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                  <text>Page 86 • Th:!Daily SentiOO

www.mydailysentioel.com

Tuesday,January6,2009

Ex-refug~ now 1St

Steelers' Harrison is AP
Defensive Player of Year

Brain pacemaker
helps Parkinson's,
but with risks,.As

Vietnamese-American
congressman, A2

•

APphoto

Florida quarterback Tim Tebow smiles during media day at Dolphin Stadium in Miami
Monday. Florida will face Oklahoma for the BCS Championship Thursday.

Different strokes for Heisman
QBs Bradford and Tebow
MARK LONG

the NFL could be next
made winning look easy in different ways. of for both signal callers.
course.
Bradford and Tebow each
FORT LAUDERDALE,
Bradford, a 6-foot-3, have already submitted
Fla .
Sam Bradford 218-pound right-hander. paperwork to the NFL's
strolled through Manhattan has thrown for 4,464 yards advisory board in hopes of
by himself the day after and a nation-leading 48 getting a better feel for
winning
the
Heisman touchdowns this season their draft stock. They
Trophy. He wore a baseball while helping Oklahoma's expect to make their deci. cap, blended in with the offense become one of the sions a few days after
New Yorkers and hardly most prolific in college Thursday night's champigot noticed.
football
·history.
The onship game in Miami.
He returned to Oklahoma Sooners have scored at
Bradford's accurate· arm
the following day, attended least 60 points in their last combined with ·his ability
practice, then
walked five games, something no to read defenses, stay calm
. across campus without other team .had accom- in the pocket. run an NFLsigning a single autograph plished since 1919:
style offense from under
o~ posing for a picture.
Even though he rarely center has some prognostiFlorida's Tim Tebow has- leaves the pocket, Bradford cators projecting him to be
n't had a weekend like that has been sacked only II the No. I overall pick if he
10
J~a~l~rd and Tebow are times and has thrown just chooses to enter the draft.
.
six
interceptions.
He
Tebow's status ' is a bit
t~e only sophomores to win prefers to go through his foggier. Having played his
I e Heisman , have enjoyed progressions, taking an entire college career in the
record-setting seasons, and extra second to find his spread-option offense and
· · ta ken nearI y every
have carried · No.
2 th1'rd or fourth rece,·ver · havmg
Okliihoma and top-ranked
Florida to the Bowl rather than try1'ng to make snap from the shotgun forSeries seogmse. thing happen with his mation, scouts differ on
Championship
1
· 1 111· 1
Tebow's pro prospects .
natlOna
e
game
.
"(.couldn't
ask
'or
a
betSorne .be1·1eve he 1s.
· d ura b le.
, They have little else in
''
common.
ter offensive line," says accurate
and
mobile
The standout quarter- Bradford,
who
edged enough to make it at the
backs have different back- Texas' Colt McCoy and next level. Others aren't so
Tebow for the .Heisman last sure.
grounds, different passing month. . "I hardly got
Linebacker
Brandon
styles, different NFL proj!=ctions and different ways touched this year. They do Spikes scoffed atthe notion
of handling fame. TheY. will so many things to get our of any NFL team passing
have different results in the offense going. If you see on Tebow.
"I had an opportunity to
title game Thursday night, some of the holes th.ey open
too.
·
·
forour run gam~, Its pretty play with this guy and train
"They might be world~ulous. I lhmk I could with this guy the last three
apart, but clearly they do a
o ~bly run through them. years," Spikes says. "I've
lot of the same things," T
re the gu.&gt;;~ who make experienced wh,at. kind of
Sooners defensive tackle th1s offense go.
.
person he is , and not just on
T~bow.'s equally qUick .to the field but off the field.
Gerald
McCoy
says.
"They're both great players pra1s~ h1s team~ates. But He's a guy you can build a
·and they have great teams there s I IItle. questiOn he has whole team around. He 's a
been a b1g reason the winner. When they say he's
surrounding them"
The son of ~ former Gators have. made the title not a quarterback, I kind of
Oklahoma offensive line- game tw1ce m the last three laugh at that. What else can
man , Bradford grew up years.
he prove? He passes the
The 6-4: 240-pound left- balL He runs the ball. His
rooting for the Sooners in
Oklahoma City and always bander With a knack for kind of style is .different
knew he wanted to play in scrambling out of the pock- from most quarterba'c~s in
nearby Norman. He might et and runmng over .defend- the league. But, hey, I feel
not have envisioned star ers was a catalyst m goal- like he can do a,nything ."
status, but is trying to li~e an~ short-yardage situWhen Tebow does turn
adjust to that much like he auons m 2006. He has done pro, he already has
Has his newfound Cherokee much more smce.
thoughts of expanding his
connection .
·
He threw for 3,286 yards work to include charitable
Bradford is a registered and 32 touchdowns last organizations and commuCherokee , four generations season, and ran for 895 nity outreach projects.
That's one reason he
removed from the last full- yards and 23 scores. He
blooded Native American became the first under- em,braces his fame. More
,: i.n ·~is ,family. He was raised class rna? to accept &lt;;ollege popular than former Florida
. with little exposure to football s most . prest1g10us quarterback and i 996
American Indian customs award
and
prompted Heisman winner Danny
and culture, but the Florida coach Urban Meyer Wuerffel or basketball star
Cherokee
Nation
has to call him "the best quar- Joakim Noah, Tebow often
embraced him as one of its terback of our era."
.
gets .swarmed by autoown - and look to him as a
Tebow's
numbers :graph-seekers on and off
hero.
·
dropped this seaso·n, but his campus . If he signed all the
Tebow was born in the value never wavered, He requests, he would surely
Philippines, and the son of threw for 2,51 S yards and . miss classes and never have
missionaries has ·made 28 touchdowns, added 56.:1 · time to do anything else ..
countless trips back to visit yards and 12 scores on the
Bradford doesn't have
schools, marketplaces and ground and may have been the same concerns.
'the orphanage his father at his best when he stood
"Obviously, .1 sign some
li;&gt;unded. He has taken sim- behind a podium a few and people ask me every
ilar mission trips to Croatia minutes after a 31-30 loss now and then ," he says. "I
· and Thailand, has visited to Mississippi, held back talked to Colt (McCoy) and
state prisons in Florida and tears and guaranteed that them, and Colt said he
rarely turns down an oppor- Flor.ida would work harder ab,solutely gets mobbed
tunity to speak aqout his than anyone in the country when he tries to walk to
the rest of the, season.
~;lass. I dpn 't know. That's
strong Christian beliefs.
" "I want to do everything
"I was a better leader, a not me."
' .
m my power that football better manager, a better
Bradford would rather be
gives me to influence as runner of the offense and lUJOnymous - hluch like
many people as I can for , runner of the team this he was in Manhattan.
"If that ,was possible.
the good, because that's year," Tebow says, "I d&lt;;&gt;f1'1
gonna mean so much more !)link I had to doas ll)UCh yes," Bradford says. "But
when it's all said and done With IllY own body and obviously, th &lt;ll's not possithan just playiilg football making plays. But as far as ble. It's something . that
11nd
winning
champi- everything else, the intan- comes with. this team's sucgibles, I was better at cess. It's something I've
onships ," Tebow says.
Bradford and Tebow have those ,"
got to be willing to do."
BY

AsSOCIIITED PRESS

.

'

.

'

NEW ·YORK· (AP) Kent State once sent a linebacker to the Pittsburgh
Steelers who epitomized
everything th~ Steel Curtain
was abou\.
That was Jack Lambert.
The current version of the
hard-hitting. versatile and
dynamic former Kent Stater·
in Steel City is James ·
Harrison, The Associated
Press 4008 Defensive Player
of the Year.
The linebacker, who had a
career-high 16 sacks to set a
AP phala
team record and led the NFL
This
Aug.
28
file
photo
shows
Pittsburgh
Steelers
linewith a career-high seven
backer
James
Harrison
during
preseason
NFL
football
forced fumbles, beat Dallas '
DeMarcus Ware in balloting action against the Carolina Panthers in Pittsburgh.
by a nationwide panel of 50 receiver Hines Ward said. football, I think he works ,
sports writers and broadcast- "He's worked his tail off to harder than anybody else in
ers annoum;ed Monday. get to where he is. You this locker rooni," Farrior
. Pittsburgh was the .league's appreeiate it more, consider- said. "He has a great work
stingiest in total defense, ing where he came from and ethic. He's very tuned ·in to
pass defense and points how he got here."
what he ha~ to do to make
allowed. Harrison was its
Harrison credited de fen- himself 'better. That's all he
main harnrner.
Dick . strives for, to try to be better
sive
coordinator
"That's something that LeBeau 's schemes with than anybody else, and you ·
everybody in the league allowing him, an undmfted can see his determination
would love · to have , to be · free agent who was cut sev- when he's out there on the
voted the top player in the eml times by Pittsburgh and field .
league for that year," once by Baltimore, to even" We've got good playerS .
HarrisAn said. "In ml mind, tually become a star.
on this teallJ, and every team
I think I do - and it s going
''The defense is· built to has good players, but he
to sound boring - what the play with H guys, and if all seems to be - this year and
defense allows me to do and II guys are on the same last year ..:.. making the plays
what my teammates allow page , playing the same 'that made the difference in
me to do." ,
defense on the same play, the game."
Harrison earned 22 votes there's nothing that can go
Harrison is the fifth
to 13·for Ware.
wri:mg and that's just how we Steelers player ·to win the
Baltimore safety Ed Reed. feel about it," Harrison said: award, including three Hall
the 2004 winner, got eight
But fellow linebacker of Famers from the original
votes. Tennessee defensive James Farrior, who has seen Steel Curtain: Joe Greene
tackle Albert Haynesworth Harrison develop from a (1974), Mel Blount (1975)
had five and Harrison's backup to Joey Porter into and Lambert ( 1976): In
teammate, safety Troy one of the game's biggest 1993; Rild Woodson was AP
·
Polamalu, got two.
playmakers, sees Harrison as Defensive Player of the Year,
"It couldn't happen to a the key.
and he's eligible for the Hall
better guy," Steelers veteran
"His whole attitude about fo: the first time this year.

·Fiesta
fromPageBl
"You saw a great football
game out there, two teams
going at it extremely hard,"
Ohio State coach Jim
Tressel said.
11
1
hd
exas Payers rus e onto
the field after Boeckman's
last-gasp pass hit the turf
deep in Texas territory, then
gathered in front of the band
and sang "The Eyes of
Texas with jubilant fans.
But early on, it looked as
if the Buckeyes would finally be. celebrating.
Texas brought Bevo, its
steer mascot •. but left 1ts
offen~e back m Austm, at
least m a slugg1sh first half.
The Longhof!!S fa1led to
score m the f1rst quarter.
Texas was shut out in only

four quarters' all season ·_ plete pass the Buckeyes had
and only once in the first to settle for a 30-yard field
quarter,. in a 39-33 loss at goal by Ryan Pretorius to
·
take a 6-3 lead.
Texas Tech on Nov. I.
, The Buckeyes took a 3-0
Texas' best chance came
late
in · the half, when
lead on a 51-yard field goal
by Aaron Pettrcy midway McCoy smartly marched
through the first period. the Longhorns from their
phio State drove 43 yards own 9 to the Ohio State 16
ln mne plays, the b1ggest in 47 seconds.
But on third-and-2 at the
chunk coming on a 22-yard
burst by Chris " Beanie" Buckeyes 16 and 9 seconds
Wells.
to go. McCoy threw per, Four minutes into the sec- . haps his worst pass of the
ond quarter. Texas tied it lit s'ilason. McCoy lobbed the
on a 27-yard field goal by ball toward Cosby at the
Hunter Lawrence, The goal line, but safety
Longhorns covered 57 Anderson Russell picked 11
yards. running twice for a off to kill the threat.
total of no yards on the
Had McCoy thrown the
drive.
ball into the seats, the
. The Buckeyes responded :Longhorns would have had
with a 67-yard march to the time for a chip-shot tying
. Texas 7-yard line. But field goal. But they went
' Buckeyes ta.ckle Bryant into the dressing room still
Browning was flagged for a down by three.
fal se start on third"and-2 at
It didn 't take McCoy long
the 7; and after an mcom- to atone.

•

•
,

~

Priated on t08%
Rocycled NP'Sprint ~. .

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio
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· I .t·n n1
. 1n~t 1a1·1ysenhne

Accident closes Ohio 7

:• Tornadoes breeze
past Meigs. See Page 81

Tanker
spills diesel

'

BY BETH SERGENT
8SERGENI'OMYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

0BITUARIFS .
Page AS
·• Elmer E. Crites, 96
• Joe Lantz, 73

INSIDE
• Grand Canyon,
Loch NeSs compete
·as natural wonders.
SeePageA2
• Law You Can Use:
,.Fliers on cars. legal ,or not. See Page A3
·• For the. Record.
SeePage AS
• Players to present
mystery dinner theatre.
SeePage AS
• Yoga class coming
to Ariel. See Page AS
• Ohio misses
deadline on business
.:report. See Page AS
.·• Ohio matches
record-low 3 death
sentences in '08.
See Page A6

TUPPERS PLAINS Around 9:30a.m. yesterday
morning a collision between .
a sedan and tractor trai lei
ended up closing Ohio 7 for
part of the day.
Though . no names have
been released, a spokesperson
with the Gallia-Meigs Post of
the Ohio State Highway
Patrol said it appears one of
the drivers went left of ~'enter.
causing the accident between.
the Tuppers Plains Chester
Water District office and
Locust Grove Road. Both drivers were lrdnsported to St.
Joseph's
Hospital , . in
Parkersburg, W.Va. for treatmerit of their injuries. The
spokesperson said the injuries
were not described as life
threatening.
After impact, the tractor
trailer went off the roodway
and ruptured its tank which
was carrying 7,800 gallons
of diesel fuel.
·
,
According to Erin Strouse:
spokesperson with the Ohio
. Environmental Protection
Agency, some diesel fuel
found its way into an
unnamed tributary that feeds
into Sbade Run. Around
· I ,000 gallons of diesel is
estimated . to have spilled
from the tanker but Strouse
·said the agency doesn't
know how much ~ot into the
water. Strouse d1d say the
diesel was contained within
a short distance of the original spill . where a containment dam was constructed.
Strouse said the Ohio EPA's
Division of Emergency and
· Remedial Response were still
on the scene late .yesterday
evening and will return today
to make sure no fuel has made
it further downstream. Ohio
EPA .will continue flushing ·
out the area and may excavate
soil near the spill.
As for ground wat!:r contamination, Strouse said this
was something that happens
after a longer term exposure ·
though at this point the Ohio
EPA doesn't think there are

· ·

STII.FF REPORT
MDSNEWSOMYDAILYSEIIITINELCOM

COLUMBUS State
ReJ!resentative . Debbie
Ph1llips (D-Athens) took the
· oath of office Monday as a
new member of the Ohio
House of Representatives in
the !28th General Assembly.
"We face awesome challenges in our state - the
economic downturn, the
need for education reform
and I relish the opportunity
to help find bipartisan solutions,' Rep. Phillips said. I
hope to continue my leadership in these areas by engag-

Detlllt on Page A3

INDEX
12 PAGES

Annie's Mailbox
Calendars
Classifieds
Comics
Editorials
Movies
Obituaries
B Section
1 ~ports
Weather
'Clll009 Ohio Valley Publlahlns eo,

•

BY CHARLENE HoEFLICH

POMEROY - 4-H is on
the move in Meigs County
with more and more boys
and girls getting involved in
the numerous program
offered through the Ohiq
State University Extension
Program, Meigs Office . .
According to a report
released by Cass ie Turner,
extension educator, the
2008 4-H ·program !las over
400 county youth enrolled
and ne'arly 100 in the

•

.

Photoa courteey of Roben Byera

a

Racine approves budget
ing my colleagues and
cmfting ideas·
that work for
every . corner
of Ohio. Our
middle class
and working
•D•e._b_b...
ie...._. families need
us to . rise to
Phillips
the
challenge, and I am confident we
can do it."
Rep . Phillips mpst recently served on Athens City
Council, where she chaired
the Council's Planning and
Development Committee.
She is the founding

Council watching cemetery fund

Executive Director of the
Ohio
Fair
Schools
BY BETH SERGENT
Campaign, which organizes
BSERGENT@.
MYDAILYSENTINELCOM
and advocates for quality
public education. She also is
RACINE - At its most
a trained mediator who has
recent
meeting, Racine
provided training in peer
Village
Council
approved
mediation and conflict reso· its annual budget which will
lution in schools.
She and her husband Jim include keeping a watchful
have two children, Jeremiah eye on the Cfmetery fund.
Unlike townships or other
and Pnuline.
Rep. Phillips begins · her village's with cemetery ·
Greenwood
first
term
as
State levies,
in
Racine
is fund·
Cemetery
Representative for the 92nd
ed
through
a
trust
and
as of
Ohio House District, which
includes areas of Athens; Dec. 31 , 2008, only
Meigs ,
Morgan . and $27,888.07 was left in that
fund, with the village's bud-Washington Counties.
get commission anticipating
appropriations
at
$29,088.o7 this year.
,
One · of the problems
include the fact several of
Clovetbud activities and the deceased rio longer have
project related work that family in the area or literalwill help them as they con- ly living so the village
tinue to grow and develop," receives no new funds for
said . the extension agent. perpetual care expenses ;
"In addition over I00 such as mowing for these
attended either a summer or older areas of the cemetery.
day camp program continu- Also, in newer parts of the
ing to build strong life cemetery, some families
have not paid a perpetual
skills."
care
fee which Mayor J.
Turner also noted that
Meigs · 4-H Teen Leaders Scott Hill said should be
have doubled in membership suggested to all tho.se .who
and activities . "Attending purchase. new lots in
. teen conferences. completing Greenwood . Cemetery to
help maintain the area .
Total permanent appropriPlease see 4-H, AS

4-H growing in numb,ers and service·
HOEFLICHOMYDAILYSENTINELCOM

·

any groundwater or residential impacts though the
agency will continue to
investigate. The S{l?kesperson with OSHP sa1d no one
in the area was . evacuated
because of the spill.
By afternoon, one lane of
Ohio 7 had been opened to
keep traffic flowing, including srhool traffic out of
Eastern Local. The OSHP
anticipated both lanes opening by 6 p.m. yesierday
evening.
First responders on the
scene included emergency
personnel ·from Meigs
EMS, Medics 5 nnd 2,
EMS,
the
Reedsville
Tuppers Plains, Chester and
Bashan Fire Departments,
the
.Meigs
County ·
Emergency Management
Agency, the Meigs County
Sheriff's Office . In addition
to the OSHP and Ohio EPA,
personnel from the Ohio
Department of Natural
Resources were on site .
Many local volunteer firefighters stayed on the scene This Ford Taurus collided with tractor trailer on Ohio 7 yesterday morning. Both drivers
most of the day.
were injured though their injuries were not described as life threatening.

Rep

WEATHER

. ll SI!CJ'JONS -

·

This &lt;?yerturned tractor trai!er was said to be carrying around 7,800 gallons of diesel, of which 1,000 ,gallons are believed
to have spilled. Although 11 s not known how much, at least some of th~t fuel found its way into a tributary that feeds into
Shade Run.
·
.

, Cloverbud program. There
was a total of 39 4-H clubs
active in the county with 94
adult volunteers involved in
the program. Twenty-five of
·those volunteers were new
last year
There
were
similar
increases in the number of
community dubs 10 percel)t
and in membership , 9 percent, Turnet reported.
"Over 500 youth were
served in community clubs
including Cloverbuds and
proje~t members. These
in
youth
succeeded

..

ations for this year were
approved by council in the
amount of $478,495.89.
Racine had a total cash carryover into the new year of
$267,290.32,
Councilman Ike Spencer
was . once again elected as
of
counciL
president
Spencer and Councilman
Dale Hart's term ends on
Dec. 31, 2012 as does
Hill's. Councilmen Jason
Shain, Jim Harmon, Ivan
Powell and Tom Reed .e nd
their terms on Dec , 31 of
this year.
In other news, the following council members were
appointed to the· following
committees:
Police and fire committee,
Spencer, Shain and Reed .
Fmancial and audit committee, all members of council.
Street committee. Reed,
Hart, Harmon : Ordinance
committee,
Spencer,
Powell,
Harmon.
Annexation
committee,
Shain. Hart, Spencer, Reed.
Human resources committee, Hart, Harmon, Spencer.
Parks and recreation committee, Reed, Powell, hart. ,
It was also announced
Clerk Treasurer David
Spencer's office term is up
on March 31 , 2013.

�I

PageA2

NATION • WORLD
Ex-refug~ now 1St Vietna•nese- Gr~d Canyon, ·
Amencan congressinan
Loch Ness compete

The Daily Sentinel

Wednesday, Januaey 7, 2dQ9

·

Bv KEVIN McGILL ·
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

·

as natural wonders
BY EUANE ENGELER ·

on the south Pacific island
of Vanuatu or Nigeria's
Zuma Rock , a giant monolith in the middle of the
African country. .
A panel of elliperts in nature.
chaired by Federico ~yor,
fonner chief of UNESCO, the
UN. Educational, Scientific
and Cultural Organization,
will reduce the list to 21 finalists in July.
The seven winners will
then be chosen in another
round of public voting lasting until 20 II , this time by
Internet, telephone and text
·• . ·
messages .
Around 100 million peqple voted in the selection of
the seven man-made wonders. The winners were the
Colosseum, Italy; the Great
Wall of China; the. Taj
Mahal , India; Petra, Jordan;
Christ the Redeemer Statue,
Brazil ; Machu Picchu, Per(!;
and the !1'ramid at Chichen
Itza, Mex1co.
·
"The enthusiasm for _, the
campaign, which brought culture out of dusty comeis and
back .to life on front pages,
TV screens and computers
everywhere, crossed all social
and economic lines," Silid
Viering. "Everyone from
schoolchildren to entrepreneurs eagerly participated."
Choosing world wonders
has been a continuing fascination over the centuries.
UNESCO keeps updating
its list of World Heritage
Sites, which now totals 878
places.
The New 7 Wonders campaign led by Swiss adventurer Bernard Weber aims to
promote cultural diversity
by supporting, preserving
and restoring mQnuments
and natural sites. It relies on
private donations and revenue from selling broad-·
casting rights.

NEW ORLEANS
ASSOCIATED PRESS WAITER
When Anh "Joseph" Cao
was 8 and Saigon was about
GENEVA - The Grand
to fall, his mother asked if
Canyon, Mount Everest and
he wanted to take a trip to
Loch Ness will vie with more
·the beach.
than 200 other spectacular
: Despite his youth, Cao
placesinihenextphaseofthe
·said he .still knCW the story
global competition for the
was a ruse.
New 7 Wonders of Nature,
"I sail\, 'Mom, we're not
organizers said today.
going to the beach. We're
The 261 nominees from
going to America," Cao
222 countries include some
recalled recently. "And she
of the most famous mounsaid, 'Yes. Yes. you are
tain peaks, ·lakes, an.d other
going to America."'
attractions. such as the
On Tuesday, more than 30
Great Barrier Reef and
years after that refugee
Niagara Falls.
child escaped aboard a U.S.
Over a billion people are
military transport plane
expected to join in Internet
with his uncle, broiher and
voting that will nominate 77
sister, leaving their parents
semifinalists for the top natbehind, Cao was sworn in as
ural wonders. whiCh will
'the
first
VietnameseAP photo share in the glory already
American to serve in Rep.-elect Ahn 'Jospeh' Cao, R-La., poses for a photograph in New Orleans, Tuesday, Dec. enjoyed by the seven manCongress·
· 9: Cao, who will be the first Vietnamese-American to serve In Congress, defeated William made wonders chosen 18
2
5
The slender
-footJefferson for the second congressiomil district seat.
months ago.
Republic~ attorney's histo"We are calling on people
all over the world to actively
ry-making victory came Jefferson's legal troubles very difficult to come out Convention.
And he decided to run show · their .appreciation for
against an 18-year incum- · and a hurricane's fickle and say that one thing or the
bent - the. first black con- path, Cao passed th!!. latest other is absolute."
against· Jefferson; who was our ... natural world by join·gressman from . Louisiana test in his tumultuous life .
Cao' earned: a physics so' popular he ,was expected ing together to celebrate the
since Reconsttuctio~ .~
Mortar damage once shut degree
from
Baylor to win re-election despite a . most extraordinary sites on .
":ho was ~ons1~ered mvm- · down his elementary school University in the 1980s, federal indictment alleging · ·our planet," said Tia Viering,
. ctble desp1te bemg hobbled . in South Vietnam. He · then entered the Society of that agents found $90,000 in spokeswoman of the New 7
by scandal.
remembers
scrambling Jesus to train as a Roman bribes in his freezer.
Wonders campaign.
"People are ~ailing me. a under his bed at night while Catholic priest. He got a . ''1. told my wife," Cao
The Swiss-based nonprofdragon-slayer, Gao sa1d fragments from explosions master's in philosophy said. "She looked at me and . it foundation collected 441
recently.
rained down on his home.
from Fordham University said, 'You're crazy. You're nominations over. the
Vu H. Pham, curator of . After escaping the coun- and worked with the poor not going to win.' I said 'I Internet since it opened the
the . . , S~1thsoman try in 1975, he faced adapt- · in Mexico - service that know that."'
selection process in 2007.
lnstll~tlon s
~~~tname~e ing to the American culture ultimately led to a change . Cao figured at least he
The foundation then chose
Amencan Exh1b1t: s~1d without his parents. His in plans.
·
could use his campaign to the ,top vote-getter from
Tuesday that Cao s nse mother stayed behind to be · "I worked in extreme draw attention to storm each country, making a list
. shows. "we've come so far with his father a South poverty and had . a faith recovery issues.
of 222 sites. The overall list
as a refugee community."
Vietnamese milit~ry officer struggle, with the situation
Then Hurricane Gustav rose to 261 with the inclu"'!'e tled ... a political who wpuld later spend of human suffering: Why hit New Orleans, delaying sion of sites shared by two
reg1me that was persecutmg years imprisoned in . a "re- did a loving and powerful local elections by a month. or more countries - such as
our people. So now, to come ' education camp." It would God create a world with so That meant Cao would not Niagara Falls and Lake
here, not only for surv1val be I() years' before Cao much human suffering?" face Jefferson on Nov. 4, Superior between Canada
..but for freedom, but to take would see his parents again . . Cao said.
when black turnout would · and the United States, and
that many levels h1gher -:Thirty years after fleeing
"My spiritual director told be high with Barack Obama the . Matterhorn , between
to become part of that poht- Saigon, Cao escaped again me ... that God sends good on the ballot.
Switzerland and Italy.
ical
freedom,
that - this time from Hurricane people 'to help address the
The night of Dec. 6, Cao
Votes can be ca~t until
Democratic . process
. Katrina, with his wife and 1ssue of human suffering."
joined friends and family. - July 7. Registration on the
lhat's the strongest state- two daughters. In its afterCao left priesthood train- including his mother and Web site aims to prevent
_ment of what that says · math, Cao emerged as a ing in 1996 and opted to father, in · a downtown people from voting twice.
The
quarterfinalists
about us as a nation," said leader in his hard-hit com- study law with atl eye restaurant to celebrate his
Pham, who is Vietnamese murtity, particularly as part toward effecting change win, a feat he might have include some lesser known
Full list of nominees on:
·American.
.
of a successful effort 'to shut through politics. He got his trouble · repeating in 2010 sites, such as Yasur Volcano www.llew7wollders .comlhp
. Until a few weeks ago, doWn a landfill.
law degree, taught at Loyola considering his district's
Cao, who looks younger , The Rev. Vien The University Law School in demographics.
·
than his 4 I years, was virtu- Nguyen, from Mary Queen New Orleans and settled in
Joel Waltzer, a fellow
.ally unknown outside the of
Vietnam
Catholic the
city's
thriving lawyer who worked with Cao
tightly knit Vietnamese- Church, said Cao has long Vietnamese community, on the laridfill opposition,
.American community in advocated for Vietnamese which became more politi- . says don't count him out.
:eastern New Orleans. Then refugees. He characterized .cally active as a $f&lt;JUP after
"If you had asked me if he
:.came his narrow victory him as ·a tenacious if soft- the storm.
·
could have won the election
SAN JUAN, Puerto Rico · based on the hidden-camera
·against Rep. William spoken leader, not a dogA staunch Opponent of . against Bill Jefferson, I
- Aruban prosecutors recordings .made by Dutch
(AP)
Jefferson , an icon in the matic politician.
abortion, Cao was elected to would· have said no," he
mostly
black, . mostly
"He san attorney but he's local Republican Party said. "I think he's got the said Tuesday their investi- television crime reporter
Democratic district.
also a philosophy teacher," posts and went to the 2008 personality to reach out to gation into ·the 2005 disap- Peter R, de Vries.
pearance of U.S. teenager
But judges rejected an
: With a boost· from . Vien said .. "So for him it's Republican
N~~otional people, I really do."
Natalee Holloway is near- attempt to re-arrest Van der
ing the end and appealed for' Sloot for statements he
anyone with information to made on the Dutch TV
come forward .
show. The hidden-camera
Chief Prosecutor Hans recordings showed Van der
It happened around 7:40 embankment and utility Deana Waltman, 26, and Mos said his office · still Sloot saying he was with
WICOMICO CHURCH,
Va. (AP) - A 6-year-old a.m. Monday on Route 360, pole about a mile and a David Eugene Dodson, 40, needs "at least another few Holloway when she died on
Virginia boy who m1ssed his about 61 miles east of half from school.
are each charged with child monihs" to investigate the Dutch Caribbean island
Richmond.
The boy told police he endangerment.
•bus tried to drive to school.
Wilkins statements made by the only and that he had a friend
·in his family's sedan - and
The boy, whose name learned to drive playing said. Waltman is being held remaining suspect , Joran dump her body at se.JL..
wasn't released, missed Grand Theft Auto and without bond. Dodson was van der Sloot, during a hidcrashed.
Mos, without di'Sclbsing
His parents were charged · the bus, took the keys to Monster. Truck Jain video released on a $5,000 bond. den-camera
interview specifics, said the TV prohis family's 2005 ' Ford games.
with child endangerment.
It was not clear if they had ·which was broadcast on ~ caused a "new stream of
State police said the boy Taurus and drove nearly
"He was very intent on attorneys.
. Dutch television last year.
mformation" regardless of the
The boy and his 4-year, · But he then said prosecu- appeals court decision blocksuffered
only
minor six miles toward school getting to school," said
injuries and authorities while his · mother was Northumberland County old brother were placed in· tors "are approaching the ing authorities from arresting
drove him to1 school after asleep, police said.
Sheriff Chuck Wilkins. protective custody.
end of this lengthy investi- Van der Sloot for a tliird time
he Was evaluated ai a local
He made at least two 90- "When he got eut of the car,
"This really is a .story of gation." ,
· based on the statements.
hospital for a bump on his . degree turns, passed sever- he started walking to miracles;" Wilkins said.
"If you have relevant infor"My office does not want
head. He arrived shortly al cars and ran off the rural schooL He did not want to "The Lord was with him, mation - no matter how to disclose these results to
after lunch, Sgt. Tom two-lane road several miss breakfast and PE."
along with everybody else small or uninteresting it may the suspect and thus make
Cunningham said. •
· times before · hitting an
His .parents, Jacqulyn on the highway."
seem - please notify my him wiser even before he
office or the police," Mos has been. confronted with
said in a statement Tuesday. these results," Mos said,
Holloway, from Mountain referring to Van der Sloot,
·Brook, Alabama, . was last who was last ·known to be
DECATUR, Ala. (AP)Theirrusedidn'tfooldetec- home life in disarray and
White's ·wife , Shelly, seen in May 2005 leavin~ a living in Thailand.
Sgt. Faron White's job run- lives for long, said Decatur losses at a casino in Tunica, declined comment Tuesday. bar in the Aruban cap1tal
In .November,
Ann
ning a squad that targeted Police Chief Ken Collier.
Miss., White saw no other The couple has three children. Oranjestad with Van der Sloot Angela , a spokeswoman for
drug dealers, gamblers and
"The
investigators way out than to try to win
Collier said the family had on the final night of a high the Aruba Prosecutors'
other organized crime in a involved didn't fall off the back some cash, police sai
"no idea what had happened. school graduation trip to the Office, said authorities
northern · Alabama city pumpkin truck last week .
"I mean, why else do you They had been through sev- ·island. She was 18 at the time. hoped to decide by the end
earned him accolades but They sensed something was go to Las Vegas?" Collier eral stressful days." ·
No trace of Holloway has of 2008 wl\ether to proseRichardson was arrested at ever been found despite cute Van der Sloat or close
was filled with pressure.
. wrong early on ," he said.
.
said.
Add a rocky marriage, ill
Federal marshals caught up
Mayor Don Stanford said' her. home in Decatur and is extensive searches involv- the case for good.
father, unexpected house- with White, 48, in a Hampton he · considered White an being held on $2,500 .bond. ing hundreds of volunteers,
Attorneys for Van der
hold expenses and gambling Inn hotel lobby Monday exceptional officer wjth a . A police volunteer for ·a Aruban soldiers, FBI agents Sloot did not immediately
losses, and somewhere night, three days after he was . great reputation. Now, he'll decade, she had been helping and eveh Dutch F-16 jets respond to messages· seekWhite's unit build a database with special equipment.
along the way, the decorated last seen working late in his be fired, the mayor said.
mg comment and there was
o
f suspected methampheta·
. Aruban
investigators no ·answer at his parents'
·veteran officer snapped, office in Decatur, a Tennessee
''This is a sad day for our
· reopened the case last year · home in Aruba .
police said Tuesday.
River city of 55,000 people. department here," said mine dealers and labs.
White is accused of stag- Long a respected officer who Stanford.
ing his disappearance, stak- had been with the department
White's family reported
ing himself with $2,500 in more than 20 years, White is him missing Saturday mom- '
Hear the
ing after he didn't return
confiscated drug money and now charged with theft.
Call today for an appointment
flying off to Las· Vegas to
Also · arrested
was. from wo(k Friday, For days,
and complimentary demo.
try to win back thousands of Richardson, who authorities search crews scoured areas
dollars to pay his debts. He say helped White get to Las around the Tennessee River,
May you be blessed with
didn't act alone , police said. Vegas by accomp&lt;tnying him lookirig for signs of
peace and prosperity in
A Decatur police volun- to Nashville, Tenn., to catch Decatur's 2007 American
594-6333 Ol'
teer - 29-year-old Sarah a flight Police believe she Legion officer of the year.
1-800-451-9806
His arrest was all the talk
Richardson - is accused of was going to join him later
helping White scatter and has been charged with at a .convenience store down
a twisting, two-lane .road
papers from his desk to with hindering prosecution.
499 Richland Av• .. Athens, OH 4!1701
make it look like he may
Collier said it appeared · from White's . home in ,
Mtdlcal Art• BulldiD@
. have struggled with some- White was stealing confiscat- Falkville, south of Decatur.
819 St. Rl. 664'N.,IA&gt;I!Bn, OH 43138
"I've never hea(d any- .
one before being abducted. ed drug ~ash from his office
. Police say they were roman- safe and that thousands more thin¥, bad about him until
tically involved .
may be missing. Wiih his this, ' said Doug Farr.

On the Net:

Aruba prosecutor: End
is near in Holloway case

1

6-year-old misses bus, takes family car, crashes

Alabama policeman feared missing arrested in Vegas

·.

NEW·YEAR!

2009!

••

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. ....

..

. '-'

-

..

' ~

..

'

..

'·,

v

,.

..

.

· r

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..

....

' • I '• • · -

ANNIE'S MAILBOX

Dear Annie: I am a college senior set to marry in
the spring after graduation.!
have an absolutely wonderful fiance· who I love unconditionally. Even though he
lives three hours away, we
talk on the phone daily and
&amp;!e each other as often as
possible.
· The problem is my best
friend, "Phil." Phil and I
have known each other
sinc'e freshman year. We
have been through a lot
together and I value hi.s
friendship. We never dated
·Or had any sort of intimate
contact. The problem is,
recently I've found myself
being strangely attracted ~o
him. I want to kiss him . ·
· Let me be clear that I have
no actual desire to be with
·Phil. We are both very dif:ferent , and I know beyond a
shadow of a doubt that a
telationship with him would
never work. I realize my
attraction is probably just
cpld feet, but how do I get
over this sudden, ridiculous
·infatuation without jeopardizing my engagement or
alienating my best friend?

Please help knock some is symptomatic of an eating
sense into this suddenly disorder, and it's possible
senseless head of mine . Beth is feeling some emoBeing
Ridiculous
in tional pressure about her ·
Pennsylvania
weight at home.or at school.
Dear Being Ridiculous:
Please make an appointYour problem is actually ment with your pediatrician
quite common and involves to discuss the matter and
the knowledge t~at mar- also talk to the school counriage ends all other roman- selor. Be sure Beth is gettic possibilities (hopef\llly). ting enough food through
It is natural . to fantasize nutritionally sound meals,
about available alternatives and if you also encourage
as long as you don't act on her to get regular exercise, it
those fantasies - and you will help her feel better
don't seem likely to. Every about herself, especially if
time you think. of Phil in an you do it with her.
inappropriate way, substiDear Annie: I must .take
tute your fiance's face and exception to your not recremind yourself of his won- ommending name tags at
derful qualities.
been to
.funerals. I have
.
Dear Annie: My daughter numerous services for work
is 9 years old and a little acquaintances. . business
heavy for her age. "Beth" · associates; military service
tends to eat too much. but members . and
distant
what reall~ worricts me is friends. Many times I had
that she h1des how much no idea who the family
she's eating and when she's members were, and often
doing it.
. .
. . there were no receiving
The fact that she feels the lines or front-row pews to
need to conceal her eating indicate who was related. I
. disturbs me. I am not in a sometimes wondered why I
position to take her to a drove the miles to attend
therapist or anything like when I could have simply
that. What are some things I sent a sympathy card.
can do to help the situation?
When my mother died , my
-Concerned Mom
siblings and I wore tags· sayDear Momi Hiding food ing. "Joe (son)" and "Jan

.

(daughter-in-law)." Countless
mourners told us they were
glad we had done this since
we had moved away from our
hometown decades ago and
they oo longer recognized us.
When they knew who we
were, they were more comfortable talking about Mom
instead of \Vandering aimlessly about, trying to figure out if
they knew anyone from the
family. I think we dp a disservice to guests by expecting
them to know ~ on sight after
many years. It's far too awkward. - Minnesota Reader
Dear Minnesota: It
makes us feel like we're at a
convention, but many readers wrote .to say they like it.
To each his own.
· Annie's Mailbox is writ·
ten by Kmhy Mitchell and
Marcy Sugar, longtime editors of the Ann Landers
col11mn. Please e-mail your
questions to anniesmailbox@comcast.net, or write
to: Annie's Mailbox, P.O.
Box 118190, Chicago, IL
60611: To find out more
about Annie's Mailbox,
and read features by other
Creators Syndicate writers
and. ·cartoonists, visit the
Creators Syndicate Web
page tJI www.creators.com.

RACINE - Jamie and
Heather Jones announce the
binh of their ftrst child, a
daughter, Raegan Delaney,
Nov. 9, at Holzer Medical
Center. The infant weighed
7 .pounds, 3 ounces.
Maternal grandparents
are Robert and Jane Ann
Hill of Racine , and the
maternal great-grandmother is Marilyn Powell of
Racine.
Paternal grandparents are
the lute Curtis Jones and
Vivian Rourke.

Raegan Delaney

Local Weather
'

.

Wednesday ••• Cloudy.
Rain likely in the morning .. Then a chance of rain
and snow showers in the
afternoon. Little or no snow
accumulation. Highs afl)und
40 . Temperature falling into
the lower 30s in the afternoon. West winds 10 to 15
mph . Chance of precipitation 70 percent.
Wednesday night ••~ow
showers likely. Light snow
accumulation
possible.
Colder with lows in the mid
20s. West winds around .15
mph with gtists up to 25 rnph, .

Chance of snow 70 percent. ·
Thut'sday...Mostly cloudy
with a 5() percent chance of
snow showers. Brisk and
~ooler with highs around 30.
West winds 15 to 20 mph . .
Thursday night...Mostl y
cloudy in the evening ...Then
becoming partly cloudy.
Lows around 20.
Friday...Mostly sunny.
Highs in the )ower 30s.
Friday
night
and
Saturday•••Mostly cloudy
with a 40 percent chance of
rain showers, Lows in upper
20s. Highs in lower 40s.

Local Stocks

Community Calendar ·
I

Wednesday, jan. 7
POMEROY Meigs
County Board of Health.
regular meeting , 5 p.m .. ·
Meigs County Health
Department.
. Thursday, Jan. 8
POMEROY Meigs
Soi I and Water Conservation
of
District
Board
.Supervisors orga'nizational
and regular meeting . II :30
a.m .. 33101 Hiland Road.
SYRACUSE - Syracuse
Village · Council, .regular
meeting , 7 p.m., village hall.
. Saturday, Jan. 10
SYRACUSE - Sutton ·
Township Trustees, special
appropriations meeting. 10
a.m., Syracuse Village Hall .
Monday, Jan. 12
RACINE - · Southern
Local School Board·, 8 p.m.

Birth announced

0

I

Public meetings

lVednesda~January7,2009

.

Common problem when tying the knot
BY KATHY MITCHELL
AND MARCY SUGAR

PageA3

BYTHEBEND

.The Daily Sentinel

Auxiliary will meet at 7
p.m. at the hall.
Saturday; Jan. 10
REEDSVILLE
Eastern Local Christmas
Concert 7 p.m. in the high
school auditorium.
RAVENSWOOD, W.Va.
- River Valley Autism
Wednesday, Jan. 7
. Network meeting. 12 noon
MIDDLEPORT
Middleport Literary Club, 2 in the Ravenswood Library. ·
p.m ., Pomeroy Libcary, Interested individuals from
Vanessa Folmer will review area invited to attend. For
"Sum Of Our :Days," host- more informatiQn call 304273-3228 Patricia Boyce, ·
ess is Frankie Hunnel.
POMEROY - Christian
Thursday, Jan. 8 . .
Association
CHESTER
Shade Motorcycle
River Lodge 453 regular "Delivered" Chapter. regumeeting,
7:30
p.m. · lar meeting; 5 p .m.,
Common Grounds new
Refreshments.
POMEROY - Alpha Iota location, 33105 Highland
Masters, II :30 a.m., at the Road.
New Beginnings United
Tuesday, Jan. l3
Methodist Church.
POMEROY - Meigs
County
Chamber
of
TUPPERS PLAINS The Tuppers Plains VFW Commerce, business-mind-

organizational
meeting ,
8:15 p.m. budget hearing,
high school~fiedia room.

Clubs and
organizations

Law You Can Use

ed . luncheon,
noon,
Pomeroy Library, Bun's
Party Bam catering, Sam
Hatcher from Gatling , Ohio
speaking, RSVP 992-5005.

Church events
Friday, Jan. 9
LONG BOTTOM
Faith Full Gospel Church,
S.R. 124 Long Bottom, will
have a sing. 7 p.m.. with
Dave and Debbie Dailey.

Birthdays ·

AEP (NVSE)- 33.11
Altzo (NASDAQ) - 44
Ashland Inc. (NVSE)- 11.94
Big Lots {NVSE} - 15.38
Bob Evans {NASDAQ) - 20.67
BorgWarner {NYSE} - 25.03
Century Aluminum (NASDAQ)
-12.55
.
Champion (NASDAQ) - 2.80
Charming Shops (NASDAQ) 2.28
City Holding (NASDAQ) - 32.27 .
Collins {NYSE) - 41.95
DuPont (NVSE) - 27.65
US Bank (NVSE) - 23.75
Gannett (NVSE) - .9.30
General Electric (NVSE) - 16.86
Hartay·Davldson (NVSE)19.80
.
JP Morgan (NVSE) - 29.88 '
Kroger (NVSE) - 25.36
Umlted Brands (NYSE)- t0.97
Norfolk Southam (NVSE) -

WesBanco (NYSE} - 26.96
Worthington (NVSE}- 11.96
Dally stock reports are the 4
p.m. ET closing quotes ol transactions tor Jan. 6, 2009, provided by Edward Jones financial
advlsora Isaac Mills In Gallipolis
at (740) 441-9441 and U.sley
Marrero In Point Pleasant at
(304) 674-0174. Member SIPC.

~nJerson 7tk!Danie{
lfunera{ '1fmru
Adam McDaniel

&amp;. James A'ndel'$0n
DIRECTORS .

49.90

Ohio Valley Bane Corp. (NAS.
Monday, Jan. 12
DAO) -19.87
MIDDLEPORT - Adria BBT (NVSE) - 25.68
"Sue" Eblen will observe Peoples (NASDAQ) - 18.35
(NVSE}- 55.70
her 88th binhday Jan.. 12. Pepsico
Premier (NASDAQ) - 7.55
Cards may be sent to her at Rockwell (NVSE) - 34.55
Overbrook Center, · 333 Rocky Boots (NASDAQ) - 4.81
Page St., Room 208'-B, Royal Dutch Shell - 55.43
Seara Holding (NASDAQ) Middleport, Ohio 45760.
42.54
Wal-Mart (NVSE) - 56.02
Wendy's (NVSE} - 4.92

www .aadenoruncdaniel.tom

Fliers on cars,. legal or not

Q: I think that the First
Amendment empowers me
to say anythiug I want, but
does it allow me to place
fliers on cars?
. A: First , you should
understand that the first
Amendment is not so much
about empowering your
speech as it is about prohibiting the · government ·
regulating
your
·from
speech. There is no federal
statute that prohibits leafletjog cars, but the state of
New York and many, other
cities across the country
·have adopted laws prohibit. ing the practice. The First
Amendment generally protects you from contentbased or severe government
regulation when you are
placing fliers on cars,
·depending on how a specific court approaches the
analysis, some laws will be
overturned and others will .
be upheld .·
Q:
If
the
First
Ame11dmeut protects me
· ·when put.fliers on cars, can
I place a flier on a car anywhere I choose?
A:
No . . The U.S.
Supreme Court has ruled
that governments may pro. hibit speech that interferes
with the use of property, so
your free speech protection
under the First Amendment
varies depending on where
you place your fliers.
Generally, the strongest
First Amendment protection occurs when you place
fliers in a traditional public
forum, which the governllielll is obligated to make
available
for . public
speech ,
i
A traditional public forum
is any place that has long
been used for assembly or
debate , such as a sidewalk,
public park ot public street.
Nevertheless. in the U.S.

your
First you distribute fliers in such
Court of Appeals for the overcome
objection a way that the potential
Sixth
Circuit,
which Amendment
includes Ohio, you may not because the Sixth Circuit receiver has the ·option of
be able to place fliers on found that governments do refusing to answer the door
cars parked on publie have a "substantial inter- or take a tlier. You should
• FREEWTTKhnk:al~
streets. In Jobe v. City of . est" in preventing litter and remember that other laws
• ln&amp;tanl ~ascaging" kHp your l)i.ljcy hst!
Catlettsburg, the Sixth protecting their citizens' prevent you from forcing
l 10 tHI1a~ tldd~ lloith Wtlbmal~
Circuit upheld a city ordi- cars, Therefore , the ordi- people to take your flier or · • Ctistoo'l Start Page -new•.wealhtt Amore!
nance in 2005 that prohibit- nance will likely be upheld , 1mproperly el)tering onto
THE
ed placing ·a handbill on a and you will be required to. someone's property.
(Gl 1:10, 3:10 &amp; 7:10
las!er!J
·
.
car on a public street. Under pay a fine.
FOUR CHRISTMASES (PG13)
This "Law You Can Use"
Sign Up Dnllntl ..ww.LoeoiNttcorn
that case, a car parked on a
column
was
provided
by
Q: Don't . these ordipublic street is private property that the government llances restrict speech the Ohio State Bar _
may protect by prohibiting without allowing for au Auocialirm (OSBA).It was ~~~
you from placing fliers alteruative avenue for prepared by Monica L.
under windshield wipers. In . expression? That should Dias, an iutellectua/ ptopthe
First erty aud First Ameudmeut,
other words, if your city has violate
an ordinance that prohibits Amendment. ·"What el.~e media and advertising
leatleting cars, you may not am I supposed to do to get attorney with Frost Brown
Todd LLC i11 Cincinnati,
be able to use the ''public . my message o11t?
Au~·tin D. Padgett, a
and
A:
Whether
right
or
forum" defense.
wrong. the Sixth Circuit in 2008 summer associate at
Jobe
ruled that cities and Frost Brown Todd LLC
Q: I still think that I
states
may prohibit you and a law student studying
should distribute my fliers
• Well· woman exams
by placing them on car from distributing fliers dn First Amendment . and
• Birth Control Including
wiudshields, What are my cars because you have other media law at Frankli11
•lmplanon (First &amp; Only
ways to spread. your mes- Pierce Law Center. This
risks?
general
column
offers
sage,
such
as
face-to-face
A: You should realize that
3·year implantable . ·
information
about
the
law.
distribution
on
the
street
or
many cities have banned tile
birth coittrol
practice and that you could door-to-door distribution in Seek an attorney's advice
• Gardasil Vaccine
have to pay a fine. For a neighborhood. Some before applying this iuforto
a
legal
problem.
matioll
municif)alities
still
·ban
example , Cleveland's ordi• STD deteciion &amp; treatment
nance § 613.12 states that some face-to-face speech For more information on a
• Minimallv-invasin
•
"no person shall throw or ·actiyities, but you will gen- variety of legal topics, visit
OSBA's
Web
site
at
the
receive
the
most
First
erally
gynecologic
surgical care
deposit any commercial or
www.ohiobar.org.
Amendment
protection
if
noncommercial handbill in
• Prtgnancy Care
or upon any vehicle." If you
llli~~!oioii..a..,..J.i-"l!:::il • Essure (Searles.~ Permanenl
were to violate this ordiJane D. Brol&gt;cker, MD Birth Control Sterilization)
nance you might not be able
to overcome the ordinance
through
the
First
113 East Memorial Drive
Amendment.
Pomeroy, OH • 992-9158
If your case were to go to
court, the government
Castrop Center 75 Hospital Dr
would have to show a "subSuite 260
stantial interest" in resirictAthens, OH • 594-8819
ing this form of speech.
The government would
also have to show that thi s
interest has nothing to do
with the suppression of
· Aoalllllal&lt;·ollh'
expression, and that the
O'BLENESS
'~
restriction on expression is
HHLTH SYSTEM
Smile! Now you can own !tie pictule ot that unforgettable
incidental .and no greater
moment capTured in lhe newspaper. P~oiOS become ~melesa
than necessary.
when framed or printed on a mug or mouse pad .
Under the Jobe deci sion ,
www.riverroseobgyn.com
and click the blue button.
Visit
the government will easily

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Gynecology Services
Available In Meigs County

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�I

PageA2

NATION • WORLD
Ex-refug~ now 1St Vietna•nese- Gr~d Canyon, ·
Amencan congressinan
Loch Ness compete

The Daily Sentinel

Wednesday, Januaey 7, 2dQ9

·

Bv KEVIN McGILL ·
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

·

as natural wonders
BY EUANE ENGELER ·

on the south Pacific island
of Vanuatu or Nigeria's
Zuma Rock , a giant monolith in the middle of the
African country. .
A panel of elliperts in nature.
chaired by Federico ~yor,
fonner chief of UNESCO, the
UN. Educational, Scientific
and Cultural Organization,
will reduce the list to 21 finalists in July.
The seven winners will
then be chosen in another
round of public voting lasting until 20 II , this time by
Internet, telephone and text
·• . ·
messages .
Around 100 million peqple voted in the selection of
the seven man-made wonders. The winners were the
Colosseum, Italy; the Great
Wall of China; the. Taj
Mahal , India; Petra, Jordan;
Christ the Redeemer Statue,
Brazil ; Machu Picchu, Per(!;
and the !1'ramid at Chichen
Itza, Mex1co.
·
"The enthusiasm for _, the
campaign, which brought culture out of dusty comeis and
back .to life on front pages,
TV screens and computers
everywhere, crossed all social
and economic lines," Silid
Viering. "Everyone from
schoolchildren to entrepreneurs eagerly participated."
Choosing world wonders
has been a continuing fascination over the centuries.
UNESCO keeps updating
its list of World Heritage
Sites, which now totals 878
places.
The New 7 Wonders campaign led by Swiss adventurer Bernard Weber aims to
promote cultural diversity
by supporting, preserving
and restoring mQnuments
and natural sites. It relies on
private donations and revenue from selling broad-·
casting rights.

NEW ORLEANS
ASSOCIATED PRESS WAITER
When Anh "Joseph" Cao
was 8 and Saigon was about
GENEVA - The Grand
to fall, his mother asked if
Canyon, Mount Everest and
he wanted to take a trip to
Loch Ness will vie with more
·the beach.
than 200 other spectacular
: Despite his youth, Cao
placesinihenextphaseofthe
·said he .still knCW the story
global competition for the
was a ruse.
New 7 Wonders of Nature,
"I sail\, 'Mom, we're not
organizers said today.
going to the beach. We're
The 261 nominees from
going to America," Cao
222 countries include some
recalled recently. "And she
of the most famous mounsaid, 'Yes. Yes. you are
tain peaks, ·lakes, an.d other
going to America."'
attractions. such as the
On Tuesday, more than 30
Great Barrier Reef and
years after that refugee
Niagara Falls.
child escaped aboard a U.S.
Over a billion people are
military transport plane
expected to join in Internet
with his uncle, broiher and
voting that will nominate 77
sister, leaving their parents
semifinalists for the top natbehind, Cao was sworn in as
ural wonders. whiCh will
'the
first
VietnameseAP photo share in the glory already
American to serve in Rep.-elect Ahn 'Jospeh' Cao, R-La., poses for a photograph in New Orleans, Tuesday, Dec. enjoyed by the seven manCongress·
· 9: Cao, who will be the first Vietnamese-American to serve In Congress, defeated William made wonders chosen 18
2
5
The slender
-footJefferson for the second congressiomil district seat.
months ago.
Republic~ attorney's histo"We are calling on people
all over the world to actively
ry-making victory came Jefferson's legal troubles very difficult to come out Convention.
And he decided to run show · their .appreciation for
against an 18-year incum- · and a hurricane's fickle and say that one thing or the
bent - the. first black con- path, Cao passed th!!. latest other is absolute."
against· Jefferson; who was our ... natural world by join·gressman from . Louisiana test in his tumultuous life .
Cao' earned: a physics so' popular he ,was expected ing together to celebrate the
since Reconsttuctio~ .~
Mortar damage once shut degree
from
Baylor to win re-election despite a . most extraordinary sites on .
":ho was ~ons1~ered mvm- · down his elementary school University in the 1980s, federal indictment alleging · ·our planet," said Tia Viering,
. ctble desp1te bemg hobbled . in South Vietnam. He · then entered the Society of that agents found $90,000 in spokeswoman of the New 7
by scandal.
remembers
scrambling Jesus to train as a Roman bribes in his freezer.
Wonders campaign.
"People are ~ailing me. a under his bed at night while Catholic priest. He got a . ''1. told my wife," Cao
The Swiss-based nonprofdragon-slayer, Gao sa1d fragments from explosions master's in philosophy said. "She looked at me and . it foundation collected 441
recently.
rained down on his home.
from Fordham University said, 'You're crazy. You're nominations over. the
Vu H. Pham, curator of . After escaping the coun- and worked with the poor not going to win.' I said 'I Internet since it opened the
the . . , S~1thsoman try in 1975, he faced adapt- · in Mexico - service that know that."'
selection process in 2007.
lnstll~tlon s
~~~tname~e ing to the American culture ultimately led to a change . Cao figured at least he
The foundation then chose
Amencan Exh1b1t: s~1d without his parents. His in plans.
·
could use his campaign to the ,top vote-getter from
Tuesday that Cao s nse mother stayed behind to be · "I worked in extreme draw attention to storm each country, making a list
. shows. "we've come so far with his father a South poverty and had . a faith recovery issues.
of 222 sites. The overall list
as a refugee community."
Vietnamese milit~ry officer struggle, with the situation
Then Hurricane Gustav rose to 261 with the inclu"'!'e tled ... a political who wpuld later spend of human suffering: Why hit New Orleans, delaying sion of sites shared by two
reg1me that was persecutmg years imprisoned in . a "re- did a loving and powerful local elections by a month. or more countries - such as
our people. So now, to come ' education camp." It would God create a world with so That meant Cao would not Niagara Falls and Lake
here, not only for surv1val be I() years' before Cao much human suffering?" face Jefferson on Nov. 4, Superior between Canada
..but for freedom, but to take would see his parents again . . Cao said.
when black turnout would · and the United States, and
that many levels h1gher -:Thirty years after fleeing
"My spiritual director told be high with Barack Obama the . Matterhorn , between
to become part of that poht- Saigon, Cao escaped again me ... that God sends good on the ballot.
Switzerland and Italy.
ical
freedom,
that - this time from Hurricane people 'to help address the
The night of Dec. 6, Cao
Votes can be ca~t until
Democratic . process
. Katrina, with his wife and 1ssue of human suffering."
joined friends and family. - July 7. Registration on the
lhat's the strongest state- two daughters. In its afterCao left priesthood train- including his mother and Web site aims to prevent
_ment of what that says · math, Cao emerged as a ing in 1996 and opted to father, in · a downtown people from voting twice.
The
quarterfinalists
about us as a nation," said leader in his hard-hit com- study law with atl eye restaurant to celebrate his
Pham, who is Vietnamese murtity, particularly as part toward effecting change win, a feat he might have include some lesser known
Full list of nominees on:
·American.
.
of a successful effort 'to shut through politics. He got his trouble · repeating in 2010 sites, such as Yasur Volcano www.llew7wollders .comlhp
. Until a few weeks ago, doWn a landfill.
law degree, taught at Loyola considering his district's
Cao, who looks younger , The Rev. Vien The University Law School in demographics.
·
than his 4 I years, was virtu- Nguyen, from Mary Queen New Orleans and settled in
Joel Waltzer, a fellow
.ally unknown outside the of
Vietnam
Catholic the
city's
thriving lawyer who worked with Cao
tightly knit Vietnamese- Church, said Cao has long Vietnamese community, on the laridfill opposition,
.American community in advocated for Vietnamese which became more politi- . says don't count him out.
:eastern New Orleans. Then refugees. He characterized .cally active as a $f&lt;JUP after
"If you had asked me if he
:.came his narrow victory him as ·a tenacious if soft- the storm.
·
could have won the election
SAN JUAN, Puerto Rico · based on the hidden-camera
·against Rep. William spoken leader, not a dogA staunch Opponent of . against Bill Jefferson, I
- Aruban prosecutors recordings .made by Dutch
(AP)
Jefferson , an icon in the matic politician.
abortion, Cao was elected to would· have said no," he
mostly
black, . mostly
"He san attorney but he's local Republican Party said. "I think he's got the said Tuesday their investi- television crime reporter
Democratic district.
also a philosophy teacher," posts and went to the 2008 personality to reach out to gation into ·the 2005 disap- Peter R, de Vries.
pearance of U.S. teenager
But judges rejected an
: With a boost· from . Vien said .. "So for him it's Republican
N~~otional people, I really do."
Natalee Holloway is near- attempt to re-arrest Van der
ing the end and appealed for' Sloot for statements he
anyone with information to made on the Dutch TV
come forward .
show. The hidden-camera
Chief Prosecutor Hans recordings showed Van der
It happened around 7:40 embankment and utility Deana Waltman, 26, and Mos said his office · still Sloot saying he was with
WICOMICO CHURCH,
Va. (AP) - A 6-year-old a.m. Monday on Route 360, pole about a mile and a David Eugene Dodson, 40, needs "at least another few Holloway when she died on
Virginia boy who m1ssed his about 61 miles east of half from school.
are each charged with child monihs" to investigate the Dutch Caribbean island
Richmond.
The boy told police he endangerment.
•bus tried to drive to school.
Wilkins statements made by the only and that he had a friend
·in his family's sedan - and
The boy, whose name learned to drive playing said. Waltman is being held remaining suspect , Joran dump her body at se.JL..
wasn't released, missed Grand Theft Auto and without bond. Dodson was van der Sloot, during a hidcrashed.
Mos, without di'Sclbsing
His parents were charged · the bus, took the keys to Monster. Truck Jain video released on a $5,000 bond. den-camera
interview specifics, said the TV prohis family's 2005 ' Ford games.
with child endangerment.
It was not clear if they had ·which was broadcast on ~ caused a "new stream of
State police said the boy Taurus and drove nearly
"He was very intent on attorneys.
. Dutch television last year.
mformation" regardless of the
The boy and his 4-year, · But he then said prosecu- appeals court decision blocksuffered
only
minor six miles toward school getting to school," said
injuries and authorities while his · mother was Northumberland County old brother were placed in· tors "are approaching the ing authorities from arresting
drove him to1 school after asleep, police said.
Sheriff Chuck Wilkins. protective custody.
end of this lengthy investi- Van der Sloot for a tliird time
he Was evaluated ai a local
He made at least two 90- "When he got eut of the car,
"This really is a .story of gation." ,
· based on the statements.
hospital for a bump on his . degree turns, passed sever- he started walking to miracles;" Wilkins said.
"If you have relevant infor"My office does not want
head. He arrived shortly al cars and ran off the rural schooL He did not want to "The Lord was with him, mation - no matter how to disclose these results to
after lunch, Sgt. Tom two-lane road several miss breakfast and PE."
along with everybody else small or uninteresting it may the suspect and thus make
Cunningham said. •
· times before · hitting an
His .parents, Jacqulyn on the highway."
seem - please notify my him wiser even before he
office or the police," Mos has been. confronted with
said in a statement Tuesday. these results," Mos said,
Holloway, from Mountain referring to Van der Sloot,
·Brook, Alabama, . was last who was last ·known to be
DECATUR, Ala. (AP)Theirrusedidn'tfooldetec- home life in disarray and
White's ·wife , Shelly, seen in May 2005 leavin~ a living in Thailand.
Sgt. Faron White's job run- lives for long, said Decatur losses at a casino in Tunica, declined comment Tuesday. bar in the Aruban cap1tal
In .November,
Ann
ning a squad that targeted Police Chief Ken Collier.
Miss., White saw no other The couple has three children. Oranjestad with Van der Sloot Angela , a spokeswoman for
drug dealers, gamblers and
"The
investigators way out than to try to win
Collier said the family had on the final night of a high the Aruba Prosecutors'
other organized crime in a involved didn't fall off the back some cash, police sai
"no idea what had happened. school graduation trip to the Office, said authorities
northern · Alabama city pumpkin truck last week .
"I mean, why else do you They had been through sev- ·island. She was 18 at the time. hoped to decide by the end
earned him accolades but They sensed something was go to Las Vegas?" Collier eral stressful days." ·
No trace of Holloway has of 2008 wl\ether to proseRichardson was arrested at ever been found despite cute Van der Sloat or close
was filled with pressure.
. wrong early on ," he said.
.
said.
Add a rocky marriage, ill
Federal marshals caught up
Mayor Don Stanford said' her. home in Decatur and is extensive searches involv- the case for good.
father, unexpected house- with White, 48, in a Hampton he · considered White an being held on $2,500 .bond. ing hundreds of volunteers,
Attorneys for Van der
hold expenses and gambling Inn hotel lobby Monday exceptional officer wjth a . A police volunteer for ·a Aruban soldiers, FBI agents Sloot did not immediately
losses, and somewhere night, three days after he was . great reputation. Now, he'll decade, she had been helping and eveh Dutch F-16 jets respond to messages· seekWhite's unit build a database with special equipment.
along the way, the decorated last seen working late in his be fired, the mayor said.
mg comment and there was
o
f suspected methampheta·
. Aruban
investigators no ·answer at his parents'
·veteran officer snapped, office in Decatur, a Tennessee
''This is a sad day for our
· reopened the case last year · home in Aruba .
police said Tuesday.
River city of 55,000 people. department here," said mine dealers and labs.
White is accused of stag- Long a respected officer who Stanford.
ing his disappearance, stak- had been with the department
White's family reported
ing himself with $2,500 in more than 20 years, White is him missing Saturday mom- '
Hear the
ing after he didn't return
confiscated drug money and now charged with theft.
Call today for an appointment
flying off to Las· Vegas to
Also · arrested
was. from wo(k Friday, For days,
and complimentary demo.
try to win back thousands of Richardson, who authorities search crews scoured areas
dollars to pay his debts. He say helped White get to Las around the Tennessee River,
May you be blessed with
didn't act alone , police said. Vegas by accomp&lt;tnying him lookirig for signs of
peace and prosperity in
A Decatur police volun- to Nashville, Tenn., to catch Decatur's 2007 American
594-6333 Ol'
teer - 29-year-old Sarah a flight Police believe she Legion officer of the year.
1-800-451-9806
His arrest was all the talk
Richardson - is accused of was going to join him later
helping White scatter and has been charged with at a .convenience store down
a twisting, two-lane .road
papers from his desk to with hindering prosecution.
499 Richland Av• .. Athens, OH 4!1701
make it look like he may
Collier said it appeared · from White's . home in ,
Mtdlcal Art• BulldiD@
. have struggled with some- White was stealing confiscat- Falkville, south of Decatur.
819 St. Rl. 664'N.,IA&gt;I!Bn, OH 43138
"I've never hea(d any- .
one before being abducted. ed drug ~ash from his office
. Police say they were roman- safe and that thousands more thin¥, bad about him until
tically involved .
may be missing. Wiih his this, ' said Doug Farr.

On the Net:

Aruba prosecutor: End
is near in Holloway case

1

6-year-old misses bus, takes family car, crashes

Alabama policeman feared missing arrested in Vegas

·.

NEW·YEAR!

2009!

••

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. ....

..

. '-'

-

..

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..

'

..

'·,

v

,.

..

.

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' • I '• • · -

ANNIE'S MAILBOX

Dear Annie: I am a college senior set to marry in
the spring after graduation.!
have an absolutely wonderful fiance· who I love unconditionally. Even though he
lives three hours away, we
talk on the phone daily and
&amp;!e each other as often as
possible.
· The problem is my best
friend, "Phil." Phil and I
have known each other
sinc'e freshman year. We
have been through a lot
together and I value hi.s
friendship. We never dated
·Or had any sort of intimate
contact. The problem is,
recently I've found myself
being strangely attracted ~o
him. I want to kiss him . ·
· Let me be clear that I have
no actual desire to be with
·Phil. We are both very dif:ferent , and I know beyond a
shadow of a doubt that a
telationship with him would
never work. I realize my
attraction is probably just
cpld feet, but how do I get
over this sudden, ridiculous
·infatuation without jeopardizing my engagement or
alienating my best friend?

Please help knock some is symptomatic of an eating
sense into this suddenly disorder, and it's possible
senseless head of mine . Beth is feeling some emoBeing
Ridiculous
in tional pressure about her ·
Pennsylvania
weight at home.or at school.
Dear Being Ridiculous:
Please make an appointYour problem is actually ment with your pediatrician
quite common and involves to discuss the matter and
the knowledge t~at mar- also talk to the school counriage ends all other roman- selor. Be sure Beth is gettic possibilities (hopef\llly). ting enough food through
It is natural . to fantasize nutritionally sound meals,
about available alternatives and if you also encourage
as long as you don't act on her to get regular exercise, it
those fantasies - and you will help her feel better
don't seem likely to. Every about herself, especially if
time you think. of Phil in an you do it with her.
inappropriate way, substiDear Annie: I must .take
tute your fiance's face and exception to your not recremind yourself of his won- ommending name tags at
derful qualities.
been to
.funerals. I have
.
Dear Annie: My daughter numerous services for work
is 9 years old and a little acquaintances. . business
heavy for her age. "Beth" · associates; military service
tends to eat too much. but members . and
distant
what reall~ worricts me is friends. Many times I had
that she h1des how much no idea who the family
she's eating and when she's members were, and often
doing it.
. .
. . there were no receiving
The fact that she feels the lines or front-row pews to
need to conceal her eating indicate who was related. I
. disturbs me. I am not in a sometimes wondered why I
position to take her to a drove the miles to attend
therapist or anything like when I could have simply
that. What are some things I sent a sympathy card.
can do to help the situation?
When my mother died , my
-Concerned Mom
siblings and I wore tags· sayDear Momi Hiding food ing. "Joe (son)" and "Jan

.

(daughter-in-law)." Countless
mourners told us they were
glad we had done this since
we had moved away from our
hometown decades ago and
they oo longer recognized us.
When they knew who we
were, they were more comfortable talking about Mom
instead of \Vandering aimlessly about, trying to figure out if
they knew anyone from the
family. I think we dp a disservice to guests by expecting
them to know ~ on sight after
many years. It's far too awkward. - Minnesota Reader
Dear Minnesota: It
makes us feel like we're at a
convention, but many readers wrote .to say they like it.
To each his own.
· Annie's Mailbox is writ·
ten by Kmhy Mitchell and
Marcy Sugar, longtime editors of the Ann Landers
col11mn. Please e-mail your
questions to anniesmailbox@comcast.net, or write
to: Annie's Mailbox, P.O.
Box 118190, Chicago, IL
60611: To find out more
about Annie's Mailbox,
and read features by other
Creators Syndicate writers
and. ·cartoonists, visit the
Creators Syndicate Web
page tJI www.creators.com.

RACINE - Jamie and
Heather Jones announce the
binh of their ftrst child, a
daughter, Raegan Delaney,
Nov. 9, at Holzer Medical
Center. The infant weighed
7 .pounds, 3 ounces.
Maternal grandparents
are Robert and Jane Ann
Hill of Racine , and the
maternal great-grandmother is Marilyn Powell of
Racine.
Paternal grandparents are
the lute Curtis Jones and
Vivian Rourke.

Raegan Delaney

Local Weather
'

.

Wednesday ••• Cloudy.
Rain likely in the morning .. Then a chance of rain
and snow showers in the
afternoon. Little or no snow
accumulation. Highs afl)und
40 . Temperature falling into
the lower 30s in the afternoon. West winds 10 to 15
mph . Chance of precipitation 70 percent.
Wednesday night ••~ow
showers likely. Light snow
accumulation
possible.
Colder with lows in the mid
20s. West winds around .15
mph with gtists up to 25 rnph, .

Chance of snow 70 percent. ·
Thut'sday...Mostly cloudy
with a 5() percent chance of
snow showers. Brisk and
~ooler with highs around 30.
West winds 15 to 20 mph . .
Thursday night...Mostl y
cloudy in the evening ...Then
becoming partly cloudy.
Lows around 20.
Friday...Mostly sunny.
Highs in the )ower 30s.
Friday
night
and
Saturday•••Mostly cloudy
with a 40 percent chance of
rain showers, Lows in upper
20s. Highs in lower 40s.

Local Stocks

Community Calendar ·
I

Wednesday, jan. 7
POMEROY Meigs
County Board of Health.
regular meeting , 5 p.m .. ·
Meigs County Health
Department.
. Thursday, Jan. 8
POMEROY Meigs
Soi I and Water Conservation
of
District
Board
.Supervisors orga'nizational
and regular meeting . II :30
a.m .. 33101 Hiland Road.
SYRACUSE - Syracuse
Village · Council, .regular
meeting , 7 p.m., village hall.
. Saturday, Jan. 10
SYRACUSE - Sutton ·
Township Trustees, special
appropriations meeting. 10
a.m., Syracuse Village Hall .
Monday, Jan. 12
RACINE - · Southern
Local School Board·, 8 p.m.

Birth announced

0

I

Public meetings

lVednesda~January7,2009

.

Common problem when tying the knot
BY KATHY MITCHELL
AND MARCY SUGAR

PageA3

BYTHEBEND

.The Daily Sentinel

Auxiliary will meet at 7
p.m. at the hall.
Saturday; Jan. 10
REEDSVILLE
Eastern Local Christmas
Concert 7 p.m. in the high
school auditorium.
RAVENSWOOD, W.Va.
- River Valley Autism
Wednesday, Jan. 7
. Network meeting. 12 noon
MIDDLEPORT
Middleport Literary Club, 2 in the Ravenswood Library. ·
p.m ., Pomeroy Libcary, Interested individuals from
Vanessa Folmer will review area invited to attend. For
"Sum Of Our :Days," host- more informatiQn call 304273-3228 Patricia Boyce, ·
ess is Frankie Hunnel.
POMEROY - Christian
Thursday, Jan. 8 . .
Association
CHESTER
Shade Motorcycle
River Lodge 453 regular "Delivered" Chapter. regumeeting,
7:30
p.m. · lar meeting; 5 p .m.,
Common Grounds new
Refreshments.
POMEROY - Alpha Iota location, 33105 Highland
Masters, II :30 a.m., at the Road.
New Beginnings United
Tuesday, Jan. l3
Methodist Church.
POMEROY - Meigs
County
Chamber
of
TUPPERS PLAINS The Tuppers Plains VFW Commerce, business-mind-

organizational
meeting ,
8:15 p.m. budget hearing,
high school~fiedia room.

Clubs and
organizations

Law You Can Use

ed . luncheon,
noon,
Pomeroy Library, Bun's
Party Bam catering, Sam
Hatcher from Gatling , Ohio
speaking, RSVP 992-5005.

Church events
Friday, Jan. 9
LONG BOTTOM
Faith Full Gospel Church,
S.R. 124 Long Bottom, will
have a sing. 7 p.m.. with
Dave and Debbie Dailey.

Birthdays ·

AEP (NVSE)- 33.11
Altzo (NASDAQ) - 44
Ashland Inc. (NVSE)- 11.94
Big Lots {NVSE} - 15.38
Bob Evans {NASDAQ) - 20.67
BorgWarner {NYSE} - 25.03
Century Aluminum (NASDAQ)
-12.55
.
Champion (NASDAQ) - 2.80
Charming Shops (NASDAQ) 2.28
City Holding (NASDAQ) - 32.27 .
Collins {NYSE) - 41.95
DuPont (NVSE) - 27.65
US Bank (NVSE) - 23.75
Gannett (NVSE) - .9.30
General Electric (NVSE) - 16.86
Hartay·Davldson (NVSE)19.80
.
JP Morgan (NVSE) - 29.88 '
Kroger (NVSE) - 25.36
Umlted Brands (NYSE)- t0.97
Norfolk Southam (NVSE) -

WesBanco (NYSE} - 26.96
Worthington (NVSE}- 11.96
Dally stock reports are the 4
p.m. ET closing quotes ol transactions tor Jan. 6, 2009, provided by Edward Jones financial
advlsora Isaac Mills In Gallipolis
at (740) 441-9441 and U.sley
Marrero In Point Pleasant at
(304) 674-0174. Member SIPC.

~nJerson 7tk!Danie{
lfunera{ '1fmru
Adam McDaniel

&amp;. James A'ndel'$0n
DIRECTORS .

49.90

Ohio Valley Bane Corp. (NAS.
Monday, Jan. 12
DAO) -19.87
MIDDLEPORT - Adria BBT (NVSE) - 25.68
"Sue" Eblen will observe Peoples (NASDAQ) - 18.35
(NVSE}- 55.70
her 88th binhday Jan.. 12. Pepsico
Premier (NASDAQ) - 7.55
Cards may be sent to her at Rockwell (NVSE) - 34.55
Overbrook Center, · 333 Rocky Boots (NASDAQ) - 4.81
Page St., Room 208'-B, Royal Dutch Shell - 55.43
Seara Holding (NASDAQ) Middleport, Ohio 45760.
42.54
Wal-Mart (NVSE) - 56.02
Wendy's (NVSE} - 4.92

www .aadenoruncdaniel.tom

Fliers on cars,. legal or not

Q: I think that the First
Amendment empowers me
to say anythiug I want, but
does it allow me to place
fliers on cars?
. A: First , you should
understand that the first
Amendment is not so much
about empowering your
speech as it is about prohibiting the · government ·
regulating
your
·from
speech. There is no federal
statute that prohibits leafletjog cars, but the state of
New York and many, other
cities across the country
·have adopted laws prohibit. ing the practice. The First
Amendment generally protects you from contentbased or severe government
regulation when you are
placing fliers on cars,
·depending on how a specific court approaches the
analysis, some laws will be
overturned and others will .
be upheld .·
Q:
If
the
First
Ame11dmeut protects me
· ·when put.fliers on cars, can
I place a flier on a car anywhere I choose?
A:
No . . The U.S.
Supreme Court has ruled
that governments may pro. hibit speech that interferes
with the use of property, so
your free speech protection
under the First Amendment
varies depending on where
you place your fliers.
Generally, the strongest
First Amendment protection occurs when you place
fliers in a traditional public
forum, which the governllielll is obligated to make
available
for . public
speech ,
i
A traditional public forum
is any place that has long
been used for assembly or
debate , such as a sidewalk,
public park ot public street.
Nevertheless. in the U.S.

your
First you distribute fliers in such
Court of Appeals for the overcome
objection a way that the potential
Sixth
Circuit,
which Amendment
includes Ohio, you may not because the Sixth Circuit receiver has the ·option of
be able to place fliers on found that governments do refusing to answer the door
cars parked on publie have a "substantial inter- or take a tlier. You should
• FREEWTTKhnk:al~
streets. In Jobe v. City of . est" in preventing litter and remember that other laws
• ln&amp;tanl ~ascaging" kHp your l)i.ljcy hst!
Catlettsburg, the Sixth protecting their citizens' prevent you from forcing
l 10 tHI1a~ tldd~ lloith Wtlbmal~
Circuit upheld a city ordi- cars, Therefore , the ordi- people to take your flier or · • Ctistoo'l Start Page -new•.wealhtt Amore!
nance in 2005 that prohibit- nance will likely be upheld , 1mproperly el)tering onto
THE
ed placing ·a handbill on a and you will be required to. someone's property.
(Gl 1:10, 3:10 &amp; 7:10
las!er!J
·
.
car on a public street. Under pay a fine.
FOUR CHRISTMASES (PG13)
This "Law You Can Use"
Sign Up Dnllntl ..ww.LoeoiNttcorn
that case, a car parked on a
column
was
provided
by
Q: Don't . these ordipublic street is private property that the government llances restrict speech the Ohio State Bar _
may protect by prohibiting without allowing for au Auocialirm (OSBA).It was ~~~
you from placing fliers alteruative avenue for prepared by Monica L.
under windshield wipers. In . expression? That should Dias, an iutellectua/ ptopthe
First erty aud First Ameudmeut,
other words, if your city has violate
an ordinance that prohibits Amendment. ·"What el.~e media and advertising
leatleting cars, you may not am I supposed to do to get attorney with Frost Brown
Todd LLC i11 Cincinnati,
be able to use the ''public . my message o11t?
Au~·tin D. Padgett, a
and
A:
Whether
right
or
forum" defense.
wrong. the Sixth Circuit in 2008 summer associate at
Jobe
ruled that cities and Frost Brown Todd LLC
Q: I still think that I
states
may prohibit you and a law student studying
should distribute my fliers
• Well· woman exams
by placing them on car from distributing fliers dn First Amendment . and
• Birth Control Including
wiudshields, What are my cars because you have other media law at Frankli11
•lmplanon (First &amp; Only
ways to spread. your mes- Pierce Law Center. This
risks?
general
column
offers
sage,
such
as
face-to-face
A: You should realize that
3·year implantable . ·
information
about
the
law.
distribution
on
the
street
or
many cities have banned tile
birth coittrol
practice and that you could door-to-door distribution in Seek an attorney's advice
• Gardasil Vaccine
have to pay a fine. For a neighborhood. Some before applying this iuforto
a
legal
problem.
matioll
municif)alities
still
·ban
example , Cleveland's ordi• STD deteciion &amp; treatment
nance § 613.12 states that some face-to-face speech For more information on a
• Minimallv-invasin
•
"no person shall throw or ·actiyities, but you will gen- variety of legal topics, visit
OSBA's
Web
site
at
the
receive
the
most
First
erally
gynecologic
surgical care
deposit any commercial or
www.ohiobar.org.
Amendment
protection
if
noncommercial handbill in
• Prtgnancy Care
or upon any vehicle." If you
llli~~!oioii..a..,..J.i-"l!:::il • Essure (Searles.~ Permanenl
were to violate this ordiJane D. Brol&gt;cker, MD Birth Control Sterilization)
nance you might not be able
to overcome the ordinance
through
the
First
113 East Memorial Drive
Amendment.
Pomeroy, OH • 992-9158
If your case were to go to
court, the government
Castrop Center 75 Hospital Dr
would have to show a "subSuite 260
stantial interest" in resirictAthens, OH • 594-8819
ing this form of speech.
The government would
also have to show that thi s
interest has nothing to do
with the suppression of
· Aoalllllal&lt;·ollh'
expression, and that the
O'BLENESS
'~
restriction on expression is
HHLTH SYSTEM
Smile! Now you can own !tie pictule ot that unforgettable
incidental .and no greater
moment capTured in lhe newspaper. P~oiOS become ~melesa
than necessary.
when framed or printed on a mug or mouse pad .
Under the Jobe deci sion ,
www.riverroseobgyn.com
and click the blue button.
Visit
the government will easily

cr::::6X

j~IJmo~

Gynecology Services
Available In Meigs County

~

�'

PageA4

OPINION.

The Daily Sentinel

wednesday,Januaryh2009

.Analysis:
Can
Uncle
Sam
spend
cash
fas!
enough?
.The Daily Sentinel
BY ANDAEW TAYLOR

.

ASSOCIAl£0 PREss 'MIIIDl

111 Court Street • Pomeroy, Ohio

'

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

''

••

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.

'••

Dan Goodrich
Publisher

Charlene Hoeflich

••
'&lt;
'

General Manager-News Editor

. Co ll,l!rrs.&lt; slhlll make

laav respecting an .
esrablislurrl'lrt 4 rdil!itm, or.prolribiting the
fret· t•.-:erdst' tlre~e'!f'; ~r abridgi11g tlte jiTedom
~f s1•ralr, or of tlrt· press; or the right of th,e
peoplt· pea a ably to trssl'llrble, a11d to petition
tlu· Gm•t•rrunellt for " redress of grievances.
110

- The First Amendment to the U.S·. Constitution

TODAY lN HISTORY
ToJa1 i, W~dolc,Ja\. Jan . 7. the sewnth day of 2009.
There :irL' J5t\ dav ., lci't in the 1c·ar.
.Toda1 \ Hi~hliuht in Hbtor): On Jan . 7. 17~9 . the.lirst
U.S. pl:c,ickoltial.eb:tillll IV&lt;IS held. Americans ·voted for
ek..:tur&gt; 11 ho. a month later. chose George Washington to
bL' the· nallon·,,,first pre&gt;iJent.
.
On thi s dat~ : In 1608 . an accidental fire devastated the
Jame&gt;lo\\ or sc'!tl.emem in the Virginia colony.
In 1(,10. astronom&lt;"r Galileo Galilci began observing
three of Jupiter\ moons .
In IXOO. the l.&lt; th presi dent oi: rhe United States. Millard
l'illmme. ""'born in SummerhilL N.Y.
In 1')27. commcrcialtraoNIIIantic telephone service was
inmo~u rated between New York and 'London .
ln - 1942. t~1 c Japanesc- siege of B;llmm began during
World War II.
In Jl)4&lt;J . Genr~c C. Marshall ~esigned as U.S . Secretary
t&gt;f Statc.ellcc·tivc .Ian. ~0. President Harry S. Truman· ~hose
Dean Achl·son to succeed him .
In 195&lt;J. the United States recognized the new government of Cuba. six days after Fidel Castro led the overthrow
&lt;~ f hol ~e nc.in Batista.
In JlJ72. Lew is F. Powe ll Jr. and William H. Rehnquist
wc·rc ""i&gt;no in ·as the 9&lt;Jth and lOUth members of the U.S.
Supreme Court. ·.
·
In 197&lt;J. Vietnamese li1rces captured the Cambodian capital
of Phnom Penh. ovenhrowing the Khmer Rouge government.
In 19Xl). Emperor· Hiroh ito of Japan died in Tokyo at age
87: he was succeeded bv his son. Crown Prince Akihito.
· Ten years ago: Fof· the · second time in history. an
impt·ac hL'd American president went on trial before the
Si:nall' . President Bill Clinton faced c harge~ of perjury and
obstruction of justice: he was acquitted .
Fi ve vcars ago: President George W. Bush proposed legal
·slatus. 'at least temporari 1y. for millions , ol illegal immigranls wo rking ·in the U.S. Swedish actress Ingria Thulin
died in Stockholm at a ~e 77 .
, Today's Birthdays:'.Author William Peter Blatty is 81.
Countrj• singer Jack Greene is 7&lt;J . Pop musician _Paul
Revere is 7 1. Magazine publisher Jann Wenner is 63. Smger
.Kenny Loggi ns is 61 . Sin ger-songwriter Marshall Chapman
·is 611. Actn·" Erin Gray i' 5'1. Aclor David Caruso is 53 .
"CBS Ewnin[! News" anchor Katie Couric is 52. Country
singer David Lee Murphy is 50. Rock musician Kathy
Valentine (T he Go-Go 's ) is 50 . Actor David Maroiano is 49.
Actrc" Hnllic Ti1dd is 47. Actor Nicolas Cage is 45. ~inger­
songwriler .lnhn Ondrasik (Five for Fighting) is 44. Actor
.·Doug E. Dow.: is .W . Actor Kevin Rahm is 38. Country
s in gcr- m ~" ici :~ 1 John Rich is :15. Actor Dustin Diamond is
32."Ac tor Robert Ri'dmrd is 26. Actor L..iam Aiken is 19.
Aclre,;s Ca mryn Grimes is .I'J . Actor Max Morrow is 18. ·
Thought for Today: "I do not believe that sheer suffering
teaches. II sullerin g alone taught. all the world would be
l' isc. ·li&gt; suffering must he added mourning. understanding.
patie nce. loll'. openness and the willingness to remain vulncrahle." - An ne Morrnw Lindbergh, American author
·( I 'J06-21,10 I ) .

WASHINGTON
Washington
bureaucrats
have a reputation for being
able to spend taxpayer
money real fast. But.
believe it or not, spending it
fast enough is one of the
biggest tasks President-elect
Bamck Obama 's economic
team faces in putting
together an economic
recovery measure.
Obam:t's economic recovery plan depends on swiftly
pumping hundreds of billions offederal dollars into
the economy to create jobs.
The focus is on tax cuts and
government spending that
can provide an immediate
lift to the economy.
.
However. the $675 billion$775 billion plan emerging
in talks between Obama's
team and Democratic allies
in Congress also appears to ·
contain lots or money that
won't be spent for years like for water projects.
rebuilding the electric grid
and buying billions of dollars
of mmputers and software
for the hea:lth care sector.
Much of that money won't
get spent until the economy
starts growing again.
.
Some GOP critics Sl\Y
Democrats are simply using
the current economic crisis
to put money into long-term
projects now. rather than .in
a few years when concerns
about record budget deficits
might threaten the spending.
"We must ... make distinctions between what is 'stimulus' ... and what is merely
more government spending
on favored projects we don't
need with money we don't
have ," said Senate Minority
Leader Mitch .McConnell of
Kentucky.
One example is a plan to
· spend billions of dollars on
a new health care informa- ·
tion technology system that
would make the delivery of

heal!~! care safer. n:tore Such an a(&gt;proach could
effecbve and more efficoent. prompt officmls to choose
During the campaign. more wasteful projects that
Obama prom,ised $50 bil- can be buill .soon over better
lion over live years for the ideasthatmoghttake-awhole.
initiative. The upcoming
"There's a tension here
economic recovery bill will between wanting to do \he
provide less.
most meritorious proJects
Even so, little of the pro- for the long term and wanllgram can get underway ng to do stu IT th•ll boosts the
quickly and building the economy quickly:· saod
system is years away. Basic . budget
e~pert
Bob
questions like privacy rights Greenstein of tl)e liberal
and a design that would Center on Budget and
allow computers for doc- Policy Priorities.
tors, hospitals and insurance
Many parts of Obama's
companies interact have yet plan would infuse money
to be resolved.
quickly into the economy.
Even Obama's economic according to budget cx(lerts .
advisers have · warned pri- These include $200 bolloon
vately that as the stimulus . for recession-hit state governbill increases in size, its ments to avoid hoyuffs. cutquality inevitably ~lines. backs in services :md mising
The' economy can absorb their own taxes. f-ederal tax
only so much publico invest- cuts delivered by withholding
ment over the next two . less from paychecks can take
years. Republicans are even effect almost immediately.
more skeptical.
Expanded food stamp and
"It's incredibly difficult to unemployment
benefits
identify things that are vatu- would aoTive mostly in 2009.
able in the long run. can be
All of those odeas ;ore
financed in the short run PQised to get funding - lots
and get the money out the of it. But many cconomosts
door ·quickly," said former say ewn more must be
Congressional
Budget pumped into the economy
Office; Director Dou~las to jolt it out of its doldmms.
Holtz-Eakin, who advosed
That mean s· massove
Sen. John McCain's presi- spending on infmstructurc
~entia! campaign. " It would
projects such as road and
be preferable to take any bridge repaors . nooct control
stimulus yoto feel is neces- and sewer systems. upgradsary and target it on a few ing schools and public
things - don't spread it as housing . and new .runways
seed money for a thousand and other aorport Improve. programs that'll never stop· ments. Those projects ty_Pigrowing."
'
cally take years . Dependmg
, "Right now. we have an on the length of the reces·emergency on our hands." sion . much of the spending
counters
Hou se may not occur until after the
Appropriations Committee economy is expandim!.That
Chairman David Obey, D- could result in inllation.
Wis . "If the House is bum- economists warn.
ing, you're not going to
A Congressionul Budget
worry about which hose you Oftice nnalysis of a $61 bilgrab, so long as you get iion economic stimulus meawater on the fire ."
sure that passed the House in
Obama officials r.romise a September - only to hoi I in
"use it or lose it' rule to the Senate - shows that just
foree states and localities to 27 percent of the plan 's $37
spend new federal money · bilhon in infrastructure
quickly to stimulate jobs. spending
would
have

occurred as the ~
struggles _throuwouldgh ha ·
Another third
ve
been spent Ul 20,10 and lhe
finalthin!wouklnthavebeen
spent until 2011 and aftel;
And those were
that lawmakers say are
to go ng~t now. House
Transportation
.and
lnfr~struc ture
CoiDIDittee
Chaonnan Ja_mes Obers~
recently w:tveoled a $45 .bil~
loon spendmg plan _foe hi8h'
wa~s. mass .transo_
t, water
projeCtS and aorport unprovements. More than ~t
\wouldn't create II_l3DY jobs
n~~t aw~y. he ~aubOqed.
·
_If we re go'!"g to ha~ a
qmc~ hit - getm,createjobs
wothm 90 days, people~­
i~g - then there IS a ~
lost of projCCIS that fall iDIO
the categ?ry." Obe~. J)..
Mono .. saod recently. So we
have to be very careful ~t
how much we grow~~- ·
Obama and all!es like
House ~peaker Nancy
Peloso. ,0-Calif.• ~ that
much ot ttH: econonuc recovery plan woll have a longer~
term locus. Such elements
indude delov~nng broadband
commumcatoons to .underserved areas, dev~loplll(l and
improving_ energy ef!iciency
techn~logoes , _Updali~g the
nation s. ~lectncal gnd and
modemozmg schools.
.
"This is not a 1930s pub,. ·
. lie works project," Pelosi
says.
,
Nonetheless, t~re s a lot
ot focus on pushmg .money
ouJ on dams and hiabWI!Y
projects already un&lt;ferway
and. up until now, financed
in bits and pieces.
"There's a huge backlog
of demands out there on a
number of diffen:nt fron~,''
an Obama transillon offictal
said. The "real challen~e ~s
to make sure money osn I
spent willy-nil~y.'' the off!coal.saod, speaking on condilion of anonymity because
he was not authorized to
speak with the reporters.

pro,r.:;

JANUARY 20...

WEI6HT HAS BEEN
LIFTED FRO!J1 MY

!.t'llt'I'S '" 1he edit or ore •relcome , Thev should be less
'''"" 300 1rords. All h;ll&lt;'rs ure su!JjectiV.&lt;'lliling. nulsr be
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wtsigntd /elias ,..;If he J&gt;u!Jiisiled. Leiters should be in
. good'"""' 11tldrcssing issues, not per.wmaliries. Leiters of
tlronh to orgwr i ~&lt;llirmx and indil'idrrals will not be accepl-

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.

Ellner E. Ci ites

REEDSVIJ,.LE - Elmer E. Crites, 96, of Reedsville,
passed away Monday, Jan . 5, 2009 at Camden-Clark
.
Memorial Hospital, Parkersburg, W.Va.
He was born May 20, 1912 in Birch River; W.Va., son of
the late Andrew and Sarah Rose Crites.
·
: He is survived by eight sons. Carroll, Larry, Allen, Jack,
Leon, Denver, Robert and Don: eight daughters, Levon,
Virginia, Charlotte, Barb, Rose. Sally, Kathy and Cindy;
liCVeral grandchildren and great-grandchildren.
In addition to his parents , he was preceded in death by his
wife, Audi-a; and a daughter, Loretta .
·
· Services will be held 10 a .m., Thursday, Jan. 8, 2009 at
White-Schwarzel Funeral Home , Coolville, with Rev.
George Horner officiating . Burial will be in the Sandhill
Cemetery, Long Bottom.
Friends may call at the funeral home Wetlnesalrom
6-8 p.m.
1
. You can sign the online guestbook at www.w iteschwarzelfuneralhome .com

.

For the Record
Highway Pat.-ol

• LETART - Johnny R. Sellers, 48, Racine, was cited for
failure to yielq half of the roadway following a two-vehicle
accident that occurred Friday at appro"imately II: 10 p.m .
According ·to troopers. Sellers was northbound in his
1996 Chevy Monte Carlo on Mile Hill Road approximately 1.2 miles south of Apple Grove Road when he failed to
yield have the roadway and struck a 2000 Chevy Monte
Carlo being driven southbound on Mile Hill Road by
Ronald J. Adkins, 27, Langsville.
Both vehicles sustained disabling damages; no major
injuries were reported .

ASSOCI.fJEO PRESS WRITER

CHICAGO
Parkinson 's sufferers who
had electrodes implanted in .
their brains improved substantially more · than those
who took only medicine.
according to the bigge$1
test yet of deep brain stimulation.
,
The study, which fol:
lowed patients for six
months, offers the most
hopeful news to date for
Parkinson 's sufferers. The
new techni9.ue reduced
tremors, rigidoty and flail mg of the li111bs and
allowed .people to move
freely for nearly five extra
hours a day.
But the research al so
higher-thanrevealed
expected risks. About 40
AP photo
percent of the patients who Sharon Pederson poses for a photograph at a friend's house in Petaluma, Calif., Monday.
received these "brai~ pace- · Pederson is a study subject who got deep brain stimulation, or DBS, surgery for ·her ·
makers" suffered serious Parkinson's disease. In DBS, a surgeon implants electrodes in the brain which are then
sode effects, including . a connected.to a pacemaker-like device that ~an be adjusted and turned ott\.p nd on. The
s~rp~si_ng_ number of fall s device sends tiny electrical pulses to the brain, disabling overactive nerve cells. .
woth IDJunes .
·
"We had one patient who researchers studied 255 across the room:· she said .
fe It so good he went up to people with advanced "Once I was eating a yogurt · Wired for therapy
repair · his roof. fell down Parkinson's at seven VA and while 1 was in the car. I
Implanted devices work to calm
and broke both his legs," six university hospitals . came inside and ·said. 1 I bad
Parkinson's symptoms by send·
ing im,p ulses to ~he brain that
said lead author Fran Patients were randomly a fight with a container of
disable oweractive nerve cells.
Weaver of Hines Veterans assigned · to have surgery yogurt.' It was all over the
!lectrode
Affairs Hospital, outsidt; plus the standard medica- inside of the car."
Chicago. "Patients are feel- tion, or medication alone.
Surgery not only stopped
mg so much better, they forAfter six months, patients . the nailing but . halted an
gpet they
still
have visited neurologists who did intense sensation that her
arkinson's."
not know whether they had nerve endings were burning .
There is no cure for had surgery or medication . Her depression also disapParkinson's disease , which In the surgery g_roup. 86 out peared . The ability to write
affects more than I million or 121 (71 percent) saw her normal nowing signa' '
Americans . Patients suffer · meaningful improvements ture came bm;k. too.
from increasingly severe in movement. as .scored by
It dido 't work for everytremors and periodically the neurologists. In the one. A few surgery patients
ngid limbs as their brains medication group, 43 out of (about 3 percent) got worse.
stop making dopamine. a 134 patients (32 percent)
"You don't want to underchemical needed for move- showed
· m~aningful estimate or overestimate the
ment . They can have trouble improvements.
risks," said Weaver. a spe- Source. Nat1ona1Institute of
AP
walking, speaking and writIn the surgery group. '49 cialist in chronic care. "It Neu1olog1Cal D1sorders and S1rolo.e
mg. and often struggle with had serious problems, still is art individual decidepressoon.
including infections, falls sioti between a patient and a other problems,.--will help
Standard
treatments and . one death because of physician."
. doctors give better advice.
mclude drugs to stimulate complications from the
Surgery to implant .the he said.
dopamine. But over time , surgery. In the 'control electrodes and pacemaker
"This study with its carethe medicines can produce group, only IS people costs about $60,000 and is ful methodology will help
fla.iling movements that are . encountered serious prob- covered · by Medicare and in setting a higher bar for
as troubling, as Parkinson's lems.
some insurance compan.ies. tracking . adverse events,"
.
Another way to measure Medications can cost said Okun, who was not
tremors.
With deep brain stimula- gains for
Parkinson 's $5,000 a year. After surgery, involved in the study.
tion, which was approved patients is the amount of ·patients were able fo cut
Four of the studv 's 22
by the Food and Drug "on" time - good quality their medications by 23 per- co-authors reported .finanAdministration in 2002 for movemen~ime. Recording cent on average.
cial ties to companies that
advanced Parkinson's and · these time during the day
One-fourth of the people make devices or drugs for
had been performed on in diaries, p ients who had in the study were 70 and Parkinson's. The lead
thousands of patients, a sur- . surgery gat d. on average , older, That age group has author sa id she has no
geon implants electrodes in nearly five hours of "on" been excluded ·from many such ties.
the brain, which are then time each day. Patients who prior studies of DBS . In the
The study was funded by
coimected to a pacemaker- dido 't have surgery made no new study. the olt)er surgery the
Department
of
like device that can be gains in that area.
patients were able to control Veterans Affairs and the
adjusted and turned off and
"It's really brought a lot their movements better. b.ut National
Institutes of
on . That device, implanted of freedom back to my younger . ones benefited Health. Minneapolis-based
under the C!&gt;llarbone or in life," said surgery patient even more.
MedtrOnic Inc .. maker of
Those findings will help the devices purchased for
the abdomen, sends tiny Shnron Pederson , 51 , of
electrical pulses to the Tomales, Calif. She said ·older patients make deci- the study, provided the
brain, disabling overactive medication worked well for sions about treatment, said money for collecting data .
nerve cells.
four or five years but start- Dr. Michael Okun of the
In about six months, more
The latest findings were ed causing her arms to fling University of Florida , med- resulis are expected from
published in Wednesday's out wildly.
ical director of the .National the study, which also com"I would go to brush my Parkinson Foundation. The pared two brain regions for
Journal of the American
Medical Association. The hair and the 'brush would fly information on falls and electrode placement.

Ohio misses deadline on business report
BY JULIE CARR SMYTH
AP STATEHOUSE CORRESPONDENT

COLUMBUS - Gov .
Ted Strickland's administration has missed its own
deadline for creating an
online scorecard to measure
purchases the state makes
fro'm Ohio-baSed businesses, and officials expect the
GALLIPOLIS - Certified yoga instructor, Charlene score to be low.
Ballard, will offer two six-week yoga classes at the Ariel Strickland ordered creDater Hall , beginning Monday' Jan. I 2.
ation of the scorecard as
The all-new, "Guided Relaxation and Meditation Class", is part of an executive order in
open to beginners and experienced yoga practitioners. The June to beef up the "Think
class will focus on st~ss release activities, without involving Ohio First" program, which
the more challe.nging yoga positions. Classes meet Monday encoura~es state agencies to
evening from 4:15-5:15. The registration fee is $48 per par- give Oh10 companies every
ticipant for the six-week session. This e-mail addresS is being opportunity to compete for
protected from syambots and JavaScript enables viewing .
state business.
, The traditiona "Hatha Yoga Class", is opefl to beginners
His order called for the
' and experienced yo&amp;a practi!ioners. Th~ class inclu?es scorecard to be O)lline by
yoga postures, breathmg pracuces, relaxation, and medota- J11n . I, but it is not expected
" tion. Classes meet Monday evenings from 5:3(}-7 p.m: until at least mid-month ,
Yoga offers multiple health benefits, including; lower lev- Strickland spokesman Keith
els of stress hormone cortisol, increase in flexibility and Dailey said. ·
strength, improved balance, improved psychological . "We fully expect that the
health, improved immune function, and many more. The scorecard will be completed
registration fee is $60 per participant.
within days or weeks;:
.. Charlene Ballard is a certified yoga and meditation Dailey said. "And thell,,
instructor and has been a registered teacher with Yoga within the next 'Several
Alliance since 1997 . For more detailed Yoga class infor- months, that Web site itself
mation please contact the instructor at 740-256-1428 , or will be completed."
email charlene.ballard@earthhnk.net
He said there is no penal Additional classes offered by the Ariel for Winter 2009
• include: "Ballroom Dancing", taught by Joseph Li , MD;
and "Young Actors Studio", !alight by Ariel Exec.utive and
Artistic Director Joseph Wnght. For more detaoled class
.'
information, or to reg~ster, contact the Ariel Box office at
740-446-2787 .

Yoga,cbiss coming to Ariel.

('(/_l(n f)//hli co t irm .

, Correction Policy

REEDSVILLE - Joe E. Lantz, 73. of Reedsville went
hom_e to be· with the Lord on Monday, Jan . 5. 2009 at
Manetta Nursmg and Rehab Center after a brief illness. ·
He was born Jan. 24, 1935 in Ivydale, W.Va. son of the
late Frank and Ora McKown Lance. He was a member of
the Reedsville Fellowship Church of the Nazarene.
He is survived by a daughter, Donna Reed; two sons,
Charles an~ Mary Lantz and Danny and Paula Lantz; a
brother, Mike and Dot Lance; four sisters, Judy Elkins,
Ruth Ann Lance, ·Barbara and Tom Summerfield and
~indy,and Fred Houghten; a sister-in-law. Bertie Lance;
n!ne grandchildren; 13 great-grandchildren; and severaJ
·
.
meces and nephews.
. In addition to his pclrenrs , he was preceded in death by his
wife, Thelma Lantz: a sister. Janelle; and 2 brothers. Jack ·
and Roger.
·
. Services will be held II a.m., Frid;~y. Jan . 9. at WhiteSchwl!lZel FID!eral Home, Coolville with Pastors Teresa
Waldeck, Wayne V()gelsong and Russ Carson officiating.
buri!l' will be in the Stewart Cemetery. Hockingport .
Fnends may call at the funeral home Thursday, from
.
6-8 p.m.
You can sign the online guestbook at www.whiteschwanelfuneral~ome .com

MIDDLEPORT - The River City Players will present
a murder mystery dinner theatre "Roses are Dead, Violets
are Too!"
The mystery written by Roger and Mary Gilmore of
Pomeroy will be presented on Fe)J. 13-14 at the Riverside
Golf Club in Mason, WV.
A full-course dinner will be served during the mystery.
Tickets ($25) will go on sale on Feb. 9 at Dan's in Pomer()y
and he RCP building in Middleport. F9r more info call 740992-6759 or go to www,rcplayers.net.

LETTERS TO THE
EDITOR

l

-

Players to present
mystery dinner theatre

£HOULDERS!

1

My memory is going. I'm
still writing 2008 on my
checks. Worse, I'm ·still
wmong .checks. while
everyone else is banking
online. Well , not everyone
Jim
else. just .people with
Mullen
money. My bank is letting .
people go left and right. No.
don't worry, none of the
executives are being "rightsized," just the people who anniversary because that
do all the work . They've would be too bard to
gotten rid of all the tellers remen1ber. It , was some-.
and replaced , them with t.hing really simple . It wasATM thachines that will n' t my phone number,
n ever get pensions or take because 1 can never .
vacations. My bank charges remember that. Ever since I
me to use the ATM . They l'ot a cell phone and you
never charged me to use a JUSt. hiqhe person's name,!
teller. I got my statement don't remember anyone 's
last month. and they phone number. I used to
charged me u "statement know two or three of them
fee" of $5. Excuse me? Is · by heart.
this a ploy to get more of
What was that PIN? My
my business?
lowest golf score? No , the
· I can never remember my PIN is four-digit number.
PIN. I picked an easy num- I'm still only a three-digit
ber that I would never for- golfer. Ah, now I remember ·
get and can ' I rL"inember - it's every other number
that easy number. I know it in my Social Security numwas n' t
ony
hirthday ber, backwards. Easy.
because that would be too
Tyvo , five , eight . three ?
easy. And I know it wasn 't Three , five, two , eightllf I
Sue's birthday Of our can 't get it in three tries,

the ATM · won't give me that.'' I seem to remember
any cash for 24 hours . But . something about a war, too . .
if 1. drop my ATM nord mi And didn't something nasty
my way home ; my .bank happen in Galveston? It was
will let the guy who finds it so long ago - like three or
empty my account down to four months ·at least. And
the last penny. But me. I wasn't there something
can't get anythin~ . You'd about a bank bailout? Did
think if a guy os smart you hear anything about
enough to break into a bank that? And the auto bailout?
electronically. he 'd be' · Wasn't there a Summer
smart enough to get a high- Olympics this year? I wonpaying job - like th e CEO der it that Michael Phelps
.o f a bank .
guy won any medals at all?
I have so much. huckcr- Look at that! Gas used to be
proof soft ware on my com- $4.50. When was that? A
puler. half the time I can't hundred years ago? Last
get into it. So I call for ser- summer? You're kidding! I
vice ami !hey want to ~now .don 't remember that at all.
my phone PIN .• I'd .like to But it does explain why
give it to them . but it is safe- there's no money in my
ly stored on the computer I bank account . No, that's not
can't get into.
it , now I remember. I turned
I know I'm not the only all my money ·over to
person losing my memory ..l Bernie Madoff to invest for
jm;t wat ched the 50 ·Tv me back in September. I
shows doing the "Top 10 · wish I could remember his
Stories of' 2008!" What do phone number. I'd like to
they think? I've already for- find out if I can retire )let.
gotten 2()08 ? CotTect me if
(Jim Mullen is the author
I'm wrong. but w;tsn 't that . l[/.: "It 7/rke.v o Village ldiot:
jus! las! year''
Complicoti11g rhe Simple
"That's· ri ght . now that Lije" and '.'Baby's First
you mention it. Obama did Tarroo. " You can reach him
win! I'd forgotten all about otjim_mullen@myway.com.) ,

The Daily Sentinel • Page As

Bv CARLA K. JoltrlsoN

'ORANGE - Christina M. Ooten, 45 , Reedsville, was
cited with failure to control following a one-vehicle accident that occurred at approximately 4:25 p.m. on Saturday.
According to troopers, Ooten was driving her 2003
Mitsubishi Outlander eastbound on Ohio 681 just .east of
Kaylor Road when her vehicle ran off:the right side of the
roadway, struck a ditch, and overturned, sustaining dis•
abling qamages. ·
No injuries were reported.

IT's AMAZING !
IT$_Lik'E THIS
INCREDigl£

-.myd.ailysentinel.com

Obituarie;

·-

LAURA,

.

Reader Services

Wednesday, January 7, 2009

ty he knows of for missing a
self-imposed deadline, even
one contained in an executive order.
The Ohio Department of
Services
Administrative
said it anticipates that many
state agencies will receive
poor marks for their in-state
purchasing . on the first
scorecard. Spokesman Ron
Sylvester said the department is working to ensure
.the purchasing dat.a that's
, posted is accurate before
making it public . .
"The governor would not
have issued the executi v~
order unless there was a
problem. unless there was a
need to pay more attention
· to these ' Think Ohio First'
programs," .Sylvester said.
"So we know that the ·numbers are not going to be
great, but· we are confident
that we have the tools in
place to begin restoring
these programs to their
rightful place within the
state's purchasing system ."
. Edward W. "Ned" Hill. an
economics professor at
Cleveland State University,
said he will not be surprjsed

Southern Consortium
for Children calls meeting

4•Hfrom Page Al
·achievement records, participating in state level leadership
roles, conducting community service projects and serving as
leaders in camp and other volunteer roles and as role models
In the community for 4-H are JUSt a few thmgs these youth
have done," she said.

MARIETTA - The regular meeting of the Southern
Consortium for Children is open to the pub Iic and subject
to Sunshine Laws of the state. The intention of the memorand.um is to advise of the scheduled meeting. as prescribed by law.
The next regularly scheduled Board meeting.w ill be_ held
Monday, beginning at 10 a.m. at the .oflo~es ol the
Washington County Mental Health &amp; Addtcnon Recovery
Board. 344 Muskingum Drive. Marietta. Ohio.

·.

if the administration 's track scorecard is released. since
record for making in,state the scores will have much to ·
.purchases is weak. given the do with the slow pace of
weak economy.
state spending.
"The state's not been pur"It would be ironic to
chasing an awful lot lately." have the Strickland adminhe said. "It's easy to change istration be pilloried for
these (buying) patterns with what is the byproduct of fi sa change of contracts. It's cal conservatism." he said.
A · se parate scorecard
next to impossible when
you ·,re bound by existing Strickland ordered last year
contracts. And there's not a initially gave state agencies
lot of bidding going on. bacl grades for their use of
even · when it comes to alternative fuels - with the
Environmental
something Like highway Ohi o
construction." '
Prote~ tion Agency among
Jeff Ortega. a spokes man the worst offenders,
for the Secretary of~ue 's
But Sylvester said publi ·
office, · where a govemor's cizing
the
scorecard
executive orders are offi- . wound up providing an
cially filed , said the office incenti vc for state agenhas no enforcement authori- cie s to do better.
ty. "I would imagine. it's up · '·There's nothing that
to the governor's office to spurs action more than
enforce their own ex ~c utive being faced with something
orders," he said.
·
that you're lagging in . and
Hill said ' he hopes kn ow ing that that's out
Strickland is not hammered there and wanting to move
with criticism when the the bar." he sa id.

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The tests will be given by a Licensed Hetiring Aid Specialist.
Anyone who has trouble hearing or understanding
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�'

PageA4

OPINION.

The Daily Sentinel

wednesday,Januaryh2009

.Analysis:
Can
Uncle
Sam
spend
cash
fas!
enough?
.The Daily Sentinel
BY ANDAEW TAYLOR

.

ASSOCIAl£0 PREss 'MIIIDl

111 Court Street • Pomeroy, Ohio

'

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

''

••

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.

'••

Dan Goodrich
Publisher

Charlene Hoeflich

••
'&lt;
'

General Manager-News Editor

. Co ll,l!rrs.&lt; slhlll make

laav respecting an .
esrablislurrl'lrt 4 rdil!itm, or.prolribiting the
fret· t•.-:erdst' tlre~e'!f'; ~r abridgi11g tlte jiTedom
~f s1•ralr, or of tlrt· press; or the right of th,e
peoplt· pea a ably to trssl'llrble, a11d to petition
tlu· Gm•t•rrunellt for " redress of grievances.
110

- The First Amendment to the U.S·. Constitution

TODAY lN HISTORY
ToJa1 i, W~dolc,Ja\. Jan . 7. the sewnth day of 2009.
There :irL' J5t\ dav ., lci't in the 1c·ar.
.Toda1 \ Hi~hliuht in Hbtor): On Jan . 7. 17~9 . the.lirst
U.S. pl:c,ickoltial.eb:tillll IV&lt;IS held. Americans ·voted for
ek..:tur&gt; 11 ho. a month later. chose George Washington to
bL' the· nallon·,,,first pre&gt;iJent.
.
On thi s dat~ : In 1608 . an accidental fire devastated the
Jame&gt;lo\\ or sc'!tl.emem in the Virginia colony.
In 1(,10. astronom&lt;"r Galileo Galilci began observing
three of Jupiter\ moons .
In IXOO. the l.&lt; th presi dent oi: rhe United States. Millard
l'illmme. ""'born in SummerhilL N.Y.
In 1')27. commcrcialtraoNIIIantic telephone service was
inmo~u rated between New York and 'London .
ln - 1942. t~1 c Japanesc- siege of B;llmm began during
World War II.
In Jl)4&lt;J . Genr~c C. Marshall ~esigned as U.S . Secretary
t&gt;f Statc.ellcc·tivc .Ian. ~0. President Harry S. Truman· ~hose
Dean Achl·son to succeed him .
In 195&lt;J. the United States recognized the new government of Cuba. six days after Fidel Castro led the overthrow
&lt;~ f hol ~e nc.in Batista.
In JlJ72. Lew is F. Powe ll Jr. and William H. Rehnquist
wc·rc ""i&gt;no in ·as the 9&lt;Jth and lOUth members of the U.S.
Supreme Court. ·.
·
In 197&lt;J. Vietnamese li1rces captured the Cambodian capital
of Phnom Penh. ovenhrowing the Khmer Rouge government.
In 19Xl). Emperor· Hiroh ito of Japan died in Tokyo at age
87: he was succeeded bv his son. Crown Prince Akihito.
· Ten years ago: Fof· the · second time in history. an
impt·ac hL'd American president went on trial before the
Si:nall' . President Bill Clinton faced c harge~ of perjury and
obstruction of justice: he was acquitted .
Fi ve vcars ago: President George W. Bush proposed legal
·slatus. 'at least temporari 1y. for millions , ol illegal immigranls wo rking ·in the U.S. Swedish actress Ingria Thulin
died in Stockholm at a ~e 77 .
, Today's Birthdays:'.Author William Peter Blatty is 81.
Countrj• singer Jack Greene is 7&lt;J . Pop musician _Paul
Revere is 7 1. Magazine publisher Jann Wenner is 63. Smger
.Kenny Loggi ns is 61 . Sin ger-songwriter Marshall Chapman
·is 611. Actn·" Erin Gray i' 5'1. Aclor David Caruso is 53 .
"CBS Ewnin[! News" anchor Katie Couric is 52. Country
singer David Lee Murphy is 50. Rock musician Kathy
Valentine (T he Go-Go 's ) is 50 . Actor David Maroiano is 49.
Actrc" Hnllic Ti1dd is 47. Actor Nicolas Cage is 45. ~inger­
songwriler .lnhn Ondrasik (Five for Fighting) is 44. Actor
.·Doug E. Dow.: is .W . Actor Kevin Rahm is 38. Country
s in gcr- m ~" ici :~ 1 John Rich is :15. Actor Dustin Diamond is
32."Ac tor Robert Ri'dmrd is 26. Actor L..iam Aiken is 19.
Aclre,;s Ca mryn Grimes is .I'J . Actor Max Morrow is 18. ·
Thought for Today: "I do not believe that sheer suffering
teaches. II sullerin g alone taught. all the world would be
l' isc. ·li&gt; suffering must he added mourning. understanding.
patie nce. loll'. openness and the willingness to remain vulncrahle." - An ne Morrnw Lindbergh, American author
·( I 'J06-21,10 I ) .

WASHINGTON
Washington
bureaucrats
have a reputation for being
able to spend taxpayer
money real fast. But.
believe it or not, spending it
fast enough is one of the
biggest tasks President-elect
Bamck Obama 's economic
team faces in putting
together an economic
recovery measure.
Obam:t's economic recovery plan depends on swiftly
pumping hundreds of billions offederal dollars into
the economy to create jobs.
The focus is on tax cuts and
government spending that
can provide an immediate
lift to the economy.
.
However. the $675 billion$775 billion plan emerging
in talks between Obama's
team and Democratic allies
in Congress also appears to ·
contain lots or money that
won't be spent for years like for water projects.
rebuilding the electric grid
and buying billions of dollars
of mmputers and software
for the hea:lth care sector.
Much of that money won't
get spent until the economy
starts growing again.
.
Some GOP critics Sl\Y
Democrats are simply using
the current economic crisis
to put money into long-term
projects now. rather than .in
a few years when concerns
about record budget deficits
might threaten the spending.
"We must ... make distinctions between what is 'stimulus' ... and what is merely
more government spending
on favored projects we don't
need with money we don't
have ," said Senate Minority
Leader Mitch .McConnell of
Kentucky.
One example is a plan to
· spend billions of dollars on
a new health care informa- ·
tion technology system that
would make the delivery of

heal!~! care safer. n:tore Such an a(&gt;proach could
effecbve and more efficoent. prompt officmls to choose
During the campaign. more wasteful projects that
Obama prom,ised $50 bil- can be buill .soon over better
lion over live years for the ideasthatmoghttake-awhole.
initiative. The upcoming
"There's a tension here
economic recovery bill will between wanting to do \he
provide less.
most meritorious proJects
Even so, little of the pro- for the long term and wanllgram can get underway ng to do stu IT th•ll boosts the
quickly and building the economy quickly:· saod
system is years away. Basic . budget
e~pert
Bob
questions like privacy rights Greenstein of tl)e liberal
and a design that would Center on Budget and
allow computers for doc- Policy Priorities.
tors, hospitals and insurance
Many parts of Obama's
companies interact have yet plan would infuse money
to be resolved.
quickly into the economy.
Even Obama's economic according to budget cx(lerts .
advisers have · warned pri- These include $200 bolloon
vately that as the stimulus . for recession-hit state governbill increases in size, its ments to avoid hoyuffs. cutquality inevitably ~lines. backs in services :md mising
The' economy can absorb their own taxes. f-ederal tax
only so much publico invest- cuts delivered by withholding
ment over the next two . less from paychecks can take
years. Republicans are even effect almost immediately.
more skeptical.
Expanded food stamp and
"It's incredibly difficult to unemployment
benefits
identify things that are vatu- would aoTive mostly in 2009.
able in the long run. can be
All of those odeas ;ore
financed in the short run PQised to get funding - lots
and get the money out the of it. But many cconomosts
door ·quickly," said former say ewn more must be
Congressional
Budget pumped into the economy
Office; Director Dou~las to jolt it out of its doldmms.
Holtz-Eakin, who advosed
That mean s· massove
Sen. John McCain's presi- spending on infmstructurc
~entia! campaign. " It would
projects such as road and
be preferable to take any bridge repaors . nooct control
stimulus yoto feel is neces- and sewer systems. upgradsary and target it on a few ing schools and public
things - don't spread it as housing . and new .runways
seed money for a thousand and other aorport Improve. programs that'll never stop· ments. Those projects ty_Pigrowing."
'
cally take years . Dependmg
, "Right now. we have an on the length of the reces·emergency on our hands." sion . much of the spending
counters
Hou se may not occur until after the
Appropriations Committee economy is expandim!.That
Chairman David Obey, D- could result in inllation.
Wis . "If the House is bum- economists warn.
ing, you're not going to
A Congressionul Budget
worry about which hose you Oftice nnalysis of a $61 bilgrab, so long as you get iion economic stimulus meawater on the fire ."
sure that passed the House in
Obama officials r.romise a September - only to hoi I in
"use it or lose it' rule to the Senate - shows that just
foree states and localities to 27 percent of the plan 's $37
spend new federal money · bilhon in infrastructure
quickly to stimulate jobs. spending
would
have

occurred as the ~
struggles _throuwouldgh ha ·
Another third
ve
been spent Ul 20,10 and lhe
finalthin!wouklnthavebeen
spent until 2011 and aftel;
And those were
that lawmakers say are
to go ng~t now. House
Transportation
.and
lnfr~struc ture
CoiDIDittee
Chaonnan Ja_mes Obers~
recently w:tveoled a $45 .bil~
loon spendmg plan _foe hi8h'
wa~s. mass .transo_
t, water
projeCtS and aorport unprovements. More than ~t
\wouldn't create II_l3DY jobs
n~~t aw~y. he ~aubOqed.
·
_If we re go'!"g to ha~ a
qmc~ hit - getm,createjobs
wothm 90 days, people~­
i~g - then there IS a ~
lost of projCCIS that fall iDIO
the categ?ry." Obe~. J)..
Mono .. saod recently. So we
have to be very careful ~t
how much we grow~~- ·
Obama and all!es like
House ~peaker Nancy
Peloso. ,0-Calif.• ~ that
much ot ttH: econonuc recovery plan woll have a longer~
term locus. Such elements
indude delov~nng broadband
commumcatoons to .underserved areas, dev~loplll(l and
improving_ energy ef!iciency
techn~logoes , _Updali~g the
nation s. ~lectncal gnd and
modemozmg schools.
.
"This is not a 1930s pub,. ·
. lie works project," Pelosi
says.
,
Nonetheless, t~re s a lot
ot focus on pushmg .money
ouJ on dams and hiabWI!Y
projects already un&lt;ferway
and. up until now, financed
in bits and pieces.
"There's a huge backlog
of demands out there on a
number of diffen:nt fron~,''
an Obama transillon offictal
said. The "real challen~e ~s
to make sure money osn I
spent willy-nil~y.'' the off!coal.saod, speaking on condilion of anonymity because
he was not authorized to
speak with the reporters.

pro,r.:;

JANUARY 20...

WEI6HT HAS BEEN
LIFTED FRO!J1 MY

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.

Ellner E. Ci ites

REEDSVIJ,.LE - Elmer E. Crites, 96, of Reedsville,
passed away Monday, Jan . 5, 2009 at Camden-Clark
.
Memorial Hospital, Parkersburg, W.Va.
He was born May 20, 1912 in Birch River; W.Va., son of
the late Andrew and Sarah Rose Crites.
·
: He is survived by eight sons. Carroll, Larry, Allen, Jack,
Leon, Denver, Robert and Don: eight daughters, Levon,
Virginia, Charlotte, Barb, Rose. Sally, Kathy and Cindy;
liCVeral grandchildren and great-grandchildren.
In addition to his parents , he was preceded in death by his
wife, Audi-a; and a daughter, Loretta .
·
· Services will be held 10 a .m., Thursday, Jan. 8, 2009 at
White-Schwarzel Funeral Home , Coolville, with Rev.
George Horner officiating . Burial will be in the Sandhill
Cemetery, Long Bottom.
Friends may call at the funeral home Wetlnesalrom
6-8 p.m.
1
. You can sign the online guestbook at www.w iteschwarzelfuneralhome .com

.

For the Record
Highway Pat.-ol

• LETART - Johnny R. Sellers, 48, Racine, was cited for
failure to yielq half of the roadway following a two-vehicle
accident that occurred Friday at appro"imately II: 10 p.m .
According ·to troopers. Sellers was northbound in his
1996 Chevy Monte Carlo on Mile Hill Road approximately 1.2 miles south of Apple Grove Road when he failed to
yield have the roadway and struck a 2000 Chevy Monte
Carlo being driven southbound on Mile Hill Road by
Ronald J. Adkins, 27, Langsville.
Both vehicles sustained disabling damages; no major
injuries were reported .

ASSOCI.fJEO PRESS WRITER

CHICAGO
Parkinson 's sufferers who
had electrodes implanted in .
their brains improved substantially more · than those
who took only medicine.
according to the bigge$1
test yet of deep brain stimulation.
,
The study, which fol:
lowed patients for six
months, offers the most
hopeful news to date for
Parkinson 's sufferers. The
new techni9.ue reduced
tremors, rigidoty and flail mg of the li111bs and
allowed .people to move
freely for nearly five extra
hours a day.
But the research al so
higher-thanrevealed
expected risks. About 40
AP photo
percent of the patients who Sharon Pederson poses for a photograph at a friend's house in Petaluma, Calif., Monday.
received these "brai~ pace- · Pederson is a study subject who got deep brain stimulation, or DBS, surgery for ·her ·
makers" suffered serious Parkinson's disease. In DBS, a surgeon implants electrodes in the brain which are then
sode effects, including . a connected.to a pacemaker-like device that ~an be adjusted and turned ott\.p nd on. The
s~rp~si_ng_ number of fall s device sends tiny electrical pulses to the brain, disabling overactive nerve cells. .
woth IDJunes .
·
"We had one patient who researchers studied 255 across the room:· she said .
fe It so good he went up to people with advanced "Once I was eating a yogurt · Wired for therapy
repair · his roof. fell down Parkinson's at seven VA and while 1 was in the car. I
Implanted devices work to calm
and broke both his legs," six university hospitals . came inside and ·said. 1 I bad
Parkinson's symptoms by send·
ing im,p ulses to ~he brain that
said lead author Fran Patients were randomly a fight with a container of
disable oweractive nerve cells.
Weaver of Hines Veterans assigned · to have surgery yogurt.' It was all over the
!lectrode
Affairs Hospital, outsidt; plus the standard medica- inside of the car."
Chicago. "Patients are feel- tion, or medication alone.
Surgery not only stopped
mg so much better, they forAfter six months, patients . the nailing but . halted an
gpet they
still
have visited neurologists who did intense sensation that her
arkinson's."
not know whether they had nerve endings were burning .
There is no cure for had surgery or medication . Her depression also disapParkinson's disease , which In the surgery g_roup. 86 out peared . The ability to write
affects more than I million or 121 (71 percent) saw her normal nowing signa' '
Americans . Patients suffer · meaningful improvements ture came bm;k. too.
from increasingly severe in movement. as .scored by
It dido 't work for everytremors and periodically the neurologists. In the one. A few surgery patients
ngid limbs as their brains medication group, 43 out of (about 3 percent) got worse.
stop making dopamine. a 134 patients (32 percent)
"You don't want to underchemical needed for move- showed
· m~aningful estimate or overestimate the
ment . They can have trouble improvements.
risks," said Weaver. a spe- Source. Nat1ona1Institute of
AP
walking, speaking and writIn the surgery group. '49 cialist in chronic care. "It Neu1olog1Cal D1sorders and S1rolo.e
mg. and often struggle with had serious problems, still is art individual decidepressoon.
including infections, falls sioti between a patient and a other problems,.--will help
Standard
treatments and . one death because of physician."
. doctors give better advice.
mclude drugs to stimulate complications from the
Surgery to implant .the he said.
dopamine. But over time , surgery. In the 'control electrodes and pacemaker
"This study with its carethe medicines can produce group, only IS people costs about $60,000 and is ful methodology will help
fla.iling movements that are . encountered serious prob- covered · by Medicare and in setting a higher bar for
as troubling, as Parkinson's lems.
some insurance compan.ies. tracking . adverse events,"
.
Another way to measure Medications can cost said Okun, who was not
tremors.
With deep brain stimula- gains for
Parkinson 's $5,000 a year. After surgery, involved in the study.
tion, which was approved patients is the amount of ·patients were able fo cut
Four of the studv 's 22
by the Food and Drug "on" time - good quality their medications by 23 per- co-authors reported .finanAdministration in 2002 for movemen~ime. Recording cent on average.
cial ties to companies that
advanced Parkinson's and · these time during the day
One-fourth of the people make devices or drugs for
had been performed on in diaries, p ients who had in the study were 70 and Parkinson's. The lead
thousands of patients, a sur- . surgery gat d. on average , older, That age group has author sa id she has no
geon implants electrodes in nearly five hours of "on" been excluded ·from many such ties.
the brain, which are then time each day. Patients who prior studies of DBS . In the
The study was funded by
coimected to a pacemaker- dido 't have surgery made no new study. the olt)er surgery the
Department
of
like device that can be gains in that area.
patients were able to control Veterans Affairs and the
adjusted and turned off and
"It's really brought a lot their movements better. b.ut National
Institutes of
on . That device, implanted of freedom back to my younger . ones benefited Health. Minneapolis-based
under the C!&gt;llarbone or in life," said surgery patient even more.
MedtrOnic Inc .. maker of
Those findings will help the devices purchased for
the abdomen, sends tiny Shnron Pederson , 51 , of
electrical pulses to the Tomales, Calif. She said ·older patients make deci- the study, provided the
brain, disabling overactive medication worked well for sions about treatment, said money for collecting data .
nerve cells.
four or five years but start- Dr. Michael Okun of the
In about six months, more
The latest findings were ed causing her arms to fling University of Florida , med- resulis are expected from
published in Wednesday's out wildly.
ical director of the .National the study, which also com"I would go to brush my Parkinson Foundation. The pared two brain regions for
Journal of the American
Medical Association. The hair and the 'brush would fly information on falls and electrode placement.

Ohio misses deadline on business report
BY JULIE CARR SMYTH
AP STATEHOUSE CORRESPONDENT

COLUMBUS - Gov .
Ted Strickland's administration has missed its own
deadline for creating an
online scorecard to measure
purchases the state makes
fro'm Ohio-baSed businesses, and officials expect the
GALLIPOLIS - Certified yoga instructor, Charlene score to be low.
Ballard, will offer two six-week yoga classes at the Ariel Strickland ordered creDater Hall , beginning Monday' Jan. I 2.
ation of the scorecard as
The all-new, "Guided Relaxation and Meditation Class", is part of an executive order in
open to beginners and experienced yoga practitioners. The June to beef up the "Think
class will focus on st~ss release activities, without involving Ohio First" program, which
the more challe.nging yoga positions. Classes meet Monday encoura~es state agencies to
evening from 4:15-5:15. The registration fee is $48 per par- give Oh10 companies every
ticipant for the six-week session. This e-mail addresS is being opportunity to compete for
protected from syambots and JavaScript enables viewing .
state business.
, The traditiona "Hatha Yoga Class", is opefl to beginners
His order called for the
' and experienced yo&amp;a practi!ioners. Th~ class inclu?es scorecard to be O)lline by
yoga postures, breathmg pracuces, relaxation, and medota- J11n . I, but it is not expected
" tion. Classes meet Monday evenings from 5:3(}-7 p.m: until at least mid-month ,
Yoga offers multiple health benefits, including; lower lev- Strickland spokesman Keith
els of stress hormone cortisol, increase in flexibility and Dailey said. ·
strength, improved balance, improved psychological . "We fully expect that the
health, improved immune function, and many more. The scorecard will be completed
registration fee is $60 per participant.
within days or weeks;:
.. Charlene Ballard is a certified yoga and meditation Dailey said. "And thell,,
instructor and has been a registered teacher with Yoga within the next 'Several
Alliance since 1997 . For more detailed Yoga class infor- months, that Web site itself
mation please contact the instructor at 740-256-1428 , or will be completed."
email charlene.ballard@earthhnk.net
He said there is no penal Additional classes offered by the Ariel for Winter 2009
• include: "Ballroom Dancing", taught by Joseph Li , MD;
and "Young Actors Studio", !alight by Ariel Exec.utive and
Artistic Director Joseph Wnght. For more detaoled class
.'
information, or to reg~ster, contact the Ariel Box office at
740-446-2787 .

Yoga,cbiss coming to Ariel.

('(/_l(n f)//hli co t irm .

, Correction Policy

REEDSVILLE - Joe E. Lantz, 73. of Reedsville went
hom_e to be· with the Lord on Monday, Jan . 5. 2009 at
Manetta Nursmg and Rehab Center after a brief illness. ·
He was born Jan. 24, 1935 in Ivydale, W.Va. son of the
late Frank and Ora McKown Lance. He was a member of
the Reedsville Fellowship Church of the Nazarene.
He is survived by a daughter, Donna Reed; two sons,
Charles an~ Mary Lantz and Danny and Paula Lantz; a
brother, Mike and Dot Lance; four sisters, Judy Elkins,
Ruth Ann Lance, ·Barbara and Tom Summerfield and
~indy,and Fred Houghten; a sister-in-law. Bertie Lance;
n!ne grandchildren; 13 great-grandchildren; and severaJ
·
.
meces and nephews.
. In addition to his pclrenrs , he was preceded in death by his
wife, Thelma Lantz: a sister. Janelle; and 2 brothers. Jack ·
and Roger.
·
. Services will be held II a.m., Frid;~y. Jan . 9. at WhiteSchwl!lZel FID!eral Home, Coolville with Pastors Teresa
Waldeck, Wayne V()gelsong and Russ Carson officiating.
buri!l' will be in the Stewart Cemetery. Hockingport .
Fnends may call at the funeral home Thursday, from
.
6-8 p.m.
You can sign the online guestbook at www.whiteschwanelfuneral~ome .com

MIDDLEPORT - The River City Players will present
a murder mystery dinner theatre "Roses are Dead, Violets
are Too!"
The mystery written by Roger and Mary Gilmore of
Pomeroy will be presented on Fe)J. 13-14 at the Riverside
Golf Club in Mason, WV.
A full-course dinner will be served during the mystery.
Tickets ($25) will go on sale on Feb. 9 at Dan's in Pomer()y
and he RCP building in Middleport. F9r more info call 740992-6759 or go to www,rcplayers.net.

LETTERS TO THE
EDITOR

l

-

Players to present
mystery dinner theatre

£HOULDERS!

1

My memory is going. I'm
still writing 2008 on my
checks. Worse, I'm ·still
wmong .checks. while
everyone else is banking
online. Well , not everyone
Jim
else. just .people with
Mullen
money. My bank is letting .
people go left and right. No.
don't worry, none of the
executives are being "rightsized," just the people who anniversary because that
do all the work . They've would be too bard to
gotten rid of all the tellers remen1ber. It , was some-.
and replaced , them with t.hing really simple . It wasATM thachines that will n' t my phone number,
n ever get pensions or take because 1 can never .
vacations. My bank charges remember that. Ever since I
me to use the ATM . They l'ot a cell phone and you
never charged me to use a JUSt. hiqhe person's name,!
teller. I got my statement don't remember anyone 's
last month. and they phone number. I used to
charged me u "statement know two or three of them
fee" of $5. Excuse me? Is · by heart.
this a ploy to get more of
What was that PIN? My
my business?
lowest golf score? No , the
· I can never remember my PIN is four-digit number.
PIN. I picked an easy num- I'm still only a three-digit
ber that I would never for- golfer. Ah, now I remember ·
get and can ' I rL"inember - it's every other number
that easy number. I know it in my Social Security numwas n' t
ony
hirthday ber, backwards. Easy.
because that would be too
Tyvo , five , eight . three ?
easy. And I know it wasn 't Three , five, two , eightllf I
Sue's birthday Of our can 't get it in three tries,

the ATM · won't give me that.'' I seem to remember
any cash for 24 hours . But . something about a war, too . .
if 1. drop my ATM nord mi And didn't something nasty
my way home ; my .bank happen in Galveston? It was
will let the guy who finds it so long ago - like three or
empty my account down to four months ·at least. And
the last penny. But me. I wasn't there something
can't get anythin~ . You'd about a bank bailout? Did
think if a guy os smart you hear anything about
enough to break into a bank that? And the auto bailout?
electronically. he 'd be' · Wasn't there a Summer
smart enough to get a high- Olympics this year? I wonpaying job - like th e CEO der it that Michael Phelps
.o f a bank .
guy won any medals at all?
I have so much. huckcr- Look at that! Gas used to be
proof soft ware on my com- $4.50. When was that? A
puler. half the time I can't hundred years ago? Last
get into it. So I call for ser- summer? You're kidding! I
vice ami !hey want to ~now .don 't remember that at all.
my phone PIN .• I'd .like to But it does explain why
give it to them . but it is safe- there's no money in my
ly stored on the computer I bank account . No, that's not
can't get into.
it , now I remember. I turned
I know I'm not the only all my money ·over to
person losing my memory ..l Bernie Madoff to invest for
jm;t wat ched the 50 ·Tv me back in September. I
shows doing the "Top 10 · wish I could remember his
Stories of' 2008!" What do phone number. I'd like to
they think? I've already for- find out if I can retire )let.
gotten 2()08 ? CotTect me if
(Jim Mullen is the author
I'm wrong. but w;tsn 't that . l[/.: "It 7/rke.v o Village ldiot:
jus! las! year''
Complicoti11g rhe Simple
"That's· ri ght . now that Lije" and '.'Baby's First
you mention it. Obama did Tarroo. " You can reach him
win! I'd forgotten all about otjim_mullen@myway.com.) ,

The Daily Sentinel • Page As

Bv CARLA K. JoltrlsoN

'ORANGE - Christina M. Ooten, 45 , Reedsville, was
cited with failure to control following a one-vehicle accident that occurred at approximately 4:25 p.m. on Saturday.
According to troopers, Ooten was driving her 2003
Mitsubishi Outlander eastbound on Ohio 681 just .east of
Kaylor Road when her vehicle ran off:the right side of the
roadway, struck a ditch, and overturned, sustaining dis•
abling qamages. ·
No injuries were reported.

IT's AMAZING !
IT$_Lik'E THIS
INCREDigl£

-.myd.ailysentinel.com

Obituarie;

·-

LAURA,

.

Reader Services

Wednesday, January 7, 2009

ty he knows of for missing a
self-imposed deadline, even
one contained in an executive order.
The Ohio Department of
Services
Administrative
said it anticipates that many
state agencies will receive
poor marks for their in-state
purchasing . on the first
scorecard. Spokesman Ron
Sylvester said the department is working to ensure
.the purchasing dat.a that's
, posted is accurate before
making it public . .
"The governor would not
have issued the executi v~
order unless there was a
problem. unless there was a
need to pay more attention
· to these ' Think Ohio First'
programs," .Sylvester said.
"So we know that the ·numbers are not going to be
great, but· we are confident
that we have the tools in
place to begin restoring
these programs to their
rightful place within the
state's purchasing system ."
. Edward W. "Ned" Hill. an
economics professor at
Cleveland State University,
said he will not be surprjsed

Southern Consortium
for Children calls meeting

4•Hfrom Page Al
·achievement records, participating in state level leadership
roles, conducting community service projects and serving as
leaders in camp and other volunteer roles and as role models
In the community for 4-H are JUSt a few thmgs these youth
have done," she said.

MARIETTA - The regular meeting of the Southern
Consortium for Children is open to the pub Iic and subject
to Sunshine Laws of the state. The intention of the memorand.um is to advise of the scheduled meeting. as prescribed by law.
The next regularly scheduled Board meeting.w ill be_ held
Monday, beginning at 10 a.m. at the .oflo~es ol the
Washington County Mental Health &amp; Addtcnon Recovery
Board. 344 Muskingum Drive. Marietta. Ohio.

·.

if the administration 's track scorecard is released. since
record for making in,state the scores will have much to ·
.purchases is weak. given the do with the slow pace of
weak economy.
state spending.
"The state's not been pur"It would be ironic to
chasing an awful lot lately." have the Strickland adminhe said. "It's easy to change istration be pilloried for
these (buying) patterns with what is the byproduct of fi sa change of contracts. It's cal conservatism." he said.
A · se parate scorecard
next to impossible when
you ·,re bound by existing Strickland ordered last year
contracts. And there's not a initially gave state agencies
lot of bidding going on. bacl grades for their use of
even · when it comes to alternative fuels - with the
Environmental
something Like highway Ohi o
construction." '
Prote~ tion Agency among
Jeff Ortega. a spokes man the worst offenders,
for the Secretary of~ue 's
But Sylvester said publi ·
office, · where a govemor's cizing
the
scorecard
executive orders are offi- . wound up providing an
cially filed , said the office incenti vc for state agenhas no enforcement authori- cie s to do better.
ty. "I would imagine. it's up · '·There's nothing that
to the governor's office to spurs action more than
enforce their own ex ~c utive being faced with something
orders," he said.
·
that you're lagging in . and
Hill said ' he hopes kn ow ing that that's out
Strickland is not hammered there and wanting to move
with criticism when the the bar." he sa id.

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�OHIO \

The Daily Sentinel
•
•

AHOA£W

ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

The phone was used twice
in Columbus after her death.
COLUMBUS -- Ohio
and one of the calls \fts juries sentenced three peoDAYTON A man made to a cell phone pie to death last year,
arrested in the slaying of a YbeJonging to Myers, which matching the lowest numyoung mother and the abduc- led investigators to · his ber since the state re-enactlion ~ he~ 4-_y~-()ld son apartment, according to ~ ed capiial punishment 27
remruned m J8Il Tuesday • affidavit filed in Franklm years ago.
wbiJt: ~ighbors remembered County Municipal Court.
Records show the number
the VIctun as a devoted mom
Investigators recovered of people indicted with capwhohltdquit~rjobatagro- the cell phone , a laptop ita! crimes in Ohio is also
a:ry store to raJse the boy.
computer and a Playstation lower than in past decades.
The house where the 2~- 2 video game system that
Ohio has 179' people on
year-()Jd woman was fatally were similar to items stolen death row, the lowest figure
api?Cared . empty from the family 's Dayton in several years. The. state
shot
Thesday, With a fishing rod home , the affidavit said .
has executed 28 defendants
and parr of men's boo!s on
Detectives also found since 1999.
the porch. A!J in~r fl~ printed di rections to · the _ Prosecutors attribute the
the scene Friday ru~t With ·home, a shotgun and shell s, decline in death sentences
her son and drove him to an bloody underwear and a to reduced crime rates and
lnterstat~ 70 rest area m cen- bag containing keys to the court decisions that have
tral O~o. when: travelers couple 's Honda, the affi- narrowed the eligibility for
found him wandering around. davit said .
the death penalty.
. Neighbor Steve Hopkins
The H~nda . had , been
They also say the availabilsaid the_ woman's son meant reported stolen in from an ity qfa sentence of life withOhio State parking garage out the possibility of parole is
ev,erythmg to her. . .
'Tha! V:~ her enure hfe, 00 Dec. 17 . The husband leading juries to sentence
!~at ,kid, Hopkms said . told police the car was fewer people to death.
You d see them. walking unlocked and the keys had
Another factor: what one
down ~e stret;!· .That was been left inside along with veteran prosecutor calls the
.
his wallet, which contained "CSJ factor,'' or impatience
her moiivaiJon .
The man arrested 10 the · three . credit cards and his on jurors' part when evi~la)'l~g. C~~he Myers, 2~. Social
Security
card. dence at trial isn't as
remame~ . m a · Fmnkhn according to a police report. splashy as what they see on
County Jail m Columbus. .
Police recovered the car TV crime shows.
Meanwhile , prosecuto~ m Friday near the family's
"You . have juries who
Dayton _filed ~arges agamst home in Dayton but said they expect more , so you may ·
Myers, ~ludinll aggravated were still investigating not get as many ~ople senmurder, kidn~pmg and ~ss . whether there is connection. tenced to death,' Trumbull
sexual unposiiion mvolvmg a
child under I ~. They had no!
deCided whether to seek the
death penalty.
The Associated Press is
rio longer identifying the
family so as not to identify
the victim of an alleged sexual assault. ·
Montgomery · County
· Sheriff Phil Plummer said
Monday that Myors confessed to his involvemeot in
the crime. While not elaborating, Plummer said he
believes · Myers · was the
only person in the family 's
•Waverly • Big Bend Pomeroy, OH
house and that Myers ·
abducted the boy.
.
• Ripley (WV) • Marietta
Investigators were look•Jackson
ing at several possible .
motives, including robbery.
It wasn't clear if Myers had .
an attorney.
Plummer has credited the
4-year-old boy with providing a descripuon of the gunman that aided in the investigation .
Hopkins, 41, described
the boy as a precocious kid
quick to make friends, even
with adults.
· ·
"When he met you , he
knew you;" Hopkins said,
adding that the boy would
Ea.
greet him on the street with
e. "How you doing, Stever'
"I've got a little 11-foot
boat, and the first time he
saw that boat he's like , 'I
· want to go fishing with
you,"' Hopkins recalled. .
· Hopkins said the woman's
husband worked at a grocery
store and a bar/restaurant.
He shoveled the neighbors'
sidewalks when it snowed ·
11b. bag
and brewed beer at home.
"He's a really rood guy,"
Hopkins said. "It s just tragic. It's a sad , sad thing."
Myers had the slain mother's cellphone in his apartment when investigators
came to question .him
· Sunday evemng, court documents show.

Bv JAMES HANNAH

\

1

•

'

I

'

Wednesday, January 7, 2009

Neighbors: Slain_Ohio Ohio matches record-low 3 death sentences in '08
Bv
mom was devoted·to son
WELSH-HUGGINS

I

PageA6

a

County Prosecutor Dennil capital defendants to life pie found to have been
Walkins said Tuesday,
without the possibility of wrongly convicted.
· The three inmates senOhio juries sentenced three parole .
people to death in 1982, the
In 2005 , the law chan~ed tenced to death in Ohio in
fU"Stfullyearthedeathpenal- again, this time allowmg 2008:
'Bennie
Adams,
'•
ty was in place following the prosecutors to seek a life
state 's enactmetlt of a new without parole sentence Mahoning County. Adams,
capital punishment law the without first seeking a death 51 , was found guilty of
aggravated murder in the
previous fall .
sentence .
cold-case
strangulation
The numberjumi'C!d to 16
That option made life
in 1984 and hit a high of 24 without parole even more death of Gina Tenney,
in 1985.
popular. The prison system whose frozen body was
Deatl\ sentences have admitted . I 04 defendants found in the ·Mahoning
been in the single digits in serving Jife without parole River in December 1985.
Ohio since 2003 when 12 from 2005 through 2008, a
• Phillip Jones, Summit
sentences were banded out. 38 percent increase over the County. Jones, 38, convictLast year's low figure is four years before the law . ed in the April 2007 slaying
· of Susan Marie Christillllconsistent with a deep took effect .
national decline in death
Over the same time, pros- Yates, 33 , at Mount Peace
sentences.
ecutors sought fewer death Cemetery in Akron.
North Carolina had just sentences to begin with in
• Calvin Neyland Jr. ,
one death sentence last year, Ohio , from a high of 97 in Wood County. Neyland, 43,
the lowest since· the U.S . - 2004 to 69 last year, accord- convicted of gunnin~ down
Supreme Court declared ing to data analyzed by the manager Doug Srmth and
capital punishment constitu- Ohio
State
Public retired Pennsylvania state
tiona! in 1976.
trooper Thomas La2ar in
Defender's Office.
Texas, with the nation's
Before
life
without August 2007 . at Liberty
outside
busiest death chamber, had parole, some juries said they Transportation
II death sentences, tied for chose a death sentence Toledo.
the lowest in the past 30 because they worried a con- .,
years.
victed killer would someday
Both states have enacted go free on parole, said
life without parole laws in Theresa Haire, deputy
recent years .
director of the Ohio Public
Nationally, preliminary Defender's office .
.
figures show Ill death sen"Nowthat they have life
tences last year, the lowest without parole, they're
www.mydallysentlnel.com
since 1976.
more willing to impose
·Death sentences in Ohio that," she said.
have been on a decline since
She also said jurors have
1996 when lawmakers gave . been influenced by increased
jurors the option to sentence publicity over innocent peo-

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- . , at Trimllla, 6 p.m.
IMigo at Alllonl, 6 p.m.

7:30

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-Valley at Coal ClnMI, 6 P.m.
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..._,......,,0

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d.elpro at Southam (Moriolta), TElA
N6w Boston at South Galla. 0 p.m.
.

Glrte 8111 T'blll

GAHS had seven players
score in the setback. mcluding a team-high eight points
GALLIPOLIS - From from both Nick Mitchell
start to finish , visiting and John Troester, Quinton
Chillicothe - the defending Nibert , Jared Golden and
Division II state champion Chuck Calvert each added
- had too much firepower three. poi'nts, while . Evan
for Gallia Academy to han- Wood and Chris. Armstrong
die Thesday night during a rounded out the scoring
53-28 boys basketball victo- with respective point totals
ry in a Southeastern Oh.io of two and one.
Athletic League South
Armstrong and Kyle
. Division matchup in the Old -Mitchell - the Devils topFrench City.
two scorers this ·season The Cavaliers (4-2, 2-1 · combined for one point in
SEOAL South) stormed out the loss . The hosts were also
to a 15-5 lead after eight 5-of-13 from the free throw
minutes of play, then went line for 38 percent.
Chillicothe had six playon a Be7 second quarter run
to take a 28-12 intermission ers score in the triumph, led
by Ron Smith with a gameadvantage.
Both teams went oil the high 23 points. Seth Dawes
defensive in the third canto, was next with II markers,
scoring just four points followed by Caleb Knights
apiece to make it a 32-16 with eight and Mike Turner
.score headed into the finale. with six .
CHS outscored the Blue
CHS also claimed a 40-30
Devils (3-5, 0-3) by a 21-12 victory in the junior varsity
clip in the fourth to secure game , while the GAHS
the 25-point outcome.
freshmen posted the lolie
STAFF REPORT

OMan · ; r

~-..yet~

Cavs control Blue Devlls, 53-28

.

•

'

r

'

CHIWCOTHE 53,
GALUA AcADEMY 28
Chillicothe 15 13
Gallipolis s 7

4
4

21 12 -

.
53
28

CHILLICOTHE (4·2. 2·1 SEOAL Sout11):
Brandon B&lt;Nerly 0 ().() 0, Caleb Knights .
3 2·5 8. Mike Turner 3 0-2 6, Grogg Van
Volkinburg 1 1·2 3, Landon Beverly 0 ().()
0, James Van Voomis 0 O..Q 0, Ron Smith
10 3-3 23. Jalen Ragland 0 0-0 o. Eric
Young 0 o-o 0. Seth Danos 4 3-3 11.
Shay NeHOf 1 D-0 2. TOTALS· 22 i&gt;-15
53. Three-point goals: None.
GALLIA ACAOEMY (3-5, 0-3 SEOAL .
Sou1h): Corey Eberhard 0 0-0 o. Jordan
Cornwell o 0.0 0, Quinton Nibert 1 o-2 3.
Ethan Moore 0 0'0 0, Nick MilcheD 3 2·6
8, Chris Armstrong 0 1·21 , Evan WOOd 1
o-o 2. Kyle Mitchell 0 0-0 0, Jared Golden
1' ().() 3. Chud&lt; Cai\/Srt I o-o 3, Beau
Wh11Jay 0 o-o 0, Zeke Maher 0 o-o o.
John Troester 3 2·3 8. TOTALS' 10 5· I 3
28. Three--point goals: 3 (Nibert. Golden.
Colvert)

RedStorm edged
on the·road in
AMCOpener
BY MARK WILLIAMS
SPECIAL TO THE SENTINEL

CEDARVILLE·- It was
a classic battle of a pair of
NAJA Divison II Top 10
teams as No. 5 Rio Grande
and No. 9 Cedarville
squared off in the American
Mideast Conference opener
oil Saturday at the Callan
Athletic Center.
.In a' back-and-forth affair,
Cedarville used its defense
to hold off Rio Grande off
66-64 and avenged an early
.Sjlason 70-65 loss that Rio
Grande handed to them in
December, the only loss of
the season to date for the
Yellow Jackets. ·
· Rio Grande (12-5, 0-1
AMC) stayed close with the
~tside shooting of junior
off-guard PJ. Rase and
. another Herculean effort in
t}te paint from senior for"
w.ard
Brandon
Ivery.
Despite the stellar play of
Rase and Ivery it was not
enough
to
overcome
Cedarville a second time
.
around. .
Rase nailed six trifectas
for the second time in three
games, en route to scoring,
a game-high'· 25 points
while Ivery posted another
double-double with 19
points and 14 rebounds. ·
Senior
center
Will
Norwell was back in the

· PBuH • • Rio, 12

P;YL holding youth
hoops tournament

Tornadoes breeze past
BY

Scan WOLFE

SPORTS CORRESPONDENT

Larry Crumlphoto

Gallia Academy's Zeke Maher is surrounded by Chillicothe
defenders during the second half of Tuescfay night's SEOAL
boys basketball game in Gallipolis.

..RUTLAND
The
Pomeroy YQuth League
will be holding a 4th, 5th
l!lld 6tlr grade basketball
t~urnament in separate
djvisions - both boys and
gtrls - at the Rutland
Civic Center on Monday,
:fanuary
26,
through
Sunday, February 8.
; :Each tournament will be
dou.ble eliminl\rion and no
all-star teams will be permitted.
· For more information
. qontact Ken at (740) 992~ .
5322 or (740) 416-6648, or .
call Dennis at (740) 4470021.

1-740-446-2342 ext. 33

mdssports Omydailysentlnel.com ·

Staff

Bry~~n Walters
(740) 446-2342,' oxt. 33
bwallars 0 mydallytrlbuna.com

LlrryCrum
(740) 446-2342, oxt. 33
Ierum 0 mydallyreglater.com

romps past
Wahama·

.Buckeyes fall to Michigan State

CoNTACT US

Sparta

uders, 11·54 ·Buffalo

RACINE - Blitzing to a
37-15 halftime lead, the
Southern Tornadoes (6-1) of
BY GARY CLARK
Coach Jeff Caldwell posted
SPORTS CORRESPONDENT
a convincing 71.-54
BUFFALO, W.Va. - The
Tri-Valley
Wahama White Falcon basConference
ketball woes continued
interdiviTuesday night when the ·
sional vicBend Area cage team
tory over
dropped
its fifth straight
the Meigs
game to a talented Buffalo
Maraud.e rs
Bison squad. The outing
( 3 - 4 )
was nowhere near as close
Tuesday
as the final score might
night
in
indicate as the Putnam
Southem:s·
County team constructed a
Charles W.
huge first half edge before
Hayman
coasting to a· 64-43 win
Gymnaover the visiting White
sium.
Falcons.
Southern
Wahama fell for the fifth
placed four
. consecutive outing since
in
men
winning its season opener
double figagainst Hannan and now
ures, led by
stands at 1-5 on the young
B r y a n
2008~ 09 hardwood season.
Harris with
Once again turnovers , a iack
Hill
16, Weston
of rebounding strength and
Roberts 14, Brad Brown 10,
poor shooting plagued
and Sean Coppick IO.Jt was
Coach James Toth 's charges
·this great effort and balance
as the taller Bisons capitalthat led to Southern's sucized on the Falcons inconcess. Michael Manuel added ·
sistencies while shooting a
nine points, Cyle Rees
blistering 75 percent from
·three, Dustin Salser three,
the field during the opening
and two each from Taylor
two quarters of basketball
Deem, Zach Manuel, and
action. WHS
had
18
John Brauer.
All 10
turnovers and shot a dismal
Southern players hit the
22 percent (4-of- 18) during
scoring column .
· first half play.
Meigs was led by a dazBuffalo raced to an
zling 21-point effort from
incredible 35-10 first half
Gabe Hill. Hill's effort
advantage after connecting
deserves an asterisk as 19 of
on 15 of its 20 field goal
those markers came in the
tries while WHS experisecond half. Jacob Well by
enced overwhelming diffivirtue of two NBA- style
culties putting the ball
three pointers notched 14.
through the basket. The
84Yan Waharalphoto White Falcons scored only
Cameron Bolin nine, Corey
flutton· six, Seth Wells two, Southern's Sean Coppick releases a shot attempt over the outstretched arm of Meigs' one bucket in the first peridefender Jacob Well (15) during the first half of Tuesday night's boys basketball game at
Please see Breeze, 12
Please see Wahama, 12
Charles W. Hayman Gymnasium in Racine.

or E-nt~~ll'

We reserve the right to limit quantities and are not responsible for typographical or pictorial errors. Prices Good through January 10, 2009

horne win on the evening
with a 44-43 decision in
overtime.
Gallia Academy returns to
the hardwood Friday when
it travels to the Apple City
for another SEOAL South
Division
contest
with
Jackson. The freshmen contest will tip-off at 5 P·l!,l ·

o.ltla Academy at .-.on, 6 p.m.

FIX'ItUIItbor: 1.·740-446-3008

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COLUMBUS (AP) Ohio Gov. Ted Strickland
has followed through on
·threats to veto three bills
passed by Republicans in
the final month of the pre vi. ous legislative session .
Strickland, a Democrat, .
vetoed bills TUesday that
would have shrunk the
state's early voting period
and paid for veterans' bonuses using the state's rainy day
fund . The governor also
vetoed a bill that would have
provided tax credits for
movies filmed in Ohio.
Strickland signed 37 other
bills into law, including a
bill that maintains a workers' compensation system
that provides . discounted
rates to businesses that pool
in groups.
· Republicans no longer
control both the House and.
Senate in the new legislature that opened Monday.
Democrats took control of ·
the House for the first time
in 14 years .

Wednesday, January 7, 2009

MoiQO at River V1111ey, 6 p.m.

Red Or

Governor
vetoes 3 GOPsponsored bills

W.O'sthe ral No.I!' . . . B6

aves at Southern, 1 p.m.

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_The Daily Sentinel

AP photo

Michigan State's Kalin Lucas (1) tri.e s to maneuver'against
pressure from Ohio State's P.J. Hill , rear, during the first ·tia.lf
of an NCAA college men's basketball game Tuesday in
East Lansing, Mich .

EAST LANSING, Mich . first day off tomorrow in a Big Ten road game and
(AP) - Michigan State couple of weeks and that you're trying to teach them
made five 3-pointers in less will be good for all of us."
the how and the why," coach
than 3 minutes, making up
Then, Michigan State ( 12- Thad Matta said . "We try to
for what was otherwise a 2, 3-0 Big Ten) will start explain to our guys that
lackluster performance .
preparing for a visit from the there are momentum swings
Kalin Lucas scored six of defending national. champi.- and. you 've got to be able to
his 20 points on 3-pointers on Kansas Jay hawks on stop .the momentum when it
during the first-half barrage Saturday.
gets going.
that gave the eighth-ranked
"If we're not ready to run . "That was the biggest
Spartans the lead.for a good in that game, we're going to thing tonijlht we weren't
in a 67-58 win over Ohio get run o~t of . the gym able to do.'
State on Tuesday night.
becaase they're very athletThe Buckeyes led 17-13
, "We were up and we let ic';" lzzo sa1d. "We have to with 8 minutes left before
our guard down," Buckeyes get freshened up.''
Michigan State took control.
forward Evan Turner said.
Ohio State's
William
Freshman Korie Lucious
"They got shots all over the Buford scored 17, B.J . made a 3-pointer, Chris
perimeter and the momen- Mullens had 16 points and Allen followed with one,
Turner added 14.
Lucas broke a tie with a 3,
. tum changed."
Michigan State has won
The Buckeyes (10-3 , 1-2) connected on another and
eight straight since being have lost three of four after Raymar Morgan's long
routed by North CaFolina . starting 9-0, hurting without jumper made it 29-20 with
and 26 in a row at home,. their most e'xperienced play- just under 5 minutes left in
dating to a loss against Ohio er, David Lighty, who is out the half.
State nearly two. ye.ars ago, with a broken foot .
Essentially , the Spartans
but coach Tom Izzo was
Ohio State doesn't have a lived off that 2-minute, 49underwhelmed by the latest senior on the roster or a second sequence ,for the rest
victory .
player left from the 2006 of the game.
"We looked tired and· we nauonal championship team .
"We got caught standing
played tired," lzzo ,said.
"We've got several guys
"We' re going to have our that just played. their second Please see Buckeyes, 12

�OHIO \

The Daily Sentinel
•
•

AHOA£W

ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

The phone was used twice
in Columbus after her death.
COLUMBUS -- Ohio
and one of the calls \fts juries sentenced three peoDAYTON A man made to a cell phone pie to death last year,
arrested in the slaying of a YbeJonging to Myers, which matching the lowest numyoung mother and the abduc- led investigators to · his ber since the state re-enactlion ~ he~ 4-_y~-()ld son apartment, according to ~ ed capiial punishment 27
remruned m J8Il Tuesday • affidavit filed in Franklm years ago.
wbiJt: ~ighbors remembered County Municipal Court.
Records show the number
the VIctun as a devoted mom
Investigators recovered of people indicted with capwhohltdquit~rjobatagro- the cell phone , a laptop ita! crimes in Ohio is also
a:ry store to raJse the boy.
computer and a Playstation lower than in past decades.
The house where the 2~- 2 video game system that
Ohio has 179' people on
year-()Jd woman was fatally were similar to items stolen death row, the lowest figure
api?Cared . empty from the family 's Dayton in several years. The. state
shot
Thesday, With a fishing rod home , the affidavit said .
has executed 28 defendants
and parr of men's boo!s on
Detectives also found since 1999.
the porch. A!J in~r fl~ printed di rections to · the _ Prosecutors attribute the
the scene Friday ru~t With ·home, a shotgun and shell s, decline in death sentences
her son and drove him to an bloody underwear and a to reduced crime rates and
lnterstat~ 70 rest area m cen- bag containing keys to the court decisions that have
tral O~o. when: travelers couple 's Honda, the affi- narrowed the eligibility for
found him wandering around. davit said .
the death penalty.
. Neighbor Steve Hopkins
The H~nda . had , been
They also say the availabilsaid the_ woman's son meant reported stolen in from an ity qfa sentence of life withOhio State parking garage out the possibility of parole is
ev,erythmg to her. . .
'Tha! V:~ her enure hfe, 00 Dec. 17 . The husband leading juries to sentence
!~at ,kid, Hopkms said . told police the car was fewer people to death.
You d see them. walking unlocked and the keys had
Another factor: what one
down ~e stret;!· .That was been left inside along with veteran prosecutor calls the
.
his wallet, which contained "CSJ factor,'' or impatience
her moiivaiJon .
The man arrested 10 the · three . credit cards and his on jurors' part when evi~la)'l~g. C~~he Myers, 2~. Social
Security
card. dence at trial isn't as
remame~ . m a · Fmnkhn according to a police report. splashy as what they see on
County Jail m Columbus. .
Police recovered the car TV crime shows.
Meanwhile , prosecuto~ m Friday near the family's
"You . have juries who
Dayton _filed ~arges agamst home in Dayton but said they expect more , so you may ·
Myers, ~ludinll aggravated were still investigating not get as many ~ople senmurder, kidn~pmg and ~ss . whether there is connection. tenced to death,' Trumbull
sexual unposiiion mvolvmg a
child under I ~. They had no!
deCided whether to seek the
death penalty.
The Associated Press is
rio longer identifying the
family so as not to identify
the victim of an alleged sexual assault. ·
Montgomery · County
· Sheriff Phil Plummer said
Monday that Myors confessed to his involvemeot in
the crime. While not elaborating, Plummer said he
believes · Myers · was the
only person in the family 's
•Waverly • Big Bend Pomeroy, OH
house and that Myers ·
abducted the boy.
.
• Ripley (WV) • Marietta
Investigators were look•Jackson
ing at several possible .
motives, including robbery.
It wasn't clear if Myers had .
an attorney.
Plummer has credited the
4-year-old boy with providing a descripuon of the gunman that aided in the investigation .
Hopkins, 41, described
the boy as a precocious kid
quick to make friends, even
with adults.
· ·
"When he met you , he
knew you;" Hopkins said,
adding that the boy would
Ea.
greet him on the street with
e. "How you doing, Stever'
"I've got a little 11-foot
boat, and the first time he
saw that boat he's like , 'I
· want to go fishing with
you,"' Hopkins recalled. .
· Hopkins said the woman's
husband worked at a grocery
store and a bar/restaurant.
He shoveled the neighbors'
sidewalks when it snowed ·
11b. bag
and brewed beer at home.
"He's a really rood guy,"
Hopkins said. "It s just tragic. It's a sad , sad thing."
Myers had the slain mother's cellphone in his apartment when investigators
came to question .him
· Sunday evemng, court documents show.

Bv JAMES HANNAH

\

1

•

'

I

'

Wednesday, January 7, 2009

Neighbors: Slain_Ohio Ohio matches record-low 3 death sentences in '08
Bv
mom was devoted·to son
WELSH-HUGGINS

I

PageA6

a

County Prosecutor Dennil capital defendants to life pie found to have been
Walkins said Tuesday,
without the possibility of wrongly convicted.
· The three inmates senOhio juries sentenced three parole .
people to death in 1982, the
In 2005 , the law chan~ed tenced to death in Ohio in
fU"Stfullyearthedeathpenal- again, this time allowmg 2008:
'Bennie
Adams,
'•
ty was in place following the prosecutors to seek a life
state 's enactmetlt of a new without parole sentence Mahoning County. Adams,
capital punishment law the without first seeking a death 51 , was found guilty of
aggravated murder in the
previous fall .
sentence .
cold-case
strangulation
The numberjumi'C!d to 16
That option made life
in 1984 and hit a high of 24 without parole even more death of Gina Tenney,
in 1985.
popular. The prison system whose frozen body was
Deatl\ sentences have admitted . I 04 defendants found in the ·Mahoning
been in the single digits in serving Jife without parole River in December 1985.
Ohio since 2003 when 12 from 2005 through 2008, a
• Phillip Jones, Summit
sentences were banded out. 38 percent increase over the County. Jones, 38, convictLast year's low figure is four years before the law . ed in the April 2007 slaying
· of Susan Marie Christillllconsistent with a deep took effect .
national decline in death
Over the same time, pros- Yates, 33 , at Mount Peace
sentences.
ecutors sought fewer death Cemetery in Akron.
North Carolina had just sentences to begin with in
• Calvin Neyland Jr. ,
one death sentence last year, Ohio , from a high of 97 in Wood County. Neyland, 43,
the lowest since· the U.S . - 2004 to 69 last year, accord- convicted of gunnin~ down
Supreme Court declared ing to data analyzed by the manager Doug Srmth and
capital punishment constitu- Ohio
State
Public retired Pennsylvania state
tiona! in 1976.
trooper Thomas La2ar in
Defender's Office.
Texas, with the nation's
Before
life
without August 2007 . at Liberty
outside
busiest death chamber, had parole, some juries said they Transportation
II death sentences, tied for chose a death sentence Toledo.
the lowest in the past 30 because they worried a con- .,
years.
victed killer would someday
Both states have enacted go free on parole, said
life without parole laws in Theresa Haire, deputy
recent years .
director of the Ohio Public
Nationally, preliminary Defender's office .
.
figures show Ill death sen"Nowthat they have life
tences last year, the lowest without parole, they're
www.mydallysentlnel.com
since 1976.
more willing to impose
·Death sentences in Ohio that," she said.
have been on a decline since
She also said jurors have
1996 when lawmakers gave . been influenced by increased
jurors the option to sentence publicity over innocent peo-

Your online
source for new$

•

Boneless, Skinless

hic.ke.n

49

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UOSSPORJsOMVDAI..VSENTINEI..COM

.-at-~8p.m.

..

WI

••

5p.m.

n:.:am·

"!!''lllllll at Parloo&lt;sbulv ~
p.m.

Glrla 8117 •
- . , at Trimllla, 6 p.m.
IMigo at Alllonl, 6 p.m.

7:30

7

R.ve- at - - 7,30
'p.m.
.
-Valley at Coal ClnMI, 6 P.m.
- a t - . Hocking, 6 p.m.

..._,......,,0

.
...,. ...h ...U
d.elpro at Southam (Moriolta), TElA
N6w Boston at South Galla. 0 p.m.
.

Glrte 8111 T'blll

GAHS had seven players
score in the setback. mcluding a team-high eight points
GALLIPOLIS - From from both Nick Mitchell
start to finish , visiting and John Troester, Quinton
Chillicothe - the defending Nibert , Jared Golden and
Division II state champion Chuck Calvert each added
- had too much firepower three. poi'nts, while . Evan
for Gallia Academy to han- Wood and Chris. Armstrong
die Thesday night during a rounded out the scoring
53-28 boys basketball victo- with respective point totals
ry in a Southeastern Oh.io of two and one.
Athletic League South
Armstrong and Kyle
. Division matchup in the Old -Mitchell - the Devils topFrench City.
two scorers this ·season The Cavaliers (4-2, 2-1 · combined for one point in
SEOAL South) stormed out the loss . The hosts were also
to a 15-5 lead after eight 5-of-13 from the free throw
minutes of play, then went line for 38 percent.
Chillicothe had six playon a Be7 second quarter run
to take a 28-12 intermission ers score in the triumph, led
by Ron Smith with a gameadvantage.
Both teams went oil the high 23 points. Seth Dawes
defensive in the third canto, was next with II markers,
scoring just four points followed by Caleb Knights
apiece to make it a 32-16 with eight and Mike Turner
.score headed into the finale. with six .
CHS outscored the Blue
CHS also claimed a 40-30
Devils (3-5, 0-3) by a 21-12 victory in the junior varsity
clip in the fourth to secure game , while the GAHS
the 25-point outcome.
freshmen posted the lolie
STAFF REPORT

OMan · ; r

~-..yet~

Cavs control Blue Devlls, 53-28

.

•

'

r

'

CHIWCOTHE 53,
GALUA AcADEMY 28
Chillicothe 15 13
Gallipolis s 7

4
4

21 12 -

.
53
28

CHILLICOTHE (4·2. 2·1 SEOAL Sout11):
Brandon B&lt;Nerly 0 ().() 0, Caleb Knights .
3 2·5 8. Mike Turner 3 0-2 6, Grogg Van
Volkinburg 1 1·2 3, Landon Beverly 0 ().()
0, James Van Voomis 0 O..Q 0, Ron Smith
10 3-3 23. Jalen Ragland 0 0-0 o. Eric
Young 0 o-o 0. Seth Danos 4 3-3 11.
Shay NeHOf 1 D-0 2. TOTALS· 22 i&gt;-15
53. Three-point goals: None.
GALLIA ACAOEMY (3-5, 0-3 SEOAL .
Sou1h): Corey Eberhard 0 0-0 o. Jordan
Cornwell o 0.0 0, Quinton Nibert 1 o-2 3.
Ethan Moore 0 0'0 0, Nick MilcheD 3 2·6
8, Chris Armstrong 0 1·21 , Evan WOOd 1
o-o 2. Kyle Mitchell 0 0-0 0, Jared Golden
1' ().() 3. Chud&lt; Cai\/Srt I o-o 3, Beau
Wh11Jay 0 o-o 0, Zeke Maher 0 o-o o.
John Troester 3 2·3 8. TOTALS' 10 5· I 3
28. Three--point goals: 3 (Nibert. Golden.
Colvert)

RedStorm edged
on the·road in
AMCOpener
BY MARK WILLIAMS
SPECIAL TO THE SENTINEL

CEDARVILLE·- It was
a classic battle of a pair of
NAJA Divison II Top 10
teams as No. 5 Rio Grande
and No. 9 Cedarville
squared off in the American
Mideast Conference opener
oil Saturday at the Callan
Athletic Center.
.In a' back-and-forth affair,
Cedarville used its defense
to hold off Rio Grande off
66-64 and avenged an early
.Sjlason 70-65 loss that Rio
Grande handed to them in
December, the only loss of
the season to date for the
Yellow Jackets. ·
· Rio Grande (12-5, 0-1
AMC) stayed close with the
~tside shooting of junior
off-guard PJ. Rase and
. another Herculean effort in
t}te paint from senior for"
w.ard
Brandon
Ivery.
Despite the stellar play of
Rase and Ivery it was not
enough
to
overcome
Cedarville a second time
.
around. .
Rase nailed six trifectas
for the second time in three
games, en route to scoring,
a game-high'· 25 points
while Ivery posted another
double-double with 19
points and 14 rebounds. ·
Senior
center
Will
Norwell was back in the

· PBuH • • Rio, 12

P;YL holding youth
hoops tournament

Tornadoes breeze past
BY

Scan WOLFE

SPORTS CORRESPONDENT

Larry Crumlphoto

Gallia Academy's Zeke Maher is surrounded by Chillicothe
defenders during the second half of Tuescfay night's SEOAL
boys basketball game in Gallipolis.

..RUTLAND
The
Pomeroy YQuth League
will be holding a 4th, 5th
l!lld 6tlr grade basketball
t~urnament in separate
djvisions - both boys and
gtrls - at the Rutland
Civic Center on Monday,
:fanuary
26,
through
Sunday, February 8.
; :Each tournament will be
dou.ble eliminl\rion and no
all-star teams will be permitted.
· For more information
. qontact Ken at (740) 992~ .
5322 or (740) 416-6648, or .
call Dennis at (740) 4470021.

1-740-446-2342 ext. 33

mdssports Omydailysentlnel.com ·

Staff

Bry~~n Walters
(740) 446-2342,' oxt. 33
bwallars 0 mydallytrlbuna.com

LlrryCrum
(740) 446-2342, oxt. 33
Ierum 0 mydallyreglater.com

romps past
Wahama·

.Buckeyes fall to Michigan State

CoNTACT US

Sparta

uders, 11·54 ·Buffalo

RACINE - Blitzing to a
37-15 halftime lead, the
Southern Tornadoes (6-1) of
BY GARY CLARK
Coach Jeff Caldwell posted
SPORTS CORRESPONDENT
a convincing 71.-54
BUFFALO, W.Va. - The
Tri-Valley
Wahama White Falcon basConference
ketball woes continued
interdiviTuesday night when the ·
sional vicBend Area cage team
tory over
dropped
its fifth straight
the Meigs
game to a talented Buffalo
Maraud.e rs
Bison squad. The outing
( 3 - 4 )
was nowhere near as close
Tuesday
as the final score might
night
in
indicate as the Putnam
Southem:s·
County team constructed a
Charles W.
huge first half edge before
Hayman
coasting to a· 64-43 win
Gymnaover the visiting White
sium.
Falcons.
Southern
Wahama fell for the fifth
placed four
. consecutive outing since
in
men
winning its season opener
double figagainst Hannan and now
ures, led by
stands at 1-5 on the young
B r y a n
2008~ 09 hardwood season.
Harris with
Once again turnovers , a iack
Hill
16, Weston
of rebounding strength and
Roberts 14, Brad Brown 10,
poor shooting plagued
and Sean Coppick IO.Jt was
Coach James Toth 's charges
·this great effort and balance
as the taller Bisons capitalthat led to Southern's sucized on the Falcons inconcess. Michael Manuel added ·
sistencies while shooting a
nine points, Cyle Rees
blistering 75 percent from
·three, Dustin Salser three,
the field during the opening
and two each from Taylor
two quarters of basketball
Deem, Zach Manuel, and
action. WHS
had
18
John Brauer.
All 10
turnovers and shot a dismal
Southern players hit the
22 percent (4-of- 18) during
scoring column .
· first half play.
Meigs was led by a dazBuffalo raced to an
zling 21-point effort from
incredible 35-10 first half
Gabe Hill. Hill's effort
advantage after connecting
deserves an asterisk as 19 of
on 15 of its 20 field goal
those markers came in the
tries while WHS experisecond half. Jacob Well by
enced overwhelming diffivirtue of two NBA- style
culties putting the ball
three pointers notched 14.
through the basket. The
84Yan Waharalphoto White Falcons scored only
Cameron Bolin nine, Corey
flutton· six, Seth Wells two, Southern's Sean Coppick releases a shot attempt over the outstretched arm of Meigs' one bucket in the first peridefender Jacob Well (15) during the first half of Tuesday night's boys basketball game at
Please see Breeze, 12
Please see Wahama, 12
Charles W. Hayman Gymnasium in Racine.

or E-nt~~ll'

We reserve the right to limit quantities and are not responsible for typographical or pictorial errors. Prices Good through January 10, 2009

horne win on the evening
with a 44-43 decision in
overtime.
Gallia Academy returns to
the hardwood Friday when
it travels to the Apple City
for another SEOAL South
Division
contest
with
Jackson. The freshmen contest will tip-off at 5 P·l!,l ·

o.ltla Academy at .-.on, 6 p.m.

FIX'ItUIItbor: 1.·740-446-3008

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COLUMBUS (AP) Ohio Gov. Ted Strickland
has followed through on
·threats to veto three bills
passed by Republicans in
the final month of the pre vi. ous legislative session .
Strickland, a Democrat, .
vetoed bills TUesday that
would have shrunk the
state's early voting period
and paid for veterans' bonuses using the state's rainy day
fund . The governor also
vetoed a bill that would have
provided tax credits for
movies filmed in Ohio.
Strickland signed 37 other
bills into law, including a
bill that maintains a workers' compensation system
that provides . discounted
rates to businesses that pool
in groups.
· Republicans no longer
control both the House and.
Senate in the new legislature that opened Monday.
Democrats took control of ·
the House for the first time
in 14 years .

Wednesday, January 7, 2009

MoiQO at River V1111ey, 6 p.m.

Red Or

Governor
vetoes 3 GOPsponsored bills

W.O'sthe ral No.I!' . . . B6

aves at Southern, 1 p.m.

Product

Bl

tre.D dow1l WVU,Pap B6 .

online at

Mini Carrots

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_The Daily Sentinel

AP photo

Michigan State's Kalin Lucas (1) tri.e s to maneuver'against
pressure from Ohio State's P.J. Hill , rear, during the first ·tia.lf
of an NCAA college men's basketball game Tuesday in
East Lansing, Mich .

EAST LANSING, Mich . first day off tomorrow in a Big Ten road game and
(AP) - Michigan State couple of weeks and that you're trying to teach them
made five 3-pointers in less will be good for all of us."
the how and the why," coach
than 3 minutes, making up
Then, Michigan State ( 12- Thad Matta said . "We try to
for what was otherwise a 2, 3-0 Big Ten) will start explain to our guys that
lackluster performance .
preparing for a visit from the there are momentum swings
Kalin Lucas scored six of defending national. champi.- and. you 've got to be able to
his 20 points on 3-pointers on Kansas Jay hawks on stop .the momentum when it
during the first-half barrage Saturday.
gets going.
that gave the eighth-ranked
"If we're not ready to run . "That was the biggest
Spartans the lead.for a good in that game, we're going to thing tonijlht we weren't
in a 67-58 win over Ohio get run o~t of . the gym able to do.'
State on Tuesday night.
becaase they're very athletThe Buckeyes led 17-13
, "We were up and we let ic';" lzzo sa1d. "We have to with 8 minutes left before
our guard down," Buckeyes get freshened up.''
Michigan State took control.
forward Evan Turner said.
Ohio State's
William
Freshman Korie Lucious
"They got shots all over the Buford scored 17, B.J . made a 3-pointer, Chris
perimeter and the momen- Mullens had 16 points and Allen followed with one,
Turner added 14.
Lucas broke a tie with a 3,
. tum changed."
Michigan State has won
The Buckeyes (10-3 , 1-2) connected on another and
eight straight since being have lost three of four after Raymar Morgan's long
routed by North CaFolina . starting 9-0, hurting without jumper made it 29-20 with
and 26 in a row at home,. their most e'xperienced play- just under 5 minutes left in
dating to a loss against Ohio er, David Lighty, who is out the half.
State nearly two. ye.ars ago, with a broken foot .
Essentially , the Spartans
but coach Tom Izzo was
Ohio State doesn't have a lived off that 2-minute, 49underwhelmed by the latest senior on the roster or a second sequence ,for the rest
victory .
player left from the 2006 of the game.
"We looked tired and· we nauonal championship team .
"We got caught standing
played tired," lzzo ,said.
"We've got several guys
"We' re going to have our that just played. their second Please see Buckeyes, 12

�'

Pqe Ba • The Daily Sentinel

-.mydailysentinel.com

.

Wednesday, January 7, 2009

www.mydallysentlnel.com

Sissonvile outlasts Knights, 56-51
The Indians (4-2} were led
in scoring by Caleb Keller
with 19 points. while Kyle
POINT
PLEASANT, Snyder added 15 markers.
W.Va. - From the start of Cody Miller was ne~tt for the
the season the new Point visitors with seven points .
Pleasant Big Blacks have followed by Lucas Walker
shown that this isn"t the same with six points. Robbie
Hamilton with four points,
Point team of old.
· And they cootinued to dis- Chris Kelly with three points
play their new colors and Jo&amp;h Holley with two
Thesday night.
points . .
Despite a 13 point halftime
Behind Lloyd, Tyler Deal
deficit, the Big Blacks bat- was next with II points.
tied back and tied the contest , Tyson Jones added six points
'against Sissonville with six and a team-high eight
minutes to go before a late rebounds. Kylenn Criste had
surge by the Indians pro- five poiJits. Jacob Templeton
pelled the visitors to a 56-51 had four points and seven
victory Tuesday night in boards and Drake Nolan.
Point Pleasant.
Nathan Wedge, Je Waan
In years paSt a 13 point Williams
and
C?cty
halftime deficit would have Greathouse had two pomts
almost assuredly spelled .apiece.
defeat for Point Pleasant (2Point ,Pleasant carne out a
. 2), but this year's t~am has little flat to Slaf! Tu~sday's
breathed new life mto the contest as the lndians Jumped
prognun and it has shown up ·out front early and pushed
m the on-court effort.
their lead to 19-1 4 at the end
Senior BJ . Lloyd led the of one quarter.
.
Sissonville lhen caught fire
second half rally with 17
points including a trio of in the second. holding Point
three pointers, but his effort Pleasant to just eight points
came up just short as while posting 16ofitsownto
Sissonville put the game extend the Indian lead to 35away with a series of clutch. 22 at the break.
In the second half the Big
shots in the final moments of
the fourth quarter.
Blacks came out with an
BY LARRY CRUM

•

.

•

•

''
;

· LCRJMO¥Yor.II.YREG1STER.COM

Wahama
fromPageBl
od, a three point goal by
Zack Whitlatch, and failed
to perform much better
over the next two stanza's
as ·Buffalo had their way
throughout the evening .
"I'm pretty discouraged
and really frustrated right
now following our disappointing shoWing," a dejected Wahama coach James
Toth said after the blowout.
"The game wasn 'I even
close and we have a lot of
work to accomplish in order
to get better and that begins
with our practices. We've
simply have to work harder
and try and. overcome the
negative atmosphere that
· we 've put ourselves in to
added .the Falcons head
mentor.',
. Buffalo placed four players in double digit scoring
with Corey Good leading
the way with 15 markers on
_the night. Schuyler Frazier
and Andrew Angle tallied
lJ points apiece while
Nathan Winterstein scored
10 in the Bison victory.
Garrett Burdette added
seven , Cody Parkins six
and Tyler. Allen, and Evan
Childers two each to
account for Coach Chuck
Elkins offense in the outing.
Wahama placed just · one
scorer in double ·figures
with freshman Isaac Lee
coming off the bench to
score a game high 18 points
on the day. Sophomore
Ryan Lee had seven points
with Kyle 'Zerkle and Matt
Arnold
notching five
apiece.
Tyler Kitchen added four
pqints,
Zack Whitlatch
three
and
Garret
Underwood one for the
White Falcons. Isaac Lee
netted all of his 18 markers
in the second half with 13 of

Buckeyes
from Page Bl .
during that stretch," Matta
said. "Give them credit
making five straight 3s was
huge ."
Morgan, the reigning Big
Ten player of the week, had
13 points and I0 rebounds
for his third straight doubledouble . Gorail Suton had
nine points and nine
rebounds for the Spartans,
who moved a half-game
ahead of Wisconsin atop the
conference.
Michigan State started the
season rarlked sixth, rose to
fifth and plummeted as low
as No. 19 following a 35point loss to the Tar Heels
and an 18-point setback
against Maryland.
The Spartans have started
io display some of their
potential "recently because
Suton is back in the lineup
after missing six games

those coming in a 26 point
.
fourth quarter.
Buffalo led by a convincing 20-3 margin at the first
tum and extended- its edge
to 35-10 at the half before
stretching its bulge to 56-17
going into the final quarter.
The Bison bench finished
out the contest with
Wahama closing the gap to
a more respectable margin
thanks to a 26-8 difference
over the final eight minutes.
The preliminary game
was a much closer affair
with Kevin Back nailing a
three pointer with just six
· seconds to play to give the
Little Falcons its second
win in a row with a thrilling
48-45 triumph.
D .J. Gibbs paced the
WHS junior varsity unit
with II points while Matt
Arnold popped in 10 for
the Wahama junior varsity
cagers. Back's game win-.
ning three point shot was
his only.bucket of the night.
Justin Shelton paced the
Baby Bison attack with a
team high nine points in the
contest.
The White Falcons will
try and reverse its recent.
misfortunes when , they
return to action on Thursday
at Parkersburg Catholic
before returning home for a
home date with Calhoun
County on Friday.

SISSONVILLE 56, POINT 51
Sissonville 19 16 to
Point
· 14 8 15

11 14 -

«rtbune - Sentinel - l\egititer
C LA S S I f ·I E D
Point
Pteasanfs
JeWaan

Williams
dribbles
pasta
SissonviU
e defender during
the first
half of
Wednesd
ay night's
boys basketball
game in
Point

· E-mail
c~ified@ mydailytribune.com

56
51

•

Or Fax To (740)446-3008

Dal

Monday thru . Friday
8:00 a.m. to 5:00 ·p.m.

~aJ ) .

HOW

I.0

!!WI. 6tj 6ll

Or Fax To

992-2157

only to .return and suffer
another injury. In last
week's loss to Warren,
Bolin injured his left wrist
and may be out for 5-6
weeks.
Meigs hit 21-45 two's, 621 three's, (27-66 overall)
and was 0-4 at the line .
Southern hit 19-42 two's, 623 three 's (24-65 overall)
and was 10-14 at the line ..
Meigs had 37 rebounds (C.
Bolin 9).19 turnovers, eight
assists .(Jeremy Smith 4),
one sieal, four blocks (Bolin
2), and 16 foul'S. Southern
had 21 rebounds (Harris 7,
Roberts 5), giving up 16
caroms to the Marauders,
had ten steals (Coppick 3,
Brown 2), 16 assists
(Brown 6, Deem 3. Rees 3),
one charge, ten turnovers •.
and seven fouls.
Southern won the reserve
game 40-36 and is currently
5, I on the season under
Coach Kyle Wickline.
Southern was led by Dustin
Salser with 15 points ;
Ethan Martin had eight, and
Zach Manuel seven . Meigs
was led by Ryan Taylor
with nine, Seth wells "eight
and Cody Mattox with six .
Southern goes to Miller
Friday and to Marietta
College for a tentative 4:30
start against Belpre. The
. boys varsity . game will
immediately follow the
Marietta
Piorieer-John
Carroll University college
game. Th~ Southern-Belpre
reserve game will immediately follow the varsity
game.

Rj§plpy· Ad;s

.

In-Column: 9:00 a.m.

All Display: 12 Noon 2

Monday-Friday for Jn. .rtion

•ualn- Days Prior To

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&amp;

iistings 304_674 .0023
B00-620-4876 ex V435
_
.one

Electric No

mon . old Boxers wl paper~ 1·800 -537-9528.
304 610
I fawn/ I hrindle,\'ery pluy· ~-~~"'!!"'!"'"'!"""ru t
SH.IO.Oil
· each Moving Sale: Sofa $400, -;;;;;;;;;'W..;ant;;;;;;J;i;o;i;Buy;i;;;~- Unfurnished
304· ~'J3-2MI.
coffee table &amp; 2 end ta· ~
apartment ·
Want to buy Junk Cars, water/trash
$
$4
300
AKC Golden Retriever bles
· end table o, call740 388 0884
$3

6

inside

pets,

call

or .:.:74;,: ().;:2;:;56:;,·6:;:2; :02:;. .___
Tbr.

1 \'!u .

w/exp ndn.
11

. 5400.00 a mnn. +$-I(NHXl
upsta1rs dep ?oll-1 -fl 75 4 1m nr
stoveffridge 7 40_44 rJ .t~Yt~9
included ~~;;;;,;;;,;,.._.;...__
2BR 1 bath nice home
50. mo. + , deposit re- I
quirect. 44 6. 9872 or or
1·2
persons
water/trash included in
446-7620
;;;;;;.;,;;;;;,----- rent NO P~:rs John·
2 br .. $350 mo. plus de- sons M
obile Home Perk.
posit &amp; utllitif3s. no pets, 740·645-0506
3rd
St.,
Rac.ine, ~F;;ed;.:;;;,l
;:;F;::;:d~~
- ~era
un s JUSt
re·
f74::;G-:;,:2;;:4:,;7·;:;429~2~"'!"~· leased for Land OWners.
Beech . Street M
iddle· No. closing cosl ano
port. 2 bedroom fur· ZERO DOWN! Will do
nlshed apartment, utili· land
Improvements.
ties pald , no pets, de· Bankruptcy &amp; Bad Credit·
posit
&amp;
references, OK. 2. 3, 4 and 5 · bed·
(740)992·0165
rooms
available.
:;.;;;:;;;;;;~-..--~
Middleport, 1 br. apt. big c7,; 40;. ·4:.;4; ,6·; ;3384;;.;,___~
rooms, front yard, stove -2BR &amp; 3BR mobile home ·
&amp; refrigerator furnished , for rent. 367·7762 or
Ouil, $450 mo. plus de· 446·4060
posit, No pels. No smok· ~~:::;:,~~~~ing, 740-992-5181
2 BA on Bailey Run Rd.
;~.:.::~;;,;;::;:;.:___ Meigs
Co. $400/mo
Beautiful Apto. 11 Jack· $400/dep. No pels. 2BR
son Estate•. 52 West- near RVHS $400/mo
wood Dr.. hom S365 10 $400/dep. No pe1s.
$560.
740·446·2566. 367-7025
Equal h.Housing
Opportu·
~~~fltl"·
. .
.
3BRh 2 ba .,.on..;.~~~
farm
nity. T IS .lnSIIIUIIOn
IS an
. $750
1 m
Equa1 0ppo rtum-1y p ro· 540-729·1331
mt . ut1111es
cluded.

!ridge $75, stereo $50.
- .
dresser &amp; night stand
$150. lwln poster bed
Legalo ........................................................... 100 Recreational Vehlc1es ............................... 1000
$200. all items OBO. Call
Announcementa ..........:............................... 200 ATV ............................................................. 1005
740-441 -0988
or !!!!!!!!!!!!!!;;;;;;!;;;;;;!;;;;;;!!!;
Blrthday/Anntveroary................. ................205 Blcyclea...................................................... 1010
Happy Ads .............................:...................... 210 Boats/Acceuorleo .................................... 1015
740-645·2376
•-'.H~o;;u~IU;;;;Fa~r~Sal.~;;;;;;;
•
Loot &amp; Found ....:.......................................... 215 Camper/RVo &amp; Trol1ero .....:....................... 1020
~-~~~~~- 11 82 Sandhill Act, Pt
Memory/Thank You ..................................... 220 Motorcycles .......................... ,.................... 1025
74=().=4=46~·~38:9~7~~~~ NEW AND USED STEEL
Notlces ......................................................... 225 Other .......................................................... 1030
:
~... Pleasant. 3br, 2 bath.
Slee I •-·
&lt;:&gt;t:fl:lms, p·1pe Aevar
Personal&amp; ..................................................... 230 Wont to buy ...............................................1035 ·
Concrete Angle, One ·story, · Hardwood
Wanted ........................................................ 235 Automo11ve ................................................ 2000
?On
Agr1~u lure for
Channel· Flai Bar· Steel 11oors. $153,999, Musl
Services .....................................................:. 300 Auto Renlallleaaa ..................................... 2005
Grating for Drains. Onve - See!
www.orvb.com
Appt1ance Servlce .......................................302 Au1oa .......................................................... 2010
ways &amp; Walkways. L&amp;L 304·675-4880
Automotive .................................................. 304 Clooolc/Antlquea ....................................... 2015
Fann Equipment
Scrap "'elals Open Mon. !"'"~~~~~~~
Bul1dlng Materials ....................................... 306 Commerclalllnduo!rlal .............................. 2020 . ~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;i;*-~~~
T e Wed &amp; Fr· 3 Bed, 2 Ba1h' Only
Business ...................................................... 308 Parts &amp; Accesaorlea.................................. 2025
EBY,
INTEGRITY, Bam-4:30pm.
u .
Closed'· $19..900 lor listings
Ca1erlng ........................................................310 Sports Utlllty.............................................. 2030
Child/Elderly Care ....................................... 312 Trucko......................................................... 2035
KVAIELFELEAY BUIL:H!O, ASEILIVE·· Thurs, Sat &amp; Sun. 800·62().4946 e)( R019
Computero .......•........................................... 314 Udt1ty Trallers ............................................ 2040
740·446·7300
Contract()ra .....................~........................... .316 Vana ............................................................ 2045
STOCK
TRAILERS,
Lanci(Acreage)
LOAD MAX EQUIP·
Want To ~uy
Domestlca/Janhalla1 .......................... ;........ 318 want to buy .................................:............. 2050
MENT
TRAILERS, ;;;;;;;;;;;""";;;;;;~;i;;;;;;;;;;;; Looking tor land to lease
Elec1rlcal .......................................... ,........... 320 Roo1 Eatalo Saleo ...................................... 3000
Flnancfat .......................................................322 Cememry Plo!o...,...................................... 3005
CARGO EXPRESS &amp; ARTIST wanls 10 buy lor deer . hunling 1·300
Heal1h ......................... l·································326 Commerclal ....c...................................:....... 3010
HOMESTEADER
Large Gray Slates.Call acres. Will pay cash.
., Healing&amp; Caollng ....................................... 328 Condomlnlums.......................................... 3015
CARGO/CONCESSION 252·729·9311··-·-Leave
865-363·3305
Home lmprovementil 330
For Sole by Owner..................................... 3020
TRAILERS.
B+W
Message.
lnaurance ......................................... .•........... 332 Houus tor Sale ................................. .. ...... 3025
GOOSEN'c:"CK FLATBE.u~.
. Lawn Sorvtce .....:...........:............................. 334 · Land (Acreage) .......................................... 3030
$3
999. VIEW OUR EN
Mualc1Danci!I!Dr'ama .................................... 336 Lots ............................................................ 3035
TIRE TRAILER INVEN· Absolute Top Dollar . sit- ;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;
Other Servlcea ............................................. 338 Wsn11o buy ................................................ 3040
TORY Ar
verlgold coins, any
,vid;::e::,r,:an;;;d:.;E;;;m,;::P;,;;Io~ye::,r·-- ;:~~~~~~~
Ptumblng/Eioc1rtco1 ..................................... 340 Real Eoblle Rentelo ...................................3500
10K/14K/16K
gold lew·
•"ar1menll/
•Clean 1 br. tum apart· Mobile home Ad a msvil~
ProfeBSional Servlcea................................. 342 Apartmenta/Townhou- ......................... 3505
WWW.CARMICH.AEL'
·
.,.
ell)4, dental gold, pre
TownhouMI
$375/mo + dep. NO
.Aepalra ..................................,...................... 344 Commercla1................................................ 3510
TRAILERS.COM
ment, dep. Ref req. call Rd.
1935
US
currency,
-;;;;;;;;;.;;;~i;;;~;;;;;;PETS.
Call after 5.
Raollng ......................................................... 348 Condomlnlums ................................. .......... 3515
740·446-3825
·~~~~ 446-4562 lea'lle.meSsage
proof/mint sets, dia· ..1 and 2 bedroom apts .. ~304::;;:·6:.:,7,;;;5·,;;29~7;:;0
~
Socurlty ........................................................ 348 Houses lor Ront ........................................3520
mends. MTS Coirl Shop. tumlshed and unfur- Gracious Living h and 2 JBA Dbl
.d
n
To'-'Accountlng .... ,...................................... 350 Lend (Acreage) .......................................... 3525
Travel/Entertainment .......................... :....... 352 S1orage .......................................................3535
Have y'ou priced a John 151 2nd Avenue. .Galli· nished, and hOuses n Bedroom Apts. at Village ·Pomero ·g· rea~' ~nd"t~a~
Flnanclal .......................................................400 Want to' Rent ................. .. ........................... 3540
Manor and Riverside w1th
. n1ce
.y, yard Ren1 1 1 1n~
Deere IatelY'• vo
' ' u"II be polis. 446·2842
Pomeroy
and
Middleport.
Financial Servlcea ....................................... 405 Manufactured Housing ............................. 4000
· d'. Check out our
In Middleport,
·
surpnse
security deposit required, $Apts.
to
$from
:.
. .·
Insurance ................. ,................... ............... 410 Lota .............................................................4005
327
592 _ clud~s
used
inventory
.
at
no
p9ts.740·992·2218
F
h
SJ
sh
/d
Moriey to Lend ............................................. 415 Movera .............................................. ..........4010
www.CAREO.com. Car740·992·5064.
Equal urnls lllQ ~a E!r ryer
Educatlon ....:............................·...... .............. soo Rentala ........ :.
4015
;;:;;;;;;;;;;
H
·
rt
'"'
&amp; some u 1111tu:~s lflC
0
michael
~quipment ;
1BR Apt, WID hookups, ousmg ppo un .,.
$5751mo.
No Pets. iuded
Can
Business &amp; Trade School ........................... 505 Sal&amp;l ........................................................... 4020
740·446·2412
satellite
TV incl. w/rent, Island View Motel has 441·0110 or 591·5174
lns1ructlon I Tralnlng .................................510 Suppllaa ..................................................... 4025
Camper&gt;
I RVa &amp; close to hospital. Call vacancies $35.00/Night~ For rent· br. all elec. all
Leasono .................................. ,.....................515 Wan11o Buy .... ,.......................................... 4030
Trailen
3
Hay,
Feed,
Seed,
Grain
Personal ....................................,......'............ 520 ReSort Property ......................................... 500()
740·446·0406
740·339·0362
appliances included lg.
Anlmals ......................... .. ............................. eoo Resort Property for aale ........................... 5025
For sale- 2nd cutting RV
2 br apt. 6 ml from Hot- Tara
Town house deck &amp; big, _yard
Animal Supplles .......................................... 605 Resort Property lor ren1 ........................... 5050
grass hay square bales Service at Carmich~el zer. Utililles paid. $525 + Apartments · 2BR. 1.5 304·61 2·721 4.
Horaeo..................................... ,.. ,................. 610 Employment........................ ,......................eooo
Llveatock ......................................................615 Accouhtlnglflnanclal ........... ,.. ..........:....... 6002
304-882-2537.
Trailers
dep. 740·418·5288 or bath, back patio, pool, Scenic location, conven·
Peta ...............................................................820 Admlntatratlve1Pro1eaalonal .....................6004
740-446·3625
38S·8039
Playground, (trash, sew- lent to town and at1ord·
Want 1o buy ..................................................~25 Caahlor/Ciark ............................................. eo06
.;.;.;..;.;;;;..___G__ age,
water
pd.) able. 2 &amp; 3 bedrooms
Agrtcu11ure .................. .... .............................700 Chlld/E1derly Care ..................................... 6008
- - - - - - - 2br apt. iri Rio . rande $425/rent,
$425/sec.
ava1·1able
call
R~
Servk:e . at Carmi· close to College. $375
Farm Equtpment ............. ,............................. 705 Clarlcal ....................................... ................ 6010
dep.
S3751month.
dep.
Call
740·367-0547
(740)992·5639
chael
Trailers
Ga·rden &amp; Produce ....................................... 710 Conatructlon ..............................................6012
Hay, Feed, Seed, Grain ...............................715 .. Orlvors &amp; Dollvory ........................;............ 8014
74o-446·3825
245·9060
Auctions
Commircial
SaJeo
Hunting &amp; Land .......................................c...720 Educa11on...................................................6016
2BR
APT.Ciose
to
Hoi;;;;;;;;;;;;;i;i;i;;;;iii;;,;;.;;;;;;;;;
~;;;;;;;;;;;;..i;ii;i;;;;;;;;iiii;;;;;;
Won11o buy ..................................................725 E1octrlcsl Plumblng ...................................6018
GUN SHOW &amp; SALE
zer Hospital on SA 160 2 bay service station Brand new 3bed 2bath
Merchandloo ................................................900 Employment Agencfoo .................;............6020
CHILLICOTHE. OH Jan.
CIA
. (740) 441 ·0194
Jackson Pike. Leas e on + ·hall acre in Pt.
An1lquea .......................................................905 En1ortalnmon1 ............................................8022
10 &amp;11 Adm.$4
required. Call 446-3644 Pleasant. OWNER Fl· ·
·Appllance ....................................,................910 Foad Sorvtceo.............. :.............................eo24
RosS Co. Fairgrounds ·
Auc11ons .......................................................915 Government &amp; Federal Joba ............. ,......8026
Apartment available now _to~rm_o.;,1~e~in~1o_.·~--- NANCE
AVAILABLE.
135 · 6' tbls $35 pre-paid =::=::Autv~~·=:;::; Aiverbend Ap1s. New ~
Bargain Basement ....................................... 920 Help anted· General .................................. 8028"
(7401 446·3570
740-667·0412
r
Haven WV. Now accept· Office building located in
Collectlblea .................................................. 925 Law Enlorcomon1 ...................................... 60~0
ing applications ' lor Gallipolis OH 28 Cedar Gov FundS avail. . for
Computers ......................... .......................... 930 Ma!ntenanceiDomeatlc ...............:.......... ... 6032
Fuol/ 011/ Coal I
vert1ble, 78,000 mites HUD-subsidized,
Equlpment/Suppllea....................................935 Managomont/Supervlsory ........................ 6034
one St. Rent $450 mth. + de· buyers who won land or
Flea Markets .................... ............................ 940 Mechanlca ..................... ....:........................ 8036
$4,500. 304·675·2454 1Bedroom Apts. Utilities posit. 740·256·6661
Wood/Goa .
have family land. 0 down
Fuel 011 Coa11Wood/Gaa ........................ ,.... 945 Medlcal ....................................................... 6038
included.
Based
on
30%
also
avail. tor ttrst lime
Furniture ...................................................... 950 Musical .......... ............................................. 6040
Seasoned
' F1rewood 2001 Chevy Malibu L1. of· adjusted income. Call ;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;iiii;;;;;;•
HauiU For Rant
buyers.
866-2 15-5774
Hobby/Hunt &amp; Sport ..... ,..............................955 Pert-Timo-Tomporarlaa ...~ ..........•.............. 8042
Hardwood. 446·92CJ'4
ED. 4 OR ~ uto. tpower 304-882.·3121. available ~19Qt mu' 4 bo:d . 2 hath . New 3 Bedroom homes
Kid's Corner ................ .................................960 Reetaurante ......................................... .. .... 6044
1
~--....~--....":'!":~ 'locks + windows 58,000 for Senior and ~l sabled R1ml Rtf). I! (~ 'll: llown. I 5 from $214.36 per month.
Mlacellaneoua..............................................865 Salea ...........................................................6048
Seasoned
Firewocxt
CAA
mi.
clean
$4901
l
Day
Wan! to buy.........:........................................970 Tachnlcal Tradea ....................................... eoso
. IIi
year'. ~q APR) for listinloJ~ includes many upgrades,
HEAP
accepted. 446-1615 or Even. people. ~
Yard Solo ..............&gt;... . .. . ......... .......... . ........ ... 975 Te.tl1ao/Factory ......................................... eo52
'iii
ROll-620--l'Mh e;~. R0~7
delivery · &amp;
set-up.
645 ·5~46 or441 ·0941.
446·1244
740·385·2434

· CLASSIFIED INDEX

RiO

'

·

(740) 992~2156 (304) 675-1333

Werd Ads

6. TOTALS: 18 11-16 51. Three-poinl

fromPageBl

,

l\egister

Sentinel

.·Oeacll:irec

2, Jacob Templeton 2 0·0 4, Cody
Greathouse 0 2-2 2, Tysori Jones 1 4-4

Breeze

tEribtine

··caW;:...":v... (740) 446-2342

W.Va.

. SISSONVILLE (.4-2): Lucas Walk!l&lt; 3 GO 6. Robbie Hamilton 2 CHl 4, Kyle
Snyder 4 5-6 15, Chris Kelly 1 1-4 :&gt;
Caleb Keller 8 3-4 19. Josh Hclloy 1 CHl
2. Cody Miller 31-4 7. TOTALS:22 10.18
56. Three-point goals: 2 (Snyder 2).
..
POINT PLEASANT (2·2): B..! Lloyd 7G- .
117.- Kylenn Cris1e 13-5 5, Dral&lt;e Nolan
1 CHl 2. Tyler Deal 4 2·2 11, Ne1han
Wedge 1 CHl 2, JeWaan Wiliams 1 o-2
goals: 4 (LJooj(J :&gt;

In One Week With Us
Websites:
REACH OVER 285,000 PROSPECTS :::=~~~:t~~
~~~~R~~
~~====~~~E~-----www--.m-~--i-~r_~_is_w_~_com----------~--~~

To P'ace

Pleasant,

and Caleb Davis tWo. Other
players contributing to the
Meigs effort were Jeremy
Smith with a solid floor
game, Jesse Smith, Heath
Detwiller,
and
Jon
McCarthy.
After several volleys and
possession
changes,
Southern notched the
game's first score when'.
Weston Roberts swished a
10-foot follow-up jumper at
the 7:09 mark. ·
Once again several misses
and a couple turnovers
highlighted the next minute
until Michael Manuel
cashed in on the scoring end
of a Southern fast break. . ·
Both clubs utilized an
upbeat tempo. Meigs frrst
score came on an inside
jumper off the glass at the
5:24 mark (4-2) then
Southern went on an 11-4
run to close out the period
with SHS on top 15-6. Brad
Brown had a couple twisting lay-ups and two threadBryan Walters/phOto
the-needle passes for assists Meigs' Jacob Well (15). soars for a rebound over Southern
in the drive, while Roberts defenders John Brauer (44) and Bryan Harris, left, during the
closed out the frame with a .first half of Tuesday night's boys basketball game in Racine.
long tri-fecta.·
od.
Meigs offense worked Southern led 37-15.
Meigs Coach Benny
The Meigs defense tightwell, but just could not finEwing
made
adjustments
at
.
ened
and Southern showed
ish the job in the first half.
the
half,
slowing
the
pace
of
signs
of carelessness in ball
Several inside misses hamthe game to a more deliber- handling . Never-the-less ,
I;SUFFAL064, WAHAMA 43 pered their · efforts, while ate tempo, and turning Gabe Southern took care of busiSouthern score hed the nets Hill loose on the offensive ness and led 54-36 at the
Wahama 3 7 7 . 26 - 43
on
the other end of the floor. end of the court. Meigs end of three periods after
Buffalo" 20 15 21 II - 64
The Tornadoes went on a actually outscored Southern · Harris had an eight-point
WAHAMA (1-5): Isaac Lee 6-6-9·18, 15-4 rampage to start the
39-34 in the second half, frame. Meigs ' Hill ended
Ryan Lee 3.()·1 7, Kyle l:erl&lt;la 2·1-4·5,
frame in Streaking to a 29- but the first half damage the canto with 12 markers,
Matt A:mold 2-Q-Q.S, Tyler Kitchen 2~0-0;
4, Zack Whllla1ch 1-0-0·3. Garrett 10 ·advantage at the 3:05 was just too much to over- 14 overall.
SOUTHERN 71, MEIGS 54
Underwood D-1·2-1 , Brice Clark o-o-omark
when
Gabe
Hill
drove
0. William Zuspan -0-0-0-0, Brandon
come. .
Southern never regained
Meigs
6 9 21 18 - 54
the baseline for his only . Early in the third frame , it its first half form as the
Flowers 0-()·CHJ, TOTALS 16·8·16·43
Sout11ern 15 22 17 · 17 - 71
BUFFALO (nla): Corey Good 7·1-2·15. first half score. •
appeared that Southern just Meigs tempo definitely
Andrew Angle 5- t -3-11 , Schuyler
MEIGS (3-4): Jeremy Smith 0 G-0 O.
Sean Coppick had six . might tum the game into a took away Southern 's edge Gabe
Frazier 5·1·4·11.• Nathan Winterstein 5Hill 9 0·0 21, Jesse Smllh 0 0-0 0,
o-o-10, Garren Burdene 2-3-5-7, Cody
Boiln 7 0·2 9, Jacob Well 6 0Parkins 3-o-o-e, Tyler Allen 1-G-0-2. points in the . drive, then blowour with the score at · in the upbeat game . Around Cameron
Bryan Harris hit consecu- 44-22 . Then Hill turned it the 1:00 mark Bolin hit a 2 14. Corey Hutlon 3 0-0 6, Seth Wells 1
Evan Childers 0:2·4-2, Justin Shelton o0·0 2, Caleb Davis 10·0 2. Tolals 27 0Q-0-0, ·Alex Marrs ().-()-Q-0, Greg Rose otive trifectas, and Weston
CHJ-o, ~rek MMier ().().().0, TOTALS 28· Roberts and Cyle Rees each loose with a pair of three pair of buckets around a 4 5~. Three Point Goals: Gabe three,
pointers and six mote points Seth Wells field goal that Jacob Well two, Cameron Bolin one.
8·18-64
SOUTH~RN (6·1): Cyle Re0s 1 0·0 3.
THREE·POINT GOALS: WAHAMA: 3 drilled three's.
that allowed Meigs to pull cut the lead to 70-54. Brad
Brown 3 4·6 10, Taylor Deem 1 0·
(Arnold. A. Lee. Whltlatchl, BUFFALO:
Jacob Well had two buck- at one point to 48-33. After Southern then rolled on to 0 2, Sean Copplek 4 2·3 10. Dustin
None.
'
Salser 0 S·4 3, Bryan Harris 6 2-3 16,
ets to keep Meigs' hopes a .Southem turnover, Meigs the 71-54 win. ·
Michael Manuel 4 0-0 9, Weston
alive , while Cameron Bolin had possession ~nd the
Meigs was playing with- Roberts
5 2-2 14, Zach Manuel 1 ().() 2,
drilled a three pointer. opportunity to cut the lead out the ·services of senior Jotm Brauer 1 o-o 2. Totals 24 10-14
with a knee injury.
. Three Point Goals: Bryan Harris
"Having Suton back defi- When the buzzer sounded to below 15 points for the Clay Bolin, who had been 71
tw o. Weston Roberts two , Michael
the
intermission, ·first time since the first peri- out with an earlier injury Manuel one, Cyle Rees one.
nitely makes them a real for
contender," Matta said.
Lucas, though , said .the
Spartans tacked passion
they lowered that mark by University of Rio Grande from the free throw line .
against Ohio State and
holding Rio to a 3L3 (20- RedStQrm women's .basket- Smith wa s able to get
shooting touch at the line.
of-64) . accuracy for the ball team played dead even only one shot for the
"We could've played a lot
·from Page Bl
game. The RedStonn made with NAIA Division II No . game.
· better," Lucas said. "We
~just9-of-31 shots in the sec- 18 Cedarville for 35 minCedarville (10-3, 1-0
missed a lot of free throws line-up after missing the ond half for 29 percent and · utes on Saturday afternoon . AMC). was led by Alison
It was the five minute s Lemon and Lydia Miller,
again . We can't keep doing Union game with an inJ·ury, they missed six of their last
seven
shots.
"
that.
th~Y. didn't that cost them who scored 18 points each
he scored 12 points before
.
··
&lt; 1·mg out .1ate •
h
Ricardo
Alhinan
totaled
as
Cedarville pulled away to propel the Lady Jackets
Ml.chi·gan State was 17- 10U
m t e game.
·
of-26 at the line after missCedarville's Chris Beals 15 points and II rebounds for a 73-61 victory in the to , the win. Cedarville
·lng almost · half of 1"ts, came through with a driving for
Mideast sealed th.e deal by going
H Cedarville while
ff hDerrick
b h American
attempts in the previous
h
.
.
h
cameo
I
e
enc
annon
Conference
opener
at the I0-for- 10 from the free
.
t ree' pomt P1ay Wit 38 ·5 with 14 points and tlfree Callan Athletic Center.
1
d
656
throw line in the final! : 15 .
· ,game, ea mg to, a . . per- seconds left t? acc&lt;;&gt;unt for assists. The two teains com0-l
Rio
Grande
'
(10-6
,
Lemon added six assists
centage that rank s among the fmal _. RIO m• ssed a bined for · just 15 total
AMC) placed three play- and three steals to her perth~~~~ ~et~;~ .: orst. Nikola Jumper With 26 seconds left , turnovers and there were ers in double figures, led
formanc e whi le" Miller
.and CU m1s.sed two free four lead changes . in the
by
sophomore
guard/fordi shed out five assists .
Kecman was eligible after a throws w1th 16 seconds to final four minutes alone .
12-game suspension for go. ·
Rio Grande head coach ward Leah Kendro with Jenna Smith sco[ed all 13
The RedSto m o d "d
h
d · f 14 points. Senior center
playing on a team with professJ·onals l·n his nat•"ve
. r p ,un e
Ken Frenc was prou o Erin Kume notched a of her points in the second
half and Rachel Hurley
· the .offens1ve glass . m the his team's effort.
double-double
with
IJ
.Serbi"a, but the 7-foot , · final seconds and Ivery
"I wouldn't trade this
finished with 10 points .
junior-college transfer did- earned two free throws with team for another one in the points ·and 12 rebounds 'Aubrey Siemon pulled
n't play.
4.8 seconds remaining. He country," he said. "For and sophomore guard down a team-high II
"In time, I think he's missed the first, intentional- what we have been through Kaylee
Helton
con- rebounds .
going to help us," Matta . ly missed the second, and lately and to play the way tributed 12 points off the
The Jackets knocked
down 11 -of-22 threesaid.
the Jackets secured the win they did today, I'm proud of bench.
Sophomore guard Jenna point shots and finished
.t '
after grabbing the rebound. them ."
Smith. Rio's leadin~ scor- 14-of-17 at the line . Rio
Ced(lrville .entered the
game
leading
NAIA REDSTORM WOMEN FAL.L IN er and best penmeter claimed the rebounding
thre at, was held in check battle, 40 -35, but commitDivision II nationally in
AMC OPENER
by . Cedarville, as she ted 21 turnovers to CU's
field
goal
percentage
'
.
defense (36.8 percent) and
. ',11'(
CEDARVILLE - The scored
three pomts,
all 15 mistakes.
~~- '.\ '
I

(

intensity 110( seen in the first
16 minutes. storming out to a
15-10 advantage to cut the
lead to 45-37 entering the
founh qua11er.
Once there Point Pleasant
continued its hot shooting,
eventually tying the game at
47 apiece With six minutes to
go tbanlcs to a ta-2 run to
open the quarter.
But as the rest of lhe fnune
wore one, Sissonville managed to find a few open looks
and was able to put together a
run of its own and closed lhe
game with a 9-4 advantage to
take horne the five-point win,
Point Pleasant will now
gear up for a trip to Wayne
Friday night. The JV contest
is scheduled to being at 6
p.m.

The Daily Sentinel· Page B3

pups. 1st shOtsJwormeo.
each.
740-643-0113
:!""-~-"'"'!~....Free to good home.
2 mate inside kittens,
litter
trained.
$ 250

1

1.;............. ...... ; . ...... ............, ..

,__.,.....,._""!'__

1'

-·

..

t

�'

Pqe Ba • The Daily Sentinel

-.mydailysentinel.com

.

Wednesday, January 7, 2009

www.mydallysentlnel.com

Sissonvile outlasts Knights, 56-51
The Indians (4-2} were led
in scoring by Caleb Keller
with 19 points. while Kyle
POINT
PLEASANT, Snyder added 15 markers.
W.Va. - From the start of Cody Miller was ne~tt for the
the season the new Point visitors with seven points .
Pleasant Big Blacks have followed by Lucas Walker
shown that this isn"t the same with six points. Robbie
Hamilton with four points,
Point team of old.
· And they cootinued to dis- Chris Kelly with three points
play their new colors and Jo&amp;h Holley with two
Thesday night.
points . .
Despite a 13 point halftime
Behind Lloyd, Tyler Deal
deficit, the Big Blacks bat- was next with II points.
tied back and tied the contest , Tyson Jones added six points
'against Sissonville with six and a team-high eight
minutes to go before a late rebounds. Kylenn Criste had
surge by the Indians pro- five poiJits. Jacob Templeton
pelled the visitors to a 56-51 had four points and seven
victory Tuesday night in boards and Drake Nolan.
Point Pleasant.
Nathan Wedge, Je Waan
In years paSt a 13 point Williams
and
C?cty
halftime deficit would have Greathouse had two pomts
almost assuredly spelled .apiece.
defeat for Point Pleasant (2Point ,Pleasant carne out a
. 2), but this year's t~am has little flat to Slaf! Tu~sday's
breathed new life mto the contest as the lndians Jumped
prognun and it has shown up ·out front early and pushed
m the on-court effort.
their lead to 19-1 4 at the end
Senior BJ . Lloyd led the of one quarter.
.
Sissonville lhen caught fire
second half rally with 17
points including a trio of in the second. holding Point
three pointers, but his effort Pleasant to just eight points
came up just short as while posting 16ofitsownto
Sissonville put the game extend the Indian lead to 35away with a series of clutch. 22 at the break.
In the second half the Big
shots in the final moments of
the fourth quarter.
Blacks came out with an
BY LARRY CRUM

•

.

•

•

''
;

· LCRJMO¥Yor.II.YREG1STER.COM

Wahama
fromPageBl
od, a three point goal by
Zack Whitlatch, and failed
to perform much better
over the next two stanza's
as ·Buffalo had their way
throughout the evening .
"I'm pretty discouraged
and really frustrated right
now following our disappointing shoWing," a dejected Wahama coach James
Toth said after the blowout.
"The game wasn 'I even
close and we have a lot of
work to accomplish in order
to get better and that begins
with our practices. We've
simply have to work harder
and try and. overcome the
negative atmosphere that
· we 've put ourselves in to
added .the Falcons head
mentor.',
. Buffalo placed four players in double digit scoring
with Corey Good leading
the way with 15 markers on
_the night. Schuyler Frazier
and Andrew Angle tallied
lJ points apiece while
Nathan Winterstein scored
10 in the Bison victory.
Garrett Burdette added
seven , Cody Parkins six
and Tyler. Allen, and Evan
Childers two each to
account for Coach Chuck
Elkins offense in the outing.
Wahama placed just · one
scorer in double ·figures
with freshman Isaac Lee
coming off the bench to
score a game high 18 points
on the day. Sophomore
Ryan Lee had seven points
with Kyle 'Zerkle and Matt
Arnold
notching five
apiece.
Tyler Kitchen added four
pqints,
Zack Whitlatch
three
and
Garret
Underwood one for the
White Falcons. Isaac Lee
netted all of his 18 markers
in the second half with 13 of

Buckeyes
from Page Bl .
during that stretch," Matta
said. "Give them credit
making five straight 3s was
huge ."
Morgan, the reigning Big
Ten player of the week, had
13 points and I0 rebounds
for his third straight doubledouble . Gorail Suton had
nine points and nine
rebounds for the Spartans,
who moved a half-game
ahead of Wisconsin atop the
conference.
Michigan State started the
season rarlked sixth, rose to
fifth and plummeted as low
as No. 19 following a 35point loss to the Tar Heels
and an 18-point setback
against Maryland.
The Spartans have started
io display some of their
potential "recently because
Suton is back in the lineup
after missing six games

those coming in a 26 point
.
fourth quarter.
Buffalo led by a convincing 20-3 margin at the first
tum and extended- its edge
to 35-10 at the half before
stretching its bulge to 56-17
going into the final quarter.
The Bison bench finished
out the contest with
Wahama closing the gap to
a more respectable margin
thanks to a 26-8 difference
over the final eight minutes.
The preliminary game
was a much closer affair
with Kevin Back nailing a
three pointer with just six
· seconds to play to give the
Little Falcons its second
win in a row with a thrilling
48-45 triumph.
D .J. Gibbs paced the
WHS junior varsity unit
with II points while Matt
Arnold popped in 10 for
the Wahama junior varsity
cagers. Back's game win-.
ning three point shot was
his only.bucket of the night.
Justin Shelton paced the
Baby Bison attack with a
team high nine points in the
contest.
The White Falcons will
try and reverse its recent.
misfortunes when , they
return to action on Thursday
at Parkersburg Catholic
before returning home for a
home date with Calhoun
County on Friday.

SISSONVILLE 56, POINT 51
Sissonville 19 16 to
Point
· 14 8 15

11 14 -

«rtbune - Sentinel - l\egititer
C LA S S I f ·I E D
Point
Pteasanfs
JeWaan

Williams
dribbles
pasta
SissonviU
e defender during
the first
half of
Wednesd
ay night's
boys basketball
game in
Point

· E-mail
c~ified@ mydailytribune.com

56
51

•

Or Fax To (740)446-3008

Dal

Monday thru . Friday
8:00 a.m. to 5:00 ·p.m.

~aJ ) .

HOW

I.0

!!WI. 6tj 6ll

Or Fax To

992-2157

only to .return and suffer
another injury. In last
week's loss to Warren,
Bolin injured his left wrist
and may be out for 5-6
weeks.
Meigs hit 21-45 two's, 621 three's, (27-66 overall)
and was 0-4 at the line .
Southern hit 19-42 two's, 623 three 's (24-65 overall)
and was 10-14 at the line ..
Meigs had 37 rebounds (C.
Bolin 9).19 turnovers, eight
assists .(Jeremy Smith 4),
one sieal, four blocks (Bolin
2), and 16 foul'S. Southern
had 21 rebounds (Harris 7,
Roberts 5), giving up 16
caroms to the Marauders,
had ten steals (Coppick 3,
Brown 2), 16 assists
(Brown 6, Deem 3. Rees 3),
one charge, ten turnovers •.
and seven fouls.
Southern won the reserve
game 40-36 and is currently
5, I on the season under
Coach Kyle Wickline.
Southern was led by Dustin
Salser with 15 points ;
Ethan Martin had eight, and
Zach Manuel seven . Meigs
was led by Ryan Taylor
with nine, Seth wells "eight
and Cody Mattox with six .
Southern goes to Miller
Friday and to Marietta
College for a tentative 4:30
start against Belpre. The
. boys varsity . game will
immediately follow the
Marietta
Piorieer-John
Carroll University college
game. Th~ Southern-Belpre
reserve game will immediately follow the varsity
game.

Rj§plpy· Ad;s

.

In-Column: 9:00 a.m.

All Display: 12 Noon 2

Monday-Friday for Jn. .rtion

•ualn- Days Prior To

In Next O.y•a PaPer
Sunday In-Column: 9:00 a .m .

Publlc.-:lon
Sunday Display: 1:00

Por Sundays Pa...r

How you can hove borders and graphics
. lL-\
addedtoyourdossllledads
(.~

..m

Thursday for Sund-.ys

S1.00 for lai'Qe

DescriptiOn • lndude A IJirlce • Awokl AbiMftlatlona
• lnchlde ,.._. Nurntt.r And AddrMI Wttan NHCied
• . . . 5ttould llun 7 O.ys

KIT It CARLYLE

_,_,...
B•• ··~ ·
Unconditiooalliletime

Ohio Vlllty

Publishing ........
1he right to ldlt,

kitncor1yl~com=;:c.:•:•t::;.n::;e:;t

A,=•=illl

_____

Townha ...

2br house in city, large
CONVENIENTLY
LO• lo1 carport. $500/renl +
CATED &amp; AFFORD- deposil + relfjfOOOOS. No
ABLE! T"''flhhuse apart· ~pe~"'-·~74-0-·44~6-4053-'!""~ments,
and/or small :'
houses lor rent. Can 2br, House for Rent. in·
dudes Slove. Refrigera·
740..441·1111 tor appli· tor;.
WaterfTrastv'Sewer
•ca-1io~n~.&amp;~in!"lo~rm~ati~·Oil~.!!'!!"- paid, No Pels. $450
ELLM VIEW APl'S month. plus deposrt.
2&amp;3BR and up. Central 740-446-1370

MOM)' To L.ncl

guanurtee. Local rater-

NOTICE OHIO VALLEY ences tum-. Es1ab- NOTICE llorrow Smart.
PUBLISHING CO. roc· 4 lished 1975. Call24 Hrs. Contact 1110 Ohio Dlvi·
ommends

that

you

00

business
you
know. andwith~OTpeople
10 send
money through the mail
until you have investlgat·
ing the offering.

740-446-0870. Rogers

:Ba:serne=n1~W~ar~e~rproo~t:lng:·:

5

"tMh.r S. ricu

Pet . .Cremations.

.
"''' ' '

sion of Financfal lnititu·

·

~

tions Office
of Consumer
Mairs
eEFORE
y&lt;&gt;u refinance yoor home or obtain a loan. BEWARE of

Csll requests

for

any

large

~--..;;~""!'-· .:..;74!!o-44;,;;;6-:;;3;;;7,;;45;;,""'""'""' a&lt;)Yance p8ymen1s of
Tupperware Openhouse, ::::;
tees or insurance. Call
Thures. Jan. 8,· 5pm to · Pial alianal Serlicu the Office ·of Consumer

View

Bpm. new products, lim-

lii(304;;;;:)8B2::;;;:
·30
:;,1:.;7!"'"-~-

ited editions, sales, Free

Gifts,

lots

ot pnzes, turi

for all, bring your friends!

Wh!I&lt;O·
Plains-Chester
lie&lt;!. 51. At 1

Tuppers
Water of&amp; Barr 30

Rd. between , Chester &amp;

Tuppers Plains. Oh. info
call 740·985·4171· or

Air. W/0 hookup, tenant 3 bf. house for rent 109

pay5 elec1ric. EHO Elm

H
toll
troe
al
TURNED DOWN ON A ialll
SOCIAL SECURITY SSI H!66·278-0003 1o loam
No
. F.ee Unless We w1·n'. .if the mortgage
broker or
lander ·IS properly li·
1.888•582 .3345
- - - - - - - censed. (Thisannouncement
is a public
Septic · pum~ Gallia ·service·
Cb. OH and Mason Co. from lhe Ohio Volley
'IN- Ran Evans Jacksoo. OH. 800-537·9528

Want.d
74o-446·2262 ask
-~-------~~~- Nancy Or Milzi

cepting

lor

740·4Hl-+3992

01illpolla Career

Cottoge

(Careers Close To Home)

GOO

866·352·0469.

{.A.)/4 CJt1'f

apart.

of

CKC ·

Pinchor

tall

,

REG,,

M-9

Spaniel puppies
$200.00 304·273-4377

school

paid.

or 740·645·5953

fumilvre

Pets

1BR tum !Shed Apt · su"·

Auloo

""""'"""'"""'""'!!!!!!!;
Renlola

;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;iiii,;~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; able lor 1 adult. Private ;;;;;;;;;;;-'"""""";;;;;;;;;;;;;;;

Charmed
Used For sale- 1999 Red Pan· driveway
w/carport. 2 br MH fm rent . close
&amp; Appliances. tiac Grand Am SE , great Retldep.
required. to town. 740·256·6574
$400. 740-245-5428
for
new
drillers $375Jmo. (740)446·4782

Miniature Twice

Mo.

shots

Ears, Furniture

Mlacellaneoua

304·675·6787.

NOW LEASING Jordan 2BR 1 balh , big yard. in
Landing 2BA. 38R &amp; coun1ry, . S3201mo in·
Impounds! Cars 48A Available No Pets. eludes garbage pick up
$5001·· Honda · Tenant
and water $200 deposit.
Responsible lor

=-'""'""""""""";;;;;;;;;

s10ck. Call Ron Evans. more!

2 male AKC Springer

trash

L.;ww;;;;;w;.;"o;m;;c;s;.c;o;m;;;:-;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~®;2009;;;;b;y;N;EA;;,;'";c;, $425/mlh. 614·595-7773

~

~lllill•'S

Buildings:

Classifieds!

44 Olive St. $4251mlh •
No
Flets.
446·3945
48R house in Gallipolis.

deposit.

Must see to appredate.

Pekingese Puppies · tst
Polite
re· from
set
of
shots
$250. Jet Aeration Motors
·
paired, new &amp; rebuilt in Chevys. Jeeps, Fords, &amp; Rent
256• 1664

Shop

2BR

town. Water &amp;

1

740·388·8788

Bulding Mat.riala

ar:~d

e.~

hookup beauliful country ment, Southwest
setting 10 mlnu1es hom district.

1_ 7
{,.,. ~

ing Councillor lnd&amp;pendenl
Colleges ~SchoolS 14748

cancelled orders! Will
se ll for balance owed
ca ll fOr Huge • savings

the

new carpet &amp; cabinets 740 · 367· 7762
freshly painted WID 5 room house, tun base·

gallipollscar.iercoMege.edu
Acc red~ed Member Accredit·

Arch

2BR

tor $400/mo $400/dep HUD

OK,
no
cats.
~
7 4;::0;:
·64
:;:;5~-1~64:;:6::..-~~
&amp;lderty/disabled. 5 rOOf!"' house srovelretr.

Immaculate

Call Today! 740·446-4367
1·800·2I 4-0452 .

Steel

applications

call 675-6679

lor

on
SAVtNGS

304-675-4655.
Garfield

waiting list lor HUO. sub·
s&lt;lized, 1·BR apartmenl

E&gt;rperienced STNA look·
lng lor prlvate dulY (no

week-daytimes) ·
references ·
available,

liberty St. Pt Pleasant,
Apts. no pets 304-593-0909 or

Twin Rivers Tower is ac- 88

416·2995
·
We wilt rhoroughly clean
,;,;;;;,;;;;;;;,""'""'""'""'"' your home or office call

Many sizes. end
year sale- repos

~

Borders Sl.ob/per ad
Graphics SOC for small

• All Ida must be prepaid"

tto.e'r~•••••

reject or..,.., ony
od atony time.
Mus!

.GET' YOtlJR CLASSIRED LINE AD NOTICED

• start YOUf Ads WIUI A • .,._.... • Jndude COMplete

IUcc~ ds
.
Should Include Tllese Items
To Help Get Response ...

for

•

&amp;

iistings 304_674 .0023
B00-620-4876 ex V435
_
.one

Electric No

mon . old Boxers wl paper~ 1·800 -537-9528.
304 610
I fawn/ I hrindle,\'ery pluy· ~-~~"'!!"'!"'"'!"""ru t
SH.IO.Oil
· each Moving Sale: Sofa $400, -;;;;;;;;;'W..;ant;;;;;;J;i;o;i;Buy;i;;;~- Unfurnished
304· ~'J3-2MI.
coffee table &amp; 2 end ta· ~
apartment ·
Want to buy Junk Cars, water/trash
$
$4
300
AKC Golden Retriever bles
· end table o, call740 388 0884
$3

6

inside

pets,

call

or .:.:74;,: ().;:2;:;56:;,·6:;:2; :02:;. .___
Tbr.

1 \'!u .

w/exp ndn.
11

. 5400.00 a mnn. +$-I(NHXl
upsta1rs dep ?oll-1 -fl 75 4 1m nr
stoveffridge 7 40_44 rJ .t~Yt~9
included ~~;;;;,;;;,;,.._.;...__
2BR 1 bath nice home
50. mo. + , deposit re- I
quirect. 44 6. 9872 or or
1·2
persons
water/trash included in
446-7620
;;;;;;.;,;;;;;,----- rent NO P~:rs John·
2 br .. $350 mo. plus de- sons M
obile Home Perk.
posit &amp; utllitif3s. no pets, 740·645-0506
3rd
St.,
Rac.ine, ~F;;ed;.:;;;,l
;:;F;::;:d~~
- ~era
un s JUSt
re·
f74::;G-:;,:2;;:4:,;7·;:;429~2~"'!"~· leased for Land OWners.
Beech . Street M
iddle· No. closing cosl ano
port. 2 bedroom fur· ZERO DOWN! Will do
nlshed apartment, utili· land
Improvements.
ties pald , no pets, de· Bankruptcy &amp; Bad Credit·
posit
&amp;
references, OK. 2. 3, 4 and 5 · bed·
(740)992·0165
rooms
available.
:;.;;;:;;;;;;~-..--~
Middleport, 1 br. apt. big c7,; 40;. ·4:.;4; ,6·; ;3384;;.;,___~
rooms, front yard, stove -2BR &amp; 3BR mobile home ·
&amp; refrigerator furnished , for rent. 367·7762 or
Ouil, $450 mo. plus de· 446·4060
posit, No pels. No smok· ~~:::;:,~~~~ing, 740-992-5181
2 BA on Bailey Run Rd.
;~.:.::~;;,;;::;:;.:___ Meigs
Co. $400/mo
Beautiful Apto. 11 Jack· $400/dep. No pels. 2BR
son Estate•. 52 West- near RVHS $400/mo
wood Dr.. hom S365 10 $400/dep. No pe1s.
$560.
740·446·2566. 367-7025
Equal h.Housing
Opportu·
~~~fltl"·
. .
.
3BRh 2 ba .,.on..;.~~~
farm
nity. T IS .lnSIIIUIIOn
IS an
. $750
1 m
Equa1 0ppo rtum-1y p ro· 540-729·1331
mt . ut1111es
cluded.

!ridge $75, stereo $50.
- .
dresser &amp; night stand
$150. lwln poster bed
Legalo ........................................................... 100 Recreational Vehlc1es ............................... 1000
$200. all items OBO. Call
Announcementa ..........:............................... 200 ATV ............................................................. 1005
740-441 -0988
or !!!!!!!!!!!!!!;;;;;;!;;;;;;!;;;;;;!!!;
Blrthday/Anntveroary................. ................205 Blcyclea...................................................... 1010
Happy Ads .............................:...................... 210 Boats/Acceuorleo .................................... 1015
740-645·2376
•-'.H~o;;u~IU;;;;Fa~r~Sal.~;;;;;;;
•
Loot &amp; Found ....:.......................................... 215 Camper/RVo &amp; Trol1ero .....:....................... 1020
~-~~~~~- 11 82 Sandhill Act, Pt
Memory/Thank You ..................................... 220 Motorcycles .......................... ,.................... 1025
74=().=4=46~·~38:9~7~~~~ NEW AND USED STEEL
Notlces ......................................................... 225 Other .......................................................... 1030
:
~... Pleasant. 3br, 2 bath.
Slee I •-·
&lt;:&gt;t:fl:lms, p·1pe Aevar
Personal&amp; ..................................................... 230 Wont to buy ...............................................1035 ·
Concrete Angle, One ·story, · Hardwood
Wanted ........................................................ 235 Automo11ve ................................................ 2000
?On
Agr1~u lure for
Channel· Flai Bar· Steel 11oors. $153,999, Musl
Services .....................................................:. 300 Auto Renlallleaaa ..................................... 2005
Grating for Drains. Onve - See!
www.orvb.com
Appt1ance Servlce .......................................302 Au1oa .......................................................... 2010
ways &amp; Walkways. L&amp;L 304·675-4880
Automotive .................................................. 304 Clooolc/Antlquea ....................................... 2015
Fann Equipment
Scrap "'elals Open Mon. !"'"~~~~~~~
Bul1dlng Materials ....................................... 306 Commerclalllnduo!rlal .............................. 2020 . ~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;i;*-~~~
T e Wed &amp; Fr· 3 Bed, 2 Ba1h' Only
Business ...................................................... 308 Parts &amp; Accesaorlea.................................. 2025
EBY,
INTEGRITY, Bam-4:30pm.
u .
Closed'· $19..900 lor listings
Ca1erlng ........................................................310 Sports Utlllty.............................................. 2030
Child/Elderly Care ....................................... 312 Trucko......................................................... 2035
KVAIELFELEAY BUIL:H!O, ASEILIVE·· Thurs, Sat &amp; Sun. 800·62().4946 e)( R019
Computero .......•........................................... 314 Udt1ty Trallers ............................................ 2040
740·446·7300
Contract()ra .....................~........................... .316 Vana ............................................................ 2045
STOCK
TRAILERS,
Lanci(Acreage)
LOAD MAX EQUIP·
Want To ~uy
Domestlca/Janhalla1 .......................... ;........ 318 want to buy .................................:............. 2050
MENT
TRAILERS, ;;;;;;;;;;;""";;;;;;~;i;;;;;;;;;;;; Looking tor land to lease
Elec1rlcal .......................................... ,........... 320 Roo1 Eatalo Saleo ...................................... 3000
Flnancfat .......................................................322 Cememry Plo!o...,...................................... 3005
CARGO EXPRESS &amp; ARTIST wanls 10 buy lor deer . hunling 1·300
Heal1h ......................... l·································326 Commerclal ....c...................................:....... 3010
HOMESTEADER
Large Gray Slates.Call acres. Will pay cash.
., Healing&amp; Caollng ....................................... 328 Condomlnlums.......................................... 3015
CARGO/CONCESSION 252·729·9311··-·-Leave
865-363·3305
Home lmprovementil 330
For Sole by Owner..................................... 3020
TRAILERS.
B+W
Message.
lnaurance ......................................... .•........... 332 Houus tor Sale ................................. .. ...... 3025
GOOSEN'c:"CK FLATBE.u~.
. Lawn Sorvtce .....:...........:............................. 334 · Land (Acreage) .......................................... 3030
$3
999. VIEW OUR EN
Mualc1Danci!I!Dr'ama .................................... 336 Lots ............................................................ 3035
TIRE TRAILER INVEN· Absolute Top Dollar . sit- ;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;
Other Servlcea ............................................. 338 Wsn11o buy ................................................ 3040
TORY Ar
verlgold coins, any
,vid;::e::,r,:an;;;d:.;E;;;m,;::P;,;;Io~ye::,r·-- ;:~~~~~~~
Ptumblng/Eioc1rtco1 ..................................... 340 Real Eoblle Rentelo ...................................3500
10K/14K/16K
gold lew·
•"ar1menll/
•Clean 1 br. tum apart· Mobile home Ad a msvil~
ProfeBSional Servlcea................................. 342 Apartmenta/Townhou- ......................... 3505
WWW.CARMICH.AEL'
·
.,.
ell)4, dental gold, pre
TownhouMI
$375/mo + dep. NO
.Aepalra ..................................,...................... 344 Commercla1................................................ 3510
TRAILERS.COM
ment, dep. Ref req. call Rd.
1935
US
currency,
-;;;;;;;;;.;;;~i;;;~;;;;;;PETS.
Call after 5.
Raollng ......................................................... 348 Condomlnlums ................................. .......... 3515
740·446-3825
·~~~~ 446-4562 lea'lle.meSsage
proof/mint sets, dia· ..1 and 2 bedroom apts .. ~304::;;:·6:.:,7,;;;5·,;;29~7;:;0
~
Socurlty ........................................................ 348 Houses lor Ront ........................................3520
mends. MTS Coirl Shop. tumlshed and unfur- Gracious Living h and 2 JBA Dbl
.d
n
To'-'Accountlng .... ,...................................... 350 Lend (Acreage) .......................................... 3525
Travel/Entertainment .......................... :....... 352 S1orage .......................................................3535
Have y'ou priced a John 151 2nd Avenue. .Galli· nished, and hOuses n Bedroom Apts. at Village ·Pomero ·g· rea~' ~nd"t~a~
Flnanclal .......................................................400 Want to' Rent ................. .. ........................... 3540
Manor and Riverside w1th
. n1ce
.y, yard Ren1 1 1 1n~
Deere IatelY'• vo
' ' u"II be polis. 446·2842
Pomeroy
and
Middleport.
Financial Servlcea ....................................... 405 Manufactured Housing ............................. 4000
· d'. Check out our
In Middleport,
·
surpnse
security deposit required, $Apts.
to
$from
:.
. .·
Insurance ................. ,................... ............... 410 Lota .............................................................4005
327
592 _ clud~s
used
inventory
.
at
no
p9ts.740·992·2218
F
h
SJ
sh
/d
Moriey to Lend ............................................. 415 Movera .............................................. ..........4010
www.CAREO.com. Car740·992·5064.
Equal urnls lllQ ~a E!r ryer
Educatlon ....:............................·...... .............. soo Rentala ........ :.
4015
;;:;;;;;;;;;;
H
·
rt
'"'
&amp; some u 1111tu:~s lflC
0
michael
~quipment ;
1BR Apt, WID hookups, ousmg ppo un .,.
$5751mo.
No Pets. iuded
Can
Business &amp; Trade School ........................... 505 Sal&amp;l ........................................................... 4020
740·446·2412
satellite
TV incl. w/rent, Island View Motel has 441·0110 or 591·5174
lns1ructlon I Tralnlng .................................510 Suppllaa ..................................................... 4025
Camper&gt;
I RVa &amp; close to hospital. Call vacancies $35.00/Night~ For rent· br. all elec. all
Leasono .................................. ,.....................515 Wan11o Buy .... ,.......................................... 4030
Trailen
3
Hay,
Feed,
Seed,
Grain
Personal ....................................,......'............ 520 ReSort Property ......................................... 500()
740·446·0406
740·339·0362
appliances included lg.
Anlmals ......................... .. ............................. eoo Resort Property for aale ........................... 5025
For sale- 2nd cutting RV
2 br apt. 6 ml from Hot- Tara
Town house deck &amp; big, _yard
Animal Supplles .......................................... 605 Resort Property lor ren1 ........................... 5050
grass hay square bales Service at Carmich~el zer. Utililles paid. $525 + Apartments · 2BR. 1.5 304·61 2·721 4.
Horaeo..................................... ,.. ,................. 610 Employment........................ ,......................eooo
Llveatock ......................................................615 Accouhtlnglflnanclal ........... ,.. ..........:....... 6002
304-882-2537.
Trailers
dep. 740·418·5288 or bath, back patio, pool, Scenic location, conven·
Peta ...............................................................820 Admlntatratlve1Pro1eaalonal .....................6004
740-446·3625
38S·8039
Playground, (trash, sew- lent to town and at1ord·
Want 1o buy ..................................................~25 Caahlor/Ciark ............................................. eo06
.;.;.;..;.;;;;..___G__ age,
water
pd.) able. 2 &amp; 3 bedrooms
Agrtcu11ure .................. .... .............................700 Chlld/E1derly Care ..................................... 6008
- - - - - - - 2br apt. iri Rio . rande $425/rent,
$425/sec.
ava1·1able
call
R~
Servk:e . at Carmi· close to College. $375
Farm Equtpment ............. ,............................. 705 Clarlcal ....................................... ................ 6010
dep.
S3751month.
dep.
Call
740·367-0547
(740)992·5639
chael
Trailers
Ga·rden &amp; Produce ....................................... 710 Conatructlon ..............................................6012
Hay, Feed, Seed, Grain ...............................715 .. Orlvors &amp; Dollvory ........................;............ 8014
74o-446·3825
245·9060
Auctions
Commircial
SaJeo
Hunting &amp; Land .......................................c...720 Educa11on...................................................6016
2BR
APT.Ciose
to
Hoi;;;;;;;;;;;;;i;i;i;;;;iii;;,;;.;;;;;;;;;
~;;;;;;;;;;;;..i;ii;i;;;;;;;;iiii;;;;;;
Won11o buy ..................................................725 E1octrlcsl Plumblng ...................................6018
GUN SHOW &amp; SALE
zer Hospital on SA 160 2 bay service station Brand new 3bed 2bath
Merchandloo ................................................900 Employment Agencfoo .................;............6020
CHILLICOTHE. OH Jan.
CIA
. (740) 441 ·0194
Jackson Pike. Leas e on + ·hall acre in Pt.
An1lquea .......................................................905 En1ortalnmon1 ............................................8022
10 &amp;11 Adm.$4
required. Call 446-3644 Pleasant. OWNER Fl· ·
·Appllance ....................................,................910 Foad Sorvtceo.............. :.............................eo24
RosS Co. Fairgrounds ·
Auc11ons .......................................................915 Government &amp; Federal Joba ............. ,......8026
Apartment available now _to~rm_o.;,1~e~in~1o_.·~--- NANCE
AVAILABLE.
135 · 6' tbls $35 pre-paid =::=::Autv~~·=:;::; Aiverbend Ap1s. New ~
Bargain Basement ....................................... 920 Help anted· General .................................. 8028"
(7401 446·3570
740-667·0412
r
Haven WV. Now accept· Office building located in
Collectlblea .................................................. 925 Law Enlorcomon1 ...................................... 60~0
ing applications ' lor Gallipolis OH 28 Cedar Gov FundS avail. . for
Computers ......................... .......................... 930 Ma!ntenanceiDomeatlc ...............:.......... ... 6032
Fuol/ 011/ Coal I
vert1ble, 78,000 mites HUD-subsidized,
Equlpment/Suppllea....................................935 Managomont/Supervlsory ........................ 6034
one St. Rent $450 mth. + de· buyers who won land or
Flea Markets .................... ............................ 940 Mechanlca ..................... ....:........................ 8036
$4,500. 304·675·2454 1Bedroom Apts. Utilities posit. 740·256·6661
Wood/Goa .
have family land. 0 down
Fuel 011 Coa11Wood/Gaa ........................ ,.... 945 Medlcal ....................................................... 6038
included.
Based
on
30%
also
avail. tor ttrst lime
Furniture ...................................................... 950 Musical .......... ............................................. 6040
Seasoned
' F1rewood 2001 Chevy Malibu L1. of· adjusted income. Call ;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;iiii;;;;;;•
HauiU For Rant
buyers.
866-2 15-5774
Hobby/Hunt &amp; Sport ..... ,..............................955 Pert-Timo-Tomporarlaa ...~ ..........•.............. 8042
Hardwood. 446·92CJ'4
ED. 4 OR ~ uto. tpower 304-882.·3121. available ~19Qt mu' 4 bo:d . 2 hath . New 3 Bedroom homes
Kid's Corner ................ .................................960 Reetaurante ......................................... .. .... 6044
1
~--....~--....":'!":~ 'locks + windows 58,000 for Senior and ~l sabled R1ml Rtf). I! (~ 'll: llown. I 5 from $214.36 per month.
Mlacellaneoua..............................................865 Salea ...........................................................6048
Seasoned
Firewocxt
CAA
mi.
clean
$4901
l
Day
Wan! to buy.........:........................................970 Tachnlcal Tradea ....................................... eoso
. IIi
year'. ~q APR) for listinloJ~ includes many upgrades,
HEAP
accepted. 446-1615 or Even. people. ~
Yard Solo ..............&gt;... . .. . ......... .......... . ........ ... 975 Te.tl1ao/Factory ......................................... eo52
'iii
ROll-620--l'Mh e;~. R0~7
delivery · &amp;
set-up.
645 ·5~46 or441 ·0941.
446·1244
740·385·2434

· CLASSIFIED INDEX

RiO

'

·

(740) 992~2156 (304) 675-1333

Werd Ads

6. TOTALS: 18 11-16 51. Three-poinl

fromPageBl

,

l\egister

Sentinel

.·Oeacll:irec

2, Jacob Templeton 2 0·0 4, Cody
Greathouse 0 2-2 2, Tysori Jones 1 4-4

Breeze

tEribtine

··caW;:...":v... (740) 446-2342

W.Va.

. SISSONVILLE (.4-2): Lucas Walk!l&lt; 3 GO 6. Robbie Hamilton 2 CHl 4, Kyle
Snyder 4 5-6 15, Chris Kelly 1 1-4 :&gt;
Caleb Keller 8 3-4 19. Josh Hclloy 1 CHl
2. Cody Miller 31-4 7. TOTALS:22 10.18
56. Three-point goals: 2 (Snyder 2).
..
POINT PLEASANT (2·2): B..! Lloyd 7G- .
117.- Kylenn Cris1e 13-5 5, Dral&lt;e Nolan
1 CHl 2. Tyler Deal 4 2·2 11, Ne1han
Wedge 1 CHl 2, JeWaan Wiliams 1 o-2
goals: 4 (LJooj(J :&gt;

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REACH OVER 285,000 PROSPECTS :::=~~~:t~~
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To P'ace

Pleasant,

and Caleb Davis tWo. Other
players contributing to the
Meigs effort were Jeremy
Smith with a solid floor
game, Jesse Smith, Heath
Detwiller,
and
Jon
McCarthy.
After several volleys and
possession
changes,
Southern notched the
game's first score when'.
Weston Roberts swished a
10-foot follow-up jumper at
the 7:09 mark. ·
Once again several misses
and a couple turnovers
highlighted the next minute
until Michael Manuel
cashed in on the scoring end
of a Southern fast break. . ·
Both clubs utilized an
upbeat tempo. Meigs frrst
score came on an inside
jumper off the glass at the
5:24 mark (4-2) then
Southern went on an 11-4
run to close out the period
with SHS on top 15-6. Brad
Brown had a couple twisting lay-ups and two threadBryan Walters/phOto
the-needle passes for assists Meigs' Jacob Well (15). soars for a rebound over Southern
in the drive, while Roberts defenders John Brauer (44) and Bryan Harris, left, during the
closed out the frame with a .first half of Tuesday night's boys basketball game in Racine.
long tri-fecta.·
od.
Meigs offense worked Southern led 37-15.
Meigs Coach Benny
The Meigs defense tightwell, but just could not finEwing
made
adjustments
at
.
ened
and Southern showed
ish the job in the first half.
the
half,
slowing
the
pace
of
signs
of carelessness in ball
Several inside misses hamthe game to a more deliber- handling . Never-the-less ,
I;SUFFAL064, WAHAMA 43 pered their · efforts, while ate tempo, and turning Gabe Southern took care of busiSouthern score hed the nets Hill loose on the offensive ness and led 54-36 at the
Wahama 3 7 7 . 26 - 43
on
the other end of the floor. end of the court. Meigs end of three periods after
Buffalo" 20 15 21 II - 64
The Tornadoes went on a actually outscored Southern · Harris had an eight-point
WAHAMA (1-5): Isaac Lee 6-6-9·18, 15-4 rampage to start the
39-34 in the second half, frame. Meigs ' Hill ended
Ryan Lee 3.()·1 7, Kyle l:erl&lt;la 2·1-4·5,
frame in Streaking to a 29- but the first half damage the canto with 12 markers,
Matt A:mold 2-Q-Q.S, Tyler Kitchen 2~0-0;
4, Zack Whllla1ch 1-0-0·3. Garrett 10 ·advantage at the 3:05 was just too much to over- 14 overall.
SOUTHERN 71, MEIGS 54
Underwood D-1·2-1 , Brice Clark o-o-omark
when
Gabe
Hill
drove
0. William Zuspan -0-0-0-0, Brandon
come. .
Southern never regained
Meigs
6 9 21 18 - 54
the baseline for his only . Early in the third frame , it its first half form as the
Flowers 0-()·CHJ, TOTALS 16·8·16·43
Sout11ern 15 22 17 · 17 - 71
BUFFALO (nla): Corey Good 7·1-2·15. first half score. •
appeared that Southern just Meigs tempo definitely
Andrew Angle 5- t -3-11 , Schuyler
MEIGS (3-4): Jeremy Smith 0 G-0 O.
Sean Coppick had six . might tum the game into a took away Southern 's edge Gabe
Frazier 5·1·4·11.• Nathan Winterstein 5Hill 9 0·0 21, Jesse Smllh 0 0-0 0,
o-o-10, Garren Burdene 2-3-5-7, Cody
Boiln 7 0·2 9, Jacob Well 6 0Parkins 3-o-o-e, Tyler Allen 1-G-0-2. points in the . drive, then blowour with the score at · in the upbeat game . Around Cameron
Bryan Harris hit consecu- 44-22 . Then Hill turned it the 1:00 mark Bolin hit a 2 14. Corey Hutlon 3 0-0 6, Seth Wells 1
Evan Childers 0:2·4-2, Justin Shelton o0·0 2, Caleb Davis 10·0 2. Tolals 27 0Q-0-0, ·Alex Marrs ().-()-Q-0, Greg Rose otive trifectas, and Weston
CHJ-o, ~rek MMier ().().().0, TOTALS 28· Roberts and Cyle Rees each loose with a pair of three pair of buckets around a 4 5~. Three Point Goals: Gabe three,
pointers and six mote points Seth Wells field goal that Jacob Well two, Cameron Bolin one.
8·18-64
SOUTH~RN (6·1): Cyle Re0s 1 0·0 3.
THREE·POINT GOALS: WAHAMA: 3 drilled three's.
that allowed Meigs to pull cut the lead to 70-54. Brad
Brown 3 4·6 10, Taylor Deem 1 0·
(Arnold. A. Lee. Whltlatchl, BUFFALO:
Jacob Well had two buck- at one point to 48-33. After Southern then rolled on to 0 2, Sean Copplek 4 2·3 10. Dustin
None.
'
Salser 0 S·4 3, Bryan Harris 6 2-3 16,
ets to keep Meigs' hopes a .Southem turnover, Meigs the 71-54 win. ·
Michael Manuel 4 0-0 9, Weston
alive , while Cameron Bolin had possession ~nd the
Meigs was playing with- Roberts
5 2-2 14, Zach Manuel 1 ().() 2,
drilled a three pointer. opportunity to cut the lead out the ·services of senior Jotm Brauer 1 o-o 2. Totals 24 10-14
with a knee injury.
. Three Point Goals: Bryan Harris
"Having Suton back defi- When the buzzer sounded to below 15 points for the Clay Bolin, who had been 71
tw o. Weston Roberts two , Michael
the
intermission, ·first time since the first peri- out with an earlier injury Manuel one, Cyle Rees one.
nitely makes them a real for
contender," Matta said.
Lucas, though , said .the
Spartans tacked passion
they lowered that mark by University of Rio Grande from the free throw line .
against Ohio State and
holding Rio to a 3L3 (20- RedStQrm women's .basket- Smith wa s able to get
shooting touch at the line.
of-64) . accuracy for the ball team played dead even only one shot for the
"We could've played a lot
·from Page Bl
game. The RedStonn made with NAIA Division II No . game.
· better," Lucas said. "We
~just9-of-31 shots in the sec- 18 Cedarville for 35 minCedarville (10-3, 1-0
missed a lot of free throws line-up after missing the ond half for 29 percent and · utes on Saturday afternoon . AMC). was led by Alison
It was the five minute s Lemon and Lydia Miller,
again . We can't keep doing Union game with an inJ·ury, they missed six of their last
seven
shots.
"
that.
th~Y. didn't that cost them who scored 18 points each
he scored 12 points before
.
··
&lt; 1·mg out .1ate •
h
Ricardo
Alhinan
totaled
as
Cedarville pulled away to propel the Lady Jackets
Ml.chi·gan State was 17- 10U
m t e game.
·
of-26 at the line after missCedarville's Chris Beals 15 points and II rebounds for a 73-61 victory in the to , the win. Cedarville
·lng almost · half of 1"ts, came through with a driving for
Mideast sealed th.e deal by going
H Cedarville while
ff hDerrick
b h American
attempts in the previous
h
.
.
h
cameo
I
e
enc
annon
Conference
opener
at the I0-for- 10 from the free
.
t ree' pomt P1ay Wit 38 ·5 with 14 points and tlfree Callan Athletic Center.
1
d
656
throw line in the final! : 15 .
· ,game, ea mg to, a . . per- seconds left t? acc&lt;;&gt;unt for assists. The two teains com0-l
Rio
Grande
'
(10-6
,
Lemon added six assists
centage that rank s among the fmal _. RIO m• ssed a bined for · just 15 total
AMC) placed three play- and three steals to her perth~~~~ ~et~;~ .: orst. Nikola Jumper With 26 seconds left , turnovers and there were ers in double figures, led
formanc e whi le" Miller
.and CU m1s.sed two free four lead changes . in the
by
sophomore
guard/fordi shed out five assists .
Kecman was eligible after a throws w1th 16 seconds to final four minutes alone .
12-game suspension for go. ·
Rio Grande head coach ward Leah Kendro with Jenna Smith sco[ed all 13
The RedSto m o d "d
h
d · f 14 points. Senior center
playing on a team with professJ·onals l·n his nat•"ve
. r p ,un e
Ken Frenc was prou o Erin Kume notched a of her points in the second
half and Rachel Hurley
· the .offens1ve glass . m the his team's effort.
double-double
with
IJ
.Serbi"a, but the 7-foot , · final seconds and Ivery
"I wouldn't trade this
finished with 10 points .
junior-college transfer did- earned two free throws with team for another one in the points ·and 12 rebounds 'Aubrey Siemon pulled
n't play.
4.8 seconds remaining. He country," he said. "For and sophomore guard down a team-high II
"In time, I think he's missed the first, intentional- what we have been through Kaylee
Helton
con- rebounds .
going to help us," Matta . ly missed the second, and lately and to play the way tributed 12 points off the
The Jackets knocked
down 11 -of-22 threesaid.
the Jackets secured the win they did today, I'm proud of bench.
Sophomore guard Jenna point shots and finished
.t '
after grabbing the rebound. them ."
Smith. Rio's leadin~ scor- 14-of-17 at the line . Rio
Ced(lrville .entered the
game
leading
NAIA REDSTORM WOMEN FAL.L IN er and best penmeter claimed the rebounding
thre at, was held in check battle, 40 -35, but commitDivision II nationally in
AMC OPENER
by . Cedarville, as she ted 21 turnovers to CU's
field
goal
percentage
'
.
defense (36.8 percent) and
. ',11'(
CEDARVILLE - The scored
three pomts,
all 15 mistakes.
~~- '.\ '
I

(

intensity 110( seen in the first
16 minutes. storming out to a
15-10 advantage to cut the
lead to 45-37 entering the
founh qua11er.
Once there Point Pleasant
continued its hot shooting,
eventually tying the game at
47 apiece With six minutes to
go tbanlcs to a ta-2 run to
open the quarter.
But as the rest of lhe fnune
wore one, Sissonville managed to find a few open looks
and was able to put together a
run of its own and closed lhe
game with a 9-4 advantage to
take horne the five-point win,
Point Pleasant will now
gear up for a trip to Wayne
Friday night. The JV contest
is scheduled to being at 6
p.m.

The Daily Sentinel· Page B3

pups. 1st shOtsJwormeo.
each.
740-643-0113
:!""-~-"'"'!~....Free to good home.
2 mate inside kittens,
litter
trained.
$ 250

1

1.;............. ...... ; . ...... ............, ..

,__.,.....,._""!'__

1'

-·

..

t

�"Nedl

Page B4 • The Daily Sentinel
"The Pnx:torv tlle
Ol!lvrwce'
$1 and a deed 15 all you
r~e&lt;J

to own '{OUI

dredm

h!.•me Call Nuw'

F' eedctn HCHlles
886 565 1; IE$-

~======

Lunc11room Vending Attendant. Par1 Time. M-F, Servce Manager &amp;

Sam· t pm. pr~ duct delivPrPd to -you Pi::iii.J t'!a.nu·•J. holnlavs
vacatJun
401k, $8 zs,hr Pre-em·
~1l ; yme n1
drug testing.
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Go.--&amp;Fedoral
Jabo

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Phillip
Alder

TechniCian

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sumo

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NEA Crossword Puzzle

Serv~

po51t1ons
av-a tlabJe, HeaHh care &amp;
Retirement ptans av8tltee

"'"
10

.... "' 74().446.91 04

BAND

~~~,-t (vONSJntc:CTJ()INI
~fl!/.~1!(

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••

Custoo! H0111&lt; Building
Steel franl( Buitiling.s
Buiklinl,!. R!i!JOOOeling
repair

c:;.,..,,..,

IAt~mlirtg Clerk. All3ssocillte's

• It 11

• Ktol

·-

IIONTY

Hours

.•

••

L&amp;LTtnllara
"'*7 W"ipple Rd.
Pomtroy.OH .

ll'w1lusl be well organized and maintain ·

(5 Pllints)

ll'l:(:ords effectively.

New &amp; Used Tire&lt;.
w~ buv u~ tln.·~.
do Ouel's . lighl
ltlel'hani~.: work,

55 Hospital Orin~
Atbe&amp;ol, OH 4S781

complete ~~erVke oll
changes. small ~ngine
repair.
We ~l"'i"-'e and
winterize boats and

Fax: (740) 566 4821
EOE

-

-llllllllr.
.741-116-11M
E-mail: captbill65@yahoo.com
www.auctionzlp.com
15548

This is

as•

Hnwod ~iller, 111111'11111•• ·

FORR~EV

WINTER RATfS

DEC. ·FEB
• RooM Addl1toM a
-ng

·-Gongts
•Etoc1rtcet6PIIIftlblng
• VInyl Skiing

THE BORN LOSER

Potnllng

·_..,.. """'h Docu

Racine, Ohio 740.247-2019

a..

acre

WELP, I EIETTER GIT GOIN', EL-l GOT A PAN OF SROWNIES 'SOUT
READY TO COME OUTTA TH'
OVEN!!

CAll US TOlMY

._,..Gua....

Cell: 740-41&amp;-50\t7
email:

Owners;
Jon Van Meter &amp;
Paul Rowe

,..
.
P'"
.
.
""
W~,._l WOUI.t&gt;'10U!ll&gt;.'l \~ fi\'(
. I !NOUI.t&gt; AAIJE 10 ~'( 1\ I~--, v-,.,~t&gt; ~11&gt;\C.C wt AA.t ~ ~~~1'
\W&gt;..T '100 ~ ~ OUTC.O\Nt;,
. 11\0~1 Rf.t:&gt;EE.fi\\Neo QJ"'Lil'l,
~a.Jtc.T, WI\'&lt; OO~T '1'0\J
60 tY..IT NOW.
~.,--,r-·- - - . CHIEF'?

J&amp;L

Construction

DD·

• VInyl Siding
• Replacement
· Windows
·• Roofing
• Decks
'Garages
• Pole Buildings
• Room Additions
Owner;

i=iii42-i233i~~

HUt-1 &gt; •
NOTHING..
NO IDE"

~~ec~~.~~:~~n d~~ ~:=~~~~ant!;!

a

or

New Homes,

Remodeling,

,. ~~~f'IU"1• 2"QQIII

Quality Seamless
Gutters

oOrywall,
KltchMtS, Baths

Cnmmerda/ L( ReJidentiill

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TRUCKING
Dump truck

service
We do drivew11ys
We Haul
Limestone- Gravel

Dirt· Ag-Lime

740·985·4422

Maintenance Plus
Vinyl
Siding/Repluccment
Windows/Remodeling
Bnnded &amp; ·Insured
740-992-1493 om,·e
· 740-416-8339 Ceil

Free

FIRST 1 I-lAVE TO FINISH M'(

Stanley TreeTrimming
&amp; Removal

TO Fl)( LUNCHES FOR

by ltlls Campos
Clllt:Onty Cll)rltr Cr'fJ)I(911"S llfl M lttc' lrOrll !IUOii! IOn ~ by 1111100, O!Otll
, Each teller 1n lhi CIOI"ltl! 5llll"&lt;l$ltlc ar"(li~IJC[

Gerombou.ll~ who had also seen East's

" ST

echo, rutted With dummy's spade king.
then bravely played a spade to his nine! ·
Four spades bid and made. ·
In the earlier problem. you should call
lor dummy's 10. When East played the
queen at trick one, he dented holding
the jack, because thlr&lt;l hand plays the
bottom of ec~lly high cards.

.o·I H &amp; P

AstroGraph
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PREVIOUS SOLUTION - ~ everyone needs help !rom ewtryone: ·Bertoli
Blecht · Peoples~ refuse help. if one ott ers~ 1n the r1ght way · . A.C
Benson
·

TIIAT DAILY C,fi'il1) 9\ '\, { - fl 'C. ~ C, ® WORD
IUUIU \:)~ ~QU ~J,.
~ IJt({' 0
O~MI

fdll..t b1 CIA Y R. .POllAN _ ; __ _ __

,

O;earra"ge
le"ers
four ltrombled

o.' !he

word~

below ro form iovr simpht ·Wordt

MEPNAN

'tour prominence among your peerS could
grow considerably In the year. ahead.
Situations where you couldn't get noticed
previously may now turn out to be your
greatest vdOties. You may e11en be asked
to assume a leadership role.
CAPRI CORN (Doc. 22-Jan. 19) Material growth looks more promising
than usu~l at this time. You might be able
to add to your resources not from merely
one source but multi ple pipelines that
Gmnn:- musing to hmeiL
open up for you.
"I' m gett ing so old. tn)
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Fob 19) - 'rtour
nobler qualities will be accentuated at this
fiic11ds who have gone to a
time. enhancing your chances lor success
in ways they couldn't previously. Make
will thmk 1didn't
these efforts count for something meaningful.
5
C9mplol• the chucki• quoted
PISCES (Feb. 20·March 20) - You are
. ..J
by fil ling in thu mi!ISII"IQ words
1 ___L,_..J.-.1..-.1.._1.
apt to be rather lucKy, not necessarily !rom
....
you develop from s1aD No 3 below.·
you r own efforts b:ut from something initiated by others. A big Idea or concept will
1ft P &lt;I~H NUMBflfD L[TT!RS IN
prove extremely succes9ful for you.
f:l lH[ S[ SQUARE S
ARIES (March 21·Ap ril 19) - Thi s is an
excellent day to handle matters that
involve business pr9PQ5itions. The only
exception is. when conducting business
with a friend , since you might collect guilt
SCRAM·LETS ANSWERS li6!09
if you get a good deal.
TAURUS (April 20·May 20) - Lady Luck
is apt to loo~ upon your effrirts with more
bene1101ence tha n usual, so get cracking. If
confes.~e~
you don't ~ake advantage ot this rare da\1,
it'll be your own fault
GEMINI (May 21..June 20) - Because
'
(
you're the one with all the good ideas. your
peers are apt to place you In the leadership role whether you're seeking it or not
Don't worry if something doesn't work out.
C.ANCEA (June 21-Juty 22)- EIIBn if you
aren't looking fQr new ways 10 supplement .
your income, something you stumble on or
uncover may til the bill. Investigate it further to see if it fits into your schedule
LEO (July 23·Aug. 22) - Today's e11ents
mi!;lht reveal just how many loyal fr iends
you really ha~e . and chances are it will be ·
llleow
numerous. Vou'\1 discover that they are all
ready to dO for vou what you do tor them.
VIRGO (Aug. 2~·Sopt. 22) - That big
break from an opportunity that opened up
yesterday at work will come full bloom.
Although you. might not get everything·you
want. you"ll get the .majorlty of it .
·
LIBRA {Sept. 23-0ct. 23&gt; - Somelhing
.B)(clting with regard to new friendships is
!~Af~AID
taking place .at this time. so be sure to
"Pl~AWW~T
accept all social invitations. You'll receive
HU.P.
one invite to an evem you won·t want to
miss.
SCORPI O (Oct 24·Nov. 22) - The closer
you get to the fi nish line , the lUcKier you
get, so don't be upset it you start slowly.
Concentrate on doing your best, and oth·
ers will taller as you grow stronger
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23-0ec. 21) Alt hQugh ~ou will be a strong, imSglnatlve
thinker, · you won't hesitate to use th e
clever ideas of others to get you where
you want to go. Combining the best of
everyone will be tho ticket:

SALL'( AND ME ..

and

*Insured
•E•perienced
References Available!
Cull Gary Stanley II&gt;
' 740-591·8044

E~tim:ued ·

COW and BOY
SOME SEE GOD AS A

H&amp;H

(ii(ANm OF WISHES.

Guttering
Seamless Gutters
Rooting; Siding, Gutters
Insured &amp; Bonded
740·653·9657

I'VE ALWAVS SEEN

GOD AS SOMEONE TMAT

EXISTS IN ALL OF US liND
WHO HELPS THOSE WHO
HELP THEMSELVES.

m,NSLATiON: WIT
YER BELLYACHIN',
FIND WHIIT YOU
WANT OUT OF
LIFE liND DO IT.

.':J.

l'lllf\\ll'Cit:l ·lidl I

'PIIItll!td

d

il.llllld diHl ilblllt
lr•ll' ( rror 1 Jto'

/Jo

( 1/r !

GARFIELD ·

•

Scott L. Swain
,....................

Local Contractor

-~

ISA. f "tt1lllld .vt.rt.t,

740·367..0544

0

(.'tnh!Ora-...IA

Free Ealtmatea

Gdpolk,OH

740·367..0536

,_
.:.

MARCUM CONSTRUCTION
' Fencing &amp; Wood
Fnr: • Chain Link

Cnll:

Fencing • Room Additions~ Garages ·

• Vinyl and WoodSiding • Roofins
• Pole Barns •l'atio's, Porches and Decks

MilE W. •cui.OWIIU·
47239 Riebel Rond , Long Bottom. OH

740-985-4141
Cell : 740-416-1834

25+ years experience

Frte Eslimatr1

Adv~rtlse

·in this space for
$67 Per month

•
"

1

I•Pmrront
Quality
Work
•Reasonable Rates

Pomeroy. Ohio

Roofing, Siding,
Soffit, Decks,
Doors, Windows.
Electric, Plumbing,
Drywall,
Remodeling, Room
AddiNdns

Shop the
· Classifteds!

king, then played a third club.

CELEBRITY CIPHER

AND SOMETIMES

GOD IS PUZZLED
~ND HORRIFIED

I.H.Ifal

1e

~..,.;.L~A;...;.T..,:B::...:E;....:.L..,.,..-1

!-lOW Dl DI 6ET
AT TI-lE BOTTOM OF
TI-lE FOOD CHAIN?

CEREAL, AND TI-IEN I HAVE

CORNER STONE
CONSTRUCTION

on
SAVINGS

Geromboux from Canberra, th.e Capital
ol Australia. North's three--club response
was a cue-bk:f raise, showins at least
game-invitational values in spades. After
GeromboUll signed On in three spadfJs
with his minimum opening bid. West was
still there with fou r diamonds. announcing 5-6 or 5· 7 in the. minors. and North .
raised to lour spade~
·
West led the Club ace, under which East
signaled with his six. starting a high-low
wtth a doubleton. West cashed his club

0LI 0Y

::::::...= ~~~ ........
.
llllbiCdH
un .

riot like a seer using tarot cards.

G

·~·

2

A'd dllo
t ns,
Garages, Pole
Buildings, Roofs,
Siding and more.

mor

39 Cticll....,
ittm
40 "ShhLo...
You" word
41 Opposed
42 Caution
44 a-m.m

t9ttH:entury English

w.dneodoy, Jon. 1, 2009
By Bernice Bede Oaol

Jafl\tl Keeaeell

7

36 Kinddlt...

This is working out the lie of the missing
i:atds baSad on tho bidding and play.
To give you an example, suppose•
dummy has K· 10·9 of spades and you
have the doubleton 4·3. Letty leads the
spade two against your cOntract of three
no-trump. YOu call for dlamm~·s nine, ard
righ"ty takes the trick with his queen.
Righty shifis to a club, lefty winning that
trick and leading anotl1er low spade
Would you caU for the 10 or the king
rrom the dummy, or Is it a guess?
Today's deal was declared by Daniel

l-7

Sat. K:OO um • t 2
Wt apprrciate your
busiMSS

"WW•••

Pass
All pass

o558'1ist and historian, wrote, "Reacllng
is sometimes an ingenious CkNice br
avoiding thought.'
No! at the bridge talllo. where !Wdlng
the car&lt;ls is one of the ar1S of the game.

Mon-Fri

as·

....

32 Sault-

Juniors can be
Inspired readers

g,oo am - 4::&lt;0 pm

593, Meigs County and deScribed •
Parcel
Number: minutes West 209.2 theilc:e . North .
Deed Records.
feat to I "PI{" 1181 to EM! 13 rodl to •
follows:
1400402000
Being In Section No. Commencing at the L.a.t
Descrtption: the ~~... of llelte; llllnce North .
20. Town No.3, Range lnterser:tlon o1 the Sltlmed
In
the County Roed 20, Dkl 12 rodllild 5 leal to
No . 11 , · of Ohio centerline ol County Township
of u.s.
Route
33, the ...... of the
Company's Purchase Road 20 and County Soloboory, County of ~ng •
County 11oM ta.dlng
and
bounded
as Roed
26; thence lololgs, OIIID:
brldga
"Pffi'C*h tram 1llppera Plains
follows.
to-wll: following
the The fallowing lUI gu.id poll at 115.8 to Reedavllla; thence
Beginning eight rOds centerline ol County Hille lllueted In the .... for ;ef&amp;/ence; South ·
w.t 13
north
of
the Roed 26, South 82 Townshlp
• of lhence South 38 rods to the place of
southwest corner of deg. 30' · East, a Salisbury, County of • • - 30 minutes ll.eglnillng,
said Section. thence distance of 441.00 Meiga and s-· of e..t 169.2 feat •lotlfl conlllnlng one acre,
north filly (50) rOds,
feet to a P.K. nail and Ohio;
being
In the centerline of moreorltlla.
thence east eighty baing the point of . Section
16.
ond County RCIM 20, Old EXCEPT:
(80) rOds; thence beginning of the tract described as follows: u.s. Route 33, to the Excepting tram the
~outh fifty (50) rOds, · herein parted and
lleglollliolfl In the piece of beginning, lbove deiCrtbed real
thence west eighty described;
thence center
of
Stile conllining
0.64 - - • trect of lerid
(80) rOds to the place . continuing .
along Highway No. 33, now acree, more or ltn, lleretolore conveyed
of
.beginning, , said centerline the . County . Road
20 excepting all 14gat by J.
Tonence and
containing
twenty·
following
'two following
the rtgtrta of way.
Olive Tonence , to
live (~5) acres, more courses
and relocation of State 1)18 btertna- In the Lou!M
· Isabella
or less.
distances:
Highway No. 33, at above
claecrtptton Poeey by deed dated
Excepting the coal
South 83 deg. 49' 18" the South- comer are megnettc bued ~~ 18, 1952, and
and one-hall of the East, 109.57 feet to a of 1 1.81 ac"' lot' of '011 a aurvay by recorded In Volume
oil. gas and other point; South 85 deg. Roy Gruesar and Hor,.
Hyleli, 170, Page 100 of the
described real estate: minerals under said 22' 49" Ees~ 99.15 Herold
Blackston, llegtatlred SurveJOI Recorda ol lleecla of
Situated
In
the 25 acre parcel. as feet to a P.K. nail; rec:ordMI In Deed No. 2274, aurvey
llelp County, Ohio,
Township
of
reserved In prior thence
departing Book 218, Page 851, . deled September 2, end dHcrlbed ..
lebanon, .County of d~s.
County Road 26,
Deed Recorda of 1985. Being I part of tollowe:
Meigs and State of Excepting the real
South 05 . deg. 52" 118tlga County, Ohio; the
real
Ea- Beginning at a lleke
Ohio and bounded estate conveyed to 00" West. a distance thence
South 78 conveyad to Henry G. in the angle of the
and · described as
Barnes Ray Phelps of 337.00 fMt to a degrees 57 minutes Arnold end Beraa . Humphrey
line;
follows :
by
deed
doled point; thence South Eest 74.5 leet along Arnold,
by deed thence Welt 6-112
Being a pari of 25 November 24, 1993 81 deg. 31' 28" Weat the South Una ot the recorded in volume rOds to a lllka;
acre :t tract as and
recorded · In
a distance of 215.41
sold 1.81
tot, 225, Page 201, Meig1 · thence north t 2 rode
recorded In Parcel
Volume 338, Page feet to a point; marked by a steel County
Deed and 5 fHI to the
Two as Tract No. one
445 of the Meigs thence l'olorlh 05 deg. mine rail, thence Recorda.
center of State Route
of Deed recorded irl County
Deed 52" 00" Eaat, a Soll\h 17 degrees 47 Current
Owner: 680; thence eset
Deed Book 302. Page Records.
distance of 308.80 minutes West 90.8 Gerlruda
Flnlaw
: : g . ! : :rod~
593, Meigs County
Rel.erence
Deed: feet to a P.K. noll in feet; theitce South 69 (decea!led) at al
Recorder's
Office, Volume 264. Page the centerline of dag111es 37 minulll• Prtor
Deed ·
0 1
Meigs County, Ohio;
253, Meigs County
County Roed 26 and Eeat
58.17
feet; Ralerencn: Volume to
Humphrey
take in line;
the
also being a pari of Olllcial Records.
being the point of thence South 17 225, Page 201
Section 20, Township. Auditor's Parcet · No.;
beginning of the tract degrees 17 minutes . apprellled at $50,000
3 North, Range 11
07·00971 .001
herein described and • East 61.3 feet; thence Terms
of
Sola: rods and 5 !Ht to the
West,
Lebanon
Property
Address:
continuing
1.735 South 45 deg111es 30 Cannot be aold lor place of beginning,
Township,
Meigs 32361 DewiH Run
acres, mora or less minutes Etill 103.2 lees than 213rda of containing 112 oc,...
County. Ohio. and Rond, Long Bonom, and subject 1o all feel to the North tide the appraised value. Property:
54783·
more
particularly OH 45743
easements and legal of Oak tree; thence 10% down on day of STATE
RTE
681,
described as follows: · AHorney for Plaintiff:
rlght-of·weys
of Soulb 87 degreea 05 sale, cash or certHied REEDSVILLE, Ohio
Beginning· at a point Little,
Sheets
&amp; record. ·
mlnutea Eaat 116 check, balance due 45172 Meigs County,
being
the Warner, 21t·213 E. Current
Ownei: lest; thence South 18 on conflrmalion. of OH 45172
intersection of the
Second
Street, Joseph Egan at at
dagreea 12 minutes sale..
118-00114.000·
south tine of said 25
Pomeroy, OH 45769, Property at: 36519 Eaat 105.2 feet or to The appraisal did not 09-0118211100
Telephone: (740) 992· Flatwoods Rd.
acre ::t: tract and
the South line of include an interior Prior
Deed
centerline
of 6689
Pomeroy OH 45769
lewis Gr-r land; examination of the Reterencea : Volume
Township Road #138:
Current
Owner: PPI 04·00080.002
thence South ·49 house.
15, Pogo n1
thence along said Gregory Petroski &amp; Prior
Deed degrees 05 mlnutea Roborl E. Beegle, Alao 2006. Glencraet
south line North 82
Joyce Grady at al
References: Volume Weal 264.6 feet along Malga County Sheriff
Mobile Horne Sir 1
deg. 22 Min. '41 Sec. Prior
deed 271, Page 0307
the South line of Attomay
for
the CH0002245KYAB
west passing thru a
references : Volume
Volume 0171, Page Lawls Grua- to the Plaintiff
Current
Owner:
· 518 Inch iron pin set 264, Page 253
0387
center of County Mantey,
Deaa, Harold W. Smith at al
at a distance cl 20.00 Appraised at $10,000
Appraised at $25,000 Road 20, Did Stale · Kochelakl
Appraised at $75,000
feet and going a total
Terms
ot
sale:
Terms
of
Sale:
Route No. 33; thence · POBoxt85028
Terma
of
Sola:
distance of 254.08 Cannot be sold lor Cannot be sold for following tho center Columbus,
OH Cannot be aold lor .
teet to a 5/8 inch "iron
tess than 213rds of leas than 213rds of line of County Road . 43216-5028
loss than 213rds of
pin
set;
thence
the appraised value.
the appralaed value. 20, Old State Route 814-222-4921
the appraised value.
tea vi ng ·south tine
10% down on day of
10%down on day of Nq. 3310 the place ,of (12) 24,31 (1) 7
10% down on day of
north 07 Deg. 37 Min.
sale, cash or certified
sale, cash or. certified beginning,
sale, caah or ceriHied
19 Sec . easl a Check, balance due
check. balance due ·
Public NoUce
diEtance of 309.25 on confirmation of '
on conllrmollon of
feet to a 5/8 Inch Iron sak!.
sale.
rlghta of way.
SHERifF SALES
sale.
pin sel ; thence south
Tt\e appraisal did not The appraisal did not Save and except the CASE
NUMBER The appraisal did
86 Dog. 29 Min. 23 include an interior include an interior following reel estate 08CV042
Include an Interior
, Sec. east passing
examination of the examination of the altuated on tha South VANDERBILT MORT examlnauon of the
· thru a SIB inch Iron
house.
house.
aide, and conveyed &amp; FINANCE INC.
house.
pin set at a distance
Robert E. Beegle,
Robert E. Beegle, to Dorea L. Arnold PLAINnFF
Robert E. Beegle,
· ct 271.92 fe.JI going a Meigs County Sheriff
and
Mildred
E. vs
Meigs County Shlerll
Melga County Sheriff
total distance of 283
AHorney
lo.r
the
Attorney- lor
the Arnold,
by
deed HAROLD W. SMITH
Anorney
lor the
· .65 feet to a point in
Plaintiff
Plaintiff
recorded In Volume ETAL
Plaintiff
the centerline of said
Little
Sheets
&amp;
Lerner Sampson &amp; 243, Page 817 Meigs DEFENDANTS
Jarllch,
Block
&amp;
township road #138;
Warner
Rothfuss
County
Deed Court of Common Rathbone
thence along said
211·213 E 2n~ St.
t20 E. 4th St. 8th Reco'rds,
and Pleas, Meigs County, 602 M. St Suite 500
centerline
the
Pomeroy, QH 45769
Floor
described as followa: Ohio
Cincinnati,
Ohio
loll9wlng
three
740·992·6689
Cincinnati, OH 45202· Situated
In
the In pursuance of an 45202
courses: (lj South 04 (12) 3t , (I) 7,14
4007
Township
of order of aale to me 513-744.JI600
Deg. 56 Min. 54 Sec.
513·241·3100 ,
Sallibury, County of ·directed from said (12) 24,31 (1) 7
west a distance of
Public Notice
(12P1 •.(t) 7 &amp;14
Meigs an!l State of 'court In tho above
44.20 teet to point :
Ohio;
being
In entitled action, I will
Public Notice
(2) South 10 Deg. 43 Sheriff Sales
Section 16, Town 2 expose to sale at
Public Notice
Min. 20 Sec. west a Case
Number
North,
Range
13 public suction on the The Home National
distance of 68.31 teet 08c.v119
Sheriff Salea
Weal of the Ohio front stapa of the Bank will auction the
.to a point : (3) South
Clli Mortgage Inc.
Caae
Number Company's
Meigs County Court following · tte,m on
14 Deg. 45 Min. 41 • Plaintiff
08CV067
purchase, and being House on Friday, Saturday, January 10,
Sec. wes t a distance vs
MldFirsl Ban~
described as follows: Jan. 30, 2009 at 10:00 2009, at 10:00 oJm. at
Joseph Egan et al
of 218.92 feet lo the
Plaintiff
Beginning In the a.m., of said day, the the Bonk's Parking
principal point of Defendant
VI
center , of County foliowl~g described lot
beginning containing
Court of Common
Gertrude
Flnlaw Road 20, old U.S. real estate:
2001
Chevy · St 4
Pleas, Meigs County, {deceased) et at
2.00 •· Subject to all
Route 33, at the EXHIBIT " A"
tGCDT19W51K16953
legal easements and Ohio
Deland anil
Southerly corner of 1 Situated
In
the 8
rights of way.
In pursuance of an
Court of Common 2.26 acre lot of Henry Township of Olive, in 1998
Dodlle
Van
Bearings
were
order ot sale to me Pleas, Meigs County, G.
Arnold
and the County of Meigs, 2B~HB11Y4WK12591
derived
from
directed from said Ohio
Barbara
Arnold, and State· of Ohio, In 2
court In the above
magnetic
taken
In pursuance of an recorded In Deed 100 Acre Lot No. 103, 1887 DOdge Rom Van
Februnry 19. t991 . entitled action, I will
order of sale to me Book 225, Page 201
Town No.4, Range 286HB21X8VK50536
The
·
above
expose to sala at
directed from laid Deed Records of No. tt of tho Ohio 3
description
was
public· auction on the
court In the above Melgo County, Ohio, Compsny's
1994 Ford Mullang
front steps of the' entitled action, I will aeld
prepared f~om an
point
of Purcha11, bounded 1FALP404XRF223164
· being and doecrlbed as The Home National
actual survey made Meigs County Court. expose to sale at beginning
on the 19th day ol
House on Frtday,
public auction on the marked by • "PK" follows:
Bank raaorvea tho
February. 199t by C.
Feb. 6th, 2009 at 10 front steps of the nail, thence North 49 BegiQnlng In the right to reject any
Thomas Smllh, Ohio a.m.,. of sald 'day. the Meigs County Court degreea 05 mlnulao canter of the County and an bide. An
following described
Professional
House on . Friday, Eeel 288.4 feet to an Road leading from vehtclaa are .old, 11
Surveyor #6844 .
real estate :
January 30, 2008 at Iron pipe, passing an Tuppers Plains to Ia whore Is, with no
The above described Situated In Settlon
10 a.m., of said day, Iron plpa at t7.8 feet Reedsville at ,the warranties expressed
the
2.00 • tracl being a ·12. Town 2 North.
loliowl~g
set for referentei Northeast corner at a ' or Implied. For on
Range
part of the following
13
West.
described real estate:
theace
North
79 tract of land now
appointment to see,
Township, Street
Addre11 : degreea 30 minutea formerly owned by call 949-2210, ask lor
parcel. being Parcel Chester
Two of Tract One of Meigs County, Ohio · 34560 Rockepringl Walt 108.9 lest to an John E. Coleman; Sheila.
deed recorded in and
being
mora Road, Pomeroy, OH iron pipe; · thanea thence South 12 rO&lt;Ia (1) 7, 8, 9 .
45769
South 73 degrees OD and 5 lset to a 1lake;
yotume 302, Page particularly bounded

more
48 XXI times c
49 Husl&gt;-hush
28 SnHit I
org..
todl
51 Jirrony'.
30 Soli tissue
successor

IEMI

Arthur ljelps, a

45 Freight

24 Existed
26 lnclino
27 Fjord port

Opening lead: • A

RV"s.
(7401 99!-5344

Sheriff Sales
Case ·
Number
08CV107
Home National Bank
Plalotm
vs
Gregory Petroski &amp;
Joyce Grady el al
Deteodanls
Court of Common
Pleas. Meigs County.
Ohio
In pursuance of an
order ot sale to me·
directed from said
court in the abqve
entitled action . I will
expose to sale. .at
public ·auction on the
front steps of the
Meigs County Court
House on Friday.
Feb. 6th, 2009 at
10:00 a.m .. of said
day. the following

c"""""'

22 Wcdtlut
'-"
units
46 Pizlz:l
23 Comics dog 47 Single no

Dealer: Soutlt

••

~

YOUNG 'S
CARPENTER
SERVICE

l

Vubierable: Both

,.

AUCTIONS/ANTIQUES
liiCIIIIIIr:

alignmc:nb. We: otl:\o

Attn: FllllUKe

~

• Q

• a;

Q 81

•

l / l&lt;l/1 mo. I)Ct

comP..ter wlk"el

Athens Mtdkal Assoclates

-...

• J 10 a
• 'as o

• AQHl
e K Q tO

Ide~ in

acrounling is pn:fem:d.
l~tpetie~~&lt;re in payroll. accounts payable&gt;
Microoofl Offic:e is required.

EMI

• J &amp;
,. It J • 4 z
&amp; -It K 9 1 4 3

SIIJp &amp; COif....lf

7:00 All - 1:00 P11

. JIO

Wesl

•Garlps
• Cornpil4e
Ren.udelic

('740) 'J92-5418')

Medical Associates, an aftiliate
the O'Bieness ·Health Systtm.
lc~lmlllllly has an opening l"or a full time
At!Jens

6 K 7552

• • New llornl'S

•Re-.Jokwtitll
• free Estinllltes

.
••

-

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"

.

1M Daily Sentinel • P-ae 85

BRIDGE

GOVERiotENT
JOBS

•

asrJay,........,7,-

)

I I I 16

~-·~~~~~~lace.

intake - Epoch - Orbit - Penci l· PLANT
"! can't grow anything, "I
to my neighbor. He
replied, "Oardening is simple, just think like a PLANT."

ARLO &amp;JANIS

~·

SOUPTONUTZ

�"Nedl

Page B4 • The Daily Sentinel
"The Pnx:torv tlle
Ol!lvrwce'
$1 and a deed 15 all you
r~e&lt;J

to own '{OUI

dredm

h!.•me Call Nuw'

F' eedctn HCHlles
886 565 1; IE$-

~======

Lunc11room Vending Attendant. Par1 Time. M-F, Servce Manager &amp;

Sam· t pm. pr~ duct delivPrPd to -you Pi::iii.J t'!a.nu·•J. holnlavs
vacatJun
401k, $8 zs,hr Pre-em·
~1l ; yme n1
drug testing.
EOE Cali:JO&lt;W85·5421

Go.--&amp;Fedoral
Jabo

t.'

W turk,......_,7,2G09

www.m, 11 llyatntiiWilcom

AllfYOOP

Phillip
Alder

TechniCian

able Please
sumo

~

LLCOCAAEQ.COU

NEA Crossword Puzzle

Serv~

po51t1ons
av-a tlabJe, HeaHh care &amp;
Retirement ptans av8tltee

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Custoo! H0111&lt; Building
Steel franl( Buitiling.s
Buiklinl,!. R!i!JOOOeling
repair

c:;.,..,,..,

IAt~mlirtg Clerk. All3ssocillte's

• It 11

• Ktol

·-

IIONTY

Hours

.•

••

L&amp;LTtnllara
"'*7 W"ipple Rd.
Pomtroy.OH .

ll'w1lusl be well organized and maintain ·

(5 Pllints)

ll'l:(:ords effectively.

New &amp; Used Tire&lt;.
w~ buv u~ tln.·~.
do Ouel's . lighl
ltlel'hani~.: work,

55 Hospital Orin~
Atbe&amp;ol, OH 4S781

complete ~~erVke oll
changes. small ~ngine
repair.
We ~l"'i"-'e and
winterize boats and

Fax: (740) 566 4821
EOE

-

-llllllllr.
.741-116-11M
E-mail: captbill65@yahoo.com
www.auctionzlp.com
15548

This is

as•

Hnwod ~iller, 111111'11111•• ·

FORR~EV

WINTER RATfS

DEC. ·FEB
• RooM Addl1toM a
-ng

·-Gongts
•Etoc1rtcet6PIIIftlblng
• VInyl Skiing

THE BORN LOSER

Potnllng

·_..,.. """'h Docu

Racine, Ohio 740.247-2019

a..

acre

WELP, I EIETTER GIT GOIN', EL-l GOT A PAN OF SROWNIES 'SOUT
READY TO COME OUTTA TH'
OVEN!!

CAll US TOlMY

._,..Gua....

Cell: 740-41&amp;-50\t7
email:

Owners;
Jon Van Meter &amp;
Paul Rowe

,..
.
P'"
.
.
""
W~,._l WOUI.t&gt;'10U!ll&gt;.'l \~ fi\'(
. I !NOUI.t&gt; AAIJE 10 ~'( 1\ I~--, v-,.,~t&gt; ~11&gt;\C.C wt AA.t ~ ~~~1'
\W&gt;..T '100 ~ ~ OUTC.O\Nt;,
. 11\0~1 Rf.t:&gt;EE.fi\\Neo QJ"'Lil'l,
~a.Jtc.T, WI\'&lt; OO~T '1'0\J
60 tY..IT NOW.
~.,--,r-·- - - . CHIEF'?

J&amp;L

Construction

DD·

• VInyl Siding
• Replacement
· Windows
·• Roofing
• Decks
'Garages
• Pole Buildings
• Room Additions
Owner;

i=iii42-i233i~~

HUt-1 &gt; •
NOTHING..
NO IDE"

~~ec~~.~~:~~n d~~ ~:=~~~~ant!;!

a

or

New Homes,

Remodeling,

,. ~~~f'IU"1• 2"QQIII

Quality Seamless
Gutters

oOrywall,
KltchMtS, Baths

Cnmmerda/ L( ReJidentiill

R.L. HOLLON
TRUCKING
Dump truck

service
We do drivew11ys
We Haul
Limestone- Gravel

Dirt· Ag-Lime

740·985·4422

Maintenance Plus
Vinyl
Siding/Repluccment
Windows/Remodeling
Bnnded &amp; ·Insured
740-992-1493 om,·e
· 740-416-8339 Ceil

Free

FIRST 1 I-lAVE TO FINISH M'(

Stanley TreeTrimming
&amp; Removal

TO Fl)( LUNCHES FOR

by ltlls Campos
Clllt:Onty Cll)rltr Cr'fJ)I(911"S llfl M lttc' lrOrll !IUOii! IOn ~ by 1111100, O!Otll
, Each teller 1n lhi CIOI"ltl! 5llll"&lt;l$ltlc ar"(li~IJC[

Gerombou.ll~ who had also seen East's

" ST

echo, rutted With dummy's spade king.
then bravely played a spade to his nine! ·
Four spades bid and made. ·
In the earlier problem. you should call
lor dummy's 10. When East played the
queen at trick one, he dented holding
the jack, because thlr&lt;l hand plays the
bottom of ec~lly high cards.

.o·I H &amp; P

AstroGraph
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PREVIOUS SOLUTION - ~ everyone needs help !rom ewtryone: ·Bertoli
Blecht · Peoples~ refuse help. if one ott ers~ 1n the r1ght way · . A.C
Benson
·

TIIAT DAILY C,fi'il1) 9\ '\, { - fl 'C. ~ C, ® WORD
IUUIU \:)~ ~QU ~J,.
~ IJt({' 0
O~MI

fdll..t b1 CIA Y R. .POllAN _ ; __ _ __

,

O;earra"ge
le"ers
four ltrombled

o.' !he

word~

below ro form iovr simpht ·Wordt

MEPNAN

'tour prominence among your peerS could
grow considerably In the year. ahead.
Situations where you couldn't get noticed
previously may now turn out to be your
greatest vdOties. You may e11en be asked
to assume a leadership role.
CAPRI CORN (Doc. 22-Jan. 19) Material growth looks more promising
than usu~l at this time. You might be able
to add to your resources not from merely
one source but multi ple pipelines that
Gmnn:- musing to hmeiL
open up for you.
"I' m gett ing so old. tn)
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Fob 19) - 'rtour
nobler qualities will be accentuated at this
fiic11ds who have gone to a
time. enhancing your chances lor success
in ways they couldn't previously. Make
will thmk 1didn't
these efforts count for something meaningful.
5
C9mplol• the chucki• quoted
PISCES (Feb. 20·March 20) - You are
. ..J
by fil ling in thu mi!ISII"IQ words
1 ___L,_..J.-.1..-.1.._1.
apt to be rather lucKy, not necessarily !rom
....
you develop from s1aD No 3 below.·
you r own efforts b:ut from something initiated by others. A big Idea or concept will
1ft P &lt;I~H NUMBflfD L[TT!RS IN
prove extremely succes9ful for you.
f:l lH[ S[ SQUARE S
ARIES (March 21·Ap ril 19) - Thi s is an
excellent day to handle matters that
involve business pr9PQ5itions. The only
exception is. when conducting business
with a friend , since you might collect guilt
SCRAM·LETS ANSWERS li6!09
if you get a good deal.
TAURUS (April 20·May 20) - Lady Luck
is apt to loo~ upon your effrirts with more
bene1101ence tha n usual, so get cracking. If
confes.~e~
you don't ~ake advantage ot this rare da\1,
it'll be your own fault
GEMINI (May 21..June 20) - Because
'
(
you're the one with all the good ideas. your
peers are apt to place you In the leadership role whether you're seeking it or not
Don't worry if something doesn't work out.
C.ANCEA (June 21-Juty 22)- EIIBn if you
aren't looking fQr new ways 10 supplement .
your income, something you stumble on or
uncover may til the bill. Investigate it further to see if it fits into your schedule
LEO (July 23·Aug. 22) - Today's e11ents
mi!;lht reveal just how many loyal fr iends
you really ha~e . and chances are it will be ·
llleow
numerous. Vou'\1 discover that they are all
ready to dO for vou what you do tor them.
VIRGO (Aug. 2~·Sopt. 22) - That big
break from an opportunity that opened up
yesterday at work will come full bloom.
Although you. might not get everything·you
want. you"ll get the .majorlty of it .
·
LIBRA {Sept. 23-0ct. 23&gt; - Somelhing
.B)(clting with regard to new friendships is
!~Af~AID
taking place .at this time. so be sure to
"Pl~AWW~T
accept all social invitations. You'll receive
HU.P.
one invite to an evem you won·t want to
miss.
SCORPI O (Oct 24·Nov. 22) - The closer
you get to the fi nish line , the lUcKier you
get, so don't be upset it you start slowly.
Concentrate on doing your best, and oth·
ers will taller as you grow stronger
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23-0ec. 21) Alt hQugh ~ou will be a strong, imSglnatlve
thinker, · you won't hesitate to use th e
clever ideas of others to get you where
you want to go. Combining the best of
everyone will be tho ticket:

SALL'( AND ME ..

and

*Insured
•E•perienced
References Available!
Cull Gary Stanley II&gt;
' 740-591·8044

E~tim:ued ·

COW and BOY
SOME SEE GOD AS A

H&amp;H

(ii(ANm OF WISHES.

Guttering
Seamless Gutters
Rooting; Siding, Gutters
Insured &amp; Bonded
740·653·9657

I'VE ALWAVS SEEN

GOD AS SOMEONE TMAT

EXISTS IN ALL OF US liND
WHO HELPS THOSE WHO
HELP THEMSELVES.

m,NSLATiON: WIT
YER BELLYACHIN',
FIND WHIIT YOU
WANT OUT OF
LIFE liND DO IT.

.':J.

l'lllf\\ll'Cit:l ·lidl I

'PIIItll!td

d

il.llllld diHl ilblllt
lr•ll' ( rror 1 Jto'

/Jo

( 1/r !

GARFIELD ·

•

Scott L. Swain
,....................

Local Contractor

-~

ISA. f "tt1lllld .vt.rt.t,

740·367..0544

0

(.'tnh!Ora-...IA

Free Ealtmatea

Gdpolk,OH

740·367..0536

,_
.:.

MARCUM CONSTRUCTION
' Fencing &amp; Wood
Fnr: • Chain Link

Cnll:

Fencing • Room Additions~ Garages ·

• Vinyl and WoodSiding • Roofins
• Pole Barns •l'atio's, Porches and Decks

MilE W. •cui.OWIIU·
47239 Riebel Rond , Long Bottom. OH

740-985-4141
Cell : 740-416-1834

25+ years experience

Frte Eslimatr1

Adv~rtlse

·in this space for
$67 Per month

•
"

1

I•Pmrront
Quality
Work
•Reasonable Rates

Pomeroy. Ohio

Roofing, Siding,
Soffit, Decks,
Doors, Windows.
Electric, Plumbing,
Drywall,
Remodeling, Room
AddiNdns

Shop the
· Classifteds!

king, then played a third club.

CELEBRITY CIPHER

AND SOMETIMES

GOD IS PUZZLED
~ND HORRIFIED

I.H.Ifal

1e

~..,.;.L~A;...;.T..,:B::...:E;....:.L..,.,..-1

!-lOW Dl DI 6ET
AT TI-lE BOTTOM OF
TI-lE FOOD CHAIN?

CEREAL, AND TI-IEN I HAVE

CORNER STONE
CONSTRUCTION

on
SAVINGS

Geromboux from Canberra, th.e Capital
ol Australia. North's three--club response
was a cue-bk:f raise, showins at least
game-invitational values in spades. After
GeromboUll signed On in three spadfJs
with his minimum opening bid. West was
still there with fou r diamonds. announcing 5-6 or 5· 7 in the. minors. and North .
raised to lour spade~
·
West led the Club ace, under which East
signaled with his six. starting a high-low
wtth a doubleton. West cashed his club

0LI 0Y

::::::...= ~~~ ........
.
llllbiCdH
un .

riot like a seer using tarot cards.

G

·~·

2

A'd dllo
t ns,
Garages, Pole
Buildings, Roofs,
Siding and more.

mor

39 Cticll....,
ittm
40 "ShhLo...
You" word
41 Opposed
42 Caution
44 a-m.m

t9ttH:entury English

w.dneodoy, Jon. 1, 2009
By Bernice Bede Oaol

Jafl\tl Keeaeell

7

36 Kinddlt...

This is working out the lie of the missing
i:atds baSad on tho bidding and play.
To give you an example, suppose•
dummy has K· 10·9 of spades and you
have the doubleton 4·3. Letty leads the
spade two against your cOntract of three
no-trump. YOu call for dlamm~·s nine, ard
righ"ty takes the trick with his queen.
Righty shifis to a club, lefty winning that
trick and leading anotl1er low spade
Would you caU for the 10 or the king
rrom the dummy, or Is it a guess?
Today's deal was declared by Daniel

l-7

Sat. K:OO um • t 2
Wt apprrciate your
busiMSS

"WW•••

Pass
All pass

o558'1ist and historian, wrote, "Reacllng
is sometimes an ingenious CkNice br
avoiding thought.'
No! at the bridge talllo. where !Wdlng
the car&lt;ls is one of the ar1S of the game.

Mon-Fri

as·

....

32 Sault-

Juniors can be
Inspired readers

g,oo am - 4::&lt;0 pm

593, Meigs County and deScribed •
Parcel
Number: minutes West 209.2 theilc:e . North .
Deed Records.
feat to I "PI{" 1181 to EM! 13 rodl to •
follows:
1400402000
Being In Section No. Commencing at the L.a.t
Descrtption: the ~~... of llelte; llllnce North .
20. Town No.3, Range lnterser:tlon o1 the Sltlmed
In
the County Roed 20, Dkl 12 rodllild 5 leal to
No . 11 , · of Ohio centerline ol County Township
of u.s.
Route
33, the ...... of the
Company's Purchase Road 20 and County Soloboory, County of ~ng •
County 11oM ta.dlng
and
bounded
as Roed
26; thence lololgs, OIIID:
brldga
"Pffi'C*h tram 1llppera Plains
follows.
to-wll: following
the The fallowing lUI gu.id poll at 115.8 to Reedavllla; thence
Beginning eight rOds centerline ol County Hille lllueted In the .... for ;ef&amp;/ence; South ·
w.t 13
north
of
the Roed 26, South 82 Townshlp
• of lhence South 38 rods to the place of
southwest corner of deg. 30' · East, a Salisbury, County of • • - 30 minutes ll.eglnillng,
said Section. thence distance of 441.00 Meiga and s-· of e..t 169.2 feat •lotlfl conlllnlng one acre,
north filly (50) rOds,
feet to a P.K. nail and Ohio;
being
In the centerline of moreorltlla.
thence east eighty baing the point of . Section
16.
ond County RCIM 20, Old EXCEPT:
(80) rOds; thence beginning of the tract described as follows: u.s. Route 33, to the Excepting tram the
~outh fifty (50) rOds, · herein parted and
lleglollliolfl In the piece of beginning, lbove deiCrtbed real
thence west eighty described;
thence center
of
Stile conllining
0.64 - - • trect of lerid
(80) rOds to the place . continuing .
along Highway No. 33, now acree, more or ltn, lleretolore conveyed
of
.beginning, , said centerline the . County . Road
20 excepting all 14gat by J.
Tonence and
containing
twenty·
following
'two following
the rtgtrta of way.
Olive Tonence , to
live (~5) acres, more courses
and relocation of State 1)18 btertna- In the Lou!M
· Isabella
or less.
distances:
Highway No. 33, at above
claecrtptton Poeey by deed dated
Excepting the coal
South 83 deg. 49' 18" the South- comer are megnettc bued ~~ 18, 1952, and
and one-hall of the East, 109.57 feet to a of 1 1.81 ac"' lot' of '011 a aurvay by recorded In Volume
oil. gas and other point; South 85 deg. Roy Gruesar and Hor,.
Hyleli, 170, Page 100 of the
described real estate: minerals under said 22' 49" Ees~ 99.15 Herold
Blackston, llegtatlred SurveJOI Recorda ol lleecla of
Situated
In
the 25 acre parcel. as feet to a P.K. nail; rec:ordMI In Deed No. 2274, aurvey
llelp County, Ohio,
Township
of
reserved In prior thence
departing Book 218, Page 851, . deled September 2, end dHcrlbed ..
lebanon, .County of d~s.
County Road 26,
Deed Recorda of 1985. Being I part of tollowe:
Meigs and State of Excepting the real
South 05 . deg. 52" 118tlga County, Ohio; the
real
Ea- Beginning at a lleke
Ohio and bounded estate conveyed to 00" West. a distance thence
South 78 conveyad to Henry G. in the angle of the
and · described as
Barnes Ray Phelps of 337.00 fMt to a degrees 57 minutes Arnold end Beraa . Humphrey
line;
follows :
by
deed
doled point; thence South Eest 74.5 leet along Arnold,
by deed thence Welt 6-112
Being a pari of 25 November 24, 1993 81 deg. 31' 28" Weat the South Una ot the recorded in volume rOds to a lllka;
acre :t tract as and
recorded · In
a distance of 215.41
sold 1.81
tot, 225, Page 201, Meig1 · thence north t 2 rode
recorded In Parcel
Volume 338, Page feet to a point; marked by a steel County
Deed and 5 fHI to the
Two as Tract No. one
445 of the Meigs thence l'olorlh 05 deg. mine rail, thence Recorda.
center of State Route
of Deed recorded irl County
Deed 52" 00" Eaat, a Soll\h 17 degrees 47 Current
Owner: 680; thence eset
Deed Book 302. Page Records.
distance of 308.80 minutes West 90.8 Gerlruda
Flnlaw
: : g . ! : :rod~
593, Meigs County
Rel.erence
Deed: feet to a P.K. noll in feet; theitce South 69 (decea!led) at al
Recorder's
Office, Volume 264. Page the centerline of dag111es 37 minulll• Prtor
Deed ·
0 1
Meigs County, Ohio;
253, Meigs County
County Roed 26 and Eeat
58.17
feet; Ralerencn: Volume to
Humphrey
take in line;
the
also being a pari of Olllcial Records.
being the point of thence South 17 225, Page 201
Section 20, Township. Auditor's Parcet · No.;
beginning of the tract degrees 17 minutes . apprellled at $50,000
3 North, Range 11
07·00971 .001
herein described and • East 61.3 feet; thence Terms
of
Sola: rods and 5 !Ht to the
West,
Lebanon
Property
Address:
continuing
1.735 South 45 deg111es 30 Cannot be aold lor place of beginning,
Township,
Meigs 32361 DewiH Run
acres, mora or less minutes Etill 103.2 lees than 213rda of containing 112 oc,...
County. Ohio. and Rond, Long Bonom, and subject 1o all feel to the North tide the appraised value. Property:
54783·
more
particularly OH 45743
easements and legal of Oak tree; thence 10% down on day of STATE
RTE
681,
described as follows: · AHorney for Plaintiff:
rlght-of·weys
of Soulb 87 degreea 05 sale, cash or certHied REEDSVILLE, Ohio
Beginning· at a point Little,
Sheets
&amp; record. ·
mlnutea Eaat 116 check, balance due 45172 Meigs County,
being
the Warner, 21t·213 E. Current
Ownei: lest; thence South 18 on conflrmalion. of OH 45172
intersection of the
Second
Street, Joseph Egan at at
dagreea 12 minutes sale..
118-00114.000·
south tine of said 25
Pomeroy, OH 45769, Property at: 36519 Eaat 105.2 feet or to The appraisal did not 09-0118211100
Telephone: (740) 992· Flatwoods Rd.
acre ::t: tract and
the South line of include an interior Prior
Deed
centerline
of 6689
Pomeroy OH 45769
lewis Gr-r land; examination of the Reterencea : Volume
Township Road #138:
Current
Owner: PPI 04·00080.002
thence South ·49 house.
15, Pogo n1
thence along said Gregory Petroski &amp; Prior
Deed degrees 05 mlnutea Roborl E. Beegle, Alao 2006. Glencraet
south line North 82
Joyce Grady at al
References: Volume Weal 264.6 feet along Malga County Sheriff
Mobile Horne Sir 1
deg. 22 Min. '41 Sec. Prior
deed 271, Page 0307
the South line of Attomay
for
the CH0002245KYAB
west passing thru a
references : Volume
Volume 0171, Page Lawls Grua- to the Plaintiff
Current
Owner:
· 518 Inch iron pin set 264, Page 253
0387
center of County Mantey,
Deaa, Harold W. Smith at al
at a distance cl 20.00 Appraised at $10,000
Appraised at $25,000 Road 20, Did Stale · Kochelakl
Appraised at $75,000
feet and going a total
Terms
ot
sale:
Terms
of
Sale:
Route No. 33; thence · POBoxt85028
Terma
of
Sola:
distance of 254.08 Cannot be sold lor Cannot be sold for following tho center Columbus,
OH Cannot be aold lor .
teet to a 5/8 inch "iron
tess than 213rds of leas than 213rds of line of County Road . 43216-5028
loss than 213rds of
pin
set;
thence
the appraised value.
the appralaed value. 20, Old State Route 814-222-4921
the appraised value.
tea vi ng ·south tine
10% down on day of
10%down on day of Nq. 3310 the place ,of (12) 24,31 (1) 7
10% down on day of
north 07 Deg. 37 Min.
sale, cash or certified
sale, cash or. certified beginning,
sale, caah or ceriHied
19 Sec . easl a Check, balance due
check. balance due ·
Public NoUce
diEtance of 309.25 on confirmation of '
on conllrmollon of
feet to a 5/8 Inch Iron sak!.
sale.
rlghta of way.
SHERifF SALES
sale.
pin sel ; thence south
Tt\e appraisal did not The appraisal did not Save and except the CASE
NUMBER The appraisal did
86 Dog. 29 Min. 23 include an interior include an interior following reel estate 08CV042
Include an Interior
, Sec. east passing
examination of the examination of the altuated on tha South VANDERBILT MORT examlnauon of the
· thru a SIB inch Iron
house.
house.
aide, and conveyed &amp; FINANCE INC.
house.
pin set at a distance
Robert E. Beegle,
Robert E. Beegle, to Dorea L. Arnold PLAINnFF
Robert E. Beegle,
· ct 271.92 fe.JI going a Meigs County Sheriff
and
Mildred
E. vs
Meigs County Shlerll
Melga County Sheriff
total distance of 283
AHorney
lo.r
the
Attorney- lor
the Arnold,
by
deed HAROLD W. SMITH
Anorney
lor the
· .65 feet to a point in
Plaintiff
Plaintiff
recorded In Volume ETAL
Plaintiff
the centerline of said
Little
Sheets
&amp;
Lerner Sampson &amp; 243, Page 817 Meigs DEFENDANTS
Jarllch,
Block
&amp;
township road #138;
Warner
Rothfuss
County
Deed Court of Common Rathbone
thence along said
211·213 E 2n~ St.
t20 E. 4th St. 8th Reco'rds,
and Pleas, Meigs County, 602 M. St Suite 500
centerline
the
Pomeroy, QH 45769
Floor
described as followa: Ohio
Cincinnati,
Ohio
loll9wlng
three
740·992·6689
Cincinnati, OH 45202· Situated
In
the In pursuance of an 45202
courses: (lj South 04 (12) 3t , (I) 7,14
4007
Township
of order of aale to me 513-744.JI600
Deg. 56 Min. 54 Sec.
513·241·3100 ,
Sallibury, County of ·directed from said (12) 24,31 (1) 7
west a distance of
Public Notice
(12P1 •.(t) 7 &amp;14
Meigs an!l State of 'court In tho above
44.20 teet to point :
Ohio;
being
In entitled action, I will
Public Notice
(2) South 10 Deg. 43 Sheriff Sales
Section 16, Town 2 expose to sale at
Public Notice
Min. 20 Sec. west a Case
Number
North,
Range
13 public suction on the The Home National
distance of 68.31 teet 08c.v119
Sheriff Salea
Weal of the Ohio front stapa of the Bank will auction the
.to a point : (3) South
Clli Mortgage Inc.
Caae
Number Company's
Meigs County Court following · tte,m on
14 Deg. 45 Min. 41 • Plaintiff
08CV067
purchase, and being House on Friday, Saturday, January 10,
Sec. wes t a distance vs
MldFirsl Ban~
described as follows: Jan. 30, 2009 at 10:00 2009, at 10:00 oJm. at
Joseph Egan et al
of 218.92 feet lo the
Plaintiff
Beginning In the a.m., of said day, the the Bonk's Parking
principal point of Defendant
VI
center , of County foliowl~g described lot
beginning containing
Court of Common
Gertrude
Flnlaw Road 20, old U.S. real estate:
2001
Chevy · St 4
Pleas, Meigs County, {deceased) et at
2.00 •· Subject to all
Route 33, at the EXHIBIT " A"
tGCDT19W51K16953
legal easements and Ohio
Deland anil
Southerly corner of 1 Situated
In
the 8
rights of way.
In pursuance of an
Court of Common 2.26 acre lot of Henry Township of Olive, in 1998
Dodlle
Van
Bearings
were
order ot sale to me Pleas, Meigs County, G.
Arnold
and the County of Meigs, 2B~HB11Y4WK12591
derived
from
directed from said Ohio
Barbara
Arnold, and State· of Ohio, In 2
court In the above
magnetic
taken
In pursuance of an recorded In Deed 100 Acre Lot No. 103, 1887 DOdge Rom Van
Februnry 19. t991 . entitled action, I will
order of sale to me Book 225, Page 201
Town No.4, Range 286HB21X8VK50536
The
·
above
expose to sala at
directed from laid Deed Records of No. tt of tho Ohio 3
description
was
public· auction on the
court In the above Melgo County, Ohio, Compsny's
1994 Ford Mullang
front steps of the' entitled action, I will aeld
prepared f~om an
point
of Purcha11, bounded 1FALP404XRF223164
· being and doecrlbed as The Home National
actual survey made Meigs County Court. expose to sale at beginning
on the 19th day ol
House on Frtday,
public auction on the marked by • "PK" follows:
Bank raaorvea tho
February. 199t by C.
Feb. 6th, 2009 at 10 front steps of the nail, thence North 49 BegiQnlng In the right to reject any
Thomas Smllh, Ohio a.m.,. of sald 'day. the Meigs County Court degreea 05 mlnulao canter of the County and an bide. An
following described
Professional
House on . Friday, Eeel 288.4 feet to an Road leading from vehtclaa are .old, 11
Surveyor #6844 .
real estate :
January 30, 2008 at Iron pipe, passing an Tuppers Plains to Ia whore Is, with no
The above described Situated In Settlon
10 a.m., of said day, Iron plpa at t7.8 feet Reedsville at ,the warranties expressed
the
2.00 • tracl being a ·12. Town 2 North.
loliowl~g
set for referentei Northeast corner at a ' or Implied. For on
Range
part of the following
13
West.
described real estate:
theace
North
79 tract of land now
appointment to see,
Township, Street
Addre11 : degreea 30 minutea formerly owned by call 949-2210, ask lor
parcel. being Parcel Chester
Two of Tract One of Meigs County, Ohio · 34560 Rockepringl Walt 108.9 lest to an John E. Coleman; Sheila.
deed recorded in and
being
mora Road, Pomeroy, OH iron pipe; · thanea thence South 12 rO&lt;Ia (1) 7, 8, 9 .
45769
South 73 degrees OD and 5 lset to a 1lake;
yotume 302, Page particularly bounded

more
48 XXI times c
49 Husl&gt;-hush
28 SnHit I
org..
todl
51 Jirrony'.
30 Soli tissue
successor

IEMI

Arthur ljelps, a

45 Freight

24 Existed
26 lnclino
27 Fjord port

Opening lead: • A

RV"s.
(7401 99!-5344

Sheriff Sales
Case ·
Number
08CV107
Home National Bank
Plalotm
vs
Gregory Petroski &amp;
Joyce Grady el al
Deteodanls
Court of Common
Pleas. Meigs County.
Ohio
In pursuance of an
order ot sale to me·
directed from said
court in the abqve
entitled action . I will
expose to sale. .at
public ·auction on the
front steps of the
Meigs County Court
House on Friday.
Feb. 6th, 2009 at
10:00 a.m .. of said
day. the following

c"""""'

22 Wcdtlut
'-"
units
46 Pizlz:l
23 Comics dog 47 Single no

Dealer: Soutlt

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YOUNG 'S
CARPENTER
SERVICE

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Vubierable: Both

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AUCTIONS/ANTIQUES
liiCIIIIIIr:

alignmc:nb. We: otl:\o

Attn: FllllUKe

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comP..ter wlk"el

Athens Mtdkal Assoclates

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Ide~ in

acrounling is pn:fem:d.
l~tpetie~~&lt;re in payroll. accounts payable&gt;
Microoofl Offic:e is required.

EMI

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&amp; -It K 9 1 4 3

SIIJp &amp; COif....lf

7:00 All - 1:00 P11

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Wesl

•Garlps
• Cornpil4e
Ren.udelic

('740) 'J92-5418')

Medical Associates, an aftiliate
the O'Bieness ·Health Systtm.
lc~lmlllllly has an opening l"or a full time
At!Jens

6 K 7552

• • New llornl'S

•Re-.Jokwtitll
• free Estinllltes

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1M Daily Sentinel • P-ae 85

BRIDGE

GOVERiotENT
JOBS

•

asrJay,........,7,-

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I I I 16

~-·~~~~~~lace.

intake - Epoch - Orbit - Penci l· PLANT
"! can't grow anything, "I
to my neighbor. He
replied, "Oardening is simple, just think like a PLANT."

ARLO &amp;JANIS

~·

SOUPTONUTZ

�.,..

'l'let B6. 'The Daily Sentitlel
. '

www

~C-oim outlasts West Virginia, 61-55

•

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- ''•

•

111.1;t

MlAMl (AP) - It used this the national champi- Whittingham from CISting
to be so simple.
onship game- and all the votes For thetr teams.
Two polls. a few bowls other ODeS bowl games ."
"'Someone would bave to
l3 or his 17 p«&gt;ints in the
and - in the eod - a
The winner at Dolphin coovince me odlc:rwu and
second half and No. 5
national champion. maybe Stadium will get a crystal that hasn't happened.~
Cooaecticut beat No. 25
two.
trophy and the No. I rant- Whittingham said 1\lesday.
West V'uginia 61-55 on
Tuesday night.
Now there already are ing in at least one of the
While their votes would
· Hasbeem Thabeet added
three teams claiming to be major polls. probably both.. still be tabulated. Brown
the ·best in the land. ·and
This, however. is certain: and Whittingham also
13 points all!i 13 ~
for Connecticut ( 13- 1, 2-I
none of them is playing Tbere will be no undisput- might get a stem talking_to
8ig East). With the victory, ·
Thursday night in what's ed national champion this from Grant Teaff. executwe
Huskies coach Jim Calhoun
supposed to be the national season . The debate will' director of the AFCA. Teaff
lOOVed past Lefty Driesell
championship
game rage on long after the con- said earlier,·this week be
into seventh place on the
between No. 2 Oklahoma fetti flies .
planned to send out a memo
NCAA career wins list with
and top-ranted Florida. Neither the Florida or reminding his members of
7,87.
Utah's legal easle is so mad Oklahoma athletic directors that agreement.
West V'trginia (11-3 , 1-1),
he's · trying to figure out a would
comment
on
Only after the 2003 sellmaking its season debut in
, way to blow up the Bowl Shurtleff's plan to. investi- son . . when LSU beat
the rankings, had its worst
Championship Series Olice gate the BCS. and RCS Oklah,oma in the BCS
shooting performance from
and for all.
officials also declined to national title game, bul
the floor at 30.3 percent. The
With Utah having com- talk about it.
Southern California was
Mountaineers were outre- ·
pleted another perlect sea·
This is not the first time a vOted No. 1 in the AP Top ·
bQunded 52-33 and manson - its second in four team that didn't play in the 25, have coaches broken
aged just three field goals
years - that wasn 'I good title game made a good that agreement:
over the tina! eight minutes .
enough to even get the Utes case to be No . l . But never
Three coaches , inchlding
Connecticut figured out
into . the BCS tide game. have so many so boldly Canoll, voted for USC that
West V'trginia's man-to-man
Utah Attorney General stated they deserve the year.
defense after halftime. The
Marie Shurtleff announced national crown.
.
No. 7 Utah stunned No. 4
Huskies shot 12-of-21 (57
Tuesday
he
is
investigating
·
Considering
the
top
six.
Alabama
in the Sugar Bowl
percent) from the floor after
the
BCS
for
a
possible
.
viQtejllllS
in
the
final
regularlast
week.
with a convincgoing just 28 percent in the
lation of federal antitrust season AP Top 25 entered ing 3 1-17 victory and fin·
first half.
laws .
the bowl season with one ished the season as major
Last year the 7-foot-3
He
contends
the
agreeloss, maybe it's no surprise. college football's only
Tha~t had a total of eight
ment unfairly puts schools
First, No. 5 USC jumped unbeaten team at 13-0.
p«&gt;ints as the teams ~plit two
such as Utah, Boise State all over No. 6 Penn State in
·
meetings,
but
the
AP pllclto· and othe~ in conferences the Rose Bowl. Only some Playing in the Mountam
Mountaineers gave him Connecticut center Hasheem Thabeet (34) dunks between Wl.thout an
· automatl·c bt' d to
bage. t'tme I ouc hd owns West
hurts the
Utes' Conference
case. even though
the
enough room this time. West Virginia forwards Devin El!!anks (3) and Wellington the most .lucrative bowl gar
score.
38-24,
look
made
the
Thabeet's
dunk
put
Connecticut ahead to stay, Smith during the first hall of an NCAA college basketball , games at a competitive and as if it was a competitive league finished 6-2 against
financial disadvantage.
game
the Pac· lO. ·
45-44, with 10:50 remain- game in Morgantown, W.Va., on Tuesday.
Maybe
the
AGs
in
As
if
that
wasn't
enough
The Longhorns have felt
.ing. .
u
Connecticut ahead by two, West Virginia, which saw its
Neither team led by more West
Virginia's
Cam five-game winning streak California and Texas can to convince the football all along they should be
than four points until Thoroughman could have snapped and lost for the first cook up some.thing up to.try world just :who's the best, playing in the acs title
Thabeet's inside basket put tied the game but missed the time at home this season. to help Southern California Carroll had this parting game instead of Oklahoma.
shot before he left the field: Texas beat the Sooners 45the Huskies ahead 52-4 7 . front end of a bonus free Bryant added II points, giv- and Texas?
Carroll
has
already
"With
all due respect, those 35 in October. But the Big
Pete
with six. minutes left.
throw.
ing the freshman double tigWest Virginia tried to
Connecticut's
Jerome ures in scoring for the lith proclaimed his USC team are two great programs 12's divisional tiebreaker
the best in the country. (Florida and Oklahoma), I and BCS standings pre"
come back from the line.
Dyson finished off the scor- time.
.
, Darryl Bryant sank two ing with' a layup and a pair
Connecticut's
Stanley Texas coach Mack Brown don't think anybody can . vented them from making it
to Miami.
free throws to pull West of. free throws in the final ~obinson. playing in just his is proud to say his 'Texas beat the Trojans."
a
staunch
and
There was some hope in
team
is
tops.
And,
of
Carroll,
Virginia within 56-55 with mmute.
stxth game after suun$ out
2:27 left. After Kemba
Da'Sean Butler and Alex the first semester. fimshed cours.e , Utah coach Kyle vocal supporter of a major Austin that an impressive
Whittingham will be giving college playoff system, victory against Ohto State
Walker's !'fee throw put Ruoff scored 13 apiece for with 15 rebounds.
the unbeaten Utes his vote does not have a vote in the in the Fiesta Bowl, comfor No . I.
USA Today coaches· poll. bined with an Oklahoma
Wait a minute: What
The American Football victory in Miami, would
about the Gators and Coaches Association has lead to AP voters making
Sooners?
agreed to have its poll vot- the Longhorns their nationCOLUMBUS (AP) ~ It
"This is lihe national ers make the winner of the al champion.
was still a loss. Yet for some
game," BCS title game No. I on
As exciting as Texas' 24championship
reason this one seemed easier
to swallow for Ohio State's
0klahoma defensive end their final ballots.
21 victory on Monday was,
players and fans.
Auston
English
said.
Nonetheless, that appar- it didn't seem to help thei~,
; The · Buckeyes walked
"There's a reason they call ently won't stop Brown and· cause.
glumly off the field, surrounded by Texas players dancing
and lal\2hing while celebrating a diamiitic Fiesta Bowl
victory on Monday ni2ht. But
for Ohio State the feeling was
different this time - even
though the result was not as the Buckeyes closed their
season with a howl loss for
the third consecutive year.
"We didn't achieve kind of
what we had set out to but,
looking back, we did some
good thin8s," wide receiver
Brian Robtskie said.
Texas quarterback Colt
McCoy threw a 26-yard SCQring pass to Quan Cosby with
16 seconds left to give the
AP photo
Longhorns a 24-21 win over Ohio State quarterback Terrelle Pryor, left, pushes aside
Ohio State ( 10-3). .The Texas cornerback Ryan 'Palmer en route to a 5-yard gain
Buckeye defense was caught
napping on the play, with no during the second quarter ol the Fiesta Bowl NCAA college
one 'back to help after free football game il') Glendale, Ariz., on Monday.
safety Anderson Russell
Robiskie,
Laurinaitis , Worthington ;md Thaddeus
missed a tackle on Cosby as offensive linemen Alex Gibson return up front on
he caught the ball.
Boone and Steve Rehring , defense, with Rob Rose stepAfter the past two seasons, tight end Rory Nicol, fullback ping in to replace Abdall!lh.
when the Buckeyes were Brandon Smith, backup quar- Wtth two of the three starting
dominated in national cham- terback Todd Boeckman, linebackers graduating (Ross
pionship games by Aorida defensive lineman Nad~.&gt;r Homan is the only holdover),
and LSU, there was at least Abdallah. linebacker Marcus the line wiU have to carry the
some consolation in going Freeman and com~rback load while the newcomers
. toe-to-toe with an elite team. Malcolm Jenkins all have develop.
"We have·done a lot of spe- exhausted their eligibility.
. Most of the secondary
cial things. Obviously it is not
On offense, the Buckeyes returns except for Jenkins, the
the way you want to go out," will build around quarterback top cover comer. There are
linebacker James Laurinaitis Terrene Pryor.
also holes at punter and placesaid, a Bible verse painted on
Pryor, the nation's top-rated kicker. .
·
the black smudge beneath quarterback recruit last · · The Buckeyes host USC in
each eye.
spring, learned on the· job the second week of the 2009
Ohio State started the sea- while starting the Buckeyes' season, hoping for a better
son with a stadium full of last 10 games. A smooth run· showing than the 35-3 pasting
optimism. It had nine starters ner but erratic passer, the they suftered in Los Angeles
back on each side of the ball
often sputtered with early this season.
,
from a team that went ll-2 offense
under center. He con1J1ey also play a game at
and began the season ranked Pryor
nected
on
just
5-of-14
passes.
Cleveland
Browns Stadium
No. 2 in the polls.
for
only
66 ,yards against against Toledo. and hit the
The Buckeyes, · who have
Returning to the road to face Big Ten foes
won at least a share of the last Texas.
Woody
·Hayes
philosophy of Penn State, Indiana, Purdue
Big Ten titles, face plenty of "three yards and
a cloud of and Rich Rodriguez's second
questions heading mto next
dust," the Buckeyes seldom edition of. a MiChigan team
season.
Not only will Ohio State be took any chances passing the that finished 3-9.
In the 2006 BCS title game.
hit hard by graduation, fans ball.
Yet
Pryor
also
showed
how
Aorida
had embarrassed the
will be waiting to hear
dangerous
he
can
be,
espeBuckeyes.41-14
in the same
whether standout tailback
of Phoenix
Chris "Beanie" Wells gives cially on designed runs or University
when
breaking
containment.
Stadium
where
they lost in the
up his fmal year of eligibility
He
gained
631
yards
and
final
minute
on Monday
to enter the NFL draft. Wells
scored
six
touchdowns.
and
night.
said .he will announce his
even caught a scoring pass
"I'll be honest: two years
decision later this week.
Wells fought nagging from Boeckman in the founh ago when I was here I cried
like a little girl. Last year I
injuries much of his career at quarter of the Fiesta Bow I.
"I
thought
Terrelle
in
a
big
cried
(after losing to LSU in
. Ohio State. After missing
game
as
a
true
freshman
did
the
title
game) . But this year a
· three full games; he returned
some
very
good
things
,"
lot
of
people
didn't think we
to·rush for I ,197 yards. But he
coach
Jim
Tressel
said
.
would
win
this
game," Boone
saw limited action in the secElsewhere on offense. the said in the somber locker
ond half of the Fiesta Bowl
(finishing with 106 yards on Buckeyes will look for room . "Ninety percent of the
16 carries) due to symptoms replacements to step in. country thought we were
Michigan transfer Justin going to get blown out, get
of a concussion.
· The ever-present specter of Boren and redshin freshman smoked. We played a great
injury, and the fact tliat Wells J.B. Shugans should help on game, we lost that game by
has 10 siblings, lead most the offensive line. Dane ( 16) seconds."
That close loss will have to
insiders to believe that he will Sanzenbacher and Devier
jump to the pros.lf so. backup Posey figure to see more time be enough to !,&gt;et Ohia State's
players and fans through
Dan "Boom.. Herron would at receiver.
Cameron
Heyward,
Doug
another
long winter.
likely take his place.

·Obama bails
'extraordinary' moment
with presidents, A2

MOROANlOWN, W.Va.
(AP) - Jeff Adriel! S(:ored

Another bowl loss, yet .consolation for OSU

•
81

Car show raises

. moneyfor
homelessness, A3

•
Middleport • Pomeroy. Ohio
-;,

11

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l'..!~

lltl l{&gt;..;ll ,, . I \\l ' " '

s

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EPA remains on scene of

'SPOR.1S
•

' .. HirJl school basketbal

Names released in
Ohio .7 accident

8Ciion. See . . 81

TUPPERS PLAINS Though no citation has been
issued , the names of the two
drivers
involved
in
Tuesday's l'Ollision which
temp«&gt;rarily closed Ohio 7
have been released.
·
. According to the GalliaMeigs Post of the Ohio
State Highway Patrol, the
driver of the tanker truck is
Phillip H. Dunlap, 55, Leon,
W.Va. The 2005 Volvo premium truck he drove is
owned by G&amp;M Fuel.lnc.
The driver of the sedan
has been idehtified as
Robert A. Northup. 26.
Pomeroy. Northup was driving a 2003 Ford Taurus
with two passengers identified as Brittany D. Cossin,
22. Hockingport and Dustin

OBITUARIFS
~aeAS

• Robert M. Gilland, 79

P. Kebler. 27 • Tuppers
Plains. Both Dunlap and
Northup were transPQlled
by Meigs EMS to St..
Joseph's
Hospital
in
Parkersburg, W.Va. with
. non-incapacitating injuries.
The accident occurred .2
miles north of mile PQSt 20
in Chester. ln addition to
other emergency personnel
mentioned in yesterday's
article. it's also been reported workers from the Thppers
Plains Chester Water District
were first on scene to help
put out a fire and as~ist
Dunlap out of his truck.
The tanker truck overturned and spilled around
I .000 gallons of diesel at
the
scene. prompting ~
involvement from the Ohio .
.
.
.
,
.
.
Photo ~Y of Ohio I!Fil
Environmental Protection ~names of dnvers tnvolved tn Tuesdays collisiOn which caused the temporary closure of
·
OhiO 7 1n Chester have been released. Cleanup activities by the Ohio EPA are still under·
PluM ... Accident. AS way alter a spill of around 1.000 gallons of diesel escaped from this overturned tanker.

ACS

Retiree honored

INSIDE

grants

available
· STAFF RI!PORT

AS

MOSNEWSO~DA.Il.V~NTINE\..()01,!

. . winter
lib 1'6Y881s beauty
'~ ~ng Hills.

Sit:Piae A6
t

,.

•

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am1

'

Coming Soon To

Oallla, Meigs &amp; Mason
Counties

We need your
Inspirational Stories!

:. 'Rent' tour kicks off in
CIENeland. See Page A6
'

WEATHER

Submit Your Stories To

Matt Rodgers ·
·mrodgers@mydailytribune.com
or mail to
Gallipolis Daily Tribune

Attn: Matt Rodgers

P.O. Box 469
Gallipolis, OH 45631

And four Story
~lght Be lnduded
In This
faith Based
· ~agazlne

111Hi.llh'l' l1 tllh.'l.\,'tl\11

.

Charlene Hoelllchlphoto

There was lots of reminiscing going on at Wednesday's retirement party honoring Howard Frenk, left. After all he's been
working in the Meigs County Courthouse for many years, the last 18 of which was county treasurer. Among the many
attending the party were his son, Ray Frank, and Viola and Bob Hartenbach, left to right. Early in his career Howard was
a deputy for Hartenbach who at the time was Meigs County sheriH..

Pelosi administers
oath to Rep. Wilson

.. , Detalla on Page A3

Bv BRIAN

J. REED

BREEDOMYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

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•

WASHINGTON , D.C. - U.S. House
Speaker Nancy Pelosi administered the oath
of office to U.S. Rep. Charlie Wilson. 0-St.
Clairsville, in a Thesday ceremony in
Washin~ton. D.C.
.
Pelosi conducted individual swearing-in
ceremonies for Wilson and other members of
congress. following ·an oath taken en masse
on the floor of the U.S . House.
. Wilson was first elected to Congress in
2006, succeeding Oov. Ted Strickland' as
representative to the Ohio Sixth
Congressional District. The district includes
.12 counties in southern and eastern Ohio,
·
including Meigs County.
Wilson is a member of the House
Committee on Financial Services, and the
Science and Technology Committee.
He is also a member of the Congressional
Steel Cnucus .
Before his election to Congress, Wilson
served I 0 years in the Ohio House and
· Submitted photo Senate.
Wilson has four sons and nine grandchilU.S. Rep. Charlie Wilson took his oath of oH.ice as a member of the 111th
dren .
Congress Tuesday from House Speaker Nancy Pelosi.

•

•

POMEROY - Victims of
Cancer in 30 counties in
Ohio's Central Region of
the American Cancer
Society, which includes
Meigs and Gallia, have only
until Jan. 23 'to apply for
transportation assistance to
and from medical treatments
through
the
Community
Investment
Grant (CIG) program.
The American Cancer
Society (ACS) has a total of
$80,000 that will be divided
between the five re~ions in
Ohio. Up to $4.000 m grant
funding is available per
grantee for the one-year
grant period.
Agencies from Athens.
Belmont, · Coshocton,
Delaware, Fairtield. Fayette.
Franklin, Oallia. Guernsey. .
Hocking, Jackson. Knox,
Lawrence,
Licking,
Madison, Marion, Meigs,
Monroe. Morgan, Morrow,
Musk.ingum. Noble. Perry.
Pickaway, Pike. Ross,
Scioto, Union, Vinton and
Washington Counties are ·
encouraged to apply.
·
This year ~s CIG's will be
used by agencies to .tranS'
port cancer patients to and
from medical treatment at
hospitals, medical centers or
other locations thai provide
cancer
treatment.
Organizations and agencies
must be a qualilied 50 I (c) 3
tax exempt organization or
provide a letter from a tax.
exempt organization who
will oversee the fiscal management of the grant.
A group of volunteers
from each region will
review and allocate the
·fun,ds to qualified .applicants. All funds must be
used for the purpose specified in the application.
Applicants will be notified
by March I, 2009 on
whether or not the~ are
funded. The ClG penod is
from March I. 2009 to Feb.
28.2010.
In past years the CJG ·s
concentrated on certain
types of cancer and pro- ·
grams, s11ch as colorectal
cancer, breast cancer and
tobacco prevention . This
year's focus is solely on
transportation for cancer

PIMM ' " Grants. AS

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