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-~--

2oth anniversary
for W JSHS Choir
dllrnner/~eater,~

-

Printed on 100%
Rec)C'lccll':eusprint

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio

~

D.,-

so CE ·s

Toy appointed defense counsel in Rizer appeal

OBITUARIES
Page AS
• Edgar Medling
·John Ord
• Daisy M. Patterson

BY BRIAN

J.

REED

BREEDCMYDAILVSE'IITINEL.COM

POMf.ROY
Paula
Rizer will have a ne\\
uttorne) representing her
in the appeal of her murd~r
conviction.
K. Robert To\ of Athens
' was appointed· ill Me1g-.
County Common Plea-.
CoUI1 to file the brief in the
Fourth Di..,trict Court of
Appeals and repre'ient Rtzcr
in her case.

SPORTS
• Turley named Special
Mention All-Ohio in
6 4 girls basketball.

Herman Car;;on and Glenn He died in hil&gt; reclining
Jones, attorney&lt;; with the chair from multiple gunshot
Ohio Public Defcmlcr's wound:-. She is now '&gt;erving
Office who represented Rizer a sentence of 15 years to life
m her two jury triab, filed a at the Ohio Reformatory for
notK"C of appeal in Rizer's Women, with additional
murder case Ill l·ebmary, but ·mandatory time for a
Toy Wd~ appointed to handle firearms specification.
the appeal on motton of the
Riter was acquitted in
defense, according to a filing October 2009 of aggravated
in Rizer\ appeals court murder, but her first jury
record.
"as unable to reach a verRizer shot her husband, dict on a murder charge
Kenneth, Sr., at their LO\ctt She was re-tried and conRoad home in April 2001). victed in January of murder

Rizer's second
jury
determined she intentionallv shot anJ killed her husband while he was re!&gt;ting
in hi~ recliner. In both of
her jury trials. Rizer
claimed her husband had
become increasingly violent and that she had fired
shots at him during an
argument in self defense.
Juror&lt;; found Rit.cr malingered, or lied to strengthen
her ca~e. in order to justify
shooting her husband. In her

second trial. Rizer added
dcta1b about her alleged mis
treatment at the hands of her
late husband, including his
use of a!addle to beat her.
Jurors di not buy the story.
There is no specific time
schedule set forth in Rizer's
appeal. Attorneys will now
wait for the completion of a
transcript of the trial proceedings - expected to
take at least 40 day-. to complete, and file briefs outlining their positions.

· ~ Page81

Cleanup
As the Ohio River recedes, it's leaving
behind familiar mud and debris which
closed the upper and lower parking lots
in downtown Pomeroy. Village workers
and firefighters spent several hours
cleaning the parking lots Tuesday which
are now open for motorists with parking
permits and, of course, those who have
to pay the m~ters.
Beth SergenVphotos

INSIDE.
posted.
See Page A2
• C~ester CounCil
meets. See Page A3
• Pomeroy egg hunt
set for April 3.
See Page AS

Consumers
dig deeper
for gasoline
BY BETH SERGENT
BSERGENTCMYDAILYSENT ~E~ COM

POMEROY- ~1otorio.;ts are once
again digging deeper into their \\allcts to pay for gasoline despite the
price of oil falling on ~tonday b)
$2.12 per barrel. according to AAA
East Central.
AAA estimates motorists in South
Central Ohio are paying fi, e cent-.
more for a gallon of regular than Jaq
week and practicall) $1 more than
last year's prices which a\eraged
$1.88 per gallon. The a\ erage pnce
of regular ga:-oline this \\eek in
South Central Ohio i" $~ .73 per gallon \\ith a national retatl price currently 'Pausing at $2.78. The national a' erage is up three cents from the
prior \\eek, also according to AAA.
So \\hat are motorists '' ho fill up
in ~leigs County paymg? A random
'election of retailers conducted
Tuesda) afternoon revealed the following results: Of those retaile~
who were randomly selected. both
Please see Gasoline, AS

WEATHER

Galli a-Meigs
CM receives
emergency funds
SENTINEL STAFF
MDSI\iEWSCMYDAILYSE~TII\i:L

•

High: 60.

The Owl Prowl

Low: Mid 30s.

Meigs Intermediate
School students
learn from ODNR

INDEX
2 SECTIO:SS -

12 PAGI\S

BY CHARLENE HOEFLICH

Calendars

A3

Classifieds

B2-4

Comics

ss

Editorials

A4

Sports

B Section

&lt; 2010 Ohio \'alit·)· l•ublishing Co.

liJ!IJIJ !1!1.!1!11

.

HOEFLICHCMYDAILYStNTINEL COM

1

POMEROY
When Pat
Quackenbu:.h arrived at the Meigs
Intermediate Sclwol recl.!ntly carrying a live owl, there was ple.nt)
of excitement among the tlmd,
fourth und fifth graders.
Quackenhush.
an
Oh1o
Department of_!':atural Rcsourc~:­
semor natural1st at Old :Vtan s
Cave State Park, wa:. there as part
of a progh1m offered by the science teachers geared to\\ an.l
expanding
outdoor
science
kn&lt;m ledge.
Please see ODNR, AS

COM

CHESHIRE
Galha-Metgs
Community Action Agenc) ha-.
been chosen to nxe h·e $18.855 to
supplement targeted emcrgenc) programs for Gallia Countv residents .
beginning. in the "Pring 2010.
Earlier this month :.; 19.909 "a-.
a\\ arded for emergenc) program-.. m
~1e1gs County. The fund~ in both
1 counties have been de~ignated to
. help expand the capac it) ol food and
shelter programs in high need area-..
The selection of recipients ''as
made b\ the ;-\ational Board compo...ed oi' affiliates of natit)nal 'ohm- ·
tan organizations and l'haired b)
the
~ Fcdl.!ral
Emergcnc)
Management Agency (FE~1A).
United Wav of America" ill prO\ 1dc
the administratiYe staff anti function
as thl.! fiscal agent.
A local Board made up of Gallia
and ..\lei•'s
Count\ cttizens ''ill
;::,
detcnninc ho\\ the funds a\\ ardcd to
the count1es are to be distributed
Submitted photo
amono the emergenc\ food and shelPat Quackenbush, senior naturalist at Old Man's Cave State Park, shows ter pt~grams nln b) local sen ice
an owl to Mergs Intermediate students as a part of his "Owl Prowl" sciPlease see Funds, AS
ence program.

.

�PageA2

The Daily Sentinel

Wednesday, March

Pepsi~o cuts

sugary drinks from

schools worldwl•de

NEW YORK (AP)
PepsiCo plans to rcmo\ e
sugal) drmks from schools
\\Orld'' ide. followin~ the
suc~css nf programs Ill the
U.S. aimed at cutting down
on childhood obesity.
The
compan)
said
Tuesda) it \\ill remo\ c fullcalorie, s\\ cetened drinks
from schools m more than
200 countries bv 2012.
marking the first stich mo' e
b) a major soft drink producer.
Both PepsiCo Inc., the
world's second-biggest soft
drink maker. and No. I

group, a federation of heart
associations from around the
world. He said he hope
other companies feel pres. urcd to make similar moves.
"It may be not so "ell
knCl\\ n in the U.S. how
inten ive the marketing of
soft drinks is in o man)
countries,'' Puska said in an
intervie\\ from Finland. I k
added thnt developing countries such as Mextco arc
particularly affected by this
strong mnrketmg.
Coca-Cola this month
changed its global sales polICY to Sa}' it won't sell any
pia) er Coco-Cola Co of its drmks worldwide in
adopted guidelines to stop primary schoolc; unless parelhng sugal) drinks in U.S. ents or school districts ask.
schools in 2006.
The policy does not apply to
The
\\orld
Hea1t 'econdary schools. The
Federation has been negoti- World Heart Federation
ating with &lt;&gt;oft drink makers \\ants nil drink!&gt; "ith added
10 have them remove sugary sugars
removed
from
beverages from schools for schools "ith children
1he past year as it looks to through age 18.
fight a rise in childhood
Coca-Cola, based in
obesity. which can lead to Atlanta, said m a statement
diabetes. heart problem Tuesda) when asked if it
and other ailments.
would expand its polic) to
PepsiCo's mo\ e is what secondal)' schools that it
the group had been seeking believes authorities ''should
because it affects students have the right to choose
through age 18, said Pekka \\hat is best for their
Puska, president of the schools.''

TI~ANSFiiltS

POSTE I)

decea ed, to Janet s.
POMEROY Met~
affidavit,
Count) Recorder Ka) Hill Hoffman,
reported the foliO\\ ing Bedford.
Terry
transfers of real C!&gt;tnte:
L.
Hoffman,
Joni Averion to Citizen' deceased, to Janet S.
Banking Co .. Chnmpaign Hoffman, affidavit. Chester.
Harle) Rice, deceased, to
Bank.
sheriff's
deed.
Village of Pomero).
Ph)llis Rice. affidavit.
Freda M Grueser to Olhe.
Christopher T. Shank. Cnrol
Tina M. Rees, Daran Jay
A. Shank, deed. Salisbul)
Rees.
to
American
Cind) Sand . Dougla C. Mumcipal P6\\er, deed.
Sdlld • to Jo eph C Sand . Letart
Jo h Tollner, L) nett
tace:y D Sands, deed,
TollJ\er, to Su an M Bond,
unon
J~d. L E-:,rvm. Tammy
deed. Olive.
Clancc Jean Hopkms,
l:.n m. to Bruner Land Co.,
Mitch Hopkins. Brenda Kay
Inc., deed. Salem.
Susan Clark, Jnme!oo T. Strawser. Fred Strawser,
Dmgess, to Christ) L. Deborah Carol Theiss. Ken
Barrett, deed. Villnge of Theiss, deed, SuttonNilluge
of Syracu::.e.
Pomeroy.
James Deaver, Beth
Mtchael K. Gilmore.
Deborah K. Gilmore. to Deaver, to Syracuse-Racine
Ju tm M. Gilmore. deed. Regional Sewer Distnct,
easement.
Rutland
Ste-.e Rift1e, Julie R1ffle,
Jefl) Garfield Little. Sr.•
Syrncuo;.e-Racine
decca ed. to Teresa L. to
Weidner, Jefl) G. Ltttle. Jr, Regionnl Se,,er District,
easement.
affida\it, OII\c.
Michael E. Pooler. Lois
Douglas Benton Eblin,
Sr.• Janet Margaret Eblin, to G. Pooler, to Syracu eDale Andrew Ebhn. deed. Racine Regional Sewer
District. easement.
Sali~bUI)'.
~1arshall Jarrell, Shiho
Catl1) A. Thaxton to
Sol he Lackev. nffida\ it, Jarrell, to Syracuse-Racine
transfer on death designa- Regional Sev.er District.
easement.
tion, Sutton.
Mark Jarrell, Norma J.
Jame Leamond, Mana
Leamond. to Syracuse- ·Jarrell, to Syracuse-Ral'ine
Racine Regional Sewer Regional Sewer District.
easement.
District, easement.
Michelle Jarrell, Mike
Gary S Kapp, Rita Kapp.
to
Syrncuse-Racme Jarrell. to Syracuse-Racine
Regional Sewer Di!ootrict. Regional Sewer D1strict,
casement.
easement.
David G. Carson, Elmsc
Terri Bowhng, Brian
Bowling, to Syracuse- R. Carson. David Carson. to
Racine Regional Sewer Carson family Re\ ocnble
Trust, David G. Cnr on.
Dt~trict, easement.
John R. Hunnell. Violet Eloise R. Car~on. deed.
Hunnell, to Seth Carleton. Rutland.
Thomas E. Romine,
deed, Village of Syracuse.
James A. Tucker, Deanna Dawn E. Romine, to Cecil
Tucker, to Ke\ in J. White. Carson Midkiff, deed.
Bedford.
deed, Letart.
Beneficial Ohio, Inc..
Bruce A. Hy&lt;;ell, 'terry E.
Hysell. Norm&lt;~ Jean Hysell Beneficial Mortgage Co. of
Snyder, Terr) E. Hysell, Ohio, to Ana!'&gt;tasio Polis,
Shelia C. Hysell, to Nonnan deed. Vill~ge of Pomeroy.
WachO'&lt;'ta Bank to Wells
Eugene Hysell. Patricia Ann
Hy ell, deed. Village of Fargo Bank. merger ceruficate.
Middleport.
Wachovin Bank to Wells
Virgie Mae and Paul G.
Buckley, Buckley Joint Fargo Bank, merger certifiRevocable Trust, to Virgie cate.
Linda Carole Jarrell,
~lae Buckley, deed, Orange.
Nancy S. Grueser Trust deceased, to Michael Ryan
Agreement tn Floyd G. Jarrell, ~ l ar:.hall W. Jnrrcll.
Mnrk Ray Jarrell. affidavit,
Hart, Billie Sue Hart.
Alexandria Brandt. Julian Sutton.
Peoples Banking and
Boggs. to Julian E. Boggs,
Trust Co. to Carol L. Wolfe,
deed, Ornnge.
Wolfe, deed,
CSX Transportation. Inc., Carolyn
C&amp;O Railroad, to James W. Village of Rutland.
John ~1 . King to Brenda
Warner, judgment entry.
S.
Kin~. deed, Olive.
Village of Middleport.
\Vilham M. McMullen.
Henry Hensley. Beverly
Hensley. to Henry Hensley. Brenda G. McMullen, to
Vernon L. Nobles. Jr.. Stella
deed, Olive.
Judy L. Lee, Todd L. Lee. L. Nobles, dccd. Letmt.
Talmadge D. I cv. is to
to Jeremy A. Crouse, Judy
Vanderbilt ~1 ortgage, shcrL. Morris. deed, Olive.
Jameo; Ed\\ard Clonch. iff's deed, Olive.
Jnmcs David Harry to
Amanda S. Clonch. -to
James A. l•tfe, deed. ~1arsha Lynn RmTy, deed.
Olive.
Rutland.
John K. Arnold, Patrccia
Cynthia Burkhamer to
Clarinda S. Spaun. deed. A. Arnold to Pntrecia A.
Sutton/Village of Syracuse. Arnold, Dan C. Arnold,
Terry
L.
Hoffman, deed, Rutland.

1 7, 2010

A beach, a jogger, a failing plane, and death
B V R USS B VNUMAND

D ORIE TURNER

ASSOCIATEDPAESS
HII:fON
HI:.AD
ISLAND, S.C. - Robert
Gary Jones was a pharmaceutical salesmnn on a business trip, looking forwnrd to
getting home to celehrate his
daughtcl''s third birthday. He
was enjoying a moment to
himself on this resort island.
jogging on the beach and listening to h1s iPod.
Officials
~uy
the
Wood tock, Ga., nwn nei·
ther snw nor heasd what
struck him from behind
Monda) evening: A smgleengine plane making an
c!Th!rgency landing.
The Lnncair I V-P nircraft,
which can be built from a
kit. had lost its propeller anj
v.as "basically gliding" us it
hit and instantly killed
Jones, Ed Allen, the coroner
for Beau fort Count) on the
South Carolina coast, snid
Tuc dny.
"There's no noise,'' said
avtat1on
expert
~t ary
Schia... o. a former inspector
general for the National
Transportation Safety Board.
"So the jogger, \\ ith his ear
buds in, and the plane with~
out an engine, you're basicall) a stealth ain:raft. Who
\\Ould expect to look up?"
The pilot. Edward I. Smith
of Chesapeake. Va .. and his
lone passenger both \\ nlked
away from the crash landing
ncar the Hilton Head
Marriott Resort nnd Spa.
Marshnll Clar) \\as sitting in his home office o'erlooking the l?each ''hen the
crash happened about 6.10
p.m. He said he heard.nothing '"hen the plane hit Jones
and didn't realize something \\as "rong until he
heard emergcnc) helicopters O\ erhead a short
time later.
From ht!oo back deck. he
" the plane m the '' ter
bout 100 yard from "h re
emer enC) responde u'ed
a sheet to co' cr the bloodied bod) of a man v.eanng
jogging shorts.
Jones. a 38-) ear-old

Jay Karr/The Island Packet/MCT

OffiCials remove the Lancair IV·P on Tuesday that made an emergency landmg on the
beach at Palmetto Dunes on Hilton Head Island, South Carolina.

salesman for pharmaceutical
company
GlaxoSmithKhne, \\as m
Hilton Head on a business
trip and was lookmg forward to returning home for
his daughter's birthdn)
Wednesday, his mother said.
Pauline
Jones.
of
Dunedin. Fla.. described
him as "great son. a wonderful husband," She snid
he lived in the northern
Atlnnta suburbs with his
"ife, Jennifer, their dau~h­
ter and a 5-year-old son.~
"I was never so shocked in
all my life," Pauline Jones
said, her voice shaking.
''They say that God only
gh es ) ou what you can handle. I said, 'You knov. what,
J',e reached m) max."'
The plane took off from
Orlando. Aa., at 4:45 p.m.
Monda) and \\as en route to
Virginia when it started
leaking oil at about 13,000
feet. said Joheida Fister,
spokeswoman for Hilron
Head }&lt;;land fire and rescue
F ter
d the ptlot c.leter
mmed h
uldn t make it l
H t H
rt He
th nt e
h1eid blocked
1
and the pro~ller h d corn
off. forcmg htm to attempt
landine n the be&lt;Ich

Smith confinncd he \\fls
flying the plane when he
returned to the scene
Tuesday. when the fourseater aircraft was hoisted
onto a trailer hitched to a
pickup truck and towed from
beach. Speaking in a subdued
\Oice, Smith said he didn't
want to talk about the crash.
"J've got a lot of issues
gomg on right now," Smith
said. "I've got ,, plane that'!&gt;
all tom up. And I've got a
)Oung man that I killed."
Authorities dtd not identify the passenger v.ho was
flying with Smith.
The Federal A,·iation
Administration and the
National
Transportation
Safet) Board \\Cre im estigating, Fister said.
NTSB spokesmnn Keith
Hollowa) said no cause had
been determined for the
crash. He aid the plane "as
being
transported
to
Virginia, v. here investigators
'"'ould inspect Jt. Hollowa)
sa1d mtervtews would also
be conducted wtth the pilot
und ) \\ ttne ses.
\\
on· t knO\\ \\hat
e pec1all) ince "e
actual!\ exarnmed
the
;.Jt," Holloway said.
"\\e are till gnthenng facts."
n FAA spokes\\oman

referred inquiries to the
NTSB.
Schin' o. the former
1\T'fSB official. aid Smith
made the right chotec in
landing on the beach rather
than attempting a \\ atcr
landing. The aircraft likely
was_n' t carrying flotati.
eqmpment.
"Planes like this sink like
a rock," she said.
Even with oil ~meared on
the windshield, Schiavo
sny.s the pilot should ha\e
been able to see through a
small window on the stde of
the plane and possibly yell
out to anyone below. Still.
there m;ty have been little
time to try to a\oid hitting
the jogger. he said.
The airplane model that
killed Jones has n turbme
engine and can fly up to
370 mph. accoroing to the
Lancair Web site. The
"fastbuild kit" for the IV-P
model, which has a pressurized cabin. is listed as
co,ting $129,000 and is
"fully -FAA approved." the
sJte ~ays.
The plane "could be easi- h bmlt in one"• home shop"
and "hns proven over the
years to be '&lt;'el)' safe, reliable and extremelv low
mamtenance." the site

U.S. census forms arrive in the mail: What to expect
B Y HOPE YEN

ASSOCIATED PRESS
WASHlNGTON - Let
the count begin.
More than 120 mtlhon
V.S. census form begin
arri\ ing Monda) m mailboxes around the country. in
the go,ernmcnt's once-adecade population count
that v.ill be u::.ed to dtH) up
congre sional seat and
more than $400 bilhon in
federal aid. Fast-growing
!'-tates 111 the South and the
West could stand to lose the
mo t bccau e of lower-thanaverage mail participation
rates in 2000 nnd higher
shares of Hispanic's and
young adults. who nrc
among the least likely to
mail in their forms.
Did tho~e $2.5 million
Super Bowl ads \\ork? Sta)
tuned.
"When you rece1vc your
2010 cen~us, please fill it
out and mail it back,'' said
Census Bureau director
Robert Grme~. who kicked
olf the national mail-in
camp.1ign
Monda)
in
Phoemx, Ariz.. a state
which could gain up to two
U.S. House ~cats because of
rnpid immigrant growth in
the last dec&lt;~dc.
Groves ts urging cittes
and states to promote the
census and improve upon
rates in 2000, \\hen about
72 percent of U.S. houschold~ returned their forms.
1
~ If e\'CI) one who rccci vc' a
census form mails it back.
the government "ould save
an estimated $1.5 billion in
~ follow-up visits.
Spcakm~ in an intcrvic\\,
Groves smd real-time ccnsus data showed public
awarene~s of the 2010
count had improved since
January to levels similar to
2000 .11 this point. "hich
he called "good news.''
Still. he remained particularly concerned about
motivating young adults,
who were lagging ~~thcr
groups. Many twentysomethings nm\ on their
O\\ n \\ere lh ing with their
parents in 2000. so the)

•

ha' en 't had the experience
of I tiling out census forms.
"If the American public
come~ through in the way
ever) one is capable of.
\\e'll ha\e n great censu .''
Groves said.
The next few \\eeks will
be criticnl. tven as it aims
high. the Census Bureau
predicts that maybe twothird of U.S. households
\\ill mail in the form. That's
because it faces special
challenges of growing li .S.
apathy toward . urveys. re!'-idcnts displaced by a high
number of foreclo ures. as
well as immigrant' who
hme become more distru!itful of government worker~
amid n crackdown on ille!:!al
tmmigration.
~
From May until July. it
\\ill send cen us-taker~ to
cnch home that . doesn't
reply by mail. which sometimes leads to more inaccurate response .
In
2000,
Florida,
Gcorgtn. Ne\ ada. Arizona.
Texas and North Carolina
each huJ bdow-avcrage
mail participation rates of
less than 70 percent,
according
to
newl)
released census data. Since
then. many of these states
hm e seen higher rate!'- of
foreclosures nnJ rapid
growth of Hispanic or
blncks. '" ho arc often more
reluctant to turn in their
forms. Each of these states
stands to cain at least one
U.S. House scat, \\ith
Texas picking up a!'- many
as four.
On the other end of the
scale, l\tidWC!'-1 states such
Hs Wiscon~tn, lowu and
Nebraska ranked at the top
in mail participation. at
roughly SO percent. The!ooe
states had higher share, of
older white residents. who
are mor~ likely to 'kw \e~­
sus partiC'tpatton as a CJ\ 1c
dut). IO\\ a could Jose one
sc.1t based on h1" ing population growth, while :,c.tt
for Wisconsin and Nebraska
arc likeh
to remain

a nation\\ ide overcount of
13 milhon people, most!)
from duplicate counts of
more nffluent whites \\ ith
multiple homes. Still. 4.5
million people \\ere ultimate!) mis ed, most of
them IO\ver-income blacks
and Hispanics.
"fhe Census Bureau has
it \\ork cut out for it.'' satd
William H. Fre), a demographer at the Brookings
Jno;titution v.ho analyLed
the participatiOn number.:-.
He noted an irony in whkh
states and counties '' ith
high
matt-participation
rates in 2000 \\ere the one
least likely to see large
population gains in recent
years.
"Thb makes it even more
incumbent on the d) namic
fnst-gro\\ ing parts of the
cnuntf) to improve upon
their subpar census participation in 2000. if they an:
going to receh e their just
rewards.'' Fre\ nid.
As pnrt of it; outreach. the
Censu!'- Bureau for the fir t
time is mnilin~ out bilingu:-~1
I~nglish-Spamsh
ccn u'
forms t(} 13 ·million hou chold-... Census fom1s are
also nvailable upon reque ...t
111
Chinese,
Korc:1n.
Vietnamese anJ Russian.
and assbtance guides .tre
a\'ailablc in 59 langunges at
W\\ w.20 IOcen us .gO\.
It al o 1' hoping to moti' ate cities, countie:-. and
local communitie!'- to get
unolved. In 2000, both
dense urban citie!'- and
sprawling rural area' from
Alabama
and
California to Michigan and
.NC\\ York
faced proh-

COMPUTER SALES AND SEVIC
MEIGS CouNTY

unchanged~

In 2000, the Census
Bureau for the firM time had

!ems "ith pnrttctpation.
particularly in areas '' ith
larger shares of lo\\ erincome re!'-idents.
Beginning next week. the
Cen,us Bureau \\ill publish
daily real-time data on 2010
mail-back
participation
rates for the U.S. broken
down by stntc, county, cuy
and
zip
code. Ron
Loveridge, pre,ident of the
National League of Citie
and the ma) or of Ri\ ers ide.
Calif., is chailenging rna)ors to sec who can get the t
highest participation mte
The skeptics include
Chri:.topher B. Aoyd. 40. a
budding engineer in Fairfax
County. Va., a suburb outside Wa.,hmgton. D.C., who
snys he doe !-on 't trust the ft;A
eral go, emment to han~W
his per onal infom1ation. "I
don't need bi!! brother
wat~hing any more than the)
a! rend' do,'' Flovd ''' ectcd
~tondav. "The Cen,'Us "as
nt OUr Church )estCrda) and
there (\\ere) se\eral of us
against gh in$ out our information. ~ly nght not to.''
The I0-qucstion form is
one of the 'hortest in the
hbtory of the cen:.us. It
a'ks a pcr,on·!'- name.
address. phone number.
age. race and ethnicity. gender. li,·ing arrangements
and home ov. nership. The
infom1ation i kept 'trictl)
confidential under federal
In\\. and the Ccnsu::. Bureau
doC!. not share data "ith
other agenc1cs, including
la\\ enforcement.
Failure to rc'pond to the
cen::.us can·ies a fine of up to
$5.000, although that lav. i:)
rarcl) enforced .

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The Daily Sentinel

Wednesday, March 17, 2010

Hospitalized
CJ ll!STFR
Canb nHl) be sent to Nara Hartman of
Chester who i" a patient at llcalth South 3. Wc~tern Hill
Dnvc, Room 225 B, Parkersburg. \V.Va. 26105.

Community Calel)dar
ublic meetings
Monday. March 22
RACINE Southern
Local Board of Education,
r~gular meeting, 8 p.m.,
h1gh school media room.

Clubs and
organizations
Wednesday, March 17
CHESTER Special
meeting of Shade River
Lodge, 7 p.m., to confer
Entered Apprentice Degree
on three candidates. All
Masons
invited.
Refreshments follow.
Monday, March 22
HARRISONVILLE -The
Harnsonvllle
Senior
Citizens will meet at 11
a.m at the Presbyterian
Church. Blood pressures
be taken followed by a
.
tluck dinner.
Tuesday, March 23
CHESTER
Pa~
Councilors
of
Chester
Council,
Daughters
of
Amenca, will meet 7 p.m. at
the hall.

.II

Church events
Thursday, March 18
POMEROY
Community Lenten services
continue with a Passover
observance, 7 p.m., Trinity
Church
Sponsored by

Meigs
ASSOCiation.
Thursday, March 25
POMEROY - Rev. Brian
Dunham to speak at Grace
Church, 7 p.m., as part of
Meigs
Ministerial
Association's community
Lenten program continues.

Other events
Wednesday, March 17
POMEROY
Community dinner at New
Beginnings
United
Methodist Church, 112
Second St., Pomeroy, serving 4:30 to 6 p.m. Menu is
baked steak, mashed potatoes, green beans and
dessert. No charge.
Thursday, March 18
MIDDLEPORT - Heath
United Methodist Church,
free community dinner,
4:30-6 p.m.. spaghetti,
Texas toast,
desserts,
refreshments.

Birthdays
Thursday, March 18
RACINE A belated
birthday card shower has
been planned for Clyde W.
Johnson who celebrated
h1s 85th birthday on March
14. He is confined to the
Ravenswood Care Center,
113 Washington Street,
Ravenswood.
W.Va.
26164.

~

Delyssa Huffman/photo

Gabrielle Mankin, a senior at WH.S, is excited for the 20th Anniversary of the WJSHS Choir dinner/theater. She stands
beside a prop that can be seen during the performances this weekend.

'Lights, _Camera, Action!'
20th anniversary for WJSHS Choir dinner/theater
Bv DELVSSA HUFFMAN
OHUFFMAN@MYDA LYREGISTEA COM

MASO~ , W.Va. For
19 years, \Vahama Jr/Sr
High School choir member~ ha'c graced the stage
with the1r performances
dunng the annual dinner
theater show. And this year.
ASK DR. BR.C)THER.S
during the 20th cllllliversary. 120 student~
take
the ~tage Frida), Saturday
and Sunda&lt;v
Event coordmator Cry.;tal
Hendric.k&lt;, and her husband
and co-coordmator. Chip
Hendricks, are e~cited for
the anniversan show.
More than anything else in
DR. JOYCE BROTHERS
"Audience members \\ill
the world, my daughter knO\\ e' ery ...ong," Crystal
Dear Dr. Brothers: Ever wants to go to medical stated. "We decided to
&lt;,mce he \\as 12 ) ears old. school. She realty is il com- choose all of thio; year's
passiOnate pcrs~n. but I'm songs from memorable
tn)' deep!) rclig.ious ~on
wanted to be a pric t But a little \\Orried about her mov1es."
no\\. after onl) fi\e years. grades It almost seems too
Several examples of \\hat
he ha5&gt; hung up his collar late in her academic life to the choir members ha'e in
and left the priesthood. He's get the kind of glowing store include singing and
al\\a)S been so self as~ured, grades needed to attend the
alwa.) s kno" ing \\hat to do schools she wants to appl)
next "1th great conviction. to. I knO\\ her role in life is
But nO\\ he just "&gt;eems so to be a doctor, but I'm conlost. I really get upset when cerned she m1ght be prehe talks about havmg no vented from realizim! her
plans for the future. I'm goal. It makes me very sad.
very worried. What, if any- How do lcope? - T.H.
Dear T.H.: If vour daughthing. can I do?- ~.G.
Sometime~ in the quest
Dear N.G.: It must have ter can do well on the ex~un
been a very traumatic deci- that is required of all stu- for good health ) ()U have to
sion for your son when it dents for medical school. talk aboll! unplca~ant thing~
came to lea\ ing the prie~t­ ~he will have a chance of - like colorectal cancer.
Talking about unpleasant
hood. especially after getting in someplace. But
imagimng the course of his the odds urc tough - abm_1t things could ... ave your life
life so vividly for many 42.000 very good cand1- . because colnrectal cancer b
;years. If this leave-taking dates for only I H.OOO slots I pre\ en table; and curable,
has just happened. I believe at the nation's medical when found at its earliest
)OU will need to give him schools. And ~o being a and most treatable stal!es.
Colorcctal cancer i~ cansome time to heal without compassionate person may
ssunng him to make any not be enough to help her if ccr that occur~ in the colon
mentOU!\
decisions ~he hasn't got something to or rectum. The majority of
•
about his next step. Almost show for it - not just ma-,- colorectal l.'ancers be~in &lt;b
abnormal
like a rebound romance !cry or the pre-med materi- polyps
after a marital breakup. any al. but some work history or !!roWths - inside the colon
Impulsive moves he might other activities showing her or rectum.
\.tore than 6.400 case~ of
make now only could come capabilities for a medical
career,
as
well
a~
great
colorectal
cancer were diagback to hurt him e\'en
more. So I wouldn't he too essavs and letters of recom- nosed each ) car amono
i Ohioans during 2002 t~
worried about being there mendation.
.As
to
what
makes
a
good
, 2006 - leading to about
for hun right now. in terms
of any career advice. But of doctor these days. there are 2,400 deaths. Colorectal
course you can be support- some interesting findings cancer is the third most
that -would seem encourag- common cancer in both men
ive in other ways.
You can offer him a place ing to those who don't te~t and women and the tlmd
~o well. If the) can make 1t
leading cause of cancer
to live. mone\ to !!et started
with ~omething cl"e - if mto medical -.chool, they death in Ohio.
Sm ing liH!s requires not
vou can ~pare it - or ju~t ma) struggle at t~rst as the
academic
load
mcrea~es,
only
talking about colorecihe assurance that you are
there in the background if but they do better as they tal cancer. hut action - on
he needs you. If he hasn't go ulong becau~e of m~re your part. Early detection
explained why he lelt the hand~-on exp~ncnce w1th and removal of the pol) ps
priesthood, don't pry - he the s1ck and mJured - an~l. prevenb colorcctal cancer
may go into it when he is where they ca.n show off I from t)CCtm·ing.
If you arc 50 years or
ready. or you may never their compa~s10nate. bedreally know the reason. That side manner. i\ study 111 the
of
Applied
would be OK- only he has Journal
to be comfortable with 1t. Psychology showed that an
Offer to attend church with examination of 600 medif he has not lost hb ical students found that
CHESTER - Chester
. or e\CTl if he has. 1\sk those who tested strongly
him if he'd like you to help for personality trait~ such Council, Daughter~ of
him explore some new as conscicntiousnes~ and America. met re~:ently at
options for working. You extra\'ersion had a good the hall with Julie Curti"
really need to take your cue chance at succc~s even if prc~iding.
Scripture, the Lord·~
from your son on this one. their cognitive skills were
lie prob.tbly has lost a lot of not as high. So if your prayer. the pledge to the
confidence in his mvn judg· daughter can get her foot in American llag, and mil call
mcnt, ~o be there to back the door. that's a good first on ""hat we lm e.. &lt;)pcned
him up. That's the best you step. How you can cope b the meeting. It wa:- not~:d
can do for now - ju~t keep by letting her do her own that valentine~ had hcen
sent to sew rat people.
thing.
standing in his corner.
It wa~ repottcd that Gary
(
c
J
20
J()
!Jy
King
Ft'attm•,,
•••
Wolfe
1s home from the hos
Syndi&lt;
are
Dr.
Dear
Brothers:

How to deal after
leaving priesthood

'"ill

dancing to songs from
''Grease."
"Footloose,''
"Titanic" and ":--.:apoleon
Dynamite.''
Additional
songs from the 70s, 80s, and
90s w11l be performed.
Since January. members of
the choir have been rehearsing and preparing for the big
event. Crystal stated that 90
percent of the d10ir is made
up of band member;.
She contmued to sa) that
much ha~ ~nanged -.mce the
ltro;t )Car
Both ( r~ stal and C
Hcndnck
h ..., e
m~olved ~ince the begmning and the) both commented that thts )ear's sho\\
is far from the one that wa5
held 20
rs ago.
"Dunn our first sho\\.
\\ e had more people on
stage than tn the audience,''
Crystal said. ''Nm' \\ ith
more support and more
funds. \\Care able to put on

a spectacular sho\\ ,... ith
glit"Y costumes and professional lighting.''
Chip added that it was a
"jo,y to \\ atch the show
grow" c~nd that more and
more kids have become
111\uhed throughout the
years. making it a huge ~uc­
ce"s.
Both hu..,band and wife
added that the show couldn't go on with the continuU'- o;upport of \ olunteer....
the l
mumt). and of
boosters.
..1med two indi\idUJb \\h ha\e been coming
back ) e,lr after year, even
though their ktd" graduated
m('re than a de~ade ago.'
L
fhompson ha... dedi~
J 17 vears to the annunl e\ erit. while Fred
Weaver has ghen 14 years
of 'olunteer sctv ice. The
Hendricks said that both
voluntee.rs lm e helping the

kid" durin2 the sho''.
'·We \\Ould ha\c never
lasted the-..e 20 years without all of our support,''
Crvst.tl stated.
•
Thb year, 16 seniors ,.,·ill
bid farewell to the dinner/theater event on Sundav. The
event wtll be held 'in the
school's gymnao.,ium.
Show time..,
include
Fnda\, March 19. with dinner beginning at 6 p.m. and
the sho\\ "tarting at 7 p.m.;
Saturda\, March 20, dmner
at 6 p.in. and show at 7
p.m.: and Sunday. March
21. dinner at I p.m. and
sho\\ at 2 p.m.
The dinner menu consists
of -..paghetti, cole sla\\, roll~
be' erage and dessert.
Admbsion for both the
dinner and show is S I 0 for
adults and SS for ...enior citizens
and
children.
Admission for the show
only i~ $6.

Unpleasant topic deserves discussion
March is Colorectal Cancer Awareness Month:
orectal cancer incidence
rate~ than women.
• Ha' ing a biological parent. sibling, or off~pring
.,.. ith a h1storv of colorectal
cancer or polyps increase
Alvin
risk.
Jackson
• ~fncan Americans have
higher colorectal cancer
incidence rates than white
or A~ian-Americans.
• Ashkenazi Jew~ ha\ e
older - take action. Get a hwher colorectal cancer
potentiall)
life-saving incidence nne~.
screening for colorectal
• A per~onal medical hiscancer. The U.S. Preventive torv ol chronic inflammatoSen ices Task Force recom- f) ·bowel disea~e. intestinal
mends colorectal cancer plll) ps, or previous colorecscreening for men and tal cancer ~ignitlcantl)
.,.. omen age 50-75 year:- increase rbk.
,
using high-sensiti\e fecal
• Dkts high in fat and lo\\
blood
tc~ting
occult
in calcium. folate. und fiber
(FOBT). stgmoidoscopy. or increa~e risk.
colonoscop).
Screemngs aren't ju~t for
Ohioans who arc 50 or
older. Whtle all person~ are
at risk of de\'cloping polyps
and colorectal cancer. some
per~ons ate at greater risk

• Long-tem1 smoker~
have higher ri"k than nonsmoker;
Talk to your doctor ahout
screening~ for colorectal
cancer ~ when ) ou "hould
!!Ct one and "hich one is
right for \'OU. It COUld ...a\e
your life."
(Alvin D. Jack..\011. M.Dy
is director of the Ohio
Deparrmelll of Health.)

I

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' £RVING POM£ROY1
Uri.!!I'Ged HJJIJ·~ No Cootracts!

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than others:

• More than 92 percent of
colorectal cancers nrc diagnosed in people age 50
years and older.
• ~ten have higher col-

The Daily Selltmel
Subscribe today • 992-2155
11'11 ll'.rm datl\'sentine/.c·om

Chester Council meets

.,

pital. The death of Ricky
Koenig was noted. Games
were conducted by Goldie
Frederick and E~t11L'r Smith,
and refreshment:-. were sen,ed
h\ Garv Holll·r and l'helma
\\'hite." Attending \\ere
Charlotte Grant. Thelma
White, Ruth Smith. Dori~
Grueser. Jo Ann Rtt~hie.
Laura Mae Nice. Mat') Jo
Barringer. Esther Smith,
Gat') Hlllll'r. and Julie CLn1is.
with gue~t . .Sand) White.

877-992-978-t
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�PageA4

The Daily Sentinel

Wednesday, March

17, 2010..

The paily Sentinel
111 Court Street· Pomeroy, Ohio

(740) 992-2156 ·FAX (740) 992-2157

IF

www.mydailysentinel.com

NOT
NOW,

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
Sammy M. Lopez
Publisher

WilEN~!

Charlene Hoeflich
General M~nager-News Editor
· Pam Caldwell
Advertising Director
Cou..(!ress s/m/1 make rw Iau' respecti".l! mr
t•stahlislrmt'llt I!( reli.l!iou, or prt,Jrihitill,(! tire free
exercise thereof; or abril((!i".~ tilt• freedmtl t!{ spealr,
or of tire press; 01' tire r(!!lrt &lt;?{tire J'eopft• peaceably
to assemMt•, mrd tel petition tire Gm•emmetrt
.Ji'r a redress c?fgrier,,ruct'$.
The Fint Amendment to the U.S. Constitution

TC) l )A Y IN HIS TC) 1~ Y
Today is Wednesday, March 17, the 76th day of 2010.
There are 289 days left in the year Tl1is is St. Patncl&lt;'s Day.
Today's Highlight 1n History:
On March 17, A.D. 461 (or A.D. 493, depending on
sources), St. Patrick, the patron samt of Ireland, died in Saul.
On this date.
In 1776. Bnt1sh forces evacuated Boston during the
Revolutionary War.
In 1860, the Kanrin Maru became the first otfic1al
Japanese ship to reach U.S. soil as 1t arnved 1n San
Francisco.
In 1906, President Theodore Roosevelt first I kened
crusading JOUrnalists to a man with "the muckrake in his
hand" i'1 a speech to the Grtd1ron Club in Washington.
In 1910, the Camp Fire Girls organization was formed.
(It was formally presented to the public on this date two
years later.} The U.S National Museum, a precursor to
the National Museum of Natural History. opened m
Washington, 0 C
In 1941. the National Gallery of Art opened m
Washmgton, D.C
In 1950, sc ent1sts at the University of California at
Berkeley announced they had created a new radioactive
element, "californ·um ·
In 1960, a Northwest Orient Lockheed L-188C Electra
crashed near Ca'lnelton, Ind. kt 1ng all 63 people on board.
In 1966 a U S m dget submanne located a m1ssing
hydrogen bomb wh1ch had fa' en from an Arnencan
borT'be~ nto the Mediterranean off Sparn
In 1970 the Un ted States cast 1ts f1~st veto rn the UN
Secunty Cou c I
In 1992 2~ people were k1l ed n the truck bombrng of
the Israel embassy 1n Buenos Aires Argentina.
Ten years ago. In a dec1s1on that outraged many gun
nghts supporters, Sm1th &amp; Wesson signed an unprecedented agreement w1tl-r the Cl.nton administration to,
among other th•ngs 1nclude safety locks w1th all of its
handguns to make theM more ch!ldproof 1r return, the
agreement cal ed for federal, state and c1ty lawsuits
agarnst the gun maker to be dropped The Un1ted States
I fted a ban on imports of Iran an luxury goods. More
than 500 members of a doomsday cult were burned to
death n a makeshift cl-rurch 1r southwestern Uganda.
F1ve years ago Baseball players told Congress that
stero1ds were a problem 1n the sport; stars Rafael
Palmeiro and Sammy Sosa testified they hadn't used
them wh•le Mark McGw.re refused to say whether he
had Rapper Lil' K1m was convicted of lying to a grand
jury aoout a shootout outs de a New York radio station.
Stephans Lambie! of Switzerland won the men's title at
the World Figure Skating Championships in Moscow.
One year ago· U S. JOurnalists Laura Ling and Euna
Lee were detamed by North Korea while reportmg on
North Korean refugees living across the border in China.
The Seattle Post-intelligencer published its final print
ed1t.on.

3 C rail: More questiOns than answers
Gov. Ted Strickland recently called
the thou~ands of Ohioan::. "'ho ha\'C
hcen voicmg legitimate concerns
about his 3C passenger r.til plan
''cheerleader:- for failure" for not
blindly :-upportmg a pmpo~al that is
expected to cost at lea~t '5400 million
to star1. cn1ry a mult1-million doll.1r
annual price tag lor the state and is
riddled "'ith serious logistic,ll questions thnt could mlpctct ho\1. manv
people ride the trains and how much
money the state will hrt\ e to mvest to
keep them running. ~o matter what
side of the 3C debate )Oll are on. I
beheve the Strickland Admmistration
has a responsibilit) to Onio taxpa&gt;ers
to deli\cr an&lt;;wcrs to these que&lt;;tton&lt;;
before the &lt;;tate constders '-pending
e\oen a Slllele duPe 011 pao;,.-.eng r r tl
hN. ho\\ mud~ \\Ill the p e t
cost! In late Janu.uv. the go\oemor
rml ad' ocat~s and other off cml"
gathered at the Statehouse to
announce that Ohio "a~ awarded
$400 million jn federal .;timulu-.
re-.uurccs to get passenger tn it
'ice up and runmn' be
Clc' eland,&lt;.. 'olumbu~. Cin~mn, t1
Dayton. HO\\ e\ cr. J ) ear c~go. tl e
go\ernor said the 3C proJect \\a&lt;;
going to cost .;;250 milJion, three
months J,1ter suppo11er-. clmmed it
\\nuld cost $400 million. t\\O month-;
later it \\as '5343 m1llion and one
month later they a-.ked the ft&gt;deral
gm crnment for more than $560 million.
In addition. accnrding to a 2009
Amtrak studv commissioned b\ the
Strickland A-dministration. the· state
''ill ha' c to pro\ ide up to S17 million
per year to keep passenger train~
operating," hill' other experts predict
this sub:--id) could he much higher.
The stat\? barcl) has enough mone~
nght now to pay for existing program-. nnd sen ict&gt;s let alone millions
of extra dollars to :support new rail
serv1ee. And. if current projections
hold true. the legislature and go' ernor "ill be forced to reduce spending
by another $4-8 billion in the ne:-.:t
budget bill \\hen Ohio's federal stimult~-. dollars dry up. Kno\\ ing this. 1s
it really responsible for state govem-

Thought for Today: "Television is a device that permits people who haven't anything to do to watch
people who can't do anything." - Fred Allen,
American comedian (1894-1956).

LETTERS TO THE EDITOR
Lette·s 10 thr&gt; ed·tor &lt;;hould be lir11tcd to 300 words. All letters are
-Ubject to ed.•·,g. must be stg:1od and :1clude address and telephone
nl!Ttber "-Jo unstgned etters w I be published. Letlers should be tn
good taste add esstng •s.,Jes, not personalittes. "Thank You" letters
w II "lOt be ..1ccep1ed for p~bl calion

1be

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Jimmy
Stewart

mcnt to commit to spending millions
of taxpa)cr dollars per )ear on pas~enger

rail?

Amtrak abo predtcted in their study
that nearl) 500.000 Ohioans would
tra\el the 3C corridor b) train each
vear. But. the , 'erage speed of the
pr; pos d K
\\hen ou include
t
t1e-.
hour On
p
ain'i arc
expecte t
t1me. Tht-; lnnth:d dcp.1rture and
c~m.,al schedule could force a passenger tra\ eling fro 1 C'tncinnati to
Cle\ eland. for ex
to spend the
mght and posstbl)
half a da) of
\\ork or school on '- trip back the
next morning.\\ ith the slo\\ pace and
limited trmcl schedule, \\ hc~t is the
inccnti\e for Ohioans to ride passenger rml?
Furthermore. there arc question-.
about the impartialit) of Amtrak'-.
ridership numbers. because as a
potential operator of passenger rail
servict&gt; in Ohio. the compan) could
direct!) benefit from the JC project
1110\ ing fomard.
Rail ~... upporters say that the gm ernor's proposed JC project is ju-.t a
first step toward faster rail sen·1ce 111
Ohio that\\ ould :tip across the state at
100 mph or more and attract significant~\ more riders. Ho\\ e\ er. thi-.
upgrade to high-speed rail has heen
estimated to cost $1.5 billion. Where
is the state going to get that kind of
monC) '?
There ha' e abo been concerns
ratsed about thc feasibilit\ of using
Oh10=s existing freight railroad track~
for pa,senger" train... ser\'ice. In fact.
according to the Amtrak stud\. freight
rail companie:--. have not yet "agr~ed

to the reintroduction of paso.,enger rail ..
~erv1cc to the 3C Corndor" or the
speci fie infrn-.tructure 11nprovemenh.
draft -.chedules and a number ot other;
related item~. In addition. I recent!\ ~
receh eel a letter fn)m a con.,tituent in
the 20th Senate Di-.trict \\ho \\Orks 111'
the railroad construction bus.inc'&gt;s. He ·
\\arned that Ohio's freight rat! line.;,'
c1rc alread) congested and regular and '
un:.chedulcd maintenance\\ ill dtsrupt
both pa~scnger and fretght s.erv ice
FU11her. passenger rail c.mnot operate!
at a top ~peed of 79 mph ''hen tre.tghrlines consistent!\ travel at Je..,1&gt; than_
40 mph.
•
La-.t month. Senate Prcstdent B1ll
Hams sent a letter to the Strid!land
Administration seeking an~''er-s to
these and se\eral other nnport.uH
que..,tion-.. In addition. I continue to
hear from residents acro~s Southeast
Oh10 '' ho are concemed about the ~C
project. While taxpa)ers 11'1 our reg~
would help foot the bill for pruo~e
raiL mo:-t people in the 20th Dastnct _
\\Ould ha\e to travel hours b) car or
bus just to get to 041e of the statio~~
on the proposed 3C route.
Any mone) for pas-.enger rail must
be approH'd b~ a ..,upennajorit) of the •
state Controlling Board. Before the
Strickland Adn1inbtrauon a!'.b the
board to \Ote on the i-.sue.the) 0\\e 1t
to Ohio taxpa) ers to pro\ ide an&lt;&gt;\\ er"
to the many critical quc-.tions sui~ ltngering about the 3C project. I \\ i I
continue to ..,eek an..,\\ers to these
question-.. and I urge Ill) coll~ag.te~
m the General A ""embl) to do the ,..
'arne.
Plea:--c contact me if ) ou h.tve .tO)
que-.tion-., thought' or concem~ .tb(~Lt"
state go' ernment b-.ue-.. \ou c,m;_
"nte to me at State Sen. Jinllll)
Ste\\Hll. Ohio Statehou-.e. Room 040.
Columbu-.. Ohio 43215. or cont,.ct
my office b) phone at (614) 466
8076. I can also be rcached b) email
at SD20~ :-.enate .st&lt;~tc.oh.us. In tlddltion. for more mfnmution about Ill\
\\Ork in the Oh~o Sen.lte. \l~it ,,• •
page on the Senate "ehstte
\\" '' .ohio-.enatL' .gO\ lji nuny-::.te\\ ar1.

�,.---------

Wed nesday, March 17, 2010

The Daily Sentinel • P age As

www.mydailysentinel.com

Pomeroy egg hunt set for April 3

Obituaries
Edgar Medling

POMEROY - Again this
year
the
Pomeroy
Merchants Association will
ho~t an Easter egg hunt for
area children on Bob
Roberts football field.
Jenni Dunham is the
coordinator for the hunt

Edgar .Medling. RO. ol McDougal, Ark .. died Sun. Mar.
14,2010 at St. Bernard's Ho..,picc in Jonesboro, Ark.
Born.on Mar. 8, 1930 in Oxly. Mo .. ~l r. Medling worked
as a miilv. right and ''as a member of Local 1102 for 50
. He was a member of Sugar Creek Country Club in
,Ark. and former l\.layor of McDougal. Ark. He was
Church of Christ faith.
Sep. 27, 1948 he was united in man·iage to Juanita
(Reed) Medling. She preceded him in death on Nov. 4, 2009.
Survivors are two sons Cab in Medling of l\kDouoal.
Ark. and Kevin Mcdling of Poplar Bluff, Mo.: one daughter Debb) Cahrier of Albany: one brother Jack Medliiw of
B Y B ETH S ERGENT
Sullivan, Mo.: five sisters Waneta Dickson of St. Lo~1is, I BSERGENTCMYDAILYSENTINEL.COM
Mo., Artie Westerman of Rolla. Mo., Ethel Meadows of
Vero Beach. Fla., Zelda Davis St. Clair, Mo. and Doris
POMEROY - Staff with
VanNe..,s of Aston, Fla.: eight grandchildre~: and two the Meigs County Ilealth
great grandchildren.
Department are encouraging
Service will be Fridav. March 19 ut Erme11 Funeral Home parents of children nine years
in Corning. Ark with Johnny Bradshaw officiating. old and younger to bring
Visitation will be Thursday, March 18, 6-9 p.m. at Ennert those children in tor their
second HI N 1 vaccination.
'Funeral Home.
Online condolences may be sent at W\\W.ermertfuneral- I Kristina rinlaw of the
home.com. Memorials may be made to St. Bernard's MCHD. said the second
Hp~pice, 1726 Marie Ctrclc. Jonesboro', Ark .• 7240 I.
dose is recommended to
ensure proper vaccination,
"If they only got one shot
for the children six months
to nine years old. it isn't
Da1sy ~1. Patter..,on, 80, or Sy_racuse. passed away at 9 enough vaccine and thl.!y are
p.m., Monday, March 15,2010, m the Kunes Nursing and still susceptible to the H 1N I
Rehabilitation Center, Athens.
virus,'' Finlav. said "lf all
Born Jul) 06, I 929. in Rosedale. W.Va .. she was the they had was one vaccine
daughter of the late Aha and Hallie Cottrill Cross. On June
26, 1949, in Wilkesville, Ohio she manied Corbett "Pat"
Patterson. He preceded her in death on April 2, 2007.
She was a homemaker and attended the Ash Street
Jtist Church in Middleport.
he is survived b) her children: Cindy (Dennis) Wolfe,
•
B Y M ICHELLE M ILLER
Racine; Jeannie Patterson, Dayton, Ohio; Bobbv Patterson,
Point Pleasant, W.Va .. and Michael Patterson. Athens. MDTNEWSCMYDAILYTRIBUNE COM
Ohio: and 12 grandchildren: a sbter: Arlena Vunmcr,
CHESHIRE _ Plans to
Racine, and sc.,·eral nieces and nephews.
move Galko Industries to a
In addition to her parents and husband, she was preced- more centralized location
ed in death b) her brothers, Virgil Cross and Ralph are now in the works.
~cCiune a brother John William Cross in infanC). and a
G II" C
1 B . d f
stster, \'elma Parsons.
: ,'.a ta oun Y . ?a~ ..o
Graveside Services and Internment will be held in the 0~.:\ el~)pmental Dtsabtlltt:s
Meigs Memory Gardens at 2 p.m. Friday, March 19,2010. Supe!lntendent. · Ros~he
Friends may call at the Cremeens Funeral Home, Racine, on pu~bm .a~n~~nced the ~a~d
Thursday from 6-8 p.m. Online condolences mav be sent to Is \\Orkmo '"1th the Galltpohs
the family by visiting www.cremeensfuneralhonie.s.com.
Develop!flental Center and
~
the Oh10 Depa11ment of
Developmental Disabilities
to relocate Gallco to a vacant
building near the Early
Childhood and
Family
Center on 1illcreek Road

which will be held on
Saturday. April 3, and begin
at 2 p.m. As in previous
years hundreds of eggs will
be hidden in three areas, the
fleld, and on each side in
the bleachers area. Each
section will be designated

for an age group. The hunt
is for children, toddlers
through fifth grade.
Prize:. will be awarded
for all eggs found and
Easter ba~kets will be
!!iven to the child in each
age category who finds the

:.pcctal golden egg.
The Ea:.ter bunny will be
on hand to meet and greet
the children and will also be
available to pose for pictures with the youngsters.
For more information on the
event call 740-416-3684.

Second dose of H1 N1 vaccine encouraged

Daisy M. Patterson

then It's like they had none."
The Center~ for Disease
Control recommends the
second dose based on studies
of immune response to the
vaccine as measured by levels of protective antibodies
in the blood. The CDC states
after one dose of vaccine,
infants and young children
do not make as many antibodies compared with older
children and adults who get
one dose. The CDC recommends the doses of vaccine
be separated by four weeks.
Infants younger "than six
months of age are too young
to get any influenza vaccine.
If the second dose is
administered beyond four

weeks, the body's immune
system still remembers the
first dof&gt;e and develops antibodies or protection against
the 2009 HI N I virus,
according to the CDC. The
"2009" in the name only
relates to the year the \ irus
was first identified; it does
not have to do with how
long the vaccine will work
or the year in which it
should be administered. The
CDC :.ays research shows
the immune system will not
develop adequate protection
if the vaccine dosing is less
than 21 days.
In addition, the MCHD
has made the vaccines
available to the general pub-

lie for anyone who would
like a second dose, regardless of age.
"This could offer extra
protection in the event of a
second wave of HI N 1 type
tlu in the spring.'' Finlaw
explained.
The H 1N l vaccines are
free of charge with donations
accepted but not required for
service. Finlaw said vaccines
are available from 9-11 a.m.
and 1-3 p .m.. MondayFriday at the health department. For more information
on the availabilitY of vaccine
or any special -vaccination
clinics in the community. go
to
www.meigscountyhealth.com or call992-6626.

Moving Gallco: Millcreek Road site being considered

Deaths

John Ord
John •·Jack" Ord of Letart. WVa. died Tuesda\, March
17. 2010. Arrangements will be announced by FoglesongTucker Funeral Home.
.

~ Briefs
Dinner theater
TUPPERS PLAI!~S - The Eastern High School senior
class v.Ill pre ent the dinner theater. ·'Who Poisoned His
Meatball?' on Saturda). Dinner is at 6:30p.m. and the play
at 7:30. Doors open at 5:30. Ticket for the dinner and play
are $10, the play only. S7.

Ball sign ups

which currently houses the
GCDD children programs.
In a letter to parents,
Durbin said the move would
make Gallco more visible to
the community and make
outings and activities more
accessible to clients.
As promised by the GCDD
board, another meeting will
be held for parents at 6:30
p.m. on Thursday at Gal leo to
disCUS!:i the proposed work
release center mo'iing into the
former Guiding Hand School.
"Our board has committed to you that we will not
finalize the!&gt;e details until
after this second parent

meeting and opportunity for
your input," Durbin wrote
to parents in the letter.
Over the past several
months. Gallia County
Sheritf Joe Browning and the
GCDD board have met with
concerned parents and community. members regarding
the proJect. The work relea-;e
center has been met with
mixed reviews. the opposing
arguments revolving around
the ~afety of Gallco client!,.
While the two entities will
ha\ e to share the grounds
until September. Durbin said
:.he hopes the planned move
of Gallco will help to allevi-

ate some of those concerns.
Due to grant funding, the
sheriff's office will need to
move quickly on the work
release center once an
ag~eement 1S in place.
The work release center
will give courts another
option in sentencing non,·iolent offenders convicted
of minor criminal offenses.
During the meeting held in
January. many of the parents agreed the work release
center would be beneficial
to the county, but did not
think it belonged next door
to a facility for adults with
special needs.

Ohio officer fatally shot responding to 911 call
ELYRIA (AP) - A man
accused of exposing himself
to a neighbor's child fatally
shot a responding police
officer and v. as killed by
backup officers. authorities
said Tuesda).
Elyria patrolman James
Kerstetter, 43. was shot
Monday night· when he
entered the home of gunman Ronald Palmer. 58,
authorities said. Kerstetter
managed to call for help on
hb radio before dying.
A woman had called 911

to report that
ne1
had exposed himf&gt;elf to her
child and kicked m a wmdow. By the ttme Kerstetter
arrived. Palmer was back in
his hou~e
Other officers who arrived
after Kerstetter was shot
fired at and killed Palmer,
who had run outside. Thev
then tried to treat Kerstetter,
v. ho was taken to &amp;l\.1 H
Regional Medical Center
and pronounced dead. Pol ice
Chief Duane White!) said.
Kerstetter was on the

rc
15 years and was a
-;henff deputy before that.
Whttel) sa1d. He leaves a
wife and three daughters.
'I &lt;.; terrible," Whitely
· He was a top-notch
er, a friend to evervone.
and he loved being a cop."
Palmer had been charl!ed
last year v. ith unla,vful
restraint. aggravated menacing and disorderly conduct in
a conflict involving his wife.
court records show. Police
said at the time that Palmer
kept the woman in her home

against her will and threatened to kill himself.
As a condition of bond.
Palmer was required to stay
500 feet from his wife and
ordered to get a psychological evaluation. It was not
immediately clear Tuesday
whether Palmer had ever
been evaluated.
Palmer pleaded no contest
to persistent disorderly conduct in September. the
records show. He paid a fine
and received a suspended
sentence of 30 days in jail.

RACINE - The Racine Youth League is holding baseball and softball sign ups from 6-7:30 p.m .. Friday at the
Racine Ma..,onic Lodge.

Jury says Ohio city discriminated, awards $1.9M

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

CLEVELAND (AP) - A
federal jury has av,:ardcd a
former recreation center
employee nearly I .9 million
after finding that the
Cle\ eland-area city where
she worked discriminated
a~ainst her because :.he is

For the Record
Divorce
POMEROY - An action for divorce was filed in Meigs
County Common Pleas Court by Patricia Riggs. Pomeroy, ~
l
inst Paul F. Riggs, Gallipolis.

Dissolution

Funds from Page At
organizations in the area. The Local Board is responsible for
recommending agencies to n~cche these f~nds and any
additional funds available under this phase of t~e program.
Under the terms of the grant from the Nat!on~l Board.
local governmental or private voluntary orgamzat10ns chosen to receive funds mu..,t: (I) be non-profit; (2) have an
lunting system and conduct a n annual audit; (3) pra.cnon-?iscrimination: ~) have demonstra~ed th~. cap_abtl•
ity to dehvcr emergency tood and/or "h.elte.t progt ,uns, and
5&gt; if they arc a private voluntary orgamzatton. they should
have a voluntary board.
Gallia and Meigs Counties haw di~tributed Emerge~cy
Food and Shelter funds previously w1th_ the Gallta-Mctg_s
Community Action Agency and the G.allta County Cou~ctl
on Aging participating. These agencl?~ were resp.ons1ble
for provicltng IHimenlliS meal~. 111 addltll&gt;ll to hous1ng and
utility assistance.
.
Furtha information on the program_may IJ&lt;'. obtm~u,_d_by
contacting Sandra Edwards. Commumty ServtCC'.\ Dn•tston
Directo1~ Gallia-Meig., Commtmity Action Agency at 3677341 or 992-6629.

plained and asked for an
accommodation for her disorder.
Thirion\ Jawvers sav she
\\or ked for the city fot~ nine
years and had excellent
performance reviews. The)
say several black employ-

ees were hired after the
election of Mavor Fletcher
Berger m November 2007.
who i~ black. and that
Thtrion was fired in
September 2008 while she
was on an approved medical leave.

Gasoline from Page AI

the Hot Spot in P01tland and
the Cool Spot in Tuppers
POMEROY - A dissolution was granted in Meigs Plain.., had the lowest price
County Common Pleas Court to Karen Denise Mullins and · per gallon of regular at
Timothy Lee Mullins.
$2.69.
The majority of those
retailers selected were
charging $2.75 per gallon
POMEROY - The following were sentenced on felony , ~or re&amp;ul.ar g~soli1~e. incl~dcharges in Me1gs County Common Pleas Court:
mg _H1ll s Cttgo m Rac~ne
• Chris Ward, the years community control. 500 hours (whtch \Vas abo chargmg
community service, non-support of dependents.
$2.75 for plus grade gaso• Samara A. Stone. five years community control. 500 ~ours
community service, completion of MonDay Correctional
Facility program. burglary and possession of drugs.

Sentenced

white and because of her
anxiety and depression.
The U.S. District Court
jury also found Monday
that the city of Bedford
Heights improperly retaliated against Charlene
Thirion when she com-

line). TNT Pitstops in
Middleport
(Second
Avenue).
Chester
and
Syracuse, Twin Oaks and
Taz 's in the Five Points Area
and Riverside Food Matt in
Pomeroy. The Pomeroy
Exxon was charging $2.74
per gallon for regular and
the BP in Tuppers Plains had
a price of $2.72 per gallon.
Other prices for a gallon of

regular ga1oline from the smrounding areas. according to
AAA. include: $2.76, Athens:
$2.69,
Jackson:
$2.72.
Chillicothe: $2.70. Logan;
$2.74. Columbiana: $2.7 3.
.Ylarietta;
$2.81. · East
Liverpool: $2.74. Portsmouth:
$2.73, Gallipolis: $2.73.
Steubenville:
• $2.71.
Hillsboro: $2.68. Washington
Court House: $2.76, Ironton:

S2.763, Waverly.
AAA also reports historical price data going back 10
years to the year 2000 shows'
prices have increased on
average roughly 13 percent
between March l and April
30. This year.\\ ith the economy still emerging from a
deep recession. it remains
unclear hO\\ strong the
spnng price jump will be.

0 DNR from Page AI

The naturalist took the stu- opportunit) to spend time
dents on an "Owl Pro,vl" outside exploring science
where they learned about the through hands on activities.
biology of owls b) looking at A small garden was planted
live ones. played a game to teach concepts such as
explaining the food chain. life cycles. interdependissected owl pellets. and dence. decomposition and
explored some prime owl soil science~." said Perko.
The tirst "Super Science
habitat in search of wild ov. Is .
Saturday"
was held in
More science camps will
follow along with a week- October at which time the
long summer science camp students participated in
at Meigs Intermediate.
according
to
Science
Teacher Heike Perko.
"We work hard on
expanding ..,uch activities
into the everyday les..,on.
Teachers and students have
acces.., to a three mile hiking
trail behind the school.
thanks to local V&lt;'lunteers
who built it. This offers

activities such as archery.
mnking mosaic stepping
stones. creating an edible
landfill and learning about
recycling. They pla)·cd the
"ater cycle game where
they learned about water
and its impottance to the
existence of life.
Perko expressed her
enthusiasm about outdoor
science programming and

her hope that community
members v. ill become volunteer participants . Local
bo' scouts recentlY installed
blue bird and screech owl
boxes along the trail at the
rear of the~ school. further
enhancing the naturalist's
··owl Pro'' 1" program

�PageA6

The Daily Sentinel

Wednesday, March

Woodlands Job Corps positions open 1
cou. nt·es
Several l·n Athens and y ·nton
1
1
SENTINEL STAFF

MDSNEWS@MYDAILYSENTINELCOM
COl U~1Rl S
Ohio
Department of Nmurnl
Rcsm1rce' (ODi':R) Dir~ctor
Sean D. I og~m announced
that 00:'\:R 's DivisJOn of
Fore..,tr) is currently a~cept­
ing applkati(lns for the Ohio
Woodlands Job Corps. made
possible by the American
Reco\ er) ami Rcill\ csunent
Act.
The ~ccond round of this
conservation skills training
and 'en ice program ''ill
employ at least 70 individuals who are intcre~ted in
working as part of Ohio's
$15 billion \\ood industry.
or as corbervat ion \\ orkt:rs
for mctroparks. national
forc-,t&lt;; or nonprofit lnnd
m,magement organizations.
Corps ml!mbers will work a
total of l ,000 hours and gain
\\ ork experience dnd w&lt;Xxtcrafl !mining .tt nne of nine
state forc~tc; Corpsmembers
will remove im asive ~pecics
on 'tnte foresL..,. leam hm\ to
fight \\ ildfirec; and recehe
extenstve tminmg and technical cct1ificatiom•. The con:.er\ation v.orker positions pa)
S13.43 per hour.

"The rc~1xmse to the Ohio
Woodlands Job Cnq1:-. from
the wood indu~tl). forest
landO\\ ners and current
c01vsmembcrs has been
~xtremely positi\'e ... said
Director l.ogan "The benefits
deri' ed from these cff011s \\iII
lnst long beyond the training
pcnod ofeach corpsmembcr.''
The Ohro Division of
Forc~tr) will employ 14 liveper..,on crC\\S working and
training at nine separate state
fore..,ts beginning June 21.
The headyum1ers for these
crews include: Blue Rock
State Fore!'lt 111 Muskmgum
Count): Fernwood State
Forest in kffer..,on County:
Hocking State Forest 10
Hocking County: \.1aumcc
State Porest in Fulton, Henr)
and
Lucas
counties;
Mohican-t\ lemorial State
Forest in A~hland County:
P1kc State Fore..,t in Highland
and Pike counties: Scioto
!'rail State Fore~t in Ro~s and
Prke counties: Shawnee State
Forest in Adams &lt;md Scioto
counties; and Zaleski State
Forest in Atherb and Vinton
countie....
"While employment of
Ohioans is a cnrcial component of this program, it abo

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

gives participants a unique
educational opportunity:
which draws on the expertise of state forestry staff.
Ohio's wood industry. OSL'
Extension and Hocking
College.'' c;ai&lt;.l Director
Logan. ''This program will
provide valuable tratning
and real \Vorld learning
experience for corpsmembers interested in making a
career in Ohio's wood
industry. which directly
employs 119.000 people."
Both The Ohio State
Univer..,it) and Hocking
College arc partners in the
training component of this
program. Four of the 25
total weeks of employment
for cnrpsmemhers will be
spent on extensive safet)
training. commercial pesticide application. wildfire
fighting, the proper usc of
chainsaws. identifying mvnsive and native tree specres,
and learning be..,t management practices tor logging.
To aid in forest management, particrpants will
spend a majority of their
time removing woody invaSl\'e plant species from state
forestlands. Exotic invasive
plants. :.uch as bush honey-

suckle and tree-of-heaven.
supprc:-scs natJve understo
ry &lt;.pecies and is detrimental
to healthy woodlands. In
addition to removing inva:-.ive species, the crews will
al&lt;.o assist with forest ill\ entory work. timber stantl
improvement
activities,
trails maintenance and tree
planting activities.
As
an
affili.ttc
of
Americorps through The
Corps Network. corps members will be eligible to receive
up to $2.300 towards their college education. The American
Recovcty and Reinvestment
Act funds are provided to the
Ohio Department of Natural
Resources through the USDA
l·orc&lt;;t Sen ice, Northea~tem
Area State and Private
Forestry.
To apply for Jobs through
the Ohio Woodlands Job
Corps
visit
ohiodnr.gov/lorestry
or
ohiomcansjobs.com. The
deadline for application is
April 9. A background
check is requrred for all ..,ucccssful applicants.
'l11c Ohio Depar1ment of
Natural Resources ensures a
balance between wise use
and protection. of our natural resources for the benefit
of all. Visit the OD~R \\Cb
:.ite at ww'' .ohiodnr.com.

SENTINEL STAFF

WASHINGTON. D.C.
l .S. Rep. Charlie Wilson,
0-0hio. said Tuesda) that
any health care reform must
include facets that strengthen Medicare.
\\ ilson joined with officmls from AARP and the
Center
for
Medtcarc
Ad,ocac) for a pres.., conference as suppor1ers and oppo·
nent&lt;; of Pre'&gt;ident Barack
Obama'c; mas!'li\e health care
legislation contmucd to jostle for 'otes in the House of
Represental!vec;.
"I would support the
Senate bill with change~ that
take out the specl31 deals for
certain &lt;;tate~. like Nebraska,
improve ,1ffordability for
middle class families and
adjust the harmful excise tax
on high cost health plans,''
aid Wilson. "I need to make
'ine those modifications
have been made. rm waiting
for the final language of the
reconciliation hill to sec the
chan••cs
for
I
e
. myself before
,
can commrt my vote.
Wilson smd ensuring
~1edicare 's Sl&gt;lvcncy IS of
primary impor1ance t&lt;? him!
given the demographr~s ol
Ohio's Sixth Cengresstonal
Distnct.
Ill
di-;trict.
"My

Robert D. Walter Center for
Strategic Leader~hip is to
provide the education and
hand-;-on experiences to
assbt in developing a ne\\
generation of strategic leaders - leaders '' ho can idenllfy new opportunities for
the organization to create
nC\\ or additional value and
craft slrategic plans to realIZe these opportunille5.''
Sherm.m sa1d that the
center v. tll 1nitllll) ha\ c
three components· a select
lt:adershtp program to
•tccelemte leadership capabihtlcs of high-potential
College of Busmess students, an educational certificate program to develop

Appalach1an Ohio, has a
large senior and retiree population, so I'm reall) interested m ho\\ this refom1 bill
strengthens Medicare and
helps our early retirees,'' he
said. ''If we don't do anvthmg, the Medicare Tnlst
Fund is projectt:d to be
in soh ent by 2016. ~ Iedicare
takes care of our seniors, but
it':s high time thut we take
better care of the Medicare
program and make sure it
remains m the black. Thi~
bill keeps Medic&lt;tre solvent
for nine more years.''
\Vi bon "ao., critic&lt;~! of the
U.S. insurance industrv during the press conference. stating, "Let's be dear: Insurance
companies have failed to provide affordable health insurance for many Americans.
espcctally early ~-etirees.''
He also satd that he
believed that ...enior citi1ens
would be better off because
of the work Congress has
done in reference to health
care reform.
The Associated Press
reported Tuesday that business groups are spending $1
million a day to depict the
bill as a job killer in tclevi~ion ad:-. in the home districts of 26 wav~ring House
Democrats. A new ~ad barrage from supportt:rs of the
legislntion went up Tucsda)

m II

di~tricts.

some O\erlapping. And unionc; are
threatening some of tho~e
lawmakers to come through
for Obama - or pa) the
price in the fall elections.
Obama has summoned
members to the White
House one by one for private, face-to-face persua..,ion, and also met larger
groups. Diverse administration re..,ourccs are bemg
employed: Even the Navy
secretary 1~ in the game.
"We here in Congress are
giving a new meaning to
March madne-..s." said Sen.
Lba ~1urkowski. R-Aiaska.
an opponent of the legislation.
At ~take is a bill that would
cover some 30 million uninsured people. end insurance
practices such as den) ing
coverage to those with a pret.:xisting conditions. reyuire
almost all American~ to get
coverage by law and trv to
slow the cost of medical care
nationwide. The comprehensive legislation could affect
nearly every American. from
those undergo1ng annual
checkups to people facing
major surgery.
Activists on both ends of
the political spectrum arc
energized. Tea party volunteer~. \"ho rallied Tue~da) in
\Va~hington. arc planning to
flood congressional offices

Panel to begin second round of blood tests for C8
PARKERSBURG. W.Va.
People near
DuPont's Washington Works
plant will undergo another
round of tests to measure
whetht:r a chemical used to
produce Teflon b affecting
their immune svsh:ms .
C8 - also k"nown as pcrfluoroocatanoic acid. or
Pl•OA - has been used at
the plant along the Ohro
River since the 1950s in the
manufacturing of non~tick
and stain-resistant products
like Teflon. It's ulso found
in food packaging c;;uch as
microwave popcorn und
ffht-food wrappers.
'I he chemical contaminat·
ed SIX water districts in

(AP)

B v H OPE RousH
HAOUSH@MfDAILYI'lEGISTEA COM

POINT
PLEASA!':T,
W Va.
Their athleticism
and character have both
impressed and influenced
generationc; of local athletc.....
Mernberc, of the Point
Pleasant High School Hall
of Fame are often athletes
who excelled in their sport.
but alc;o demonc,tratcd good
character. And the PPHS
H,tll of Fame Committee ic;
now accepting nominationc;
for the 2010 class that will
be mducted this fall.
t\'ominmion forms arc
avuiluble at the PPHS office
and Point Plea&lt;&gt;ant River
Museum. Nominee-. must
be gradu&lt;tte!'l of PPHS and
must h:ne been athletes
prior to 1970. In addition.
nominees must have at least
• two vars1ty letters. Hall of
Fame members abo are
rcyuircd to be good role
models
and
citizenc;.
!\'"ominations \\ill be accepted through ~a) 31.
Once the nomination perio&lt;.l is over. the Hall &lt;,1f Fame
Selection Committee will

Wednesdav . .. Sunnv.
Highs around 60. Light and
:.trategic leadership skills educational experience for variable winds ... Becoming
for studenh from across the its studenb.
nor1h around 5 mph in the
"In today's economy. afternoon.
university. and a research
center to ad\ ancc our teaching our students the
Wednesday niJ!ht ...\1o!&gt;tly
understanding of strategic complex ptinciples of ..,trate- clear. Lows in the mid 30s.
gic leadership v. ill further N011h winds around 5 mph in
leadership.
The cclchration event this mission," he ~aid. "If one the e\ening ...Becoming light
drev. mt.:mber-; of the Ohio of our students can lea\e and '~uiable.
University
Board
of Ohio University to be a
Thursda~ ...Sunny. Highs
Trustees, CEO of Cardinal leader like Bob Walter, or an) in the mtd '60s. Northwest
Health George Barrett and of the other lenders in this wind~ around 5 mph.
many more luminaries to room. \\e will know that v.e
Thursday night ...Partly
honor Walter's contributron have achieved our m1sston."
cloud). Lows in the upper
"Our vision 1s reahled 30s. South\\ est \\ inds
to the college and to dtscu.ss
the principles of strategic through our students. facul· around 5 mph.
t). \taff. alumn1 and fnend-, •
leadeNh!p.
Frida) ...Most!) 'unn).
d "Our l,1 1t
Prec;Jdent Roderick J . McDa'd
Ht .h 11 the upper 60s.
McDavis honored \\alter's to educate tomorro\\ 1 d
hida\
mght ...Partly
contribution toward expand- ers and lift our um\ ersit) to cloud) m the evening ...Then
ing Ohio University's mis- even greater heights is now
sion of providing a singular possible."

Wilson: health reforrl) must keep Medicare solvent
MOSNtwSOMYDA LYSE:NTJt.._L COM

~PHS Hall of Fa~e .
commtttee accepts nom1nat1ons
.

meet and vote on thts year's
class. 'Jo ~e elected l? the
Hall of l·ame, nornmeeo:;
muc,t recetve at least 75 percent of the \Ole. Pollo\\mg
the initw! nomin~t!on, non.
mees may he eltgtble f~r
\Ole each year for a rmmmum of three successive
years and may be re-nom1
nated thereafter. All votes
\\ill be taken by roll call
unless a secret ballot is
called for b) a member. ~or
'oung. purpose,, a contlJct
of intere't \dl! cxtst. for n
tr~stee w~en ius/her "Timedrate famrly member IS up
for vote or tht: vote is
regarding tha.t member..
The selectiOn commrttee
may select .up to 12 new
!nembers t)m ye~r. Anyon~
mterested rn c;ervlllg on the
~election comnuttee may
jo~n. To serve on the commrttce. mcll)ber&lt;;_ must pay
annual dues of$.).
~
The 2009 f-!..all of !·arne
con-;J..,ted of b former ath
letes.
. .
.
For more llljormarwn.
call Glenn Long at 304675-1732 or visit the
I~PIIS Hall of
facebvok page.

Fana

W

--------------------------------------------------- Meigs County Fore~t

ou College of Business receives $2 million
\THENS
Ohio
Uni,er:.it) 's College of
Busine-.s recently celebrated
the opening of the Robert D.
Walter Center for Strategrc
Leader&lt;&gt;hip. The name of the
nt.'\\
center is pending
.tpproval by the Ohio
Unhersit) Board ofTrustees.
The center wa ... made posSible thanks to d $2 million
donation from Cardinal
Health F-oundatiOn in honor
of Robert \\alter, the
fo nd r 1 C'ardmal and an
On1o l n \ er...~t) alumnuc,
\\ Iter recent!) rettred from
the compan). •
Dean of the College of
Busmess Hugh Sherman
said, "The purpose ot the

17, 2010

Fletcher said the ne\\
Ohio and West Virginia.
DuPont has installed water tests. which \\ill begin next
filtration
systems
and week and run throu~h June.
reduced the amount of C8 it will focus on the immune
pump~ into the air and water system and infectious di~­
ease, the endocnne system
to settle a lawsuit.
That ..,ettlement. in which and thyroid disease.
Previous ~tudies have
DuPont agrees to phase out
a
correlation
the use of C8 bv 2015. also shown
include~ a seric~ of blood between C8 and higher cholesterol and uric acid. which
tests.
aJ:e linked to high blood
~lore than 60.000 people in
the Parkersburg area have pressure and heart disease.
C8 is a suspected carcinoalrcad\ been tested. The nev.
round" of blood tests and gen. and some studies ha\'e
questionnaires will take a linked it to birth defects and
thyroid dist:ase.
clo~cr look at as many as 800
DuPont contends there
people from that first group.
~aid Dr. Tony Fletcher. pu11 of are no I.-nown human health
the (otll1·appoint~d science effects nn&lt;.l that C8 is not a
danger to the g~neral public .
panel studying the problem .

\\ ith e-mml~ opposing the
legislation as a step toward
socialism. And 'some on the
politiLal left have joined in
callin!! for the bill's defeat
becau~c n leave~ out a federal insurance opuon.
The
sought-after
Democrab - mainlv modcrates, but abo u few ·liberals
- are mostly trying to stay
out of sight. They include 37
who voted against the bill
last year and smaller number who are having second
thoughts after supporting 11
the first time.

a

I

bccomir-H!-mo-stlv-cl-ear.
Lo'' s uro~und 40. "
Saturda\ ... ~ostlv sunm.
Hi!!h~ in the mid 6&lt;Js
·
Saturday night...:\tostly
cloudv. A chance of shO\\ ers
after midnight. LO\\S in the
lo\\ er 40s. ~Chance of rain
30 percent.
Sunday...Cloudy with a
50 percent chance of shov.ers. Cooler with highs in the
lower 50s.
Sunday
night
and
Monday...Mo~tly cloud).
Lows tn the lower 30s.
Hrghs in the mid 40'.
l\londay
night and
Tuesda) ...Partl)
cloud).
t.ows in the upper 20s.
High .... in the lower 50"

Local Stocks
AEP (NYSE) - 34.77
Akzo (NASDAQ) - 56.86
Ashland Inc. (NYSE) - 52.27
Big Lots (NYSE) - 36.54
Bob Evans (NASDAQ) - 32.01
BorgWarner (NYSE) - 37.20
Century Aluminum (NASDAQ)
- 14.84
Champion (NASDAQ)- 1.25
Charming Shops (NASDAQ) 6.68
City Holding (NASDAQ) - 34.92
Collins (NYSE) - 60.52
DuPont (NYSE) - 35.94
US Bank (NYSE)- 26.12
General Electric (NYSE)- 18.07
Harley-Davidson (NYSE) 28.35
JP Morgan (NYSE) - 43.24
Kroger (NYSE) - 22.29
Limited Brands {NYSE) - 24.71
Norfolk Southern (NYSE) 55.13

Ohio Valley Bane Corp. (NASDAQ)- 24.00
BBT (NYSE) - 31.59
Peoples (NASDAQ) - 16.83
Pepsico (NYSE) - 66.07
Premier (NASDAQ) - 8.38
Rockwell (NYSE) - 55.33
Rocky Boots (NASDAQ) - 9.24
Royal Dutch Shell - 59.01
Sears Holding (NASDAQ) 105.22
Wat-Mart (NYSE) - 55.99
Wendy's (NYSE) - 4.86
WesBanco (NYSE)- 15.72
Worthington (NYSE)- 17.27
Daily stock reports are the 4
p.m. ET closing quotes of transactions for March 16, 2010, pro·
vided by Edward Jones finan·
cial advisors Isaac Mills in
Gallipolis at (740) 441·9441 and
Lesley Marrero In Point Pleasant
at (304) 674·0174. Member SIPC.

Come See the JVel!ness Center Renovations &amp; New Equipment

•
•
•
•
•
•

Thursday. March 18, 2010
1 p.m. to 2 p.tn.
Public Is Invited
Healthy Snacks &amp; Tours
Sign-Up for Door Prizes
For tnore information. (304) 675-7222

PLEASANT VALLEY
WELLNESS CENTER
Tk f"()JI(tft of Pr-ofu~iolfak

�-- -

-~~·~---

--

-·--~--------~-----

Inside

Bl

The Daily Sentinel

Ark-Pine Bluff" ins IJia~ -in game, Page B2
Cll\ s lop Piston , Page B6

\Vednesday, March 17, 2010

SCHEDULE
A IChedulo or

RedStorm baseball wins a trio of games

u~

om g high ;
llCI&gt;O&lt;.l v rs ly IPO ''" evonts lnvotvlng team•
from Mason Me•gs ond Ga11a C'lurr e&amp;

Wed.ne&amp;dar, March lZ

BY MARK WILLIAMS

Softball

W;~hama at Wayr-o

SPECIAL. TO THE' SENTINEL.

30 p '11

Tlu.u&amp;day, MIUC!118
Softball

Pornt Pleasant ot Wtn' old 5 30 p n

frldnr•..MarctL Ul
Spr g V
PIT'
Sp 1'9 V
pm

Girls Tonnls
81 Potnt Pleasant 4 1 5

v

Boys Tennis
y 81 Pc :11 Pleaso

•

4 15

Saturday. Mllreh.20
BascbaU
Buret t Hannan rDHJ 2 p m

Softbell
Po rtt P easart 2 p rn

-w~ o ot

Cl"
Hu

orr

ngtor' St Joe

1Wah8m8 (OH) 11

ORMOND BEACH, Ha.
The Univcrsitv of Rio
Grande RedStorm~ baseball
team continued the1r succe..,!&gt;ful sprmg trip with a 6-5
VICtOr) O\er Grand Vte\\ on
Tuesda) afternoon
Rto Grande ( 17-4) laced
up the hitting shoes as it
produced 12 hits in the
game
Junior shortstop
Brad Konrad (Maumee.
OH) had a big da) at the
plate. going 3-for-4 with a
double and three runs b.ttted in. Julllor second baseman
Chn~uan
Frias
(Salinas, PR) alo:;o recorded
three hits in four at bats.
I Semor designated hitter
Chno;; ~lahon (Hamilton.
OH) Went 2-for-3 with an
RBI, junior leftficlder
Michael Lynch (Lyndhurst.
OH) \\as 1-for-4 \\ith an
RBI and senior third baseman
T) ler
Schunk
(Cincmnatt. OH) y,as 1-for4 and dro' e m the other Rio
run.
Semor catcher Tyler

Tough day for l

Rio softball
BY MARK WILLIAMS

SPECIAL TO TH_ SENTINEL

• ASHVILLE. Tenn.- It
\\as .1 tough da) for the
Unhcrsit) of Rio Grande
R e d S tor m
softball team
as
the)
dropped both
endo, of &lt;1 doublehe.1der at
Tre\ecca-Nazarene on Monda) af1ernoon. Rio lo!o.t the first
game. 8-0 m a fhc-inning
merc) rule and lost the sec
o.nd game b) n 9-1 score.
Rio Grande (8 4) \s.as
onh able to muster one htt
in the fiN game lo!!&gt;s a sin
gle b) junior shorto;top
Amber B0\\111.111 (Hebron,

Plumpton (Peterborough,
collected two hits in
four at-bats with one double.
J UlllOr
righthander
Desmond
Sullivan
(Scarborough, ONT) started
the game for the RedStorm
and kept hts team in the ballgame, despite struggling
Y.ith his command He lasted 5 innings. scattering six
hit and allowmg four"' alk .
He struck out three and
) ielded tY.o uneamed runs.
Rio trailed 2-0 when
Sullivan left the game.
The RedStorm broke
through with four runs m the
6th onlyt to sec Grand View
tight back to tic the game ut
4-4 heading into the seventh.
Schunk cc~rnc on in relief
of Sullivnn and picked up
the win. Schunk (4-1)
pitched four innings, allowmg three hits and t\\O runs
with four strikeouts and one
walk.
Rio i-. 2-0 ven..us Grand
Vtew thi!&gt; se.tson. The
RedStorm trumped the
Vikings on Sunda) b) an 113 ~&gt;Core.
The RedStom1 will be
O~T)

back
in
action
on
Wednesday in a doubleheader
versm
Ashford
Gnivcrsity. •
URG BASEBALL SPLITS
WITH OLIVET NAZARENE
ORMO~D

BEACH. Fla.
• The Unhen.it) of Rio
Grande RedStorm baseball
team gained ft spht ot a doubleheader \Crsus Olh et
Nazarene on Monday. Rio
Grande won the first game.
4-1 behind the outstanding
pitching of senior Tyler
Schunk. The RedStorm
dropped the second game by
a score of 7-3.
Rio Grande (16-4), with
the first game victory, won
for the fifth consecutive
tunc. Schunk (3-1). tired a
t\\ o-hitter and stmck out
seven Olhet batters. The
lone 11111 that Schunk sun·endered was a solo home mn
m the sixth inning thnt made
the score 2-1 in fa, or of Rio
Grande.
Schunk made amends in
the se\enth inning \\hen he
launched a t\\O-homc run to

give the RedStorm a threerun cushion.
In addition to his outstanding pitching effort. Schunk
had a big day nt the plate as
he y,cnt 2-for-4 Y.lth three
RBJ's.
Sen10r centerfielder Ryan
Yakura (Pickering. ONT)
led Rio Grande with a 3-for4 day at the plate. One of
Yakura's htts was a double.
Junior
shortstop
Brad
Konrnd (Maumee, 011) went
2-for-4 with a double and a
triple.
Junior lcfttielder tvhchael
Lynch (Lyndhurst, 011),
junior
first
baseman
i~rancisco
Ramirez
(Columbus. OH) and junior
second baseman Chrisuan
Frias (Salinas, PR) all had
one hit each for the
RedStorm.
Rio fell \:JCtim to some
o;hak) defense in the ~econd

game as Olivet Nazarene (85-1) scored four unearned
runs m the fourth inning to
take the lead for good.
Sophomore
R) an
Chapman (Racine. OH)
started and lost for Rio
Grande. Chapman (3-3)
was chased from the mound
after 3 1/3 inning~ on the
hill. Freshman Eric Ford
(Chagrin Falls, OH) did a
nice job for Rio Grande m
rehef. pitching 2 1/3 innings
and allowing onl) one
unearned mn.
Senior catcher Tyler
Plumpton (Peterborough.
O~'T) went 2-for-4 at the
plate with a double Schunk
''as 2-for-3 '' ith a double
and an RBI. Senior rightfielder
John
Storey
(Wheelersburg. OH) ''as 1for-3 and dro"e in a run and

Please see Rio, 86

Turley named Special
Mention All-Ohio in
D-4 girls basketball

Eastern's Connery, Meigs' Howard
also named honorable mention

om.

Sophomore hurler Annn
Smnh &lt;Ro-.~. OH) lost for
onl\ the elOnd llmC thiS
BY BRYAN WALTERS
e. \11 II e1ght deCISIOnS BWA.!.TERSOMYOA. r"R 6 ~COM
Sn 1th IIO\\ d mne hn.., und
eu!ht run.., seH:n earned) in
COLl MBl S. OhiO &lt;API
ft\ e mnmgs ot pitching. - Three g1rh from the
struggled "ith her con Ohio \aile) Publi hing
)teldmg four walk and area - all of \\hom are
tnkmg out onl) t\\O from Meigs Count)
Smtth
l•.o surrendered Y.ere selected to the 2010
three home runs
AP All-Ohio girls b&lt;1sket
The Red~tonn fared on I) ball teams for Ot\ is ions I
mar m II) better m the ~ec I\
ond •arne, recordmg tour
E:.:a'&gt;tern Htg.h School
htl'- Sentor catcher Kayl) n landed t\\ o representati\ es a 20 3 O\ emil mark EHS
He.1dtn • rHtlhard. OH) Y.us on the Dt' ision IV list in also fumhed the regular
1-for-3 und dubbed her senior Kasey Turle) and J&gt;eason ranked 8th m the Dth1rd home run on the road jumor Emeri Connery. 4 AP poll.
Ho\'.-ard - a .,econd team
tftp for Rto's onl) marker of while Meig&lt;&gt; junior Morgan
"'as
the game.
Howard was the lone all distnct selccuon
BoY. m.m. senior center- Di\ 1s1on II :)election from named the D ·2 Honortible
\1cntion list after avcragfielder Leah Hamman the area.
CLel\.ington, OJ I) :md fresh1\trle) - a fir~t tc:ar11 ull- mg 't l .3 points und 13.4
man leftfielder KJitie di-;trict selection - \vas rebound" this year for the
SteY..Jrt &lt;Ple.1sant Hill. OH) nc~med to the D-4 Speciul 10-11 Lad) Marauder,;; :
Turley wal&gt; selected ;\ 11all \\ ent J-for-3 in the game. Mention hst after ave rag
Sophomore Allison Mills I ing 14 points. eight 0hio for the third time 111
(West Chester. OH) fell to rebounds. four steals and her four-year career. "ith
2-2 on the season. She two ass1sts this year for the t\\ o of those coming at
pttched six mnings, allow- Lady Engles.
Southern dunng her freshmg mne hits and mne runs
Conner) - a second man and sophomore cam(eight mn.-.) \\ tth t\\ o strike- team all-district selection paigns. HO\\ ard was named
outs and fi\ e \\ alks
was named to the D-4 All-Ohio for the second
1rc,ecca
Nazarene Honorable !\1cntion quad straight ... cason. \\ h1le
tmpro\csto17-2onthesea- \\Jth averagel) of nine Conner) earned her first
pomh. four steals. three All-Ohio honors in basketo Grande wtll return rebounds and two ass1sts ball.
nome ro face Madonna per outing.
The complete lists Unhersit) on Thursday
Both Turley and Conner) Di\ isions I-IV- of the AP
(March 18) at Stanley helped the Lad) Eagles All-Ohio girb basketball
E\'ans Field. Game one is reach the district fm.lls this teams are a' atlablc on Page
set to begin at 2 p.m.
-;cason '' hile fimshing with B6.

I

REoSTORM SWEEP
PIKEVILLE COLLEGE

I

OSU adds 2 years to Tressel's contract.

PIKEVILLE, Ky. - The
t:nivcrsity of R10 C1randc
RedStorm softball team
bounced back from being
sY.e~ on friday at horne
versu~ l•airmont State to
score a d01.:blcheader S\\ eep
of Pike,JIIc College on
Saturda) afternoon. Rio
y,on the first game. 9 I and
captured the second game.
3-2 to impro\e to 4-0 in
Mid-South
Conference
pia)
Rio Grande (6-2, 4·0
MSC) had a one-person
wrecking cre\s. in sophomore pitcher Anna Smith
, OH). Smith (5- 1)
the distance in the first
• scatte1 ing four hits
and allowing one earned 11111
111 seven 1nnings. She
struck out eight b~ttters. At
the plate. Smith helped her
QWn cause. going 3-for-4
with a home run and three I

RB I.

Senior ccntcrfielder Lcuh
Hamman (Lexington, OH)
contmued her hot st&amp;ll1 to
the season m. she went 2

Please see Softball, 86

Bryan Walterslfrle photo

Eastern senior Kasey Turley (22) releases a shot attempt over a pair of Trimble defenders during this January 21 file photo at Tuppers Platns, Ohio. Turley, along with juniors Morgan Howard
and Emeri Connery, were named to the All-Ohio girls basketball teams for Division I-IV.

AP photo

OhiO State head coach Jim Tressel holds the championship
trophy after defeating Oregon, 26-17, in the Rose Bowlin
Pasadena, Cal fornia, on Friday, January 1, 201 0.
J

COLUMBUS. Oh1o (AP)
- Ohio State ha.o; added t\\O
more \eru·s to football coach
Jim Tres~el's contract - and
ha' offered h1m an administrathc job \\hen he reti~.
The nine-)ear coach of the
Bucke\e., had his anginal
contract. signed in 2006 and
amended twi.:-e more. extended through the 2014 sefuon on
Tuesda).
"We "anted to re\\ard Jim
for his excmplaJ) \\ ork '' ith
our football program and Jock
him in a.-; our coach for an
additional two _;cars." athletic
director Gene Smith said.
Tressel. '' ho b 94-21 at
Ohio State, makes about $35
million a year. depending on
lnccnuvc_-. and additi~ms. He
\\ill he 62 ~·ears old ''hen the
new CXtcnsJOil ends.
lie has said that he \\ anh to
coach a!'. lon&gt;!, as h~ cnjO\ s it
and facts he Is cff~l'lh r. '1ne
Buckevcs are coming off an
11-2 ·season which ".JS
capped b\ a 'ictor) over
Oregon in the Rose Bo" I
One pot1tO'l of the ne'' con
tmct addendum prO\ ides
Tressel \\ ith a uni\ersity job

as an ns,nciatc athletic dir~c­
tor tf he steps do\\ n as football
c.on~:h on good tenns before
his contract ends. He \\Ottld be
pa1d $150.000 a )Car.
His old contract offered him
a faculty positton upon retirement.
A paragraph in the ne''
addendum also prO\ ides that
"hen Trcs~el rcttres as football coach. he "ill recci'e . ix
press box tickets to all home
Ohio St.ttc football games for life along "1th t\\ o sca:)On tickets to all home men's
and "omen's basketball
game.;.
.
In the st.ltement announcmg
the ne\\ extension. Tressel
smd it ".1s an honor to '' &lt;lrk at
Ohio Statl',
Tr~sscl. Smith, Ohio Stntc
..~niur 'kc president for husi~~ s and finaiK'&lt;' William J.
Shkurti nnd Jelf K:t\)lut). special asl&gt;tstant to () lio State
president E. Gordon Gee. all
~i~ned the contmct cxtenston
tlus month.
Smtth said Tue dn) that
Tres el told him he ''as satisfied \\ ith hi alar\ and is
&amp;marc of the financial pmb-

lems facing the ~chool's athletic department and ha.... not
...ought additional COlllJ')Cn!'.ation~

Ohto State has raised football ticket prices $7. to a face
'alue of ::;70. and has added
another I to mos.t men's basketball ticket... to off&lt;;et sub'tantial lo'!'&gt;C' in the .nhleuc
department.
Smith 'aid at the ttmc that
the ticket-price increase '"ere
nN'ded to offset increa es in
operatim:: cost-. and losses
cau~d 6) a flaggins econom). He said concesSIOn re\enue was down 9 percent and
merchandi..,c re' cnue unother
26 percent. '' ith pa) roll and
other cxperbc.., d~mg 10 percent.
Smith said he thought the
men'..; bash.cthall pmgrnm ranked among the top 10 in
the nation .mtl a ~o. 2 seed in
thi:.. week\. ~CAA toumament
\\ould lo~e around
$350,000 again thi~ ""a'on f01
the .-;ccond 'ear in a ro''.
Tres,el ':-·extended contract
i., ,ubject to the appro' .tl of
the Ohio State board of
tm:.tee:.. at it' Ma) meeting.

�------------------------------------.-------·Pago n2 • The Daily Sentinel

www.mydailyscntinel.com

Wednc..f.iday, March 17, 2010

Ar~-Pine Bluff be~ts D-1 stars lead AP's All-Ohio girls teams

Winthrop 61-44 In .
NCAA opener

DAYTON, Ohio (AP) Arkansas-Pine Bluff finally
found a road tnp to its likmg.
Allen Smith scored 14
pomts Tuesduy night,
Including a pair of 3-pl)intcr" during the Golden
Ltons' second-half surge to
a 61 44 ' ictory O\ cr
Winthrop 111 the :NCAA
tournament's opening game.
The Golden Liom. (18-15)
"'ill pia) Duke, the No. I
seed 111 the South Regional,
Qn hida) in Jachonvtlle,
Fla. - a place thev somehoY. mts ed during a season-opening jaunt that nearly did them in. They spent
the first two month~ playing
some of the country's best
teams on the road. going
ever) v. here and getting
nov. here.
The) dropped their first
11 games, losing at schools
uch as Tcxas-EI Paso.
Michi~an, Oklahoma State.
Georgnt Tech, Missouri,
Kansas State and Oregon.
They cranked up th~·ir iPods
and let their music soothe
them during 13-hour bus
ride ' across the heartland.
ones that bonded them.
The basketball equi\ alent
6f boot camp hardened
them for n South\.,e tern
Athletic Conference season
that "ould be much more
kind. Bv the time their tournament- rolled around. the
Golden Lions were only one
game under 500, nearly out
of that 11-lo~'i hole.
The) "'ept through the
conference tournament to
get to Da) ton Their next
de tJnution 1s with histof)
- a chance to pull off the
unprecedented first-round
upset of a No. 1 team.
Conch George h ory knov.
a little blt about that He
... t r at \1iSSI~~ipp1
\a le) Stat '"hich kept up
uh ~
I Duke n 1986
bet
f lim S'\-78.
The fa~t exu \\a famthar
forWmthrop (19-14). \'oh1ch
has made the tournament
nine t1me in the last 12
.year&lt;; but has onl) one victory 111 all those tries.

COLlJ.MIHlS,Ohio(AP)
Natashu Howard and
My_lan WooJ~. who led
thetr teams 1? th~. state
tournament v.htle pllmg up
Impressive individual num
Winthrop got the t) pc of bers, headline the . ~0 I 0
game tt Y.anted, but could- Assocwted Pr~ss Dms10n I
n't make a shot as another and II All-Oh19 Teams.
tournament slipped away.
H_oward. a
6-foot-3
Charles Corbin scored 13 se~tor who averaged 24.7
points for the Eagles. who polllts, II rebounds ~111d 2.(l
shot 29 percent from the assists a game for Toledo
·
.
1~1
.I S
field and went 2 ol 21 u•
v~a1tc, IS a 'ortl a • tate
behind the 3-poim arc.
s1gnec. She y.as announced
Neither team :shoots par- Monday as the b1g-school
ticularly well - no player player of the )C:.tc.
averages more than J0
Woods, n 5-1 I senior at
points for either one. Shaker Heights Hathawa)
Instead, they win with tight Broy. n, put up 15.4 points,
defense and rebounding.
6.4 rebounds. 4.5 a'iSI'&gt;h
These mirror-image teams and 2.7 steals a game. The
settled m, to slog one out on Northwestern signee \\as a
the NCAA's big stage.
Midway through the lir~t
half, there were a::. many
shots blocked as made.
Bored fans started doing the
"ave.
Arkansas-Pine
Bluff' Tavaris Washington
m1sscd tY.o dunk attempt .
Both teams shot under 30
percent from the field in the
first half, which ended with
the Golden Lions up 24-23.
Ugly? Not to these two.
Corbin was the only
shooter With anv semblance
of a touch, makin!! his three
attempts in the fir~""t half. His
3-pointer started a 13-2 run
thnt ;gave Winthrop a 23-17
lead. The Golden Lions
caught up by drawing fouls
and making free throws.
Smith hit a pair of 3s - a
rarit) in thi~ game - as
Arkansas-Pine Bluff pushed
its lead to 38-31. Smith held
up his right hand in the
"OK" sign - three fingers
extended - after connectmg from the left comer and
the top of the key.
fhings were anythmg but
OK for Winthrop when the
Golden Lions' Terrell
Kennedy. a bulky front-line
pl,tyer, swished only Ius
second 3-pointer of the "'enson to beat the shot clock .
he pmg
Arkansas-Pine
Blut1 pull ahead by double
dJ It!&gt; \\ mthrop v. ould
ne\er get the lead clo~ r
than mne the rest of the
v.ay.
Smith put the final touch
on It, hitting another 3 and
givmg his ''OK" sign with
16.3 seconds to go.

Cl~ pluyer

of the year in
D1v1ston II last season.
1he coaches of the yca1
in Division 1 are Kettering
fairmont's Ttm Cogan
Waite's Manny Ma) and
Marion Harding'!&gt; Greg
Noftz, while those stngled
out 111 Division 11 mclude
Ravenna's Rod Chlysta,
Geneva'::. Nanc , Barbo and
R , N . 11 0 { S·111 d k
• '
p:')k ..
Cl
us Y
l:r
·r 1n", · M" 0 f
• a~ ler • mgo
~outh
l:.uclld Regina. Shicolc
Watts of Canal Wmchcst~r
Harvest Prep and Berltn
H1land's Hilary Weaver
took top honors on the
2010 Associated Press
Division IH and IV AllOhio team:..

be;~

M!ngo, who will
State teammate of
DIVtston I player .of the
year Nata!&gt;ha How.trd next
season, was the ptck in
DivisiOn 1Il based on the
reco!llmendations of a state
me~ta panel. The 5-foot-8
se~1or averaged
17.8
po1~ts, 2.9 rebounds, 6
assists and 5 8 ste~als .a
game for South Eucl1d
Regina, which is clmmH!. its
d oor~ a f tcr t h"1s ncaJcm1e
~· .
year.
Watts i!; a 6-1 jumor who
o;cored 14.9 points and
added 10.7 rebound!) and
3.5 assists while shooting
52 percent from the field
for state-bound Han eS1
Prep. She shared the
Division IV honors with
fl~l1:1~a

al~o

Weaver,.who
shared
the same honor a year a~u.
Weaver IS a 5-7 semor
headed for Lehi~h. She hit
for
14.6 pomts, 2.8
rebounds and 4 steals a
game while guiding Hiland
to the state tournament.
Honored. as co~che ... .
the year 1!1 DI.VISton
~·er~ I_&lt; an Kuchen
Spnngf1eld Northeastern
and Loudonville's Joy
.
Taylor. G ettmg
the no d .an
Division IV arc DeGraff
Riverside's Dean Sanford
along with Harvest Prep's
David
Dennis
and
Ottoville's Dave Kleman.
The selections were
made based on the recommendations of a state
media panel.

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(3) 17

Public Notice
PUBLIC NOTICE
NOTICE: Is hereby
given that on Saturday,
March 20, et 10:00 a.m.,
a public sale will be
held at 860 Broadway
St., Middleport, Ohio.
The Farmers Bank and
Savings Company Is
selling for cash In hand
or certified check the
following collateral:
2001 Clayton Mobile
Home CLA019059TN
The Farmers Bank and
Company,
Savings
Pomeroy, Ohio, re·
serves the right to bid
at this sale, and to with·
draw the above collateral prior to sale.

Further, the Farmers
Bank and Savings
Company reserves the
right to reJect any or all
bids submitted.
The above described
collateral will be sold
as is-where Is, with no
expressed or Implied
warranty given.
For further Information,
or for an appointment
to Inspect collateral,
prior to sale date contact Cyndltl or Ken at
992·2236.
(3) 17, 18, 19
Public Notice
Sheriff Sale of Real Es·
tate
Case Number 09CV105
BAC Home Loans Ser·
vlclng, L.P. fka Countrywlde Home Loans
Servicing, L.P.
Vs
Charles W. Hawk, ot al.
Court of Common
Please, Mnlgs County,
Ohio.
In pursuance of and
order of sale to me dl·
reeled from &amp;aid court
In the above entitled
action, 1 will expose to
sale at public auction
on the front stops of
the Meigs County Court
House on Friday, April
9th, 2010 at 10:00a.m.
of said day, the followlng described real estate:
Parcel One: SITUATED
IN THE TOWNSHIP OF
OLIVE,
IN
THE
COUNTY OF MEIGS
AND STATE OF OHIO:
BEING IN THE EAST
PART OF LOT 1161
TOWN 4, RANGE 11 OF
OHIO
COMPANY'S
PURCHASE; BEGIN·
NING AT THE OHIO
RIVER AT THE NORTH·
EAST CORNER OF
LANDS OF GRANT L.
BORING AND ERIKA H.
BORING AND SOUTH·
EAST CORNER OF
LANDS OF RAYMOND
ROWE
BAKER;
THENCE
ALONG
RIVER
8
RODS;
THENCE WEST 12
RODS TO AN IRON PIN
IN MIDDLE OF STATE
HIGHWAY
124;
THENCE ALONG THE
MIDDLE
OF SAID
ROAD
8
RODS:
THENCE EAST 12
RODS TO THE PLACE
OF BEGINNING, CON·
TAINING 6110 OF AN

ACRE MORE OR LESS,
AND
BEING
THE
NORTHEAST PART OF
A TRACT OF LAND
CONVEYED BY PAUL
KIBBLE TO GRANT L.
BORING AND ERIKA
BORING BY WAR·
RANTY DEED OF DATE
APRIL 27, 1950 AND
RECORED IN DEED
BOOK 165 PAGE 519
DEED RECORDS OF
MEIGS COUNTY, OHIO.
EXCEPTING AN EASE·
MENT
PREVIOUSLY
SOLD TO THE STATE
OF OHIO, FOR A MORE
PARTICULAR
DE·
SCRIPTION SEE EASE·
MENT RECORDS IN
MEIGS
COUNTY
RECORDER'S OFFICE.
REFERENCE
DEED:
BOOK 136, PAGE 819,
BOOK 86, PAGE 929,
MEIGS COUNTY OFFI·
CIAL RECORDS; VOLUME 255, PAGE 617,
MEIGS COUNTY DEED
RECORDS.
AUDITOR'S PARCEL
NO. 09-00447.000
PARCEL TWO: SITU·
ATE IN THE TOWNSHIP
OF OLIVE, COUNTY OF
MEIGS, AND STATE OF
OHIO, TO·WIT: BEING
IN TOWN #4, RANGE
#11, SECTIONS 134, #9,
#1 0 AND IN 160 ACRE
LOT 1161, AND BEGIN·
NING AT THE SOUTH·
WEST CORNER OF
LANDS OF SAID ROY
BARBER ON
THE
EAST SIDE OF STATE
HIGHWAY
#124:
THENCE
NORTH
ALONG THE EAST
SIDE OF SAID HIGH·
WAY 7 RODS TO AN
IRON PIN; THENCE
EAST FOUR (4) RODS
TO THE OHIO RIVER:
THENCE
SOUTH
ALONG THE OHIO
RIVER 7 RODS TO X
MARK ON STONE;
THENCE
WEST
4
RODS TO THE PLACE
OF BEGINNING, CON·
TAINING 28 SQUARE
RODS.
BEING THE SOUTH
PART OF A 1·1/2 ACRE
TRACT OF LAND CONVEVED BY HERBERT
ROOD, AND WIFE, TO
ROY BARBER BY
WARRANTY DEED OF
DATE MAY 19, 1938,
AND RECORDED IN
DEED BOOK 146, AT
PAGE 202, OF THE
DEED RECORDS OF
MEIGS COUNTY, OHIO,
REFERENCE
TO

WHICH IS HEREBY bounded
and
deMADE.
scribed as follows:
REFERENCE
DEED: Beginning at the comer
BOOK 1!6, PAGE 819; of two streets at the
BOOK 63, PAGE 717, northwest corner of a
MEIGS COUNTY OFFI· two acre lot being the
CIAL RECORDS; VOL· corner of the two
UME 255 , PAGE 619, streets
mentioned
MEIGS COUNTY DEED above; thence south 65
RECORDS.
degrees east ele11en
AUDITOR'S PARCEL rods; thence south 35
NO. 09-00449.000
degrees west eight (8)
Parcel Number: 09· rods; thence north 65
00447, 09-00449
degrees west eleven
Property Located at: (11) rods to the Street
67093 State Route 124 leading to the Bone
Reedsville, OH 45772
Hollow Road; thence
Prior Deed Reference: north 35 degrees east
OR Book 182 Page657· seven (7) rods to the
658
place of beginning,
Property Appraised ot: ·containing one half
$35,000
(112) acre of land, being
Terms of Sale: Cannot the same more or less,
be sold for less than 1/2 acre belonging to
213rds for the ap- Margaret Bolt Is in 100
praised value.
10% acre lot No, 309: also a
down on day of sale, right of way around
case or certified check, Daniel Russell barn
balance due on conflr· twelve (12) feet wlde to
mation of sale.
the said half acre lot;
The appraisal did In· said right of way to be
cludo en Interior exam- In force until said
!nation of the house.
Daniel Russell shall
Robert S.
Beegle, see fit to make an out·
Meigs County Sheriff
let on the north side of
Amanda Romanello
said half (112) acre lot.
Attorney for tho Plain· Also tho tollowmg rool
tiff, Lerner Sampson estate, situated In the
and Rothfuss
Township of Salisbury,
PO Box 5480 Clncln· County of Meigs and
natl, OH 45201·5480 State of Ohio, and
(513)241·3100
bouflded
and
de·
(3) 17, 24, 31
scribed as follows;
Being In one hundred
aero lot No. 309, town
Public Notice
No. 1 and Range No.
13, beginning at the
Sheriff Sale of Real Es· northeast corner of
tate
Daniel Russell's land;
Case Number 09CV133 thence south 35 de·
CltiMortgage, Inc. sue- grees 00' west 145.5
cessor by merger to feet along the east line
ABN AMRO Mortgage of said land; thence
Group, Inc.
north 59 degrees 35'
Vs
west 148 feot to the
Floyd Hickman aka southeast corner of
Floyd C. Hickman, et al. Wesley Stewart's lot;
Court of Common thence north 35 de·
Please, Meigs County, grees 00' West 132 feet
Ohio.
along the east line of
In pursuance of and Wesley Stewart's lot to
order of sale to me dJ. the north line of Daniel
reeled from said court Russell's land; thence
In the above entttled south 65 degrees 00'
action, I will expose to east 149 feet along the
sale at public auction north line of said land
on the front steps of to the place of begin·
the Meigs County Court nlng, containing 47/100
House on Friday, April acres.
9, 2010 at 10;00a.m. of Also the following real
said day, the following estate, situated In Saldescribed real estate: lsburyTownshlp, Meigs
Exhibit 'A'· Legal De· County Ohio, In 100
scription
acre lot No. 309 Town 1
Situated In the County and Range No. 13, deof Meigs, In the state of scribed as follows:
Ohio and in the Town· Beginning on the east
ship of Salisbury and side of Bone Hollow

Road; south 35 degrees oo· west 115.5
feet from the northwest
comer of Wesley Stewart's lot; thence south
35 degrees 00' west 21
feet along •aid road;
thence in an easterly
direction, parallel to the
south line of said lot, 85
feet; thence north 35
degrees 00' east 21 feet
to the south line of said
lot; thence In e westerly
direction along the
south llne of said lot 85
feet to the place of beginning,
containing
41100 acres.
14·
Parcel
No:
01582.000
&amp;
14·
01583.000
Prior Deed Reference:
OR Vol. 110, pg 691
Parcel Number: 14·
01582.000
&amp;
14·
01583.000
Property Located at:
39489 Bradbury Road
Middleport, OH 45760
Prior Deed Reference:
OR Vol. 110, pg 691
Property Appraised at:
$22,500
Terms of Sale: Cannot
be sold tor less than
213rds for tho ap·
praised value.
10%
down on day of sale,
case or certified check,
balance due on confir·
matlon of sale.
The appraisal did not
Include an Interior ex·
aminatlon of the house.
Robert S. Beegle,
Meigs County Sheriff
Julia Steelman
Attorney for the Plain·
tiff, Lerner Sampson
and Rothfuss
PO Box 5480 Clncln·
natf, OH 45201·5480
(513)241-3100
(3) 17, 24, 31
-------------Public Notice

----r------

Sheriff Sales
Case Number 08cv156
HSBC Bank National
Association es Trustee
for SG Morgtage Socurltles Trust 2005·0PT1
Asset Backed Certlfl·
cates, Series 2005·
OPT1
Plaintiff
vs
Marilyn Howery Et al
Defendants
Court of Common
Pleas, Meigs County,
Ohio
In pursuance of en
order of sale to me dl·
reeled from aeld court

In the above entitled
action, I will expose to
sele at public auction at
the Meigs County Court
House on Friday, April
9th, 2010 at 10 am, of
said day, the following
described real estate:
Situated in the County
of Meigs; In the State of
Ohio, and in the Township of Columbia, and
bounded
and
de·
scribed as follows:
Commencing In the
center of the K. &amp;
O.R.R. tract where the
center of State Route
143 Crosses said R.R.
tract; thence proceed·
lng in a westerly diractlon along the center of
state route 143 to the
Western edge of the K.
&amp; O.R.R. tract; thence
In a westerly direction
along the center Of
State Route 143, 420
feet to a point In the
center of State Route
143, being the true
place of beginning;
thence In a northerly dPrectlon 30 feet to an
Iron stake; thence N. 22
deg. 30' E. 198.92 feet
to en Iron stake; thence
N. 1 deg. E. 410.78 feet
to an Iron stake; thence
N. 3 deg. w. 704.94 feet
to an Iron stake; thence
N. 81 deg. W. 496.37
feet to an Iron stake set
In the western bound·
ary line .of the real estate
described
In
volume 254, page 675,
Meigs County deed
records; thence in a
southerly direction with
the western boundary
line of .-aid real estate
to the center of state
route 143; thence In a
southerly and easterly
direction along the center of State Route 143
to the place of begin·
nlng, contalnlhg 14.3
acres, more or less,
being approximately
4.2 acres In fraction 5
and 10.1 acres In Fraction 4. Calls for this description provided by
the grantor.
Prior Instrument Reier·
ence: Deed dated July
15,2005, filed August 8,
2005, recorded In Offi·
clef Records Volume
218;
·Page
525,
Recorder's
Office,
Meigs County, Ohio
Current Owners' Name:
Rodney Howery and
Marilyn Howery
Address:
Property

30468 St. Rt. 143
Albany, OH 4571 OParcol
Number:
0500351.000 and
05..00352.000
Appraised At: $90,000
Terms of sale: 10~:. of
the appraised value
and that failure to complete the sale will resu:t
In the forfeiture of the
deposit.
D.
Kirk
Angela
(0075177)
Manley D. Kochalskl
LLC
P.O. Box 165028
Columbus, OH 43216
614·222-4921
Fax: 614·220·5613
Email:
adm@mdk·
llc.com
Attorney for Plaintiff
(3) 17, 24,31
Public Notice
Sheriff Sales
Case Number 09CV017
JPMorgan Chase Bank,
as Trustee, on behalf of
CITHome Equity Loan
Trust 2002·1
Plaintiff
vs
Marion Speelman aka
Marlon D. Speelman,
ETAL
Defendants
Meigs County
Common Pleas
By virtue of en order or
sale to me directed by
the Court of Common
Pleas, of Meigs County,
I will offer for sale at
public auction In Meigs
County Court House,
Pomeroy, Ohio on Frl·
day. April 9th, 2010 at
10 a.m., on said day,
the following described
real estate to wit:
Situated In the County
of Meigs, In the State ol
Ohio and In the Town·
ship of Olive.
Situated In Olive Town·
ship, Town 3 North,
Range 11 West, Meigs
County, Ohio, and
being part of the Wolf
Subdivision
as
recorded in Cabinet 1·
B. of the Plat Records
In the Recorder"s Office
of Meigs County, Ohio,
and being described as
follows:
Lot 13 subJect to all re·
strlctlons and condi·
tiona as shown on the
plat which Is recorded
In Cabinet 1·B of the
Plat records In the
Recorder's Off1ce of
Meigs County, Ohio.

Further subJect to an
agreement to modify
covenant, as more fully
shown in Vol. 327, Page
485 of the Meigs
County Deed Records.
Parcel Number: 09·
9495..001
Currently set forth In
Deed Volume 98, Page
701, Recorded 11·2999. Commonly known
as: 62899 State Route
124, Long Bottom, OH
45743.
Appraised at $115,000
Mimimum
bid
$76,667.00
Terms of Sale:
Deposit, a Cashier's
Check or Certified
Funds, In the amount of
ten percent (1 0%) of the
appraised value at t.
time of sale. The
malnlng balance sli
be paid within (30) days
of the date of sale. The
deposit shall be forfeited upon failure to
pay the balance within
(30) days of the date of
sale.
SHERIFF Robert Bee·
gle
(740) 992·3371
Thomas Novack
Attorney for Plaintiff
3700 Corporal Dr. Suite
120
Columbus, OH 43231
614-818·2573
(3) 17, 24, 31

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2BR 14x60 Soutt' Gal ta
sChool d striCt No pets.
(740) 256-6143

p

Gee
40-388-8586
lns.J~

F e

Other Services

-;;;;======;;;;;

-

Real Estate
Rentals

Life lock
Are You Protected?
An Identity Is stolen
every 3 seconds
Call Ufelock now to
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free for 3D-daysI

~le

Lavm ~~~~====

3-5130

•=

Lav.

~o~es

339-0024

llldoo &amp; O'.rtdoor
g 304-675-7324 or

POLICIES OliO ~llfY PubU&amp;!llng ceacrvoa tno rt;ht to tell!. rejoet, or Cllntel eny !Kill 11111 lime. Erron mUll be sepon.cl oo tho Nn;t day ot p\illk:ll on one! thO
Trtb~t11nel·~l.ter wtn be rnponslblt tor no mort than thO coat o1ttlo apace oceuplecl by t11o error and only the first lnMrllOn. Wt ah:ll nc1 be llsb~ tor
aoy lo8S or t:q&gt;tnae tl'lat ree.Jita t:on the p~bUcatlon or ondl81on olen oeltlllllllment. Cori'Ktlon wt• be m:.de In thO l!rll an :11ble edltlon. • e'"' nU!ftbet .cis
are 1 waya cordldtnllal • cwrem m• c:ald llj)pUn • All rut •1110 tcltt!IICII!Iento ere subjeCt 10 lhll Federal Fair Housing Act ot t~ • lhll 111Wq)21*
IICCePII only hllp Ml'h&lt;l
metllrlg EOE lllardards We will not k~IV!ngly accept any tclnn ling In vlolaiiOn ctthe tew. wtn nc1 be I'UPOflllb!c lor l11'f
er101111n 11111Clllkert over the phOno.

Promocode:
FREEMONTH

.o.E..ei

B ow:'l

ed

1

3500

Buried In Credit Card
Debt?
Call Credit Cord
Relief for your free
consultations.
1-sn-264-8031

sm

Wanted

Now you can hove borders and graphics
~
added to your classified ads
.( ~
1m
Borders $3.00/ per ad
~
,~
Graphics 50¢ for small
«&lt;
S1.00 for large

Financial

CREQITCABE
RELIEF

tc ures a
have been
placed In ads at
the Gallipolis
Dally Tribune
must be picked
within 30 days.
Any pictures
that are not
picked up will be
discarded.

All Displays 1.2 Noon 2
Business ODVS Prior To
Publication
Sundey Display: 1.100 p.m.
Thursdny for Sundays Paper

• All ads must be prepaid•

• Start Your Adf With A Keyword • Include Complete
Df:Kriptlon • Include A Price: • Awid Abbreviation•
• Include: Plume Number And Addreu When Need d
• Ad• Should Run 7 Dap

AMOUncements

Lost &amp;

GET YOUR CLASSIFIED LIHEAD NOTICED

Display Ads

Dally In-Columns ShOO a.m.
M ondey-Frtday for Insertion
In Nc)(t Oay'l5 Paper
Sundny Jn·Columm 9100 e.m.
Friday For Sundays Paper

Monday thru Friday

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

Or Fax To (304) 675-5234

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

Word Ads

HOW TO WRITE AN AD

JUST SAY

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r-; 4tn

Ave Middleport.
2 br I IShed apt dep
&amp;
ref
No
pets
740.992..()165

Secunty

~~~~~~~

Am:

Free Home Security
$850 Value
with purchase of
alarm mQnltonng
services from ADT
Security Services

Owr a New 3BR 2 BA
fllo w 1 acre 5 ~n $525
ref mo WAC Nez: Holzer
740-446-3570

1900

C8111-888-274-3888

Tax /

Accounting

AMERicAN tAx
BELIEE
Settle IRS Taxes for
a fraction of what
you owe. If you owe
over $16.000 In back
taxes call now for a
free consullntton.

Uercllandise

I

Appliances
2 Reg Argus Cows w
calves ~Y. tho r Sides '
Angus Eft!! 1 yr old Cdfl
be reo Coli 256·6444

Pets

SEars Kenmore 30' fleeInc: Range wh te wblack
front self cleanmg oven
Good Cond tton S50 00
Call 740.446·2361

2000

Sales
N w 2 bed·S1ove-ref w d
haoJ;up
n &amp; qu t =~=====;;;;
• u ng
740.992-4119 01 Clayton Mob o ~lome
ask tor t.~arge S435+ u: 14x50 2BR 1BA Po:d'
IOC
Good shape
S Dep
t. rucks ~--------- taken care of 510000 II
EI!ICiet'Cy apt. lor rent mtt:rested
please
cal
P ICed 10 Elect &amp; gas No staJrs (740) 441·7720 or t740
~ ~~- No pets 1 or 2 people. 645·3927 if no answer
1624 Ct'atham Avenue please leave message
(rear) 1740 446-4234 or
OH
(740) 208-7861

Automotive

wet

CLASSIFIED INDEX
Legals...........................................................100
Announcements ........................................ 200
Birthday/Anniversary .................................205
Happy Ads..... •......................................210
Lost &amp; Found ......................................... 215
Memory/Thank You ................................... 220
Notices ....................................................... 225
Personals ............................................230
Wanted .............................................. 235
Services ...................................................... 300
Appliance Service ....._ ..............................302
Automotive ........................................... 304
Building Materials ...................................306
slnoss .. • ..................................... 308
......................................................310
Chlld.IEic:terlv Care ..............................- ...... 312
Computers ..........................................- ...... 314
Contractors ..................................................316
Domestlcs/Janltorlal ...................................318
Electrical ...................................................... 320
Financial......................................................322
Health ........................................................ 326
Heating &amp; Cooling .................................... 328
Homo Improvements 330
Insurance ..................................................... 332
Lawn Service ............................................... 334
Music/Dance/Drama .................................... 336
Other Scrvicoa .............................................338
Plumbing/Eiectrlcal .....................................340
Professional Services .................................342
Repalrs .........................................................344
Roofing ........................................................ 346
Security ......................................................348
Tax/Accounting ........................................... 350
Travel/Enterta inment ..................................352
Flnonclal ......................................................400
Financial Surviccs .....................................405
Insurance .................................................... 410
Money to Lend ...........................................415
Education................. .. ••• ........................ 500
Business &amp; Trodo School .......................... 505
Instruction &amp; Trolnlng ................................ 510
Lessons.....................................................515
Personal ................................................... 520
Animals....................................... ............ 600
Animal Suppllca ........................................ 605
Horses....................................................... 610
Livestock....................................................615
Pets ..............................................................620
want to buy ..................................................625
Agriculture .................................................. 700
Farm Equlpment ..........................................705
rden &amp; Produco.......................................710
Feed, Seod, Graln ............................... 715
ntlng &amp; Land .......................................... 720
WAnt to buy.................................................725
MerchDndise ............................................... 900
Antiques ...................................................905
Appliance ....................................................910
Auctions ......................................................915
Bargain Basement .......................................920
Collectibles ................................................. 925
Computers .................................................. 930
Equipment/Supplies ..................................935
Flea Mnrkets ................................................ 940
Fuel Oil Coal/Wood/Gas ............................. 945
Furniture .................................................... 950
Hobby/Hunt &amp; Sport .................................... 955
Kid 's Corner.................................................960
MisccliDnoous............................................965
Want to buy ...............................................970
Yard Salo ...............................- ................ 975

I

Recreational Vehicles ............................... 1 000
ATV ............................................................. 1005
Bicycles......................................................1 01 0
Boats/Accessorlos, ..........................- ....... 1015
CamperiRVs &amp; Trailers .......................... 1020
Motorcycles ......................................... 1025
Other-......................................................1030
Want to buy ............................................ 1035
Automotive ................................................ 2000
Auto Rentai/Lease .....................................2005
Autos .......................................................... 2010
Classlc/Antlquu ...................................... 2015
Commerclalllndustrlal .............................. 2020
Parts &amp; Accessorles ...- ............................2025
Sports Utllity •. - ..........................................2030
Trucks ..........................- ............................2035
Utility Trallers ............................- ............. 2040
Vans ............................................................2045
Want to buy ...............................................2050
Real Estate Sales ...................................... 3000
Cemetery Plots .......................................... 3005
Commercial................................................301 0
Condominlums .......................................... 3015
For Sale by Owner....................................3020
Houses for Salo......................................... 3025
Land (Acreage) .......................................... 3030
Lots ............................................................3035
Want to buy................................................ 3040
Real Estate Rentals ................................... 3500
Apartments/Townhouses ......................... 3505
Commercial ................................................351 0
Condominiums .................,....................... 3515
Houses for Rent ........................................ 3520
Land (Acreage) ..........................................3525
Stora9a.......................................................3535
Want to Rent .............................................. 3540
Manufactured Houslng ............................. 4000
Lota .............................................................4C05
Movers ....................._ ................................401 0
Rentals .................._. .............................. 4015
Sales......... ............ .................................4020
Supplies ................- ............- .................... 4025
Want to Buy ..................................- ......... 4030
Resort Property ........................................ 5000
Resort Property for sale ......................... 5025
Resort Property lor rent
. 5050
Employment ..........- ..................................6000
Accounting!Financlal ................................6002
Administrative/Professional....................6004
Cashier/Clerk ............................................6006
Child/Elderly Care ................................... 6008
Clerlcal ....................................................... 6010
Constructlon .............................................. 6012
Drivers &amp; Dellvery ..................................... 6014
Educatlon ................................................... 6016
Electrical Plumbing ................................... 6018
Employment Agencles .............................. 6020
Entertainment ............................................ 6022
Food Servlcea...................................,........6024
Government &amp; Federal Jobs ................... 6026
Help anted· General .................................. 6028
Law Enforcement ...................................... 6030
Maintenance/Domestic ............................. 6032
Management/Supervisory ....................... 6034
Mechanics ................................................6036
Medical .......................................................6038
Musical .....................................................6040
Part-Time-Temporaries ............................. 6042
Restaurants ............................................... 6044
Sales...........................................................6048
Technical Trades ...................................... 6050
Textiles/Factory .........................................6052

AKC M :.ature Schnau·
ze s 2 pant male wh te
choca to
1 choca ate
M 1 chOcalate F whrte
on chest &amp; back feet.
or
p·emtSeS
parents
tak ng depositS Ca I to
see 740-441-1657 Also
stud &amp; groontng scrv·

Child/Elderly Care
Posit on

teS

open at Darst
Adu t Group Home I rst
second &amp; lhlrd sh Its,
740.992-5023

Female Toy Poodle for
Sale S350 CKC papers
Call
740·446·2455
or
645·1960

Babysitter reeded 1n "1'
Mason Co1.r1y '10Me call
304·633-3682

Malo Jack Russell Pup
Dog House broken To a
home
good
140.256·1337

Drivers &amp; Delivery
Spnng
Va y
Green
Apartments 1 BR at
S395+2 BR at S470
Month 740-446-1599

700

,Agriculture

Liquid
needed

Asphalt

Dnvers

In Pt. Pleasant

area must be 21 Y'S old
or oldC rrust haveCiaSS
A COL w Ill Hanre E
dorseme t
and
good
MVR ;oca ll1PS
c;;
1 000-598-6122 'or
more nfo

Farm Equipment
Recreational
STIHL Sales &amp; Servtee 1000
Vehicles
Now Ava labia al Ccmuchael
Equ pment ~~~~~~~~
740 446-2412
:
•
ATVs
•
Hoy, Feed' Seed' G ratn
93 4-wheelor Kaw 300
Square baled hay·$2 50 cc 2x4 w'Htgh &amp; Low
oach, round hay bales Range-Now Tires $1000
SIOOO
each ft!T"l.740·645-5174
140 949 2660
Mixed •ound bolos for
sale
4x4
and
4x5
740-446-2412
Tirrgthy

Hay
ro01nd
S35 ()() ea
call
740.339 3203

ba

Houses For Rent
Land (Acreage)

3 br 2 bath, 98 mode
doubfew\do In country
Loo~lng to purchase 20
0
to 60 acres of good hurtt· No Pets. S650 pe•
1
ing land w roa to build plus ut ties S650 dep
yrs le;~s!l 740.416-2960
cab n &amp; polo bal"''. Prefllr
locatton wtlhtn 20 to 30 - - - -......~-~
min f•om Holzqr Ho pi· 4 Rms + Ba Stove &amp;
irtdgo 50 Ohva St No
tal Cllll(419)6803174
pets S4SO.'no + dep
446·3945
House lor renl 4 br 2
balh Mt A to WV call
•
304 532 6059

=========

MECHANIC NEEDED :
R&amp;J Tr.JCktng Co
Man·
etta, Ohio
Job Includes PM t"Bctor l:"a ler !Ire &amp; weldtng
repatrs Must have own
tools clear vahd dnvors
hoense rs needed, COL n
plus COMpelltiVe wages
based on cxp benefits
401 K health dental Ax
opl ons.
Jn forms- pro·
v ded worl&lt; boot allow·
ance

For nformai!On ca Jell
SOD-462~365 X 206
0
N~to hoMe 3 BR I BA. K. fax 740.374·3059
to
LA gar HP'CA qu ' rr
SSOO + d.,p
&amp; rei NO &lt;ICil t dcrC , :1JCk ng oo
IT'&gt;
Pets Cs I 740-446-2601

�Page 84 • The Oc1ily Sentinel
Food Servlcea

www.mydailysentinel.com

Help Wanted· General

Help Wanted· General

Help Wanted. General

Class A COL Dr vers fD
road construcUon Start
g pay $16 00 tu
wt'ek:'y lrBVOI •equ ed
rr~ portal on
provided
lor SOIT'G areas Submn
applications at www slur
rypavers CDIT' or rra to
S ur'Y Peters INC 12n
Mounta n Ad A mond
VA 23060 Slurry Pave·s
INc • ar equal opportu·
n 'Y
employer
1·600-966·1812

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Construction

lnfoCisicn wants YOU II
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Only 15 "oslttons Av811·
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hour JUSt alter 6 month 11
Complete Benef1ts Pack·
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Weekly Bonus lnocnuve
01'1 S~o PhysiCian

Need SOI'looro Exp to
work on 2 4·whoolors
(740)245 5595
or
(740)709·9235
WANTED Full·lii'"O 81"·
ploymont n your own
home as a Hom Sc:v·
Worker
Comm..,nw1th
ty Buck·
Serv-

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

YOUNG'S

CARPENTER
SERVICE

wv 036725

99:-t.215 7411-591-1119.5
Pomeroy, Ohio
30 Years local £xpcrlonce
- W1nter 8

lals-

We prov•de saary ,.---------,.--~------,
efts and a day
and oo= d •ate
You pr;&gt;vlde a nome.
gu~ ce and lnendsl' p

CaU TODAYI
Interview TOMOR·
ROWII
Work NEXT WEEKI!I

a 1 ;y IITQSPX e
Rcqu res ob ;toJ to teach
persona ;v ng rU and
a comm IITont •o the

g ~r

nd development
of an
vidu wltl'l develop nt;:
d sab ues
If rtor ted ccntac: Ce·
at 1-8()()-5.11·2302
or
1740)
286-5039
P•o·crrptoyment
OrJg

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

~

IAASSIFIEDS

HaftrooDd a Jn2tf1 llnd f

fllft!li'e

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Pamting- Gutters -

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Calll&gt;ennis Bo)d

i40-992-2029

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

740-742-3411

• New Homes
·Garages

·Complete
Remode!1ng
I

}40·992·16}1
Stop &amp; Compare

t5, LTI&gt;
(740) 742-2563

• Siding• \in)l
\\ indu\\S • 1\lctnl
and Shingle Roof::.

Racine, Ohio 740·247-2019

• Derks • Addition~
•Ei{'clrknl
• Phunhing

Owners:
Jon Van Meter &amp;

• Pole Barns

Paul Rowe

BARGAINS

RJ .llollon
Trucking
Dump Truck

&lt;'nice

The Daily Sentinel

Bam' ~Ictal Roof
Fire &amp; \\ atcr Damage
Dl) v. all Rep;1ir

Polt!

~pedali

FOR

SELL YOUR
EXCESS
ITEMS
WITH A
CLASSIFIED
AD

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One Call to Do It All

Replacement
\\indO\\&lt;&gt; nnd
\in) I Siding

SHOP
CLASSIFIEDS

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lChr ~Dotnt ~)lras·ant l\cgtstcr

(that's easy on your wallet)

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CONSTRUCTION

Decks- htc.
For Fa-.t Courteous
Sel'\ 1cc Free
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Great coverage and
superior setvice

304-773-1111
CONS IRI CTIO:'Ii

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SEAL IT
pool

\\(• do drhc"a~'
Umt-stom • Grtl\ {'I
'I op Soil • fill I&gt;irt

MIKE MARCUM
Rubber Roofing, Room Addltio~ Decks, Shingles,
Siding. Windows, Pol!' Barna, ;Garaga~,
lnsuranc:e Work, Residential ,&amp; .Commercial
LlcenMCI &amp; Boftded
Free Es1lmates

balance due on
confirmation of sale.
ALL SHERIFF'S SALES
OPERATE UNDER THE
DOCTRINE OF CAVEAT
EMPTOR. PROSPEC·
TIVE
PURCHASERS
ARE
URGED
TO
CHECK FOR LIENS IN
THE
PUBLIC
RECORDS OF MEIGS
COUNTY, OHIO.
ATTORNEY
FOR
PLAINTIFF:
Jennifer L. Sheets, LIT·
TLE &amp; SHEETS LL~
211·213 E. Second
Street, Pomeroy, OH
45769, Telephone: (740)
992-6689
(3), 17, 24, 31

Public Notice
Legal Notice
In The Court Of Com·
mon Please, Meigs
County Ohio
Case No 09DLT001
Oron Dungee, Dane
Dungce, State of Ohio
Dept.
of Taxation,
Ronald
Manning,
Sharon Manning, Glen·
don Myr.es, Catherine
Mynes, John/Jane Doe
1·3 will take notice that
on November 30, 2009
plaintiff Peggy Yost,
Meigs County Trea·
surer filed a petition for
tax foreclosure against
them in the Court of
Common Pleas, Meigs
County Ohio third floor
of the County Court·
house the same being
Case No. 09DLT001 in
said Court, praying that
plaintiff be found to
have a good and valid
first lien on certain
premises taxes, as·
sessments and penal·

ties, that all defen·
dants, be required to
set forth the r claims or
be forever barred from
asserting them, that
plaintiff be paid within
a reasonable time, to
be named by the Court,
the equity or redemp·
lion of defendants, be
foreclosed and Order
of Sale issued to the
Sheriff directing him to
sell said premises in
the manner provided
by R.C. 5721.19. Parcel
ID # 05·00161.000. A
complete legal descrlp·
tlon can be found at the
County
Meigs
Recorder's Office at
Volume 283, Page 61 of
the Meigs
County
Records.
This cause will be
heard on April 26, 2010
at 11 :00 am or as soon
thereafter as meets the
convenience of the
Court. Interested par·
tics have 28 days to re·
spond to the Complaint
for Tax Foreclosure.
Answers are to be filed
with the Meigs County
Clerk of Courts, Third
Floor of tho County
Courthouse, Pomeroy,
OH 45769
2/10, 17, 24, 313/10, 17
-------Public Notice
-------TERMS OF SALE: Ten
percent of the highest
bid, cash or certified
check, due on the day
of sale, balance due
upon confirmation of
the sale by the Meigs
County Court of Com·
mon Pleas, the deed
will be Issued upon the
balance being paid.

Legal Description:
Situated In the County
of Meigs, State of Ohio
and
Township
of
Salem, and Bounded
and described as fol·
lows:
Being In Section 5,
Town 8, Range 15 of
the Ohio Company's
purchase and being in
the unincorporated VII·
!age Of Dexter;
Beginning 40 Feet
South of the Southwest
corner of lot 14; thence
South following the
East Line of the public
highway about 19 rods
to where an ash tree
once stood, about 18
inches in diameter;
thence east to the cen·
ter of leading creek,
thence up the center of
said creek to a point 20
feet south of the center
of an Iron bridge;
thence west to the
place of beginning,
containing 1 acre, more
or less.
Subject to 1991 and
1992 taxes.
Property
Address:
35268 Dexter Road,
Langsville, Ohio 45741
Parcel
Number:
1300706000
Case Number: 09CV124
Sale Date: 0410912010
Appraisal: $20,000.00
Plaintiff:
Beneficial
Ohio Inc.
Defendant:
Norman
Hamilton
Attorney for Plaintiff:
Phillip Barragate
Held at: Front Steps of
Meigs County Court
House, at 10:00 a.m.
(3) 17, 24, 31

74 24

0. 5-04 37

30 Yeara

'

PSI CONSTRi.fCT1
I ON
Roo Adruuon~. Remodel n~. Me K
Sh1rgle Roofs \~" Home S~dn;~ D-~
Bnthroom Rt::modehng Licensed &amp; lr~u c
Rick Price • 17) rs. Experience
WVI040954 Cell 740-416-2960. 740-992.0730

740-856-2609
Cdl

Stanley TreeTrimming
&amp; Removal

References A\ ;ulable 1
Call Gat) Stanley
300.00 feet and going a
total drstance of 326.81
feet to a point In the
centerline of Township
Road #56;
Thence along said cen·
terltne South 35 deg.
12' 40" West a distance
of 84.66 feet to the prln·
cipal point of beginning
containing
2.6852
acres. more or less,
subject to all legal
easements and rights·
of·way.
Bearing were derived
from magnetic taken
October 15, 1991.
The abo•1e description
was prepared from an
actual survey made on
the 15th day of Octo·
ber, 1991, by C.
Thomas Smith, Ohio
Professional Surveyor
#6844.
Reference Deed: Vol·
ume 193, Page 889,
Meigs County Official
Records
Auditor's Parcel No.:
11·00756.001.
The above described
real estate Is sold "as
Is" without warranties
or covenants.
PROPERTY ADDRESS:
34608 Corn Hollow Rd.,
Rutland, OH 45775.
CURRENT
OWNER:
Tori M. Bass and Mark
A. Bass.
REAL ESTATE AP·
PRAISED
AT:
$20,000.00. The real
estate cannot be sold
for less than 213rds the
appraised value. The
appraisal does Include
an Interior examination
of any structures, If
any, on the real estate.
TERMS OF SALE: 10o/o
down on day of sale,
cash or certified check,

jrshadfrm@aol.com

ROOFING &amp; REMOD.EuNG (0.

Guttering
Seamless Gutters
Roof ng S d :19 Gutters
Insured &amp; Bonded
740-653·9657

·~Jtpenenced

the boundary of said
1.70 acre, more or less,
tract the following
three courses:
1. North 33 deg. 40' 49"
West a distance of
159.50 feet to a 518"
Iron pm set;
2. North 23 deg. 58 55"
West a distance of
245.00 teet to a 518"
Iron pin set;
3. South 83 dog. 1o·
27" West a distance of
15.28 feet to a point in
tho centerline of a
creek;
Thence leaving said
boundary line and
along the centerline of
said creek tho follow·
lng three courses:
1. North 65 deg. 19' 30"
West a distance of
114 53 feet to a point;
2. North 03 dcg. 48' 54"
West a distance of
48.62 feet to a point;
3. North 23 deg 40' 20
West a distance of
96.56 feet to a point;
Thence leaving said
centerline North 62
dog. 17' 45" East passIng through a 518" Iron
pin set,
Thence South 30 deg.
35' 18" East a distance
of 275.05 feet to a 518"
Iron pin set on the
boundary of a 2.0 acre,
more or less, tract as
recorded In Deed Book
286 at page 895;
Thence along said
boundary tho following
two courses:
1. South 62 dog. 17'
45" west a distance of
195.50 feet to a 5/8"
Iron pin set:
2. South 27 deg. 16'
21"
East
passing
through a 5/8" Iron pin
set at n distance of

Cell: 740·416·5047
email:

740-985-4422

• Prompt anj Qualtt)
\\ork
*Rea,onable Rates
•In ured

SHERIFF S
SALE
CASE NO. 09 CV 116,
PEOPLES BANK, NA·
TIONAL ASSOCIATION,
PLAINTIFF, VS TARI M.
BASS AND MARK A.
BASS, ET AL., DEFEN·
DANTS, COURT OF
COMMON
PLEAS,
MEIGS COUNTY, OHIO.
By virtue of an Order
of Sale Issued out of
said Court In the above
action, Robert E. Bee·
gle, the Sheriff of Meigs
County, Ohio, will ex·
pose to sell at public
action on tho front
steps of the Meigs
County Courthouse In
Pomeroy,
Meigs
County, Ohio, on Frl·
day, :o\prll 9, 2010, at
10:00 a.m., the follow·
lng lands and tone·
ments:
Being a part of a 152
acres, more or less,
tract of land as trans·
!erred to Harry Russell
and Bertina M. Mozingo
as recorded In Deed
Book 253 at Page 485,
Meigs
County
Recorder's
Office,
Meigs County, Ohio,
also being a part of
Fraction No. 31, Town·
ship·6·North, Range·
Rutland
14·West,
Township,
Meigs
County, State of Ohio
and more particularly
described as follows:
Beginning at a point
In the centerline of
Township Road #56
said .point being tho
most easterly corner of
a 1.70 acre, more or
less, tract as described
In Deed Book.246 at
Page 629;
Thence leaving said
centerline and along

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�Wednesday, March 17, 2010

www.mydallysentinel.com

BLONDIE

Dean Yeung/Denis Lebrun

FUNKY WINKERBEAN

CROSSWORD
By THOMAS JOSEPH
ACROSS
DOWN
1 The
1 Jane
Emerald
Austen
Isle
book
5 C1ty of 12 Map hne
Across
3 Mutton
11 Additional
dish
12 Each
4 "Waking
13 Hotel
Dov1no"
worker
5 Library
14Servlng
stamp
need
6 T1ps
15 TV spots
7 Slant
16 Bears' la1rs 8 Gu1tanst
17 Store up
Paul
19 Hot blood 9 Bar need
22 Fog en10 Court
shrouded
d1v1der
24Aerosol
16 Calendar
output
box
26 Opposed 18 Singer
27 Green
Redd1ng
shade
19 Incongru28 Printer's
ous
need
statement
30Graph
points
31 Make
clothes
32 Rein for
Rover
34 Broker's
advice
350o a
checkout
job
38 Broke
41 Jupiter's
w1fe
42 Ntche
43 Sing1ng
voice
44Province
of 1Across
45Secluded
val}ey

Tom Batiuk

11

.

AGAR THE HORRIBLE

The Daily Sentinel • Page 85

Chris Browne

20 Freeway
exit
21 Potato
parts
22 Atlas
pages
23 Concerning
25 Asset
29Jacket
part
30 "East of
Eden"
brother

33 Church
official
34 Location
36 Pay to
play.
37 Ruffian
38 Letter
after
s1gma
39Maximum
amount
40 Machines
with RAM
41 Bender

THELOCKHORNS
HI &amp; L;OIS

Brian and Greg Walker

.. IF YOU

Patrick McDonnell
TELL ME., WHAT
Oo 'jou THINK OF

jou

ART~UR'~

BAR BY NOW...

ZITS

COULD

Jerry Scott and Jim Borgman

USE A
L~R1CIST.

My NEW SONG.

I

THE FAMILY CIRCUS
Bil Keane

William Hoest

(

CONCEPTIS SODOKU
G r~~n

by Da\'c:

HAPPY BIRTHDAY for Wednesda), March 17

7 9

2010

1 6

5

This year. you ha\ e a lot to offer. A nel\ luck C) clc
begin&lt;;. You want to chnsten 1t "ell. Re-e\ aluate your
goals and long-term desires. You v.;)l rontmue to do
the unexpected. Listen to others' feedback. If you are
smgle, you'll ha\1~ man) opporturuties to meet "'the
one 'Stretch anJ grow willi this ~rson If\ ou are
attached, the two of vou w1D be able to connect on a

4

4

7
5

1

often

3 2
"My merst'!mallow feels a little dry.
Do we happen to have any warm
chocolate milk?"

DENNIS THE MENACE
Hank Ketchum

7
2
t---·
9 1I-

9
8
2

.
!

1

5

1 7
Difficull)
cl ***

I

Le\

Lit

G

Ig

v

B 6 g 9
L ~ v G

~

£
~ 9 ~ 6 £ L B

B 6

G

Gv
£ 9 9
6 L B
~

U'•,....,'"'"' P~O\IEi ~' SNAKES OUT OF I~P..NP.
N~i&gt;D A SAINT Wj-ID COUI.'D ~IV' ~t KIP

£

deeper le\ el. ARifS
makes you smile
Thr SlaTs S1111W tht Kmd ofDav \llu UHlr.!t' 5Dymmuc, 4-Pos!livr; .3-Am'age: 2 ~ 1 Difficult
ARIES (Manh 21-Apnl19)
***** Sone people feel more Irish than others.
Some stgns feel more Iiish than others This rear:
many Aries will feel greener than they hcl\ em many
\eclrs. Loosen up and enJOy the momf;llt.
Commurucation flouri.,hes. Tonight Romance flour
t..he&lt;&gt;, tool
TAURUS (April 2(}-Ma) 20)
***You juSt might not feel up to snufi. Others
"ant you to JOin in. whether 11 IS busu1\.&gt;ss or pen;on.tl
You s1mply aren't in tht~ mood Md could Ciluse n Situ·
,\lion 1-iihout trying to. Knu11 ing when enough I"
enough is important. 1omght VanL&lt;:h 1f) ou 11 nnt
GEMINI (~lay 2l·June 20)
***** )ou C'an be found m meetmgs, talking to
friend~, tl.&lt;;SOCJat~ or bosses, but most cert;linlv not
,\lone. You could be surprisE'd bye\ erything that
occurs and opern up A conwrsation demonstrates
that you are on the same page as someone else
Tonight Painting the town gret.'l'l.
CA~CER Oune 21-July 22)
**"** As usual, IOU srem to be the one 11ho ts
lett holding the~ You dist'\1\t&gt;r an .n..[ullot 11bout
someone you ca:e about f.: nov. '~hen to s.:l)
"enough.' Your sen..-.e of humor emerges and Hll.l
become far more canng. Tomght. On top or your
gprne
•
LEO Oulv 23-Aug. 22)
* ***"* You ha' e more z1p than mam Sign.'
E'en m the Idee of another's Issues and uproar you
are able to remam grounded and look fom ard Look
dt cl !:Jtuation fro:n a different pomt ol 'Jc\\. Keep lisrenmg to another person, but do \our own thing. •
Torught: Let vour im,)b&gt;inatton play out.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22)

**.....,.,.... Oealv.ith others directly~ You might
''ant to understand what motivates a key person
Your mstmcts are nghlin line. as you'll di-;..'0\ er.
Don't fill m the blanks. lbat way, you ''Ill learn more
about "hat mob\ cltes others TOnight Hook up wtth
a frtend
Ll BRA Sept. 23-0ct. 22)
*'*'*** Don't allow an\ one else's mood to color
your dal. Stay on top Of) our game, knowmg full
'' ellv. hidt 11 ay to go. Realize wh.ltts happerung
behind the~ Someone fmally open.~ up
1bmght Defer to MIOther's sugge-.tion.
SCORPIO (O..'l 23·1'\o\. 21)
*'** Focus on getting a project done_ In some
m.mner, vou v. Ill feel \ ery respotbible for others
Relax more, but complete a-. much a~) ou om Otht&gt;rs
count on ) our sense Of organi7.cltion. )ou are on top
of your gaml.' 1brught Easy \1 orks.
SAGllTARIUS (~o' 22-Dec. 21)
** *'** Funnel &gt;our ingenuity where tt counts
look dt what ho1ppens othenvi."e. Situations could
unr.~' el. You are on top oi your game, whether you
re.Jh:tt• 11 or not. If) ou follow your instincts once you
are fncused, you'll SU1Xt'tc'\.i. Tonight Thmk lnsh
CAPRICOR.."' (~. 22·Jan. 19)
**'*' Do \\h..ttevt!r vou need to do to :mt.our
self more comfortable work. )ou "unply mt t
dose the door or add a new ploll'lt. OtheJS m1 t want
to \\Ork from home. Do wh.1t you must. Staymg so
tightly \1 ound could be difficult. Tonight Oose to
home
AQLARIUS Oan 20-Feb. 18)
*"*'** Keep talking and :&gt;hare \l;th other;. Look
at "hat come-; down your path. In fact. surpnses

at

walk hand m h md w1th 'ou right now Keep smihn&amp;

e1 en if a partner 1s a bit cau-.tic. A soft &lt;:t) ~ goes a
long "a\I Tonight. Where the OO\\ ds an&gt;
PISCES (Ft&gt;b. 19-lvlarch 20)
*** Be a" are of how much )OU ha\e to offer
L'nderstoll'lding "ill e' oh-e to a ne\\ Je, el1f' ou do a
lot of hstenmg )ou could be -.urpnsed b\ \\:),at
o.."':'Urs beh1 een ) ou cl.'ld another peNln 11 you
mdulge thiS person Sta1 oo top of what IS gomg on
Tontght )our treat
lilal•ldmr Blgar r:; :m the bllm~l
C! /1ttp

jaajudml'lll$l!rmtl

�.

Page 86 •

'I he Dnily Sentinel

Cavs top Pistons
AL'BLJRJS HILLS. :-.lkh.
lAP&gt; - LeBron James had
his fourth tripll"-double or
the "eason. lifting the
Clc\el:tnd Ca\aliet:s to a
113-l 0 I 'kton m·cr the
Detnw Pistons ·on Tuesday
night.
·
James score&lt;.! 29 points.
grabbed 12 rebounds and
had 1.2 ass1sts.
lie blockcJ a shot and
t~1ade a .rumper on ct~JN:cutne possesstons to g1\e the
Cavs a five-point cu ... hion
'' ith a m1nute lett, then
..,ealed the victory on u J.
pointer v. ith 29.5 se~onds
remaining.
Cle' L'iand has \\'Oil four in
a mw and lost only one of its
last II games, imprm ing to
an l\BA-best 53-15.
Richard Hamilton had 24
points and was one of six
Pistons who scored in double figure~.
Ddroit has dropped lost
three straight and eight ot
I 0.

The Pistons, unlike recent
games, \\ere \eJ') competiti' c until James took over in
the fou!th quarter.
He tho ha_ve help.
~lo Williams scored 20
p&lt;_?ints_. Antawn Jamison had.
b pomts and I 0 rebounds.
and rcsen e Jaw ad Williams
added I 0 points.
Pistons reserve Charlie
Villamte\d scored 16 points.
Detroit's Ta) ... haun Prince
had 15 poinh and matched a
career high with eight
a~~ish. \\ill B~ num hall 12
pomb anu his team thought
he should've had at letl-.t

-

~~.-

·

www.mydailysen tinel.com

I

Dobbs, Shaker Hts. Hatha....-ay Brown, Ltzzy Z1ernsK1, Shelby Sheets,
Fa(et•ev••o-Pcrry, O•c'chen
DIVISION I
Jefferson Area; Taylor Webb. Geneva. Leslie Staubach, Cm Made~ra Usa W&lt;ber Day Chr stlan,
two more points. ~mlting .1
FIRST TEAM: Natasha Howard, Tol Waite, 6·3, sr.. Ra1fsntder, Bellevue; Alex1s P1erce, Wauseon· Cenz1e
Allie Herbe Gates M1lls Gl.r ou• Acad Autumr
goaltending call on Jumes'
24 7, Malina Howard, Twinsburg, 6-4, soph , 1a.3; Yoder, Carma Knssy Sokol Akror Hobar Dana WiltJafT'S St&gt;aker Hts...au;el: nA•eny Dunn gan s
lakst
come-from-behind Darryce Moore, Youngs Boardman, 6·2 sr, . , Mathews, Struthers: Natalie Cook Norton Lauren I Euclid Regina Ashley Schut•er, Ely•la Cath Taylor
16 6
1 Ratliff
block. Rookie Jonas Jerchko Hope Mancm; Mayfield, 5·8, sr. 25.2 Ashley
Tilden, Ravenna.
Cotumb1a
Stat10r1
Columbia
Kat•e
scored 10 points and Jason Wanninger, C1n. Colerain, 5·9, sr., 16.2; Hannah Honorable Menllon
J Stumphauzer Wellington
Knsten Anderson Sparta H1ghland, L!c1e Buckey,
Lauren Aberdroth Tel O:tawa H1,1s CMe Craft
Maxiell haJ 10 points und Robertson New Albany. 5·8, sr., 1a.2
Player of the year. Natasha Howard, Tol. Waite
Granv111a· Tarnra Londot, Utica, ...ab1tha Piper, Sunbury F•ndlay Liberty-Benton, Anra Steffel. Defiance T1nora
15 rchounds.
Coaches of the year TifT' Cogan Kettewlg B1g Walnut, Tykla Savage, Canal Winchester;
Tiffany Ehlers, He-nler Patnck Henry, Halley Galvan,
Detroit had b~.:cn getting Fairmont, Manny Maf. Tol. Walle· Greg Noftz Marion Shelby Stover, Byesville Meadowbrook; Katherme Archbold, Enca Cramer. Attlca Sereca E , Kara
J~rles, Byesv1lle Meadowbrook; Asl'lee Afsept Dover;
Ut'lerhake Coldwater
bkJ\\ n out early in game~. Hard1ng
SECOND TEAM. T'Shera Lucas, Reynoldsburg, 5. 9, Taylor Mau·er M1nerva Kailee Howe Zanesville:
Kar.:. Horvat
Manchester
Haley
but was determined to put
sr, l6.a, Raeshaun Gaffney, Cm. Mt Notre Darne, 5 • AunDrea West, Steubenvlllo:
GarrettSVIlle Gar'1e1d Alex Letsler SIT' thvllle
up a fight against the Cavs.
e, soptl 20 4 Shawnta Dyer, Manon Harding, . 2, Ashley Lawson WCH M•ami T•ace, Lauryn 1 Funk Jaromosvl le HillSdale Tasr,ra Uceta
The score was tieJ after ' sr 19.9· Natach1a Watkins, Lyndhurst Brush 6•1 6sr,
Robmson. WCH Washington. Jalyrm Bradburn, Sou'h MefT'onal, Andr a Lyons. Ne\Y Middletown Spr ngheld
the fir:-.t quarter. the Pistons 15 5, Phylesha Bullard, Cm Walnut Hills. 5•11 , sr.. Point, MorQan Howard, Pomeroy Me1gs, Elena Lem Hannah Lmdesrr 1tt' Carton Ce'lt Ca•'l
Athens. Janae Driggs, Chillicothe Untoto, Mogan
led by two at halftime and 16.0; Kalpana Beach. westlake, 6·1,Jt 19 5
THIRD TEAM; Ameryst Alston, Canton McKinley 5. Saylor, Greenf1eld McClain Tor' 01xon, McArthur
b) one entering the final
DIVI SION IV
9, soph,, 17 7; Olivia Fouty, Sylval'Ha Northvtew, 5·11, Vmton County, Sar'l Roblrsor Thornville Shendan,
period.
sr 17 9; Maleeka Kynard, Tol Slarl, 5-7 Jr 13 2, I Kelley Austr a Day Carroll· NicOle Boll, Cln. Indian
FIRST TEAM St&gt;tcole Watts, Canal Wmchester
James mts ...ed 10-of-15 SMniqua
Ogle, Lor111n Southview. 6·0, jr., 18 6;"raytor I Hill, Courtney Chnstie Kettering Allor, Slllfa ~ouse, Harvest Prep 6-1 Jr 14 9 Hilary Weaver Berllr
shots O\ er the first three Willtarns, Warren Howland, 6-2 soph, 17.a.
Spnng Kenton R'dge; ~elsoy Matthews, CJ' ,d,an Hiland, 5-7, sr 14 6; Slna K1ng, Waterford 6-Q sr
Special Mention
Hill, Lauren ,Mazzaro. Cm. McNictlolas.
24 7· Kayla Cook, S. Webste·, 5·'0 sr 24.2 Amelra
quurtcrs and was 5 for 7 in
Kavunaa Edwards, Pickenngton North, N1k1 DIGuiiiO,
Sam Lucc. Chagnn Falls Taylor Krus.nskl, Parma Carter DeGraff R1vers1~0 5-11 sr, 1a 0 ;.at1s1'1a
the final one as he added
Vernon, Haley Schmitt, Gahanna-Lmcoln; Hts 1-io.ly Name; Teresa Dav,s, Oberflr F~relands
Walker Cleve Hts Lui~ E 6·1 sr. 14.0, Zohryrfour assists and three Mount
Des~rae Ball, Cin. Ursuline; Kac1e Cassell Vandalia SarahVtcK BayVIIIage Bay ChyressLockhart, Cleve Brya" Delphos St Johrs, 6 0 sr 15.5· Erica Kng
.
.
'
Central Cath N1chelo Johnson Conneaut
rebounds to his total for his Butler; Cass1e
Sant, Kettenng Fairmont; Mackenz1e
Sh km h AI
d
1&lt;
S
F
PetttSVII e 5-5 sr, 19.0' Jordan Pol.,, Mogadore 5 a
e a
exan er, 0 1 colt; Jordan ra.:~y
r
Clark Mentor· Alexa Troptano, Willoughby South
~8th career triple-double.
'
.
'
' Sandusky Perk1ns Kaylca Gnffl:l Clyde, Chelsea s ·• 22 2
NOTES: The Piston5 Kat:e CollinS, Charoon. Racheal Mahan,
Mansheld L d
N
I
•
I
W II d I P ayo·s o! the year ShiCOle Watts Carai
efT'an,
apo
eon
Jerna
auer
e,
1
ar
.
u
8
Semor; Jess1ca Monsman, Hudson· Jililan Halfhill, S
th R b
L
Sh
M
M
' Winchester Harvest P·ep Hilary Weaver Bar n
hope Rodney Stuckey can Canlleld
Logan Paslor Green· lmani Gordon Akron
aman a 0 !SOn, lma
awnee; egan 111er. Hiland
1
·
'
'
T'f 1n Columbian,
pra~.·tice Thursday and play
restone.
Tabatha McKinney Canton South; Mana Arnone,
Coaches of the year Dean Sanford, DeGraff
the next day. two weeks F Honorable
Mention
. ...
Akron SVSM; Michele Sosnick Beloit West Branch; ' Riverside, David Denms. Canal Wmchester Ha-ves•
after he collapsed on the
Kate Franc1sco, Merysvllle, rave~ta Franklin, Cpls. DIAndra Gibson, Raverna, Katelyn Ardale. Struthers, Prep, Dave Kleman, Ottov11JO
bench at Cle,eland. Doctors Broo.khaven Addie Goodw1n. H1ll1ard Dav1dson, Kara Goliat, Cuy Falls Walsh Jesu,t; TaneKa L'ewts, 1 SECOND TEAM: Rac"lel Bcl'da Bridgeport. 5·9 sr
C8111in Kusan Weste'vllle Nortt' Jane Wmdler Upper Akron Hoban.
21 1· Jaclyn WJIIoughb(, Houston, 5·9. sr, 17 8
deareJ Stueke) for exercise Arlington,
Kathleer Phillips, Sa'ldusky St Mary 5-9 ar, 17 6
ltl\t week after extensive
Hanna Luburg Dresden Tri·Valley· Carly Young,
Tene1l Krebs, Bucyrus Wynford, 5·9 Jr 16 a· ...auren
cardiac tests .... Cavs G Dresden Tn-Valley. Alyssa M1ller, Dresden Tri-Valley,
DIVISION Ill
Gerosk1 Fostor•~ St. Werdelm 5-6, sr 16 C
Bailey Topf, Logan, Mon1que Lee, Ch1llicothe;
Stepl"a•ue Recke•, Pandora-Gilboa, 6·0 ,r, 14.1
Delontc West out of the lineAmanda Baute C1~. Oak Hills; Kayla Jo,ner, Cin
FIRST TEAM Tay'ler M1ngo, S Euclid Reg1na, 5 a. Noe1le Yoder, Be·l :1 Hiland, 5·7 t•, 19 0
up as a precaution because
1
Pnnceton, Chelsea LaPorte; Ja'Monica Orton, sr., 17 a; Amanda Hyde, Ftndlay Lt::&gt;erty·Benton, 5-10,
THIRD TEAM Adr enne BlanKenst&gt;Jp Fra'lk n
of a sprained knee.
Riverside Stobbms; Tayler Stanton, Cm. Walnut Hills, sr., 21.a, Jen:'la Pew, SmJthvJlle, 6-0 sr., 20 3; Ally FJrnace Greer 5-8, sr 14 5; Amber Bog::·d Cleve
Pistons C Ben Wallace uid Jaymee Veney. Fa~rborn;
Malott, M1ddletown Madison, 6-3, 1r 17 7, Kar•ssa Hts. i:..1Jih. E 6·0. 1r 16.0, He1d1 Merve•, Cuya. Hts
not pia) because of an
Az1za May, Lyndhurst Brush; Jaime Olues1ng. Solon; Adkins, Oak Hill, 5·9, sr., 16.2· Meg:!n While He::t"l, 5·10, sr 17 7 Joh Jorn•e Mosley, McDonald. 5·7 sr
1
1 22 2 Kayla Linkous New Mad1son Tri-V llage. 5-1.1
injured nght knee. ... The CBIII!n Fitzpanck, Willoughby South; Claire Gotchall 5·6, sr 21 7
Middleburg Hts Midpark, Martha Nagbe, Lakewood:
Player of the year Tey'ler M1ngo, S Euclid Reg1na
soph, t6.6
Piston-. \Veren 't sure Prince Alexandria Hams. Lora1n Admiral Kmg,
Coaches of the year: Karl Kitchen, Sp"ll'lg
Spec1al Morllor•
would plav because of a !-&gt;Ore
Tiffany Scott, Sylvania Southv1ew; Jaymle Jackson, Northeastern; Joy Taylor, Loudonville
A!l'y Jo B1shop, Lancaster Fairfield Crnst an; At~ssa
hack ... The Ca\s, 27-7 in To1 Start; Cat Wells, Tol Notre Dame Acad ; Brenae SECOND TEAM· Sara Tucke, Zoarv1lle Tuscarawas K1•k, Gahanna Christian, Chelsea McKmght, Cana.
2010, haYe a chance to be Hams, Marlo!' Hard,ng; Daniells Sallisbury. F1ndlay· Val., 5·7, sr., 14.6; Raven Ferguson, Cots. Afncentrlc, Wmchester Harvest Prep: Kendra Votaw G1lead
5-11 Jr., 23 8; Courtney Boyd, Brookville, 6·1 s·, Crrtstlar Se:'ltana Bom'ant, Strasburg-Franklir. Tor'
the fir-.t team to have the Cara Croom, Sandusky
Ashley Rin1nger. Canton GlenOak, Jasmyne Kirksey. 30 I A)a Hal. Fostona, 5·9. sr 21 5, Alyson Lee, 1 Ja·rett Beallsville Jaclyo Johnson Shadys de; M1ssy
best regular-~eason records Massillon Perry; Monica Touvelle, Youngs. Boardman: Cleve VASJ, 5·5, sr.. ~50. Becky Orchard I Buckley lljew Boston. Glerwood; Charda Cuekler
in Clmsecutive season:; .since Jessica Lairson, LoUisville; Jaytene Taylor, Massillon Loudonv1lle. 5·10. sr 13.7
Stewart Federn Hocking, Kasey Turley, Reedsv1.1e
Chicago did it during the Washington; BrJana Dawson, Youngs. Easr M1kaela THIRD TEAM Alex Kuhn, Woodsfield Monroe Cart Eastern Chelsey R1ddfe. Leesbu·g Fairfield· Sarah
5-a sr., 19.9, Daniello Grooms, Magnolia Sal"dy Vat
Carroll, Cm Cl'lnst1c1n· Janel Olberd rg, Ft Loram1e,
1995-96 and 1996-97 sea- Lengal, Brunswtc)&lt;; Taylor Roil, Copley
5·9 sr 15 9: Megan Car~pbell Versatlles 6-1, sr
Mariah Reed Cin Ccunt•y Day Alyssa Amyot.
sons.
DIVISION II
15.9· Lauren Langenderfer Metamora Evc·green. 5- K1rt1and Ma-y Sl'1rT'kO, Nortl' Rldgevl'le Lake R1dge

I

I

8, soph. 1a 2; Rebecca Puckett, Oak H11' 5·10 sr
15.5, N;rra F1e1ds, S Euclid Regina 5·9, sopt' 16 s·
Hannah Plybon, Orrvl11e. 5·8. frost&gt; 17.4, K.C. E klns.
West JeHersor 5-6, sr.• 18.a
Special Mention
Arny Dar1els, Manon Pleasant: Krtsta Mathews
BaiU!l'ore Ltberly Umon, Knsten T-oyer, Sugarcreek
Garaway; Sam' Schott, Sarahsvule Shenandoah Brea
Tackett, Ironton: Jordan Arbaugh Lucasvu e Va
Whitney Daugherty, Alb"'!'lY Alexander; Karll Beasley.
Seaman North Adams, McKenr:ee TatM"'!'l Chillicothe
Zane Trace l.l11dsay Hosk.ns, M ddletOWil Madrsor
Courtney t-lubbard Hamilton Badtfl Car'le Watk1ns.
Anna Meghann Wright Burton Beksh1 e. Pa'So11r a
Hope, S Euclid Reglra. Ern y Nagle Colu!l'b
Sta1 on Columb E-n y Taylor Elyna Cath., Kays;e
Br nham M be-y ..ake Katrenne ~ ·"1 eson To
E'r
Je 'I
Cl' s W erro Reserve
H
E
Pl
A
e z •-y Yot. gs
)tOn A~r

FIRST TEAM Mylar~ Woods, Shaker Hts. Hathaway
Brown, 5·11 t·.. 15.4, J1ll Stetn, Tiffin Columbmn, 6-2.
sr, 13 5; Shavon Rcbmson, Canton South 5·9, sr,
1 17 3, Samane Walke1. Day Cnarn.nade-Juhenne, 6·1.
sr, 16.2, Jenne Cobb, WCH M1am1 Trace 5·7, sr.,
17 9, Abb1e Corbett, Ut1ca, 's-3, sr 18 9; Amy
Scullion, Salem 6·0, sr, 18.6.
Player of the year Mylan Woods, Shaker Hts.
Tigers. just had an off day.
.. Tt looked like he had a Hathaway Brown.
Coaches of the year. Rod Chlysta, Ravenna, Nancy
hard time gripping the Barbo.
Geneva Ray Nelli, Sandusky Perkins
ball,"' Hinch said.
SECOND TEAM· Carly Kel'n, Car'lbrldgo, 5·6 sr.,
"E\erything from the get- 10 2 He d1 Sc'1fegc4. Wapakoneta, 6.0. sr. 17 a·
go. he was fast wtth hir; Cl)el~ e Buller, Mtner/8 6·4, Jr 16 6 Ashley Chr she
oeli\Cl). had a lot of \Cioc- i&lt;&lt;'lt rg Alter 5·9 sr • 12 2 Ka•e Ha 'l'IOnd
eld McCan 58 sr t3 2, M ssy Spat:
lt; coming out. but h1s Green!
Me~tor Lake Cath 5-10 sr 161
t.:Ommand ~as off. He was a
THIRD "'EAM Da e e ed c N w P '·"'"'"'~"'""
httle Jumpy off the rubber .. 510 sr 202 Mac etta A e To Lbbey 5·8
for the Reds. starter 20 2 Ange Coo e• Cots East 6-4 r ~ 7 5 A e
Johnn) Cueto allo~ed t~o Turner, Spnng Greer-on 5·6, sr, 2a a LeArne Ross
Mnr etta 5-0, sr. 20 8; Ashley Evens, Avon, 5·7, ar
runs in 3 213 innings. He 20.0;
Rache Thenot, Cuya Falls Walsh JesUit 5·10
struck out one and walked soph 12.1
one.
Spectal Mentton
Pa1ge Ricketts.
Chr stme Delaney. Lew1s Center 0 entangy
Drew Stubbs entered the
BaDCock West
Zanesv1 e West
game hitting 2 for 20. but Jindra Surbury 81g Wa nut Ch. ey Aad f
Aced Ty Harr s, Wmtersv' e lnd ar C ee
z Herr son Cent ,
went 2 for 3 ~ ith a double Eastmoor
Melar1e Poor[Tl;ln Zanesv le Maysv lie, Alyv a C a
and tnple and two RBis to C~rclev11e Logan Elrr. '&lt; ty Wyeth uneaSier Fatrf e d
1mprove his average to Umon Kayla Fletc~er South Poml Mackerz1e Albany Alexander: Jesse Sps;:•s Glouster Tnll'ble;
.174.
Arledge, Ct'1lllcothe lJmoto: •Knsty Sw1nehar• AutufT'r Sm th, Frankfort Adena, .~ass ca RoepKe,
"'Ju::.t putting together Tl10rnvllle Sheridan, Jordanne Gambill, Ctarksvllle I Chllllcott'e Zane Trace Rachel Mullins Sard101a
Ntkkl Mcl&lt;ee C1n. Wyoming; Brearna , Eastern Brown Cell Hatten Lynchburg-C.ay,
quality at-bats." he said. CllntOI'·Massle;
Stucke T1pp City T1p~ecanoe, Anme Bova, Cl~ve. Hts.
Jada Brown, Cm Purcell Manan, Casey Carter.
..It's all I'm concerned Beaumor.t. Hannah McCue Rocky River, Alexis Georgetown·
Morgan M1lle·, Casstown M1amt E

about."'
Bruce ~ ent 2 for 3 with
two RB!s and his second
homer of the :-.pring. He is
batung .391 .
It was the Reds' first trip
to Tucson since the team
moved to its spring complex in Goodyear. The Reds
will abo travel to Tucson
on March 25 to play the
Colorado Rockie~.
Notes: Reds third base
prospect Juan Francisco
made hi~ first start in left
field anu didn't have a
putout. He went I for 3 with
an
RBI
sing.le.
. ..
Diamondbacks th1rd baseman Mark Reynolds. who
ha~ agreed to a three-year,
$14.5 million deal. had the
da) off after playing four
consecutive days and didn't
come to the ballpark, Hinch
said. The manager said he
will be g1ving his other
every day position players
days off.

Westbrook leads Indians past Giants
GOODYEAR. Ariz. (AP)
-Jake Westbrook outpitched
two-time Cy Young winn~r
Tim Lincecum and Tnn 1~
Hafner drove in three runs.
kadin~ the Cleveland Indians
to a 7-1 win mer the San
Francisco Giants on Tuesday.
Westbrook. the Indians'
scheduled opening day ~tm~er
trying to come bacK alter
missin~ near! y I\VO ~easons
with inJuries. allowed one run
and two hih in four innings. It
was hts best outin~ this spring
anJ a huge confidence builder
for the right-hander, who
underwent Tommy John
surgery in 2008.
Penciled in by ne\V managet· !vlanny Acta to he the
lndi~ns · opening-day sta11er.
Westbrook allowed cne nm
and two hits in four innings. It
v.·as his best outing this spring
and a huge confidence builder
for the right-hander. who
underwent Tommv John
surgerv in 2008.
•
"[ was just throwing strikes

Wednesday, March 17, 2010

2010 AP All-Ohio girls basketball teams

Jackson struggles in
Arizona's loss to Reds
TCCSO~, Ariz. (AP)
Arizona
Diamondback~
&lt;.tarting pitcher Edwin
Jackson ~a&lt;.n't hi' usual
"harp self in a 13-7 lo~s to
the Cmcinnati Reds.
But that wasn "t a concern
th " ca1l~ m pnng training
f~..1r the n~,ht hander. \\-ho 1
·xpectcd
to
be
the
Dwmondback
No
2
starter.
He allo~ed se\'en runs
and six: hits in 2 113 innmgs.
He gave up a solo home run
to Ja) Bruce, walked t~o.
struck out none and threw a
'"'ild pttch during a blustel)
.lfternoon
at
rucson
Electrtl. Park. The '"ind at
game t me ~ J.~ 19 mph.
'Probubly rushing a httle
b1t. I didn "t really have .t
feel for an) pitch. That's
ne\ er a good thmg ~hen
you ne\er e ... tablish a feel
for any
pitch,"' said
Jac.kson. ~ho io; 0-1 with ,In
8.59 ERA. ''Couple balb
up They put them in play."
A&lt;iked if it wa!:. a concern,
Jackson ~mlied.
"If 1t was a concern for
me right now. we· d have
big problems," he :said. "'If
one outing \\a" a concern.
(manager) A.J. (Hinch)
would'i1eed to pull me into
h1s office and have a nice
little talk With me."
"I've had plenty outing.s
where you come 111 and 1t
wa~n't whatJou wanted to
do.'' he adde "All vou can
do ic; go back and 'lwalyte
the situation and go from
there."
He :-.aiel he was still able
to get his work in. And he is
healthy.
Hinch ~aiJ Jackson. who
joined the Diamondbacks i!l
December Irom the De troll

-----....-----·

.........

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

with all mv pitches, getting
ahead and pounding the
zone:· the 32-year-old said."!
was able to do that. I was
being very aggressive and
when I'm aggressive and
throwin&amp; strikes it makes all
of my p1tches that much better. For me light now. it's just
fine_ tuning my command.·
Lmcecum allowed a home
mn b) Shin-Sao Chao in the
tirst and was tagged for four
nms and four hits in four
innings. Although he has a
YJ9 ERA during the exhibition season. the carefree 25year-old isn't worried and
came away pleased with his
performance.
Hafner hit a three-run double in the se\'enth to make it
7-1. It was Hufner\ tirst
extra-base hit. and the fact
that he pulled it to right-center
W&lt;l~ an encouraging sign for
the Indians. who are hoping
he can find his power stroke
after hitting just 16 homers
last season.

Acad. Knst•n Klausmg, Delpt&gt;os Jef'erson: Tasha
Kau 1rnan Ottov1fle AfT'anda Sidwell, Mogadore;
Taylor Hv•3da~. LoweltvJlfe· Colleen l(ennehar Ber'1n
Cel"'ar Western Reserve· Courtney M1tchel1 East
Ca11ton.
1-&lt;onorable Me'ltiOn
Lmdsay Eockel, Grove C ty Chnsllan; Aubrey Hazen
Danv1le. Nan Hooper Lancaster Fa,rtield Chrts!lan;
Ker·ssa Jonnson, Morral "11dgeda.e. V1ctona
Tt&gt;oMpson Cols Tree of L1fe Cnnst1an·
L•zzy NaJ. Caldwell Heather Boot'1, New
Matamoras F•ort,er, E le LeMasters, Bellalfe St
John's Cary Cla•k Strasbu·g-Frankll'l; M ll1e
Patchen, New Ph adelphia ~usc. Cent. Cath
Jessie MorIS. W1llow Wood Symmes Val., Alyssa
Ra1res, New Boston G enwood; EfT'tly Brow'l,
Waterford EMer Co'lrery, Reedsv1lle Easter'l;
Courtney Rowe Beaver Eastern Rachaei Staker,
Beaver Eastern; Gabnt 1e Boone, Leesburg Fa'"'""td·
Shance Clark .ocklal"d Errlly Ellerbrock, T1pp C1ty
R ~el Jenra Erw n S Ct'a:lestor Southeaster'l, K1m
Ga t 11amt ton "Jew M1arn1; Ashlyn Hernmelgar.,
Ansor. a f,olana Schafer, Troy Crnstian·
•
Kristen WOIOW ec. Garfield HIS Tr 'ltty· C
Madden, Klft!and. D8'11e e Day Newbury Bra Es
C eve tits Luth. E 6rldget Boyle, Garfield Hts.

Tron ty
Lacey Kessler '•11. Blanchard Riverdale· Amelia
Recker Ar rgton. Hannah Stevens Holgate; Melissa
Hoffbauer. New Wast&gt;mgtor Buckeye Cert·al Sara:-!
Sh1rey Plymouth Jo ThofT'pson. Convoy Crestv ew;
Paula Kelbley, lljew R1egel, Katnna Brand Mar a Ste1n
Manor Local,
Presley Destro Mogad:&gt;rc M1ky1a Tipton, Wei sVllle·
EMily Carlsor Lowetlvllle, V CIO'Ia Browr Be•lln
Center Western Reserve; Kayly'ln Barco Southll'lgton
Chalke· Kati Vanan. East Cantor Mel ssa Stoa!'l
Cortland Maplewooa
"

12-8 and topped the Blue
Raiders in the .;;econd came,
7-2.
~
Senior designated hitter
Chris Mahon (Hamilton,
OH) continued his torrid
hitting. going 3-for-4 with a
triple and four RBI ·s.
Senior third baseman Tyler
Schunk (Cincinnati. OH)
went 3-for-5 with a double
and knocked in two runs.
Senior
catcher
Tyler
Plumpton (Peterborough.
01\'l) was 1-for-4 and had
two RBI's and senior rightfielder
John
Store)
(Wheelersburg. OH) was 0for-2 but had two RBI"s.
Jumor shortstop Brad
Konrad (Maumee. OH)
contributed t\\ o hits to the
Rio offense \\ hile junior
leftficlder Michael Lvnch
(lyndhurst. OH). senior
centerfielder Ryan Yakura

(Pickering, O~T) and
junior
Brandon
La'
(Columbus, OH) all rallie~l
one hit in the came.
Freshman ~
R\ an
Robertson (Wa\erly. OH)
battled for 5 213 innings and
Was able tO keep hiS record
unblemished on the 'oung
sea~on. Rohe11son · (4-0~)
scattered II hits and
allowed eight nms. including two home runs. He did
manage to record six strikeouts in the game. Schunk
came on to record his second o.;ave of the season. He
pitched the final I 1/3
innings and had one strikeout.
In game 1\\o. Rio put
to!:!clher I I hir... and it wa"
Plttmpton who had the big
game. Plumpton "ent 4for-5 and k11ocked in three
runs. Among his hits \\ere

a two-run home run and an
RBI double.
Junior first baseman
Frand\CO
Ramirez
(Colun'bu..,, OH) "as 1-for4 and dro\'e in a pair of runs
and junior second baseman
Christian Frias (Salinas,
PR\ went hitless lO-for-2)
but managed an RBI.
L\ t'lch l10tched two hits
"hile Schunk. Yakura,
sophomore Derek Green
lBean Station. TN) and
freshman
Joe
Stolpa
(Gallm\ a). OH) all recor··
ed one hit each.
Schunk (2-2) picked up
the win in relief for the
RedStorm ( 14-J. 3-1 ~1SC).
Schunk was perfect for 3
2/3 innmgs. striking out six
batters. ~
~
Lind~e\ \\'it...on fall-. to S7 on the· season and 1-3 in
MSC p a).

Softball

REDSTORM TAKE TWO
FROM CUMBERLAND

from Page Bl

LEBAi'\ON. Tenn.- The
University of Rio Grande
RedStorm softball team
recorded an impressive
sweep of Cumberland (TN)
Universit) on Sunday, wm
ning the first game. 4-0 and
taking game two in mn-rule
fashion~ 11·1 .
.
Rio Grande (8-2) recdved
another li!!hls out pitching
performance rrom sophomore Anna Smith (Ross.
OH). Smith (6-1) went the
distance and allowcu onlv
t\\O hits . She fanneJ five
and walked only one batter.
Senior centerticlder Leah
Hamman (Lexington. Ol {)
led the Rio offense. going 2for-2 with home run.
The RcdStorm clubbed
three long ball-. in the game.
Senior catcher Kaylyn
HeaJing (Hilliard, OH)
gave Rio a 1-0 lead with a
solo home run in the tirst
inning. Freshman kfttield-

cr Kaitie Stt:\\ art (Pleasant
Hill. 0H) clubbed a 1\\0-mn
homer in the seventh to finish the scoring.
Allison Black\\ ood took
the loss for Cumberland l47).
In game two, Rio scored
in e\'er) inning hut the
fourth in rolling to an 11-1
'ictol)' in tiw innings. The
RedStonn started ... trong
wtth four run-. in the first.
Rio added single runs in the
second and third and completed the doubleheader
s\\eep "ith fi,e run-. in the
tift h.
Hamman put together
another pcrl'el't game at the
plate. going 3-for-3 "ith
two RB£'s and three run"
scored. She ab o stole t\\'o
bases. Heading \\ent 1-for-

2 with a t\\O-run home nm.
Junior shortstop Amber
BO\\ man (Hebron, O H)
went 1-for-2 "ith a double
and two RBI\ while freshman -.ewnd baseman Katie
Fuller (Hamilton. OH) \\·a..,
l-for-1 \\ith a pair of RRI 's
and freshman Jesignated
hitter \1ackenzic Rucker
~Proctonille. OH) wa.., 2for-2 "ith three runs scored.
Sophomore Allison ~ ! ill s
(.West Che..,ter. OH) "ent the
th~tunce for the "in for Rio
Grande in the second game
~I ills L~-1) allowed~
uneamed run in seYcn con
plete innings. \\ hile scattermg fi\ e hih. gi' ing up one
walk and ..,triking out three .
Caith•1 Gray \tartt•d the
game
and · lost
for
Cumberland.

Rio
from Page Bl
Frias recorded the other Rio
RBI. despite going 0-for-3.
Lynch had· a double and
Konrad and Yakura also
notched base hits for Rio
Grande.
Rio is 2 I on the spring
trip.
URG SWEEPS DH FROM
LINDSEY W ILSON

COLUMBIA,
Ky.
The Universitv or Rio
Grande RedSto~m baseball
team won both games of a
doubleheader on Saturday
at Lindsey Wilson to take
the series three games to
one. Rio won game one.

for-3.
Game two was a close
encounter with Rio Grande
pulling out the game late.
Smith picked up the win in
relief. fi1ing three shutout
innings . Sm1th yielded
only one hit in the game.
Sophomore Alli~on Mills
(West Chester. OH) started
anJ pitched four innings.
She kept the RedStorm in
the game, giving up only six
hits und two runs. The
score was tied at 2-2 \vhen
she left the game.
Sophomore nght fielder
Marissa Lennox (Gahanna.
O li) :m·ung the big bat for
Rio Grande. She went 2lor-3 with two doubles and
two RBI's.
Freshman
rightlielder Kt.utie Stewmt
(Pleasant ll ill. OH) was 1for-2.

01.

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•

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