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                  <text>Find Th.e

It's the law of the
land: Health
overhaul signed, As

~UJUW~W ~Uj H
•

e
OBITUARIES
Page AS
o Alvin Barnett
o Eloise Connolly
o Gaylene Robinson

D.,

JOO~ ~

Printed on
Rt&gt;c)cled j\:e~~print

Middlep o rt • Pomeroy, Ohio

Meigs hires architect for renovation
project
.
.

B v CHARLENE H OEFLICH

HOEFLICH C MYDAILYSENTINEL COM

==========
SPORTS
Meigs Co. lands
five on All-Ohio teams.
Page 81
o

P0!\1EROY - An architect has
been hired by the :\1eigs Local
Board of Education to provide serI vices relating to various renovation
' projects in two district buildings.
Action was taken b) the Board at
M onday night's meeting to enter
into an agreement with .John
Valentour of RVC Architects, Inc .•
' Athens, to proYidc the' service at an
approximate cost of $28.000.
The firm had pre\ iously given a
preliminary estimate of $656.550
for the recommended reno\ at ions.

The money to pay for the work ,
accot'ding
to
Superintendent
William Buckley, will be from the
·•settlement money'' which consists of funds remaining from the
S I million settlement received as a
result of a law suit on a masonry
contract default during construction at the !v1cigs Elementary
School Remaining in the fund
now i::. $607.000 .
Buckle) reported that use of the
money for renovations to the build ings has been approved b) the Ohio
School Facilities Commi ~sion.
lie said his hope is that air conditioning in the gymnasium can be

Installed before graduation in late
.\tlay. and that the remainder of the
work can be completed during the
summer months before school stat1s
in late August.
To facilitate early movement on
the HAVC repair/replacement projects in district buildings the Board
adopted a resolution of urgent
necessity. This applies to the high
school gym air conditioning and the
Meigs Elementary school chiller
replacement.
The scope of the wo rk at the high
school as recommended by the
Board, in addition to the air conditioning. which has an estimated cost

of$78.400. includes replacement of
the bleachers and the floor at an
estimated cost of $230.000.
Other recommended improvements include painting wall surfaces. replacing doors and hardware. along with stage accessories,
banners and league flags. and the
high school scoreboards. Also
included in the list of recommendations is an upgrade of the high
school elevator.
About 20 parents and students
met with the Board to discuss the
school's archery program. Speaking

Please see Renovation, AS

Early voting
begins next
week for
May primary
I Board open until 9 on
l last registration day

l

B v B RIAN

J . REED

BREEDOMYOAILYSENT!NELCOM

1 PO:vtEROY - Earlv vot1 ing will begin next week for
j ' the .May 4 primary. and
' those who who are not registered to \·ote but wish to
1 cast ballot!'! in' the election
\\ill have unt~l the week
after to register.
According to Becky
1 Johnston. deputy director
of the .\·tei!!s Countv Board
1 of Elections. early' 'oting
I will be!!in on Tuesdav.
Voters are not required to
provide a reason for voting
absentee. and mav either
request a ballot from the
Board of Elections by mail
or vote in pen..on at the
board office.
Johnston said voter registration for the primary will
continue through April 5.
The board office will be
open until 9 p.m. that da) to
allow last-minute voter registration.
!\.lei!!s Count\' Auditor
\1ary Byer Hill: Racine. a
Republican. and County
Commissioner
.Mick
Davenport. Pomero). a
Democrat. filed their petitions for re-election in
Februarv. Tim Ihle. a
Republican from Rutland.
tiled as a candidate for the
commtssiOner
seat
DaYenport no\\ occupies.
Candidates
for
both
Democratic and Republican
Central Committee will
also appear on the Ma) 2
ballot.
Primarv races for C .S .
Congress· and t· .S. Senate
will ~also be detem1med in
the primary. and candidates
for Ohio gowrnor. lieutenant goYemor. state representatiYe and other statelevel offices are also on the
primary ballots.
There are three GOP candidates
for
Congress:
Richard Stobbs of Belmont
1 Count~.
Bill
Johnson.
Poland. and Donald Allen.
YoungstO\\ n. .\ Democrat.
Jame-; Rennc:-r. ts opposing
U.S Rep. C~arlie .Wilson.
St. Chu_rs\ t~le tn
the
DemocratiC pnmary.
}'hird-party candtdates
Rtchard
Cadle.
North
J ackson. Cor~ McCusker.
\ oungsto:nl. and !\ 1artm J.
H sas!-1 ot Co.lumbmna are
abo
. candtdates . for
~on,~r~ss · and :~til be
•1 ~~c.u ~ng , on the .tn!'lt-e\ er
thud-p.trt) ballots tn Ohto.
It! the race for the 92nd

j

INSIDE
• 13 states sue over
health care overhaul.
See Page A2
• Meigs Middle School
,publishes newspaper.
See Page A3
• Romine wins
Grange contests.
See Page A3
• Local Briefs.
See Page AS
• Ohio court upholds
timits on injured worker
suits. See Page A6
• Ohio State plans 8.5
pet tuition hike in 2010.
See Page A6

WEATHER

Beth SergenVphoto

The Pomeroy Cluster of Churches of the Meigs County Cooperative Parish are giving away $4,000 worth of Dollar
General gift cards to needy children this Saturday. The cards are specifically marked to be used for clothing only. Pictured
picking up the gift cards, front row (from left) Rev. Leslie Flemming , Penny Barker of the Pomeroy Dollar General, Don
Shaffer; second row (from left) Dave Ridgway. Pastor Brian Dunham, Father Walter Heinz

CllJStering together for 'Undy Sunday'
Bv B ETH S ERGENT
BSERGENT@MYDAILYSENTINEL COM

POMEROY - A cluster of Mctgs
County churches have banded together 10 form ''Undy Sunday," an event
meant to provide free Dollar General
gift cards to needy children for the
purchase of under clothes.
Meigs County school-age children
who arc in need must be present to
receive a gift card which will be given
away from noon-2 p.m .. Saturda).
March 27 at Grace Episcopal Church
on East M ain Street in Pomeroy.
Refreshments and hot dogs will be
prov.ided. There are no . i.ncome
requtrcments and no proof of tncome

required. Organi1ers arc relying on the
honor sv~tem and that those trulv in
need wih show up for the cards . •
"Undy Sunday'' has been financed
by the Pomeroy Cluster of churches of
the Meigs Cooperative Parish . These
churches. of every denomination. pro' idcd enough funds to purchase
$4.000 of $15 and $25 gift cards from
Dollor General. These cards are
specifically marked and can only be
used for clothing item!'! at any Dollar
General Store in Meigs County,
including the Pomeroy, Tuppers Plains
and Racine lo~.·ations.
The ''Cluster" is hoping to serve an
estimated 250 children in need ; a need
which on I) continues to grow. In fact.

last year, Grace Episcopal Church provided 230. $20 gift cards to the Shoe
Show for needy kid-. to buy shoes. The
shoe giveaway cost nearly S6.000.
Grace ~piscopal has joined the
"Cluster' \\ hich hopes to band together to provide even more shoes in the
future and possibly begin a community garden project.
"You have more power when you
have more people," Dave Ridgway of
St. Paul Lutheran Church said.
.:None of us can do am'thin!! alone."
Don Shaffer of Grace Epi~copal agreed.
Member~ of the "Cluster" will be
working the "Und) Sunday" giveaway.
though again, it "ill be held at Grace
Episcopal Church on Ea~t l\.1am Street.

'You might be from Meigs County Ohio if. ...'
High: Lower 60s.
Low: Upper 30s.

Facebook page takes off
Bv BETH SERGENT
BSERGENT@MYDAILYSENTINELCOM

INDEX
a SEcrJONs -

€alendars

12. ?AGEs

A3
B2-4

Comics

Bs

Jiditorials

A4

Sports

B Section

~ aoao Ohio Valley Puhllshing Co.

I

~.~IJJ !1!1.!1!~1 .

PO M EROY
Th~
Fncebook page ''You might
be from Meigs County Ohio
if.. .'' current ly has about as
many fa ns as the Village of
Po m eroy has residens at
1.806.
T he page is literally a
meet ing place for people
w ith ties to Meigs County to
reminiscence about its past
or di scus~ its present.
Having begun a couple of
months ago. it stat1cd to take
off with local s who live within the county as v.:ell as those
who arc natives now spread
across the counlt'). According
to the page's admini..,tr:ttor,
who lives in Meig:-. County

and wishes to remain anonymous. of it~ 1,806 member!'!.
336 live in Pomcrov. 219 liYe
in Chicago, Ill., I ~n live in
Clevdand and 181 live in
Columhus. 42 live in Athens.
31 live in Charleston. W.Va.
and 3 1 live in Parkcrshurg.
W.Va., 30 lhe in Ne'' York
City. NY. 18 live in Los
Angeles . Calif.. 17 live in
Houston. Texas. 16 live in
Dallas, Texas. I I li\e in San
Antonio, Texas and II li\'c Ill
'l111npa, Fla., us v.:ell as many.
many other places around the
countt).
There are 71 temale members nnd 28 male. T he majority of the page's members are
35-44 years o ld follmvl.!d by
~5-34 )ears.45-54 )Cars. 18~4 years and 55 pht..,,

The administrator was
inspired to create the page
by seeing a similar one on
Facebook for Parkersburg.
W.Va.
''I saw that and thou!!ht.
boy, wouldn't it be cool to
have one where people reminisce about Meigs County."
he said. ''I'm ~urprised at hm\
manv folk-. come on and sav
·r reincmbcr this and that."' •
Current topics on the ''You
might he from :Vkigs County
Ohio if. .." Faccbook page arc
(according to
posters):
.\lemorie!-1 of the ~leigs
Grocen• Store which was
located
where
King
Hardware in Middlcpot1 now
sit-.: the Meigs Equipment
Company
in
Pomero)
behind
Meigs
General
Hospital; coal trucks tnn l'lIIH! Ohio 124 b('t\\ ecn ~ktgs
Nl ll1l' #J I and Ohio 7:

Elbeti'eld's; Reed's Store in
Reedsville. also known as
the "ReedsYille ~!all'' b\ one
po-.tcr: Baker fumitu;.e of
Middleport: driving the
Flood Road: Scott's l\lusil'

Store in Pomerov: Pleaser\;
Restaurant of Pomeroy and
their pancakes: Gibbs Store
of Pornerov.
In additi~)n to tOilics related
to l\.kigs Count). members
ot the page can v.iew nearl)
200 photos relating to the
past and present of the count). :\lemhers are also encouraged to post thl'ir personal
photos of the area. If you'd
like to see a photo of the
Ohio River frozen mer in
1977. become a fan of " You
might be from l\ 1eigs Count)
. . . ..
~
0 hto'
. t. .. and take a peak.
. .
Ul ttm&lt;!tely.
the admtnl.... trato1· s:ud the page 1s about
"people reconnecting."

i

0~ 10 ., ~o~se. se~t. ~ep.

D~bbtc hilltps. Rcpubhcan
~hke Hunter. Athens. and
"I'\
C o 11 .mswor th
of
'\·elsomille. a canfdat'
f
t 1
~ or

Please see Voting, AS

..

�----------------------------------- ·-·-----------------------------------------------~~----------------~..~..~--~--~
The Daily Sentinel

PageA2

ON

Wednesday, March

24,2010

13 states sue over health care overhaul
BV BRENDAN FARRINGTON
ASSOCIATED PRESS

TALLAHASSEE. Ha.
Attorneys general from 13 stntC'&gt; sued the federal go\ ernment Tuesday. chtiming the landmark
health care overhaul is uncon~titutional just
seven minutes after President Burack
Obama signed it into law.
The lawsuit was filed in Pensacola after
the Democratic president sigrted the I0year, $CI38 billion bill the House passed
Sunday night.
"The Constitution nm\ here authonzes the
United States to mandate, either din.:ctly or
under threat of penalty. that all citizens and
legal res1dents hme quahfying health care
CO\erage." the la\\suit sa)~.
Legal experts say it has little chance of
succeeding because. under the Consututton.
federal laws trump state hl\\S.
Florida Attorney General Bill McCollum
is taking the lead and is jomed b} attorne)s
general from South Carolina, Nebraska.
Tex.,ts, Michigan, Utah, Penn'&gt;)hania.
Alabama,
South
Dakot&lt;~.
Idaho.
Washington. Colomdo and louisiana. All
are Republicans except James "Buddv"
Caldwell of Louistnna, a Democrat.
•
Some states arc considering separate lawsuit::. - Virginia filed its own Tuesday and still others rna) join the multistate suit.
In Michigan. the Thomas More Law Center
of Ann Arbor. a Christian legal all\ ocacy
group. sued on behalf of itself and four people it says don't have pnvatc health insurance and object to being told the) ha\e to

'This is the first time in American history
where American citizens will be forced
to buy a particular good or service."
Nebraska Attorney General Jon Bruning

purchase it.
McCollum, who is running for govcmor,
argues the bill will cuuse "substantial hurm
and financial burden" to the states.
The lawsuit claims the hil~ violates the
lOth Amendment. which says the federal
gO\ernment has no authority beyond the
powers granted to it under the
Constitution. by forcmg the states to carry
out its provisions but not reimbursing
them for the costs.
"No public policy goal - no matter ho\\
important or well intentioned - can be
allowed to trample the protections and
nghts guaranteed b) our Con titution.''
Texas Attorney General Greg Abbott said in
a statement.
The lawsuit also sa~s the states can't
afford the new law. l,sing Florida as an
example. the lawsuit says the overhaul will
add almost 1.3 million people to the state's
.Medicaid rolls and cost the ~tate nn additional $150 million in 2014. growing to $1
billion a yew by 2019.
"We simply cannot afford to do the things
in this bill that we're mandated to do,''
McCollum said at a press conference rtfter
filing the suit. lie said the Medicaid cxpan-

::.ion in Florida will cost $1.6 billion.
"That's not possible or practical to do in
our state," he said. "It's not realistic, it's not
right. and it's very. very wrong."
South Carolina Attorney General llenry
McMaster, who is also running for governor, said the lawsuit was necessary to protect his state's sovereignty.
"A legal challenge by the states appears
to be the only hope of protecting the
American people from this unprecedented attack on our ..system of government."
he said.
Rut I awrence Friedman. a professor who
teaches constitutional law at the Ne\\
England School of Law in Boston. said
before the suit was filed that it has little
chance of success. He said he can't imagine
a scenario where a judge would stop implementation of the health care bill.
Still. McCollum said he expects the U.S.
Supreme Court will eventually decide if the
overhaul i~ constitutional.
''This is not lawful,'' he said. ''It may have
passed Congres~, but there arc three
branches of government."
Some states are looking at other ways
to avoid participat'tng. Virginia and Idaho

have passed legislation aimed at blocking
requtrements in the bill. and the
Republican-led Legislature in Florida ts
trying to put a constitutional amendment
on the ballot to ask voters to exempt ~
h
state from the federal Ia\\ 's requiremc
At leust 60 percent of voters would ha
to approve.
Under the bill, starting in six months,
health insurance companies would be
reyuired to keep young adults as beneficiaries on their parents· plans until they turn
26. and companies would no longer be
allowed to deny coverage to sick children.
Other changes would not kkk in unt1l
2014.
That's when most Americans "'ill for
the first time be required to carry health
insurance - either through an employer
or government program or b) buying it
themselves. Tho e who refuse "'ill face
tax penalties.
"This is the first time in Amt:rican Ju~tory
where American citizens will be forced to
buy a particular good or service." said
Nebraska Attorney General Jon Bruning.
who is also president of the National
Association of Attorneys General, explaining why his state joined the lawsuit.
'lltx credits to help pay for premiums also
will start flowing to middle-class working
families \\ith incomes up to $88,000 a year,
and Medtcatd will be expanded to CO\er
more low-income people.
•
No Republicans in the U.S. House
Senate voted for the bill.

Israeli leader gets warmer Oil prices drift higher, settle near $82
welcome in Congress
Bv MATTI FRIEDMAN AND MATTHEW LEE
ASSOCIATED PRESS

WASHINGTON
Israeli Prime
Mimster BenJamm Netanyahu recehed a
\\amter pubhc recept1on from Congress
than from the Ob.1ma administration. with a
top Democrat and Republican joining
Tuesda) to \\clcome a leader who has
refused to back down 111 a di .1greement
\\lth the Whtte House O\et lsr,1e.h housmg
expan ron m d1~puted part of Jeru~alem.
'\\e m CongrC'&gt;'- -.tand b} I rael. · the
le der lf the House Speaker :':';unc)
Pelo 1, as ured et.ln) ahu at an all smtles
appearance before the cnmeras. "In
Congres-; w~ speak wtth one \Otce on the
ubJeCt of Israel."
President Barack Obama "ill meet With
Netanyahu later Tueo;da). but the meeting
has been d clared clo'&gt;ed to JOUrnalist~ tn
\\hat could b.: n md1catton that the spat
mamng t1es bet\h.. n the alhe 1s not O\ er
yet. The Obama admm1 trat1on appears
eager to let 1"\etan)ahu·~ a\\kwurdl) trmed
'a 11 pa.,s wrth a~ ltttle public remark as
possible and has refused to detml whdt
promises Net,m)ahu 1s 91akmg to ease the
most enou~ dtplomattc breach between the
two natwn~ m decades.
Neither s1dc has publicly detailed which
steps, 11 any. Netanyahu has proposed to
defuse tens1ons. Netnnynhu has given no
indicc~uon that he \\ill agree to halt or
slow Israeli building in Jerusalem, which
the administration has said - in an
unusually blunt and public fashion - is
harming peace efforts and ties between
the V.S. and l'&gt;racl.
In his meeting with Pelosi, Netanyahu
asserted that l.,raeJ had been building in east
Jerusalem smcc tbc 1967 Mideast war,
when it captured the We t Bank from
Jordan. and that the matter had ''ne\er been
a subject of argument among us or in the
u.s.:· nccording to Netan)ahu's office. The
Jewash neighborhoods built in east
Jerusalem "'ill rem.tm part of Israel in an)
final tat us deal with the Palestinians. he
told Pelosi. so building there doesn't harm
the chanceo; for peace
The internntionnl community. including
the U.S.. has ne\ er rccognited Israel's
annexation of east Jerusalem and sees the
Jewish concentrations there as no diJiercnt
from West Bank settlements.
The Palestinian demand for a halt to
building in Jeru~alem as n prcconditton for
peace talks, Netanyahu said, will serve only
to delay peace talks further. Netan)ahu said
the sides "must not be trapped by an unreasonable and illogtcal dl.!mnnd."

The abrupt rescheduling Mondn) of
Netan)ahu's planned trip to the State
Department for ''hat had been billed as a
public meeting "'ith Secretary of State
Hillary Rodham Clinton underscored the
unea.,y atmosphere. Netanyahu's meeting
with Cljnton took place at his hotel and was
closed to the press
It was followed by a pnvate dinner nt
Vice President Joe Biden's home on
Monda) mght that was mean• to sahe hurt
feelings from t\\O \\eek'&gt; ago, \\hen
Netan)ahu's go\ernment nnounced a
pro\ ocatl\ e housmg expan.,ton m east
Jerusalem \\htle B1den \\a \hltmg the crt)
Netanyahu said he was un.l\\are of the
mo\e. blaming lO\\·le\el bureaucrats, but
an angry and embarra se&lt;1 Biden \\as
reported!) 90 minutes late for a dinner '' 1th
the Jc;raeh leader.
Both nat10ns are no\\ try mg to mO\ e on
"'tthout badong do\\ n.
"We ha\e no stronger ally any\\ here in
the \\Orld than Israel." said House
Republican Leader John Bochner. "We all
kno\\ \\e're m a difficult moment. I'm glad
the prime minister is here so we can have an
open dialogue.''
Other Republicans have \\ eighed m on
Israel's side, criticizing the Obama admini tration for its handling lll the cris1-..
''I never thought I'd live to l&gt;Ce the da)
that an American administration \\ ould
denounce the state of Israel for rebuilding
Jerusalem." Rep. Mike Pence of Indiana
said on the House floor Tuesday after
meeting Netan) ahu. "I urge the president
to ,,top all this talk about &lt;;ettlemcnt in
Jerusalem and start focusing on isolating a
threatening and menacing and rising
nuclear Iran." he said.
Pelosi and Boehner both pomted to the
threat from Iran as a top concem and an
area in \\ hich .the Umted State:; ''ill cooperate '' ith Israel. Netanyahu thanked his congressional hosts for "'hat he called warm.
bipartisan support. "We face l\\O great challenges". Netan) ahu sa1d. a "que t for peace
with our Palestinian neighbors" and stoppmg Iran from developing atomic \\Capons.
Obant.l has remained out l)f the frny as
Clinton and other U.S. officiab have
rebuked Israel.
P.J. Cn)\\ Icy. the State Department
spokesman, told The Associated Press that
the U.S and Israel were currently engaged
in ·'give and take."
"We are not going to !lllk about the pre·
cbe steps both side::-o hnve to take. We will
continue to discuss those steps privntcl) ,"
Crowley said.
·

February existing home sales drop 0.6 percent
WASH ING1 ON tAP) Sales of existing
homes fell for a third straight month in
Februan. pushing sales dO\\ n to the lowest
level s1nce last July. There is concern the
fragile housing rebound 1s fahenng. making
it harder for the O"llernll economy to recover.
'11te National Associauon of Realtors said
1\Jesday th.tt sales ot previously occupied
homes dropped 0.6 p.::rcent in February to. a
season,tlly adjusted annual rateof5.02 rpill.ion.
The weakness in snlc~ depressed pnces
with the mediAn home price dropping
almost 2 percent from a year ago to
$165.100.
Sales activity varied across the country.
In the Midwest, sales Jllntped almost 3 percent. and were up more thnn 2 percent in the
Northeast. In the South, sale~ fell about I
percent, and were down almuo;t 5 percent in
the West.
'A number of houstng m.nkets may be
stabilizing or starting to rebound. though

..

''e do not )Cl see. m many respects, a susrained nation\\ ide recovery·;· said Jeffrey
Mezger, president and chief executive offi·
cer. of KB Home, which builds homes in 10
states. The company reported a $55 nullion
quarterly loss on 1\aesda).
In fact. sales nationally have been declining smce No\ ember. eroding gains made
over the summer. The downward direction
troubled ccono111 ists hecausc the gm ern·
ment has taken unpreccdentl?d ::.tt•ps to sup·
port the housing sector.
lt) keep mortguge rates low, the Ft'llclal
Reserve hn-. spent almost $1.25 trillion. ln
addition, Congress C\tended a deadline fur
homebuyer), to qualify for tax credits. Both
programs arc set to end soon.
High unemployment nnd tough lending
standards appear to be holding buyers back.
Thnt could dewil housing as it tries to
emerge from the \\Or.&gt;t do\\ nturn in decade
and harm the overall economy.

NEW YORK (AP) - Oil price drifted
on Tuesda) before clo ing higher, as rising ~tack prices waged a tug-of-\\ ar with
the stronger dollar and signs of lackluster
energy demand.
Benchmark crude for ~a) delivery
reversed earher losses and gamed 3 J cents
to ~ettle at $81 .91 a barrel on the Ne\\
York Mercantile Exchange.
Stocks markets ro e after c;ales of existing homes fell les~&gt; than expected in
February. The report from the National
Associntron of Realtors topped forecasts
but rarsed concerns about the strength of
the hou ing market recovery Salce; have
fallen for three months Orl trader; often
l )()).; t '&gt;lock marl..e
J m
ure of

O\erall imestor sentiment. The Do\\ Jones
industrial a\erage extended gains for a
econd da) to touch a new 17-month htgh.
Crude prices fell a::-; low as $80.87 as the
t:.S. dollar strengthened. making oil more
expensh e for inve.;ron. with other currencies.
Meanwhile. crude oil stockpiles continue to
balloon. Anal)Sb expect the E~y
Department to report a 1.67 million-barrel butld
in rc.-;encs on Wedne.'oday for the week ended
March 19, according to a sune) by Platts. the
energy mfonnation mm of McGmw-Hill Cos.
Gasoline demand remains weak. The
Federal Highwa) Administration reported
that vehicle miles traveled in January fell
1.6 percent, or b); 3.7 billion vehicle miles.
compared \\ ith the -;arne month last year.

Holzer Clinic Beach Party
and

Idol Singing Competition
Sponsored by
Dr. Kelly Roush and staff

FRIDAY, MARCH 26TH
6:00 - fO:OO PM
FIRST CHURCH OF
NAZARENE
•
FAMilY liFE CENTER
fffO fST AVE. GAlliPOliS, OHIO
---------------------------------~I

IDOL COMPETITION

COST:

$10 for team entry

$5/ Entry for indh idual or duets

Name_____________________________

r

I
I
I

Phone__~------------Age._________
What song are )·ou singing'?--=--------------------\\ hat are your hob hie~/ What inspired you to sing'? _____________
Categories: Ages 7-15. 16-20.21 plus (must sing)
Team competition (:.kit , sing. can Iii&gt; ) nc)

PRIZES FOR EACH CATEGORY:
fST · SfOO
2ND $50
3RD $25

I
1

TEAM PRIZE:
fST $200
2ND SfOO

*Please drop off entry forms to Shaumber at the Sycamore
Branch of Holzer Clinic or call 446-5818 to enter

before noon on Thursday March 25th
*There will be food, beach events, little kid
events, booths for orthotic foot scans (including
our new flip flop orthotics,fttness center info,
etc. and Great Door Prizes
PAUl "BUB" WilliAMS Will BE OUR GUEST ENTERTAINER FROM
BlACK SHIRT ENTERTAINMENT

�PageA3

T'he Daily Sentinel

\Vcdncsday, March

24, 2010

Romine wins Meigs Middle School publishes newspaper
Grange contests
POMEROY
Cookie
cand) contel&gt;tS were
"hen Hemlock Grange
reccntl) .tt the hall.
K un Romine placed first
in both categorie-. and then
"ent on to pla~c first in the
county contc~t. Ro al ic
Story conducted the meeting and announced the
Grange banquet to be held
on April 16 at 7 p.m. at the
former Sali~bur) School
cafetena.
It \Ht'- noted that Drew
Web!&gt;ter Post. Ame1 icnn
I egion, \Viii -.erve the baked
steak dtnncr the co:.t of
\\hich is $11.50 lor adults
and $10 for children. bach
grange 1s to supply three
door pnzes. Roy Grueser
has donated a handmade
'' ooden bO\\ 1 tor a fund
raiser a the banquet.
RO) Grueser, legi latn c
chairman, reminded members or anyone \..ith cell
phones to cull 1-888-352122::! to :-top tclcmnrkl'ting
companies from calling
r cell number. The call
t be from the phone on
•
'' h1ch the do not call
request is made . This
blocks the number for II\ e

) ear;.
A thank ) ou note "as read
from Courtne) Simm for
,tliO\\ ing a meeitng about
Bedford fire protection to
be held at the grange hall.
It ",1s noted that the State
Grange is puttmg together .1
ne\\ cookbook. Any member ma) submit recipes b)
Apnl 2. \ada Sickles and
Margaret Hanning \\ere
reported ill.

POMl ROY
1 he 1VIc1g'- Middle
School pubho;he~ Jh O\\ n ne" spaper
stx ttmes e,tch !.Chool ,YC.tr, '' 1th the
last issue bemg ded1catfd to the
eighth graders "ho arc movmg on to
the high chool

Kim Romme, lecturer,
u ed U.S. Histof) Month as
the toptc of her program.
She said that m 1800 I nchnn
Chief
Te~.:umseh
was
angered by the way his people ''ere being trented.
\\'illiam llenry Ha1ril&gt;on 1
was pre,ident and he and
Tecumseh had a battle
called
the
Battle
of
Bv DR. JOYCE BROTHERS
H,1rnson
Tippacanoc.
defeated Tecumseh "ho
Dear Dr. Brother~: I
is~ued
a curse: ever) \\ ork for a nonp10fit that
American president to he p10vide~ transJIJOnal 'e•
elected on a ) ear dh isahle 'ices to homek~ ... s people.
by 20 will die m offJcc.
and I'' e been uwoh ed in
llarri~on was elected in
'arious cha1 ittes my whole
1840, ard &lt;.lied in 1841: in l1fe. This \\US no thanks to
1860 Abraham lincoln wa!&gt; m) parents. who alv.dys
elected president .tnd died told me I \\as \hlstmg my
in 1865 in 1880 Garheld
time. and that people dtdn t
wa&lt;.o elected president and
\\ant or need my help. I
dted in 1881: 111 1900 ha\e children of Ill\ 0\\ n
\\ illiam McK inle) \\as
00\\. and r m '&gt;!rug i mg to
elected president and died
teach them the value of gt\
m 190 I
In 1920 Warren Harding mg back \\ithout forcmg my
\\as elected p1esidcnt and own world\ le\\ on them.
he died in llJ23: in 1940 How can I tc.tch them to be
chant.tble \\ tthout tt' bemg
Franklin Roose' cit was "Mom's
job, .. -.).B.
elected for a third term and
Dear
J
.B.: It', great th.tt
he died in 1945: in 1960
John r. Kennedy \\as vou \\ere able to lcat n from
elected and he died in your parents' nwaakcs. and
1963; m 1980 Ronald cun nO\\ use "hat ) o · \ c
Reagan \\Us elected presi- learned to help ) ou1 O\\ n
dent and he \\as shot m chtldren. Whtlc )OUr k1ds
1981 but quick medtcal certainl) look up to )OU,
.tttention made him sur- you're nght to thmk th.tt
vive and hopefull) broke they most likely Will take
better tn ~omcthing they cnn
Tecumseh's curse.
claim ar;; the1r o\\ n thdn to
She concluded the pro
simply follow m your loot~ram with a humorou~ readIll£ on AADD - nell\ ated step&lt;&gt;. Bemg in"Yol\ed in
attention deficJt d1sorder. chant) ha!&gt; been '&gt;hO\\ n to
The April meeting ''Ill be help ratsc self e\teem,
preceded b) a ham dmner at de\elop social sktll.., 1s )OU
learn to mteract \l;lth people
6:30 p.m.
dtfferent from )Ourself ,md
encourage people to appre
ciate the1r O\\ n It fest\ lc
1 hese all are \\OJ1h) go.tls
for 'our chtldren
You should pr cnt '"h r
table
t1 v t C'i to )
Thursday, March 25
POME80Y - A verv1ew Ill U \\a) th t f 111
nd ene n
Garden Club 7 30 p m

I uke ~cwland •~ the edito1. and
I inda I e.1r. the dvtsor, lor the
M,u"Uuder Jr. Gazette. It includes mf01
rnat1on on acadcmJ~; classes. sport!&gt;,
.111d extracurncular e\ents as well as as
an ,td\ ice column tit ed "Dc.tr M.trt) ."

fhe ne\\ spapcr staff conststs of more
than 40 reporters. the editor. and a di'i
tnbutton team of etght members who
help m the collection and word processmg of articles and gettmg the completed
project out to the student bod) and staff.

ASK DR.. BR.()TJIER.S

Kids learn value of givilig back from Mom
Sho\\ them the little thmg"
the) do alread) that 1re acts
of 'Cnero!&gt;ity
"hethcr
tt's sendmg d gct-\\cll c&lt;~rd
to a fnend or \ l'&gt;ttmg a
lonely relative. You can
take things that your kids
already .1re familiar WJth.
and shed ne" light on them.
Rather than cleaning out the
doset e\ery sprmg to n1.1ke
your house neater. you are
cleanmg out the closet to
find clothes to g 1' e to
Good'' til. You \\ant to let
vour kidr; choose their O\\ n
causes, and while )OUr
instinct may be to shield
them from the wrongs in
the \Vorlds, it m1ght not be
the bc'&gt;t approach. Almost
as important as the giving
process JS talking ,tbout It
and explammg who's benefited and hO\\. It doesn't
help kids to -.oluntcer \\ ithout kno" ing wh) the) 're
doing it.

•••
Dear Dr. H•·otlu·rs: I'm
m a dead end job, and haH~
been wanting to start 0\er
,md go to ,trt school for a
long tllne. I thmk I'm talented. but 11\ a hard transition. and I'm afratd of what
people '' 111 sa) There are

tonl&gt; of 'itcps ulong the \\ay
before I e\en get to school,
and it's gctttng dt!&gt;couragmg almost even before I
t&gt;egm. Ho\\ can I st.ty
motivated and on-task, and
not let other people con\ ince me that thir; is a
crat.y idea? - W.A.
Dcur \\ .A.: It'!, great that
)Ou've gotten the courage
to make 1 frer;h start. It certainly can be ,1 tough transition. cspec1,tlly 1f you're
lea\ ing &lt;1 cmcer that others
,ee as prcl&gt;tigJOus or succe&lt;;stul. But it turns out that
the solution might be much
,impler than )OU think. It
,eems like Common sense
to think that when you set a
major goal. you should tell
that
e\eryone &lt;~bout it
''a). ) ou '11 be more like!~
o do it be~ause you don't
\vant to be &lt;;cen .1&lt;; a f&lt;~ilure.
But if )Ou're \\Orned about
osing Y?Ur moll\ at ion or
not gettmg support from
those people rou confide
n. the answer ts: Don't tell
anyone.
Actually. blabbing about
your major goals can gl\ e
\OU u false sense of accompli-.hment. and might actually make you le s hkely to

'' ork tO\\ ard that ac~om
pltshment. It ) ou don't talk
about ) our pur~u•t of !!Clung mto art school, ) ou
''on 't run the nsk of letting
)OUr fnends or CO·\\Orkers'
opinions o;top )OU
after
all, you might o;ta11 believmg them, \\hen you really
should be )J'&gt;tcmng to your
O\\n feeling'&gt; Plus. you'll
be so cxcned to tell people
once )OU ha\e gotten in
that )Ou'll be more mott\ated throughout. Keepmg
thJ'i moti\ at ton "ithout
r;upport from your friend&lt;.
might l&gt;OUnd hard. but ) ou
cnn be ) our O\\ n ..upport
network b) conccntratlng
on the outcome of all your
hard \\Ork and surrounding
yourself
"1th
people
imohcd in the arts.
(CI 2010 b\ King Features
S)ndicate

Community Calendar
Public meetings
Wednesday, March 24
POMEROY - The cam:m'Ricl&lt;ott for the Metgs
Ennchment
(MLEF) fund
dnve 1s scheduled for 6'30
p m Wednesday, March
24 at the Me1gs High
School cafetena MLEF 1s
ra smg funds to bUild the
Multi-Purpose
Me1gs
Complex
Thursday, March 25
POMEROY- The Me1gs
So1l
and
Water
Conservation
01strict
Board of Superv1sors,
11 :30 a.m. at distnct off1ce,
33101
Hiland
Road,
Pomeroy.
Monday, March 29
POMEROY - Veterans
Serv1ce Commission, 9
am., 117 Memonal Or.
Monday-Tuesday,
March 29-30
SYRACUSE - Syracuse
V11lage Council, special
meetings to interview possible employees for 201 0
London Pool season, 6
•
.. village hall.

Clubs and
organizations
Thursday, March 25
POMEROY - The Meigs
County Retired Teachers
Association, noon at the
Wild Horse Cafe. Speaker
will be the director of commumcatJon service, State
Teachers
Retirement
Systems.
POMEROY
Ewtng
Chapter, Sons of the
Amencan Revolution, 6:30
p m. at Meigs Museum, 144
Butternut Ave., Pomeroy.
Omner followed by speaker
Tom Romine of Athens,
member of the Brigade of
the American Revolution.
Romine to present "Before
They
Were
Soldiers,
Material
Culture
an
Everyday L1fe in the 18th
Century." Invited Return
an Meigs Chapter,
members; ancestors of
American Revolution sol·
diers.
POMEROY United
Fund for Meigs Coun ty
annual meeting, 6 p.m.,
Pomeroy Library meeting
room. The public is invited to
attend.
SYRACUSE Me1gs
County
Republican
Women, 6:30 p m. at
Carleton School. Everyone
welcome. $5 donat1on for
the dinner.

home of No a Spears
Tuesday, March 30
OH-Kan
POMEROY Coin Club, meetmg and
auct1on, 6:30 p.m. at the
Pomeroy Library

Church events
Thursday, March 25
POMEROY - Rev Bnan
Dunham to speak at Grace
Church, 7 p m., as part of
Me1gs
Minlstertal
Association's commumty
Lenten program conttnues.
Friday, April 2
POMEROY - Stat1ons
of the Cross,
noon,
Sacred Heart Church, w1th
ministers
of
Meigs
Minister al
AssociatiOn
assisting Rev. Walter E.
Heinz. pastor.
Saturday, March 27
POMEROY - G1veaway
of gift cards to Dollar
General for needy children,
noon-2
p.m.,
Grace
Episcopal Church, East
Main Street, child must be
present to receive card,
refreshments, hot dogs
avatlable
Chill
REEDSVILLE cookoff and soup supper, 5
p.m., Reedsville Untied
Methodist Church.
Sunday, March 28
POMEROY Revival,
Mt. Hermon Church, located off Route 7 on Texas
Road, turn at 36411
W1ckham Road. Clifford B.
Cole mar,
evangelist,
Meetings Sunday, 10:30
a.m. and 7 p m. through
March 31, 7 p.m. each
evening. More information
call 985-4220
MIDDLEPORT - Revival,
Hope Baptist Church, 570
Grant St, Middleport, Rev.
Gary Ellis, pastor: Rev. Gary
Bowlin, evangelist. Sunday,
March 28, 11 a.m. and 6
p.m.; March 29 through
March 31, 7 p.m. each
evemng. Nursery provided
More information, call 992·
5334.

Other events
Thursday, March 26
PAGEVILLE
The
Meigs
County
Health
Department will offer a
H1 N1 flu shot clinic from 10
a.m. - 2 p.m. on Friday,
March 26 at Pagevtlle
Grocery. Vaccines are for
those six months and older
and are free, though donations are accepted.

c
Holzer Clime is pleased to announce the addition of
accomplished Nephrologist, Gopi K. Gunduma!la, MD.
Dr. Gopt IS certified !n Nephrology by the Amencan
Board of Internal Medicine. Dr. Gopi's specialties
include:
.Diagnosis &amp; Management
of Kadney D1seases
•Kidney Transplantation
•D1alys1s Therapy
•ACid-base Ktdney 01sorders
·Electrolyte Disorders

•NephrolithiaSIS
(K1dney Stones)
.Hypertension
(Htgh Blood Pressure)
•Acute K1dney Drsease
. End-stage Renal 01sease

Now Accepting New Patients

740.446.5763
HOLZER
CLINIC

�·------------------- -----~------·----------~----------~--------------~--~--------~---.~~--~--~~~---

PageA4

The Daily Sentinel

\'Vednesday, March 24,

201C!

The Daily Sentinel
111 Court Street • Pomeroy, Ohio

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

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
Sammy M. Lopez
Publisher
Charlene Hoeflictf
General Manager-News Editor
Pam Caldwell
Advertising Director
Cou.(!rc'SS slutll makt• uo law respecting au
t•swblislmu·ut lif refiL(!iou, or prollibitiiiL(! tlu free
exacisc tlrereof; or (tbritiJ!i"~l! tl~e freedom of speeclr,
or cif tlte press; or tire ri,{!lrt of tiH' people peaceably
to asscm/Jie, ttud l1l petition tire Gotlcmment
for a redress of grie11arrces.
The l ir t Amendment to the U.S. Constitution

f () I) A Y I N 1-I I S T () I~Y
Today ts Wednesday, March 24, the 83rd day of 2010.
There are 282 days left In the year.
Today's Htghllght tn History·
On March 24. 1980, one of El Salvador's most respected Roman Catholic Church leaders, Archbishop Oscar
Arnulto Romero, was shot to death by a sniper as he celebrated Mass m San Salvador. (Romero was assassinated after urgmg the Salvadoran mtlitary to halt death
squads that had ktlled thousands of suspected guerrillas
and leftist opponents of the government.)
On th1s date
1'1 1765 Bnta1n enacted the Ouartenng Act, reqwnng
Amencan colantsts to provtde temporary housmg to
Bnt1sh soldters
In 1882 German sc1ent1st Robert Koch announced tn
Berl n that he had dtscovered the bactllus responsible for
tuberculosis
In 1934 Prestdent Franklin 0 Roosevelt signed a btll
granting future Independence to the Phtllpptnes.
In 1944 tn occup1ed Rome, the Naz1s executed more
than 300 c1v1l ans m cepnsal for an attack by Italian partiSans the day before that had ktlled 32 German soldiers.
In 1955 the Tennessee Williams play "Cat on a Hot Tm
Roof opened on Broadway
In 1958 rock·and-roll smger Elvis Presley was mducted 1nto the Army 111 Memph1s. Tenn
In 1976 the prestdent of Argent na, Isabel Peron, was
eposed by her country's m11tary
1989 th supertanker Exxon Valdez ran aground on
Pnnce W II am Sound and began leakk
of ude o
Br t sh sold ers stopped rout ne
B
t Northern Ireland
1999 NATO aunched airstnkes agamst Yugoslavta,
rn&lt;:~rk-ong the first ttme 111 ts 50-year eXIStence that It had
er ttacked a soveretgn country Th1rty-nme people
ere k ed when f re erupted m the Mont Blanc tunnel tn
d burned for two days
o A f deral udge awarded former
And o $341 m I on from Iran hold ng
t r pol"s b fo A derson s nearly seven
p v ty 1n Lebanon Anderson later rece1ved
f ozen ra an assets ) Stg M ckelson
62
pres dent of CBS News dted m San Diego at
t
f
age 86
Ftve years ago The U S Supreme Court dented an
appea from the parents of Tern Schravo to have a feedl"''g tube remserted mto the severely bratn-damaged
woman. Chess legend Bobby Ftscher was freed after
bemg detatned ntne months tn Japan for trytng to leave
the country w1th an mvahd U S. passport, he boarded a
fl ght to h1s new home. Iceland
One year ago· In h1s second prime-time news conference smce taktng offtce, President Barack Obama
clatmed early progress m h1s aggress1ve campaign to
lead the nation out of econom1c chaos and declared that
desp1te obstacles ahead "we're moving m the nght
d rect on
Thought for Today: "The history of almost every
civilization furnishes examples of geographical
expansion coinciding with deterioration in quality."
-Arnold Joseph Toynbee, English historian (18891975).

•

God gets His healthcare bill
Bv

DR. PAUL KENGOR

C

ER FOR V

The most fruo;tr.ttmg thing J', e
dec~It '' tth m profI! 10nal life "as

e1ght )Car' of outrageou'&gt;. ba!'.ele~s
charges agam.,t Prc•mlent George \\.
Bush on matters of fatth. E\cn when
Bush "a~ simpl) a'\kcd about h1s
faith. nnd responded '' 1th utterl)
bemgn statement&lt;;, hke ~a) ing he
couldn't tmagine &lt;;un 1\ ing the presi
denc) ...,.. tthout f&lt;~ith m the Lord." or
notmg he pt.tyed helore committmg
troops. echomg C\cr) pre~tdent from
Washington to Lmcoln to Wil ...on to
Carter to Cit nton. he "a., ' 1ctousl)'
1 ~.mltcd

''\\c me deJhn
mtlll n t 1' th md

wtth a me&lt;&gt;.,tamc
d R lph 1'..: er
•JJ
~h uld n t b
p \m
mton d l "rc n 0 () nn I t ) th
M$1\;BC f uthlul
Repeated I) I ".ts c lied to re"pond
to tht nons n~c .M) retort ''a' agomllngl) ~tmple. I mcn:l) r, n through
example 1ftcr example of Amcnc n
D m
t
founders. pre relent
., ) mg ett r
and Repubhc n
c1 el) ''hat Ru h &lt;. 1d or 'iOmethm
far more cxtremc hke Woodro\\
\\ 1lson claumng God c&lt;J.Iled upon
htm to found the League ol Nations.
or J DR mountmg a battlcshtp leading
troop' m a rendttJon ol "On\\ ard
Chn uan Soldters. •
What I 'iatd rarely mattered. E\cry
Bush mention of God ''as a signal.
someho\\. that thi~ Bible-quoting
"simpleton" \\,IS trying to tran,foml
America into .1 ''theocmcy ..
Alas. there ''as •llluther tactJC I
u~cd: I quoted current Democrats on
the campmgn trail. from Hillar)
Clinton to B.mtck Obama. Ill\ oking
the Almighty. I knC\\ th,lt 1f these
politicmns reached the White House.
the) 'd sa) the same as Bush, or much
\\Orse
wtth no backlash from the
seculctr medta. Qutte the contmf), liberals \\ ould roll out the red carpet.
enthusm ttcall) wekommg faith into
the public ~quare.
All of that ~~ prelude to Ill) point
here toda):
·n1c Religious Left. from "social
justice" Cntholtc nunc; .111d Protestant
1

mini&lt;.ters to the Democratic Spe.1kcr
of the House and prcMdent of the
l 'mted States. ha\e been mcco;s&lt;~ntl)'
clmmmg God'' advocac) of thetr
healthcate rcfom1 1 hat'., no &lt;,urpnse,
JUSt as it's no surprise that the pre ' ,.,
not onl) not outraged but stlentl)
supportt\C. There's nat) .1 \\htmpcr,
let .tlone ho\\-1-.. ot "separation of
church and state!"
C'onstder .1 fe\\ example'&gt;. most
telling m hght of pas'\age of th
healthcare bill·
Last Augu"t. Prc..,tdent Ob.un
addres&lt;,eJ a '1rtual •athct mg of
140,000 Rchgtuus Left indh iduaJ,
He told them he w,,., ""om • to need
) our h lp" m pa.,~m hcalthcarc
pcnod I
Ob.un
mtentl lll\t k
4 D
t
f

r
th

s1
olio" cd t
\\ lth t c
d
th \\
rtJOn
n
ther thm
J part of an eternJily "tden
mg ., ctal JU&lt;&gt;tlce"
• nda lhe
Rehg10us Instllute. \\htch reprc ent"
4 800 clcrg). urged Congre"s to
mclude abortton fundtng Ill "health
care'' reform. adamant!) rejcctmg
amendmenh that p10l11bttcd fundm~
To not help poor \\omen '&gt;ecure the1r
reproductive rights ""' unjust,
declared the progressi\c pastors. As
the Rc\ . Debr.t Hainer. executi\c
dircctm of the Relig10us Institute.
complallled. federal polic) alrcnd)
pre\ enh lo\\ -wcome
"unfairly
\\Omen and federal emplo)ce from
receh ing sub.,idiLed" abortions
Here \\e ee the Religiou~ Left's
continued pen Cl".lon ot "~octal JU"tice... Behold: oct.tl JUStice abortions.
E.trl) last \\Cek. a group of 59 nun'&gt;
sent Congres~ a letter urging pa... sa~e
of the healthcare btll. Tbts came Ill
d1rect defiance of the Cmtd St.tl "
Conference of C.Hhohc B1 hop~.
\\ hich insisted the b11l "mul&gt;t be
opposed"' because of 1ts refu al to
l~.:ommt

t

exphcttl) ban abortion funding.\\ hat
the bt'\hop., -;aid didn't matter, one
nun told Fox· Ne1l Ca\ uto - supportmg the bill is \\hat "Je'u" \\OUld
do··
,
fhe hberal media cheered on the
nun..,, gleefull) exaggerating the i •
ter'&gt; · mtluence. In a breathtak:ing dispia). the Los Angelec; Times beamed
.. !':un,' support for health-care btll
r,ho''" [Catholic) Church split.''
Quoung the nun&lt;&gt;. the Times reported
th.tt the letter repre,ented not more
than 50 nuns but O\ er 50.000. Likt!
Jesw. "1th the loa' Cl&gt;. the militant!\
secular libernl Times had dt,pla)ed
nmaculou.., po\\ er" of muluphcation.
f mall). Ia t Friday. Speaker of tht!
Houc;e Nanc\ Pelo ... i. a Roman
Cathohc. Ill\ oked the Solemnit) of
th feast of St. Joseph on behalf of
the healthcare bill. She urged
\m ncan Catholic-; to "ptt:t) to St
Jo~ ph..
earth!} guardian f
unborn son of God. Such O\
are hard!) ne\\ for Pelo~1. "ho
tmel) exhorts Democrat~c disc1ple td
\Ote the ltberal progressJ\e u.genda u
n "act of worsh1p ...
All of that 1s prelude. of cour;e, to
"hJt happened the e' ening of MarcI:!
21. 2010, AD. \\llh a rare \Ole not
merel) on a Sunda) - God'~ da) but the final Sunda\ in Lent. the \\eek
before Palm Sunda) that tmtiate... the
Lord'l&gt; Pas,ion. To President Obami
Speaker Pelos1. and the Religiou
Left faithful. Je..,u~. presumabl). has
gotten hts hcalthcare package
Amid that proce.... secular liberal~&lt;
got religion. as their political soulmate~ spearheaded thi.., ..change'' in
the name of Je..,u-.. Chrbt. It's u quitt:
radical dep.trture from etght ) cars o1
scouroiiH!
Geon.!e \V. Bu-.h e\ en
c
tunc he conte ed he pra) ed At long
la-.t. there i.:- room for Je u in the inn
.,o long a' the Sa' 1or .. .,upports" a
ccrtam .1genda. \\ ho a) s con' ersJOn'\ don't happen?
t Dr Paul l&lt;.en~or is profo,or n
~

~

~

pollllc a/ scrence and e\ecwn e drrec-tor of The Cemer j01 \ mon ana
\alue~ at Grm e Car Coller:e J.
book\ mclucle "God and George
811\h, · "God and Ronald Rear:an,"
and Gnd and Hillan Clinton." J

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\\'edncsduy, March 24,

Obituaries

The Daily Sentinel • P.age As

www.mydailyscntinel.com

2010

It's the law of the land: Health overhaul signed
Bv

Alvin Barnett

JENNIFER LovEN

ASSOCIATED PRE S

Ahin Lionel Barnett, 82, of Southport, N.C., passed
m'a) on March 21 , 2010.
He wasbo.rn on Nov. 25, 1927, in Dan\llle, W.Va., son
the late Varg1l Leo Bamett and Vada Mae McDorman. He
\\as a Nnv) 'eternn.
He is sun i~ eel b) .his children: Donna (Roger)
rson. \\~t)IIC (Landa) Barnett, Wesle) (Dawnl
and ~1c\•.nda (Jeff) Lr~Da): m.mygrandchildren; sist~r. G&lt;~thel Shaflc•: sc~ era! rHcccs und nephews: anda spccwl fncnd, Rm.coe P'tlc.
~esides his parents , he\\ as preceded in death by his wife.
M1!dred llekn .Barnc!t, and a snn. Rodger Bamett
funeral scrv1ccs \\Ill be h~ld at noon on Friday, March
26. 20 I0 at Anderson McDamel Funeral Home in Pomeroy
Burial will follow at l\1eigs Memory Gnrdens \\here mili~
taf) funeral honors will be presented b) the American
Le5ion Post 128 .
\ 1siting hours w1ll be from 6-8 p.m. on Thursday nt the
funeral home .
A registf) is a' ailable on-line ~It W\\ ".andersonmcdaniel.com

WASHINGTON
Claiming a hi!-.toric triumph
that could define his presidency. a jubilant Barack
Obama signed a mas5i\e,
nearl) S I tr ilhon health care
overhnul on Iucsdny that
will for the fma tune
cement insuruncc l'Ovcr,,gc
as the right of evcl) U.S.
citizen und begin to 1eshapc
the Wa) virtunlly nil
Americans receive and P••Y
for tre.llmcnt.
After more.: than a year of
h) perpartisan struggle
and numerous near-death
moment... for the measure
Obama declared "a new
&lt;;cason m A me11ca" as he
sealed a '1ctor) denied to a
line of pre~1dcnts stretchrng
back more th.m hnlf a centuf). Democratic Ia\\ makers
Olivier Douliery/Abaca Press/MCT
cheered hrm on, giving the Presrdent Barack Obama s1gns the health insurance reform bill in the East Room in
Eloise Marie Connoll) . 91. Reeds\llle died March 23. White House Sl~ning cere- Washington, D.C., on Tuesday. A box of pens employed for the task is at right.
20 I 0 at the home of her daughter, Mary Frecker.
Shew a5 bom Jan . ~ · 1919.• 111 ~~incr5ville. daughter of the mony a rail) -hkc atmos- from Republicans who char- someone gets sick. Insurers the mea'&gt;ure less than two
late Charles and Jessae Mosrcr Pnce. She \\as Christian and pherc as they shouted atld acterize the measure as a also will ha\e to allow par- da) s after the cliffhanger
a prayer wm,-ior. She was a member of the Long Bottom snapped photos '"ith pocket costly. wrongheaded gov- ent to keep children on their final House vote m a mre
Sunday night ses5ion.
ernment power grab. Obama plans up to age 26.
United Methodi st Church. and also attended Bethel cameras or cell phones.
''Our presence here today
The changes are to be
Not cvelyonc was cheer- and the Democmts portray it
Worship Center.
She was pteceded m death also b) her husband Joseph ing. '!be l)emocrnt~ pushed as literally a lifco:;avcr for paid lor with cuts in project- is remarkable and improbaand !1er son. Okey: ~isters E\ elyn Baglc). Dorothy Pence: the bill through Congress countle~s Americans.
ed government payment ble,'' Obama said. his grin
MarJory Ho\\ land , ~1ar) Pownall, and Ethel Car:-on: broth· without GOP supp(m, und the
'111c core of the massive increases to hospitals, insur- wider than any in recent
. Charles Price and George (Bill) Price: and son-in-law, Republicans s~ud ruesday law is the extension of ance compames and others memor). "With all the punthat those Democratic law- health care coverage to 32 under Medicare and other ditry. all of the lobbying, all
!·reeker.
nneth
• Sun i\ ing
arc her daughter. Mary hecker: grandson make~ would P·•&gt; dearly in million who now lack it. ,1 health
programs.
an the game-playing that passBrian (Ton) a) Connoll) : grandd,1ughter,;;: Brenda (Ja)) this No,ember's elections. goal to be achie\ed through increase in the Medicare es for governing in
Lo\\ers and Paula (Tim) Buckle): great grandchildren: Opinion polls show the pub- a complex cocktail of new payroll tax for orne, fees on Washington. it's been easy
Karrisa and 7..nchary Connoll). Breea and Brad Buckley. he remains skeptrcal,too, and mandates for indi\ iduals 111surance companie . drug, at times to doubt our ability
Tori and T)ler Lower : a sister. Mildred Bissell: daughter- Obama \\ill fly to IO\\d on and employers, subsidies for makers and medical de\ ice to do such a big thing, uch
m-law. Janet Con noll): and se\ ern! qieces and nephe\\ s.
Thursd.t) for the first of a people who can't afford to manufacturer&lt;;, a new exci e a complicated thmg."
At a econd celebration
Re\. Norman Butler \\ill officiate at a gra,eside funeral, number of appearances that bu) coverage on their 0\\ n. tax on h1gh-\ alue insurance
I I a.m. on l·rida). Murch 26. 2010, at Metgs Memof) will be more hke a conunuing consumer-friend!)
rules plan and a tax on indoor later. he said. "After a centuI) of strh mg. after a ) ear of
clamped on insurers. tax tanmng ervices.
sales Job than a 'tctof) lap.
Garden. Pomero) .
Friends may call fro m 6 to 8 p.m. on Thursda) at WhiteAsade from the huge, real- breaks, and marketplace.&lt;; to
For emors. the plan "ill debate, after a historic \Ote.
gmduall) close the "dough- health care reform is no
Schwarzel Funeral Home . Cooh 11le.
life changes 1n tore for o;hop for health plans.
The law·~ most far-reach- nut hole'' pre cription CO\- longer an unmet promise. It
man) Amenc,ms, the Whate
House hope the 'ictory ing changes don't kick until erage gap and ampro\ e pre- is the Ia\\ of the land.''
The president now face
even as u companion Senate 2014. including a reqUJre- \enthecare. But it also \\ill
the
ta.,k of elling to the pubcut
funding
for
popular
priGa) lene Wright Robinson. 77. ofWa hington CH, passed "fix-it" bill mo~e throu.gh ment that most Amerkans
\Ote in urance plans offered lic a bill that satisfie, neither
away on Monday, ~1arch 22. 2010 at 12 p.m. at the Court the Senate - wa.ll rc\ltalll.C cam• health insurance through
Medicare side of the political spectrum.
House Manor Nursmg Home.
an Obama prcs1dcnc) that wheihcr through an cmplo)
Liberals bemoan that a
Ad\
antage.
About
oneShe" a born on Dec. 21. 1932 m l•n)ette County to John h,~s been all but prcoccupred er, a gO\ernment progmm
government-run
plan to
quarter
of
seniors
have
or
and Clara Louise Cummins Wright. She had spent most of , With health care for h1s fir;o;t or their own purchase
compete
with
private
ones
up
for
such
plans.
signed
her hfe 111 thl5 area. She had been a healthcare worker and ye~r am!. two ~onths 1n pay a fine. To make that a
pro\ 1der .tnd retired from Onent.
ofollce. \ICe PreMdcn! Joe reality, tax credits to help which gencrall) offer lower was shed from the legislation during bitter negotiaGa~lene \\ US preceded in death b) her parents. brother Blden wm.. caught \\h1sper- cover the cost of premium~ out of pocket costs.
tions. Con&lt;;enatives fear an
Democrats,
led
by
Obama.
Ro) \Vnght . m ter Ph) lh' Callender and one brother at mg _a profnrllt) as he \\Ill start flowing to m1ddle
tnfa l \ She was alo.;o preceded m death b\ her aunt and cxclmmed to the pre tdent cia famahe5 and Medtc d \:debrated a "new wmd at our expansion of go\ernment
b
rom an ach1evement and cost the\ sav will
'me e \\I o r tsed her, Pearl and Charles Fnriner.
"hat a b1g d .11 rt \\ .t
w til be expanded t c
-;hed after more than bankrupt the country.
Sunnor lln.;lude her chtldrcn Michne
Kathy)
Indeed. the rc hapmg of more IO\\&gt;-tncome people
)
e
of
hagh tensiOn and deo:;pite an estimate from the
rnson of Washmgton CH, Patt) (Mark) \\ aller of one-s1 xth of the l! .S. econo-Among the nev. rule on
dt\
1
ion
- stretching nonpartisan Congre sional
deep
Davrd Robm on of West Viroinia, Bert Robinson m), to be phased m 0\er insurance compames are banto
shouted
protest that Bud!!et Office that the la\\
back
CH. Pete Robmson of Jeffersonville, Brad
everal )Cars. ranks among nm~ lifeume dollar lim1ts on
in11::m1pted
Ia''
maker;'
to\\ n will~ cut federal budget
Robm.;;on . and hi fianc~ Shem Bain and Jane Fillmore the brggest changeo; ever pohcies co,emge demals for
deficit' by an estimated
h,
11
meeting
on
the
subject
and her fiance Dino Da\r .111 of'\\ashington CH; grand: de\i ed b} ~ashington. pre-ex1 t111g cond1Uons. and
$143 billion O\er a decade.
Obama
igned
I
summer
chrldren Brooke (Courtney) Cribbs. Apnl Bell, Mind) That "·' a mam complamt pohc) cancellations \\hen
R)anl \\ endel. Ton) Robm-.on. Laura Robmson.
-------Che)enne Robrnson, Jon Sn)der. Jeo:;saca Robanson.
Ashlergh (M ich.tel l Chamberlm. Lmdse) Robinson. Jordan
Bn·e~S
and Jenna h llmore and Dane and Thor \\aller. 8 great1:
grandchrldren; .,1b hng ~ Pat Bennett. Maf) (Harold)
1 ongbei'I) , Barb Breakal and LaiT) (Brenda) Wright all of
pri' ate part-time pre- chool
to be removed from gra\es
\\a!-.hmgton CH John . "Bill'' \\ nght of Tennessee: qepprogram in the Mulberry
before that time.
mother Roma Wright of Washmgton CH. step-siblings Kam
Communlt)
Center in
.Mowing and trimming
PAGEVILLE
The Pomeroy. Available paces
(Rand)) Welsh of Bloomingburg, Harold (Maf)') Wright of
fee' are $25: the price for
1eigs
County
Health
\\ashmgton CH , Tamm) (Todd) Wright of London as well
each gra\e b
$375. Dcpar1ment will offer a are limited. Information is
.\11DDLEPORT
The
as many nieces, nephe\\ s, cousin&lt;&gt; ,md a host of friends.
available at 992-6245.
Paymenh are to made to
A gathering of family and friends will be held on Village of Middleport i~ Marvene Cald\\cll, 41016 Ill N I flu shot clinic from 10
Thursday. March 25 , 2010 from 4-8 p.m. at the Summers 1cqucsting that ctn) one SDR 7 Reed.s\ ille. Ohw a .m. - 2 p.m. on Friday.
March 26 ut Page' illc
f·uneral Home In keepmg with her wishes, cremation \\anting to retnC\C cemc- 45772.
Grocery.
The vaccines are for
terv
flowers
from
will follow
REEDSVILLE
A
cemeteries
those six months and older.
Memorial contributions arc suggested to the Fayette M (ddlcport
Good Frida) sen ice will be
The
vacctnes
arc
free
though
should
do
so
b)
March
31
.
County Commis ion, Meals on Wheel .
held at 7 p.m. on Aprd 2.
donation are accepted.
Online condolence may be sent to \\W\\.summersfuner- Decorattons remaining on
gra\e
will
be
remo\ed
SYRACUSE
The
alhome.com .
\\hen cleaning begins.
S) racu c Fire Department
"ill hold a ch1cken barbeTUPPERS PLAINS
cue and Easter Egg hunt on
. Tupper'
Plain
Fire
Saturda). April 3. The barhold an
POMEROY
Ne\\ Department
becue starts at II a.m. and
Childhood Easter egg hunt ah I :30 p.m ..
the egg hunt at I2:30 p.m .. HorilOns
Center
is April 3. at the old grade
at the Syracu'e Ball Ftcld . Enrichment
1 VPPERS PLAINS
Cleanup of the Tuppers The Easter Bunm will aL o enrollirH! three. four and fi, e school. Children up to 15
POMbROY - The following \\ere sentenced in Meigs Plains Chri tian Cemetery be gh ing ou~t pw:es. ) car-old':; for pre-school pro- rna) participate. Prize will
begin Apnl 1 and all Children ages one - 12 are gmms for 2010-20 I I. :-\c\\ be a'' arded. Hot dogs. chip
County Common Pleas Court:
Horizons is a faith-based, and soft drink'\\ ill be sen ed.
• Christopher C. Griffin. 25, Pomeroy, five )Cars for flowers and other items arc "elcome to participate.
attempted burglary, consecutne with a three-) ear sentence nO\\ being served on another charge from a different jurisdiction.
• Kelli N. Tauen.on. 23. Rutland. five years community
rrom Page At
control for posessivn of drugs as charged after an invcstimember!'.
Ron
gauon by the Ohio State I lighwa) Patrol. Slx month dri- for the delegation were two period, April I. 10 10 to pensatioll of pcr,onncl as Board
Ro!!er
Abbon.
\1ahr.
Logan.
ver's license suspension, lilctime firearms dbability.
\\ell
as
negotiations
Dec.
31,
2012
for
the
buildparent&lt;;, one ~harging that
• Trrnity Keener, 20. New Haven. W.Va .. five )Cars com- the safetv of their children i~gs/accounts currently serBuckle\, 'J'rl•.1surer1CFO Larr) Tucker and Barbara
munity control for grand theft, rece1\ ing stolen property. is being" compromised in ' ICC by Columbus southern Mark Rhonemus. and all Musser attended.
after investigation by sheriff's department.
practice sess1ons, and the Power di\ ision of American
• Trenton Qualls, 29, Middleport. five years community second that money from Electric Power.
control for non-support of dependents.
Several chang~ in person
fund raisers is not being
nel \\ere approH•d during
turned into the Boosters.
It ''as reported b) a par- the meeting. The res1gnat1on
ent that the students were for retirement purpo es of
shooting "ithout the proper Maril) n ~1eier as Food
from Page AI
backdrop curtain. and that Sen ice Supen isor effecth e
the Green Party, "ill all proceed to the general election proper protocol \\a not Jul) I \\US accepted. Also
being folio\\ cd to which accepted "ere the rcsrgnaunopposed in the primal').
Voters also will cast ballots in rocco; for Oh1o governor R) .tn Mnhr commented that tion&lt;; for retirement purposes
nfety
1s of Linda Lear, math teacher.
and lieutenant governor and L:.S. Senate. The U.S. Senate compromise
nnd Eleanor McKclve).
"unacceptable"
eat will be considered an open seat in this year's statC\\ ide
ln other busmess the technolof!\ teacher. both the
in Bedford lov.w;hip will decide a permanent three- Board nppr&lt;wed a re\ iscd Meigs ~1fddlc School. \\ ith
mill kvy for li1c .Protection. Sou them Lo&lt;:al Sch?ol _Di,trkt pctmancnt appropriations the option to e\ercbc the
proposes a ~.7- mlll bond issue and half-null ~ontmumg levy f01 lisc,al )·car 2009-10 in retire/rehire prm ision of the
for renovations to the Southern I~lementary School and con- thl' amount ol $29.57R,H51. MI:l'A negotiated agreestruction of an addition to the building whkh would serve as and acknowlcdgl'd ,, 'l't:ch ment.
Other re:-.ignat1ons mcluda nc\\ high school. RcplaLcmcnt of a fire prntelli&lt;~n levy 1n Prep grant of $4,572.76
Olive Township and cemetery m:tintenance le\y 111 Sutton frum Washington State cd Rcbcccu Frechette as
:\ ll'i~s Count)
M.'crctar) at the ~1cigs
Township also appear on the f\lay 4 pnmary hallot.
. College.
1\ahl'rl'Uiosis
Those who wish to, ote c1 spccil1c third-pm1y ballot, the1r
~I embers apprm cd a ne\\ .\1iddlc school, and Mary
OITic:c
Gilmore
as
a
substitute
ecfirst opportunity to do so in Ohio. can sp~cify ~heir c.hoicc [Xmer I!Uppl) cnordithltlnn
rctar).
of ballot on their application for early 'otrng. \ oters 111 the sen icc agreement \\ ith
The board nH)\ ed into
May 4 primary hnvc a choice of \oting De~ocratic or Direct l·ncrgy to continue
Republican , Jssuc!&gt;-only. or one of four tlurd part1es: ekctr llll) purchn Ill' sl.!r- cxccutl\e ess1011 lor the
Constltution. Green, L1bert.man or Soc1alist.
vices for the Distnct.lor the purpo e of hinng and com

Eloise Connolly

J

Gaylene Wright Robinson

Local

H1N1 clinic

Cemetery work
to begin

Good Friday

Barbecue set

TP cemetery
cleanup set

For the Record

•

Enrollment
open

Egg hunt

''ill

Sentenced

'"ill

Renovation

ON THE MOVE. ..

Voting

... TO

EliMINATE

TUBERCULOSIS
WORLD TB DAY

MARCH 24, 2010

l

..

�·pageA6

The Daily Sentinel

Wednesday, March

24, 2010

Ohio court upholds limits on injured worker suits Meigs County Forecast
Bv JoANNE VIVIANO
ASSOCIATED PRESS

C'Oll'~1Bl'S
An Ohio
Supreme C'our1 ruling that
upholJ., a 2.005 "tate ldw
lim1
lawsuit-. b\ worker-.. hurt on the job will bnng
.1 sense of security to
emplO) ers
and
help
employees. courts and
l.t\\)ers dculinr wtth \\Ork
place injuries, a la\\)Cr -;a1d
Tucsdll).
In a pmr ot 6-1 decio;ions,
JUstices upheld the Ia\\ that
restncts the filing of injury
Ia\\ suits nramst employers
b) \\ 01'kcr~ v. ho arc simultaneous!) re~:ei\ ing state
workers'
compensation
benefits. The hm requires
an employ ce filing lawsuits to prove the emplO)Cr
acted dclibcrutel) to cause
the injur).
"ror employers generally.
1t real!) brings a seno;e of
security as to what the law
ts because the statute has
been in effect since 2005.
but there's been no definitive ruling by the Ohio
Supreme Court on \\ hether
or not it "-'as constitutional."
said Irene Ke) se-Walker.
"ho represents employer
Metal &amp; Wire Products Co.
of Salem in northeast Ohio
in one of the cases.
The opinion's thorough-

ness, retracing tht: h b. tory of
\\01"kcrs' compensation law
and court decisions. also i~;
beneficial. she said.
"It's going to bi.! an opinIOn tll.lt \'-'ill be helpful on
'"' '
legallJ
'Ions. I
th111k, tor years anJ )Cars to
come." she said
But the ruling limits the
nghts of worker~ in Ohio to
pursue full con'pensatiOn
for tht:1r injune&lt;&gt;, including
civil damages for pain and
suffering.
said
Rrad
Zelasko. of the firm that
represents injured Metal &amp;
Wire
worker
Rose
Kamin.,ki. Kam:nski suffered an injury in 2005
when an 800-pound coil of
~;tecl fell on her legs and
feet. according to court
documents.
"While workers' compensation is a good program in
most !-.ituations, there are
some cases \\here people
are 'ery seriously hurt
becau'e of conduct that historically has been vie,,ed nc;
a "orkplace intentional
wrong and now they will be
\ery limited jn doing that,"
Zelasko said
Each of the court's de~:i­
sions dealt with a different
section of the Ohio
Constitution, \\ hich injured
\\ orkers suid were viola!l:d
by the limits set on their

ability to sue their employers C\en when a workplace
condition was "~ubstantially
certain to cause injury."
In the Kaminski ruling,
justices sa1d the law doesn't
viohltC \\ n1 ken,' rights
under n ~cction of the con
'itltution that allows legislators to make laws that provide for ''the comfort,
health. safety and general
\\&lt;Cifare of all employees''
und laws to resolve workers' comp issues
,
The second decision said
the law doesn't violate u
host of other constitutional
protections, including the
guarantee to tnal b) JUry. a
remedy for damage::-. and
due process.
'I he ca~e im olved un
mjury to Carl Stetter. u
worker at an R.J. Corman
Derailment Scrvtces site in
.\1illbul) in northwest Ohio.
His lawsUit claims he suf'fered broken bones in his
nbs, back. race. head. ankle
and foot and other injuries
in 2006 when u truck tire he
was inOating exploded and
from
its rim.
broke
1\lessages seeking comment
"ere left Tuesdav for attorneys representii1g Stetter
and the Nicholru;ville, Ky.bascd R.J Corman.
Justice Robc11 Cupp, who
\Hote both of the court'c;

Wedncsday ... Mostly Lows in the lower 30s.
opinions, '&gt;aid in the Stetter
ruling that workers' com- sunny. Not as cool with Highs around 60.
pcnsn!Jon laws are "the highs in tne lower 60s . West
Saturday night... Mostly
result of a unique mutual ~ inds around 5 mph.
clear in the evenmg ...Then
compromise
bctwecn
Wednesday
night. .. becoming part I y cloudy.
employees .mJ ~mployers.:· Partly cloudy 111 the Lows in the upper 30s.
"Empll~)Ce''- "H' up theu· evening ...'J'hen be~.-ullling
Sunda)' ...Partly ~&gt;unny.
&lt;.:ormnon-la." remedy and 1 mostly cloudy. Lows in the chance of :-.howers 111
accept posstbly lower mone- . upper 30s, Northea~t winds afternoon. Highs around
tary recovery, but wllh around 5 mph.
Chance of rain 30 percent.
gr~atcr &lt;~ssurance that they
Thursday... Partly sunny
Sunday night ...Cioudy.
will re~c1ve rew;on~bl~ ~om- in the morning ...Then most- Showers
likely... Mainly
I'.cnsat•on f~&gt;r thetr .mJury. ly cloudy with a chance of after midnight. Lows in the
bmployers 111 tuf!l giVe up showers in the afternoon. upper 30s. Chance of rain
common-law . detens~s .but Highs in the mid 60s. East 60 percent.
~re r.1:ot~~ted from unl11mted winds around 5 mph.
~londay ...Mostly cloudy
hab11lty. Cupp ~rote.
Chance of rain 30 percent.
with a 50 percent chance of
H~
also
1:-.::-.ued
~
Thursday
night... showers. Highs in the mid
rem111dcr . tha! workers
Showers. Lows in the lower 50s.
cnmpensa!wn 1s a no-f~ult 40s. ~ortheast winds 5 to 10
Monday night ...Mostl)
system With award~ ?!ten . mph. Chance of rain 80 per- cloudy with a 40 percent
made to employees ~nJured cent.
chance of showers. Lows in
Friday...Cioudy. Showers the mid 30s.
as the result of the1r own
m1sco~duct.
..
.
likely... Mainly in the mornTuesday...Mostly cloudy.
JustJ~e Paul P~e1fer dt.s- ing. Highs in the mid 50s. A chance of rain showers in
sent~d 111 both rulings, wnt- Chance of rain 60 percent.
the morning. Highs m the
mg 111 the Ste.tter case. that
Friday
night
and upper 40s. Chance of rain
the purpose ot the law ts to Saturdav...Partly cloudy. 30 percent.·
''take away the right of Ohio
·
workers to seck damages - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - for their employers' intentiona! acts."
1
"An
employee
may
reco\'er damages under the
statute only if his employer AEP (NYSE) - 34.30
Ohio Valley Bane Corp. (NASdeliberately intends to harm Akzo (NASDAQ) - 56.20
DAQ)- 23.78
BBT (NYSE)- 32.10
•
him .... Are we to believe Ashland Inc. (NYSE) - 53.19
Peoples (NASDAQ) - 17.51
that criminally psychotic Big Lots (NYSE) - 37.91
Pepsico (NYSE) - 66.86
Evans (NASDAQ) - 31.59
employers are really a prob- Bob
Premier (NASDAQ) - 8.53
BorgWarner (NYSE) - 38.00
lem that requires legislation Century Aluminum (NASDAQ)
Rockwell (NYSE) - 56.78
Rocky Boots (NASDAQ) - 9.51
- 15.37
in Ohio'?"

Local Stoeks

Around Ohio
Missing men
found dead in
Muskingum river
ZA "\ESYIU E CAP) Police 111 eastern Ohio say
foul pia) is not suspected
IT1 the death" of two misstng men \\hose bodies
ha\ e been touncl in their
car in a ri' er.
Zanes\ tile Police Capt
Mike Baker says the bodies
of 29-year-old Ben Da\ is
.md h1s friend. Ryan Hickey.
"ere reco' ered from the
Muskmgum Rh er around
II :30 ~ondu) night. Their
vehtclc \\as eli scovered in
the water under a bndge in
z~mcs' illc.
Da\ 1&lt;; and H1ckey had
last been !.ecn le,l\ ing a
nightclub in Zanesville
earl) la:-.t Wednesday. Both
lived in Alexandria. about
30 mile-; c~way.
Baker \\ ould not speculate on hO\\ the car wound
up in the nver and sa1d the
im esti gat ion· "as continuim!. ~The
~1uskmgum
Count\ coroner\ office said
autop~tes "auld be done
Tueo:,da).

2005 He was removed
from cou11 the following
year during :-entcncing
"hen he \\ ouldn 't stop
laughing and smiling.
though that '' ~.s not an
issue in Fry's appeal.

Prosecutor: Ohio
bodies case
record was public

movies toure.d the operation
Tue-..day.
Later he held n news conference and appealed to
Gennany's Hugo Boss AG
to reverse its shutdown
decision. Glover led a boycott of Hugo Bos::. formal
\\ear at the Academy
Awards March 7.
'l'he
company
said
Tuesdav that its shutdown
decisioi1 stands. The compam say~ the union representiii£ workers rejected concession~ at the plant. which
it says isn't globall) competitive.

CLEVELAND &lt;AP) - A
prosecutor :-.ays a serialkilling suspect's psychiatric
exam.
\vhich
got
a
Cle,·eland reporter threatened with jail last week,
\\uS a public record.
Ohio Turnpike
A~si.stant county prosecuto build greener
tor Richard Bombik said
Monday the evaluation of
service plazas
Anthonv Sowell was submitted l'ts cviden.:e and the
CLEVELA~D (AP) public had a right to know The Ohio Turnpike plans to
about it.
build a pair of "grl'end'
Sowell has pleaded not service plaza-. powered by
gmlty in the kdlinl:is of II renewable enen!\, with
women "hose rcmams were electricitv for trucker~ to
found at his Cleveland heat or cool thrir rigs withhome.
out keepmg their eng1nes
A reporter for The Plain running.
Dealer who wrote about
Officials say the plaLas on
the psychiatric report ''as both sides of the turnpike m
threatened with arrest lust Williams Count). 20 miles
Tuesda) for missing an from the Indiana border.
emergency hearing. But
will offer ethanol and
Ohio high court the judge backed off when also
h:ne stations for recharging
she learned another judge elcctrir cars. Plus. Turnpike
upholds Akron
had made the l'Valuation Executi Yl' Director George
man's death
a\ailablc.
Distel sa) s truck drh-ers
Sowell's law)ers main- who stop "ill have the nbilsentence
tain that releasing thl.' report ity to hook up to cable and
will make it tough for him the Internet.
COLU\1 Bl S (AP)
The
Turnpike
The Ohio Supreme Court · to get a fair trial.
Commission awarded about
hm, upheld the con\ icnon
$31 million in wnstruction
Glover makes
and death ~entence of a man
contracts on ~1onda\. :\1ost
who stabbed h1., former girlpitch to save
of the mone) "iii come
ft iend to death wtth a butchfrom last year's toll increase
Ohio jobs
er knife in front of her
for dri,ers JXl) ing cash.
grandchildren.
The ne'' service plazas
BROOKLYN &lt;AP)
ln a 7-0 mling Tuesda).
the state'!\ highest court Dann) Glo,cr offered hugs will open ne:-;t )Car. •
reJected clatms b) Clarence and mornl support to
Fry that errors were made. Cle' eland-are,t '' orl-.crs at a
Cop says he
fir"t m his indictment and men ·s sUit plant that faces a
acted on instinct
later by the judge at his trial. shutdown next month '' ith
Fift)-year-old Fry. of the loss or 375 jltbs.
C'LEVELA:'\D (AP) - A
Workers at the llugo Bll~s
Akron. was convtcted of
plant in 13rooklyn. Ohio, suburban Cle\ eland pol ice
o~ggravated murder 111 the
killing of 41 -year-old whooped und chce1ed us thL off•cer sa) s he was acting
Tamila Ht~rdi&lt;.on in July star of the "I L'lhttl \\'capon" on mstinct when he pusht'd

a stranded motorist to safety
and got flipped over a
guardrail by an out-of-control vehide ,
Brooklyn Heights Lt.
John Lambert said at a
hospital ne\\ s conference
Monday that he was just
doing his job \\hen he was
~truck on an icy highway
ramp last month. The
ordeal \\as captured on his
patrol car's dashboard
'ideo.
Lambert suffered fractures of the peh is, tailbone
and left eye socket and
rould require up to 18
months to recover fullv.
The driver whose car hit
the officer has been ticketed.

Champion (NASDAQ) - 1.25
Charming Shops (NASDAQ) 6.90
City Holding (NASDAQ) - 34.05
Collins (NYSE) - 62.85
DuPont (NYSE) - 38.31
US Bank (NYSE) - 26.25
General Electric (NYSE)- 18.33
Harley·Davldson (NYSE) 28.48
JP Morgan (NYSE) - 44.58
Kroger (NYSE) - 21.39
Limited Brands (NYSE) - 25.46
Norfolk Southern (NYSE) 55.24

Smile! Now you can

Royal Dutch Shell - 58.69
Sears Holding (NASDAQ) 108.85
Wai·Mart (NYSE) - 55.89
Wendy's (NYSE) - 4.86
WesBanco (NYSE) - 16.78
Worthington (NYSE) - 17.58
Dally stock reports are the 4
p.m. ET closing quotes of trans·'
actions for March 23. 2010, provided by Edward Jones flnan·
clal advisors Isaac Mills In
Gallipolis at (740) 441·9441 and
Lesley Marrero In Point Pleasant
at (304) 674-0174. Member SIPC.

own''"' plelure cl.,.,t ~­

mornet"t ~ ;n ~ n~t Pno~oe; bOCOmo omeJesa

whet\ tramod or pnntod on D mug or mou.., pad

.

Ohio State plans 8.5 pet tuition hike in 201 0
Bv Juue CARR

SMYTH

ASSOCIATEP PAE&amp;S

COl l.:MBL,S - Ohio
Stnte l'mverMty is preparing to raise in-state undergr.tdu,tte tuition and fees by
about 8.5 percent over the
next two quarters. bnngmg
the highest cost paid by
re~idents to $9,420 per
school )Car.
Ohio State, one of I he
nation's largest uni,ersllie~;,
distributed ,, memo outli n
ing detai l ~ of the plan
Tuesday. Trustees
are
scheduled to unveil the proposal nt theu March 30
meeting. A fm,tl vote ic;;
toXpected 111 \1,t).
J·o111 ot Ohio\ six public

colleges or Ulli\CrsitiL's \\ ith
sclecti-.c achmss1nn lht\C
already rnised ll1illll11 Since
a statC\\idc freczo: "·'" hltrd
effCCI i \ e i 11 f,tll .2009.
With the hike, Ohio Stull'
will rank filth highest 111 thL'
state in cost, behand Mi.tm•
of Ohw. the llni\ct'll) nl
Cincinnati, Ho\\llllg nrccn
and Ohio Univl'rs•t~.
Senio1 VICC IHCStdl'nt 1111
business ,u1d lnwncc Bill
Shkurli ":ud only II) pen:cnt
of Ohio St:tte ~tmknts pay
full prkc; nil nth~rs rel'CI\ c
some kind ol fin,mcial aid.
"'!'hie; is sort Df like the
~I tckc1o. price on a car," he
said.
Shkurti s.ticl the un1vcr,1t)
'&gt;.t\Cd c;;tudcnh and the1r

famiiJ('s $12 million bv
deht) ing thL' 3.5 pen:~.&gt;llt
IIH.'t\'asc allowed this school
\car frnm full to summer
2o 10. Another 3.5 per&lt;.:cnt
InCrL':t~c
allo\\ed
nc~..:t
!!l'hool )t'ar will be ta&lt;.:ked
on lor fall quarter.
M,tlong up the r~.&gt;st of the
uwrcase nrc incr~.&gt;ases in
lees for accrss to the Ohio
lllllllll studt'nt t'lller, free
u~c of the loc.1l transit systt•m und llllll'r llt'th itics. he
said
&lt;:.adu:tiL' .;tudents will
nlsu see tuition and fee
incrcuses, ,llld out of-state
r~sidcnts "ill pa) a tu ition
surch,trgt• of I pcrl.'ent thi~
summc• und 1.5 pe1Tl'llt
begnming in the fall.

BANKING. INSURANCE. INVESTMENTS.
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--"---

�------~---

Inside

The Daily Sentinel

..

NFL changes OT for plaJofl's, Page 86

Bl

Vols prepped for Rucke~es, Page 86

Wednesday, March 24, 2010

41!;!~ A~~u~evente:sf~!:;in~h•gh

Sullinger again AP's 01 POY 21110 AP All-Ohio bovs
basketball teams

var.;1ty &amp;pert•ng
Involving teams
from Me gs Mason and Galila coun1oes

&amp;¢hool

COLUMBUS. Ohio (AP)
Jared Sullinger ami
Cameron Wright, tY.'o highly
sought recruits who had
remarkable senior seasons.
headline
the
2010
Associated Press Division I
ami II All-Ohio boys basketball teams.
Both \Vere announced
:.\1onday a!&gt; players of the
year in their rcspccthe divi:,.ions, ba5ed on the recommendation of a statewide
media panel.
Sullinger. the 6-foot-9
force inside for Columbus
.Northland who 1s headed to
Ohio State this 1~111. is the
reigning AP f\1r. Basketball
in Ohio and a ... trong contender to make it two in a
rov. "hen the award is
announ&lt;:ed Wednesday. He
c1veraged 24.5 points, 12.3

W~tdnuday, Marm 2.4

Baseball
Point Pleasant at Poca, 7 p,m
Softball
Point Pleasant at Herbert Hoover. 5 30
pm.

Thursday, March 2.5

Baseball
Chapmanvolle at Point Pleasant, 6.30
pm.
Softball
Wahama at Bulfc!to, 5.30 p.m
frl&lt;l_ay,..Marcb26
Baseball
~rbert Hoover at Poont Pleasant, 5 p m
Softball
Scott at Po1nt Pleasant 5·30 p m
Girls Tennis
Scott at Po1nt Pleasant, 5 p.m
Boys Tennis
Scon at Point PteasaN 5 p m

=====:--:::-:::-::-- ...::.:..::=

Rio Grande
baseball sweeps
WVUTech
B Y M ARK W ILLIAMS
SPECIAL TO THE SENTINEL

A to GRANDE, Ohto

~ Universit) of Rio
Grande RedStorm baseball
team finished off u fourgame "weep of West
Virginia Tech on Sunday
afternoon by winning both
ends of a doubleheader, 130 and 9-5. History was
made in game one a~ junior
righthander
Desmond
Sullivan threw his second
career no-hitter for the
RedStonn in the gume one
victory.
Sullivan. a native of
Scarborough,
Ontario,
improved to 3-0 on the season. Sullivan struck out
eight butters and walked
~mly two in the fi\'e-inning
tun-rule game. ll's the
first no-hitter for Rio
Grande ~ince Sullivan
~lanked
~otrc
Dame
~ollege, April 5 of last seaon.
·'Desmond "as lights
• ," said Rio Grande head
ch Brad Warnimont.
. .ght strikeouts. firing a
co-hitter m that tirst game.
6e thre\\ oubtanding."
Sullivan was the pitching
$tar and senior third baseman Tvler Schunk \\as the
hitting" stur. He was a perfect hitting 3-for-3 with u
~ome run. a double. three
~Bis and three runs scored.
The RedStonn (23-4. 7-1
MSC) had II hib in the
first game triumph. Junior
first baseman Francisco
Ramirez had a nice gume at
~he plate, going 2-for-3
with a double, a nm scored
and two RBls. Junior leftfielder Michael Lynch was
,.for-2 with a run scored
imd an RBI. senior centerfielder Ryan Yakura was 1for- 1 with a run scored and
~n RBI and freshman Mark
parent delivered a two-run

I

I
1

'
l

rebounds , J blocked shots
und 2.4 assn. ts for the
Vikingo;, who ·w·ere ranked
No. I in the USA Today
national poll until their loss
to Gah,mna Lincoln in the '
regwnnl
championship
game on Saturday.
Wright, a 6-4 senior at
Cle"eland Benedictine, has
~igned to pin) at Pittsburgh.
He averagl..'d 19.3 points, 7
rebound~. 4.2 assi-,ts and J.2
steals for the Bencals. who
\\ill play Dayton Dunbar in
the Div1sion 11 state semifi·
nab on Thu~~Juy night at
Value City Arena.
Ohio State-bound point
guard Aaron Craft, along
'' ith a guy he may be seeing
a lot over the next fe\\ )Cars,
Adreian Payne, arc the
biggest names on the 2010
As~ociated Pn:ss Division

Ill and IV All-Oh1o teams.
Craft is a 6-foot-2 point
guard from top-ranked
Findlay Liberty-Benton who
averaged 26.7 poinb. 7.7
rebounds und 6.5 a~sists
while leading his team to a
79-1 regular-season record
in his four years. He was
selected as the player of the
year in Division IlL
Division IV player of the
)ear Payne is headed for
another Bil! Ten school,
Michigan State. The 6-10
senior hit for 15.lJ points.
II .6

rebound!)

and

4. I

blocked shots a game while
leading Dayton Jefferson to
the state semifinals thb
week at Value City Arena.
The selections. based on
the recommendations of a
state media panel, were
announced on Tuesday.

Eagles, 'Does cOmbine
for 5 AII-Oh io selectiOns
in boys basketball
B Y B RYAN W ALTERS

Sarah Hawley/file photo

Southern senior Sean Coppick (12) prepares for a shot
attempt during this March 4 contest against Chesapeake at
Charles W. Hayman Gymnasium in Racine.

f-

Lynch

Winebrenner

Rees

Johnson

Rio softball splits with Marietta

~

ron

3. sr, 22.1, Paul Honigford. Sugarcreek
Garaway. 6·8. Jr.• 16.0; Kyle Ondera, Oak
Holl, 6-1. sr., 20.3
Player of ·he year· Aaron Craft, Fondlay
Loberty·Benton.
CoaChes of the year Chad Spurgeon. E.
Canton. Mark Short, Blanchester
SECOND TEAM. Chall Montgomery.
Cle Cent. Caltl .. 6. 3 , sr.. 18 .9; Roley
Thomas, Cardington-Lincoln. 5·11. sr
25.9; T1m Kochendoerfer. Ironton. 6-3, sr
20.4 , Dere~ Bdbng. Anna. 6-3. sr .. 20.4.
Brook Turson. Plymouth. 6·3, sr., 25 2;
Ryan Snyder, Louisvolle Aquinas, 6.0, sr

c

C1n. W1nton Woods, 6·7, sr. 17.0;
~~iRD TEAM· Matthew McCollister,
Demetrous Treadwell. Euchd. 6·7, sr. London Madison-Plains. 5·9, sr., 17.9.
22.8: Tyler Peters, Modina, 6-2. sr., 16.1; Dan Monte·oso. St.Ciaorsvolle, 6·1, fresh
Tra€110n Jackson, Westervolle South, 6-2. 215: Levo Cros•er. Bellaire. 6-2, sr.. 162;
2
Jr
TEAM: Cory Veldhuizen, N
Jess Chadwell, Georgetown. 6·4, sr
Canton HoovQr, G-5. sr., 18.1 Shawn 22.0, Ctad
Messing,
Metamora
Dyer, Marion Harding, 6·1, sr, 200: Evergreen. 6-3. sr., 19.8; Hank Leslie.
Robert Devos Tot Bowsher. 6 •3, Jr 25.7
McDermott Northwest, 6·4. sr.. 23.0;
Travos Tnce. Huber HIS Wayne. 6.0. 11
Jerah'me Wtlhams, Campbell Memonat,
21 9: DaWuan Thomas, Trotwood· 5·9, sr., 23.0..
MadiSOn, 6-1 sr.• 18.6· Brandon Neels, 1 Spec•al Mentron
Con. La Salle, 6·3. fr., 15.2: Ralph Holl,
K!arke Ransome. R•chwood North
westerville North, 6-6. sr., 22.6.
Unoon; Doug Ute. Marron Elg•n: Jordan
Specoal Mention
Burress. Martons Ferry; Wes Rata•czak.
Bnan Sullovan, Upper Arlington; J.D Sarahsvolle Shenandoah; Mark Maloney.
Weatherspoon, Cols Northland: Clay Moddletown Mad•son· Cameron Motchell.
cameron
Dresden Tri·Valley· D.J. Con. Taft YJoUoam Pope, Camden Preble
Martinez. Troy, PatriCk Angle. Logan: Tom Shawnee; Nathan Copley, Chesapeake;
Parker, Cle. Sl Ignatius; Nate Tait, Tory H~rne. Portsmouth, Blake Ju~toce.
Lyndhurst Brush; Trey Lewis, Garfield Peebles. A,drew Seaman. Peebles. K•rk
Hts.; Delberl Love, Lakewood St Edward; Maxwell, Ch1lhcothe Zane Trace; Evan
Brian Theriot, Modpark, Justin Roth, Legg, Poketon. Anthony Artossa,Ko~land,
Parma; Jaron Crowe. Mentor: Charlie Joey Hummel, Moddleheld Cardona!. A.J
Hughes, Perrysburg: Anton Hutchlrs, Henson. Orwell Grand Valley Jerma•ne
Lima Sr Josh Egner, Mass. Jackson; Willoams, Cle. VASJ. Ryan Frey. Mount
Tyler Ferrell, Brunswock; Angel Gonzalez
Blanchard Roverdale; Josh . Johnson,
Warren Hardong. Cameron Black II, Kent Onawa:Gtandorf. Charlie Rtchar~son.
Roosevelt; Jonathon Harris, Twinsburg: Ontano, R&gt;1an Burtoel.d. E. Canton, ZeN
lsiah Ellion. Canton McKinley.
Bradley. E. Canton. Ben Gyson. E
Honorable Menton
Palestine; Brennan McKean, W Salem
Rob Brandenb~rg, Gahanna·L•ncoln: Northwestern: Cody Dollon, Newton Falls.
Trey Burke. Cols. Northland, Kevtn Gray,
Honorable MentiO~
.
. •
Reynoldsburg· Taylor Rieger Lewis I Pat Blevrns. Batt1more L•berty UniOn,
Center Olentangy Orange; Stev;e Taylor. Luke Branstool, Howard E Knox: Nick
Gahanna·lrncoln;
G•bsoo. Milford Ctr Faorbanks· Skyler
Markus Crider, Huber Hts. Wayne; S•mpson, Cent~rburg, MarcquiCe Taylor
Jordan Hocks. W. Chester Lakota W., A.J. Cots. Afncentnc.
Brennan Mullett, Sugarcreek Garaway;
Pacher, Vandaha Butler; Mervin Taylor.
Con. Woodward: Aaron Thomas. 1n. Evan Jones. W. Lafayette Ridgewood;
Aoken· Mike W•lkoson Cin Anderson·
Dev1n Ward, Bella11e. Cody Nelson. Lore
Ma~n Mays. Loga~;
'
C•ty B~ckeye Tra11. Dalton Sm1th,
1
Myles Hamrlton. Lakewood St. Edward: Barnesvolle
.
.
Ned Tomoc. N Royalton; Aaron Whole.
Wes Carlson, C1n. H1lls Chnst•an Acad.,
Strongsvolle: Cohn Barth, Olmsted Falls, Ronn•e Dnnnon, Jan:estown Greenev•ew;
Alfonzo Houston, Cle Hts ; Tyler Ben Gertz Readong; Man Houser,
Hammond Cle • St lg~at1 us Tyrone Middletown Mad•son; Scott Mas•n. T1pp
Wolfiams, E·. Cle, Sha..:.: Shonn Miller. Cle
City Bethel; Scott Purcell, HamlltO~ Badon:
St. Ignatius: Rochoe Poekarski, Hudson;
Blake Barnes, South Poont, Andy
Jay Spnngs, Tor St John's; Storm Stegman, ~heelersburg, Blake Yates.
Stanley Tol St Francis· Demond Poweil
Lucasvolle \at .. Zach Utley. Lucasvone Val.
Tol. ROgerS; Drew Lehman. Tol Cent: Markle Tate, Belpre: ~yler Thon:pson.
Cath., Leroy Alexander
Holland Stewart Federal ~ocklng, Mychal M•lchell,
Sprlngf1eld· Ct&gt;auncey Orr Bowltng Nelsomlolle-York, Zach Bobo, Albany
Alexander, Jesse Stone. Oak Holl;
Green·
·
•
Brad' DuPont, Mass. Jackson; Corey
John We•ss. Gates Molls Hawken; John
Pornn1• canton T 1mken: Elvin Butter
W1lson. Gates Mrl1s Hawl&lt;en; Brandon
Akron E .. Mike Podolsky. canfield: Jacob Easton, Andover l}'matunong Val.: Paul
Shays.
North. Barberton: Kenny Kaminski, Guhde, Kortland. . Robert
Med na Kyle Payne Brunswick Connor Wellington Nate F1ata. Gates Molls
·
'u
·
·
.
B
Gtlmour
Acad.,
1
G root, noontown Lake, Jare le urt. I Jo da li n Dell .· ry o·eonn Lma
Youngs East
r n ur er,
a.
or, '
·
·
Cent. Cath.; Desi K11k~an. Lima Cent. •
Cath., Brandon McCalley Plymouth; Enc
DIVISION II
1 Lefeld, Codwater: Voctor Fortkamp, St.
FIRST TEAM: N1Ck Kellogg, Cols. Henry;
DeSales, 6·2. sr. 18.7; Dave Brown,
Zach Wasson, OrMIIe, Corey Caldwel~
Coshocton, 6-0, sr., 19.1. Ouinten Rollins, Sm1thv1lle; Bnan Sole. Newton Falls; Nate
Wrlmongton, 6.0, sr., 17.8; Cameron Hodge, Campbell Memonal; Zach
Wnght. Cle Benedictine, 6-4, sr, 19.3. Houmard. Wooster Tnway; Josh Smith. E.
Zach Leahy Rossford, 6·2, sr., 23.3: Canton; Cote Bond. Louisville Aquinas;
Charles Hearns, Akron Kenmore, 6-2. sr.. Tyler Cline. Jeromesvolle Hollsdale
25.0; Geron Johnson, Day. Dunbar 6·3,
sr., 16.8: Ryar HICkS, Port Clinton. 6·7,
DIVISION IV
sr., 16.4.
FIRST TEAM: Man Dawson, Newark
Player of the year: Cameron Wright. Cle
Cath.,
6·1,
sr., 17 2: Justrn Andes
BenediCtine
Coaches of the year Troy D•els. Port Shadyside, 6·2. sr.. 17.5; Blake Blevins
Clinton; Blair Albnght, Cols. DeSates; Ktrk Manchester, 6-6. fl .. 18.4; Adreoan Payne,
Day. Jefferson, 6·10, sr., 15.9: Greg
Lehman, Def•ance; Jeff Skmner Athens.
Kahlig. Ft. Recovery. 6·5, sr., 26.7, Casey
SECOND
TEAM: Adam
Blake, Carroll, Yocngs. Christian, 6-8. sr., 18 2.
C1rclev111e Logan Elm. 6·0, sr. 13.6; Jerry
Player of the year: Adreian Payne, Day
Dixon, Cots. East. 6·1 sr, 22.8: Cori
Butcher, Athens. 6.0, sr., 16.2, Derek Jefferson.
CoaChes of the year Drew Meister,
Jackson, Cle. Benedictine, 6·1, sr 15.4;
...ason Pons. Akron Buchtel. 6·1, sr., 19.3; Newark Cath ; John Ltndsay, Tol. onawa
Hills
Anthony Kukwa Perry. 6-4, fr., 194.
SECONC TEAM: Justin Young.
THIRD TEAM: Anthony Monaco. Dover.
6·3, jr. 20.8; Darrell "Bucky" Chenault, Richmond Hts, 6-4, sr., 14 1; Bryan
Cols. Centennoal, 5·10, sr., t9.0; Jake RediC. Cols. Tree of Ufe. 6·4. sr., 18.5;
Heagen. New Concord John Glenn, 6-4, Dylan Kaufman, Berlin Hiland. 6-4, soph ..
fr., 16 6; Jorian Hudson. St. Bernard 18.9; Jake Devos, Cin. Seven H•Us. 6·6, sr.,
Roger Bacon, 6·3, sr. 14.9, Steve 16.0; Jordan Bas•nger Kalida 6-4, sr.,
Hammersmtth. Defiance 6-6, sr., 11.2; t6. 1: Eliot Browarsky Tol. onawa Hills, 6·
Kyle Slone, WCH Washington. 5·10. fl., 0. sr. 19.2; Kns Tibbs, Wollow Wood •
18.1, JaKarr Sampson. Akroo SVSM, 6-8, Symmes Val .. 6·3, sr.. 15.0, Matthoas
Tayala. McDonald. 6·1, fl. 17 0.
jr 14.0.
THIRD TEAM.
Seger Bonifant
Special MentiOn
Jordan Laster Cols. East; Reuel Rogers. Strasburg-Franklin, 6·7, soph .. 17.7;
Frankoe
Yo;ng,
Lockland.
6·5, sr.. 17.0;
Cois. Bexley; Tanner Gibson, Zanesvolle ,
Danrel Wose, Uhrichsville Claymont. Greg Mochael Dennis, Carey, 6-8. sr., 23.2; TJ.
Gamey, Day. Thurgood Marshall; LOUIS Short, AntNerp. 6·5. sr , 19.5: Devonta
Schaljo, Bethel-Tate; Joe Staley. Day. Brooks. Bedford Chane!, 6·4. Jr., 13.1,
Chaminade
Julienne;
Austin Chris Cox. Leesburg Fa•rf1eld. 6·5, sr.
Cunnongham, Vincent Warren; M•chael 228.
Special IVention
Turner, Chillicothe, Hamson Martin,
Kyle Anderson. Morral Ridgedale ; Shakir
Waverly; Dylan Newsom, Jackson; Eric
Truog, Chagrin Falls Kenston; Roehard Dunning, Canal Winchester Harvest
Morrow, Huntong Valley Unov. School; NICk Prep; Enc Knechtel, Lancaster Fairf•etd
Farley, Vermilion: Nock Harney, Cle. Chr.; Trav•s Tucci , Malvern- Aaron Parry.
Benedictine: Tyler Honkte. Wauseon: Zanesville Rosecrans: Justin Teramana,
Reggie McAdams, Elida: Josh Ingle. Steubenville Cath. Cent.; Mark Fnlling, Ft.
Shelby: Mike Brown, Louisville; Cyte Loram1e; J.P McFanand. S. Charleston
Strouble, Alliance Marlington; Niko Southeastern; Ryan Newsome, . Yellow
Fatimus. Poland Seminary; Myles Frtten. Sprongs; Wes Loop.. S. Webster, Noah
Akron Buchtel; R•cky Johnson. Akron I Guthne. Glouster Tromble, Jake Lynch.
SVSM; Moke Plouse. Norton
Reedsville Eastern: Sean Coppock.
Honorable Mention
Rae~ne Southern: Jordan Thornsberry,
Troy Clark. Delaw!lre Buckeye Valley; Seaver Eastern .Jo"' Pokorny. Newbury;
Justin Dassylva Utica· Percy Dean Cols
Abe Valenti.ne, Elyna Open Door Chr.,
Moffhn: Bryan Large Hebron lakewood: Zach o·orazoo. CuyahOga Hts.. James
M•ke Tighe Cols. Watterson·
Tonsley. Rochmond Hts., Josh Lee,
·
·
Pandora-Golboa: Ryan Vanderhorst. New
Ryker
Locke, _Monerva;
Marcus Knoxvtlle; Mochael Johnston. Wellsville; JT
Mamarella. Dover, Knshan Cross. 1 10 er Dalton· Andrew Lowe Orrville
Carrollton; Ethan Shnver. Byesville ;ny s:.Vay
c"hr
Landon ' Traoner
Meadowbrook:
Dom
McCluskey. t M'Jadore
Coshocton, Dwtght Macon, Steubenville;
Honorable Mention
Nate Adams, Newark Cath.; Derek
Ryan Bass. Day. Dunbar; Sam
Hendncks, Ctn. lnd1an Holl; Brent Clark Lancaster Fisher Cath. Andrew
Langhorne. Middletown FenwiCk, Shawn
· G
G.,
.,.,
Robinson, Day. Thurgood Marshall. N•ck Har~e. ahanna Chr. Acad.. eron ,ate.
Canal Winchester Harvest Prep; Weston
VanHoose St Pans Graham· Matt Vest
• ·
.
.
'
Severns, Danvolle;
Day. Chamonade·Julienne,
.
Noah Boyd. Berlin Hiland: Adam
Tyler Pntehard, Corclevtlle logan Elm, Weckerly Malvern Brandon Sweet New
Casey Shaw, WCH Washongton: lsa1ah
·
· S
C on WCH Mlam 0 Trace Frank Phila Tusc. Cent. Cath.. NiCk chuetz.
v:r~nto'ur, Athens: Aoric Steagall, Shadyside: Dylan K~mble, Shady~ide ;
Hillsboro; Jake Kretzer. waverly; Jacob
Nock Brandis. Con. Chrostoan, Aaron
Mechanocsburg.
Hayden
Horsley, Thornv•lle Sheridan; Andy Grillo; Brown,
McArthur v 1nton County;
Hagerman, Spnng. Cath. Cent.: Cody
R J. Kauffman, Avon, Kevrn Krakow•ak. Latomer. D~y. Jeffe~on; Drew Moore. New
Parma Hts. Holy Name: Anthony Ma4'~ l'o-Vollage, Craog Wallace, Day
Hitchens. Lorain Clearview: Sean Butler, Pon tz,
Ashtabula Edgewood; Matt Kelly. Hunting
Connor Scon. S Webster: ~on Garrett
Valley Unlv School; Dylan O'Donnell, Scootovl_lle E.
Kelly . Winebrenner
Mentor Lake Cath., Brian D'AIT'ato, Cle
Reedsv.ilte Eastern: Moke Johnson.
Benedoctone·
Reedsvolle Eastern; Cyle Rees, Racone
Maurice T~ylor Tol Loblley· Clay Rolf
Southern; Doug McVey, Beaver Eastern:
Pombervolle EastwOOd: Cody Ruhlman: Kevin Montgomery. Beaver Eastern;
Bellevue; Trey Howard, Lim~ Shawnee:
Ben
Hemongway, . . Wolloughby
Cole Wolliams. T 1ffin Colu1"1boan: Daron Cornerstone Chrost•an: RIChie 0 Neoll, N
Waterman Cehna
R•dgevolle Lake Rodge Acad.; Marlin
Nate Jac.ubec Struthers David Baker Pockens. Cle. His. Luth E .. Jordan Munn,
Poland Sem;n'ary Leon Hedgepeth' Newbury. Shane Pengov, Thompson
Streetsboro: Jazel Garrett. Akron Bllchtel; Ledgemont. Anthony DeBaltzo. Bedford
Lorenzo Cugint. Akron SVSM; Ben Chane!,
.
Donlow, Poland Seminary; John Stoops,
Jordan .Cook, Vanlue. Mason Roth.
Youngs Mooney
McComb. Brock Hom•er. Contmental;
·
Cody Ven1ekotter. Moiler Coty; Jared
Horstman, Ft. Jennongs: Luke Kohls,
Columt&gt;us Grove, Juston Eolerman New
DIVISION Ill
FIRST TEAM : Aaron Craft, Frndlav Bremen,
Jeremy Carter, Wellsv•lle; John Pecchoa
L•berty·Benton, 6·2, sr., 26.7· Jacob
Bolyard Orrville. 6·1, sr., 20.8; DeMonte Youngs. Ctorrstian; Matt Knight, Windham:
Flannogan, Cle. VASJ, 6-7, fresh .. 13.1; Chris Morgan, Voenna Mathews: Aaron
Adolphus Washongton, Crn. ·Taft. 6·6, Knight N Bloomheld, Barren Gasser.
soph. , 24.0: Joe Graessle, Cols. Ready, 6· R•ttman.
2

rWtRo

i

c

BWALTERS@MYDAII.YTRIBUNE COM

COLCMBCS, Ohio (r\P)
- Five locals from the
Ohio Valley PubJi..,hing area
' -- all of whom are from
Meigs Count)
were
selected to the 2010 AP AllOhio boys baskethull teams
for Divi~ion~ 1-IV.
Eastern High School
landed three representatives
on the DiYision IV list in
seniors Jake Lynch, Kelly
Winebrenner and i\tike
Johnson. while Southern
"eniors Sean Coppick and
c, le were also selected to
the D-4 squad.
Both Lynch and Coppick
a pair of first team alldi-;trict selections - were
named to the D-4 Special
~1ention list. It was also the
second straight year that
Coppick
and • Lynch
received All-Ohio acco
lades. as both were named
honorable mention a season
ago.
Lynch a-.eraged J0.9
point&lt;. and also had over
two assists, steals and
rebounds per contest for the
20-2 TVC Hocking champion Eagles, \Vhile Coppick
a\'eraged l6.5 points, 7 3
rebounds and shot over 56
percent from the tield for
the 17-6 district runner-up
Tornadoes.
Winebrenner, Johnson
~i ngle.
and Rccs were all selected
Senior rightfielder John to
the
Division
IV
rey wus 1-for-2 and Honorable Mention list, a
ior second ba~eman fir!&gt;t for each member of the
rhtian Frias and junior trio in their hoops career!oo.
}lrandon Lay added RBI ·s
Winebrenner led EHS in
tor the RedStorm.
Please see Ohio, 86
In game two. freshman
southpaw Ryan Robertson
$.tayed unbeaten on the seu~on.
Robertson (6-0)
pitched 4.1 innings. yieldmg 10 hits and four runs
with a puir of stril\eouts
B Y MARK W ILLIAMS
.find one walk.
SPECIAL TO THE SENTINEL
Sophomore righthander
Ryan Chapman gave up a
RIO GRANDE, Ohio
run in two innings of pitch- The University of Rio
Ing as he collected his third Grande RedStorm softball
~ave of the season.
team split a doubleheader for
Schunk out-did hi" first the fourth consecuti\'e day,
~arne performance with a losing gmne one to tv1arietta
it-for-5 game with a home CoJJcne bv a 3-0 score and
e
• for a 7- 2 \'IC~ory
·
hm and five RBb to lead rebounding
the way for the ReJStonn in oame two on Sunday aftcrJn game two.
no~n at Stanley Evans Field.
Rio posted eight hits in
Rio Grande ( 12-8) hit into
the second game victory. some tough luck in the tir~t
catcher. Tyler game witl~ numer~ous wei~ htt
Se nior
Plumpton was 1- for-3 balls findmg thetr way uno
While Storey and senior Marietta College gloves.
signaled hitter Chris Rio had eight hits in the first
were both 1-for-3 game but just couldn't collect
a double each and one that key hit to dent the plate.
each. Frias wa~o; also
Sophomore first baseman
with a double and a Chelsic Brooks had a perfect
scored and Yakura was da) at the plate, going 3-for3. Freshman third baseman
rfor-2.
WVU Tech falls to 5- 15 Jaymie Rector went 2-for-4
the year and 0-6 in MSC while junior Amber Bowman
was i-for-4 with a double.
ay. Ryan Workman had a
Sophomore pitcher ~nna
1g second game for the
olden Bears as he went 4- Smith and sophomore nghtJer-4 with one RBI and one fielder Marissa Lennox had
tyn scored und Eric Jlelton one hit each.
was 2-for-4 with n home Smith (7-6) pitched \Veil
for the RedStonn despite the
and four RBis.

DIVISION I
FAST TEAM Jared Sullinger, Cols,
Northland, 6·9. sr. 24.5; Jordan Sibert,
Con Pronceton, 6·4. sr
t8 4. Cole
Knzanck: Mentor. 5-11. jr., 27.1 Anthony
H d
r.
1
Sta
t
6-2
28 3 M rk
en arson, 0 ·
r·
· sr., · : a
Hannlger. ~ass. Jackscn, 6-8. sr. 20 6
:O~~~~n~. t e year· Jared Sullonger, Cols.
C oacli es 0 f th 8 year Ed
alo.
Westerville South; Dan Fleming. Con. La
Salle; Bob Knzancic, Mentor.
SECOND TEAM: Darrln Hams.
Mansfield sr. 6-2 sr.. 18.8; Allen Payne,

I

loss. She went the distance.
allowing seven hits und three
runs with four strikeouts and
one wulk.
Amanda Strong tired an
eight-hit ~hutout for the
Pioneers (8-4). She struck
out one and walked a batter.
In game two. Rio Grande
score~l in every inning but the
sixth. The top of the order
did the bulk of the damage
for Rio Grande as senior cetlterfielder Leah Hamman was
2-for-4 with a double anc.l
l\\o RBI's. Rector was 2for-4 with two runs scored
and a stolen base and
Btmman \\as 2-for-3 with a
triple, a double and two
RBI\.
Freshman lcftfielder Kaitie
Stewart ac.lded an RBI hit and
sophomore hurler Allison
~1111&lt;, hclpl!d he1 cau~c at the
plate, going 2-for-3 with a
run scored and an RBI.

"tills (5-2) was outsrunding in the pitcher's circle as
she went the distance and
allowed only two unearned
runs and three hits. She
fanned eight and walked two.
"We'd liked to ha\'e taken
a few hits thut fell in the second game and conYerted
those to the lirst !!ame:· said
Rio Grande head coach
David Pyles. "You·•e got
to give Marietta ,,:redit. t11ey
made the plays. I mean really I thought \'&gt;'e hit some
balls hard und do\\ nand thev
had a shortstop (~1khelle
Sayr:~) that looked good all
day.

"The first game we just
couldn't seem to get a break,
but the girls bounced huck in
the second game very nicely
and got the victory \\ ith a lot
of hib. a lot of ~)eopk contributed which is ah\ avs
good to sec," Pyles added.·
I'

�Page 82 • The Daily Sentinel

Wednesday, March 24 . 2010

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Ohio Valley
PubUshlng reserves
the right to edit,
reject or cancel any
ad at any time.
Errors
Must
eported on the fir
y of publlcatlo
the Trlbun
nd
tlnei·Roglster wl
responsible for n
ore than the cost o
he space occupl
the error and onl
he first Insertion. W
hall not be liable fo
ny loss or expens
hat results from th
ubllcetlon
mission
of
dvertisement.

200

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NOTICE OHIO

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

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CLASSIFIED INDEX
oo Recreational Vehlcles ............................... 1000

Legals........... ~ ..............................................1
Announcements .......................................... 200
Birthday/Anniversary .................................. 205
Happy Ads ....................................................21 0
Lost &amp; Found ............................................ 215
MemoryfThank You .................................... 220
Notices ........................................................ 225
Personals .................................................... 230
Wanted ........................................................ 235
Services ...................................................... 300
Appliance Sorvlce ....................................... 302
Automotive .................................................. 304
Building Materlnls ....................................... 306
Buslness ...................................................... 308
Catering .....................................................310
Child/Elderly Carc ....................................... 312
Computers ................................................. 314
Contractors .................................................316
Domestics/Janitorial ..................................318
Electrlcal ...................................................... 320
Flnanclal.......................................................322
Heallh ...........................................................326
Heating &amp; Coollng .......................................328
Home Improvements 330
lnsurance ..................................................... 332
Lawn Servlce ............................................... 334
Muslc/Dence/Droma .................................... 336
Other Services ............................................ 338
Plumblng/Eiectrlcal ..................................... 340
Professional Servlces.................................342
Repairs ........................................................344
Rooflng .........................................................346
Sccurlty ........................................................348
Tax/Accounting ........................................... 350
TravcVEntcrtalnmcnt .................................. 352
Financial ......................................................400
Financial Services ...................................... 405
Insurance ................................................... 410
Money to Lend ............................................ 415
Education .................................................... 500
Business &amp; Trade School .......................... 505
Instruction &amp; Training ............................... 510
Lessons ....................................................515
Personal ...................................................,.520
Anlmals ........................................................ 600
Animal Supplies ......................................... 605
Horses .............................................. :..........610
Livestock.....................................................615
Pets.............................................................620
Want to buy................................................625
Agriculture ...................................................700
Farm Equipment .........................................705
Garden &amp; Produce......................................710
Hay, Feed, Seed, Grol11 .............................. 715
Hunting &amp; Lend ........................................... 720
Want to buy .................................................. 725
Merchandise ................................................ 900
Antlques .......................................................905
Appllanco ..................................................... 910
Auctions ...................................................... 915
Bargain Bnsement.......................................920
Collectlbles .................................................. 925
Computers ................................................... 930
Equipment/Supplies ...................................935
Flea Markets ................................................ 940
Fuel Oil Coal/Wood/Gas ............................. 945
Furniture ...................................................... 950
Hobby/Hunt &amp; Sport................................... 955
Kid's Corner..............................................960
Miscellaneous............................................965
Want to buy..............................................970
Yard Sale ................................................... 975

,

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Other Services

li B's lawn Care Harvey
Computers

Now you con hove borders and graphics
added to your classified ads
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All Display• 12 Noon 2
Buslneas Days Prior To
Publication
Sunday Dlsplay1 1100 p.m.
Thursday for Sundays Paper

POLICIES Ohio \IIliey PubUihlng
Iht rtght to tell!, ,.~or~ any td at aoy lime. Erro&lt;t muct ~ rtp0&lt;1td on the ftr• day of pUbllcatlon lind the
Tnlll6lii-Saril~leter wtQ be respo111lb .. lor no mo&lt;etllan the eo• oiiiW IPIIC• occupied by the error 8lld only the !Iret ll*rtJon. We theU not be liable lor
lilY loas or •XI** tllaiiiiUI!t from the pub!ic:etlon or onlltalon ol lllt&lt;l'&lt;lflltemtnl Correction ;rr1U be m.re In thl nret avelablt tdlt•on. • Box numblf
are olwap conlldtntlaL • CU'rent 111te oerc IIPPOU. ·All rMI te!trle lldvertl~~mtnta arc tubjec:l to lht Feclarll Fair Holllln!i Ac:t ol 18118. • Thit
IICeepll Ollly l*p Wlrild ldl tniiMll £0£ ~rcla. WI Will not knoMngly tCC.pl II'IY IIChlllltlng In Vlollrtion of the IW W•U not be '"I)OOIIbll lOr
erroraln an ad taken over the pt.ona.

Ananciol

CREDIT CARE
BELIEE

Lost &amp; Found

GUN SHOW GALLIPO.
l ~ Holiday tm Apnl 10
&amp; l1 Adm S4 00 6'
TBLS $25 74().667.()412

We
will
no
nowingly accept an
dvertlsement
I
lolatlon of the Jaw.

Personals

Announcements

GET YOUR CLASSIFIED LINE AD NOTICED

• All ada must be prepaid"

• Start Your Aclt With A keyword • I11clude Complete
DHcrlption • InClude A Price • Avoid Abbrc\1at1o11s
• Include Pllone Number And Addrcta Whn Needed
• Ad' Sboukl Run 7 Dayw

ATV ............................................................ 1005
Bicycles......................................................1010
Boats/Accessories ....................................1 015
CamperiRVs &amp; Trallers ............................. 1020
Motorcycles .............................................. 1025
Other ..........................................................1030
Want to buy ...............................................1035
Automotive ................................................ 2000
Auto Rentalllease ......................._ ..........2005
Autos ...................................................- .... 2010
Classic/Antiques ............................._.._ ... 2015
Commerciatllndustrlal .............................. 2020
Parts &amp; Accessorlcs ..................................2025
Sports Utllity..............................................2030
Trucks .........................................................2035
Utility Trailers .....:...................................... 2040
Vans ............................................................2045
Want to buy ...............................................2050
Real Estate Sales ...................................... 3000
Cemetery Plots ..........................................3005
Commerclal ................................................ 301 0
Condominiums .......................................... 3015
For Sale by Owner.....................................3020
Houses for Sate ......................................... 3025
Land (Acreage) .......................................... 3030
Lots ............................................................ 3035
Want to buy ................................................ 3040
Real Estate Rentals ................................... 3500
Apartments/Townhouses ......................... 3505
Commercia1 ................................................3510
Condomlniums .......................................... 3515
Houses for Rent ........................................ 3520
Land (Acreaga) .......................................... 3525
S\Orage .......................................................3535
Want to Rent ......: ....................................... 3540
Manufactured Houslng ............................. 4000
Lots............................................................. 4005
Movers ...............- ......................................401 0
Rentals ....................................................... 4015
Sales........................................................... 4020
Supplies ..................................................... 4025
Want to Buy ............................................... 4030
Resort Property ......................................... 5000
Resort Property for satc ........................... 5025
Resort Property for rent ........................... 5050
Employment ...............................................6000
Accountlng1Financlal ................................6002
Adminlstratlve/Professlonal .....................6004
Cashier/Clerk ............................................. 6006
Child/Elderly Care ..................................... 6008
Clorlcal ....................................................... 6010
Constructlon ..............................................6012
Drivers &amp; Dellvery ..................................... 6014
f,ducatlon ................................................... 6016
Electrical Plumblng ................................... 6018
Employment Agencles .............................. 6020
Entertainment ............................................ 6022
Food Sarvlces ............................................6024
Government &amp; Federal Jobs .................... 6026
Help anted· Ganeral .................................. 6028
Law Enforcament ...................................... 6030
Malntananco/Oomestlc ............................. 6032
Management/Supervisory ........................ 6034
Mechanlcs .................................................. 6036
Medical ....................................................... 6038
Muslcal ....................................................... 6040
Part·Time·Temporarles ............................. 6042
Restaurants .............................................. 6044
Sales........................................................... 6048
Technical Trades ....................................... 6050
Textiles/Factory ......................................... 6052

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Real Estate

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tub, 5 seats, II1C cover, ~
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protect your family
g.veaway to good homo verlg,old
COinS,
any 446·4543 or 645·4834
free for 30-daysl
or farm Good wlchddren. 10KI14Kl18K gold jaw·
1-877-481-4882
740-446-3248
airy, dental gold, pre 3BR 2BA, 1700 sq.lt.
Promocode:
1935
US
currency, home with Appl 2 AC.
FREEMONTH
proof/mint
sets,
dta· All Appl Lg Bath W1Fire·
7 00
Agncullure monds. MTS Cor- Shop. place, TV All only 3 yrs .
151 2nd Avenue Gall•· old Make an olfer. Call
lor more 1nlo. 388.0301
pohs 446-2842
Farm Equipment
Unlimited local
House lor sale 113 4!1\
and Ion g
EBY,
INTEGRITY, Buying Sl hi Chalnsaws Ave BeloW S30 000. lm·
distance calling KIEFER BUILT,
any kind lor partS &amp; re- rned ate possessiOn F~
17401 44 1 165
HORSEA.IVE· par,
runnang
or not ..
~~~~-6~~~~~
for only $24.99 VALLEY
STOCK
TRAILERS. 740-794·1\88
Land (Aaeoge)
LOAD
MAX
EOU P.
per month.
MENT
TRAILERS,
Get rehab!e phone
Yard Sole
Wooded
acreage
lor
seMce from Vonage. CARGO EXPRESS &amp; Bargan Center ya!d sere residentlal or cornmeroal
HOMESTEADER
Call Today!
March 26th &amp; 27th 482 development.
CARGO/CONCESSION
1-877-673·3136
B+W Horton St • Mason WV
=~~~~~~~ TRAILERS
acres o' land com·
GOOSENECK FLATBED
Professional Services
prtsed of ha I m1. of road
$3999. VIEW OUR EN·
frontage rural water. arid
llRE TRAILER INVEN· Garage 1\, Yard 5ale
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Mar. 26&amp;27. SL At. 588, approx. 30 acres of
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priced
a
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OH
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1nventory
at
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~
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Jackson,
OH used
www.CAREO.com
Car· =::;:;:::;:;:::;:;:::;:;:::;:;:::;:;:=
Ap
/
800-537·9528
Eq~.o•pment 2008 ArtiC Cat 700 HI, 2
ortmenb
michael
seater, 1 wrench Wind·
Townhouses
40.
Security
7 446 2412
sh1eld. mag wheel Uke =;;;;;;;;;;;;;;::;:;:::;:;:::;:;:;;;;;;;::;:;:
Ma,~y
Fcrgu~n Tr.Ktor new $7000 or trade lor 4
end 2 bedroom apts.,
50 gas " mu!u fXl"er WD pickup
fum shed
and
unfur·
Free Home Security
~ cond
$bed
kepi Ca 1304-882·3121
ntshed and houses •n
S5&lt;oo.OO '!04·~76·2147 or =~~~~=~= Pomeroy and Middlepcn,
$850 Value
~67.t.()6l &lt;
Com.,-rs / RVs &amp;
security deposit reqlll:ed.
with purchase of
Troilers
no pets. 740.992·2218
STIHL sates &amp; ServiCe
alarm monitoring
Now Avallable at Carmi- ~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;::;:;:=~
services from ADT
chael
Equipment RV
2BR APT.Ciose to H:&gt;l·
Security Services.
740-446·2412
SeiVICe at CarmlChae zer Hosp tat on SR 1SO
Call1-888-274-3888
Tra ers
CIA C740) 44 1.0194

DIBECIV

ssoo.

Lifelock

Y.f).NAG.E

eo

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

ADJ

Tax/ Accounting

AMERICAN TAX
BELIEF
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
4 00

Financial

CONVENlENnY
L::&gt;CATED
&amp;
AFFOR[).
M!Xed round bales for
ABLEI Townhouse apart·
sale.
4x4
end
4x5. ~
R..
V~So
~
rv1C
o-at -...
Ca
- rn
- 1· ments,
and/or
small
74().446-2412
chacl
Tratlers
houses for rent. Can
740-446-3825
740-441-1111 lor appl900
Merchandise
cation &amp; 1nlormatlon
Motorcycles

Equipment/ Supplies
Now's the best t•me to
buy a Rotor Ttller 4
5', 6', &amp; T 3 pt. hitch.
Jim's
Farm
Equlpmert, 74Q.446-9n7

I

I

Fuel Oil Cool
Wood/Gas

I

500

Education

Business &amp; Trade
School
Gallipolis Career
College
(Cereers Closo To Home)
Call Today I 740-446-4367
1·800-214.()452
g

~reereo!lege edu

~ted

Momber Accred.t•

1:1g Cou!lcillor lndepender'l
~~ a'ICI Sdlooii1274B

Beautiful Apts. at Jack·
son Estates. 52 West·
wood Dr, from $411 to
$606.
740-446-2568
Equal HOUSing Opportu·
nrty. Th s nslltution s 81'
Equal Opportun ty ProviCar and Employe•

~G.;.ra;.;.c~
IOus~Liv
~ng.;;.;.;.1;;...~.,.

Bedroom Apts at
Manor
and
Apts. m t~eport. li'Or'
to
S625
$387
Equa
740-992 •5064
Housmg Oooortun tv
Jordan Landing Apart·
menta
3 br ava lab!e a e ec·
trie, no pets • Ask About
Our Rent Specials • ca
for details 304-674.()()23
or 304·610.()776
Modem 1BR
740-446.0390

apt

Ca I

New 2 BR apt WID
Hookup,
Rio/Jackson
area. S5251mo + dep.
~C;;al~
l7~4;;0.;;·64;;;5;;.·.:.:
12:;;:8;6;_ __
N•ce 2 BR, 1BA. Also 1
BR house. Deposit &amp; 1st
mo.
rent.
Ca I

740~
,;;.;64~
5·.;;5.:.:
78;.;6;..._ __
N•ce 2BR completely fu··
nished S600 .. elect
S600 dep. 446-9585 or
446·9595
Sonng
Va ley
Green
Apartl'!'lents 1 BR at
S395+2 BR at S470
Month 740-446-t599
Houses For Rent

~S-ea;;;so;;;n;;;ed;;;;;;;fi=rewood;;;;;;;;;;;;;;.;;;;;;;;;;;;;;
All Hardwood.
74 ().853_2439
7
9204
40-446-

Free Rent Special !II
2&amp;3BR apts $395 a~d
up. Central Air, W D
hookup,
tenant
pays
electnc.
Call between
the hours of t!A·t!P
EHO
94 Harley Davidson Soft·
Ellm VIew Apts.
tall
446-9585
or
(304)882·3017
446-9595

or

Coin,

1009 $260; Also
1899 Plam, Morga!' S I·
ver
Dollar,
Looks
B.U.·S175.
740-533·3870
Jet Aeration Motors
repaired, new &amp; rebuilt
In stock. Cell Ron
Evans 1·800·537·9528

2 br. In Pt Pleasan'
ter &amp; trash inCluded
between
10am-5pm
304 675 3952
·
•
:'
3~br
-~
ln-N
..e-w~H~
ave-n~WV
~
$400.00
a
mon
+
$400.00

dep

no

pe•s

2005 Harley Dyne Super
Ghde 9500 m1 Wllh ex·
tras.
$9000
Call
446-1655

.304....,·88.;,.;,;;2..;·3652;;.;,;~·---­

TWin R1vers Tower 1s acccptlng apphcat ons 'cx
waiting hst for HUD sub·
sldLZed 1-BR apartment
lor the elderly d sal:)jed,
Autos
call675-6679
~
2000
Ford
Windstar,
~
Auto A?C runs looks
good,
asldng
S2 100
OBO Call 740-446-4t22 Beau: tu! 1BR apartment
In the country fresnly
or 339.()636
pe nted very clean \\ n
- - - - - - - - - hook up mce courtry s31·
98 Sebring Conven ble ling only 10 mrns. from
87 M1tsublshl 05 N n1a town Must see to apprec.ate Water pd S375.mo
636
614·595-m3
or
740.446·17681v msg.
• 740.645·5953
..
0-ua_h_ty_ C
_a_rs
__
&amp;_T_ru_c_ks 1 BR end bath. 1rrst

740.256·1664
Newly remodeled 3 BR 1
BA coiOfllal farmhOuse.
n1ce country vaew ~·
Add•son 12 X 20 storage
bldg .. LP H _, $525
mo .
deposit
reQ
740-367-7760

2000

reQuests· for any large
Miscellaneous
advance
payments
of ~~;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;
lees or Insurance. Call 2 112 Dollar, Indian Gold
the Qlface of Consumer
Aif.ars
toll
free
at
1·866·278.()()03 to leal'!'
I the mortgage broker or
lender
s properly fl.
ccnse&lt;l (ThiS " a public
SCIVICO
announcement
from the Ohio Valley
Publishing Company)

wv

Hay, F•ed, S..d, Groin 740-446-3825

Money To Lend
NOTICE Borrow Smart.
Contact the Ohio DIVI·
slon of FinanCial lnstitu·
lions QI!IC8 ol Col'sumer
Alfa1rs BEFORE you refi.
nance your home or obtain a loan BEWARE of

Apartments/
Townhouses
::;:;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;::;:;:;;;;;;;::;:;:
Apartl'!'lent available now
RIVerbend
Apts
New
Havel'
Now accept·
ng
applicallons
for
HUD-substdlzed,
one
Bedroom Apts. U!J cs
UlCiuded Based oro 3Q'll.
of adJusted IIICO!Tle Cal
304-882·3121
ava able
lor Semor and Drsab!ed
people

Automohve

wfwarranty all priCed to
sell, 15 yrs 1n business
Cook Motors, 328 Jack·
Carpel Sale Free Instal· son P•ke,
lation on spec1al orders. Gallipolis,
OH
Dnve a little, save a lot. 740-446-0103
-=~===~=~~~
Mollohan Carpet 2212 Eastem Ave. Gall•pohs,
Vans
OH (740) 446-7444.
2008
Dodge
Grand
FREE 12 X 20 metal Caravan. silver, 6 cyl.
bldg • 1n exchange tor l•ke new, to much car tor
clean up alter removed. Granny. 740-949·2202
740-446-9490
WontTo Buy
Swimm1ng pool Above
ground 4 yrs old Very
good cond. $750 Call Want to buy Junk Cars,
call 740-388·0884
388·11221of more Into.

4 Rms + Ba. Stove &amp;
lndge.
Olive St No
pets $450/mo + dop.
446·3945.
Brand new. very small
1BR House. All ulll pd
S350 mo
+
dop

so

N:ce home 3 BR 1BA K
LR gar HPfCA QU et
SSOO + dep. &amp; r • NO
Pets CaH 740-446-2801
4000

Manufactured
Housing

~~~~~~=~

R•ntols
~~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;•

2
months rent &amp; deposit. BR Mobile Home,
references requ1red, lilo ter, sewer, trash pd
Pets
and
clean. pets. Johnson's Mob o
740-441·0245
Home Park 446·3160
Beech St., Middleport. 2 39 r mob11o home u• t~e
"
co t
br. turmshed apt., utd
un ry.
d N p t d
&amp; 1 740.256-6574
p . o e s, ep.
re •• ~------~
740.992·0165
2 bedroom ell electric
N 4th Ave. M1ddleport, trailer 1n country, No
4_
o._
74-2-·20
-14_ __
2 br tum1shed apt .. dep. ~P-ets_._7_
No
pets,
&amp;
ref •
740.992.0165
N 3rd Avo • M cldleport,
1 br lumiShed apt No
Pets,
dep
&amp;
ret •
740.992.0165

3 br trailer on K1ngbury
Rd., Pomeroy, luUy 1u.
nished, S450 per rno •
$450 dep inct~ wa·
terltrash
No
Pets.
740-416-2960

�~---------

--

' • • • • • · l~i~l•l

SHERIFF'S
SALE,
CASE NO. 09 CV 116,
PEOPLES BANK, NA·
TIONALASSOCIATION,
PLAINTIFF, VS. TARIM.
BASS AND MARK A.
ET AL., DEFEN·
COURT OF
N
PLEAS,
MEIGS COUNTY, OHIO.
By virtue of an Order
of Solo Issued out of
said Court in the above
action, Robert E. Beo·
gle, the Sheriff uf Mt:lys
County, Ohio, will ex·
pose to sell at public
action on the front
steps of tho Molgs
County Courthouse In
Pomeroy,
Molgs
County, Ohio, on Frl·
day, April 9, 2010, at
10:00 a.m., the follow·
lng lands and tonements·
Being a part of a 152
acres, more or less,
tract of land as trans·
!erred to Harry Russell
and Bertlna M. Mozingo
as recorded In Deed
Book 253 at Page 485,
Meigs
County
Recorder's
Office,
Meigs County, Ohio,
also being o port of
Fraction No. 31, Townshlp-6-North. Range·
14-West,
Rutland
Township,
Meigs
County, State of Ohio
more particularly
os follows:
at a point
In
centerline of
Township Rood 156
sold point being the
most easterly corner of
a 1.70 acre, more or
less, tract as described
In Deed Book 246 at
Page 629,
Thence leaving said
centerline and along
the boundary of said
1 70 acre, more or less,
tract the following three
courses:
1. North 33 deg. 40' 49"
West a distance of
159.50 feet to a 518"
Iron pin set;
2. North 23 deg. 58' 55"
West a distance of
245.00 feet to a 5/8"
Iron pin set;
3. South 83 deg. 10'
27" West a distance of
15.28 feet to a point In
the centerline of a
creek;
Thence leaving sold
boundary line and
~long the centerline of
sa d creek the follow·
lng three courses:
1. North65deg.19'30"
a distance of
feet to a point;
03 dcg. 48' 54'
West a dtstance of
48 62 feet to a point;
3 North 23 dog. 40 20"
West a distance of
96 56 feet to a pont;
Thence leaving said
centerline North 62
deg 17 45 East pass·
lng through a 518 Iron
pin set:
Thence South 30 deg.
35' 18 East a distance
of 275.05 feet to o 518"
Iron pin set on the
boundary of a 2.0 acre,
more or less, tract as
recorded in Deed Book
286at pogo 895;
Thence along said
boundary tho following
two courses:
1. South 62 deg. 17'
45" West a distance of
195.50 feet to a 518"
Iron pin set;
2. South 27 deg. 16'
21"
East
passing
through a 518" iron pin
set at a distance of
300.00 feet and going a
total distance of 326.81
feet to a point In the
centerline of Township
d 156;
nee along sold cen•
tne South 35 dog.
12'40"Westadlstance
of 84.66 feet to the prln·
cipat point of beginning
containing
2.6852
acres, more or less,
subject to all legal
easements and rightsot-way.
Bearing were derived
from magnetic taken
October 15,1991.
The above description
was prepared from an
actual survey made on
the 15th day of Octo·
ber, 1991, by c.
Thomas Smith, Ohio
Professional Surveyor
16844.
Reference Deed: Vol·
umc 193, Pogo 889,
Meigs County Official
Records.
Audltor's Parcel No.:
11-00756.001.
The above described
real estate Is sold "as
Is" without warranties
or covenants.
PROPERTY ADDRESS;
34608 Corn Hollow Rd.,
Rutland, OH 45775.
!URRENT
OWNER:
M. Boss and Mark
ESTATE AP·
AT:
PRAISED
S20,000.00. The real
estate cannot be sold
for less than 213rds the
appraised value. The
appraisal does include
an Interior examination
of any structures, If
any, on tho real estate.
TERMS OF SALE· 10%
down on day of sale,
cash or certified check,
balance due on
confirmation of sole.
ALL SHERIFF'S SALES
OPERATE UNDER THE
DOCTRINE OF CAVEAT

EMPTOR. PROSPECTIVE
PURCHASERS
ARE
URGED
TO
CHECK FOR LIENS IN
THE
PUBLIC
RECORDS OF MEIGS
COUNTY, OHIO.
ATTORNEY
FOR
PLAINTIFF:
Jennifer L. Sheets, LITTLE &amp; SHEETS LLP,
211·213 E. Second
Street, Pomeroy, OH
45769, Telephone: (740)
992·6689
(3), 17, 24, 31

Sheriff Sale of Real Estate
Case Number 09CV105
BAC Homo Loans Ser·
vlclng, L.P. fka Countrywlde Home Loans
Servicing, LP.
Vs
Charles W. Hawk, et al.
Court of Common
Please, Meigs County,
Ohio.
In pursuance of and
order of sale to me directed from said court
In the above entitled
action, I will expose to
sale at public auction
on the front steps of
the Meigs County Court
House on Friday, April
9th. 2010 at 10:00a.m.
of said day, the follow·
lng described real estate:
Parcel One: SITUATED
IN THE TOWNSHIP OF
OLIVE,
IN
THE
COUNTY OF MEIGS
AND STATE OF OHIO:
BEING IN THE EAST
PART OF LOT 1161
TOWN 4, RANGE 11 OF
OHIO
COMPANY'S
PURCHASE; BEGIN·
NING AT THE OHIO
RIVER AT THE NORTH·
EAST CORNER OF
LANDS OF GRANT L.
BORING AND ERIKA H.
BORING AND SOUTH·
E;AST CORNER OF
LANDS OF RAYMOND
ROWE
BAKER;
THENCE
ALONG
RIVER
8
RODS;
THENCE WEST 12
RODS TO AN IRON PIN
IN MIDDLE OF STATE
HIGHWAY
124;
THENCE ALONG THE
MIDDLE
OF
SAID
ROAD
8
RODS;
THENCE EAST 12
RODS TO THE PLACE
OF BEGINNING, CON·
TAINING 6110 OF AN
ACREMOREORLESS.
AND
BEING
THE
NORTHEAST PART OF
A TRACT OF LAND
CONVEYED BY PAUL
KIBBLE TO GRANT L.
BORING AND ERIKA
BORING BY WAR·
RANTY DEED OF DATE
APRIL 27, 1950 AND
RECORED IN DEED
BOOK 165 PAGE 519
DEED RECORDS OF
MEIGS COUNTY, OHIO.
EXCEPTING AN EASE·
MENT
PREVIOUSLY
SOLO TO THE STATE
OF OHIO, FOR A MORE
PARTICULAR
DE·
SCRIPTION SEE EASE·
MENT RECORDS IN
MEIGS
COUNTY
RECORDER'S OFFICE.
REFERENCE
DEED:
BOOK 136, PAGE 819,
BOOK 86, PAGE 929,
MEIGS COUNTY OFFI·
CIAL RECORDS; VOL·
UME 255, PAGE 617,
MEIGS COUNTY DEED
RECORDS.
AUDITOR'S PARCEL
NO. 09.00447.000
PARCEL TWO: SITU·
ATE IN THE TOWNSHIP
OF OLIVE, COUNTY OF
MEIGS, AND STATE OF
OHIO, TO-WIT: BEING
IN TOWN 14, RANGE
#11,SECTIONS134,19
110 AND IN 160 ACRE
LOT 1161, AND BEGIN·
NING AT THE SOUTH·
WEST CORNER OF
LANDS OF SAID ROY
BARBER
ON THE
EAST SIDE OF STATE
HIGHWAY
#124
THENCE
NORTH
ALONG THE EAST
SIDE OF SAID HIGH·
WAY 7 RODS TO AN
IRON PIN; THENCE
EAST FOUR (4) RODS
TO THE OHIO RIVER.
THENCE
SOUTH
ALONG THE OHIO
RIVER 7 RODS TO X
MARK ON STONE;
THENCE
WEST
4
RODS TO THE PLACE
OF BEGINNING. CON·
TAINING 28 SQUARE
RODS.
BEING THE SOUTH
PART OF A 1·112 ACRE
TRACT OF LAND CON·
VEYED BY HERBERT
ROOD, AND WIFE, TO
ROY BARBER BY
WARRANTY DEED OF
DATE MAY 19, 1938,
AND RECORDED IN
DEED BOOK 146, AT
PAGE 202. OF THE
DEED RECORDS OF
MEIGS COUNTY, OHIO,
REFERENCE
TO
WHICH IS HEREBY
MADE.
REFERENCE
DEED:
BOOK 136, PAGE 819;
BOOK 63. PAGE 717,
MEIGS COUNTY OFFI·
CIAL RECORDS; VOL·
UME 255 , PAGE 619,
MEIGS COUNTY DEED
RECORDS.
AUDITOR'S PARCEL
NO. 09.00449.000
Parcel Number: 0900447, 09.00449
Property Located at:

67093 State Route 124
Reedsville OH 45n2
Prior Deed Reference:
OR Book 182 Page 657·
658
Property Appraised at:
$35,000
Terms of Sale: Cannot
be sold for less th11n
213rds for the ap·
praised value.
10oo
down on day of sale
case or certified check:
balance due on conflr·
mation of sale.
The appraisal did In·
elude an Interior exam·
lnatlon of the hou!:o.
Robert s.
Beegle,
Meigs County Sheriff
Amanda Romanello
Attomey for the Plain·
tiff, Lerner Sampson
and Rothfuss
PO Box 5480 Clncln·
natl, OH 45201-5480
(513)241-3100
(3) 17, 24, 31
-------Public Notice
-------Sheriff Sale of Real Es·
tate
Case Number 09CV133
CltiMortgage, Inc. suecessor by merger to
ABN AMRO Mortgage
Group, Inc.
Vs
Floyd Hickman aka
Floyd C. Hlckman,etal.
Court of Common
Please, Meigs County,
Ohio.
In pursuance of and
order of sale to me dl·
rected from said court
In the above entitled
action, I will expose to
sale at public auction
on the front steps of
the Meigs County Court
House on Friday, April
9, 2010 at 10:00a m. of
sold day, the following
described real estate:
Exhibit 'A' • Legal De·
scription
Situated In the County
of Meigs, In the state of
Ohio and In tho Town·
ship of Salisbury and
bounded
and
de·
scribed as follows:
Beginning at tho corner
of two streets at the
northwest corner of a
two acre lot being the
corner of the two
streets
mentioned
above; thence south 65
degrees east eleven
rods; thence south 35
degrees west eight (8)
rods; thence north 65
degrees west olevon
(11) rods to the Street
leading to the Bone
Hollow Road; thence
north 35 degrees cast
seven (7) rods to the
place of beginning,
containing one half
(112) acre of land being
the same more or tess,
112 acre belonging to
Margaret Bolt Is In 100
acre lot No, 309: also a
right of way around
Daniel Russell born
twelve (12) feet wide to
the said half acre lot;
said right of way to bo
in force until said
Daniel Russell shall
see fit to make an out·
let on the north side of
said half (112) acre lot.
Also the following real
estate, situated In the
Township of Salisbury,
County of Meigs and
State of Ohio, and
bounded
and
described as follows;
Being In one hundred
acre lot No. 309, town
No. 1 and Range No.
13, beginning at tho
northeast corner of
Daniel Russell's land;
thence south 35 degrees 00' west 145.5
feet along the east line
of said land; thence
north 59 degrees 35'
west 148 feet to tho
southeast corner of
Wesley Stewart's lot;
thence north 35 degrees 00' West 132 feet
along the east line of
Wesley Stewart's lot to
the north line of Daniel
Russell's land; thence
south 65 degrees 00'
east149 feet along the
north line of said land
to the place of begin·
nlng, containing 47/100
acres.
Also tho following real
estate, situated In Sal·
lsbury Township, Meigs
County Ohio, In 100
acre lot No. 309 Town 1
and Range No. 13, de·
scribed as follows:
Beginning on the east
side of Bone Hollow
Road; south 35 degrees 00' west 115.5
feet from the northwest
corner of Wesley Stewart's lot; thence south
35 degrees 00' west 21
feet along said rood;
thence In on easterly
direction, parallel to the
south line of said lot, 85
feet; thence north 35
degrees 00' east 21 feet
to the south line of said
lot; thence In e westerly
direction along the
south line of said lot 85
feet to the place of be·
ginning,
containing
4/100 acres.
t4·
Parcel
No:
14·
01582.000
&amp;
01583.000
Prior Deed Reference:
OR Vol.110, pg 691
Parcel Number: 14·
01582 000
&amp;
14·
01583.000
Property Located at:
39489 Bradbury Road

Middleport OH 45760
Prior Deed Reference
OR Vol. 110, pg 691
Property Appraised at:
$22,500
Terms of Sale: Cannot
be sold for loss than
213rds for the ap·
prolsod value.
10%
down on day of sale,
case or certified check,
balnnce duo on conflr·
motion of sale.
The appraisal did not
Include on Interior ex·
amlnotlon of the house.
Beegle,
Robert S.
Meigs County Sheriff
Julia Steelman
Attorney for the Plain·
tiff, Lerner Sampson
and Rothfuss
PO Box 5480 Clncln·
nnti, OH 45201·5480
(513)241-3100
(3) 17, 24, 31
Public Notice
Sheriff Sales
Case Number 08cv156
HSBC Bank National
Association as Trustee
for SG Morgtage Secu·
rilles Trust 2005-0PT1
Asset Backed Certlfi·
cotes, Scrlos 2005·
OPT1
Plaintiff
VS

Marilyn Howery Et al
Defendants
Court of Common
Pleas, Meigs County,
Ohio
In pursuance of an
order of sale to me dl·
rected from said court
In the above entitled
action, I will expose to
sale at public auction at
the Meigs County Court
House on Friday. April
9th. 2010 at 10 am, ol
said day, the following
described rear estate;
Situated In tho County
of Meigs; In the State of
Ohio, and In the Town·
ship of Columbia and
bounded
and
de·
scribed as follows:
Commencing In the
center of the K &amp;
O.R.R. tract where the
center of State Route
143 Crosses said R.R.
tract; thence proceed·
lng In o westerly d~rec­
tlpn along the center of
state route 143 to the
Western edge of the K
&amp; 0 R R tract thence
In a westerly direction
along the center Of
State Route 143 420
feet to o point in the
center of State Route
143, being the true
p!ace of beginning
thence In a northerly dl·
rectlon 30 feet to an
Iron stake, thence N 22
deg 30 E 198 92 feet
to on Iron stake· thence
N. 1 deg. E 410 78 feet
to an Iron stoke thence
N 3 dog W 704 94 feet
to an Iron stake; thence
N. 81 deg.
496 37
feet to an iron stake set
In the western bound·
ary line of the real es·
tate
described
In
volume 254, page 675,
Meigs County deed
records, thence In a
southerly direction with
the western boundary
line of said real estate
to the center of state
routo 143; thence in a
southerly and easterly
direction along tho cen·
ter of State Route 143
to the place of begin·
nlng, containing 14.3
acres, more or less,
being approximately
4.2 acres In fraction 5
and 10.1 acres In Frac·
tlon 4. Calls for this de·
scription provided by
the grantor.
Prior Instrument Reference: Deed dated July
15, 2005, filed August 8,
2005, recorded In Offt·
clal Records Volume
218;
Page
525,
Recorder's
Office,
Meigs County, Ohio
Current Owners' Name:
Rodney Howery and·
Marilyn Howery
Property
Address:
30468 St. Rt. 143
Albany, OH 45710Par·
Number:
05·
eel
00351.000 and
05-00352.000
Appraised At: $90,000
Terms of sole: 1Oo/o of
the appraised value
and that failure to com·
plate the sale will result
In the forfeiture of the
deposit.
Angela
D.
Kirk
(00751n)
Manley D. Kochalskl
LLC
P.O. Box 165028
Columbus, OH 43216

w.

Salem and Bounded
and described as fol·
lows:
Being In Section 5,
Town 8, Range 15ofthe
Ohio Company's purchose and being In the
unincorporated Village
Of Dexter;
Beginning 40 Feet
South of the Southwest
corner of lot 14; thence
South following the
East Line of the public
highway about 19 rods
to where an ash tree
once stood, about 18
Inches In dtameter;
thence east to the center of teadmg creek,
thence up the center of
said creek to a point 20
feet south of the center
of an iron bridge;
thence west to the
place of beginning,
containing 1 acre, more
or less
Subject to 1991 and
1992 taxes.
Property
Address·
35268 Dexter Road,
Langsville, Ohio 45741
Parcel
Number:
1300706000.
Case Number: 09CV124
Sale Date: 04/0912010
Appraisal: $20.000.00
Plaintiff:
Beneficial
Ohio Inc.
Defendant:
Norman
Hamilton
Attorney for Plaintiff:
Phillip Barragate
Hold at: Front Steps of
Meigs County Court
House, at 10:00 a.m.
(3) 17 24, 31
-------Public Notice
-------Sheriff Sales
Case Number 09CV017
JPMorgan Chase Bank,
as Trustee, on behalf of
CITHome Equity Loan
Trust 2002·1
Plaintiff
vs
Marion Speelman aka
Marlon D. Speelman,
ETAL
Defendants
Meigs County
Common Pleas
By virtue of an order of
sale to me directed by
the Court ol Common
Pleas, of Meigs County,
I will offer for sale at
public auction In Me gs
County Court House
Pomeroy Oh o on Frtday April 9th. 2010 at
10 o m on satd day
the fo ow ng dcsc bed
real estate to wit.
Situated m the County
of Me gs. In the State of
Ohto and n the Township of Olive
S tuated n 0 ve Townsh p Town 3 North
Range 1t West. Me gs
County, Oh~. and
betng part of the Wolf
Subd vision
as
recorded In Cabinet 1·
B of the Plat Records
In the Recorders Off1ce
of Meigs County Ohio,
and being described as
follows:
Lot 13 subject to all restrlctlons and condl·
tlons as shown on the
plat which Is recorded
In Cabinet 1·B of the
Plat records In the
Recorder's Office of
Meigs County. Ohio.
Further subJect to an
agreement to modify
covenant, as more fully
shown In Vol. 327, Page
485 of the Meigs
County Deed Records.
Parcel Number: 09·
9495.001
Currently set forth In
Deed Volume 98, Page
701, Recorded 11-29·
99 Commonly known
as: 62899 State Route
124, Long Bottom, OH
45743.
Appraised at $115.000
Mlmlmum
bid
•
576,667.00
Terms of Sale:
Deposit, a Cashier's
Chock or Certified
Funds, In the amount of
ten percent (10°o) of the
appraised value at the
time of sale. The re·
maining balance shal
be paid within {30) days
of the date of sale. The
deposit shall be forfelted upon failure to
pay the balance within
(30) days of the date of
sale.
SHERIFF Robert Beegle
(740) 992·3371
Thomas Novack
Attorney for Plaintiff
3700 Corporal Dr. Suite
120
Columbus, OH 43231
614-818·2573
(3) 17, 24 31

614-22.2-49~1

Fax: 614·2.20.5613
Email:
adm mdk·
Public Notice
llc.com
SHERIFF'S
SALE,
Attorney for Plaintiff
CASE NO. 09 CV 100,
(3) 17, 24, 31
PEOPLES BANK, NA·
TIONAL ASSOCIATION,
PLAINTIFF
Public Notice

vs.

TERMS OF SALE: Ten
percent of the highest
bid, cash or certified
chock, due on the day
of salo, balance due
upon conllrmatlon of
the sale by tho Meigs
County Court of Com·
mon Pleas the dood
w111 be Issued upon the
bol;mco being paid
Legal Description.
Situated In the County
of Meigs, State ol Ohio
and
Township
of

ROCKY A. HUPP AND
CAROL J. HUPP, ET
AL..
DEFENDANTS,
COURT OF COMMON
PLEAS,
MEIGS
COUNTY, OHIO.
By virtue olen Order of
Sale Issued out of said
Court In the above ac·
tion, Robert E. Beegle,
tho Sheriff of Meigs
County, Ohio, will expose to sell at public
action on the front
steps of the Meigs

J&gt;•al.,.llic N..-.si ...· c s 1 ... l"'oJc,vsa&gt;:•l&gt;ca·s.
••• 1 ..... • • • • - . l &gt; c l i v ... ·a·c•l l~igl~t t•&gt; ''"••••·

County Courthouse In
Pomeroy,
Meigs
County, Ohio, on Frl·
day, April16, 2010, at
10:00 a.m., the follow·
lng lands and tone·
ments:
Situated In the Village
of Mtddll)port, the
County of Meigs, and
the State of Ohio, and
being known and des·
lgnated as Lot No. 319
In Lower Pomeroy now
a port of the Village of
Middleport, In tho
County of Meigs, and
the Sate (sic) of Ohio.
This being the same
premises
conveyed
from Lewis 0. Cooper
to Eunlco A.B. Swift be
deed recorded In Vol·
ume 67 on P~ge No
128 of the Meigs
County Deed Rct:ords.
Reference Deed: Vol·
ume 222, Page 619,
Meigs County Official
Records.
Auditor's Parcel No:
15-00110.000
The above described
'teal estate Is sold "as
Is" without warranties
or covenants.
PROPERTY ADDRESS:
545 Park Street, Middle·
port, OH 45760
CURRENT
OWNER·
Rocky R. Hupp and
Carol J. Hupp.
REAL ESTATE AP·
PRAISED
AT:
S15,000.00. The real
estate cannot be sold
for less than 213rds the
appraised value. The
appraisal does Include
an Interior examination
of any structures, If
any, on the real estate.
TERMS OF SALE: 10%
down on day of sale,
cash or certified check,
balance due on
conftrmatlon of sale.
ALL SHERIFF'S SALES
OPERATE UNDER THE
DOCTRINE OF CAVEAT
EMPTOR. PROSPEC·
TIVE
PURCHASERS
ARE
URGED
TO
CHECK FOR LIENS IN
THE
PUBLIC
RECORDS OF MEIGS
COUNTY, OHIO
ATTORNEY
FOR
PLAINTIFF.
Jennifer L. Sheets LIT·
TLE &amp; SHEETS LLP
211·213 E Second
Street Pomeroy OH
5769 Te ephone
2-6 89
24 31 4 7

1&gt;•••-&gt;•·-

ARE
URGED
TO
CHECK FOR LIENS IN
THE
PUBLIC
RECORDS OF MEIGS
COUNTY, OHIO.
ATIORNEY
FOR
PLAINTIFF:
Jennifer L. Sheets, LIT·
TLE &amp; SHEETS LLP,
211·213 E. Second
Street, Pomeroy, OH
45769, Telephone: (740)
992·6689
(3) 24, 31, (417

FLOOR
lng thereof.
COLUMBUS,
OHIO The Director of Natural
43229-6693
Resources
reserves
until APRIL21, 2010 AT the right to reject any
1:30 P.M., and open ad or all bids, or to accept
thereafter lor furnish· the bid which em·
lng the materials and braces such combine·
performing the labor lion
alternate
for the execution and proposals as may pro·
construction of:
mote the best Interest
FRY LANDSLIDE
of the State.
MEIGS COUNTY, OHIO APPROVED FOR PUB·
PROJECT
NUMBER LICATION IN The Dally
MB·Sb·75
Sentinel, Legal Notice
in accordance with the Dept, 111 Court Street
plans and speclflca· Pomeroy, OH 45769,
WEDNESDAY,
Public Notice
tlons prepared by the on
DEPARTIIIlENT OF NAT· March 24, 2010, and
SHERIFF'S
SALE, URAL RESOURCES, WEDNESDAY, March
CASE NO. 09 CV 100, DIVISION OF MINERAL 31,2010.
PEOPLES BANK, NA· RESOURCES
MAN· (3) 24, 31
TIONAL ASSOCIATION, AGEMENT,
COLUM·
PLAINTIFF, VS. ROCKY BUS,
OHIO.
A. HUPP AND CAROL PROPOSALS•WILL BE
Public Notice
J. HUPP, ET AL., DE· OPENED IN THE SEC·
FEND ANTS, COURT OF OND FLOOR CONFER· SHERIFFS
SALE
COMMON
PLEAS, ENCE ROOM OF 2045 CASE NO. 09 CV 100
MEIGS COUNTY, OHIO. (BUILDING H-21 OF PEOPLES BANK, NA·
By virtue of an Order of THE
FOUNTAIN TIONAL ASSOCIATION,
S11le Issued out of said SQUARE OFFICES OF PLAINTIFF
Court In the above oc· THE OHIO DEPART· VS.
tlon, Robert E. Beegle, MENT OF NATURAL ROCKY R. HUPP AND
the Sheriff of Meigs RESOURCES.
The CAROL J. HUPP, ET
County, Ohio, will ex· United States Office of AL.,
DEFENDANTS,
pose to sell at public Surface Mining Recla· COURT OF COMMON
action on the front motion and Enforce· PLEAS,
MEIGS
slaps of the Meigs mont Is supplying COUNTY, OHIO.
County Courthouse In 100% of the funds for By virtue of an Order of
Pomeroy,
Meigs this project. The con· Sale Issued out of sold
County, Ohio, on FrJ. structlon completion Court In the above acday, April 16, 2010, at date for this project is tion, Robert E. Beegle,
10:00 a.m., the follow- September 30, 2010. the Sheriff of Meigs
lng lands and tone· THE ESTIMATE FOR County, Ohio, will ex·
ments:
THIS PROJECT AS DE· pose to sell at public
Situated In the Village TERMINEO BY THE Dl· action on the front
of Racine, County of VISION OF MINERAL steps of the Me gs '
Meigs, and State of RESOURCES
MAN· County Courthouse In
Onlo:
AGEMENT
IS Pomeroy,
rAelgs
Being Lot Numbered $88,323.02.
County. Ohio. on Frl·
Twenty (20) In the A MANDATORY pre-bid day. April 16, 2010 at
James M. Weldon Addt· meeting will be held on 10:00 a.m., the followtion to tho Village of APRIL 7, 2010 AT 10:00 lng lands and toneRacine, Ohio, which Is A.M., at the project site. ments:
more particularly de- It Is the Intent of the Situated In the VIllage
scribed as follows.
DMRM to commence of Middleport, County
Beginning at the South· the pre·bid meeting at of Meigs and State of
west corner of Lot the designated time. Ohio:
Numbered
N neteen Prior to commence- Being Lot Numbered
{19) In aforesaid Wei· ment of the meeting, an Seven (7) In Probst s
don Addition In the VII· attendance
sign-In Addition to Lower
lnge of Racine, Ohio; form shall be dlstrlb- Pomeroy, now incorpothence East a ong said uted among the con- rated Into and a part of
Lot Numbered Nine· tractors present. This the Village of Middleteen (19) a dtstance of form will be collected port, Meigs County,
One Hundred Nineteen by DMRM staff when Ohto. And being the
Feet (119) to a street the pre-bid meeting be- some property conwhich Is the extension gins. Only those con· veyed 'by Vasto E.
or Seventh Street in the tractors signed In prior Swisher, as Guardian
VIllage of Racine, Ohio; to collection of the of Jesse R. Swisher
thence South along form who remain in at· and William E. Swisher
said Stroot a distance tendance through the to R.A. Miller by deed
of S xty Four Feet(64') d1scussion ofthe plans dated March 1, 1926
to an a y, thence and detailed specifics· and recorded In Book
W st a
aid al ey a tlons shall be deemed 127 at Page 632 of the
One Hun· present for the purpose Deed Records of Meigs
en feet of determining ellglbll· County, Ohio.
Southeast lty for bid submission Reference Deed: Vol·
corner
Lot Num· acceP.tance. Partlcipo· ume 158, Page 821,
Pubhc Notice
ber d Th rteen (13); lion In the site viewing Meigs County C'lficlal
thence a ong the East subsequent to the corn- Records
SHERIFF'S
SALE
'ld of sa d Lot Nurn- pletlon of the discus- Auditor s Parcel No
CASE NO 09 CV 100 bered Thirteen (13) a slon of the detailed 15-00696.00
PEOPLES BANK NA·
e of Sixty Four specifications will not The above descr bed
TIONALASSOCIATION
o the place of be- be required In estab- real estate Is sold as
PLAINTIFF VS ROCKY 9 n g
llshlng attendance. NO Is without warranties
R HUPP AND CAROL Save and excepting the PLANS OR SPECIFICA· or covenants.
J HUPP, ET AL. DE· coal, oil gas and other TIONS WILL BE SOLD PROPERTY ADDRESS·
FENDANTS COURT OF minerals underlying AT
THE
PRE·BID 1053 Vine Street, Mid·
COMMON
PLEAS, said lot.
MEETING.
dfeport, OH 45760.
MEIGS COUNTY, OHIO. The real estate herein Copies of the plans, CURRENT
OWNER:
By virtue of an Order of conveyed being the specifications, and pro- Rocky A. Hupp and
Sale Issued out of sold same as that .conveyed posal1orms will be for· Carol J. Hupp.
Court In the above nc· from James M. Weldon warded
from
the REAL ESTATE AP·
tlon. Robert E. Beegle. to Mildred S. Wolfe by Dtvlsron of Mineral Re· PRAISED
AT.
the Sheriff of Meigs deed dated September sources Management. $40,000.00 The real
County, Ohio, will ex· 21, t922 and recorded Department of Natural estate cannot be sold
pose to sell at public November 15, 1922 In Resources, upon re- for less than 213rds the
actton on the front Volume 119 at Page 431 cclpt of a check or appraised value. Tho
steps of the Meigs of the deed records of money order In the appraisal does Include
County Courthouse In Meigs County, Ohio.
amount of $31.00 made an Interior examination
Pomeroy,
Meigs Prior Instrument Refer· payable to the Ohio De· of any structures, If
County. Ohio, on Frl· ence: Volume 56, Page partment of Natural Re- any, on the real estate.
day, Aprll16, 2010, at 31;Volume56,Page33; sources (ODNR) and TERMS OF SALE: 10°o
10:00 a.m , the follow- and Volume 56. Page 35 mailed to ODNR, Dlvl· down on day of sale,
lng lands and tene· Meigs County Official slon of Mineral Re- cash or certified chl!ck.
ments:
Records.
sources Management, balance due on
Situated In the State of Reference Deed: Vol· 11296 East Pike Road, confirmation of sale.
Ohio, County of Meigs ume 161, Page 207, Cambridge. Ohio 43725 ALL SHERIFFS SALES
and In the Village of Meigs County Official Attention:
Dona OPERATE UNDER THE
Middleport.
Records.
St.Ciair
(Telephone DOCTRINE OF CAVEAT
33 feet fronting on Sec· Auditor's Parcel No : Number: (740) 439· EMPTOR. PROSPEC·
ond Street ol the Vii· 19-00366.000
3640). Plans and spec- TIVE
PURCHASERS
loge of Middleport, Tho above described lftcatlons become the ARE
URGED
TO
being one-fourth of Lot real estate Is sold "as property
of
the CHECK FOR LIENS IN
No. 60 purchased by Is without warranties prospective
bidders THE
PUBLIC
L.C. Davis from Jennie or covenants.
and no refunds will be RECORDS OF MEIGS
Hayes, Charles Geiger PROPERTY ADDRESS: made. For Information COUNTY, OHIO.
and Ella Geiger, the 604 Broadway Street, regarding the project, ATTORNEY
FOR
same being the South· (W. 7th. Street), Racine, the primary contact PLAINTIFF:
west quarter of said Lot OH 45n1
person is the Project Jennifer L. Sheets, LIT·
60. Said one-fourth bo- CURRENT
OWNER: Engineer, Brady John· TLE &amp; SHEETS LLP,
ginning at the North· Rocky A. Hupp.
son; his absence you 211·213 E. Second
west corner of tho REAL ESTATE AP· may contact the Project Street, Pomeroy, OH
Cranz lot running parol· PRAISED
AT: Officer, Barb Flowers 45769, Telephone: (740)
lei with tho same about $25,000.00. The real or the Design Engineer, 992-6689
98 feet; thence East 33 estate cannot be sold Bryan Brunton. They (3) 24, 31 {4) 7
feet; thence West about for less than 213rds the all can be reached in
98 feet to Second appraised value. The the Athens District Of·
Street; thence along appral$al does Include lice (740) 592-3748.
Second Street in a on Interior examination Each proposal must be
Southwesterly dlrec- of any structures, If accompanied by a BID
lion along Second any, on the real estate. GUARANTY, meeting
Street 33 feet to Cranz TERMS OF SALE: 10% the requirements of
lot, the place {of) begin· down on day of sole, Section 153.54 of the
nlng.
cash or certified check. Ohio Revised Code.
CONTRACTORS ARE
Reference Deed· Vol· balance due on
ume 155, Page 573, confirmation of sale.
ADVISED THAT EQUAL
Meigs County Official ALL SHERIFF'S SALES EMPLOYMENT
OP·
Records.
OPERATE UNDER THE PORTUNITY CONDI·
Auditor's Parcel No. 1S. DOCTRINE OF CAVEAT TIONS
ARE
00839.000
EMPTOR. PROSPEC· APPLICABLE TO THIS
The above described TIVE
PURCHASERS PROPOSAL IN ACCOR·
real estate Is sold "as ARE
URGED
TO DANCE WITH THE
Is" without warr~~ntles CHECK FOR LIENS IN PROVISIONS OF SECor covenants
lHE
PUBLIC TIONS 153.59 AND
PROPERTY ADDRESS: RECORDS OF ME$S 125.111 OF THE OHIO
570 S. Second Street, COUNTY. OHIO.
REVISED CODE. THIS
Middleport, OH 45760 ATTORNEY
FOR PROJECT IS SUBJECT
CURRENT
OWNER: PLAINTIFF:
TO A So/o EDGE PAR·
Rocky R. Hupp.
Jennifer L. Sheets, LIT· TICIPATION GOAL IN
REAL ESTATE AP· lLE &amp; SHEETS LLP, ACCORDANCE WITH
PRAISED
AT: 211·213 E. Second THE PROVISIONS OF
$15,000.00
Tho real Street, Pomeroy, OH O.R.C.
SECTION
estate cannot bo sold 45769, Telephone: (740) 123.152 AND O.A.C.
123:2-16·08.
WAGE
for less than 213rds the 992·6689
appraised value. The (3) 24, 31 (4) 7
RATES ESTABLISHED
appraisal does Include
IN
ACCORDANCE
an Interior examination
WITH SECTION 1513.18
of any structures, If
Public Notice
AND 1513.37 OF THE
any, on tho real estate.
REVISED CODE ARE
TERMS OF SALE: 10% NOTICE TO BIDDERS ALSO APPLICABLE TO
down on day of salo, Sealed proposals will THIS PROPOSAL.
cash or certified check, be received at the:
Sealed proposals shall
balance due on
DIVISION OF MINERAL be delivered to the ad·
confirmation of sole.
RESOURCES
MAN· dress given at the top
of Notice To Bidders.
ALL SHERIFF'S SALES AGEMENT
OPERATE UNDER THE DEPARTMENT OF NAT· No bidder may with·
DOCTRINE OF CAVEAT URAL RESOURCES
draw his bid within
EMPTOR. PROSPEC· 2045 MORSE ROAD sixty (60) days after tho
TIVE
PURCHASERS BUILDING H, THIRD actual date of the open·

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Page 84 • The Daily Sentinel
Rentals

Soles
Tho Proctorv1 e
btteronce
S1 and a deed

BA

6000

Employment

Child/Eiderfy Core
Mob llomes for rent 1n
the Pt Plensa11t area call Pos.uor opon at Darst
304 075 3423
before Adult Group Hor11c IIISI,
930pm
second &amp; third sMts,
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367-0266 or 339 3366

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Send to:
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P.O. Box 1145
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For employment consideration,
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'
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-

Help Wanted - General

Unlimited Earning Potontlall'l
101 'i Bob FM s looking
lor the nght person to
JOin oo sa
t m A
person that
t rasted
a career tt. • atforas
lnfoC or oHers
the opport;.~ ty to giVe
ProfessiOn Work Env
yo rsott a r so every
ron ent
montn a career vme e
Exce lent Ben f•ts Pack
you re roqu rod to actu
ago
a ly got out of the off ce
PadTranng
nnd roto the public a caWeekly Pay nnd Bonus
r r 1n t."'e cxclt no end
Opponumties
Interesting r old of rad•o
If you thinK yol- have
Call and Schedule Your what 1 takes to succeed
Interview:
in th1s ll-n and rcward•ng
1·888·1MC-PAYU ext.
carocr, thon err~all a re·
2331
swrro to pneaceCcon·
http://jobs.lnfoclslon.c no•ssourmed•a com
Saom
r ous lnqu nos only f x
- - - - - - - - penence IS preferred but
Now n r ng bartenders not reqUired Conno s
Panchos Mex can Can sour Med a Is an equ~l
lira
opportumty employer
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Arbors at Gal pols 170
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p necrost Dnve Ga po1
Domestic
Seeking car ng and con
passiOnate proVIders of
MeiQS lndu •nes Inc 15
grcatseMCe
Current ST&gt;.JA hoc so re
h ling part llme crewloaders lor Moria :'ld .awr
qu r«&lt;
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Apply at center or em&lt;:
expo nee
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tan tona custod I
wott
www ext nd care com
profcned Me~gs lndustr es prov dO$ seiV'ces
_ ___E
..o_E~--- for dulls w II' develop·
Your Career Starts
mental dlsab 1t1es Must
Horell
have a valid Oh o driVers
Full and Part Time Po· license and hlgl' school
sltlons Available I
d•ploma or GE'D Scrod
resume to Me1gs lrdus·
Earn up to $12 25 an
tnes Iroc P 0 Box 307
hour aftor SIX rrontrs
Syrac~Jso,OI'•o 45779
Rocru1t1ng Volunteers for
MaJor Nonprofit Organizations•
Medical
Weekly Pay + Bonu •
Complete Borcl1ts PackOverbrooK Center , c~.;r­
ago at 90 days
rorlly accep ng app ICB·
On S to PhysiCIBn
tons
lor
~
IfSill N rs ng AssisCall TODAY'
lnteMBW TO'.IORROW tants I'" 8 sh~ fu
t
hOurs nv !able In·
Work NE~ WEE'K
t r ted app;:::ar ts can
ptCk up n applicatiOn or
1-888 MC.PAY"\J
contact Lucy Go!f BSN
REMEMBER Ext. 1931
AN StaH Development
Apply onlf'le
0
l:t!lp.@obs.IOfOC!SiOO CO"] Coordlllltor
740.992-6472 M F 9a·5p
t 3.13 Page St Middleport Oh FOE &amp; 8 partiCI·
pant of the Drug-Froo
Workp ace Program

0

Se

ices Offered

To place an ad
Call 740-992-2155
r-- -----..,
YOUNG'S

Co nstruction
• Vinyl Sidtng
• Replacement
Windows
·Roofing
· Decks
·Garages
·Pole Buildings
• Room Additions
Owner.
James Keesee II
742-2332

CARPENTER
SERVICE

eatt Marcum Construction
Commercial &amp; Residential

• Room Additions &amp;
Remodollng

• Ruorn ndditions • Routing • C
• &lt;;t!nt•ral Remudeling • Polt• &amp; Uorw
Barn~ · \in.) I &amp; \\ood 1- cndng

• VInyl Siding &amp; Pointing
·Patio and Porch Decks

foundation.,
MIKE W. M ARCUM, OWNER
472l9 Riebel Rd., Long Bottom, OH

• New Garages
· Eloctrlcal &amp; Plumbing
·Roofing &amp; Gutlcr•

wv 036725

V.C . YOUNG Ill
99l-6l l 5 740·591-111115
Pomoroy, Ohio
30 Yea11 Local Experience
- Winter S lals -

740·985·4141

MIKE MARCUM
ROOFING &amp; HEMODELING Co.
Rubber Roofing, Room Additions, Decks, Shlng1C5,
Siding, Windows, Pole Barns, Garages,
Insurance Work, Residential &amp; Commcreiol
740.245-0437
Uoensed &amp; Bondod
30 Years
Free Estimates

Experience

Roofing

ROBERT
BISSEll

Painung-

CONSTRUCTION

SJdmgGutters
Deck' [ tc

Senil e I rce
Lstmmte s &amp;
a fordable Price~.

Call Ocnnis Bu)d
7~0-992-2029

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

· New Homes
·Garages
·Complete
Remodeling

e

Great coverage and

superio r service
(that's easy on your wallet)
H ometown Insurance Center
teraaaOhometownlnsuruncec:enter.com

304- 773-1111
B

Erie
~ Insurance'"

Stop &amp; Compare

Rcplact·ment

Specialist!., LTD
(740) 742-2563

Home

Insurance

740-992·1671

\\indo\\ sand
\in) I iding

740·416·1 834

Fully insured
Free a1imatC1o - 25+ _)ears cxpcricm·l·
(;\Out affiliated \lilh l\like \lart"um Koofinlt &amp;. K~nutddm~•

~~

Total Construction

~O~ne-C~a/~1-to-l-)o--Jt_A_l~/------- ~
0\\ner
Am) \eteran
Tom \\olfe

Pole B.lm !\Ictal Roofs
f-Ire &amp; \\ atcr Dama!!e
O r)\\ all Repa1r
-

740-416-2575

• Siding • \Ill) I
\\indo\I s • !\Ictal
and hinglc Roof~
• l&gt;ccks • Additimt~

•t.lcctrical

Estimates

740-742-3411

MT SECTION HEAD

Racine, Ohio 740-247-2019

BAI\KS
CO:\S'I Rl C I 10:'\

Pleasant Valley Hospital currently has
openings for a full-ttme MT Section
Head. Three years experience in
MICrobiology. WV license requ1red. Must
be able to work all sh1fts, hohdays and .
weekends.
Please send resumes to

co.

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

Owners:
Jon Van Meter &amp;
Paul Rowe

Pomem), Ohio
Commercial •
Residential

R.L. Hollon
frucking

Pleasant Valley Hospital
c/o Human Resources
2520 Valley Dr., pt Pleasant, WV 25550
or Fax to (l04) 675-6975 or
apply on-line at ~yalley.ore

I&gt;ump lnrd.
Sen lee
\ e dudnH'" \

I imcst nc •
"l op { I•

740-985-4422

AA/ EOE

740-856-2609
Cell

PUBLI C
NOTICE S
SHERIFF'S
SALE,
CASE NO. 09 CV 100,
PEOPLES BANK, NA·
TIONAL ASSOCIATION,
PLAINTIFF,

vs.

ROCKY R. HUPP AND
CAROL J. HUPP, ET
AL.,
DEFENDANTS,
COURT OF COMMON
PLEAS.
MEIGS
COUNTY, OHIO
By virtue of an Order of
Sale Issued out of said
Court In the above ac·
t on Robert E. Beegle,
the Sheriff of Meigs
County, Ohio, will ex·
pose to sell at public
action on the front
steps o f the Meigs
County Courthouse In
Pomeroy,
Meigs
County, Ohio. on Frl·
day, April 16, 2010, at
10:00 a m ., the follow·
lng lands and tene·
mcnts:
Situate In tho VIllage of
Pomeroy In tho County
of Meigs and the State
of Ohio.
Lot No. 45 as deslg·
noted on a map of Lincoln Heights, made by
Breece &amp; Carper, Reg·
!stored Civil Engineers,
Huntington, West Vir·
glnla, d ated October
17, 1942, a copy of
which map was flied
with tho office of the
Recorder of Meigs
Co unty, Ohio, Decem·
ber 17, 1942 In Plat
Book No. 3, ot Pages 43
and 44, and being more
particularly bounded
and described as lol·
lows:
Beginning at a point In
the South line of Lin·
c oin Road at tho corner
between Lots 44 and
45, as shown on said
map; t hence with tho
said line of Lincoln
Road, South 63 De·
grees 51' East 50 feet ;
thence with the line between Lots 45 and 46,
South 26 Degrees 09'
West 200 feet ; thence
North 63 degrees 51 '
West 50 feet ; thence
with tho line between
Lots 44 and 45, North
26 Degrees 09' east 200
feet to the point of bereserving ,
g inning;
however, tho coal and
all other minerals In
and underlying tho
above des cribed prop·
erly together with the

right to mine the same
without encumbrance
to tho surface, and subJect to an casement lor
sewage filter ditch of
leaching ditch as set
forth and described in
that Instrument bearing
date November 26,
1943, and recorded In
sold recOrder 's office,
December 3, 1943, In
Deed Book 151 , Page
178.
Deed Reference: Vol·
ume 166, Page 415,
Meigs County Official
Records.
Auditor's Parcel No.:
16-01870.000
The above described
real estate Is sold "as
Is" without warranties
or covenants.
PROPERTY ADDRESS:
1638 Lincoln Heights,
Pomeroy, OH 45769.
CURRENT
OWNER:
Rocky A. Hupp and
Carol J Hupp.
REAL ESTATE AP·
AT:
PRAISED
StO,OOO.OO. The real
estate cannot be sold
lor less thAn 2/3rds the
appraised value. The
appraisal does Include
an Interior examination
of any structures, if
any, on the real estate.
TERMS OF SALE: 10%
down on day of sale,
cash or certified check,
balance due on
confirmation of sale.
ALL SHERIFF'S SALES
OPERATE UNDER THE
DOCTRINE OF CAVEAT
EMPTOR. PROSPECTIVE
PURCHASERS
ARE
URGED
TO
CHECK FOR LIENS IN
THE
PUBLIC
RECORDS OF MEIGS
COUNTY, OHIO.
FOR
ATIORNEY
PLAINTIFF:
Jennifer L. Sheets, LIT·
TLE &amp; SHEETS LLP,
211·213 E. Second
Street, Pomeroy, OH
45769, Telephone: (740)
992-6689
(3) 24, 31' (4) 7
-------Public Notice
-------SHERIFF'S
SALE.
CASE NO. 09 CV 100,
PEOPLES BANK, NA·
TIONAL ASSOCIATION,
PLAINTIFF, VS. ROCKY
R. HUPP AND CAROL
J. HUPP, ET AL., DE·

FENDANTS,
COURT
OF COMMON PLEAS,
MEIGS COUNTY, OHIO.
By virtue of an Order of
Sale Issued out of said
Court In the above action, Robert E. Beegle,
the Sheriff of Meigs
County, Ohio, will ex·
pose to sell at public
action on the front
steps of the Meigs
County Courthouse in
Pomeroy,
Meigs
County, Ohio, on Frl·
day, April 16, 2010, at
10:00 a.m., the follow·
lng lands and tenements:
The following Real Es·
tate situated In the
County of Meigs. State
of Ohio, and In the
Township of Salisbury
and more particularly
described as fallows : It
being a part of Section
No. 8, Town 2. Range
13 of the Ohio Com·
pony's Purchase and
bounded as follows :
Beginning on the West
Side of the road leading
to
fr om
Pomeroy
Athens at a point dis·
tance
100
feet
Southerly from the
Southeast corner of a
tract lately awned by
Peter
Jeroleman;
thence running South
on the line of said road
50 feet; thence West up
the hill to what was formerly Montegue"s line;
thence with said line
North 50 feet ; thence
down the hill to the
place of beginning,
being the same prem·
ises conveyed by Nellie
Karr and Dana Karr to
Phillip Kreiseimeier by
Deed Recorded In Vol.
94, Page 176 and 177 of
the Records of Deeds
in the Recorder's Oflice, Meigs County,
Ohio.
Reference Deed: Volume 166, Page 469,
Meigs County Official
Records.
Parcel
No.:
1400713.000
The above described
real estate Is sold "as
Is" without warranties
or covenants.
PROPERTY ADDRESS:
32755 US 33, Pomeroy,
OH 45769
OWNER:
CURRENT
Rocky R. Hupp.
REAL ESTATE AP·

PRAISED
AT:
510,000.00
The real
estate cannot be sold
for less than 213rds the
appraised value. The
appraisal does not in·
elude an Interior examination
of
any
structures, if any, on
the real estate.
TERMS OF SALE: 10%
down on day of sale,
cash or certified check,
balance due on
confirmation of sole.
ALL SHERIFF'S SALES
OPERATE UNDER THE
DOCTRINE OF CAVEAT
EMPTOR. PROSPEC·
TIVE
PURCHASERS
ARE
URGED
TO
CHECK FOR LIENS IN
PUBLIC
THE
RECORDS OF MEIGS
COUNTY, OHIO.
ATIORNEY
FOR
PLAINTIFF:
Jennifer L Sheets, LIT·
TLE &amp; SHEETS LLP,
211·213 E. Second
Street, Pomeroy, OH
45769, Telephone: (740)
992·6689
(3) 24, 31 (4) 7
Pu blic Notice
SHERIFF' S
SALE,
CASE NO. 09 CV 100,
PEOPLES BANK, NA·
TIONALASSOCIATION,
PLAINTIFF, VS. ROCKY
R. HUPP AND CAROL
J. HUPP, ET AL., DE·
FENDANTS, COURT
OF COMMON PLEAS,
MEIGS COUNTY, OHIO.
By virtue of an Order of
Sale Issued out of said
Court In the above ac·
tlon, Robert E. Beegle,
the Sheriff of Meigs
County, Ohio, will ex·
pose to sell at public
action on the front
steps of the Meigs
County Courthouse In
Pomeroy,
Meigs
County. Ohio, on Frl·
day, April 16, 2010, at
10:00 a.m., the followIng lands and tene·
ments:
The
following
de·
scribed premises, situ·
ated In the Village of
Middleport, County of
Meigs and State of
Ohio:
Being Lot Number
Three Hundred Scv·
enty-Four (374). as per
recorded plat of Lower
Pomeroy, now the VII·

lage of Middleport, said
Lot being an the East
s1do of Pearl Street, be·
tween Lincoln and
Grant Streets, being
fifty (50 ft.) front.
Reference Deed: Volume 210, Page 609,
Meigs County Official
Records.
Aud1tor's Parcel No.:
15·00001.000
The above described
real estate is sold "as
Is" without warranties
or covenants.
PROPERTY ADDRESS:
842 Pearl Street, Midd!eport, OH 45760
CURRENT
OWNER:
Rocky R. Hupp and
Carol J. Hupp.
REAL ESTATE APPRAISED
AT:
S40,000.00. The real
estate cannot be sold
for less than 213rds the
appraised value. The
appraisal does Include
an interior examination
of any structures, II
any. on the real estate.
TERMS OF SALE: 10%
down on day of sale,
cosh or certified check,
balance due on
confirmation of sale.
ALL SHERIFF'S SALES
OPERATE UNDER THE
DOCTRINE OF CAVEAT
EMPTOR. PROSPECTIVE
PURCHASERS
ARE
URGED
TO
CHECK FOR LIENS IN
THE
PUBLIC
RECORDS OF MEIGS
COUNTY, OHIO.
ATTORNEY
FOR
PLAINTIFF:
Jennifer L. Sheets, LIT·
TLE &amp; SHEETS LLP,
211·213 E. Second
Stroot, Pomeroy, OH
45769, Telephone: (740)
992-6689
(3) 24, 31 , (4) 7
-------Public Notice
-------NOTICE TO CONTRAC·
TORS
Sealed proposals for
the paving of Brick
Street and Civic Center
Drive In the village of
Rutland, Meigs County.
Ohio will be received
by the Meigs County
Commissioners at their
office at the Courthouse, Pomeroy. Ohio
45769 until 1:00 P.M ..,
Wednesday, April 14,
2010 and then at 1:15

Stanley TreeTrimming
&amp; Removal
:-lm~

Sdlmg.

• l·ord &amp; \l otorcrall
Part~ • ~ngmcs.
~runs fer Cases &amp;
Tran~m1ss1ons

• Aftcrm,ukct
Replacemert Sheet
~fetal &amp; Components
f

A I '-H

f\

Racine. Oh1o
7-'0·949-1956

MICHAEL'S
SERVICE CENTER

1555 N\'E AYe.
.P omcro\', 011
• 011 &amp; f1ller ch.m e
• fune l P'
• Brake Sen 1ce

• AC Recharge
• Mmor exhau~t
rcpa r • Tm: Repatr
• Transmt~s•on hher
,'\: Huill Chan.:c
• Geneml Me~h;m~:
\\Ork

Fx~nenced

Rclercnces A\ 1lablc 1
C'.all Gar) S1 nk:) "
740 'i91 8044

I.EWIS
CONCRETE
CONSTRUCTION
Concrete Removal
and Replacement

\II T'VC" or

Conrreh· ' \orJ...
29 \ear I xpcriencc

I&gt; a \'id Le\\ is
740-99.2-6971

•• construcu
Pole Barns, Garages,

Ql\

New Construction, Roam Add.,
Roofing, Shingles, Metal. Rubber,
Concrete Work,
Any Type remodeling, Decks
Phone : 74~7~16

Cell 740-447-3842
39 yrs exp. Free Est. FuUy Insured

'l'im Cremeans &amp; Raga Sellers

Public Notice

Public Notice

P.M. at said office
opened and read aloud
for the following :
Paving of Civic Center
Drive and Brick Streets
located In the Village of
Rutland, Meigs County
Ohio. Specifications
are provided In tho bid

the official or agent
signing the bond.
Bids shall be sealed
and marked as Bid for
Rutland Village Street
Improvements
and
malted or delivered to:
Meigs County Commissi oners
Courthouse
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
Attention of bidders Is
called to all of the re·
quiremonts contained
In this bid packet, par·
tlcularly to the Federal
Labor Standards Provisions and Davis-Bacon
Wages. various lnsur·
once
requirements,
various equal opportu·
nlty provisions, and the
requ irement lor a pay·
ment bond and per·
lormance bond lor
1oo~. of the contract
price.
No bidder may with·
draw his bid within
thirty (30) days alter tho
actual date of the openIng thereof. The Meigs
County Commission·
ers reserve the right
to reJect any"or all bids.
Tom Anderson, President
Meigs County Commls·
sioners
(3)24, 31 ' (4) 3

pac~et.

~

Owners:

(7-'111992-09111

Specifications, and bid
forms may be secured
at the off1ce of Meigs
County Commission·
ers,
Courthouse,
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769·
Phone I 740·992-2895.
A deposit of
0
dollars will be required
for each set of plans
and specifications.
Each bid must be ac·
companied by either a
bid band In an amount
of 100% of the bid
amount with a surety
satisfactory to the
aforesaid
Meigs
County Commission·
ers
or by certified
check, cashiers check,
or letter of credit upon
a solvent bank In the
amount of not less than
10°to of the bid amount
In favor of the aforesaid
Meigs County Commissioners . Elld Bonds
shall be accompanied
by Proof of Authority of

Sea:-Jiess G~:' •-rs
Sdrog Gutte s
lf'st.red &amp; Bonded
740.653-9657

Roof:-~

Hill's Self
Storage
29625 Basto..n Road
Rae ne OH 45771

740·949-2217

Remodehng. Roo:n

Sizes s· X 10'
to 10' x 30'

\ ddi!IOfl'
Local Contractor

740-367·0544

Hours
7:00am· 8:00pm

\ CK'

~~~~~

Roofing. S1dil'g
Sofiu. De.:ks, Do01~.
\\ mdo\h. Electnl .
Plumbmg. Dl') \\all

Free t. 'timntes

740-367-0536
Coll\tm ction and

Replacement

~ inyl\\mdoK~

CONTRACTOR WINDOW SU
t &amp; MANUFACTURING, llC
• AND SIDING INSTAllATION
Spe&lt; t•/1 c l 11 Repl(/( 1""1&lt; nt \l mtlo" \
/- vr OIJ&lt; r Home' &lt;\ 7rmlen

PSI CONSTRUCTION
Room Addll!on,, Remodchng. M~tal &amp;
Jungle Roofs, :'\c\\ Home' . S~mg. lA'\:ks,
B,uhroom Remodehng. LJcen,ed r In urcd
Rirk Price • 17 ~ r,. E:\p&lt;&gt;rience
WVI040954 Cell740-416-2960 740.992.0730 I

�Wednesday, March 24, 2010

www.mydailysentinet.com

Dean Yaung/Denis Lebrun
~E

CROSSWORJ)

VOl.;

By THOMAS
ACROSS
1 Awmt
5 UK
res•dent
9 Pat to
Pedfo
11 Panter El

KIOO;t~G?

WE'VE GO..
-ONS~

-HE

s-~.~::::r

GAME!

.

Tom Batiuk

AGAR THE HORRIBLE

Chris Browne

"r-·'~MY
IJOA"t'

V" I J!AVE To
GOONA
R/!J(J Tot'.A'(...

JOSEPH
38 Dundorhead
39Movo
sinuously
40 Started a
hole
41 Clutter

12Low
DOWN
nobleman 1 Rum
13 Burdened
cakes
14 Histone
2 Pccturos
lime
3 Stra1g111
15 Fake
4 B1g head
chum
5 Muffm
17 Newsmakeup
paper part 6 Overn1ght
19Word of
flight .
accord
7 ~ssass.ns,
20 Flag
In slang
features
8 Thoator
21 Hankenng
awards
22 Bas~ball's
Pee Wee
24 Guita r
blaster
26 Pool need
29 Novelist
Kobo
30Veal
buys
32 Senocomlc
show
34Porpolse
place
35 Massenet
opera
36Museum
piece

SUT .I NEVeR THOUGHT
IT WOULD TAI&lt;E ALL DAY
AHD CUT INTO MY GOLF

FUNKY WINKERBEAN

The Daily Sentinel ·Page 85

I?E,AOY

q

10 Burning
11 Secluded
spot
16 Kane's
last
word
18 F1eld
cover
21 Holler
23 Nymph
chasers
24 Wear
down

25 Nasty
fellow
27 Caron of
"G1g1"
28 Tankards
29 Let in
30 Small
coin
31 Bags
33 State of
mind
37 Shade
tred

3-24

THELOCKHORNS
HI &amp; LOIS

William Hoest

Brian and Greg Walker
N REEAL. t.tFe I CAN't"
eVEN WAt.l&lt;, BIJI IN MY
r?RcAM6 I CAN FL.Y/
I /..OVS /I-'
-

UTTS

Patrick McDonnell

ZITS

MOOCH - HOW IS

Jerry Scott and Jim Borgman

THE OUTSIDE
WORLD SINCE

I'VE BEEN
HIBERN ATING
') .../

.

THE FAMILY CIRCUS
Bil Keane

CONCEPTIS SODOKU
by Dave Green

~·

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" Is It my job to teach PJ
' bout sharing?"

PENNIS THE MENACE
Hank Ketchum

·-

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HAPPY BIRTHDA't for \\'ednesdl\ Marcil 24
2010
11us year, expect the unex-pected llus sununer
rould surpnse you. What could be a miStake ts to
hold on to what tSn't working The cour,,ge \our ~lgll
JS known for wtll need to emerge. Sometunes ch.mge
LS scary. \l.m) of you wtll find 11 exciting If you are
mgle, 'ou could meet someone "ho knocks 'our
!l()(ks off If ) ou are attached, the rn o of you break
mto ,, brand nt"\\ ' ' orld together Let the ex{'tte:tll'nt
1m tSOrate your bond Someone born under the 1
CAI'C'ER am be oh so emuttonal
I r Stars Slww llrr Kmd ofiDw 'i.m11 Hat'C 5
Dvmrrnu:· 4 Posrtrve; ~ A rn:o:c, '&gt;()&lt;so; 1 Drfficult
ARIES (M&lt;'Inil21 Apnll9)
* ** Obser\ e and w, trh You'll see much more
than man). but you'll cllo;o tcalu:e that} our po" er to
efte.~ d'lange ore\ en to mamtam l.'Ould be at d lo''
Mo\e '~hen you feel !he tinuntps nght TnHt \OUr
JUdgments Tonight Htmg at home
TAURUS (Apn12(}.Ma\ 20)
'**"* ** You kno\\ ho'' Important a dcciston
might be Listen to .;omeo.ne and what he or .;he
sh.ires. The mote mfoml.ltl&lt;lll \ ou get, the stronger
the •'Iebon vuu rrught t.tke Don t take a rt'' ersal ~~
~:mall). rather, u.&lt;&gt;e the unexpt-rted. Tomght M.1tnlam
a high proftle.
GL\11!':1 (Ma) 21 June 20)
"*"*"*'toucan onh do 'iO much Take stock of )OUT
a-;sets. Your actions pomt to .t c;trong reaction after a
dL'CIStOn. Still, someone' n•.l&lt;"tton could be surpn 'lg.
Regroup and reorganu:e. Don't v.orry about a JOlt
!\might: Treat} ourself \\t&gt;ll.
CANCLR Oune 21 July 22)
*"***"* A surge ol questions helps) ou focu
t:o;e the process to come out on top of ,,h,ltts ne..'l!S
5&lt;'11) Others re:;pond c;trongh to' our etforl"
IXmonstrate) our grasp of the facts and an .lbihh to
put them m the J'O" ~ r periptXtl\ e forught Take the
lead
L£0 l)uly 23-Aug 22)
*"** Mu,·h gOL&gt;s on bchmd the s..~nes. )ou sense
\\ h.1t ts g1 •in&amp; on. 11w sm,ut Lion refuses to tak.t!
acbon, thougn an ilSS(lCl.lte could throw c'l t.mtrum
Rt'.J!tze w h.1t io; h ~ppemng and u.o;e time us an ssel
DL'&gt;CO\ t&gt;r that someone cl rould make aD the dtffcr
ffiC\' Tonight Vanish \\hile )OU can.

VIRGO (Aug 23-Sept 22l
,,hat you'' ant 'tou rould be
disroncerted b) o;omeone' s attitude Drop the reaction
and stay focused on \\hat must hapfX'll Others can
react all they want, don't lose )OUT focus or centenng.
Torught \\'here people are.
LIBRA (Sept 23-0ct. 22)
•
"*"*"** l.1ke charge and step up to tht: plate )ou
c.m le.:~d others a'i on1) lew can Your sen;e of hu:nor
ro.."'''C&lt;; through t the end of the d,1, 'tou ClJ'\ a' oid
frustrauon \\1th the &amp;ft of ~cti' e ',omeone dose
ll\lght be obser. mg 'rOU fo
t A mu'it .1ppear.mce.
SCORPIO (O:t 23-f\:0\. 21
*"*'"*'*'"* Reach out for expert&lt;; e-;p...'Oalh u ) ou hit
,, logjam. Re,l! e that vou might ha' e too mudi information on vour platt&gt; Sortin~ f.1cts from upll'Uon..,
could be a lull time )Oh T.1p mto }our mtutti\ e know)
edge. Torughc. Let )OUr mind "ander
SAGliTARIUS No' ~ Dec 21)
"*'*''*'*' 'tou nught want tore' amp' our ideas after
con"!denn a partner's sugge'ition \\'n!k "tlh the
unantiapated as tt hapf't!I'S. 'tou could be put off b)
someone',:; altitude, but 'ou'll get ,lfOUnd 1! JUSt fine.
1-.no" the e\tent of the dam.tges. Ton1ght E~y wor'....,
CAPRICOR:'\ (Dec 22-J,m. 1&lt;1)
"* *'*"* Others continue to be " touch defiant or
demandmg )ou c.mnot change then g)Tationo;,
t:nderst.:..,d "h.1tts happening mthm a sele.."'t group
ol people Realize you could be v.om out h\ !hem.
Toillght Be "tth 001) tho~ &gt;ou c.m tc a:-: " tlh.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. lS)
* * St.l\ )e, d, as th,, unexpa'te&lt;i dtlt'S O&lt;.'l.'llr. )our
".1} of handling n ftnitndal mntter rould IX' quite off
lhe-'1 c11l to some people but ea5tl) could prO\ e effec..
li\e KnO\\mg \OUr limits i, \t?I) important as \\ell.
'tou could be a touch seJf indulgent Tomght Put ~our
fret up
PISCES (Feb 19-Man:h 20
,_,_,_,,_.. 'tour unagmation could ll\1 read a '&gt;ttuatton .1nd make more of tt than '' h t ts reall) gomg on.
Laugh and rel.1x \11th the rompan) of others, e\'en dll
associate makes a Sl\'&lt;ll companion 0\ er Jun. h. )our
hght attitude d, ~ ha\e,..Jn impat'l lbrught Let your
pia\ fulness spm out:
"'~~'1HI'""*'*' Zero m on

*

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111e Daily Sentinel

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Wednesday, March

www.mydailyscntincl.com

Rio track begins outdoor season

Pearl says Vols know they stand 1 win from history
KNOX\ II 1 b,
fenn
(APO
R ch111g the
rcg1011 I
I
, ol&lt;ll&lt;. Ol the
NC \A tournament h.:~o;
become quttc ,, h•1b1t lor
fennco;;sce. I lfUrmg. out ho\\
to \\Ill ' •
the Vols get
th 1c') v
tiMt'!. the proh
111.

!he \u,, h.1'
never
,ld\ dllCCd pal-It the IOUJld of
16
Iennc,scc 1" 111 the round
of 16 tor the "iXth time in
"l:hool hi'&gt;lOI \ .md fo1 the
thn·d 110\t' in" RntL't' Pc.trl'&lt;..
ll\c sc,t ons. fhe second'ccded VL)b (27-8) play :-.Jo.
2 &lt;,ecd Ohio State (29-7) on
Fnda) 1ught m St. Lou1s
a rematch ol the 2008
sem1final
reg10nal
fenne5".&lt;..ee lost g5 84 .1ltcr
blu~ ing •I huge halftime
lc td .1 mnst Grcr Odcn and
1
:\l1dl.lel Conic}
P~.:arl !..tid ~ tonday tl1.1t Ius
\oh. h,1,e been plu) m~ for
h1,lo1) 111 sc,\,011
"fh1.;; team 1" one "m
u\\ &lt;~) from gomg :-.omcpl.tcc
th.tt no lenne&lt;..sec b,t,ketball
(team) has C\ er gone. b cry
one ot us \\ould l1kc to have
our name on th.tt .tccom
phshmcnt " he said
Thl!. 1s the fourth time in
SIX !.Cason'&gt; tor Pc.1rl to t.tke
a team to tim po1nt of the
~( · \A tounMment. He did 1t
\\ ith \\ 1scon.,m-~1ll\\ auh.cc
111 200~ bclorc Tennessee
h1red hun a\\J) to rcvnc a
prof_ram that had to hide
empt) section&lt;.. 111 1ts em
ernous .1rcna '' 1th hln\.k cur
tains.
Ao;ked 1f he feels not
reac.hmg tht: n:' IOil.ll findl I'
\\CI •hmg on hnn, Pc.trl ~J1d
no.
"But 11 "111 be 1f 11 contm
ue,," he ~atd \\lth a smile,
"It'll be a great problem to
ha\ e 11 e\ cl') ) ear I c,m't get
111) team from the S\\cet 16
to the I lite 8. It\ hke when
Mike KrtytC\\-ski got to the
J in I F-our C\ er) ) ear hut
c.ouldn 't '' m the national

championship. That \\ ,\s a
•al bu1dcn.''
Pearl I'&gt; tr) mto a combma
lion m tr) mg to find the
nght buttons to push to le.td
hi'&gt; Vol&lt;&gt; to Sunday's ref?IOllnl final ag.tinc;( ellher
Mich1g,111 State or Northern
h:mu HI!. \u ltfted \\CI hh
Mond,l) Jll
like the)
al\\ ays do. and they planned
to cheer the Lad\ Vub in
their second wund game
a~uinst
Dayton l\tonday
mght.
But Pcnrl also hac;; talked
to some coaches, II) in~ to
gle,m Un) ad\'Ice or t1dbll he
can use. Pearl said he plans
to thro\\ in a couple of different things at his team to
keep the mood light. And he
w11l tap Lnd\ Vols coach Pnt
Summ1tt \\hen she's oiT her
own game-pre!\sure for some
tips considering her eight
national championships.
''I'll be intere ted to see
\\hat her thoughts are,"
Pe.Jrl ...ud.
Tennes!'&gt;ee has plent) of
experience thts tune around.
Scm or Wa) ne Chism \\ill he
pl.t) mg in h1s third regional
senufinal. while this will he
the &lt;iecnnd for J.P. Prince.
The prospect of pht) mg
the Big Ten champ pales
considering "hat Tennessee
alrcad) has been through
th1s sec1son. Hopes of reachmg the round of 16.1et alone
J hfth straight NCAA tournament berth. &lt;&gt;upposedly
\\ere rumcd Jan. I \\hen
\enior T)ler Smith and three
teammate.-. ''ere arrested on
m1o;demeanor drug and gun
charr,es.
Pearl d1smi&lt;:.sed Smith n
week after that arre.o;;t, and
the other three - Cameron
futum.
center
Brian
\\ tlltams ,md point guard
Mch in Goins - all had to
'' ork their \\ ay back from
suo;pcnsion&lt;:.. That left the
Vol.-. with stx scholarship
pla)ers, and they worked
'' ith three \\alk-ons to hand

BY MARK WILLIAMS
SPECIAL TO THE SENTINEL

WINS'! ON~ALl:.M, NC
- The University of Rio
Grande RcdStorm men's
and women's track and field
teams began the 2010 outdoor season at the Wake
Forest Open this weekend.
"I hie; was a non-scoring
meet.
Rio Cirande was facing
some lugh caliber competition at this meet from all
lcveb ol college uthleucs.
Red-shirt freshman Nick
Wilson was the top men's
performer as he fimshed
I lith in the 3.000-meter run.
Wilson covered the distance
in 8:49.79. Be also ran 24th
in the l ,500-metcr run wtth
a time of 4:03.50.
Sophomore distance man

I

Ohio
from Page Bl

Neal C. Lauron/Columbus Dlsptach/MCT

Ohio State's Dallas Lauderdale (52), David Lighty (23) and
Jon D1ebler (33} stop Georgia Tech's Maurice Miller (3) in
second-half action. Ohio State beat Georgia Tech, 75-66,
during the second round of the NCAA tournament in
Milwaukee, Wisconsin, on Sunday.

then-No. I Kansas tts first
loss of the !&gt;Cason.
Then Tennes ec became
the first team since the 200102 season to knock off the
top l\\0 ranked teams in the
countl') m the same season
\\ith a 74-65 \\in 0\er thenNo. 2 Kentucky on 1-eb. 27.
The Vols nre 9· 3 over their
last 12 games mcludmg their
83-68 &lt;;econd-round rout of
Ohio, the team that knocked
out Gcorgcto\\ n. Without
using Pearl's preferred fullcoul1 pressure. the) are holding opponents to 38.2 percent
shooting during the tomna-

24, 2010

ment. a stat that slumps to
29.5 percent from 3-point
range. They also are grabbing
35 more rebounds per game.
That has stoked expectations
not JUSt from
Tennessee fans but the Vols'
themsel\es.
Pearl said ~orthem Iowa's
upset of Kansas has all four
teams headin!! to St. Louis
for a t\\o-game stretch where
each has to 'ike the odds of
ad,ancing.
"We've got to look at it the
exact same way. We're two
wins away from going to the
Final Four.'' Pearl said.

both scoring ( 11.9 ppg) and
rebounding (4.9 rpg) this
past winter, while Johnson
added 10.8 points and 3.6
rebounds per ~arne for the
Green and White.

Zane Miller finished 24th in
10,000-meter run.
the
Miller posted a time of
33:29.20.
Junior Justin Francisco
registered a time of 16.12 in
the I 10-meters hurdles,
~·hich was good enough for
37th place. Sophomore
Lucas Murphy ran 41st in
the 800-meter. run with
time of I :57.84.
Sophomore Kayla Gra
was the top finisher for the
Red Storm women's team as
she crossed the finish lme
111 43rd place in the 400mcter run. Graves posted a
time of 1:01.13. Graves
was 98th in the 200 (24.26).
Freshman
sprinter
Hayley McSurley was 60th
in the tOO-meter dash
(13.37) and I20th in the
200 (28.31).
Rees
averaged
11.4
pomts. 8.4 assists and 6.2
rebounds per game for the
Purple and Gold, whQ
ad\anced to their second
strai !!ht district championshTp game th1s season.
Winebrenner. Johnson.
and Rces were all second
team selections for · the
:-outheast
district
Division IV.

WIN $200
CLUf rOR
WfDM~DAY, MARCil 24th.

"432 sq. miles to look!"

NFL changes overtime for playoff games
ORLANDO, Ha. CAP)
lhc ~r L h.l!. ch,tngcd its
0' crtunc rut s for phi) otf
.tm"s
Startrno ne't e.1son, it a
te.1m "mo; the co1n to~s und
then ka\,;h a field goal, the
other tc.ml •et' the ball. If
the game become., tied
, g.1111 alter that next &lt;,enes,
pl.l) \\-Ill contmue under the
current &lt;:.udden de,\th rules.
Should the team \\inning
the to&lt;:.., 1mmediatel\ &lt;;core
u toudlt.IO\\n, then the g,une
1' over.
ream O\\ ner~ \ oted 28-4
on Tut:sda)' in favor of the
proposal .tt the Nl L. meetings. Mmneo;;ot.l, Buffalo,
ctncinnall ami Baltimore
\\ere ag.tm't the change.
Mmncsota lost last se&lt;t
son·.,
H champ10n!.h1p
game m o\ crume to Nc"
Orlean-.. fhe S, mts "on

the too;;s , drme do\\nfield
and kicked a tield goal to
\\ m.
"Modified sudden death
rs an opportunity to make a
prett) good rule ... e'en
better."
~aid
Atlanta
Falcons president Rich
McKa). co-chairman of the
competition
committee.
··stati'&gt;ticall). it needed to
change. It \\asn't producing
the 'fairest result ...
Those statisllcs sho\\ed
th.tt since 1994. the team
thnt \\On the overtime coin
toss \\on the game 34.4 percent of th~ time on the first
posse&lt;&gt;!.ion.
Over,tll. the team that
corrcctl) called the coin
toss \\On overtime games
59.8 percent of the time in
the last 15 vears, or since
k1ckoffs "ere mo\ ed back
5 ) ards to the 30.

"Pient) of people on the
cammtttec, m) self mcluded, arc so-called traditionalists," Indianapolis Colts
president B1ll Pohan said.
"I am proud to be one. But
once 'ou sa\\ the tatistics.
it became ob' iou \\e had
to do something."
The ne" rule applieo; only
for po&lt;;tscason game . But
McKay said even that could
change. and sevcr,ll O\\ ncrs
expreso;ed mtere't in further
dhcus'iions at their May
meetings in Dallno;.
"There was a lot of sentiment Jn the r&lt;Xllll to change
this rule for the regular season." McKa) o;a1d, addmg
he doesn't expect that to
happen this yem. "Our
thought is to take our t1me
and stud) it a bit and make
sure everyone understands
the implication
there

would be for that.''
McKay and Polian both
aid the VIkings-Saints
game had little role in pac;snge of the rule change.
"That's
interesting,"
McKa) said. "One of the
teams that voted against
wus m the !!arne and.~last 1
checked. I don't think they
won."
Vikings O\\ ner Z) gi Wilf
said Monday he \\as
inclined to \Ote against the
modification.
"You need consistcnC) of
the regular :-.ea~on and the
postseason.'' Wilf said.
Pol ian ,aid O\ ertimc
rules already are different
during the 'eason, when
games end m tics after a 15nunute OT. and the playoffs. ''hen a \\inner must
be determined.

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