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                  <text>Find The

Health care gains
start soon - bigger
ones later, A2

Uj[JUUJ[]W l£(tj H

Printed on 100%
Rec)dtd New~print

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio

aD.,-

I

SPORTS

New water meters doing job too well?

• District 13 all-stars
compete. See Page 81

Pomeroy residents complain about 'extremely high' bills
iclent~ about "extremely high"
paying for the water running
water btlls. Clerk Treasurer Kathy through their meters. However,
Hyse ll -.aid she'd heard that was .\1usser 5aid "we have to be fair
POMEROY
The
VIllage
of
the
case though hadn't taken any with cvcr)'Onc,'' mcluding those
1P
. I v. ater her&lt;&gt;elf ~1ayor John Musc;er con- who've had working meters all
omeroy ' s new d'Ig1ta
1
I meters appear to be doing thetr firmed there was a residential
along and have been paying for
JOb, maybe a little too well fm water bill for $1,000 with the resi
v.ater they·,e used all along.
A wcll·known problem accentusome resident&lt;; who may've not dent finding the water leaks and
had an accurate meter reading correcting them.
ated by the majority of now v. orkuntil thts month.
Musser said in this case, as in all ing meters is not all residential
Last night. Councilwoman Ruth cases, the village is ''trying to be as meters in Pom~roy were working
Spaun asked 1f the water office helpful as it can" to res1dcnts to correctly or had been working
had received complaints from re~- meet the financial obligation of correctly for year&lt;;. This is a huge

Bv BETH SERGENT

BSERGENT@MYOAILYSENT'NEL COM

reason why the VIllage. felt the
meter replacement project was
crucial. As for how the village
will fair financially from these
nev.. more accurate meters, Hysell
said she would have a better idea
concerning the numbers at the end
of the month.
Councilman Vic Young also suggested the village promote its
water leak insurance to customer:.
which covers these unforeseen
leaks for $25 a year. .Mu::.ser said
most of the res1dential meters have
now been replaced with the new
Please see Pomeroy, AS

,_ Kicking into high gear
INSIDE

I

• SHS honor roll.
.,.
• Nighttime energy
may only increase
sleep deprivation.
See Page A3

• PVH awarded
laboratory accreditation.
See Page AS
• Managing your
Beth Sergentlphoto
finances: Wealth
Students and staff at Brtanga's Martial Arts Center in Middleport kicked into high gear recently, raising money and colwatchers. See Page AS lecting donations for the Meigs County Dog Shelter. ''I'm thrilled people 1n the community have gotten involved in the shel• For the Record.
l ter and I wish more would do it," Dog Warden Torn Proffitt (pictured) said. Also prctured is Marianne Proffitt of the Meigs
1 County Dog Shelter.
See Page AS
• Ohio Briefs.
See Page A6

I

FREE RI DE

Cancer patients benefit from program

W EATHER

BY BETH SERGENT
BSERGENTCMYOAILYSENTINE:L.COM

POMEROY - The cost
of fighti ng cancer is
tremendous for many and
for many more it'~ not just
about paying for medical
care but payi ng for the
tran~portallon to simply get
to that care.
Cancer patients who live
1n Meigs Count) and arc
also customers of American
Electric Power are now
benefiting from a free tram.portation program which i~
paying for these co~ts. The
program, sponsored by
AEP. the United Fund for
Meigs Coun ty and the
Meigs County Cancer
lnitiativt'. will run through
March 3 1. Annual income
guidelmes are as follows one per::.on hou~chold,
$21,660: two person household, $29 .140; three person
hou sehold, $36,620: four
pcr~on household income.

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

INDEX
12 PAm lS

A3
B3-4

Comics

Bs

Editorials

A4

Sports

B Section

:zoto Ohio Valley Publishin g Co .

I

B Y B RIAN

J . REED

BREEDOMYDA....YSENTINEL.COM

II

See Page A3

a SECJloss -

Hill trial
continued
in double.fatality crash

$44, 100.

For more informution on
the program. call Courtney
1 Sim at 992-6626. Sim
brought up the prog1~am at.
the most recent meetlllg ol
the American
Cuncer
Society's 1\leigs Count&gt;
Taskforce. Sim told mcrn
bers local canrcr patients

lliJ!IJIJ!1!1.! !II .

j

1

ha\~ so far benefited from
$1.500 in fuel voucher:~ron~ored .bY the program.
Also d1~cussed at the
meeting \\Crc:
ACS ~lcmber JoAnn
Crisp announced the 2010
Ml·tgs Relay hlr Life will
begin at noon on June 12
and end at 6 a.m. on
Sunday. June 13 at the
Meigs Count) Fairgrounds.
Only I 0 fund-raising teams
have registered online 10
date. Crisp said that.
despite extensive contacts.
rcspon~c to team recruitment efforts has been
mediocre at bc\t. Attendees
concurred that
pubiJc
enthusiasm for the event
seem:- to be declining not
only in ,.\leigs. but also in
surrounding counties.
The av&lt;~nabil ity of adequate food sales at the
event is a concern with the
rc\ 1sed scheduled includ111g more afternoon and
evening hour.,, If only a
two-three te&lt;tms offer food
on site. the planning committee ma\ ha\·e to contact
mobi le fo()d vendors.
The ;..teigs County Health
Department(I'B Clinic's
Relay for Life 'Ibm is coordinating a ··spling Chtcken
5K Fun Run/Walk" at 9 a.m.
on May 22 ar the Meigs

County f'airground~. The School Districts ha\ e benee\'ent is as a fund-raiser for fited from grant monies via
the l\1CHD in the past.
the ACS.
There will be a "Toob
.\1ember
Andrew
Brumfield
announced for Schools'· conference on
''Dining with Diabetes•· ses- Aug. 5 at Eastern Local for
sions will be offered from 6- srhool food sen ice per8 p.m ., on April I, 8, and 15 sonnel.
Brumfield will impkment
at the Courthouse Annex.
There are I l trained "Su!!ar "f'resh Start'' tobacco ces~a­
Helpers•· via "Diabetes:~ A tion program with the assisf'amilv .Matter." The "Sugar tance of Lora Rrm .,on (a
Helpe~·s" will provide dia- forr11er cmplo) ec of the
betic awareness and support Holzer ~1edical Center
throughout the \.'ounty and TIJbacco Pre' entinn Center)
in
~t ay.
can help facilitate environ- beginning
Additiona~ facilitators arc
mental changes.
Brumfield will also be being solicited and \\ill be
coordinating a chronic di~­ trained. Brumfield will
ea:-e sclf-ni:·magement pro- cotm.Jinate client referrals
gram. '' hich is based on and registration.
There \\'ill be a ~1eigs
curriculum from Stanford
Survivor~hip
l niver~ity. Communit) vol- Count)
unteers \\ill participate in a ll1skforce meeting at noon.
four day training to facili· April 8 at the Pomenn
tate public cla-.ses about Lihrar). ~kmbers are to
brin.!? their lunch. 'l11e n.e:\t
lifcst) k choices, etc.
The .MCHD reccntlv i\(h I~Ol') Board meetlllg
donated $5,000 of remain·- ~~ill take place at _noon.
ing ·Cardiovascular Health I hur~d~y. ~hi) 20 1n the
Gn111t funds to the Meig~ ban4uet r~)()lll nf the Wild
Local
Enrichment Horse Ca.te ·
Foundation l'or the pur
At~cndtng
the_ recent
chase/in~tallation
of a meetmg \\t'I'L' ~resident R&lt;~e
climbing wall, which will ~loon~,
Sun.
. Juhc
be available for community l!llei~\\'OO·d.: 9~ona ,~ lo.es~
usc. If the money \\a~ not 'G\ 11•1('.. h:\ l,lell)11}t:n. 1\ILl'\lthlt:
spent locally. it would h:ne
!n 1tt •
wne
) nc. ·
been returned to the ~tate. Cn-.p, Lenora LeJinctt.
Snuthem and En~tern Llx·al 13rumficld.

•

POMEROY - The trial
of a forme r Pomeroy
woman charged in the
deaths of two people in an
April, 2009 auto accident on
Ohio 143 has been continued until June.
Brandi Hill. 26. also
knov.n as Brandi Hicks. is
accused of driving '' hile
h1gh on cocame, causing a
collbion on Ohio 143 that
killed two. including a passenger in her own SUV. Until
recently, Hill was in custody
of the Oh10 Department of
Correcttons on charges from
~
another count\'.
Hill faces two counts of
aggravated vehicular homicide, possession of cocaine
and two counts of operating
a motor vehicle under the
mfluence of, cocaine. Her
trial hu-. been continued
from early April until June
23. A final pre-trial in the
case h&lt;h been set for June 4.
Hill is now free on a
$I .000 personal recognizance bond after appearing before Judge Fred W.
Cro'' Ill for arrai!!nment on
the Mei!!s Count\ Grand
Jur\''s .ndictment. ·She has
ret&lt;iined Charles Kni!!ht of
Pomerm as her attornev.
Hill allegedly struck· two
vehicle-. \\ aitino to make
left-hand turns o~ Ohio 143.
then went left of center into
Please see Trial, AS

Third party
voters may
now register
in Ohio
B v B RIAN

J.

R EED

BAEED@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

PO~ t EROY- After gencration-. . of
. voting
Demo..::rat1c. Republtcan or
, is~ues-only in the spring
1 pnmar). 'oters in Ohio can
now register as member~ of
1 the Constitutional. Green.
Libertarian. or Souahst pat
ties, and 'ote for candtdate~
I on those balloh
Hm\ eYer, 111 spite of all
-,e, en hallob a\ a !able., ot
ers still cannot I'C\!Ister as
lndep~ndents l\oi1-affihat
ed candidates .1~ thev are
knO\\ 11 in the ·ohio
Sccretnr) of State\ office.
nrc "hen issues-onh ballots.econtaining onh.. ~ttuc
ballot i~sucs a~1d local tax
le\ ies and lora! options. -\n
is~ues-onl\' b,tJiot remains
aYailahle ."
·

I

Please see Voting, AS

�PageA2

The Daily Sentinel

Tu esd ay, March

23, 2010

Health care gains start soon - bigger ones later

Iceland's
eruptions could
have global
consequences

B Y RICARDO
ALONSO-Z ALDIVAR
ASSOCIATED PRESS

WASHINGTON - The
first c.:hanges under the new
REYKJAVIK.
Iceland health care law will be easy
(AP) - Blasts of lava and ~o see and not long in comash shot out of a volcano in mg: There'll be $250 rebate.
southern
Iceland
on checks for seniors in the
Monday and small tremors Medicare drug coverage gap.
roc.:ked the ground, a surge and young adults moving
in activity that raised fears from college to work will be
of a larger explosion at the able to stay on their parents'
nearby Katla volcano.
plans until they tum 26.
But the peace of mind the
Scientists say history has
proven that when the president promised _ the
Eyjafjallajokull
volcano antidote for health care
empts. K~t.la f&lt;?llows, ~ the insecurity. whether you
only qu:s~ton ~~. h~\\ soo~. 1 favored or . opposed his
And Kat~~· lol.:ated !-~n?er I overhaul _ 1s still a ways
~he mass1\e Myrd~llsjokull beyond the horizon, starting
tcecaJ?. threatens d1sastr?us 1 only in 2014. Insurers then
lloodm~ a_nd e.~plos1ve will be batTed from turning
blasts \\he~ 1t hlo\\s:
down people with medical
, Sat_~rday s_ erupt1on at problems. and the governE)'J?,tJa.lla~okull
(A YA- !nent will provide tax credfeey.1p!:1-yurkul) -.d.onnant !ts to help millions of work~or nc.trly 200 years mg families buy coverage
forced at least 500 people to they can't afford now.
evacuate.
~tost
have
Health care overhaul will
return~~ to thetr hot:n.es, but bring real change. but it's
au~ho~t!es were. wmtmg for going to happen slowly.
scientific as~essments to
President Barack Obama
detennme \~heth~r they \\_ere plans to sign the main legis~afe to sta). Res1dents of. 14 !at ion Tuesday in the White
t~nns nearest to the erupt1on House East Room after 11
s1te were told to stay away.
bitterly divided House
,Several ~mall tre~10rs approved tt Sunday night.
\\e~e felt.eady Mo!Jda~. fol- That will cap a turbulent.
IO\\ed b) ~pt~rts ?f la\a a~d yearlong quest by the presisteam rock~tmg '.nt? th~e a1r. dent and congressional
I~eland s1ts _on &lt;~ large ~o!- Democrats to remake the
c~1c hot S~)t .m the ~tl~t1c s nation's health care system.
mtd-oceamc ndge. Eruption&gt; fully one-sixth of the U.S.
C?~m?n througho~~l~elrmd s economy.
h1~to~, are_o.ft~n.t.II::g~red b~
OMma's signature will
se1sm,1c actiVIt) \\ht.:n th~.: start the Senate considering
Earth s plates move and when a package of changes the
magma from .deep under- House also has approved.
ground pushes 1b way to the But the main overhaul will
sulrf~kce. rth ak
d. t already be officially on the
. ~~ e ea ~u es. pre· 1c. - books.
mg t~e t~mm~ of V?lcam.c
Still. if Obama wants to
erupttons 1s an 11~prec1se '-CI- actually preside over the
ence. An ~mptton nt t~e 1 expansion of coverage to
Katla volcano. could be d1s- 1 more than 30 million people,
astrous, bo\\ e\ er - both for he '11 first have to persuade a
lceland an,d other .nattons.
majorit) of Americans torelceland s Lak1 \ olc~no elect him in 2012 .
erupted 111 178~ , free1ng
"For people who have the
gases that turned mto smog greatest need a number of
The smog floated .acro s the things \\Ill ~t~ quickly and
,
,
'd
Jet Stream. changmg
weath- make a d'ft'e
1p · renee,
er pattems. ,i\t any d'1ed t'rom DeA
dh 0 1 sa10 f
, nn
ne.
m
gas poisoning in the British
Isles. Crop production fell Consumers Umon. For. othin wet-tern Europe. Famine crs, 201 ~ m.ay ~~em ~tke a
s read. Some even linked long Wa) U\\ay. Somt: P~~­
t'f:.e emption. which helped pi~ may be frustrated that 1t s
fuel famine, to the French gom~ to be sev~ral years. b~t
Revolution. Painters 111 the that IS the reahty of ~ha! 1t
18th century il ustrated takes to mak~ these stgmfifiery sunsets in their works. cant change.s, she added.
The wmter of 1784 was
The .mam reason th~t
also one of the longest and Obama 5 .Plan phases m
coldest on record in North slowly b~lls do\\ n to cost.
America. New En~land !he Med1care cuts and t~x
reported a record stretch of mcreases to finance _t~e b1ll
below-zero tempemtures and st:m early: the subs1d1e~ to
New Jersey reported record hc.::lp peopl~ purchase cme~­
sno\\ accumulation. The age. come later. That combiMissis~ippi River also report- natton keeps the cos.t &lt;;&gt;f t~e
edlv froze in New Orleans.
?verhaul under $1 tnlhon m
''These are Hollywood- 1ts fi~st decade. ~s. Obama
sort of scenarios but possi- promised. Re~ubhc~ns ~all
ble,"
said
Colin 1t an a~countmg g1mm1ck
Macpherson, a geologist - but Ill past. years they
with the l:ni\erslty of also re_~~~ed to.1~ . .
Durham. "As the melt rises,
Hen: .s a .look at some of
it's a little like taking a cork t_he ma~or Impacts for conout of a champagne bottle:'' sucmoer~IING SOON·
There are three mam
.
·
places where volcanoes nor- . Ro~ghly. a thn·d. o_f ~ople
mally occur - along strike- m the~r :os are um~1surcd, so
slip
faults
such
as allo~mg yo~ng adu}ts t~
California ·5 San Andreas re~am on thetr parents. pl~~s
fault line, along areas where unt1l 26 wo~ld be a Sl~~~fl­
plates overlap one another cant new o~tlon for fam1hes.
such as in the Philippines and
Adult ch1ldren would not
the Pacific Rim. and in areas
like Iceland, where two of
the £!.'lith's plates are moving
apart from each other in a so·
called ~preading system.
WARSAW, Poland (AP)
Unlike the powerful volcanos along the Pacific Rim - Food coupons for some
where the slow rise of of the notorious Nazi docmagma gives scientists early tors at the Auschwitz death
seismic warnings that an camp - including perhaps
eruption
is ~ imminent, the sadistic Dr. Joseph
have been
Iceland's volcanos are unique Mengele found
in
the
attic
of a nearin that many empt under ice
by house. where they had
sheets with little wan1ing.
Magnus
Tumi lain unseen for d~cades.
Also found in the attic
Gudmundsson. a geologist
at the University of Iceland were other documents relatwho flew over the site ing to the lives of Nazi offiMonday, said the beginning cials, including death cerof Saturday's eruption was tificates and a map.
Some sugar coupons bear
so indistinct that it initially
went undetected by geolog- the names of Horst Fischer
ical instruments. Many of and Fritz Klein. doctors who
the tremors were below were executed for their
crimes after the war. Adam
magnitude 2.6.
Cyra,
a historian at the
Using thennal cameras and
radar to map the lava tlow, Auschwitz memorial museGudmundsson and other sci- um who is looking through
entists were able to deter- the documents, said Monday.
"The sensational value of
mine that the lava from
this
discovery i~ in the fact
Eyjat]allajokull wa~ flowing
down a gorge and not mov- that these original documents. bearing the names of
ing toward the ice caps murderers
from
reducing any threat of floods. main
He said he and other scien- Auschwitz. were found so
tists were watching Katla but many years after the war,"
Monday's trip was meant to Cyra said.
Cyra said he believes a
assess immediate risk.
1

.

Olivier Doullery/Abaca Press/.

President Barack Obama makes a statement in the East Room following the final vote in the House on health care ref
in Washington D.C. Sunday.
be able to stay on a parental
plan if they had access to
employer c.:overage of their
own. But they could get
married and still be covered.
(Grandkids.
however.
would
not
qualify.)
Regulations will clarify to
what degree young adults
have to be financiallv
dependent on their parents:
Other reforms starting this
year ,,.·ould prevent insurers
from canceling the policies
of people who get sick, from
denying coverage to children with medical problems,
and from putting lifetime
dollar limits on a P?licy.
. These changes w1ll spread
nsks more broadly. but
they're also I kely to nudge
msurance premtums somewhat h1gher
Obama'5
plan
also
include' iln important new
program for the mo~t vulnerable: uninsured people who
can't get coverage hecau'!.e
of major medical problems.
It's intended to prov1de an
umbrella of protection until
the broad expansion of coverage takes effect in 2014.
The government will
pump money into high·lisk
insurance pools in the states,
making coverage available
for people in frail health who
have been uninsured for at
least six months. The premiums could still be a stretch.
but for people who need
continuing medical attention. it could make a dramatic difference.
"For people \vho have not
been able to gc~ anything.
who have expens1ve chronic
illnesses or other conditions. it could be a lifesaver." said Friedholm.
There is a catch, however.
The $5 billion Obama has
allocated for the program is
unlikely to last until 2014.
In fact, government experts
have projected it could mn
out next year.
Among seniors. the plan
will create both winners and

losers. On the plus side. it
gradually closes the dreaded
''doughnut hole" prescription co~:erage gap, improves
preventive care and puts a
new emphasis on trying to
keep seniors struggling with
chronic diseases in better
overall health.
But it also cuts funding
for popular private insurance plans offered through
the Medicare Ad\ antage
program. About one-quarter
of seniors have signed up
for the plans, which generally offer lower out-ofpocket c.osts. That's been
possible because the government pays the plans
about 13 percent more than
It cost&lt;&gt; to cmer seniors in
traditiOnal Medicare. As
payments are ~aled bad.
could tngger an exo
from Medicare Ad\antage
"It's not all black and
white: sometimes it's grm ,''
srud Ja
Firman. president
of the
tlOnal Council on
the A
"0\erall we thmk
this plan IS very good, and
\\ill provide some significant benefit:; for seniors.
There will be some pain
among some people in
Medicare Advantage plans:·
The prescription coverage
gap will be totally closed in
2020. At that point. seniors
will be responsible for 25
percent of the cost of their
medications until Medicare's
catastrophic coverage kicks
in. dropping their copayments to 5 percent.
COMING LATER:
The real transfonnation of
America's health insurance
system won't take place
until 2014.
Four
breathtaking
changes will happen simultaneously:
• Insurers will be required
to take all applicants. They
won't be able to tum down
people in poor health. or
charge them more.
• States will set up new
insurance supennarkets for

Documents of Auschwitz death camp doctors found
June 1943 coupon for a small
amount of sugar probably
was assigned to Dr. Joseph
Mengele, who was infamous
for his sadistic experiment&lt;.;,
but the writing is unclear.
A FebrUaJ) 1944 coupon
for 028 kilograms of butter
is made out for a Dr.
Mergerle. There was no SS
doctor by that name at camp,
so Cyra believes a clerk ntisspelled Mengele's name.
Doctors and phannacists at
the camp conducted pseudomedical experiments on the
inmates and helped select
Jews arriving at the camp for
either labor or death.
Mengele escaped after World
War 11 and evaded capture
for the rest of his life.
.
The documents - almost
300 in total - were found
in the attic of a house being
renovated in the town of
Oswiecim. where the Nazis
built
the
AuschwitzBirkenau camp.
The homeowner, who has
requested anonymity, made
them available to historiam.
at the Auschwitz museum

on Friday, museum officials
.said. They believe the house
was used by an SS officer
during the war, but it is not
clear which one.:.
Historians have checked
through some of the documents but have more to pore
over, museum spokesman
Pawel Sawicki said.
The matenal does not
document cnmes committed at the camp.
The documents include a
German-language map of
the area around Oswiecim
and a death certificate for
Adolf Kraemer, a pharmacist at Auschwitz saying he
died of a, hea11 attack in
Febmal)' 1944.
About I 50 blank food
coupons and death certificates were also found. Cyra
said.
Between 1940 and 1945
more than I million people,
mostly Jews. were killed in
the gas chambers at
Auschwitz or died of star\'ation or disease while
forced to perform hard
labor at the c.:amp.

small businesses and people the nujority of working-age
buymg their own coverage. Americans and their famipooling together to get the lies will still have employerkind of purchasing clotlt gov- ~ponsored coverage. as they
do now. But the number of
ernment workers have no\v.
• Most Americans will be uninsured "'ill drop by more
required to carry health than half. lllegal immigrants
insurance, either through an would account for more
employer, a government than one-third of the
program or by buying their remaining 23 million people
own. Those who refuse ''ill without coverage.
Cost could be- the Achilles·
face fine~ from the IRS.
• Tax credits to help pay heel of the whole effort.
''I hope it is not repealed.
fol' premiums will start flowing to middle-class working because \VC do need to
families, and Medicaid win extend coverage to most of
be expanded to cover more our population ," said Gail
low
income
people. Wilen~y. who ran Medicare
for President George H.W.
Hous~holds making up to
four times the povert) level Bu::.h and remains leading
- about $88,000 for a fami- health care adviser to
ly of four- wiii be eligible Republicans . ·'But it could
for a: '\tance. But tM most ''ell be substantiallv modigene ~ aid - including fied . It expandt- ·r~·., ...r.,n..
help \\ th capay ments and but it does ven little
dedul:ttbles - will be for on two other ·major
tho eon the lower-to-middle 1mpr0\ ing quality and le
mg the rate of growth in
run s of the income scale.
\ hen all is 'aid and done, spending.''

a

COMPUTER SALES AND SEVICE
MEIGS CouNTY
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PageA:J

The Daily Sentinel
ASK

I) I~ .

Tuesday, March

B R. () T H E R. S

Nighttime energy
only increase
sleep deprivation
BY DR. J OYCE BROTHERS

Ocar Dt·. Hrothci·s: I' ve
been \\orkmg lnte recent!).
and almost e\ er y da) I drag
through the d.t), \\HJting to
go home so I can relax and
get to bed. InC\Itabl), a!&gt;
soon as I get home, I get a
bur&lt;;t of cncrg) and finall)
feel ltke I c.Jn get things
done Tim \\ould be OK .
except that I ne\ cr can fall
nslcep. Mld I am getting
more .md more sleepdcpmed. Is lhis tughthme
energ) normal'! Ho\\ can I
tty to normalll-C my ~ched­
ule Without sacrificlllg my
producti'e
mghttime
hours? - l\I .K .
Dear l\1.K.: While they
might not be desirublc, )our
sts of nighttime energy
likel) quue common.
L st people, when these
hit. take .td\ antage of their
ne"" found moti\ ntion to get
""'ork done 01 catch up on
somelhing they''c been
euttms off. But, like )OU.
lhe) then find it hard to
rel.tx enough to get to sleep.
Thts '' lrkel) because )OUr
c;,urge 111 cncrg) ts actuall)
tnggered b) anxJet) -)OUr
bod) rele.1 ...e 1he hormoneo;
l:Ortt'iol and adrenaline m
respono;e 10 being sleepdepn,ed . .1nd these hormones consptrc to give you
that energetic. moth a ted
teehng. The problem is, )OU
then onl) become more
sleep depmed.
\\ htle 11 can be hard to
rc 1...,t usino th1s nc" found
ener ) • you 'II be much happt r md more \\&lt;ell teo;ted if
u " n If \OU ha\e to do
m thm
tr) relaxing
Lt 'ttte
hkc read mg.
r than htgh-strcs
hke catching up at
or \\Orkmg out. If )OU
sull tmd tl hard to Jeep.
'ou ma) ha-ve other lecpm" 1 5.Ues 1-rrattc meal
'"h1ch certnmch dules
1) c n '-orne long ""tth
o;t 'm I. te t lhe office
rn ke 11 hard for )OUr bod}
to know \\hen 11 hould be
gemng &lt;;Jeep) Tl) to ha'e
dmner at a set lime C\ ery
da). e\ en on ""cckcnds. to
tram )OUr bod) 10 know
what ttme to start wmding
down at night. You also can
make sure vour room is
totall) dark. and tl\Otd alcohol nt bedttme to nldkc sure

l

you're getting good-quality
sleep every night.

•••
Dear Dr. Hrothcrs: l'\e
been suffering from depression for )Cars. and I'm
finally learning 10 get it
under control. But in lhis
process, I' ve worked Wtth a
lot of m) colleagues (I'm n
la\\)er) and ha\e noticed
I hat a lot of us ha\ e \cered
tO\\ard depression in a ~im­
ilar "U). Is there something
innate to pracucmg Ia\\
I hat makes us depressed!
I' ve
been
practicing
throughout my treatment,
but am I onl) making it
worse for myself? - II .S.
Dear lUi.: If practtcing
law is \\ hat ) ou love doing,
then b) all mean" conti nue.
It's great that you're wmkmg through your dcptc~sion.
and undoubted!) you're
learning about the sources
and mnnifeslations of this
dtsease. While practicing
Ia\\ in and of itself doeo;n 't
cause depression. it rna) be
1rue that some lawyers h.tre
certain ""a) s of thinking tbat
migh1 predi po e them to
dcprer;.sron. \\ hile not pessimistic per se, lawyers tend
to attribute negathe events
to stable and lastmg factors.
rather than assuming lhe)
arc trnnsitof). This can be
helpful in creating n prudent
approach to law, helping
you predict future Jssue and
counteract them pre-empttvely. But what makes you
, good Ia\\ yer does not
a)\\ ays make you a hnppy
pcr~on. Thts pes-.tmisttc
'icv, of the \\Orld ma) be a
hallmark of deprec;,ston
La\\)er . hke other pro
fe ston-. ""ho'&gt;e ""ork can
change people's li\es. can
take on too much and ha\ e
trouble maintaimng healthy
relatJOnshtps outside of
work. Career dissatisfaction, abandoning your personal \alue and h1gh levelo;
of tre s can lead to depre&lt;;ston as \\ell. One o;olution 1
to confront )OUr negatJ\e
thmkmg he.td-on. You may
thtnk )OUr depreSSIVC Sl)'le
of thmkmg is nom1al, but
you should challenge )OUrself to come up ""ith healthier and more constructive
responses to problems ) ou
face e\ery day.

Community Notebook
Old Fort Meigs
having egg hunt
RUTI AND
An Easter egg hunt
will be held at the Old l•ort Meigs Park
near Rutland on April 3.
Sharon Campbell ,mnuunced that
the egg hunt \'viii be held at 2 p.m.
Children \\ill he di\ided into age
groups for the hunt w11h b1ster baskets
to go to the ""mner' in each category.
A luncheon of hot dogs and other
refreshments '"ill be !'.ened.
·1 here wtll ben chatge of$1 a person
to CO\Cr the expense of the meal.
Campbell s.ttd.

Soup dinner
March 28
Final plans
SALEM CbN I'ER
for a soup dmner to be held on Sunda)
Mnrch 28 "ere made ""hen Star
Grange #778 met recent I).
Sen 111g of the dmncr will be held
from II a.m. to 2 p.m. dunng whi.:h
time there ""ill be entertmnment.
·1 he meeting was conducted h)

Public meetings
Tuesday, March 23
POMEROY Regular
meet1ng
of
Local
Emergency
Plannmg
Committee. 11.30 a.m.,
sentor center. 2010 reqwred
exerc1se, water resource
survey problems to be discussed
Wednesday, March 24
POMEROY - The campaign k1ckoff for the Meigs
Local
Enrichment
F'oundatlon's (MLEF) fund
drive is scheduled for 6:30
p.m .. Wednesday, March 24
at the Me1gs H1gh School
cafeteria MLEF 1s ra1stng
funds to bUild the Me1gs
Mult -Purpose Complex
Thursday, March 25
POMEROY - The Me gs
So1l
and
Water
Conservation District Board
of Supervisors, 11.30 a.m.
at d1stnct office, 33101
Hiland Road Pomeroy.
Monday, March 29
POMEROY - Veterans
Serv1ce Comm1ss1on 9
am. 117 Memonal Dr

Clubs and
organizations

Local Stocks

107.47
Wai·Mart (NYSE) - 55.62
Wendy's (NYSE) - 4.68
WesBanco (NYSE) - 16.82
Worthington (NYSE) - 16.90
Dally stock reports are the 4
p.m. ET closing quotes of transactions for March 23, 2010, provided by Edward Jones financial advisors Isaac Mills In
Gallipolis at (740) 441-9441 and
Lesley Marrero In Point Pleasant
at (304) 674-01 74. Member SIPC.

Thorn band coming
to Stuart's
NELSONVII LT!
Stunrt'c;, Opera
House in Nelson' tile will host an
evening of musk \\ 1th sung\\ nter Paul
Thorn and Ius band on Monday.
March 29 at 7 p.m.
Thorn's ong ha\e an .tuthentic
connection to the mustc of the
Mississippi heartland: blues, countl).
gospel, rh) thm nnd blue • nnd rock 'n'
roll. I horn excels as a musical stor)-

will be taken followed by a
potluck dinner.
Tuesday, March 23
CHESTER
Pa~
Councilors of Chester
Council,
Daughters of
Amenca, w11l meet 7 p m. at
the hall.
Thursday, March 25
POMEROY - The Me1gs
County Retired Teachers
Association, noon at the
Wild Horse Cafe. Speaker
will be the director of communication serv1ce State
Teachers
Retirement
Systems.
PO MEROY Ewmgs
Chapter, Sons of the
American Revolution, 6:30
p m at Meigs Museum
144
Butternut
Ave
Pomeroy Dmner fo lowed
by speake Tom Rom
Athens
ember f
Bngade of the Arne
Revolut1on Romme to pre
sent Before They Were
Sold ers Matenal Culture
an E er ay Ltfe n the
18th
tury
Invtted
Retl.rn
nathan Me gs
Chapter DAR members
ancestors of Amencan
Revolut1on sold1ers.
POMEROY
Untted
Fund for Meigs County
annual meeting, 6 p.m.,
Pomeroy Library meeting
room. The publ c is invited
to attend.
SYRACUSE Meigs
County Republican Women,
6:30 p.m. at Carleton
School. Everyone welcome.

teller. Ttckets are &lt;&gt;!Ill a\ .til 1ble
·11cketc;, und further 1nformatton ,,r
available at 740 75 ~-1924 01. on the
web, at"""""" o;tuart&lt;;operahousc.org.

O'Bieness offers
health screenings
ATHhNS - O'Bierwss Memon.tl
Hu!-.pllal in Athens will ofTcr blood
pres!-.ure screening a.., \\ell as chol.c~
terol
and
glucose
screenmg
Wednesday. April 7.
The free blood pre..,sure scro.!cnmg
will be open to the pubhl: from 9
a.m. until noon m the hospJl,d's
pat1ent entrance lobb) The chole
tcrol and glucose saeenmg. whteh
will be offered for t1 S5 fee ""til b
a\ ailable at the same location by
appomtment onl) from 9 a.m. Utlttl
noon To make an appomtmcnt. c,1ll
0' Blcncc;s· Commun1tv Relation
office at (740) 566-4814
Free colon-rcct.ll cancer hom
:;creentng ktts and informallon can bt
obtained on JJ. dati) basio; at the ho&lt;opl
tal's pattcnt and "'io;nor entranl:c mfor
mat ion desks as ""ell .ts at the (a trop
Center informatiOn desk.

PROl.:DTOBEA
PART OF YOUR LIFE.
17u Dml\ Sentmrl
5u/n( nbr roda\ • 992 215"'
11 H 11 Ill\ elm!\ t

mml'l com

$5 donat1on for the dinner.
Thursday, March 25
POMEROY - Rtverview
Garden Club, 7:30 p.m .•
home of Nola Spears.
Tuesday, March 30
POMEROY Oh-Kan
Com Club, meetmg and
auction, 6:30 p.m. at the
Pomeroy Library.

Church events

information call 985-4220.
MIDDLEPORT
Rev1val, Hope Baptist
Church 570 Grant St
Middleport, Rev Gary Ell s
pastor: Rev. Gary Bow 1n
evangelist. Sunday March
28, 11 a m and 6 p m
March 29 through March
31, 7 p m. each evenmg
Nursery prov1ded. More
mformat1on, call 992-5334

Thursday, March 25
POMEROY - Rev. Bnan
Dunham to speak at Grace
Church, 7 p.m , as part of
Mimstenal
Meigs
Assoctat1on s community
Lenten program continues.
Saturday, March 27
POMEROY - G1veaway
f g ~ cards to Dollar
r needy children,
p.m
Grace
Ep sc
I Church, East
Mam St eet ch1ld must be
present to rece1ve card.
r
shments, hot dogs

~

FREE 24/1 U.... T.dtn~eal Suppor1

:~ Un m!led Houn No Con nK!l

e

,~ 10 E-ma I Add=ses

Sunday, March 28
P MERCY Revival,
Mt Hermon Church, located
off Route 7 on Texas Road,
turn at 36411 W1ckham
Road. Clifford B. Coleman,
evangelist,
Meetings
Sunday, 10:30 a.m. and 7
p.m through March 31, 7
p.m. each evemng. More

• FREE Spam Prot.c! on
~ lnvooce e· mg Avo fable
• Rehab o Access S nee 1994

1-877-267-3266
www.core.com

Dining with Diabetes
What:

Dining with Diabetes Classes
Learn about how nutrition affects diabetes, •
cooking demonstrations, Receive diabetic recipes.

SHS H O NOR l:tO LL

RACINF
Southern
High School has released 1ts
'1\tcsda' ...Cloud\. Sho\\ er; chance of rain. Lo\\~ m the honor roll for the thtrd mne
hkel) .. Malnl) in ~the morn- IO\\ er 40 .
\\eel\!&gt; grading period.
:FI'iday...Cloud).
A
ing. Highs m the lo\\er 50s.
Semon;, all A's. Kris
\\ est \\ind 10 to 15 mph chance of rain in the morn- Kleski, Mtchael Manuel.
h gu to; up to 30 mph. ing ...Then a chance of Breanna T&lt;l) lor. L) nzee
sho\\ers in the afternoon. Tucker. Katte \\Oods. A &amp; B.
Jlce of ratn 70 percent.
• 'uesda)
night ... Partly Highs in 1he mid 50s. Sean Coppick. Ta) lor Deem,
cloud). l O\\ s in lhe upper Chance of ram 50 percent.
Che)enc Dunn. James
Friday
night ...Mostl) E' ans. Logan Huddleston.
30:-;. \\ c~t \\tnds 5 to 10 mph.
\\ e d n c s d n ) . •. ~ I o s 1I ) cloud). Lo\\.., in the upper Shawn Imboden. Taylor
sunny. Not as cool "" Jth 30s.
l..emle), Jon Powell. Cyle
Saturday and Saturda' Recs, Dustm Salser. Duo;tin
highs m the lower 60s. West
night ...Partly cloudy. Higt1s Smeck. Kayla Steven&lt;:..
winds 5 to 10 mph.
We dnesd ay
night. .. in the lower 60s. Lows in ,\shle) Walker. Andre\\
Partl) cloudy. Lows in the the upper 30~.
Youn••.
Sunday ... M o~ t ly sunny. A
Juni01s. all A's, Stephanie
upper 30s. Nortlmcst winds
5 to 10 mph in the chance of sho\\ ers in the 13crnman, Tenor Flint,
cvening ... Becorni ng I ight afternoon. Highs in the mid Joe) "Forester. Bnbbi llarris,
60s. Chance of rain 40 per- Dakota Imboden. Daniel
,md vannble.
Jones. Z.1char) Manuel.
Thursday...Pdrtly sunny. cent
Sunday
night
and Sam Rcitmirc; A &amp; B. Eric
A chance of rnm in the afternoon. Highs m the lo\\er60s. Monday...Cioud) with a 50 Cundiff. Tt lfnn~ Cundiff,
percent chance of howers. Lee Anna Hudson, Dalton
Chance of rnm 40 percent.
Lo\\ S in the mtd 40s. Highs
Imboden. Michelle Ours.
Thu~sda) night ...Mostly
Charle) Pyles. Braxton
cloud) with a 50 percent in the mtd 50'&gt;.
Thorla. Cod) Tucker.
Sophomores, all A's.
Emily Ash. Amber Ha) man.
Manuel,
Hope
Emil)
Teaford. Cattrtne) Thomas,
Abbie Willi.uns: A &amp; B.
Ohio Valley Bane Corp. (NASAEP (NYSE) - 34.08
Martina Arms. fiffan)
DAQ)- 24.25
Akzo (NASDAQ) - 55.95
Burns, Ccairrn Curr,m.
BBT (NYSE) - 32.00
r.
Inc. (NYSE) - 52.51
Bethnll\ Fet rell. Andre\\
Peoples
(NASDAQ)
66.31
(NYSE) - 37.65
Gi nther. Katel) n Hill ,
Pepsico (NYSE)- 66.31
(NASDAQ) - 3 1.14
Premier (NASDAQ) - 8.40
Chelsea Holter, ~l mmda
SOr·aWarn•~r (NYSE) - 37.93
Rockwell (NYSE) - 55.86
Century Aluminum (NASDAQ)
I h ) ltCI , H,tlcy L111knus.
Rocky Boots (NASDAQ) - 9.50
- 14.68
:V1 organ .\kM ill an. Clayton
Royal Dutch Shell - 58.26
Champion (NASDAQ) - 1.25
Moorl', C111 ma P&lt;l\\e ll.
Sears
Holding
(NASDAQ)
Charming Shops (NASDAQ) 6 ,64
City Holding (NASDAQ) - 34.12
Collins (NYSE) - 62.59
DuPont (NYSE) - 37.79
US Bank (NYSE) - 26.22
General Electric (NYSE) - 18.07
Harley·Dovldson (NYSE) 28 .77
JP Morgan (NYSE) - 43.74
Kroger (NYSE) - 21.33
Limited Brands (NYSE) - 25.29
Norfolk Southern (NYSE) 55.40

~1ao;tc t /Preo;Jdent Patty D) cr. It wa&lt;;
announced that the Melt'!'. Count) ·1 B
Office ""111 be holdmg a d 1111C at the
Star Grange hall on April 5 with
re.tding to be done on April 7. The
ti me both will be 5 to 6 p.m. The
Meigs County &lt;lrangc b~1nquet \\ill
be held on Apnl J() at the Drew
Web~tcr Post Amcncan Legion hall.
·1 1ckets to he l&gt;lllcha'ied b) April II
are a-vailable from all !VIeigs Count)
Grange Masters
The next meeting will be held on
Saturda), April 3. wtth potluck at
6:30 p.m. followed by a meetmg at
7:30 p.m

Community Calendar

Monday, March 22
HARRISONVILLE- The
Harrisonville
Senior
C1t1zens w11l meet at 11
1
(c) 2010 by King Featur£'\ a.m. at the Presbyterian
Church. Blood pressures
Syndicate

Meigs County Forecast

2:i, 201 0

Jess1ca Riffle, Andre\\
Ro eberr). Oli\ 1,1 Searls.
Catherine \\olfe.
Frl!,hmen. All A' . Tara
Eakms, Jennifer !\kCO).
Jacl) n Mees, Stefame
P) les. Kyrie S\\ ann. Johnn)
\\ httney
\ ancoone).
\\ eddie, Kod) Wolfe: A &amp;
B, Chns Chane). Iegan
McGee, Adam Pape. Shelb)
Picken~. Danielle Ta) lor.
P~uge Wehrung.

When:April8,13,1 5

Who

should attend:
All diabetics and their family

Time:s-apm
Cost: FREE
Location:courthouse Annex
Pomeroy, OH

3

Contact Andrew Brumfield
at 740-992-6626
for more information.

/

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PageA4

The Daily Sentinel

Tuesday, March

23, 2010

The Daily Sentinel
111 Court Street • Pomeroy, Ohio

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

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
Sammy M. Lopez
Publisher
Charlene Hoeflich
General Manager-News Editor
Pam Caldwell
Advertising Director
Cougress slutll makt• uo ltrll' respectiiiJ! au
establisluut'tll of rel((!iou, or prollibitiu..l! tl1e free
t•.wrdsr tlwreof; or abridj!iii,S,! tlw freedom of speech,
or of the press; or the r(f!hl of tilt• }Jeople J'eaceably
to asst•mble, mul ICJ }JCtitiou tl1e G1wernmcut
fM a redress "fJ!rit•t•mtces.
The First Amendment to tltc U.S. Constitution

Y () U It .()PIN I() N

March of Dimes
Dear Editor:
At the Mdl'ch of D1mc!&gt;, v.e promise to v.orh. tircless1) tov. ard the dd) \\hen all babies are born healthy.
Bab~t·s h,t\ c been at the hc,u1 of our rn1ssion since
1958. \\hen v.e ... hllted ou1 llll'&gt;'&gt;IOll focus to pregnancy
.md t&gt;.tb) h~:.·&lt;~lth Although )OU llHI\ not kn0\\ it, )OU
hm e hcen tou~.;heJ b) the !\1,u ch of Dune&lt;&gt; if ..
• 'I our huhy or,, h.Ih)' ) ou knov. v. .t&lt;&gt; born premature!), too small .tnd too '&gt;Oon. and recel\ ed hfe-sa\ ing lung
"• rtactant ther.tp) to help u tth bn:athmg.
• 'H)U knov. that neUlal tube Jefecl'&gt;, like Spma
BiftdJ. can be pn.:\\;ntcd up to 70 percent of the t1me tf
'WOmen t.1ke ,, d.ul\ multi\ l!anun '' 1th 400 microgram&lt;&gt;
of the B '1tamm f{lhc , ctd before and during pregnanl:)

• Your bab) or a hab) \ ou knQ\\ \\as cared for m a
neonatal mten't\e c,11e umt or NICL
• 'I ou and ) our chtldrcn v. cr\; '.tccmateJ agamst
poho
• 'wu or someone m )our farntl) rccched the PKU
te&lt;&gt;t, ttcr bu1h. I he PKL test I'&gt; ,, heel pnck blood test
th.tt can d1.tgnose a disorder\\ h1ch cauc;es ..,e,ere men
t.tl ret, rd.1110n 1f lt:ft untreated.
• ) QU .m: , \\ .tr\: th 11 .th..ohol drut. , nd tobacco use
du11n \.UJl\. ptwn md pre •nanc) can lead to se\ ere
h1n d • t'&gt;
't 1 k .,.., re
\Cd a r bella \JC

T () I) A Y I N H I S T () ItY
'

Today 1s Tuesday March 23 the 82nd day of 2010.
There are 283 days left tn the year
Today s H ghllght In H1story
On March 23 1775, Patnck Henry delivered an
address to the V1rgm1a Provtnc1al Convention in wh1ch he
IS sa1d to have declared, Gtve me liberty, or give me
death 1

r

The Daily Sentinel
Reader Serv1ces
Correction Policy

Ou man·• corcern 1n a

tor
to
error
be accurate II yo ~mow of
1n a story ca the newsroom at (740)
992·2156

Our main number Is
(740) 992-2156.

Department extensions arc:

News
Editor: Chartere Hoof ch Ext 12
j Reporter: Br, n Reed, E.x• 14
~Reporter: Be• Serg nt Ext 13

Advertising
Advertising Director: Pa"Tl Caldwell
740 446 2142 Ext 17
Retail Matt Rodgers Ext 15
Retail: Brerda Dav1s, Ext16
ClassJCirc.: Jutly Clark. Ext tO

(UsPs 213-sso&gt;
Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
Pub hed Tuesday ( •ough Fnday 111
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c s postage paid at Pomeroy
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the OhiO Newspaper AssociatiOn
Postmaster: Send address correct
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Antidote for anxious times? Do your duty
o, cr the Ia 'it fcv. month&lt;;, the pre::.~
has been filled v. ith \\Orned .trtides
about the tate of the union. "Pundit&lt;&gt;
arc begmnmg to \\onder 1fthe ")'&gt;tern
is broken in &lt;&gt;Ome fundamental v.m:·
\HOte ban Thom.t'&gt; in Neu \week.
"Do parusan polat iLation. specmlinterc..,t mone). '&gt;narling nC\\ s outlets
and publtc disnffectJOn eno;ure gridlock mto the indcfimte future?" a::.ked
John Harv.ood in The Ne\\ York
Times.
These \\Titers and many other'&gt; are
rrllectmg a btuldmg '&gt;en e within
Washington that !o&gt;Omcthing i amiss
with
our
&lt;.\::.tem
of
~0\ crnance I aced \\ tih a des per lte
JObq.:no;...,, soarmo d fiut&lt;; L u th
tederal nd st te I h:ls.
• 1 --\;
S) tem v. 1d ·I)
n s br ken
pre., ... mg tntern t10nal J'iSll\!' the
IhttiOn 's political le.tders are strammg
to coalesce around solutions. Pubhc
.mention on thi., front "a... gal\ am zed
b) the much-nouced announcement
b) Sen. han B.:t) h of lndmn.t 1
"ould not o:;cek re electiOn t
Congres.., he'd come to \tev. , .., •nd
locked
1 he pubh\; Itself 1~ no more chant.t
ble: In the lntc'&gt;t At..socr,lted Pre"s
poll. JUSt 2.:! percent of Americans
.tppro" cd of the job Congrco:;&lt;; i-;
doing.
In this tune of v. orr) and di~con­
tcnt. it's \\Onh rcmemhcrmg a fcv.
fundamental tmths. l·irst. Congress is
not
designed
to
::tl't
expL·ditHJusly. You can't create a
bod) \\hose purpose is to reflect the
di,crse views ,mJ intere&lt;&gt;ts of the
American people nnd expect It to settle quickly on v. hat leg1o:;lat1on ought
to look like.
The Senate in panicul.tr ''as em isioned as a pl.tce for b11ls to "cool'' if
the) lacked broaJ support. The t) ran11) of the "60-\ote rule" nO\\ required
to 1110\ e legislation to a \ ote rna)
seem extreme. but it's not entire!) out
of keeping \\ ith the Sen.tte's original
purpose
It\ al'o \\onh keeping m mind that
this Congre'&gt;s h,ts enacted e\ eral

hammer out a c;oJution that s both
good for the country and politicall)
feasible and then 'ell it to American
\Oters.
Gh en the current grumbling about
hO\\ Washington b broken. it's natural to a~k whether there is any hope at
Hamilton
all. I \\ ould amue that for most of us,
as citizen~. that que~tion is irrele\'ant.
Here's a quick story. In 1780, the
skie~ O\ cr much of :--:ew England
darkened at mid-day: families
important pieces of legislation lunched by candlelight and people
(mcludmg the '&gt;limulus package. found it difficult to read paper:- held
imc..,tments 111 green technology, only a few inches away. It was dis"ca"h tor clunker-;" .tnd other mea- covered many ) ears later that the
• nd that 1t hu'&gt; otten closer cause most likeh \\as wildfires over
\ oth r tn h1
t reC rm ng eastern Ontario. At the time. hO\\ ever,
t
man) people thought Judgment Da)
'' a!o&gt; at hand. The Connecticut legislat
re '
ture, v. hich \\as in .,e~~ion that
besettmg th1 c
considered adjourning. Col. A
reason. o are the Amencan Da\enport stood up to oppose
As Ste' en Pearl te 1
motion. ''The da) of JUdgment is
hm ton Po.,t
either approaching. or 1t is not,'' he
truth 1s that on
sa1d. "If it is not. there j.., no cause of
.1\
th Amem..1n
an adjournment; if it is, I choo e to be
...ontu.,ed The) " nt \\.111 found dome: rn\ dut\ ...
t(l be remed rn. but the) 're
is v. ith
There rna\ be cau e
set
ctgam!o&gt;t
more forSodiit courae:ement
dead
the current
regulat1on The) ''ant C\ Cr) one to state of affairs in about
Wa
...
hington
. but
ha\ e access to affordable health
msurance. but the) 're \\ al) of whether Capitol Hill and the White
exp.mding the role of govemment ... House are falling apan or performing
The) v. ant the federal defic1t brought ~plendidly, our responsihilit) n citiunder control. but not if it means cut- Lens is the same: to do what\\ e can to
ting entitlement ~pending nr rab.ing improw our own corner of the world.
and to insist that our elected rcprescntaxes."
It is trmptin~ to blame our political tath·e~ do their utmost to impro\'c
leaders for failing to lind a way out of their....
If we hold both ourseh cs and our
our -.ariou-; dilenun.ts. but it's hard to
fault them cntirelv when we \\ant politicians to account - if \\ e refuse
to offer excu~es to ourseh·es for \\h)
contradictor\ thing"s.
Yet the' cio h&lt;l\ e to shoulder c1 fair \\C can't be en!!ae:ed, and refuse to
measure· of reo;ponsiblhty tor the accept ..,cJf-inte;ested beha\ ior from
country·., current malmsc. We elect our politicians - that is the best ...alve
our politicians to lead the countr) and 1 can think of for our count!)· cur"oh e its problem . not to mdulge in rent pains. In shon. \\e rnu't choose
part1san game ...manship or shrink to be found doine: our dut\.
(Lee !Iami/ron ;~ Director of the
from makmg hard deci.,ions bccau e
the) 're afraid constituent&lt;; might )ell Cemer 011 C 011~ress at India, ,
at them.
Unil ersit\'. He ll'llS a member oj
If Americans \\ant contradictor) U.S. Houu of Represemati\cs for
policies. then it's wa~hmgton's job to ) ears.)

Lee

us.

w

l'tn sorr1..:we ~
did evel~hi11~
we could to

save you ...

�~-----~-- --

Tuesday, Murch

----

23, 2010

The Daily Sentinel • Page As

www.myd ailyscntinel.com

Local Briefs

PVH awarded laboratory accreditation

GED testing scheduled
POMEROY
The offictal General Educational
Development (GED) test \\ill be g1\ en in Meigs Count) on
April 21 and 22.
For more information about the official practice test,
ults arc encouraged to. call the Middleport ABLE
nter, 992-5808. or the !'uppers Plains Center, 6671. of the i\letg County ABU· (Adult Basic &amp;
) bh.1cationl pll)~rfll~l.
Upon passmg till' oflicml Cd•D test. a person receive-. the
Ohio I tigh School Eqlllvalencc Diploma. which is generally acceptl'd as equal to n high school diploma.

Phillips to visit
RAC'INE I POMEROY - Ref?. Debb1e Phillips (DAthens), will continue her 2010 I 1stening Tour this v.eek
with stops in Racine and Pomeroy on Thursday, March
25 ·1 he open-format communit) meetings will sene ns
an opportunit) for res1dents to share their priorities, con.cerns and opinions directly v. ith Phillips. The meetings
arc at 4 p.m. at Sout~e!n Elen~en_tary an~ then at 7 p.m.
'at the Pomero) Mumctpal Butldmg m vtllage council's
'Chambers.

MlEF campaign kickoff
POMI:.ROY - The campai~n kickoff for the Meigs
Local Enrichment Foundat1on s (MLEF) fund dnve is
,scheduled for 6:30 p m., Wednesday. March 24 at the
~1cigs High School cafeteria. ~1LEF is rmsing funds to
build the Me1gs l\lulti Purpose Complex.

e or the Record
Foreclosures
POMEROY - Complaints 111 foreclosure v.ere filed in
Metgs Count) Common Plea~ Court b) Farmers Bank and
Sa\ mgs Co., Pomero). against Kelli R. Hubbard. Rutland,
and others; Bank of New York Mellon. Houston. Tex ..
against Tifian) D. Shaffer, Pomero).

Divorce
POMI:.ROY - A complntnt for dt,orce was filed m
Meigs County Common t&gt;teas Court by Deedrah L.
Simmon • Reed\ tlle, against Thomas T. Simmons,
Reeds" tile.

Indictment
POMeROY - An indictment v.as returned by the
Meig County Grand Juf) against CABIIS. Inc .. a corporation John C. Harmon. Syracuse, tatutol) agent, chargtn t\ e count of conductmg illegal bingo. felonies of the
fourth dctrree

Pomer0) rmm Page At
7

digital meters with the Job expected to wrap up by the
end of th1 month
A for the 1 ue of the 'ill age considering offenng
emplo}ees n hourly mcrease in v. ages in exchange for
that emplo)ee pa mg on village medical insurance,
counLtl dec1ded not to take action last mght. At this time,
Musc;,er smd only one peiT\on has a ked to opt out of the
med1caJ insurance.
Brenda Barnhart asked council for permission to usc a
portion ot the Hllage parktng lot for National Day of
Pra)er obsen ances whtch on Thursday, May 6. Events
include Bible readings from the stage on the parkmg lot
beginning Sunday-Thu~sday. a youth event on
Wednesday. May 5 und the main observance on Court
Street in front of the Meigs County Courthou~e on Ma) 6.
Council grunted Barnhart permission to use the parking
Jot and to place prayer igns along the walking path ouring the observance
Spaun also point~d out the 'ill age needs to get a tenant
for the old Pomeroy High School to keep it from deteriorating.
Young brought up drnmage problems behind Save-ALot, Pleasant Ridge and e~ccss1\e trash at a residence on
W•llis Hill v.hich had pre\ iousl) been reported to the
Pomeroy Police Department though Young aid the tra. h
.remains
Young also a ked if the \ tllage ,, auld be movmg the genfrom the old municipal building to the new one for a
backup for the police department? Musser said if it works
for the new building, 1t wtll be mo\ed, if not. another
replacement v.ill be found.
Council approved its annual contract with the
Washington County Jml to house prisoners at $60 per day:
transferred $8,000 from the general to the ~trcct fund:
~advanced $250 from the Beech Grove Cemeter) CD into
the cemetcr'l fund.
·
mto executive sesswn to d.tscu::.E•
The mectmg adJoumed
'disciplinary matter&lt;; m the water department.
•
-

Voting from Page At
Becky Johnston, dcput) director of the Meigs County

~oard of Elections sutd candidates ,.,·ho file for office after

the pre cnbed dendlme for parttsan primaries are called
''mdependent,'' but lndependcllt is not a registered political
affiliation in Ohio.
The upcoming primary election will be the first in. \\_hich
voter; can register under one of even part) affihattons.
:Because party aftihntton in Ohio is deternuned by the ballot
.cast in the pnmary election. Vl)tero.; '' ho cast those ballots
'Will be identified as such in the pubhc ~oting •oll .· ~~ile
votes nrc ca&lt;&gt;t b) secret ballot, a voter ::. part~· affihat10n
in the primal)
up until nov., D, R or 1ssucs
y - is public record.
.
Chan_ging voter regtstration, from Democrat~c to
Hepubl1cnn has always been done at the polls_on pnn~~-ry
A&lt;.lay. It eun he done that d&lt;~), hut \olen. must stgn an atllr:
mation. slatmg among other things they have done so ot
their own free wtll.
Such an. affirmation i::. still required to change from
Democratic to Kepubltcan and vice 'e1 a. but not to requc~t
a ballot for one of the other parties. That, Jeff Or1e~n l!f
Ohio Secretary of State Jennifer Brunner's office sa_rd. 1s
because the other pa11y ballots hnvc not been avmlable
·before now, so a change to one of those political P,arties
.could not he cffecttvely challenged.
Elecuon day 1 Ma) 4. Reg1stered \Oters can begin
requesting nnd castrng thetr early ballots on March 30.

POINT
PLEASANT,
federal government as being the world's largest associaW.Va. - The main lnboratoequal to or mort! stringent tion composed exclusively
1)' at Pleasant Valle) Ho pital
than the government's own of pathologists and is \\idewas recently U\\arded an
inspection program. As part ly considered the leader in
accrcdttation
by
the
of the on-site inspecuon, laboratory quahty assurCommission on Laboratory
inspectors' examine the ance. The group is an advoAccreditation of the College
records and quality control cate for high-quality and
of American Pathologists
of the laboratory for the pre- cost-effective medical care.
(CJ\P).Alvin R. Lnv.-son, JD.
ceding tv.o years, as well as In addition, the CAP
FACilE. Chief l:.xecutive
the education and qualifica- Laboratorv AccreditatiOn
Olfkcr and President of the
tions of the total staff, the Program is widely recognnn·profit ht:ulthcare facility,
facilities, the equipment, nized as the ''gold standard''
annourKed.
&gt;erfomlance improvement. and has served as a model
"I he CAP lH:creditation
aboratory safety. and labo- for various federal, state,
was ba~ed on the results of a
ratory management to deter- and private laboratory
recent on-site inspection
programs
mine how well the laborato- accreditation
and PVH was sin~led out
ry IS serving the patient. throughout the world.
LaCarbonara
for rldtionnl recogmtion lor
This strinJ;ent inspectiOn
The Pleasant Valley
the excellence of services an independent, qualified program IS designed to Hospital
Laboratory
being provided to patients. body has found us to be in specifically ensure the high- Services are provided by
Pleasant Valle&gt; Hospital is excellent standing,'' com- .est standard of care for all technologi!-.ts, technicians.
part of an elite group of mented Becky Browning, laboratory patients.
phlebotomists. support and
more than 7,000 laborato- Director of Laboratory
The College of American clerical personnel, and
ries nationwide to cam the Sen ices.
Pathologtsts is a medical supervisory staff. Providing
prestigious accreditation.
The CAP Laboratory society serving 17,000 medical direction for clini"We take our accredita- Accreditation
Program physician members and the cal and anatomic pathology
tion very seriously. It's great began in the early 1960's laboratory
community is Fredric E. LaCarbonara,
for the communit) to know and is recognized by the throughout the world. It is M.D.

l

Managing your finances: Wealth watchers
Anvone who's ever tried
to lose n few pounds knows
that not evcrv diet work::. for
every pcr::.ni1. Similarly, it
may take u few tries to lind
a system for managing your
personal finances that you
can stick to.
For many people, a simple
program c.llled "Wealth
Watchers'' could be the solution. As its name might
tmply. Wealth Watchers feature the journnling technique
popularized
by
Wetght Watchers,\\ here you
track every morsel eaten or in this case, eve!) dollar
spent - each day.
The tdea is that by carefully monitoring your
spending
habits.
you
.become more aware of. and
more likely to change.
behavioral patterns that
caused you to overdo 1t m
the first place. The program
also place~ heav)' emphasili
on the 1mportance of fin.mc•al education.
Wealth Watchers v. a
born from ad\ersity. Its
founder. Ahce Wood. v.a a
successful estate-planning
I attorney whose occupation
made her very knO\\ledge-

Jason
Aldennan

able about personal finance
issues. But after sustaining a
brain injury during a freak
airplane accident. Wood
suddenlv found she was
becoming forgetful, unable
to concentrate and prone to
making poor financial decisions that later plunged her
into debt.
Another byproduct of her
acctdent was unexpected
weight gaJQ. Wood notes, "I
went.to Weight Watchers to
help drop the extra pounds,
and in one of tho e 'liphtbulb' moments. I realized
that the solution to both Ill)
v.etght and pendmg pro
lems Ill;) 111 the stmple. d I
disc1phne of keepmg track
After developing and
practicing the core principles that \\auld come to
define \\ealth Watchers

~uch as "spend less than you
make" - Wood began ~har­
ing her ideas with family
member::. and friends. and
eventually with larger
groups. J"hen. in January
she published a book entitled "Wealth Watcher::.: A
Simple Program to Help
You Spen4 Less and Save
More" (Free Press. $19.95).
The book contains formulas for calculating what it
costs to live each month. as
well as worksheets to track
disposable
your datly
mcome (DDI), which is the
amount you can safely
spend each day wtthout
going into debt. "The difference between your DDI goal
and your actual n"erage
daily total of expenses will
how you if you are staying
on track." he explains.
Another feature I like is
the "Call to Action for
Con::.umers ," a' 16-step
roadmap for dchieving
finan I health. A few of
tho e t~ps people someurn~ merlook include:
• Make ure your partner
is on board with your goals.
• Define and understand
the d•fference between

fixed. semi-fixed and discretionary expenses.
• Know your credit score:
If it falls below 700. make it
higher. Find tips at
www.whatsmyscore.org.
• Set up and strictly follow a bill payment system
to avoid late payment
charges. ~1any people find
automatic payments from
credit card or checking
accounts helpful.
• Knov. your " mall
leaks"' - ::.pending weaknesses that can undermine
your goal (e.g., buying
unnecessary gadgets).
• Share your goat with
others. That's why so many •
folks find Weight Watchers
meetings helpful.
The bottom line is: Find a
system that works for you.
For Wood, adapting techniques she learned from
Weight Watchers to track
and control expenses was
the key to her financial
recoverv.
(Jason Alderman directs
Visas financial education
programs. Sign up for his
free month!) e-Newsletter at
ww•w.practicalmoneyskills .c
om/newsletter.)

Duda wins University of Rio Grande Wyant Award
help the students better
understand the subject matter and encourages them to
~
learn even more.
RIO
GRANDE
"Dr. Duda is v.illing to
Heather Duda, Ph.D., ~as
been named tl!e ?O I 0 ,"Ill- help any student with class1 ner of t.hc brn1~ \\y~nt room projects. whether or
Outstandmg
. fea~h1ng not they are for her class,
A~ ard at the Untvcrs1ty of and is prompt in her
response to an) ..,tudent
R1o Grande.
.
.
Gillenwater
Duda, who lives !n problems,"
Jackson. has taught at Rto said. She added that Duda'::.
Grande since 2007 and office door is alway::. open
serves a an n si tant pro- for students, and that she
also ad\ be:- the Zeta Theta
fessor of English.
"'I am honored," Duda Chi ::.ororit\.
Gillenwater also md that
::.aid. '"It's a great experihelps her students
Duda
ence.''
The
Erme
W) ant with their resume and
Outstandmg
Teaching application materials. and
A\\ ard is presented annual- pro\ ide ad\ ice to students
ly to a Rto Grande facult) about furtherine: their edumember who strongly cation.., or seeking employencourages
academic ment.
"Dr. Duda al~o ha::. the
achie,ement and helps prepare students to be sue- ahilit) to bring the best out
ccssful after graduauon, of her student..., She chalRio
Grande
students lenge:- u~ and forces studecide \\ h1ch faculty mcm- dents out of their comfort
her receive:- the award zones so that we be~:ome
more open-minded and
each year.
"Coming from the ::.tu- absorb the material predenh, this award i~ very sented. She has made me
humbling, thut they would into a better writer and a
student."
think so highl) ot me,"' better
Gillenv. ater said. "Dr.
Duda said.
Rio
Grande :-.tudent Duda is dedicated to her
Amber Gillenwater nomi- students, and because of
nated Duda for the award. this. she b one of the best
and explained that Duda's Rio has to offer."
As a teacher, Dudn
innovative use of films,
documentaries and diverse \\arks 'ery hard to engage
texts in her hnglish courses her students in order to
SENTINEL STAFF

MOSNEWSCMYOAILVSENTlNELCOM

I

Trial from Page AI
the path of a tmck, which
burst into flume on impact
with the dri\cr, Robert W.
!Iarrison I I. trappl.'d inside.
Stephanie J. English was
a passl'ngcr in ll ill's SUV.
mu..l abo di~d in the crash.
Another adult ami two juveniles were abn injured in
the crash, nnd llill herself
was ho pitaltzed for inJuries
in
the
acctdcnt.
Investigators later determined she v.as dri,ing the
\Chtclc.
.
A specification in the

charge of possession of
cocame indicate::. Hill ''as
in pnsses-.ion of le:-s than
five grams of cocaine. but
had a concentration of the
drug in her blood and mint.!
at the time of the four-vehicle crash.
·A mot ion to ::.uppres~
C\ tdcnce i~ nm\ pending
m the case and "ill hl'
heard h) Judge Fred \V.
Crov. Ill later this month.
That motion "as continued to allov. Kmght to
re' iew the case.

helf them learn.
" want them to learn.
but I also want them to be
able to take v. hat thev
learn and understand it so
they can appl) it to other
parts of the1r live&lt;' Duda
said. ''The students here
reall) v.ant to learn.
The)' re really great studenb."
Duda published her first
book. "The Monster Hunter
in Modern Literature;' during the 2008-2009 academic
-.ear. The book has been
\..ell-received. was nominated for several award-.
and was mentioned in different article and publicaaf,o
tion . Duda ha
received other 8\\ ard-. for
her v.ork. including bemg
recognized as Prombing
Young Alumni Scholar by
lndmna Univer ity of
Penn-.ylvama, the universit)
where she earned her doctoJI!ll degree.
The
Ernie
Wyant
Teaching
Outstanding
Award i~ named in honor of
Ernie Wynnt. '' ho was born
in Scioto Township in the
Redhrush area of Jackson
County. He grew up m t~e
area and attended R10
Grande College, ''here he
earned a teaching certificate. After earnin$ the certtficate. he taught m 'e' eral
one-room sch,.oob in the
area while continuing his

own education through corre~pondence cour:.es at Rio
Grande. He earned his
degree in 1937.
Wvant ~erved as an educator for 41 years. mcluding 16 years as a principal.
He \\as known for joining
hi::. students on the playgrounds to play marbles or
in ballgame::.. and he
enjoyed these activities
almost as much• a~ he did
teaching. Wyant passt:d
awa) in I %0, and thts
award i~ dedicated to this
outstanditig area restdent
and educator. Pa. . t \\ inners
of the award include Ra)
~1atura, Barbara Bole).
Chris Barker, We le)
Nas eef
Thoene.
Abukamail, Ellen Bra,el.
T. ~1ichael Rhodes. Arlie
Peck. Krishna Kool, Barry
Thompson. Larry G. Spees,
Charmaine Lepley. E:.dte
Ross and William Stitt.

Preschool Registration
"111e Athen::.-Me1g..., Educational Sen ice
Center Preschool registration for the
20 I0-20 II school ) car v. ill be held

Monday. May 3. 2010 at
Bradbut") I ,earning Center
App~)tlltmcnts

arc necessar).

To scitcduk an appointment contact

Betsy at
740-992-2 165.

f

'

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· - --------~--------

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Page A6

'Th e Daily Sentinel

Tuesday, March

Unions irked at Space
over health care vote
B Y D OUG W HITEMAN
ASSOCIATED PRESS

COLU~tiHJ S- T\\0 unions representing tens of thousand" of Ohio
.,.. orkers said Monda) the) '' ould no
longer support the ..,tate's only
Democratic congressman to oppose
President Bnrnck Obama 's health
care bill.
U.S. Rep. Zack Space betra\ed
union members .,.. ho camp.tigncd-for
him in 2006 and 2008, smd the Service
Emplo)ee.-.: lntemauonal l'nion and
the United Food and Commercial
Workers union.
"A no \Ote on health care is an antiv.orker \Otc," said Allison Pctomc.
~pokesv. oman for Columbus-based
UFCW Local 1059, v.hich ha 18.000
members v.01king in food rctmling
and processing m Ohio. Th.lt includes
1.500 people 11\mg in Space's district, she said.
Space was among 54 Democrats
"ho voted .tgamst the landmark legi~­
latJOn Sunda). It passed 219-212.,.. ith
no Republican support.
Space !)aid O\ er the weekend that

Ohio Briefs

vote on
health care is an
anti-worker vote."
~~no

Allison Petonlc, spokeswoman
for Columbus-based UFCW Local 1059

he had serious resen at ions about
the measure and that he feared it
might financially burden the .,.. orking class by "opening the door to
taxmg employee benefits as
income.''
The Democrat, .,.. ho represents
Oh10 's 18th District, smd a 'ers1on of
the bill he supported last year taxed
wealth) Americans, not the middle
clas~. to help pa) some health care
costs for the working poor.
The unions were unconvmccd.
"Working class, middle income
people who live in the congressmnn's
di~tnct really need help to obtain
their health care. While this bill isn't
perfect. it'~ step in the nght direction,'' said Anthony Caldwell,

spol\esman for SEll, District 1199
\\ hich represents about 25.000 ho~pi~
tul. nur:sing home, state and other
.,.. 01-kcrs in OhiO.
Messages
111 g co
1 wen;,
• .y seek·
left Mond
for Space'smmen
.
1
tary, Andr;w RICCI. •
ptess sccre"I th'nk ·
h
"
.
.. 1 • 11 \\as a toug
'vOte 1 or
luf!l· said freshman .Rep. Steve
Dnehaus, v.ho spoke wJth ~pace on
the House 0oor Sunday mght b~t
dechned to d1scuss the nature of the1r
comersation.
Dnehaus. \\ho represents a conservative dic;trict m the Cincinnati area,
voted lor the bill onlv after Obama
issued an exeCUtl\ e order affirming
prohibitions against taxpayer money
going to aborttons.
Space was elected m 2006 with 62
percent of the vote after six-term
Republican Bob Ncy pleaded gutlty
to federal charges in connection
with the Jack Abramoff lobbying
scandal.
In 2008, 60 percent of the di~trict
got hehind Space. despite all but one
county choo~i ng Republican John
McCain over Obama.

23, 2010

Southwest Ohio area
along 1-75 sees boom
DAYTON (AP) -An area along Jnterstate-75 midway
between Cincinnati and Da) ton is rising up as an economic growth center desp1te the flagging economy.
The corridor has attracted more than S 1.2 billion
investment O\er the past tv.o )Cars, and one commu
Libe1ty Township, drew 28 new bu.,inesses last year.
j Montgom~ry County Economi~ Development Dtrector
Joe Tuss S!"lld growth ~ea~ the h1.ghway ~as come as the
1 Dayton :u'Ca has seen Slg111ficant JOb loss 111 areas such as
automott'vC
parts.
"Th ere h ns
been growt h .111 ot her sectors, 11110rmal!on
. "
technology, health care and the d~fen~; indu~try, and those
have tended to be along that corndor, he satd.
''Many companies v1ew southwest Ohio as one big
labor market. They want access to the largest work force
they can."
About $1.5 billion in road tmprovements also is happening along J-75 . a mo've that wJll open the area up to economic recmery. said Kimm Coyner, Warren County's
development chief.
"Acth ity always breeds more activity." she said.
The Da) ton-to-Cincinnati conidor links to two other
major high\\ ays. 1-71 and 1-70, and IS driving distance tO
several cities and airports including Columbus and
Indianapolis.
Regional planners said it's likely the Dayton and
Cmcinnati areas will merge into a census and marketing
"megaplex" as soon as 2020.
As the population of an area increases. jobs follow, smd
Mark Policinski, executive director of the Ohio-Kentucky• Indiana Regional Council of Go,ernments.

,

progmm stmlldr to those m New York, Chtcago and
Toronto.
Sometimes. mghttnne hghttn~ is encouraged to present an attracthc im.1gc for aenal TV shots during big
WEST t.:l':ION (AP)
Police h:l\e accused a man of sporttng e'ents.
fatall) stabbmg hts gmndfather and assaulting his grandmother in the couple'-; Adams County home.
Industry hails court
Authonties say 43-) ear old Thomas Hargra\e of West
ruling on Asian carp
Union \\as arrested Monda) on aggra' ated murder and
aggravated assault charges.
CHICAGO (AP) - The barge and tug industf)' is hailing •
Pohcc sa) 84-year-old Maxine Holland ran from her
Court deciston to tum down Michigan's second
a
Supreme
home Sunda) mght calling for help and police anived as
Hargrme d1.1rged out the front door. Her husband, 75-year request to close Chicago-area shipping locks to prevent
Asmn curp trom mfe~tmg the Great Lake&lt;&gt;.
old f·rankhn Holland, had been stabbed numerous times.
Amencan \\ aterv. .t) Operatof'&gt; c;,poke woman L) nn
\\est lmon Police Chtcf Roy Strick lett sa) s police aren't
Muench &lt;MUH~CH a) ..he h pe ~onda) · ruhn end
ure .,.. hat led to the -;In) mg and ac; ault
II legal ctJOn and lead the dtf re t tcre t
Hargrm e \\as bemg held m the Adams County Jail.
\"Oik more clo el) to stop the 111\ \C f h
Astan &lt;.:clrp hn'e been mtgraung tO\\ard the Great L k
Colleges take classes
w.trmmg \\ aterv. a) s le,1dmg to Lake Mtchtgan.
Scientl ts fear the)' could enda11ger the $7 billion fi h
to high schools
mdustr) 1f the) reach the lakes. But
rv. a) operntors su)
clo tn the locks \\Ould d1srupt ,.
ponatton route
COLl MBL S {AP)
Ohio unners1ties and high and de,astate the1r mdustr\
chool are \\Orkmg together to adapt a 2-)ear-old proJu !tees turned dov.n ~1tchtg m
ngmal request m
gmm and bnng college COUI1.e \\ ork and credits to hip.h Januaf).
chool eniors.
Under the tate's Semor to Sophomore imtJathe, the
Former Ohio chief justice, dies
htgh o.;chool tudents v. ere upposed to spend the1r final
)Car on a college campuc;, enrolled full- or part-time.
CLEVI:.LAND (AP) - Famil) members ~ay former
HO\\C\er, orne rural dtstncts found students v.ere too far
Ohto
Supreme Court Chief Ju tice Frank Celebrezze has
from a participating college to attend classe there. Some
students alc;o decided they didn't want to miss out on semor died after a two-) ear fight \'vith lung and colon cancer. He
was 81.
'
)Car .,.. ith their high school classmates.
Son
Jeff
Celebreae
sa)
s
his
fathe
r
died
Sunday afterSo, 1f students woulcln 't come to them. c;ome colleges are
going to the c;tuclent&lt;;. Southeast Ohio'~ Hocking College, noon at the Cleveland Clinic from complications followfor example. now pro\ ides classes in htgh schools. Other ing :-.urgery.
Frank Celebrcue .,.. as a Cleveland Democrat who sen ed
Ohio colleges otfcr online courses through the program.
in the Ohio Senate from 1956-58. He later became a
Cuyahoga Count) Common Pleas judge and was elected to
AAA: Ohio gas prices
the OhiO Supreme Court in 1972. Six years later he became
chief justice and sened in that position until hb defeat in
· up to average $2.77
1986 by Thoma Mo) cr. the current chief justice.
Ohio Democwtic Chairman Chris Redfern savs
COLUMBUS (AP&gt; - Ohio gasoline pnces have gone up Cclebreue brought compa sion and effecti' e leadership to
another 5 cent m the last \\ eek n" pncec;, nationv. ide ro e to the state's highest court.
the highe t le\els since the fall of 2008.
A suney from auto club AAA, the Oil Price Information
Ohio tea party groups
Sen tee and Wright Express puts the statewide a\erage for
regular-grade ga oline at $2.77 per gallon. compared to
aim to block health bill
$2.72 last Monda).
Prices at Ohio pumpr. are 23 cent&lt;; htgher than they \\ere
COLCMBUS (AP) - Tea party groups m Ohio say
a month ago but are 5 cents below the current national a\er- they want to amend the state con~titution to block
age of $2.82.
President Barack Obama 's health care overhaul from
The AAA smd last week that prices were the highest taking effect.
since October 2008 v.hen oil and gasoline prices \\ere craTwenty-five groups led b) the Ohio Liberty Council said
tering as the recessiOn took hold.
~1 onday they v.ant to "protect Ohioans from the finandal
One year ago, gas was more than 80 cent:-. cheaper~ in burdens and tndividual mamlatc-.." contained in the bill.
Ohio, averaging $1 .96 for regular.
The) arc drafting a proposed constitutional amendment
and \\ould have to tile 402,275 valid signatures by June 30
to get the issue on till' November ballot.
Cleveland targeted to
Advocates for the uninsured issued their own statement.
trim bird..skyscraper strikes
saymg the tea party groups offer no solutions to the health
care crisis.
CLEVELAND (AP) - A' wtldlife expert wants
About 1.3 million Ohioans are uninsured.
Cleveland sk) scmpcrs to turn off their lights O\ emight in
spring and fall to pre' ent migmting birds from :smashing
into the buildings.
Migrnting birds that na' igate by the stars can be confu ed
b) sk) scraper hghts.
To reduce tlldt, Haney Web ter with .the Cle,eland
Museum of Natural Histof) is tr) ing to start a lights-out

Man accused of fatally
stabbing grandfather

CLl/froR
TU~AY, IIAil!II29RD.

"FouD.ded
Aprll lst 1819"

,_.If ••fa·r. t111,.,,.
1t,.,.,.,-...
•Y•
'*

•ltflr ,_ ete

·r,

tcbJtrf"

In"" tt • , _ . . . . ,

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Inside a

Bl

The Daily Sentinel

NCAA Tournament roundup. Page 82
OHSAA Girls Tounrament, Page B6

Iuuday. .MIIK1123
Baseball
Buffalo at Po1nt Pleasant, 5.3C p m

Softball
Point Pleasant at Stssonvtlle. 6 p.m
Wayne at Wahama, 5.30 p.m.
Track
Hannan, Potnt Pleasant at Po,nt
Pleasant Quad
WtiJnuday ldarch.~

Baseball
Potnt Pleasant at Poca. 7 p m.

Softball
Potnt Pleasant at Herbert Hoover, 5.30
pm.

.Ihw'aclay,..Mllrch .25
Baseball
Chapmanvtlle at Point Pleasant, 6:30
p.m

Softball
Wahama at Buffalo, 5.30 p m

Baseball
Herbert Hoover at Potnt Pleasant, 5 p m

Softball
Scott at Potnt Pleasant, 5 30 p.m
Girls Tennis
Scott at Potnt Pleasant. 5 p.m.
Boys Tennis
Scott at Pomt Pleasant 5 p m

'
I

PROVIDf'..NCE, R.I. (APJ
- Tennessee coach Bruce
Pearl cleared his bcm:h at the
end of the game, a victOI)'
O\'er No. 14 seed Ohio and a
berth in the Midwest
Regional scmitinals secure.
It was time to reward the
ouys who helped the
Volunteers get there.
.I .P. Prince scored 18 points
and Scotty Hop~on had 17 to
l~d sixth-seeded Tennes~ec
to an 83-68 victory over Ohio
on Saturday and give the Vols
their third Sweet 16 berth in
four years. The other starters
pitched in, too: Brian
Williams and Wayne Chism
had 12 rebounds apiece, and
Bobby Maze had nme assi~ts.
But Pearl ""anted them to
share the cclehration with the
reserves who filled in after a
New Year's Day gun, drug

and alcohol bust left
Tennessee with just six scholarship players.
"There's no question, Josh
Bone and Renaldo Woolridge,
Skylar ~1cBee - those guys
all played a lot in a stretch of
games," Pearl said. ''We're a
team, we're a family, and
those guys got u~ through ....
We don't get here to this game
if Melvin Goins doesn't step
up to San Diego State, and
Cameron Tatum. J thought,

played well. And so 1t's a
team."
Tennessee (27-8) will play
the w·inner of Sunday's Ohio
State-Gcort{ia Tech game in
St. Louis. ·I he Vols have never
gotten past the third round.
mcludin~ losses to Ohio State
and Loursville under Pearl in
2007 and '08.
''I've been there twice
alread~· and came up short
twice,' Chism said. ''I'm
happy to be back on that stage
agam. and I just can't wait to
get there."
.
Tommy freeman scored 23
points for Ohio, which wa&lt;;
the lowe:-.t ~eed to get out of
the first round. But he didn't
get enough heIp from Armon
Bassett and D J. Cooper, the
guards v. ho starred in the
rlrst-round victor\' over thirdseeded Georgetown before

vender
dominates
asOSU
rolls 93-59
PITTSBURGH (AP) Turns out the turkev sandwiches bothered Ohio State
a Jot more than St. Francis
did.
Jantel Lavender dominated inside for Ohio State
with 23 point:-. and 16
rebounds against smaller St.
Francis, Pa.. and the second-seeded
Buckeve~
opened up a 27-point lead
before halftime during a 9359 rout in a first-round
NCAA Da) ton Regional
e on Sunday.
avender, the three-time
Ten player oLJhe year,
•
startmg guard Tayler Hill, .
three reserve~ and numer- I
ous team personnel became j
ill after eating sandwiche!';
following practice Saturday
BY BRYAN WALTERS
BWALTERSOMYOAILYTRIBUNE COM
and mi~sed the pregame
shootaround, but most of
CENTEt\'ARY, Ohio the Buckeyes (31-4) recovThe District 13 Basketball
ered by game time.
"I didn't know what to Coaches Association all-star
expect," coach Jim Foster games were held Monday
night at the new Gallia
said.
Academy
High School, as
He probably dido 't expect
the
Division
I-II girls and
this. Instead of looking
sluggish or ill at ease, the Division III-IV boys came
Buckeyes reeled off runs of away with victories in a pair
11-0, 19-2 aud 13-3 before of closely-contested games
Gallia Countv.
halftime, taking control in District
13 encompasse:-.
from the start and never high school programs locatailowing the Red Fla!&gt;h ( 17- ed~ in Gallia. Meigs,
1$) to build any con1idence Jackson,
Vinton,
or momentum.
Washington.
Hocking,
''I'm
feeling
OK,'' Athens and Lawrence counLavender said. ''I wa~ a lit- ties. The teams - which are
tl~ woozy at the start. but I
broken do\'. n by dh is ion for
ctn play."
both boys and girls -- were
he certainly can. The made up of senior players
Flash had no one who selected to the first and sec•
C'}Uld defend the 6-foot-4 ond teams in their respecti\e
Lavender's post-up moves. divisions.
In the girls contest. both
Brittany Johnson's outside
sHooting or point guard
S~mantha Prahalis' playJI¥iking. Johnson ended
wfth 18 points. going 4 of 8
frpm 3-point range, while
ptahalis had 14 points, 13 •
MILWAUKEE (AP) a9sists and six rebounds.
Big, bad Kansas is gone.
nt didn't take long.
Third-seeded
Uohnson hit a pair of 3- Georgetown didn't even
pQinters and Sarah Schulze make the weekend.
f11ade another as the
And
No.
4
seed
n... •. ~~,·4 '"'" seized a 11-0 lead
Maryland'! The Terrapins
only 2: II gone. The were sent on their way
Butoke:yes led 32-9 at the home, too.
~~~~~~int of the first half,
It doesn't take.a brackcmade it 51-24 late tologist to look at the
before taking a Midwest Regional and see
haJftime lead. They that Ohio State's path to
let up even when the Final Four got a lot easreserves began coming ier over the last four days.
bench. even though
"A lot of people arc
Maria Moeller was probably say_ing. 'Well, ~he
lli:littd to two minutes by No. I team 10 your reg10n
lost.' We're not worried
le Little, a two- about that,'' Jon Diebler
Big Ten defensive said after Ohio State fendof the year. made all ed off the sloppy yet scrapher shots while scor- PY Georgia Tech Yellow
14 points and getting Jackets 75-66 on Sunday in
steals. displaying the the second round of the
of depth the Buckeyes NCAA tournament. ''We're
need if they meet focused
on
playing
cWJfendin1g national champi- Tennessee, and I think
C&lt;J•nnecticut in the that's why we're being so
dEion~l final next weekend. successful
right now,
gave us a lot of ener-

I

:-wiMI~aiH

Rolls, 86

Tuesday, March 23,2010

Tennessee Waltz: Vols in Sweet 16 aQain after beating Ohio

SCBI DUI E
A schedule of upoom ng high
varsl!y sporting events lnvo'v ng teams
I om Me gs Mason and Gallia countres

fiJ.day. March 26

.rs

- a

Left: Coach Jim
Osborne talks with some
members of the District
13 girls basketball team
including OVP area players Jasmine Waugh
(left). Tricia Smith (second from left). Amy Noe
(third from right) and
Kasey Turley (second
from right), prior to the
three-point shootout on
Monday evening at Gallia
Academy High School.
Below: Southern's Cyle
Aees shoots the ball
during the boys District
13 ct&gt;ntest at Gallia
Academy High School on
Monday evening.
Bryan Walters/
photos

Four pmticipant in 2009 Ohio failed in its attempt to be
just the third No. 14 seed to
reach the Sweet 16 since the
tournament expanded to 64
team~ in 1985.
''It's a great experience,
especially being a freshman,"
Cooper said. "Ju~t makes you
more humble, makes you
more hungry and makes you
know what )PU have to do for
next year. for the guys coming
back.''
The Bobcats (22-15) trailed
by six points midway through
the second half before the
Vols went on a l 0-1 run to put
it away.
Tenne~see had an even
more remarkable run after the
:;-.;ew Year's Day incident three players were suspended.

Please see Ohio, 86

Johnson wins
for 1st time at
Bristol
BRISTOL. Tenn. (AP) There ·s an aura about
Bristol Motor Speedway, a
track that drivers and fans
love equally for its electric.
throwback-style racing.
Jimmie Johnson never
chalked it up as one of his
favorites.
The :'our-time defending
l\ASC -\R champion could
ne\ er get a handle on the
.533-mile bullring. where
he struggled far more than
he ever succeeded.
Until Sunday. that is.
Johnson finally knocked
Bristol off his to-do list.
plowing from sixth to first
in just three laps Sunday to
grab his first career victory
at the revered Tenne'&gt;see

Locals fare well in
D-13 all-star games

,........ osu, 86

combining for 23 points on 7of-23
shooting
against
Tennessee.
·Iennessee also dominated
inside, outscoring the MidAmerican Conference champions 58-12 in the paint.
"Right now,'' Ohio coach
John Groce said. "I'm not
thinkmg about the MAC tournament run right now or the
""in against Georgetown. f'm
thinking about what we could
have done better to play better. ... I do know that I'm
awfully proud of our guy.., for
not flinching numerous times
during the sea~on."
Each of Saturday's games
in Pro\'idence matched a double-digit s~ed again:-.t a team
from a power conference. But
one-half hour after tiny Saint
Marv's knocked off Villanova
No. 2 seed and a Final

track .
"Evervthino
around
Bristol is what people focus
on. There are parties for it.
The fans get excited for it.
You walk into this facilitv
squads found themsel\'es
and look around. and you
deadlocked at 33 at halfwant to run well." Johnson
time, but a 37-32 second
said. "It's really been a
half run ultimately allowed
downer for me to walk
the Division I-II squad to
through the gates. look'
pull of the five point deciaround. 'Man. I'm going to
sion.
(stink) today. I really had
Ironton's Lorna Caesar
that mindset coming here."
was named the Most
I That chan!!ed last season
Valuable Player for the \Vihwhen Johnson led laps in
ning squad with a gameboth Bristol races. grabbing
high 24 points . Oak Hill's
a pair of top-IO finishes
Rebecca' Puckett
and
while gi\'ing him a guide on
Eastern's Kasey Turley were
how to get around the connamed co-M\'Ps for the
crete track.
Dlll-IV squad with respec"I started building my
tive efforts of 20 points and
confidence:·
he
said
19 points.
"Those t\I.O races ga\'e us
Other area player~ in the
clear direction where to
girls game included Amy
work. me a clear direction
.Noe and Allie Troester from
on how to dri\'e the car."
Gallia Academy, Tricia
And that's all he needed
Smith
from
~leigs.
with I0 laps to go and an
Audrionna Pullins fn.)m
opportunity to den) Kurt
Eastern. and Hailec Swain
Busch a chance to gain any
from South Gallia.
ground on Johnson's championship "io. 48 team.
Please see Distrid 13, 81
Busch led 278 of the 500
laps and had a decent gap on
Johnson when his eas\
drive to\ ictorv \\as clouded
bv a debri&lt;; caution with 17
hips remaining. All the leaders headed to pit road. and
Busch and Johnson both
took four tires on the final
:-.top.
Greg
Biffle.
Matt
Kenseth. Carl Ed\vards and
Tom Stev. art all took two
tires. gi\ ing them the first
four po~itio~1s on the restart.
Busch \\as fifth. Johnson
was sixth and the race
resumed \\ ith lO laps to go .
Ken seth's difficulty getting up to speed stacked up
traffic behind him. including Busch.. \\ ho lost his
op~portu~it) to leapfrog his
way to the front.
Not Johnson. though. He
weaved through the mess up
to second, Stewart moYed
into the lead. and Johnson
needed just O\'er one lap to
pick him off. too.
"When we· rc winning at
tracks that we're not supposed to. bt,ys better look
out.'' Johnson warned.
"Ewn that 2 car (Busch)
that doesn't \\ant the 48 to
win."
Rick Wood/Milwaukee Journal SentlneVMCT
Busch. a the-time Bristol
Ohio State's Evan Turner (21) is double-teamed by Georgia Tech's lman Shumert, left. and
Derrick Favors, right. in second- half action. Ohio State beat Georgia Tech , 75-66, during
Please see Johnson, 81
the second round of the NCAA tournament in Milwaukee, Wisconsin, Sunday.

--

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

Page B2 • The Daily Sentinel

Tuesday, March

www.rnydailysentinel.com

~3 , 2010

NCAAMens Tournament Big run leads Illinois
past Kent State in NIT
.
No. 2 WEST VIRGINIA 68, No. 10 MISSOURI 59

BUFFALO.N.Y.(AP)- D.1'Sean Butler accounted for 19
of West Virginia's 30 points in the tirst half, then finhhed with
28. to lead the second-seeded Mountaineers past No I 0
M1ssoun and imo the round of 16.
Kevin Jones had 13 points and nine rebm111ds lor the Big
East .Confere1~ce tournament champions.
M1chad Daxon scored 15 points for Missouti (23-11),
which went 20 of 61 from the field and was just as had frocn
the free-throw line, going 12 of20.
West Virginia (29-6) ad-. anee~ to face No. II seed
Washington at S) racuse. I"\ .Y.. on 1 hursdav. It marks the tifth
time the Mountmneers reached the final-16 and first since
2008.
.
No. 5 MICHIGAN STATE 85, No. 4 MARYLAND 83
SPOKANE. Wash. (AP) - Korie Lucious hit a 3-pointer at
the b~7..,.er to cap a. frenetic finish and give injUJy-del?teted
~'fJCh1gan State. whach lost star guard Kalin Lucas. a vtctorv
over Marvland.
•
The Spartans blew a 16-point lead in the second half.
Greivis Vasguez put fomth-secded Maryland (24-9) ahead
83-82 with 6 second.~ left. b~t ~ic~igan State pushed the, ball
up the floor and Lucaous. filhng m tor Lucas, dramed a 3 trom
the top ot the ~ey, setting off a wild celebration by the
Spa~tans.
I"\ S
d M . h'
26
·
o. ~ ee . ac 1gan • tate ( -8) advanced to play mnth-

s

seed.ed Northem lo":'a on Friday in the Midwest Regional
sem1finals 111 St. Louas.
Luca.... a two-time all-Big Ten selection got hurt with 2:28
remaining in the first half and did not ret~. •
SRartans coach Tom Izzo said the junior likely has a torn
Ach1lles' tendon, which would make 1t almost impossible for
him to play in the round of 16 _ and probably would sideline him for the rest of the tournament.
No. 6 XAVIER 71, No. 3 PITTSBURGH 68

MILWAUKEE (AP) _Jordan Crawford scored 27 points.
including a breakaway dunk with just over two minutes
remaining, to help sixth-seeded Xavier beat No.3 Pittsburgh
in the second round.
Jason Love had 14 points and a key block down the stn:tch
for the ~1usketeer~ (26-H). who advanced to play secondseeded Kansas State in the West Regional semifinah in Salt
Lake City on Thur~day.
Ashton Gibbs scon:d 19 points and Brad Wanamaker had
16 points and 10 rebounds for the Panthers (25-9), who nearly rallied \\ ith two 3-pointers by Gilbert Brown in the final28
second&lt;~.

Gibbs missed a ~tential game-tying 3-poinrer Vl;'ith less
than a second left. Pitt'&gt;burgh had one last chance to mbound
the ball with 0.4 seconds left. but Wanamaker left the shot
short.
No.4 PURDUE 63, No.5 TEXAS A&amp;M 61, OT

SPOKANE. Wash. (AP)- Chris Kramer's drive past one
defender and Ia) up over another 6 inches taller than him with
42 seconds remainin~ in overtime sent fourth-seeded Purdue
into the regional semafinals with a bruising victory over No.
5 Texas A&amp;M.
BJ. Holmes sot a final. frantic chance to win the game for
Texas A&amp;.M w1th a rushed 3-point try from in front of his
bench at the buzzer, but it hit short on the rim to ensur~ a sixth
regional appearance in 12 NCAA tournaments dating to 1994
for Purdue (29-5).
Kramer, Purdue's leader with Robbie Hummel out with a
knee injury, led the Boilcnnakers with 17 points a11d seven
rebounds.
Bryan Davis led the Agtdes (24-1 0) with 17 points and 15
rebounds. 111e 6-foot-9 senior was the man who leaped but
could not block Kramer's winning shot.
No. 9 NORTHERN IOWA 69, No. 1 KANSAS 67

OKLAHOMA CITY (AP) - In an NCAA tournament full
of upsets, Northern Iowa pulled off the biggest one: The
Panthers took down mighty Kansas .
Playing with poise down the stretch and getting another big
3-pointer from Ali Farokhmanesh. Northern Iowa knocked
No. I overall seed Kansas from the bracket with a programdefining 69-67 win Saturday.
Northern Iowa (30-4) won the tempo tug-of-war. grounding
the high-flying Jayhawks with in-their-jersey defense, then
withstood a furious rally to become the fin.t team to beat a
No. l seed in the se.::ond round since UAB and Alabama did
it to Kentucky and Stanford in 2004.
There have been 10 double-digit seeds to pull upsets this
year - eight in the first round. But the ninth-seeded Panthers
delivered the shocker of them all.
Farokhmanesh, Northem Iowa's fir:.t-round hero. buried an
open 3-pointer with the shot clock still in the 30s to give the
Panthers a four-point lead \Vith 35 seconds left.
The gutsy shot capped a dominating stnrt-to-tinish win that
sent the Panthers to the round of 16 for the first time. UNI will
face Sunday's Michisan State-Maryland winner in the
Midwest Regional semifinals in St. Louis.
Kansas (33-3) fell behind early and never caught up. bowin~ out of the tournament with another disappointing loss to a
mad-major. Cole Aldrich had 13 points and 10 rebounds. and
Marcus Morris added 16 point~.

CHAMPAIGN, Ill. (AP)Illinois used a big second-half
run to heat Kent State 75-58
on Monday night and
advance to the quarte1tinnls
of the Nattonnl Invitation
Tournam~:nt.

With the game tied at 31 at
halftiml!, Illinois (20-14)
went on an J8-7 nm 11Ut of the
break to take control Illinois
host&lt;&gt; the winnl!r of Da)tOnI

n·IStflC. t 13
from Page B1
Noe. Troestl'r and Smith
had l2, nine and two points.

n:spectively, for the victors.
Pullins scored 10 for the
Dlli-IV squad, while Swain
added two points in the setback. Southern's Cheyene
Dunn was abo selected for
the DIII-IV team. but did
not participate·
In the boys contest, DIJIIV led 45-39 ut the half then
out::.cored the DI-1 l s4uad
b) a 42-39 margin in the
second half to wrap up the
9-point de.cision.
.
Ironton ~
Tim
Koche!'~o~rfer was named
• th~ DavJsion .III-IV ~VP
wat!1 a game~hagh 18 po1nts,
whale Patnck Angle of
Logan w?n the DI-11 MVP
honors With 14 markers.
Other area .Players in the
boy~ game mcluded Jo~n
Troester
from
Gall1a
Academy. Mike Johnson,
Jake
Lynch.
Kelly
Winebrenner and Titus
Pierce from Eastern, Sean
Coppick. Michael Manuel
and Cyle Rees from
Southern, and Brandon
. Hmrison from South Gallia.
Manuel had 13 points for
the Dill-IV team, followed
by Winebrenner with l J.
Lynch with eight. Coppick
with six. Johnson with five.
• Harrison with four and Rees
with one point. Pierce did

Cmcinnati on Wcdne~day.
''The first half we staned a
little ~luggish. hut we got
going," forv.•ard Mike Da\ Is
srud. "The !&gt;econd half, we
were pretty lights out and
shot well.''
After a back-and-f01th first
half featunng nine lead
changes. lllinoi~ came out on
the of1ensive behind Dcmetn
MLCamey. The junior guard

Illinois had bef.11 richng a
three-gwne home losing
streak which they were determined to break against Kent
State.
''I wl&lt;.l them today at the
o;hootaround. I said this is
important," Weber said. ''lr'&lt;;
impo11ant for our progr l
It's important for. our progz
as a team to make &amp;ometh1tfg
special.

not score for the victors.
Troester - the lone DI-ll
representative - had five
points in home tinale.
The slam dunk champion
was Grant Venham of
Warren. while Zach Bobo of
Alexander won the boys
three-point shootout. The
girls three-point champion
was Mikie Strite of Oak
Hill.
All District 13 players
were. also presented their
awards for first, second and
honorable mention selections. Lynch was also pre,sented with his D-13 Player
of the Year award for
Divbion IV.
Eastern coaches Howie
Caldwell (boys) and John
also
Burdette
(girls)
received their Coach of the
Year plaques.

Gallia
Academy
Senior
Amy Noe

shoots
dunng

the
3-pornt

shootout
at the

District 13
All-Star
event at
Gallia
Academy

H1gh
School.
Bryan
Walltersl
phot.

DISTRICT 13
ALL-STAR GAMES
GIRLS
DIVISION 1·11 70,
DIVISION III-IV 65
Dlii·IV
Dl·ll

33 32 33 37 -

65
70

DIVISION lll·lV- Brooke Skinner 0 1·2
I, Audrionna Pullins 5 0.0 10, All Wes11
o-2 2, Megan Brooks 1 0·0 2, Hallee
Swain 1 0·2 21 Ton DIXon 1 o-o 3 .•
Rebecca Pucken 7 5-7 20, Kasey Tur ey
7 3·6 19. Chelsea Delong 3 o-2 6.
TOTALS: 26 9·21 65. Three-point goals:
4 (Turley 2, Dixon, Puckett). MVP Kasey
Turley. Eastern, Rebecca Puckett, Oak
Hill.
DIVISION 1-11 - Pa1ge Lamb 3 3·4 9,
Amy Noe 4 2·2 12, Tricia Smith 1 0.0 2,
Tlnesha Taylor 3 3-6 9 , Allie Troester 3
2-2 9, Lorna Caesar 9 6·7 24, Brea
Tackett 2 0.0 5. TOTALS 25 16·21 70.
Ttlree-po1nt goals 4 (Noe 2, Troester,
Tackett). MVP: Lorna Caesar, Ironton.

was his first at Bristol.
where his pre\ ious best finish in 16 sta1ts was third.
Nine of his previous finishfrom Page B1
e~ here had been outside the
top 16.
winner who hasn't been to
At the start of each seaVictory Lane at the bullring
son.
Johnson and crew chief
~ince 2006. was irate over
Chad
Knaus write down
his radio at the loss. He settheir
goals
and finally grabtled for third behind
Johnson and Stewart. miss- bing a checkered flag here
ing hts chance to win his "as a big one.
''It was pretty high on hb
second consecutive race of
the season and prove his list," Knaus said. "for him
Penske Racing team has to say that he wanted to
made enough ~ains to run focus on that and {!et better
consist\!ntl) w1th Johnson at this racetrack. fo'f us to be
and
the
Hendrick able to go out there and do
Motorsports bunch.
what we did. I think it
"I'd rather lose to anv of speaks volumes about the
the other 41 cars out there dedication and desire he's
than the 48 car," Busch smd. got inside.
''I thought we had him beat.
"We want to \Vin every
I gave it m) heart today. but single event. This one has
eluded us. We're very proud
we came up short.''
It was Johnson's third win to be able to have it."
Next up for Johnson is
of the season and 50th of his
Speedway.
career. More impot1ant. it Martinsville

Johnson

took c~arge on the court leading an 8-0 run in the first five
minutes niter the halt. Dunng
that :.!retch, the Golden
J;')ashes went 0 for 5 from the
field with three tumovers.
McCamey fimshed with l5
points nnd 10 assists and
became the first 111 Ilhnob
history to record more than
I .200 points and 500 assists
in only three seasons.

BOYS

DIII-lV
DI-ll

DIVISION III-IV 87,
DIVISION 1-11 78
45 42- 87
39 39 - 78

DIVISION 1·11 - Dylan Guth•1e 4 0·0 8,
Clay Ellenwood 1 ,_2 3, Collin Pfalf 3 66 12. Patnck Angle 5 2-4 14, Con
Butcher 3 0·3 6, Mason Mays 3 5-6 12.
Brandon F1vecoa1t 3 1·2 7, John
Troester 2 1·1 5 Andy Gnllo 1 0-0 2,
Dylan Newsom 3 3·4 9. TOTALS. 28 19·
28 78. Three-po~nt goals 3 (Ang e 2,
Mays) MVP Patrick Angle Logan.

DIVISION III-IV- tim Kochendoerfer 7
4-4 1~. M1ke Johnson 2 1-2 5 Brandon
Harrlso11 2 0·2 4. Jake Lyl'lCh 3 1·3 8.
Kelly Winebrenner 4 o-o 11, T tus Perce
0 o-2 0, M!Chae M !Chell 6 3·9 15 Sean
Copp1ck 2
6. Zach Bobo 3 o-o 6,
Cyle Rees 0 1-2 1, M chaet Manuel5 2·
2 13. TOTALS. 34 12·26 87 Three-oo r&gt;t
goals. 7 (WinebrenJJer 3 CoppJCk 2.
Manuel,
Lynch)
MVP·
TlrT'
Kochendoer!er, tron1on

Girls: Mkie.Stnte. Oak Hill
Boys: Zach Bobo, Alexander

where he's v. on five of the
last o;even races, a stat not
lost on Busch.
"The; 're gomg to be
tough next week at
Martinsvilte. We'll be luckv
to finish I Oth :· Busch said.
''That's why 1 v. as really
pouring my heart and soul
into winning thb one. He's
going to ha\ e a solid car
next week:."
Biffle tinished fourth and
was followed bv has Roush
Fenwa~ Racing teammates
Kenseth and Ed'' ards. Dale
Earnhardt Jr. overcame a
speeding penalt) to finish
seventh. Jamie Mcl\turrav
was eh!hth and Kvle Busch
and Jerr Burton ro-unded out
the top 10.
Kevin Han ick maintained hi~ lead in the Sprint
Cup Series standing~ by t1nishing I Ith.
Johnson became only the
12th dri,·er in l\ASCAR
history to win 50 races. He

reached the milestone in his
296th start. and only three
drivers did it faster: Jeff
Gordon (232) . Da.
Waltrip (::!78) and D
Pearson (293 ).
.
· Even with his stats.
though , team owner Rick
Hendrick doesn't think his
driver gets his due.
··If vou look at the stats
and \OU look at the talent
and '\·ou look at the dedication: ~ust look at hb record
- I don't understand whv
it's not written now he "s one
of the best that's ever done
thas.'' Hendrick said. "You
look .1t Jeff. and I've been
around for a Jon!! time. l'\e
v. atched a lot of !!UVS from
Richard Pett) on up to cur•
rent da\.
"\\'hen \Ou look at the
le\ el of competition since
he's been in the sport. what
he\ done. what he's accomplished. I mean. I don't
k,10\\ \\hat he's got to do.''

o-o

THREE·POINT SHOOTOUT
CHAMPIONS

SLAM DUNK CHAMPION
Grc:1t Vel" ham, Werrer

No. 10 SAINT MARY'S 75, No. 2 VILLANOVA 68

PROVIDENCE, RJ. (AP) - Omar Samhan was an
unstoppable Gael force, and Saint Mary's earned a surprising
spot in the NCAA tournament's round of 16.
·
Samhan played the game of his career on college basketball's biggest .!&gt;tage, finishing with 32 points and seven
rebounds to lead lOth-seeded Saint Mary's past No. 2
Villanova and on to Houston for the South Regional semifinals.
Mickey McConnell stopped and fired an arcin~ 25-footer
that banked high off the gla&lt;&gt;s to give the Gaels (-8-5) a 6865 lead with I: 15 left.
Samhan used a two-handed block to turn back Reggie
Redding. and McConnell made both ends of a 1-and-1 to
make it 70-65.
Star guard Scottie Reynolds struggled again, and t~e
Wildcats (25-8) made an early exit a year after they played 111
the Final Four. Thev started 20-1 and collaQsed at the end.
No.2KANSASS~TE84,No.7BYU 72
OKLAHOMA CITY (AP)- Jacob Pullen scored 20 of his
career-high 34 points in the first half to help dig No.~ seed
Kansas State out of an early 10-point hole, and the Wildcats
turned away Jimmer Fredette and BYU in the second round.
Pullen came alive with a scorin~ flurry shortly aft~r he and
Fredette got tangled up in transition in ~he first hall, and ~­
State (28-7) didn't trail again in earning 1ts first appearance m
the round of 16 since 1988.
Pullen ~urpassed 30 points for the third .time in his. car.eer
and helped seal the victory with a. 3·pomter an~ s1x t~ee
throws down the stretch. Equally as tmportant as has sconng
was his physical defense against Fredette, who had scored .37
points to get the seventh-seeded Cougars (30·6) past Flonda
m double ove11ime in the first round.
Fredette finished with 21 p&lt;Jints on 4-of-13 shooting.
No. 1 K ENTUCKY 90, N o. 9 W AKE FOREST 60
NEW ORLEANS (AP) - Darius Miller scored a career-.
high 20 points and top-seeded Kentucky made easy work of
No.9 Wake Forest in the second round.
.
It was the second consecutive blowout forth~ WII~cats (34r
2). who crushed East Tennessee State I00:71 111 thctr opener.
Miller scored 16 points in the first half to help Kentuc~y
build an early double-digit lead lh.at ballooned bcy~md 30 m
the second half. D~Marcus Cousms added 19 pomts, John
Wall had 14 and Eric Bledsoe 13.
.
.
Al-Farou4 Aminu led Wake Forest. (20-11) w1th 16.poants.
Kentucky moves on to play the wmner.of Su!1d~y s gap1e
between 12th-seeded Comell and No.4 Wasconsm an the East
Regional semifinals next week at Syracuse, N.Y.

10

~;:::~~-j~~-t~~~~~lNc~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~==-1
12

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CLASSIFIED INDEX
Legats ........................................................... 100
Announcements .......................................... 200
Birthday/Anniversary .................................. 205
Happy Ads ....................................................210
Lost &amp; Found ............................................... 215
Memory/Thank You ..................................... 220
Nolices ......................................................... 225
Personals ..................................................... 230
Wanted ........................................................ 235
Services ....................................................... 300
Appliance Scrvice ....................................... 302
............................................ 304
Materiials ....................................... 306
...................................................... 308
1g ..................................................................... 10
rdl~'ldt!rtv Ca re ....................................... 312
Comp u ters ................................................... 314
Contractors .................................................. 316
Do mestics/Janito rial ................................... 318
Electrical ...................................................... 320
Finan cial .........................: .............................322
Health ........................................................... 326
Heat i ng &amp; Co ollng ....................................... 328
Home Improv ements 330
ln s ura nc e ..................................................... 332
Lawn Serv ice ............................................... 334
Mu sic/Oance/Drema ............................-...... 336
Other Serv ices ............................................. 338
Pl umblng!Eiectrical .....................................340
Pro fes si onal Servlce s ................................. 342
Repai rs ......................................................... 344
Roofing .........................................................346
Sec url ty ........................................................ 348
Ta x/Acco u nt ing ........................................... 350
Travel/Ente rtain m ent ..................................352
Fl nanc ial ....................................................... 400
Fi nancial Services....................................... 405
Insurance .................................................... 410
Money to Le nd ............................................. 416
Education ..................................................... 500
Business &amp; Trade Sc h ool ........................... 505
Instruction &amp; Training ................................. 510
Lesson s ........................................................ 515
Persona l ....................................................... 520
Animals ........................................................ 600
Animal Supplles .......................................... 605
Horses .......................................................... 610
Livestoc k ......................................................615
Pets............................................................... 620
Want to buy .................................................. 625
Agriculture ................................................... 700
Equ ipment..........................................705
&amp; Produce.......................................710
Feed, Seed, Grain ............................... 715
unting &amp; Land ........................................... 720
Want to buy ...................................................725
Merchandlse ................................................ 900
Antiques .......................................................905
Appliance ..................................................... 910
Auctions ....................................................... 915
Bargain Basement .......................................920
Collectlbles .................................................. 925
Computers ................................................... 930
Equipment/Supplies ....................................935
Flea Markets .............................: .................. 940
Fuel Oil Coai/Wood/Gas ............................. 945
Furniture ...................................................... 950
Hobby/Hunt &amp; Sport.................................... 955
Kid's Corner.................................................960
Miscellaneous ..............................................965
w a nt 1o buy ..................................................970
Yard Sale ..................................................... 975

r'LOOking For~
ANew Home?

M i scellaneou'

Recreational Veh icles ............................... 1000
ATV ............................................................. 1005
Blcycles ......................................................101 0
Boats/Accessorles .................................... 101 5
CamperiRVs &amp; Trallers ............................. 1020
Motorcycles ............................................... 1025
Other ..........................................................10 30
Want to buy ............................................... 1035
Automotlve ................................................ 2000
Auto Rentai/Lease ..................................... 2005
Autos .......................................................... 2010
Classic/Antlques ....................................... 201 5
Commercial/Industrial .............................. 2020
Parts &amp; Accessories ..................................2025
Sports Utlllty .............................................. 2030
Trucks .........................................................2035
Utility Trallers ............................................ 2040
Vans ............................................................2045
Want 10 buy ............................................... 2050
Real Estate Sales ...................................... 3000
Cemetery Plots ..........................................3005
Commerclal ................................................ 3010
Condomln lums .......................................... 3015
For Sale by Owner..................................... 3020
Houses tor Sale ......................................... 3025
Land (Acreage) .......................................... 3030
Lots ............................................................ 3035
Want to buy................................................ 3040
Real Estate Rentl\1 8 ................................... 3500
Apartments/Townhouses ......................... 3505
Commerclal ................................................3510
Condominiums .......................................... 35 15
Houses for Rent ........................................ 3520
Land (Acreage) .......................................... 3525
Storage .......................................................3535
Want to Rent .............................................. 3540
Manufactured Housi ng ............................. 4000
Lots............................................................. 4005
Movers....................................................... 4010
Rentals ....................................................... 40 15
Sales ........................................................... 4020
Supplles ..................................................... 4025
Want to Buy ............................................... 4030
Resort Property ......................................... 5000
Resort Property for sale ........................... 5025
Resort Property tor rent ........................... 5050
Employment...............................................6000
Accountlng/Financlal ................................ 6002
Adminlstrative/Professl onal .....................6004
Cashier/Clerk ............................................ 6006
Child/Elderly Care ..................................... 6008
Clerlcal ....................................................... 6010
Construction ............. , ................................ 601 2
Drivers &amp; Delivery .................................... 60 14
Educatlon ...................................................60 16
Electrical Plumbing ................................... 601 8
Employment Agencies .............................. 6020
Entertalnment ............................................ 6022 ·
Food Services............................................6024
Government &amp; Federal Jobs .................... 6026
Help anted· General .................................. 6028
Law Entorcement ...................................... 6030
Maintenance/Domestic ....................... .,. .... 6032
Management/Supervisory ........................ 6034
Mechanlcs .................................................. 6036
Medical ....................................................... 6(138
Musical ....................................................... 6040
Part-Tlme·Temporarles ............................. 6042
Restaurants ............................................... 6044
Sales ...........................................................6048
Technical Trades ....................................... 6050
Textlles/Factory ......................................... 6052

Other Services

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e xperience , upgrade
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Financial

Get re!lable phone
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Professional Services

Money To Lend
NOTICE Borrow Sman
Contact the OhiO Drvr·
s on of F nMcral lnstrtu·
trons Offrce of Consumer
Affarrs BEFORE you refl
nMce your ~'lome or obta :1 a loan BEWARE of
requests tor any •arge
adVance
payr1erts
ot
fees or Insurance Call
the OffiCe of Const.IT'or
Aft ars
toll
free
at
1-!166·278·0000 to learrr
If tt&gt;e r10rtgage broker or
tender
s property II·
censed (Thrs rs a public
servrce
announcement
from the OhiO Valley
Publishing Company)

500

Education

Busi neu &amp; Trade
School
Gallipolis Career
College
(Careers Close To Home)
can Today' 74().446·4367
1·800-2'4.()452
ga pohscareert&lt;&gt;llego ed"
Menber Accred I·

Accllld~ed

ng Counc I for lndeperodent
Co eges and Schools 12748
TU RNED DOWN ON
SOCIAL SECURITY SSI
No Fee Unless We Wrnl
1·888·582·3345

700

Agriculture

=;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;
··-=;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;
=

VOf:/AGE
Unlimited local
and long
distance calling
for only $24.99
per month.

2BA '700 sq ft
w1
Ar.p 2 AC
MY krd for pa~ &amp; r&amp; A Appl Lg Bath w F reparr
r.Jnn ng or not pace TV A only 3 y s
74().794·11 88
Form Equipment
old. Make an of'e Ca I
for IT'ore rfo 388·03C'
Recrea~onal
EBY,
INTEGRITY, 1000
Veh1cles House for sae 113 4tt&gt;
KIEFER BUILT.
VALLEY
HORSE.'L VE·
Ave Be:ow S3C 000 lm
STOCK
TRAILERS
mod ate possessron PtLOAD
MAX
EQU P·
1740\441-5165
MENT
TRAILERS.
2008 Artrc Cat 700 HI 2
Land (Acreage)
&amp;
CARGO
EXPRESS
seater 1 wrenct&gt; wrd
HOMESTEADER
shreld mag wheel Like ..ook ng to purel1ase .20
CARGO/CONCESSION
new $7000 or trade •or 4 to 80 acres o• good runt·
TRAILERS.
B+W
WDptekUp
rg ard w ea 10 bu d
GOOSENECK FLATBED
Call304-882-312'
cabrn &amp; PO e barr Prefer
$3999. VrEW OUR EN·
TIRE TRAILER INVE'N· 93 4-wheeler Kaw 300 locator wrth r .!0 to 30
mn
Ho ze Hosp •
TORY AT
CC 2x4 w/H !¥' &amp; Low tal Ct: (419) 680-3174
WWW.CARMICHAELRange-New Tres $'000
TRAILERS COM
hrm 74().645·5174
740·446·3825
Campen / RV' &amp;
Trailen
Have you prced a Johr
80 acres of land corr
Deere lately? vou'll be
RV
!Jr sed o 'lalf m o• road
svrpnsedr Check out our
Serv1Ce at Carmrchael 'rontage rural wate and
used
rnvef'tory
at
Tra Iars
approx
30 acres ot
www CAREQ com
Car
740-44&amp;3825
Locltetl
on
woods
IT'rchael
Eau pment
Jones Pd at V rtOI' OH
740-446·2412
RV Servtce at CafT'l Fo
r'o
:or •act
ct&gt;ael
Tr lers
513-256 9743
\I '"'Y 1-erguwn T Jdl)r 740-446·3825
ISO ,._, \\ mul
1-")1\Cr ~~~~~~~~
Real Estate
3500
''""' cl'nd
,lJed
kepi
Motorcycles
Rentals
,~50000
l(U ~76-21"7 ,,r ~~;;;;;;;~;;;;;;;~~~ ~~~~~~~~
'\ll-167.w615
94 Harey Davrdson Soft ~
tarl
446·9585
or
Apartments/
STIHL Sales &amp; Servrce 446·9595
Townhouses
Now Available at Carmr· I
ct-ael
EqUipment 2000
Automotive ' and 2 bodrOOIT' ~ts
740-446-2412
IUMIShed
and
' fl.
ntShed and 1-oo:JSCS "
Hay, Feed, Seed, Grain
Pomerov artl Mrddlepon.
Autos
M•xed round bales for =;;;;;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; sec. 'Y depo~ • reqL red
sale.
4x4
and
4x5 2000
rord
W rdstar no pets 740-992·221!1

1

800-537 9528

600

Animals

Pets
1 male SSOO. 1 femaln
$550 Yorkshire Terror,
740-985·3852

Security

l\IIT
Free Home Security
S850 Value
w ith purchase of
alarm monitoring
s ervices from ADT
Security Services.
Call1 -888·274-3888

Tax / Accounting

AMEBLCAN_1AX.
BELlff
Settle IRS Taxes for
a fraction of what
you owe. If you owe
over $15,000 In back
taxes call now for a
free consultation .
1-877·258·5142

Strhl

Charnsaws

3BR

~one

'!'0"'

740-446-2412
SEPTIC
PUMPING
Gallra
Co
OH
and
Mason Co WV Ron
EvMs
Jackson.
OH

Buyrng

I

I

900

Merchandise

Equipment / Supplie'
Now's the best trme to
buy a Rotor Tiler 4
5.6' &amp;T3pt Mch
JuTI's
Far-1
Equrp·
ment, 740-446·9777

Toy Poodles for sale.
CKC, vet checked. ta1ls
docKed
dewclaws removed,
shots
and
worr1ed. colors are cho·
Fuel/ Oil / Coal /
chotato and black, males
Wood/ Gas
$300, temales $350 Md
up, 740·992·7007
Seasoned firewood
All Hardwood.
74().853·2439
or
AKC Mrmature Schnau· 740.446·9204
zer's, 2 pan• male whrte
Miscellaneous
chocalate, 1 chocalate
M, 1 chocalato F, whrte
on chest &amp; back feet, 2 1'2 Dollar lndran Gotd
parents
on
premrses, Corn, 1909 $260, Also
takrlng deposrts Call to 1899 Plarn Morgan Sri·
Dollar,
Looks
see 740·441-1657 Also. ver
stud &amp; groomrng serv· B.U ·$175.
740·533·3870
1ces

Auto A?C runs looks
S2 100 2BR APT Close to Ho •
good
askrng
OBO. Ca I 740-44b-4122 zer Hosp tal on SR •60
CIA t740) 441.()194
or 339.()636
CONVENIENTLY
LO·
98 Sellnng Convertible CATED
&amp;
AFFORD·
87 M•tsubrshr 05 N f'J&amp; ABLE Townhouse apan·
636
r'erts
ardor
SIT'all
1 40·446·1768 1v rnsa
hol.iSes for rc t
Cl"ll
Ouahty Cars &amp; Truck~ 740-441 111 1 •or appl·
w warranty all pnceo to cat on &amp; nformatron
sell, 15 yrs n busrness .;;;.;,F.;.ree~R-e_n_
t _S_pe_c_l_ai-1..
!1Cook Motors, 328 Jack· 2&amp;3BR apts S395 and
son Prke,
up
Central A r
D
Gall polrs,
OH ~ookur
tenart
~ays
740·446·0103
elcctnc
ca between
the ~ou s of 6A-6P
Vans
EHO
Ellm View Apts .
2008
Dodge
Grand
(304)882·3017
Caravan. sdvc
6 cyl
lrke 'lew to rruch C&lt;Jr •or Twr" R1vers Tower rs nc
Grannv. 740·949 2202
ceptrng app rcat ons lor
walt ng I st fo HUD Sl.bWant To Buy
s zed 1 BR apartr1ent
lor \l'le e derty d sa bled
Want to buy Junk Cars.
call675 6619
call 740{188 0884

w

o

3000

Real Estate
Sales

~

Beaulll ul Apts

WV&lt;ld Or

Stnpod orange cat to
g1veaway to good hor'c
or farm Good w/chrldren.
740-446·3248.

Jet Aeration Motors
repa ired. new &amp; rebuilt
In stock. Call Ron
Evans 1·800·537·9528

Ill Jack·

son Estates. 52 We I
lrt'!l" $4 1 1 to

$600
740 44f ~)
E qu. I Hou ng Oppunu
r ty P11S
stitutoor IS
12 Unit Apt . Complex. Equ I Oprortun IV P o
vlder and En•ploycr
446·0390.
For Sale By Owner

�-

-

--

-~-·--------~---~ -

--- -- - -- . -

Page 84 • The Daily Sentinel
Apartmenh/
Townhouses

www.mydailysentinel.com

Tuesday, March 23, 2010

Good
to the

Last
Word

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

That's the word from
subscribers who read
our newspaper daily
for captivating news
stories, dining and
entertainment reviews,
travel deals, local
weather reports and so
much more!

E'xp Of!ICe Mgr

req

rT'USI

CO.'nputer

•Room Additions &amp;
Remodeling

• Now Garage•
·Electrical &amp; Plumbing
• Roofing &amp; Glitter•
• Vinyl Sldong &amp; Painting
• Pallo ond Porch Docka

wv 036725
V.C. YOUNG Ill

992·(•215 7-111-5'11·111'15

Pomeroy. Ohio
30 Yc.ra Lac.! Experience
- Winter S lals -

ROBERT
BISSEll

Roofmg- StdmgPaintmg- Gutter; Decks- Ltc.
For F.1st C'ouncou'i
Sci"\ tee Free
Estrmate~ &amp;
affordable Prices,
Callllcnnis Ho) d
740-992-2029

Clerical
boOks
have

CARPENTER
SERVICE

Construction

CONSTRUCTION
·New Homes
• Garages
·Complete
Remodeling

tnfoCision o"
Prot
WOOl E

ronment
E'xce

t Benet

Pack

ago
P dTra

Weekly Pay :ld
Opportunt
Truck Onver Wanted
Req 2 Y'5 exp
CassA·CDL
Res.r."'e w/3 Work Ref
Send to

740-985-4141

740-416-1834

Full~ in~un-d

Fn·e l'Stimales- 25+ ~ears C\perit•nt'l'
l'ol•ffiliatcd "il h \liJ..• \larc·um Ruolin~: &amp; R&lt;mudtllnJ!I

Great coverage and
superior service
(that's easy on your wallet)
Hometown Insurance Center
tereeeOhometownl..-....-.center.c:om

304-773-1111

Rcplar&lt;·mcnt
\\indo\\S and
\ 1n) I "iding
pcciaJi,ts, LTD
£740) 742-2563

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

Drivers &amp; Delivery

47239 Riebel Rd., Long Bottom, OH

Ill Erie

~Insurance·

Stop &amp; Compare

SUNSET

441 729501'645-7371

Foundation~

MIKE W. MARCUM, OWNER

740-992-1671

Ou•CI&lt;·
have
sklls

• Room additions • Roufing •
• C:eneral Remodeling • Pole &amp; llur~e
Barn' • \in) I &amp; \\ood Fenclng

.,.1_o.;...t_a_l....:;;C...;..o.;...n.;,...st_r..;;..uc.:...t_io;_n_ _ _ ~·

~

011c Call to Do II All
Pole Barns Metal Roofs
Fn-e &amp; \\ater Damage
. Dl) '' allfRepa1r

O"ner
Am\ \..teran
Tom Wolfe

740-416-2575

• iding • \ in) I

\\ indO\\S • Metal
nnd Shingh: Hoofs
• necks • Additions
•llectrlral

740-742-3411

Call end Schedule Your
Interview:
1-888-IMC.PAYU exl
2331

Racine, Ohio 740-247-2019

http:IIJobs.lnfoclslon.c

om

Owners:
Jon Van Meter &amp;
Paul Rowe

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

R I . llollon
Irurking

ty Fa PO Box jJ4
PI Pleasa t WV 25550

Dump lrurlo:
~nil-e

ad
04 15/10

\\edodn
Litnt

BiNETRY

\D\~

740-985-4422

d a lnffi'¥

g

()art

1op ~

Fu?n !ll'e

www.t:imberc:reeJtcabmetr7.com

46.92 0

740-856-2609

2459 St. Rt. 160 • Gallipolis

Cell

Stanley TreeTrimming
&amp; Removal
Vetonnarf
ASSIStant
'leedcd. Expenence pre-

:-Ill\\

Selhng

• Ford &amp; Motoreraft
Part' • E:.ngme~.
Tmnsfcr C'ase\ &amp;
Tran,mtsslol''

b1..t Will tra n
SOrT'O weekerCIS
req1.. red M OlrT'L.rT' wage
&amp;; d resurT'e to French

ferred

PT FT

Get A Jump
on
SAVINGS

Town Vetennary C me
360 SR 160 Ga polls 0'
fax 74D-446-4101

• Aftermarket
Repl.tcement Sheet
Meta' &amp; Components
F r o\ \1

\

Reference~ A\111lable'

Call 0.11) t:mle) "

740-"91-RO+t

Racmc.Oh o
740-949-1956

l\IICHAEL'S .
SER\' IC I~ CJ~,,'ER

155.5 NYE A\·c.
Pomcn n·. OH

CAREER
IN THE
CLASSIFIEDS

•1 xpe_ncnced

• 011 &amp; hiler ch :1 e
• runcLp~
• Broke ~en ace
• AC Recharge
• l\hnor e'l.haust
rcpatr • Ttre Repatr
• Tmnsmtss on Ftltcr
&amp; Hutd Ch.mge
• Genernl 'l.kcham~.
\\ork

LEWIS
CO:\CRETE
CONST RUCTION
Concrete Removal
and Replacement

\II l)pe or
Concretr \\ork
29 \cars t xpl·rience

David Lewis
740-992-6971

Guttering
Searro ess Gur.e:-s
Roof r&gt;g S1d ng Gutters
Insured &amp; Bonded
74Q-653-9657

Public Notice
NOTICE TO BIDDERS
STATE OF OHIO
DEPARTMENT
OF
TRANSPORTATION
Columbus, Ohio
Office of Contracts
Legal Copy Number:
101059
Sealed proposals will
be accepted from pre·
qualified bidders at the
ODOTOffice of Con·
tracts until 10:00 a.m.
on AprilS, 2010. Project
101059 is located In
Meigs County, SR-12430.00 and Is a MISCEL·
LANEOUS project. Tho
date set for completion
of this work shall be as
set forth In the bidding
proposal. Plans and
Specifications are on
f1le in the Department
of Transportation.
(3) 16,23

For employment consideration,
send resume to:

\

Q"

Pale lams, Garages,
New Construction, Boom Add.,

Roofing, Shingles, MataJ, Rubber,

.. Concrete Work,
Any 'rypa remodeling, Decks
Phona:7~7~18

Call 746-447-3842
35 Jll exp. Free Est. Fully Insured

740·949-2217

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

Help Wanted

Help Wanted

Hours
7:00am-8 :00pm

CORNERSTONE
CONSTRUCTION
Roofmg. Stdmg.
Sofitt, Ded.;s, Doors.

\\ mdo"s, Electnc,
Plumbmg. Dl)" illl
Remodeling. Room
AddtllOIIS
l.()('UI Co ntractor
740-367-0544
Free F~timntc'

740-367-0536

®

MT SECTION HEAD
Pleasant Valley Hospital currently has
openings for a full-time MT Section
Head. Three years experience in
Microbiology. WV license required. Must
be able to work all sh1fts, holidays and
weekends.
Please send resumes to:

.

Pleasant Valley Hospital

Pam Caldwell
c/o Gallipolis Dally Tribune
825 Third Ave.
Gallipolis, OH 45631

F

Jl

29625 Bashan Road
Racine. OH 45771

poses to change the
post mining land use
form undeveloped to
commercial.
The application Is on
file for public viewing
at the Meigs County
Recorder's
Office,
Meigs County Courthouse, 100 E. Second
Street, Pomeroy, Ohio
45769 and shall remain
so for at least 30 days
following the last date
of publication of this
notice. Written comments or requests for
on informal conference
may be filed with the
Division of Mineral Resources Management,
2045 Morse Road,
Building H-3, Columbus, Ohio 43229-6693
within 30 days otter the
last date of publication
of this notice
(3) 9, 16, 23, 30

Ol~

•• constructi

Hill's Self
Storage

PUBUC NOTICE
Southern Ohio Coal
Company has submitted an Application to
Revise a Coal Mining
Permit (ARP) #R·354-65
to the Ohio Department
of Natural Resources,
Division of Mineral Resources Management.
The ARP area to bo re·
vised Is located In Sec·
tlon 18, Township 7 N,
Range 15 W, Salem
•Township,
Meigs
County, Ohio. This ARP
•encompasses 7.0 ocros
'and Is located on the
, Wilkesville Quadrangle
•7
Minute U.S.G.S.
:•Quadrangle Map, ap·
• proximately 0.5 miles
"'southwest of Danville,
:ohio, at the Intersection of Ohio State
,Route 325 and Salem
Township Rood No.
.. 190.
• Tho application pro-

S10 perlb Ca h onI)
Pml ,req ~ od
htpmcnt s am\ e e\ er.

Owners:
Tim Cremeans &amp; Roger Sellers

(74ll) 9!12-119111

We ha\ e nn opening for a fulltime customer sen 1ce position.
Succe sful applicant mu t be
people oriented, pleasant
telephone ctiqucllc. profes ional
and dependable. Must ha\e
experience in computers. nnd
enjo) \\ ork.ing '" ith number;.
Po ition offer all compan)
beuclit including health and life
insurance. 40 I K, paid \ acation
nml pl!rsonal d::l) s.

t.&amp;f'Et', 11&lt;\U fronn hd&lt;b 011

c/o Human Resources

2520 Valley Dr., Pt. Pleasant. WV 25550
or Fax to {304) 675·6975 or
apply on-line at ~~..QU

AA/EOE

lie Sp (lilll:e In Rt'plaamenr\\mdon s

for 0/dn Home~ ,\ Trmlen
\ o t?\rrtl charge to rc place lllt'tal fmme 11 11u/on 1

VISA =
Ridutrd Smith
( o 01\ ncr \"c f'reqd~nt
C'&lt;'l&lt;lh•

OH

PSI CONSTRUCTION
RoomAddllton~. Remod~ling.

\tetal &amp;
Roof,, :\e" Home,, Stdmg. Dcd, .
Bathroom Remodeling Lteen ed &amp; Insured
Rkk Prire- 17 )n. E\perirncc
hmgl~

WV1040954 Cell740-416·2960 740.992.0730

�Tuesday, March 23, 201 0

www.mydallysentinel.com

BLONDIE

Dean Yeung/Denis Lebrun

HE SAID HE'O RUN IT
UP THE l=LAGPOlEAI-ID
6EE IF ANVO"'E
SALUTED IT

CROSSWORIJ
By THOMAS JOSEPH
ACROSS
2 Louvre
1 Florida
contents
team
3 Sticky
7 Recite the
stuff
rosary
4 Source
11 Ark's land- 5 D1d yard
mg s1te
work
12 Colossal
6 Proofrng
13 Areas over
note
home plate 7 Lrght
15 "Underparticle
29 Minute
stand?"
8 Use the
part
16 Put down
track
31 Measured
18 Liner stop 9 G row
33 Gymnast
21 Sentence
older
Korbut
10 Agreesubject,
mem34 M asseur's
usually
able
bars
place
22 Garage
answer
35 Dupe
job
14 Close, as 21 Carp
22 Shoe
36 Ch1ck's
24 FBI
a Jacket
shade
mom
worker:
16 Type a
Abbr.
password 23 For each 37 Court
25 Catchdivider
25 Tourist's
17 Singing
38 Mendes of
phrase
aid
cowboy
28 Mississ1pp1
m ovies
26 Homer's
Gene
39 Jazz horn
explorer
dad
NEW CROSSWORD BOOK! &lt;;eM $4 7S (Ch~ -;j to
27 ChP-f
ThOmas JosP.Ilh Book 2 PO Ocx ':&gt;36476 Orlando fl 32853 6415
Ramsay
29 Surgery
remtnder
30 Russian
refusal
31 Hardens
32 lmpass1ve
34 Places to
drive
slowly
40 Verse
expert
41 Swiss city
42 - Domini
43 Com plete
the bill

I ALWAYS THOUGHT
TI-IAT WAS JUST
A SAYI NG !

:a-23

FUNKY WINKERBEAN

The Daily Sentinel • Page 85

Tom Batiuk

AR THE HORRIBLE
J"' I LEAflNEP 'IE!&lt;Y CAfll.y
ni4T I COilUJN'T COLIN/
0JJ ANYON61tl itlt$ 1./fe/

DOWN

1 N eon, for
one

THELOCKHORNS
HI &amp; LOIS

W illiam Hoest

Brian and Greg Walker

TTS

Patrick McDonnell

ZITS

THERE.

: THE FAMILY CIRCUS
Bil Keane

" I DON'T NEED A MIRROR ... I HAVE LORETTA."

Jerry Scott and Jim Borgman

CONCEPTIS SUDOKU
by Dave G reen

--- f-.-

4
5
3

3
41
3 6
9 4~
7
1
6
1
5
-

2

" Feel free to Interrupt me while I'm
d oing my homework."

DENNIS T H E MENACE

Hank Ketchum
[)lfllCU

1

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16

8

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"'

2
9

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6

9
7 5
8 9
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G £ B 9 17 6 ~
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6 9 L 9 17 B
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B g £

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G £
B g
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HAPPY BTR1HDAY for Tuesda), March 23, 2010:
Thb year. misunderstandJn&amp;" come from out of
nowhere. It is ifnrortant to Sla) (\!l\tered,. abo\ eboord
and not to take others' act10ns_personallv. You could
fmd de\elopmg this attitude &lt;hallengmg, but most
worthwhile. Remain posith-e and direct. You kno\\
what is needed to make vour life "ork. Often you \\ill
ope. to head out alone or take lhe lead If you are single,
reJ,lting rould be dlaDenging, as ol'tt?n you feel pres-sured by situations - mitside .md \\1lhtn the relationship. If you are attached, learn to defuse tens!Ofl and
stress \\1th your sweetie. Someone born under lhe Sign
CAl\.'e'ER can be difficult to deal \\1th.
771C Stars SlltT..o the Kind of Dent )Llt&lt;71 Hm~ 5 DynamiC;
4--Po._qtr.x; 3-Am-age; 2-~ 1-D:fficrdt
ARifS (Mardi 21-Aprill9)
*** Tensionbuilds. You rnis:ht wiSh )OU could be

Vill.GO (Aug. 23-Sept 22)

**"*** Yw make the right decisions, e\ en under

stress. You know \\ luch way to go. Sta' on top of your
\\Ork, and be aware of a building confuct.lngenuit}
and sensiti\ity could sa' e the day !'\urture a ke\ per·
!Ul. Tonight \\'here people are.
U BRA (Sept 23-0ct. 21)
**** lf)ou're \\ondering what t&lt;. the \\tSt.-.;t
appro.1ch to a conflicted "ituation, lOS" the LSSUe out to
those who rrught be i."'llpacted b) il You \\ould be well
ad\'ised to keep your own counsel about opllllQjlS. \our
persona] life rontinues to challenge ) ou. TOnight
Happy at home.
SCORPIO (Oct. 23-1'\io\'. 21)
***"** Take an 0\ emew, undetstandmg) ou GIDnot change \\rut someone feels. If YOU c.m, find some
way that two different attitudes could meq;e or at least

al hom&lt;&gt; Som&lt;&gt; of} ou might be t"ortunate enough to be

coextSl A\ oid bL\Ck and whit&lt;' and e1thCI'Or "Jtuations.

able to do just that, while Others COI1Slder dosing theu
doorl OWienges blow in from left field. and you "on·
der "hat to do and which way to go. Tonight: Stay
dose to the hearth
l AURUS (April2(}-~ fay 20)
Othe~ h.n-e a Jot to sa); whether you \\ant
to hear it or not. Ren1ain upbeat &lt;md pos1th e, despite
pres!&gt;ure. Refuse to react t~' somrone's '' ord~ or' oiC'\'.
Detach and take the high road. You'll g.un depth and
under.:;tanding. Tonight Catch up on a frit'nd'o: ~ws.
GE.\IL'I;I (~.fay 21-june 20)
* ** Slow down and take a hard look at your
finanre;. 'roor style and m.~ of communirnting
draws many people, especialh m a meeting. Don't
romnut unless you are Sw-e ol) our;elf Kno'' what
you want St.l) upbeat 10night GllhL'r &gt;our bills. Take
a hard look at) our budget.
CAr-:CER (June 21-juh 22)
**"** You '' ake up gung-ho and read) Though
you h!i a ha$1e or two, ) ou \\ill come out on top Your
t.'lle1ID and magnetism mark ~our deosxms. V1SU&lt;1hze
rather than cause) ourself,, problem. Tonight: Do
whale' er makes YOU happ)
LEO Quh 23-Aug. 22)
Krlow when }OU Ccmnol \\in and l'let.'i to c;tep
bad. How you h.mdle a personal matter rould change
radically ns pressure builds W}t.lt might be wto;e i&lt;; to
remam nonreacth e. 1hink about pt'I"'Qn,llto;sues rathe1
than act on them. Tonight Get some extra u2.'s.

Tonight. Feed \OUT mind ,;,ome candy'
SAGmARIUS (~o,, 22-Dec 21)
**** You nught want to rethink an ac;sociation.
espe:iall) if) ou kt'\&gt;p encountering conflicts. \ \'ork ,..,th
someone dire.·tly. understanding" hat i~ going on'' ith
him or her. Allow LD1h ~ rnUln per-onalldlk if you
want to armmplish a'lot. Torught: Togetherness works.
CAPRICOR."i (Dw. 22-Jan 19)
**** Other.:; ~·mpl)' have U!dy Lurktm the1rside.
The wise C..oat "ill back off and allow key people to
ha' e their wav. )ou mJt;ht feel resistant. but that attitude \\ill only muse a problem Sta) light .md eilS)
mth others. Tonight: Go along mth someone else s

* ***

***

rnOIQ!

AQUA RIUS Oan 20--f't'b IS)

*'** Emphasue "hat' ou can get done as op)Xl5ed

to \\hat )OU would I .e toan"Omplf;h. Mamtairung a
re.1listic perspecti\ e might be more important thari you
real e. You rould be making mountainS out of molehills. Stop. Tonight Squt'\&gt;:re m "'rne aerd.&lt;1e
PISCtS (Feb. 19-March 20)
Your mo--mwty could pn'\-ent a cc:nfljct
lx&gt;h\'l't.'ll h\Omapr interest., I\fan} people are\ ested in
) our chotces INtach \\1th care, ~-.no,,ing \\hat you
''ant and desu-e A smile~ a long '' il) in healmg a
rift Thnight: Let go of wor"' and ~.

**"***

/aarutlrrt• Big.u t&lt; "'' fhto lnlmttt
r .m ,.uqu ntHga~:m L

Ill hlf!•

�Page B6 • 111e Daily Sentinel

Tuesday, March 23,

www .mydailyscntinel.com

osu

OHSAA State Girls Basketball Tournament
Findlay Liberty-Benton
wins first state title

Harvest Prep bests
Berlin Hiland 45-41 for title

from Page BI
because we haven't been
looking ahead "
Well, that and having a
guy like Evan Turner.
The Big Ten'11 player of
the year bounced back
from one ol the worst
shooting nights of his
career with 24 points, corning an assist and a rebound
within his third triple-double of the ~easnn Diebler
added 20 points and David
Lighty had 18, including
six in the last 75 seconds to
help put an end to Georgia
Tech's last-ditch run.
ACC Freshman of the
Year Derrick Favors. who
played just 5 minutes in the
first half after picking up
two quick fouls. keyed an
11-0 run that brought the
Yellow Jackets to 65-61
o,qth I :47 to play. But
Turner made two free
throws, Lighty converted
both of his after an intentional foul and the IOthseeded Yellow Jackets (2313) never threatened again.
"Obvwusly everybody
saw Kansas lose in our
bracket," Georgia Tech
coach Paul He" itt said.
''I'm sure that heightened
the anticipation for this
game because whoever
came out of this game, now
you're a couple games
away from getting to the
.Final Four."
The Buckeyes wiJJ play
sixth-seeded Tennessee on
Friday night in St. Louis in
a Mid.,.,est Regional semifinaL Northern Iowa and
Michigan State play in the
other semifinal.
"It's good to get a win
out of the way." Turner
said. ''!'jow you just have
to focus on the next one.
You can't really spend time
celebrating:·
UC
Santn
Barbara
humped and hounded
Turner into niJ;Ie points on
ju.st 2-of-13 ~hooting
Friday night, and Georgia
Tech dtdn't give htm much
more breathing room. Two

2010

Yellow Jackets were glued
to Turner every time he
brought the ball up the
court. with top defender
!man
Shumpert
Turner's backcourtmate in
junior high - all over him .
But there's a reason
Turner is a candidate to
add national player of the
year to his Big Ten honors .
When the Yellow J
·
eased up on their su
ing press to start the
ond half, Turner and the
Buekeyes simply took it to
Georgia Tech. With Turner
feeding them the ball,
Lighty and Diebler lit it up
from outside and William
Buford
and
Dallas
Lauderdale pounded the
ball inside.
As for Turner, he just hll
from wherever he wanted.
"We had a game plan on
how to do things off ball
screens and we didn't do
that
all
the
time,"
Shumpert
said .
··sometimes he got free
"and made us pay."
Beating Ohio State mtght
have been a tall order anyway, but the Yellow
Jackets had no chance with
Gani Lawai and Favors,
their two leading scorers
and rebounders. in foul
trouble for much of t.
game. Favors, who ft
ished with 10 points and
four rebounds, fouled out
in the la::.t minute. Lawai,
who had three fouls before
halftime. had 11 points.
Turnovers dido 't help,
either. The Yellow Jackets
had 21 miscues, eight
more than they had in
Friday night's victory over
Oklahoma State.
But the Buckeyes didn't
exactly keep the ball under
lock and key. either. They
had 18. with Turner
responsible for nine of
them.
.. As long as he gets me
24 (points), nine (assists)
and nine (rebounds). I'll
live with it." Ohio State
coach Thad Matta said.
"When the time was needed. he delivered for us ....
As I told these gu) s, we
got what we came for. on
to St. Louis."

COLL'MBUS, Ohio (AP)
f·mdlay I ibcrt)' kenton
COLUMBUS. Ohio (AP) - Cheyenne Rose sank two
t:oach Nate Irwin knew hi:-. undersized squad couldn't out free throws with 37 seconds left and Shicole Watts added
muscle MiddlctQwn Madison so the strategy \HIS to push the two more from the foul Ime to give Harvest Prep a 45-4 I
JMI.C
win over Rehn Hiland Saturday for a DivisiOn IV title in its
It \\orked .1'- the I·aglcs limited l\t&lt;idt.son to four goat ... in first tournament appearance.
21 attempts Ill the second half while outscon1g them by IS
Berlin Hilantl (25-3) got 19 point.s from Hila!)• Weaver,
points to pull awny for n 66-44 win and its lirst state tttle 1n hut the llawks lost in the chHmpionship game for the second
Ph ision HI on Saturdn\.
straight season.
"We had to run the tioor and hopefully wear them down
Watts hud 14 points and I0 rebounds for the Warriors (27and hopefully affect thctr l:!hooting,'' Irwin said.
l J, who were up 41-39 when Noelle Yoder stole the ballnenr
The Eagle-; (27-0) broke a ttght game by outscoring the rnidcmu1 and p.tS&lt;;Cd ulu•nd to Weaver for a layup to tie the
Mohawks 15-6 in the third quarter for a 53-40 at.lvantage score.
that was capped by n layup from Amanda Hyde with five
llnrvest Prep brought the ball up and Weaver was called
seconds left.
for blocking after Rose dribbled into her in the backcourt.
Hyde, an Associated Press first team All-Ohio selection, After a timeout. Rose sank both free throws for a 43-41lead.
had 13 of her 23 points in the fiN half in the first meeting
Wea\Clr then drove into the lane and lost the ball, and pollof unbeaten teams m a final since Cincinnati Mount Notre session \\as awarded to Harvest Prep in the ensuing scramDame beat Dayton Chaminadc-Julienne in the 2004 ble. Weaver sto e the ball, but as Yoder was bringing it to the
Dt~ is ion championship.
frontcourt. Destmy Turner knocked it away to Watts. She
Caite Craft '&gt;cored II in the second half to increase the was fouled and added two free thro"s with 16 seconds left.
Eagle&lt;:' (27-0) four-point halftime Jead, 38-34. She finished
Harvest Prep rallied from a 27-21 halftime deficit to lead
\\tth 19 and Amber Peterson added 13 points.
38-37 going mto the fourth quarter.
Brittany Shields had 13 points and Ally Malott JO for
Hiland's biggest lead of the third was 30-23, but Harvest
Madison (27-1 ).
Prep leveled the score at 32 on a Watts free tl1row. Yoder
Madison had gradually cut a 10-point second quarter immediately countered with a three-pomter before baskets
deficit and got to within 40-38 three minute&lt;&gt; into the third from Lucia Herndon and Thrner gave the Warriors the lead
but Peterson n.1iled a three-pointer from the left corner. at the I :46 mark of the quaner. Jaren Francis added a layup
Hyde hit a jumper and Craft made t"l) free throws and u to make it 38 35. but Jessica StutL.man'::. driving shot pulled
Ia) up to provide the Engles a 49-38 edge.
Hiland to within one.
"E\ eryonc realized if we wanted to wm we had to keep
The battle of the A~sociated Press Division IV eo-Plhyers
our defense up." Peterson said.
of the Year was one-sided early hut began to heat up in the
The Eagles ure kno\\n for their long-range shooting - second quarter. Weaver scoret.l seven of Hilands first lO
they made six three pomters to give them 235 for the season, pmnts to help the Hawks take a 13-9 lead after eight minsecond-most in Ohio girls history to the 241 hv Lima Bath utes. Meanwhik, Watts die! not attempt a shot.
in 2004-05 -but Madison coach John Rossi was impressed
by their defcn~e.
. 'Going 4 for 21: that's tou~h to win any ballgame against
::t great team hke that,'' he smd.
Madison. m its first tate appearance. had trouble early.
too. It \\Cot fi,e minutes without a point while LibertyCOLUMBUS. Ohio (AP) - Canton McKinley coach
Benton ran off 15 pomts m ro\\ to take a 32-19 lead. The Pamela Davis felt confident that her team was going to win
Eagles \\ere up 34-24 \\hen Lindsa) Hopkins drove the tts first state title -even when the game wasn't decided as
floor to end Madison?s scoreless streak. Adrianne Lehman the clock struck zero.
folio" cd With n three-pomter and later a free throw to make
E\eryone watched as Toledo Waite';:, Shanice Mcl'eal
it 34-30 \Hlh t\\o mmutcs Jeft in the first half.
stood ulone at the foul line for a pair of free throws and her
"We kne" the) weren't scared of us." H)de said. "We team trailing b) two McNeal missed the first attempt, and
kne" \ve weren t scared of them.'
the Canton McKinle) claimed a 49-47 victol)' in the
Dn ision I final on Saturday.
"We have a lot of composure," Davis said. "Even when we
were behind \\e didn't panic."
Laneisha Lennon hit the go-ahead free throw with 18.1
seconds left and Ameryst Alston made a free throw for a
COLUMBUS, Ohto (AP) -Kettering Alter got a taste of two-pomt lead w1th 6.6 seconds to go.
what it often docs to opponents m tem1s of relentless defense
''I had to hit it. I couldn't'let mv teammates down.'· Alston
and turning a game around when needed.
•
said.
Victimi.wd by a slow stat1, Alter rallied to within one of
Waite (24-2) brought the ball up court and had a final
Shaker Heights Hatha\\ ay Brown into the third quarter only chance off an inbound pass with 0.9 seconds to play.
to see the Blazers pull away for a 48-35 victory and a sec- ,\1cNeal received the ball and was fouled bv Lennon with no
ond straight Di\ i&lt;;ion IJ girl&lt;&gt; state title on Saturda).
time showing.
"The\ did to us what we do to a lot of people." Alter co"We thought they would go to No. 40 (McNeal) and they
head coach Kendal Peck :;aid. "For a two- or three-minute did.'' Davis said. "We thought they would go for the lob and
stretch of the fir~t period we couldn't e,·en make a pas~. We they did. I didn't have a great angle but thought it was a
do that sort of thing to a lot of teams. They turned the tables jump ball or block. That was a lot of pressure on the young
on us."
Jad).''
Mylan Woods had 16 points and seo,en rebound::. to help
McNeal wa&lt;&gt; by herself as,the teams gathered near their
Hnthm\a) Brown defend its title. The senior \\oas also part of benches. Her shot hit the rim and bounced away. and she
ninth time in 10 games by
the state runner-up teams in 2007 and '08.
shooting 49 .3 percent (37
crumbled to the court in tears.
"HB is a force to be reckoned '' ith," she said. ''To come
of 75) to the Red Flash's
"I feel real bad for the kid," Waite coach Manny May said,
do" n here (Columbu ) four straight times is a blessing.''
from
Page
Bl
28.6 percent (20 of 70)
if
it
had
to
be
somebody
I'd
rather
it
be
her.
She's
a
"but
Woods. the As ociated Press Dh tsion 11 Player of the junior. She cam~ c.m come back and ltttrn from that."
and ou rebounded them
Year. nl'&gt;o had four as&lt;;tsts and three steals. including one
AI ton had 22 points and Sydnee Penn 15 for McKinley gy. poking at the ball. get- 55-3~. St Francis was 7 of
during a ke) stretch earl) in the fourth quarter.
(25-3).
ting loose balls and 30 from 3-point range
Hath a" a) Bro" n (23-4) entered the final period ahead 30''They were what we
27 but ran of1 etght strmght pomts with the last being a buck- . Natasha Ho"ard had 23 points, 14 rebound::., eight steals rebounds, and it really
and
four
blocks
in
a
losing
effort
before
fouling
out
with
6.6
expected.''
Hodges said.
helped a lot,'' Prahalis said.
et b) Alanna Guy off an outlet from Wood to make it 38seconds
left.
"We
knew
what
we were
Maybe
it
-,.·as
Foster's
27.
"She came to piny.'' ~1ay ~aid. "She challenged her team- warning that the Red Fla!'&gt;h getting into:·
''To ha\C a mce nm hkc that allowet.l us more breathing
mates to play with her."
This was the Red Flash's
resembled Iowa that made
room,'' Woods ~atd.
With the score tied at 47 and under a minute to play. his players dctem1ined to first appearance under
The Blazer~ led 2H-18 three minutes into the second half
but Alter (25-2) got to\\ ithin 28-27 four minute~ later before Howard got a ~teal with the pressure help from teammate ne\er let St. Francis into the Fruchtl. a former Penn
Brooke Hunt but tlowart.l missed a shot, as did McNeal on game. Ohio State scrambled State star who got her
Wood&lt;: drO\C the lane f'or a three-point advantage.
·•we told the ktds to win the th1rd quarter,'' Alter co-head the foll&lt;m.
from I 6 points down to beat te •. m into the NCAA tourHoward fouled Lennon going for the rebound to set up the Iowa 66-64 in the Big Ten nament despite being only
coach Chris Hart ..aid. "We were in fine position to make a
\vinning foul shot by Lennon. Howard's fifth foul came tournament.
run but we didnt tnke care of the ball."
fifth-seeded
in
the
Whitney Dabbelt had eight points for A~ter, the_ 2008 :-tate when teammate Brook'"e Hunt missed a jumper following
Conference
"'I11ey have an opportuni- Northea~t
champion "hentt beat Hatha"ay Brown m the tttle game. Lennon's mis:; of the second free throw.
ty to go pretty far.'' Red tournament. Only three
It was Howard, the 2010 Associated Press Ms. Basketball, Flash
Woods had &lt;;tX points and Hathaway Brown led 11-5 after
coach
Susan seasons ago. the Flash
the first quarter. Alter had only three free throws by Dabbelt who rallied Watte from 10 down in the fourth quarter with Robinson Fruchtl said. won jus s1x games.
until Ashley C'hristte made a lavup wtth 31 seconds after the several steals off a high pre&lt;&gt;sure defense that had the 6-foot- "Even someone who's not a
The Red Flash took
3 forward hawking the ball out to midcourt.
Knights had missed their first four shots from the floor.
some hope into the game
fan
can
tell
there's
a
big
difYet, it \\asn't enough.
"Our defensl\e effort \\a&lt;; outstandmg," Hathawa) Brown
that a near upset of Pitt at
"It means ever) thing to me.'' Alston said of the champi- ference between a team
coach Paul Barlo" ... aid. "I'm sttll trying to let it sink in, the
Petersen
Even
the
from
the
Big
Ten
and
a
team
onship. ''Words can't describe it."
back-to-bad. (utJes).
from our conference ... but Center earlier this
we want to be the first team might ~how that th
from
the
Xortheast could play at this le\
and
n
No.9
seed
in
the
program.
So
we've
got
a
lot
season
"TI1e character of this team
(Conference) to win an but the talented Buckeye
hac; been building,'· said 12-team league tournament. to be happy about.''
never gave them .. hance.
The Vols took the lead with i'\CAA game.''
Goins." ho wa... among those But they swept through
With Pitt m1ss;ng from
Britne)
Hodges
and
though
the
MAC
po~tscason
all
charges
against
arrested:
an
18-2
run
that
sta11ed
with
from PageBJ
him were later d1smissed. ''I and then dispatched the 12 minutes left in the first Brittany Lilley scored 16 the tournament : 1eld foltlunk we're saying something Hovas 97-81.
half, turning a two-point point~ and Samantha lowing a disappointing
and starter Tyler Smith was fnr oun;elves. We ha\'e been
''"it's bittei~\\Cet." Bassett deficit into a 14-point lead. Leach had 14 for St. 16-15 season. onlv several
kicked ofT the team
a trof- through a lot, and just to have said. "We've got a lot to he Ohio kept firing 3-pointers Francis. which is 0-10 in thousand fans. shO\\ ed up
fic stop that resulted in gun, the chance to advance to the proud of. We wt•athered the
the NCAA tournament. at
the
12 .50S-scat
drug and alcohnl charges. Sweet 16 is a blessing.''
storm and got a MAC cham· - they tried 26 in the game. losing each time by at Petersen Center. Pitt bid
making
10
but
never
got
They won their next five
111e Bobcats camet.l their pionshil&gt; when ever) hody
for the event with the
games. beatin_s top-mnkt;d underdog status honestly: countct us out. And we any closer than 50-45 on least 15 points.
Freeman's
3-pointer
with
13
expectation it would reach
Ohio
State.
No.
8
in
the
Kansa~ with SIX scholarshtp They were 7-9 in the .Mid- advanced in the toumament
final AP poll. won for the the tournament.
players and three walk on~.
American Conference this and beat a great team. u great minutes to play.

Canton McKinley tops
Toledo Waite 49-47 for title

Shaker Heights H-B
defends Div. II girls title

Rolls

.

..

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�</text>
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