the r sides 1
Ga ha
Co
OH and Angus Bu 1 yr old Can
sale
4x4
Mason Co WV Ron be reQ Call 256-6444
74().446-2412
Evans
Jackson
OH
Pets
800-537·9528
900
Merchandise
Free-graylwh1te 1 cat,
Security
declowed.
spay,
all
shots lo good home only
Appliances
74~985·4252
Free Home Security
S850 Value
with purchase of
alarm monitoring
services from ADT
Security Servi ces.
Call l-888·274-3888

AOI

Carpel Salo Free lnstalTo good hoiT'o 2 male
allOn on special orders
Beagles
7
mon
old
call
400
Financial
Onvo a llttlo save a 101
304·675·6 t45
Mollohan Carpet 2212
Easter!' Ave, Gallipolis
~~~~~~~~ To good home 3 adult
OH (740) 446·7444
Money To lend
house cats lovable &amp;
gentle
litter
tra ned
304·675·5696
NOTICE Borrow Smart
Contact the OhiO DIVl·
Agriculture
slon of Ananc1al lnstHu· 700
1 ons OHICo of Consumer
Sa o
Berber
Carpet
AHalrs BEFORE you ret •
5
95yd
•
Specaals
on vtFonn Equipment
nance your home o· obnyl In stock-drlve a !tie
tam a loan BEWAFE of
INTt:GRITY, save a lot Mo lohnn Car·
requests ror any large COY,
pet 2212 Eastern Ave
acm.nce pay-nents ot KIEFER BUILT,
Gal poliS
OH
(740)
HORSE/LIVE·
tees or nsurance Ca VALLEY
446-7444
TRAILERS
the OHooe of Consumer STOCK
MAX
EQUIP·
Alfl8rs
toU
tree
at LOAD
WoniTo Buy
TRAILERS
1·866-278-0003 to leam MENT
CARGO
EXPRESS
&amp;
Abso uta Top Dollar • s
I the mortgage broker or
VG gold
C04ns
any
lender IS proper!) li- HOMESTEADER
10K/14Kl18K gold JCW
censed (Th s IS a pubfiC CARGO CONCESSION
BtW o ry dont
gold pre
serviCe
announcement TRAILERS
US
currency
from the OhiO Va ley GOOSENECK FLATBED 1935
$3999 VIEW OUR E"l· P!fOUm nt
sots
doa·
Publ sh ng Company)
TIRE TRAILEq INVEN· monds, MTS Co n Shop
TORY AT
1 51 2'1&lt;1 Avonue, Galh·
WWW CARM ICHAEL·
polls. 446 2842
500
Education TRAILERS COM
740-446·3825
Buy1ng Slihl Chau"~saws
any k nd for parts &amp; re·
Have you p11ced a John pa1r, running or not
Business &amp; Trade
74
4 ..:.
1 .:.:
1 8:.:;
8____...,.
Deere lately? You"ll bo .:.;
;;.;0;.;7;.;;9~
School

k tchen 1 Car Garage
Cert a'r A app stay
595 500 74~645·7965.
12 Unit Apt. Complex.
446-0390.
Houses For Sole
1 6 acres of land-water
electnc and gas heat on
St Rt 588 $19 QOO-and
1 WI give you the house
that 'leeds some wort(
clone on It Take aryth ng
w 'h any value on trade
Ph 74().446-7327

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

========
Gallipolis Career
College
(Careers Close To Homel
Call Today! 74().446-&lt;l367
1-8()()-214.()452

oa lipoliscl eereotteoe tc1u
Accred&gt;l~ MembG Act;

ed
1ng Couocti lor lndepeneent
Colleg6a and Schools 12749

surprised' Chock out our
Recreational
used
tnventory
et 1000
Vehtcles
www CAREO rom
C r
miChael
Equ pment ;;;;;;;;~~~~
740-446·241 2
ATVs
STIHL Sales &amp; Serv1CO
Now Avatlablo at Ce:m
chael
Equ pment
74().446·241 2

93 4 w'lee•er Kaw 300
CC 2x4 w'H h &amp; Low
Range-Now Tires 51000
I rm 740.645 5174

.---------------,

Find all the
news that
matters
to you.
€l.1lltpolts Da1lv tcnbunr
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�Page 84 • The Daily Sentinel
Apartments/
Townhouses

www.mydailysentinel.com
Driven &amp; Delivery

Rentals

2BR MObile HOMe Wa·
New 2 bod-stove-ref w &lt;1 tor, sower trash pd No
'lookup clean &amp; qutot pats Johnson s Mobile
setting
740·ll92·4119 HOITO Park 446·3160
ask for M ·ge, $435+ t.hl
S Dop
3BR 2BA $4751mo +
dep.
Excellent
$475
Beautiful Apts . at Jack·
cond 74Q.367·7762
son Estates. 52 West
wood Dr Iron• $365 to - - - - - -- $560
740.446·2568. Mobile Home for rent.
Equal Hous.rg Opportu- 2BR 14x60 South Galha
mty 1llts tn~t1tution ts an school dtstrtct No pets.
Equal ()poortumty Pro· (740) 256·61 43
Vldcr and E"1ployer
Nice 3BR, 2 Bath, 16x80.
EHtctency apt tor rent
Country
Setting
Elect. &amp; gas No stairs
367·0266 or 339·3366
No pets 1 or 2 people
1624 Chatham A~enuc
(rear) (740) 446-4234 or Own a New 3BR, 2 BA
w 1 aero. 5% down. $525
(740) 208-7861
rro WAC. Near Holzer
Freshly pa1nte&lt;1 clean 1 740446 _3570.
br elf'tc1ency apt ref &amp;
pets
dep
no
Soles
304·675·5162
Gracious Living 1 and 2 01 Claytol' Mob1le home
Bedroom Apls at VIllage 14x50. 2BR 1BA, Porch
Manor
and
R1VOrS1de rc. Good shape. well
Apts In Mtddleport from takef' care of $10,000. If
S327
to
s592. tnterested please call
74
(740) 441·7720 or (740)
9
2
5064
9
0.
Equal 645·3927, tl no arswer
Hous ng Opportun ty.
~~...;...~~---~ please leave message
ModeM 1BR apt Call
740·446..()390
78 Elcona Tratler 14x70,
New 2 BR apt W D 635 Paxton $6000 OBO
Hook~;p,
Rto.Jacksor 140..645·1646
area S525/mo + dcp
Call 740·645·1286
AA Now 4 BodrOOMS
Pleasant Valley Apart·
Only SM-970
rnents ts 'lOW ta kJng ap2010 S1ngtewide
pliCations to• 2 3 &amp; 4
tncred1ble $19 995
Bedroom HUD Subs •
mymtdwesthorr~es.com
d zed Apel'tments Applf.
740 8282750
catloPs ·e taken MOl'·
day
th ough
Fnday
"'The Proctorville
900am·1 OOprr Of!ce s
DtHerence"
located at 1151 Ever·
$1 and a deod ts all you
green Dnve Potnt Pleas·
need to own your dream
ant WV (304) 675·5806
horre Call Nowl
Freedom Homes
888·565·0167

Help Wanted· General Help Wonted· General

MECHANIC NEEDED :
R&amp;J Truckng Co. Marl·
ella. OhiO
Job tncluoos P M. trac·
tor tratler t1re &amp; weld1ng
repatrs. Must !'ave own
tools clean valid dnvers
license ts needed, COL a
plus, compet11tve wages
based on exp. bonehts.
401K. heath, dental Ax
options,
umlorms pro·
vtnAt1 wot1&lt; boot allow·
ance.
For ntormatton call Jeff·
800·462·9355 X 206
e
lax 740-374·3059,
matl
to
&lt;Jcaltnder@rjtrucklng.co
m&gt;
-------Regional
Dump
and
Pneumatic Tanker Driv·

LAB TECHNICIAN
Seektng temporary work·
ers tnterested trl Plant
Lab work. 40hr work
woek antiCtpated Ovor
time May be roqwed,
must have m1ntmum of a
2 yr asstctate degree tn
chemtstry, physiCS, btol·
ogy or oqu1valent. Must
have a moderate degree
of
knowledge of skill nocessary to prelorm wo~k w1th
standard
laboratory.
chemical
analyzing
OQU1pmant, operation ol
water treatment equtpment, and coal sampling
E.11try level wage rate @
approx, $16.00 per hr
with moderate benefit
paCkage betng oHered
ers.
, Interested
candtdates
R&amp;J Trucktng Company are to subm1t resurnes to
in
Mane~a
OH.
is . 614·716·2272
search1ng for qualified
applicants must be at
least 23yrs. have mtnt· looking lor general con·
mum of 1 yr of sate tractor must be hconse·d
Insured
contact
conmerctal dnv1ng expe· and
nence 1n a truck. Hazmat Brent Sang at French
certthcatton clean MVR City Butlders or stop tn
apphcat1on
and good 10b stabtlity for
compeltltve 304·675·5888
We
offer
boreltts plus 401 K and
Need 5 ladtes to sell
vacation pay.
at Avon. Ca11 446-3358.
Contact
Denms
1-800·462·9365 to apply
to Qu.tltty Control c:tm up to
or
go
WWW.I']l'UCk1rtg.coM.
SIOO.OO per da) t\alualm~
E.OE.
retat Slllres tramtng pro
Truck dnvers wanted. \1dcd n(l np. rrqwred call

Woodland Centers, Inc ,
a communtty behavioral
health agency servtng
Gatlla,
Jackson,
and
Meigs coun11es tn South·
eastern Ohio for 35
years ts accepting applications lor the position of
Housing Specialist. Po·
slllon will serve as the - - - - - - -.....
primary point ol conta&lt;:t
YOUNG'S
J&amp;L
for agency ho~;stng pro·
Construction
grams Outtos lncludA re·
cetvtng appttcattons for • Vinyl Siding
all houstng
progrc:ms
• Replacement
• Room Additions &amp;
Matntatrs watt1ng list per
Remodeling
Windows
• New Garages
HUD gutdohnos, obtain·
·Roofing
•
Electrical &amp; Plumbing
ng proof of tncorw. per·
• Roortng &amp; Guttera
formtrg apartment tn· ·Decks
·VInyl Siding &amp; Painting
spectlons, and data en· ·Garages
• Pallo and Porch Deck•
WV036725
try
·Pole Buildings
Woodland Centers. Inc. • Room Additions
V.C. YOUNG Ill
offers compeUt1ve sala·
Owner:
1)1)2-112 1:' 7~11·:''11-11 1'!:'
ries and a comprehen·
Pomeroy. Ohio
James Keesee II
stve benel1ls package.
30 Years Local Expenence
742·2332
Interested
applicants
- Wtnter S tats should apply by e-matllng
rosomes
to r-----------.:r-----~

Req Class A.CDL, 2 yrs. 817.:18-6197
exp Resume wf3 work
STNAs
ref. Send to: Onver, P.O
Box 1145, Galltpolls OH
Arbors at Galltpohs, 170
Ptnecrest Dnve, Galllpo·
45631
'Is
Seeking caring and com·
Food Services
passionate providers of
Accopt1ng resumes tor
great service
exp. Fr Subway Mgr, C Current STNA license re·
new locatton tn Gallipolis
qUtrod
Ferry. WV
Salary &amp;
Apply at center or ematl
to
Trade 1n your old stngla· Bens @ lntervtew Send
lvlanCextendtcare com
w1de 'or a new home. 0 resumo to Mgr. @ 24968
Lashley Rd ,Quaker City
www.extendtcare.com
money down. 446-3570
011 43n3 or apply on
Spnng
Valley
Greer
EOE
une
0
www.pai"''C"·
Apartments 1 BR at
Employment stores com
$395+2 BR at $470 6000
Want a job where you
Month 740·446-1599
can make a difference?
Very "l1ce 2 BR Apt;w
Child/Elderly Care
Kttchen app , water Inc
W/0 hookup Close to Posilton open at Darst
hospital
no
pets Adult Group Home, first,
446 9442 alter 5pm
second &amp; third shifts,
740.992·5023

Help Wonted· General

ADECCO is now htnng
50 asSOftateslll
50 PrbducttOP laborers
needed must be able to
communtcate eHectlvely,
work tn a sale manner,
be a team player and
t'ave good attendance
and work ~1story
Must be able to hit 35 lbs
somettmes
repetttlvely
m Also
ab:e to react&gt;
stoop, knEel or stand and
otner sUCh pas bons e
J pilsh pu
Have dexter·
oas use of bo'..ll hands
gOOd VISiC/l ab a to w

Houses For Rent

3 br 2 bath, 98 l!'odel
&lt;lot.blewtde tn country
No Pets $650 per mo
plus .rtl t as $650 dep 1
yrs tease 74().416·2960

CalllnfoCislon todayl
Make calls for tho NRA
and other conservattve
political orgamzauons
Full lime pos oons ava I·
able
Weekly pay and bonus
opportuntties
Great bereftts and work
enwonmentl
Call and Schedule Your
Interview:
1-888-tMCoPAYU ext.
2321
http://jobs ln1oclslon.c

om

- - - - - - - - with l"'ln superv SJO
pertom rOQu e&lt;1 phyt
cal duties
Adecco .s an EOE and a
drug free work place
If Interested please call
(Ji'll 522·8623 speak
Driven &amp; Delivery
with Usa or Mtke

4000

WANTED
ptoyment 10 your own
home as a Home Sorv·
Ices Worker With Buck·
eye COrrlrrt.r ty Serv·
teeS We provide salary
plus benefits and a daily
Manufactured , Uqutd Aspt&gt;an Drivers
room and board rate
Housing I needed In Pt Pteasan: Down Under Resll:uraf'l
You provide a home
Now h rtng servers,
guidance end trends p
area rrt.st bo 21 y'S old cooks, &amp; bouno::~ apply
In a fal!' ~ atmosphere
o older rnust haveC ass WI! n 64 State Sl Galt·
Reqt. res atlillty to teach
A COL wth Hazna1 En- pohs, OH
personal llv ng k. is and
oorscment
and
good
Need. Someone Exp to a commitr'lent to tho
MVR local trips
call 1-1!00..598-6122 for work on 2 4-wheelers growth and developrr~crt
(7 40\245-5595
or of an tndtvldual w1th de·
(740)709-9235
velopmental
dtSBb lrttes
11 Interested contact Cectlla at 1·S00.531·2302
or
(740)
286-5039
Pre-employment
Drug
Testtng. Equal Opportu'1lty EMployer
Public t'.ntict-. in ~""'p811fl'\.
\oor Right lu l\no11, Ddilm-d Right to \ our I.I&lt;IQr.

=;;:;;;;;:;;;;;;;;;;
~

PUBLIC NOTICE
Southern Ohi o Coal
Company has submit·
ted an Application to
Revise a Coal Mining
Permit (ARP) #R·354-65
to the Ohio Department
o f Natural Resources ,
Divi sion of Mineral Re·
sources Management.
The ARP area to be revised is l ocated In Sec·
t ion 18, Township 7 N,
Range 15 W, Salem
Township,
Meigs
County, Ohio. This ARP
encompasses 7.0 acres
and i s l ocated on the
Wilkesville Quadrangle
7
Minute U.S.G.S.
Quadrangle Map, ap·
proxi mately 0.5 miles
southwest of Danville,
Ohio, at the intersec·
lion of Ohio State
Route 325 and Salem
Township Road No.
190.
The application pro·
poses to change the
post mining land use
form undeveloped to
commercial.
The application Is on
fi le for public viewing
at the Meigs County
Recorder's
Office,
Meigs County Court·
house, 100 E. Second
Street, Pomeroy, Ohio
45769 and shall remain
so for at least 30 days
following the last date
of publication of this
notice. Written com·
ments or requests for
an i nformal conference
may be flied with the
Division of Mineral Re·
sources Management,
2045
Morse
Road,
Building H·3, Colum·
bus, Ohio 43229·6693
within 30 days after the
last date of publication
of this notice.
(3) 9, 16, 23, 30

SHOP
CLASSIFIEDS
FOR
BARGAINS

Public Notice
NOTICE TO BIDDERS
STATE OF OHIO
DEPARTMENT
OF
TRANSPORTATION
Columbus, Ohio
Office of Contracts
Legal Copy Number:
101059
Sealed proposals will
be accepted from pre·
qualified bidders at the
ODOTOfflce of Con·
tracts until 10:00 a.m.
on AprilS, 2010. Project
101059 Is located In
Meigs County, SR·124·
30.00 and Is a MISCEL·
LANEOUS project. The
date set for completion
of this work shall be as
set forth In the bidding
proposal. Plans and
Specifications are on
file In the Department
of Transportation.
(3) 16, 23

Public Notice
IN THE MATTER OF
SETTLEMENT
OF ACCOUNTS, PRO·
BATE COURT
MEIGS COUNTY, OHIO
Accounts and vouch·
ers of the following
named fiduciary has
been
flied In the P;obate
Court,
Meigs
County,Ohio for ap·
proval and settlement.
FILE N0. 21275-16th
Account of Joan M.
May, Trustee o f the
Trust Created by Item
Eighth of the Last Will
and Testament of Lin·
nle B . Taylor, deceased.
Unless exceptions are
flied thereto, said ac·
count will be set for
hearing
before said Court on
the 16th day of April,
2010, at which lime
said account will be
considered and contin·
ued from day to day
until finally disposed
of.
Any person Interested

Tuesday, March 16, 2010

CARPENTER
SERVICE

kmockCwoodlandcen·
ters.org or mathng re·
sumes to Kevan Mock.
Director of Operations,
Woodland Centers. Inc.
3086 State Route 160
Galhpolts.
OH
45631
Woodland Centers, Inc Is
anAAIEOE

Commercial &amp; Residential
• Room additions • Roofing • Garage~
• General Remodelin~ • Pole &amp; Horse
Bar ns • Vinyl &amp; Wood Fencing
Foundation~

MIKE W. MARCUM, OWNER
47239 Riebel Rd., Long Bottom, OH
740·985·4141

1-rl'l"l'~lim:ttl'' • 25+ )l':tr~ l''prril·nn·
•'ut.tltih.Jitrl \\llh \ 1ikl· \ 1.tnum H.cH•fi n~ ,\ Kt·nH,fhltncl

.Home

' { " I\. I\B1C:D

tl'Vl ·~
........,...,,~-..
\

Insurance

il\ETRY

Great coverage and
superior service

Har&lt;twbod abjnetry And Furnnur!
''W'Ii'IW.tlmbuc:reekeabidetry.com

Management /
Supervisory
Appncattons
for
pool
manager, asststant rnan·
agar &amp; ltle guards tor
Syracuse V1llage London
Pool can be piCked up &amp;
returned to Clerk!Treas·
ure(s oHtce on or before
Mar 26. more tnfo call
740·992-7m

Medical
Overbrook Center Is cur·
ren!ly accepttng appltca
lions
tor
SIAn;
~ Nursing Assls
tants for all sl'lfts full
lime hours available. In·
terested applicants can
ptek up an appltcatton or
contact Lucy GoH BSN
AN Stall Development
Coord nator
@
740.992·6472 M·F 9a·5p
at 333 Page St , Middle-port Oh EOE &amp; a pc1lcl·
pant of the Drug-Freo
Workplace Program

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

740.446.9200

----town~.c:om

2A59 St. Rt. 160 • GalllpoUs
Ll fOR fREE ESilMATES

SEAL IT
CO:\STRl"CTIO:"i

Rooling- StdingPainting- Gutters Decks- Etc.
I:or Fast Couneuu~
Service Free
E.'tunate~ &amp;
affordable Prices.
Call ()en nis Boyd
140-992-2029

SUNSET
CONSTRUCTION
Remodeling,
Roofs, Garages,
Pole Buildings,
Siding, Decks,
Drywall, Additions
and New Homes.
Insured· Free
Estimates

740-742-3411

304-773-1111

ROBERT
BISSEll

• Erie

~I nsurance·

CONSTRUCTION

a &lt;'Z&gt;&lt;C1 2001iEI,. ;,_,.-~

• New Homes

· Garages
·Complete
Remodeling

740-992-1671
Stop &amp; Compare

~.

Total Constr uction

1-0
~
ne:.:C~a...:/::..;
1 t:.:o.;.D
;;;.;;o:...:l:..:tA~ll:.::..-- ~

Pole Bams/7'..1etal Roof:-.
Fire &amp; Water Damage

Drywall/Repair

0\\ner •
Am) Veteran ,
Tom Wolfe:

740-4 16-2575 •

Replacement
Windows and
Yin)l Siding
Specialists, LTD
(740) 742-2563
• Sid in~ • \ in} I
\\'indo\\s • Metal
and Shingle Roofs

Racine, Ohio 740-247-2019

• lk&gt;ck~ • Additions

•Electrical
• Plumbing
• Pole Barns

Owners:
Jon Van Meter &amp;
Paul Rowe

Cell: 740-416-5047
email:
jrshadfrm@aol.com

NOMA77ER
WHAT YOUR

STYLE. ..

('0

~

Pomero). Oh1o
Commercial •
Residential

PSI CONSTRUCTION

R.L. Hollon
... THE
NEWSPAPER
HAS
SOMETHING
FOR YOU!!

may file written excep·
lion to said account or

Room Addnion~ . Remodeling, Metal &amp;
Shingle Roofs. Nev. Home~. Siding. Decks.
Bathroom Remodeling. Licensed &amp; Insured
Rick Price · 17 )TS. Experience

Trucking
I&gt;umpTruck
Ser,icc
We do dri\C\\a)
Lime~1ont • Gra,el
Top Soil • Fill Dirt

W V1040954 Cell 740-416-2960 740· 992-0730

740-985-4422
740-856-2609
Cell

Stanley TreeTrimming
&amp; Removal

Guttering
Seamless Gutters
Roofing, Sid~ng Gu11ers
Insured &amp; Bonded
740-653·9657

and Quality
Work
*Reasonable Rate~
* Prompt

to
matters pertaining to
the execution of the
trust, not less than five
days prior to the date
set for hearing.
L. SCOTT POWELL
Judge
Common Pleas Court,
Probate Division
Meigs County, Ohio
(3) 16

* lnsur~·d

• Expenenced

References A\ mlable 1
Call Gary Stanley (tl

-

ROUSH STREET
STORAGE
89 Roush St.
\VV 25260

~1a~on.

s '" 5\10 10 10\ 20
30~- 773-5601

sJ constrocuQ"

Pole Barns, Garages,
New Construction, Room Add.,
Roofing, Shingles, Metal, Rubber,
Concrete Work,
Any 'l'ype remodeling, Decks

740-591 -8044
Please leave me~sage

Phone: 7~7~16

Public Notice

can 746-447-3642

IN THE MATTER OF
SETTLEMENT
OF ACCOUNTS, PRO·
BATE COURT
MEIGS COUNTY, OHIO
Accounts and vouch·
ers of the following
named fiduciary has
been
flied In the Probate
Court,
Meigs
County,Ohlo for ap·
proval and settlement.
ESTATE NO. 32330 •
The Fourth Account of
Sandra
Southern,
Guardian of the person
and estate of Brenton
Michael Southern, a
minor
Unless exceptions are
filed thereto, said ac·
count will be set for
hearing
before said Court on
the 15th day of April,
2010, et which time
said account will be
considered and conlln·
ued from day to dlly
un til finally disposed
of.
Any person Interested
may file written excep·
tfon to said account or

3&amp; yra exp. Free Eat. Fully Insured

Nov. Selling.
• Ford ol.:: \1otorcraft
Parts • Engines.
Tratv•fer Case, &amp;
Trunsmbsions
• Aftennarket
Replacement Sheet
~tetal &amp; Components

Owners:
Tim Cremeans &amp; Roger Sellers

I

Hill's Self
Storage

f·or All \1 Jke, &lt;&gt;! \eh1clt
Racine. Ohio

Roofing . Siding,
Solitt. Decb, Doors ,
Plumbing, Dl) ''all
Remodeling. Rtx1m
Add itions
Local Contrnctor

1\II{'IL\EL' S
SEIH In CE\ n I{
ISSS \\ E \H·.
l'unll'rm. (II I
• Otl &amp; liter ch.tnge
•Tune Ups
• Rmkc Sen ice

CORNERSTONE
CONSTRUCTION
w11100\\ s. ElectrtC.

1956

7 40·367·0544
Hours
7:00am- 8:00 pm

Fr~

Estimates

740-367·0536

• A C Re,·han:c

to
matters pertaining to
the execution of the
trust, not less than five
days prior to t h e date
set for hearing.
JSPowell
Judge
Common Pleas Court,
Probate Division
Meigs County, Ohio
(3) 15

740· 416- 1834

htll) itNtn•d

I

With so many
choices, it's easy to
get carried away
with our
Merchandise listings
in the classifieds!

• :\linor exhau~l
rcp;m • Tire Rcpa1r
• Transmh~ion Filler
&amp; Fluid Chan~.:
• G~ner;~l ~1echamc
'' Drk
(740) 992-0910

I.F\\ IS
( 'O~("J~ ETE

CONSTIU CTIO'\

740-66 7-0.\06
Fa': 740-667..()329

Concrete Removal
and Replacement

Toii F
' n"l': 877-428-8 196

Alll)'pes Of
f'oncnte Work
29 \'ears E'~ricnce

David Lewis

1,;~~...,~. Dt\fr t'ro1c:n, hnd~ on

740-992-6971

Pml IS requm.·d tn ad' ance

$10 pc:r lh Cash on I)

Shipmc:nl\ iiiTI'&lt;' ''Wr)
othc:rl·mlay

Accepting !'ie"
Students
Piano/Keyboard
June Yan\"ranken
Pomer(n, OH
740-992:9752

..

1

�- - --- - - -------~-~--~------------------------~~-~~----~----~------------~--~---------Tuesday, March 16, 201 0

www.mydailysentinel.com

BLOND IE

Dean Young/Denis Lebrun

CROSSWORD
By THOMAS JOSEPH
ACROSS
43 Dickens
1 O utcropg~rl
p ing
5 Just - in DOWN
the bucket 1 Brooch
10 C ruise
p art
vessel
2 Revolt
12 W admg
3 F rank
btrd
M cCourt's
13 Perfectly
mother
restore d
4 Earth:
14 Field deal- 27Ltke
15 G limpse
Preftx
ing with
llamas
16 Nap s tte
5 M il. sch.
29Go
bridges
17 U se the
6 Hosp .
19 Deceitful·
by
couch
workers
bunch
30Second
18 A rrive
7 Kidnap
20 "Water
drink
20 Method
demand
Lilies"
33
Girder
21 H ouse
8 New
painter
m
aterial
coa t?
York
24 Zoo
35 1nquires
22 Poet
lake
inhabitant 38 Noah's
Khay.,vam 9 Pla te
25
Fina lly
boat
23 That o r
metal
26
Cinco
de
39
ConfesKorean
11 Spring
sional
M ayo
25 M iles o ff
birds
event
topic
28 Densrve
NEW
CROSSWORD
BOOK!
5end
$4
75
(Cilec!Vm
o) to
look
Thomas Joseph Book 2 PO Box ~64/5 Orlando FL 32853·64 711
31 M int
2
containers
10
32 B est·
seller list
makeup
34 Was
a head
35 Eibow
s etting
36 Tow ard
the
s tern
37 Stmple
40 U nad om ed
41 Cotton
thread
42 Army
vehicles

Mor t Walker

IJ

I

FUNKY WINKERBEAN

The Daily Sentinel • Page 85

Tom Batiuk

t f iAGAR THE HORRIBLE
TJIE M057" tii.Poln'AH7" ...,.,.A/IJCl T,/£1/
Tti!NG IN liFE I~
GO 0/JTANO
,-0 KtJOY'I WJlA1'
GET IT/
~J.J WANT. ..

THELOCKHORNS
HI &amp; LOIS

William Hoest

Brian and Greg Walker

i

I
§

NNER IS REAOV, LEROY . . . fDN'T YOU
GET MY TEXT MESSAGE?"

Patrick McDonnell

ZITS

How's 'jooR..

Jerry Scott and J_im Borgman

- - - -- --.

NE.W SONG
COMING?

lTM~F~~~

~~(Nl..~

~~~®

(

$V~OF

~g~IC!E

THE FAMILY CIRCUS
•
Bil Keane

CONCEPTIS SUDOKU
lw Dave
"'

G r~c n

6 J4 3 2
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" .. .It's more Impo rtant to make dallY.
deposits In your memory banks. '

~7
8 1

'19

6

4

7

7

DENNIS THE MENACE

j
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6

(,j

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1 2 8 9

H ank Ketchum
Dtffkull) Le\rl

**

3 to

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• • P~TJ AlJR.'!JJIQ

91\

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P9 L 6 £ 9
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£ v 9 L 9 8
+

HAPPYBIRll-IDAY forTuesda) March 16.2010:
Tilis year. the Wla-pet1ed runs not. Actuall), you
.-u-e the common denominator m all thi.-. activit); therefore, to make the a.~mption that you a:re the s..-rurre L~
not far-fetched. Somehow you use Lady luck well and
alwct)'S land on your ft&gt;et. Your assets, both fmandally
and emotJonall), could rome mto play. It ) ou are sin-

gle, check out each ruitor carefully. Someone might not

be aU he or she seems. If you a:re attached. thiS) ear

begins a new cycle in your relation_.;hip. L'se 11 to make
your life together bt.~r. ARIES IS great at ~-pending
yourmone}:
71~t SLtrs Sfwu, the Kmd

of Ilry You'll Have· 5-

Dy11mmc; 4--Posrtitor; 3-At'l"lll,l,'(", 2-So-&gt;a; 1 Difficult
ARIF.S (March 21-Apnl19)
*"**** You feel renewed. Though an assoaate or
friend could ha, e a case of the bah-humbu~) ou
muse ricllt through. Know what you want and why.
You coufd be diffiCult to stop, as you seem to be
empo'~ ered. Tonight lhe world is your oyster. H,a,-e
th.,t special talk.
TAURUS (Aprii2().:May 20)
*** Mum could go on behind the 5reJ1t'S. How
you h.mdle it could detenmnc the end re,u)t.,
Certunl); you don't ha,·e ,,u the right cmo;wers, but) ou
are open to finding lhem. A surprise reYelati&lt;m could
put you on a different course. ionight Do what }OU
need to do.
G~U:-.11 (}..1ay 21-Jtme 20)
look at what IS moti\ ating vou and others to
unpnxedented leYels. You might understand a lot
more about a situation than you realize Focus on getting., pn)jt&gt;&lt;."l off the ground. Others cannot help but
respond "lbnight: Where the t\ction i'&gt;.
CANCER Otme 21·July 22)
Take a leadership role if you want to get a
pi'Ojfct off the ground. You might not like not hm~ a
ChOice, but that is the lay of the land Understand wnat
L~ needed from you Toitight 1n the thi&amp; of things.
LEO Oulv 23-Aug. 22)
l-:t!ep reaching out for someone ncar and
dec~t Your tlbility to move throucll a probll'!ll emergl"'.
Det.1ch onre more and seck out Iacts. 1'\evertheless,
someone rould re.1Uy !&gt;urpnse you. Usten more. Share
more You ha'oe what it takes. Tonight: Surf the Net, or
relax to a rna\ ie.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22)

*"**

*"**

* ****

*"*"** Sometimes 11 t... difficult to tmderstand what
motJ\atesothers If \OU pull yourself out of the ~tua­
tion, you'll ha, e the opportunity to see a matter differently. Your finances are out of whack. You are far more
eao.,ygoing and together than in the pa.st. Torught:
U"ten to a friend.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 22)
You understand what is happenmg on a
~~ le\ el. The unexpected OCQJJS at '' ork arid in your
dally life. Defer to thOse around you. look at what b
happmmg bet\\ een you and a ke\ penm 'rmight

*"***

Defer, defe~; defer.
SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21)
A relaxed and ea-.y pMe works Pressure
builds around ,, pe~nal !TlLitter. Your e'en beh.wior
might be\Ulusual, and you ~-ould be quesborung \\ildt
is going on. A nuld sen_o;;e of negativity could be

***

de&gt;&lt;.-ending on you. Tonight: Put your feet up. )ou
need a break.
SAGilTARIUS (t\o,. 22-Dec. 21)
Don't allow a friend to push vou too ham.
Cse your ingenuity to make yourse!I and Others happy.
Your fmances remam a key b-.ue Don't spt!lld what
you dun'! ha' e. EnJOy what i.; happening \\1th a child
or Jo, ed one. 1(might: Forget the day of the \\ eek.
respond to the moment.
CAPRICOR~ (Dec 22-Jan. 19)
Knowu1g your prionties misht be unporbnt. You could be JUggling two different ronrems. U
you work from home. )''OU might want to fOCI.IS on
work ru1d then take a brea~ A per.;onal matter could
knock on your door. Tonight: 01\ier m
AQUARIUS Oan 20-teb. lt')

*****

**'**

***** 'lou might want to Te-e\ alu.tte an offer
that in' oh es fmnn..'CS. Communication keeps ) ou
buo:y. Realize \\hat is happening finanoally. )ou might
not be able to see the btg picture. Your canng C01l"le5
out Tonight Cllat \\ith a friend
PISCES (f&lt;eh 19-March 20)

'**** 'lour surpns111g actions could pro,'Qke some

'"el) ~trong 1\.'actions. linJt&gt;rSt.mdll'lg could help
soothe some of the ruftled feathers Be mreful h(,w you
deal with -...)meone \OU Cdre about. 1bnlght Tre,lt
yourself.

�%.

Page 86 • 'I he Daily Sentinel

MIDW EST

•

FIRST ROUND ~i~ij•J:i•l;t•IIW•J
March18
~
1
Kansas
u

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REGION

N

REGIONALS

C

A

Tuesday, March 16,

E A S·T

A

Men's

March 25-28

~

2

March 21

0

1

2010

REGION

·REGIONALS

t1 #H•III•I ;!I !II :111

FIRST ROUND

March 25-28

March 20

March 18

•

1!i

.-E-.-li-en_n......'-S-t.-1_:_
6

basketball tournament

8UN LV

March 19
5 Mich. State

1

March 20

www .mydailyscn tine] .com

!.,

a;§

Texas

~Forests !

0

March 21

March 19
le
5

March20

March18
Marquette 6 ~

Jf12 N.M. State
.; 4 Maryland
!-13 Houston

St. Louis

SEMIFINALS

SEMIFINALS

April3

April3

r

.!d

March 19
ill: 7 Okla. State

Syracuse, N.Y.

1-----t.~W~a~sh~i!.!1n~ton 11 ~
NewMe~;3 i
- - -..........--l~ntana
14 j

March 21

March21

If1oGa. Tech

J-;

10 z
0
West Virginia 2 !
Missouri

Ohio State

Morgan St. 15 i

~15 UCSB

WEST

REGION

FIRST ROUND ~'UB.W•I;nliWI]
March 19
1 _,,,ro'"'

&gt;= -....;;....&lt;~---..;~__,

...

March19
Clemson
7 &gt;=

March 21

SOUTH

REGIONALS

REGIONALS

March 25-28

March 25-28

REGION

fi~ij•l:! rl;lt!i!wJ FIRST ROUND
March 19 ~
March 21
Duke
1~•

o1~6~~~_J------~

1681

~....;:a;..=.:==-..

-----------II~L~o=u~is~v~il~le~~9~

9

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~

March 18
5 Butler

March 21

March 20

..,
Vanderbilt
c _4 __;;.___;;...;;...;;._;.__,
~13Mu

March 19
~a 6 Xavier

Purdue

Indianapolis
March 21

.! 11 Minnesota

Siena

April 5

Salt Lake City

Houston

March 20

March 20

110 Florida

~mthro~P_ _J-~-

i

March 20

Dayton, Ohio

Arkansas PB

March 16
16

2 Kansas State

Browns trade QB Brady Quinn to Broncos
BY ARNIE STAPLETON
ASSOCOC"E

Brady Quinn \\ill get u
chance to start over in Dcn,er.
Whether he'll get to &lt;;tart i'&gt; up
in the air.
The Broncos acquired the
fonncr first-round dmft p1ck
from the Cleveland Bro" ns
for fullback Pc)10n Hilii'i, ,1
20 II sixth-round draft p1ck
and a conditional pick in 20 12
The teams announced the
trade Sunday and said the deal
is pending ph) sicals.
Ostensibly. Quinn will compete with Kyle Orton for the
Broncos'
starting
job,
although
coach
Josh
McDaniels \\a unavmlc~ble
Sunday to comment on the
trade. according to a team
spokesman.
Quinn's departure comes
one day after the Brown~
agreed to tenns" ith free agent
Jake Delhomme on H lwo-yt'.ar
contract. Quinn went3-9 in J 2
starts for Cleveland, which
dmfted him with the 22nd pick
in the first round in 2CX&gt;7 out
of Notre Dame.
From Dublin, Ohto, he wa~
embraced by Browns J1ms as
the quarterback of the futu_re.
But it neverpa.nned out for the
Browns or (.2umn.
"I appreciate cve1 ythmg
Brady did for us last year mtd
in his three sensons WJth the
Cleveland Browns,'' coach
Eric Mangini said m a statement. " He is professional in
the way he goes about doing
his job and worked extremely
hard at CVCI) a5p&lt;:Ct of hiS
game. I "ish him the best of
success in Den' er.''
Quinn won Cleveland's
starting job la~t season, but
was benched after 2 I /2 g~m1es
for Derek Anderson. (.lumn
eventually got his job back
when Anden.on stm~gled but
he was hindered hy marcura
cy.
He completed only 53 percent of his passes la!lt season
for I ,339 yards with eight
touchdowns mtd seven mtcr
ceptions. His rating was 67 3.
Quinn's days in Cleveland
appeared numbered when new
president Mike Holmgren
failed to endorse him as the
Browns' future starter. Last
week, the Bro\\ ns acquired

backup Seneca \\allace m .1
tmde wtth Seattle, released
hosted
Anderson
and
Delhomme, recentl) cut b)
Carolina
Holmgren ·s house cleaning
continued Sunda), when he
shipped another fmmer fiNround draft pick, Iinebacker
Kamerion Wimble). to the
Oakland Raiders for draft
picks
The Broncos reportedly pursued Quinn last season when
the) were lr) ing to replace Jay
Cutler.
Instead, they dealt Cutler to
Chicago for a be'') of draft
picks and Orton, who beat out
Chris Simms for the starting
job m June.
The Broncos ha' e insisted
the) 're happ) \\Jth Orton. a
\\Orkmanlike leader \\hO wasn't allowed to thro\\ downfield much last ~ea~on, when
he led the Bronco~ to a 6-2
start before u 2-6 finish kept
them out of the playoffs for a
fom1h c;traight ~eason.
That''&gt; the longest drought in
the 26 ;cars Pat Bo\\len has
owned the team. Bowlen
recently said he likes Orton as
his qua11crback but would like
to see the Broncos draft a
passer next month.
Those phms may now be on
hold.
The Broncos lost confidence in Simms Ja-.t season, so
it would appear he\ out of the
picture with the acquisition of
Quinn.
Last week, the Broncos
offered Orton, a restricted free
agent, a fin,t-round tender
offer that would pay h1m
$2.261 milhon this se.ason.
Like hundreds of other players caught up in the league's
labor issues. however. Orton is
expected to boycott his team's
start of offseason training.
which stm1s Monday for the
Bronco~ .

With the league rippino up
the labor deal in hopes ofgetting a more owner-friendly
contrnct, dotens of players
who \\ere set to reach the riche&lt;&gt; of unrcs!Jicted free agency
tlu~ month are instead bound
by their teams, which are
o!Tcring much less than the
players could have made in an
unfettered marketplace.

'I

13ci

11

I

3i

March 18 ..;
Richmond 7

Cleveland
quarterback
Brady OUinn
fires a pass
during
fourth-quarter
act1on
against the
Pittsburgh
Steelers at
Cleveland
Browns
Stadium 1n
Cleveland,
Ohio,
Thursday,
December 10,
2009.The
Browns defeated the
Stealers,

13-6.
Ed Suba JrJ
Akron Beacon
JournaVMCT

a:

ISt. Mary's

10

Vtllanova

2

IR. Morris

C2010 MCT

15 North Texas

4

Sam H. St. 141

*Winner, No. 16 seed in South

i:§ 7BYU

'i

•

!i

Ba lor

~14 Oakland

March 18

sJi

March 18
Notre Dame 6 Old Dom.

_!= 3 Pitt
t

March 19
Texas A&amp;M

Utah StGtte 12

i12 UTEP

en

I

California

15

osu

forced Minnesota to call ttme
out.
A steal and tv. o-handed jam
b) Diebler ga\ e the Buckc\ e
from Page Bl
a 28 21 lead. but Minne;ota
came back '' ith a 3-pointcr
6 Purdue to 1each the final. b) Jo-.eph at the halftime
"We c.tme here and buuer to cut the Bucke\ es ·
imp1csscd n lot of people. I lead to ~3-30 . Both te:m1s
guess, ,md we n1.1de our \\ u~. -.hot poorl) for mo-.t of the
m
the
tournament,
first half. but "armed up
\\cstbrook ~aid "It\ , great tO\\ urd the end .
fcdmg We broke c1 ~ouch 111
The Bucke,•es opened the
there bec..&lt;1Use \\C \\ere all second half ,\ith .m 8..0 run.
jumJ?ill&lt;! ruound and celebrat- ntrcc-pointers b) 'I umcr and
William Buford helped Ohio
m~.
J'he) \\eren't cclebmtmg ..1 State take a 41-30 lead.
Big Ten 11Ue because Tumer
Mmne ota re~ponded '' ith
did .1 little bit of e\CI) tlung. a 1-0 -.purt, higlili&amp;hted b) a
He nt.~de four 3-pointers and 3-pointer b) Josepn. to trim
SC\eral acrob.1tac la)Ups, and Ohio State's lead to 41-37 JU t
had IX ass1 ts. After one 0\er 4 minute~ into the sec
Ia) up. dunng '' hkh he \\as ond half.
fouled, Oluo State f::m !'.tartcd
Tumer hit another 3-pomtchantmg M \ -P
er. then Light) made consecMinn~ota had \\On four Utl\ e Ia) ups to push th. e
strail!ht gan1es and '\e\Cn of Bucke)es· lead back to
nme, but stmgs,Ied defensl\ e pomts mid\\ a) through tJ
ccond half. and the rout ''as
I) for the firsi t1me in the tournament. Tlle Golden Gopher,;, on. The Bucke)e" outscored
held their first three oppo- .\linnesota 57-31 in the secnents to combined Vi percent ond half.
''When our mind-. are right.
sh&lt;1oting in the toumament.
and had locl\ed down Purdue our !!amc i-. ri!:!ht, and l thmk
in a 69-42 'ictor\ on \\ e came out-,, ith the right
mental it\ to !!O out and get the
Saturda\.
•
Ohio 'State shtlt 58 p~rcent job done." Cight) said. ··You
on Sundu). but things st:u1ed klll1\\. the.\ kept fight ing, but
"c withheld and kept lightshml).
Consccuth e 3-pointcrc; b) ing. a-. ''ell. then thin~s start!Umer and Dtebler ga\e the ed falltng for u-. \\llCn \\C
Buckc)es a 24 18 read and p1cked ui&gt; the defense.''

•

Hillis will also be getting a
fresh start.
He went from starting tail
back under coach Mike
Shanahan in 2008 to forgotten
fullback under McDaniels,
\\ho adamant!) refused to usc
him even though rookie nmning back Knowshon ~1orcno
frequently came up sho11 Ill
short-yardage situations.
MdJanicb im.isted that the
prohlenl'.. were on thc line und
not in the backfield und that
he'd rather gi\\~ the ball to his
top drati pick. With SjX'ncer
l.an,en banged up for much of
thc ~cason. McD:1nicls said his
hands were often tied because
he didn't \\ant to risk nmning
Hillis,\\ ho was often his on I)
a\ ailc~blc fullback
Hilli&lt;; had just 13 c.m'ic.~ for
53 yards last scn'Son. lie was
inactive for l\\O games, once
to attend his gmndmother's
funeral in No\cmbcr. He also

retumed four kicks.
'Ibe 240-pound bone-rattler
energ1zed the Bronco-. in 2008
''hen he ememed during an
inju'1 eeidemrc among the
team s tatlbacks and ran for a
team-high 343 vard and
scored six touchdown!-. before
teming h1-. nght ham-.tring
against Kan-.a~ Cit) in
December.
The Bnm ns seemed to hm c
found the1r No. I tailbad; late
last season in Jerome
I huTison, \\ ho fimshcd with a
team-high R62 y.mb 1~1shing.
But 'cteran Jamal Ll'Wts, Sl'C'·
ond on thl' team in mshing,
''as rdeascd la-.t month,
'' hidt could prm ide .m opcnlllg for Hillis to be the power
t.•omplcment to thc small and
quick Harrison.
So Hilli~ get-. another
chance 111 Cle' eland "hilc
Quinn tries to jump--.tart his
career m Dcm cr.

Ohio
ft-om Page Bl
"in in the quarterfinnb
agamst Eastern \1ichagan.
Akron junior gunrd Ste.' e
McNccc; came do'' n and
buried •• 3-pomtcr from the
top of the kc) to t1e it.
Ohio had the last shot, but
&lt;. 'oopcr ''as long \\ ith a 12t'oot jumper as the horn
sounded.
I k nllll'l' than made up for
it in m l'l'ttmc.
t\nd before he \\Cnt back
on the floor. Cooper and In~
te.umnnte&lt;; got a mcs ... age
from G10cc.
"Don't flinch," he ... md he
told them.
Cooper. the :\lAC's fre~h­
man of the )Car. drained a

3-polnter to gl\ e Ohto .1 7370 lead. and moments later.
he ?locked a Ia) up b)
1c.;-.;ec-. under the ba... kct.
Mc.:\ees did make another ~
to tie' it 75-all. but Bn"ett
hit a -.oft bank -.hot. and
after a mi-.-.ed 3 b~ Akron.
Cooper drained t\\ o free
thro\\' to make it 79-75
"ith 24.9 -.econd... left.
DO\\ n b) four und out •
timeout:-, the Zip-. \\ l'
forced to launch from the
outside but b.1dh mis ... ed
both attcmpb. •(hl' loo...e
ball found its wa\ into the
hands of Ba-.sett. \, ho '' ent
in for a dunk. pro\ iding an
excl.unation point to Ohio'-.
improb 1ble title
\\ hen the hom sound~d.
Ohio·.., pia) er-. "" .1rmcd 111
fronr of their bench. celebrating -..omething onl) the)
thought \\a-. possible.

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