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                  <text>Middleport • Pomeroy • Gallipolis. OH • Pt . Pleasant. wv

Page D6 • The Sunday Tunes- Sentinel

'

•

Sunday. March I . 2009

I

Circle reme~
.shut-ins arid sick
residents, A3

Five generations, A3

•
Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio

Last 3 Days, Sale Ends Maa ch 2ncl
Bring us ANY ,aclwertlsetl price, we WILL save.you •oney!

.........

.

") 1 )

l I '\ I to.,

• \

t

·d . .'l .~ \ ~ ' .

SPORTS

.

:- Higt) school basketbal
action. Set Page Bl

1h )

\

No
BRIAN J. REED

POMEROY - The Ohio
Bureau
of
Criminal
Identification
and
investigation will handle all
public communications about
the Doris )ackson homicide
case. because the agency is

~::bate

$17,0,0
$4,600

S9 '9$10

....! • :.! t H ll)

\\ \\ \\

BCI to handle ·communications
BY

2009 !19022.
Pontiac
GS XFE
31 MPG., PW, Pl.

I ( ) '\. I ) \ ' . \ I \ R t I I

.,f!ff-..

m-. t l.n h

't · n l t nl'l

t

u 111

er details on Jackson's car

BREEOOMYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

MSRP
•
Marks Discount

100~

Printed 011
Recyded Newsprint '(]. .

leading the investigation.
Meigs County Sberitl'
Roben Beegle said this
weekend the BCI has asked
that all media inquiries be
directed to its London
office. On Friday. Beegle
said the BCI will lead the
homicide ·
investigation
because his relatively small

Investigators believe the
vehicle. a 1989 Mercury
Marquis. was stolen - and
·may be driven - by
staff' does not allow him to Jackson ·s killer. As of
do so as effectively us the · Friday afternoon. it had
BCI can.
been reponedly seen · in a
When asked if Jackson's number of locations, includvehic'le had been . located. ing Inez. Ky . A bulletin was
Beegle said he could not issued alening police in
comment. He said he would Kentucky. Tennessee and
CQIItact BCI Monday to make . Nonh Carolina to watch for
ammgements for ·· public the car and stop it if seen.
Jackson·s body was found
infonnation about the case. .

'

in her Tuppers Plains home
on Thursday. A preliminary
medical examiner 's report
indicales that she died of
strangulation. a stab wound
to the qeck. and head trauma.
Her familv last saw her
Feb. 23: her disappearance
was first officially reported
Thursday momiqg . Family
members found her garage
door open. her vehide missing. and her residence
unlocked.

'Mardi

Gras' theme
of Chamber
gathering

2009 Jr.~~YlEx~~~~erd~
MSRP
.
Marks Discount .

~::::bas21

·

BY BETH SERGENT

5~0,480

BSERGENTOMYOAILYSENTINEI:.COM

$5,000

48o
l
0BITUARIFS
. Page AS
·:.- N'adilie'Qoebel, 75

2009 Ch1ev•v
•9069. Auto.,

MSRP
Marks Discount
Rebate .

~~::e

S12

2009 CheVY Malibu ·
19097. Onstar, 33 !1;1pc, loaded.
MSRP
·$21,475
Marks Discount
$2,597
Rebate
$2,750

S

Sale
Price ·

INSIDE

sm• .

• Rare snow blankets
South as East braces for
storm. See Page A2
• Holzer Clinic gives
back to the community.
,See ~e A3
• West Virginia
purchases slemwheeler.
See Page A3
• Law You Can Use:
Know your rights
. when faced with layoff.
See Page AS
• Johnson returns from
assignment in Iraq.
See Page A5

~'

·WEAmER
2009
GMC Acadia
19206. FWD, SlE Loaded.
MSRP
Marks Discount

~::::bas21
.

$~2,625

$2.400

9$75

2009#9202.
Bufck
En.c lave
White Diamond, Lo1ded.... ~,._
MSRP
Marks Discount

~~:::bs3 9

5
5
s15
$4.~50

PRESIDENTIAL Pre·Owne SAVIN S
Only at Marie Porter GM Supereenter
2009 PonUac Vlbe GT • Bh1'"k',Auto., 181nch Wheels . ·: . . , . .. . .. .. ......... .. . . . .. ... •. . . ·: .... . .$11,995
:1009 Toyota Corolla LE • Cru1w, Aluminum Whe.lt, PW, PL , , , , , , ; , .. , .. , , , , , .. , .. , , .. , .. , • , . , , .... 51~,9!1.'1
2009 Chevy Aveo .LT • 5 Dr., 1 .6l4 Cyl., Auto .. . .. ... ... . , , . .. , .. .. , .. , . . . , .. . , , .... , .. , , , , , . . ... 514,.'19.'1

..

:1001 Che~ HHA.:. 181( Mile~, l111&lt;~~tht!r, AIC, Auto .. . .... . . .. ... .. , ·,., .... ..... , ......... , . . ........ $9,!19.5
ZHI CadH ac DTS • 201( Mil", Certified, Luxury II .. .... .. ...... .. ....... .... .... , . "., .. , . . , ... .. S:li7~9!15
• :1:008 Pontalc Torrent · Olue, Low Mile~, Cle•n ......... .. . .. . ... : . . .. . .. . .. . .... , .... 1 . , ••••.•••• 51&amp;.99.'1
:1:008 Chevy Silverado Ext. Cab ••• • PW, PL, Nicelruck. Certified . , ....... .. . . . , , ..... , ..... . . , .s:n,l!ls
2001~:dlllac MS- 4 Dr. w/ ISA,.C:.6LY8,Aulo ...... .. .. , .. ............... , •. . . , , , .. .. ... . .... , .S:l:1,9U
· 2001 Chevy Eq~:nox lT • FWD, 4 o~.• 1.4L V6, Auto .. .. ....... .... .. .. ... .. .. .... , .... , ........... 514.995
2001
Ma bu LS • 4 Dr., :Ul4Cyi., Auto .......... . . ·. . .. ... . . .. ,, . . .. . .. , ........ , .•.. , , .$14,995
~001 :onttc: ~6CT • 4 Dr., l .5LVb, Auto ..... ·: .' . . . ....... . ...... . ... , ....... , . , ............ , .SU,!J!IS
2::1 C~nt a~ or~nt AWO -Auto., PL, PW, Cerllfled .. ...... • .... , . . ........... , . .. , , , , . .....• , .$1&amp;,495
HI Che\')'
a LTZ - 4 Dr., 3.5L V6, Certlfil'd ........... . . . ·. ... .. . ..... .. ... .. ..... , . .... : .. •$1&amp;•.995
2 HIp e:z ~ bu LT- 4 Dr., UL 4 c,.t, Certified .. ' .... ' ..•. '.' ..........• '.' .. .. ' .. ' . . .. ' .. '.$16.995
1 I on ac: 6 CT • 4 llr., leiither, l ,5l \'6, Certified .......... . . . , . .. .. ....... , .. ..... , . , . , , . , , .SU.101

'7

:r.

2008 M~ury Sable FWD .. 4 Or., l,SL V6, Auto,leath~tr, Loaded, . , • , . , , . , , . , . , . , . , , ,'. , . , , . •,. . , . . , .$1!1,995
2008 Chevy Cobalt lT- 4 Dr., ~011ther, Sunroof .. , . ........ . . .. .... . ........ , • , .... , , , .. , j,, . . . . . 511,995
2008 Mazdal· PW, Pl, 34 MPG, Nice C;~~r .. , ................ .. ... , , . , , . , ... , .. ,. , , , . , , . .. , , , ... S1J,995
2008 Hyundal Sonata Llmtted- Le•lher, Lu.de4 .... .. . . , .... , .. , . , , ... , :. , . . , . .. , , . , .... , , , ... S1J,995
. 2007 Nluan Titan SE Crew Cab • 52K Mile~, VR ... ,. ... . , .......... : .......... .. . .. , .... . ...... .$18,995
2007 Pantlu CN.IId Prh: CTP- 111( Milet, le.ather, Hea d~ Up Di 1 play, Sh;up ....... . , . , , • . , . 1 , •• ,, •• $16',995
2007 Satum Aura XR- Luther, Sunroof, Heated St-&lt;1li ................ .. . , .. .. . , ... . ... , , • , • , , • , • , .$14,995
2006 Chevy Monte Carlo· 2 Or., 3.UV6,Ct'rtirK'd . , ., ..... : ..... ... ... . .. . . , ... , , , , , . , .. , .... .$10,995
:1006 Chevy CobaH SS Supercharaed .. 2.0L4 Cyl., 5 Spd ........ , ......... . ....... , . , .. . ..... ·.. $13,995
1006 Chevy Malibu LTZ- 4 Dr., l .5LVb, Aulu ....................... , ..... ... . ... ... , . . , . .. , , .. S1l,995
ZOOS ~lilac DeVIlle- ~9K Miles, A/(, le~tl1er, Ciean .... . ........ , , , . , , ·:" .. , .... • . .'. , : . , .., . , .$11,995
1005 Cadlll~c SRX "4 Dr. , J.bl lUK Mile~. C11rtifit'd . , ........ , .. .. . . .. . , . . , . :, , ., , .... .. ..... , ..... $16,995
200411;ultk leSabre .. -4 Dr., Aulo. , Luther, One Owner, :J.8L V6 ... , .... , .. . , ... .' .... ,., .............. $9,99!1
:1004 Pontlill: CTO- (uUPf , 5.7LVH, 5 Spd. ' ......... ' ....... " ... ' . .... .. .. . .. ·' · ........ : .. :. ' .. S14,995
1002: Chevy Ellprell Van· 15 P•s!M'snser, lJI( Miln, V8, Clean . , .............. ': . .... ,' ...... .. . , . .. . ...St,9"

With approved credit. Sale ends Marc:h 2nd. Dealership not
responsible for misprints. Photos for Illustration purpose only.

CHEVROLET • CADILLAC • PONTIAC • BUICK • GMC
308 East Main •1·740·992·6614or 1·800·837·1094 • Pomeroy, OH
LiM....
-~

2031173

Hours: Mon.-Thur. 8·7; Fri. 8·6; Sat 9·5; Sun. 12·4• Saturday Servke 1·1• Closed Sunday

www.markportergm.com

Recognized for 50 years .of service
1959 and in the years which followed
HOEWCHOMYDAILYSENTINELCOM
was employed with · the firms' of
Crow. Crow and Porter; Porter. Little
POMEROY - Ann Ryther, whose and Sheets: Porter. Little. Sheets.
career ·as a legal secretary. has Lentes, and Frecker: Little. Sheet ~ .
spanned 50 years , was honored with a Porter and Warner. and now Little.
surprise pany at St. Paul Lutheran . Sheets and Warner.
Jennifer Sheets spoke.of the many
Church Friday.
Her employer, the law firm of Little, · attributes of Ryther and her ~ontribu ­
Sheets and Warner, and the firm's staff tions to the profession over the Y-ears.
She listed her outstanding attnbutes
hosted the celebration .
· Ryther staned working with the law - dedication , loyalty, trust worthifirm of Crow and Crow on Feb. 27, ness, and orgunizational skills - and
BY CHARLENE HOEFLICH

then presented her with a gift from
the firm.
Several of those for whom she had
worked previously also spoke of her
ability and contributions to her pro·
fession .
.
A decorated cake featuring a repli·
ca of a manual typewriter symbolic
of those early years of Ryther 's
career in the legal field was served at
the luncheon.
. Ryther plans to cominuing working
at lhe law finn on a pan-time basis.

..

'

~ u:--·

.

·&lt;.:_.,·

Dismantling of old bridge begins
BY BETH SERGENT

..

BSERG~NTCIMYDAILYSENTINEL . COM

POMEROY - Though
there
has been no date set
Details on Page AS
for the explosive charq;es
that will eventually brmg
down a sizable portion of
the old Pomeroy Mason
Bridge. dismantling of the
old dinosaur has begun.
a SECTIONS- 12 PAGBS
The Ohio Depanment of
Aimie's Mailbox
A3 Transponation is trying to
lighten the ·structure as much
Calendars
A3 as possible, taking it down to
B _
a.skeleton meaning less mate·
Classifieds
3 4 rials will be brought down
B
when the bridge is eventually
~Qmics
5 detonated with explosives.
A4
Cary Betzing. project
Editorials
· engineer for ODOT, says CJ
As Mahan/National is the priObituaries
mary contmctor working on
B·Section the geneml demolition of the
Sports
old bridge. Mahan also built
·
As
the new Bridge of Honor.
Weather
According to Betzing,
Mah~n are beq;inning at the
© ~009 Ohio Valley Publlshtlfll Co.
West Yirgima approach
spans to remove the walk
and make the bridge lighter.
The contractor will then use
4 equipment to remove the

INDEX

.•..
·.

Charlene Hoefllch/photo
Ann Ryther was recognized for her work as a legal secretary for the past 50 years at a surprise party at St. Paul Lutheran
Church. With her here are Douglas Lillie and Jenn~er Sheets of the.Lillie, Sheets and Warner law firm. Linda Warner was
unable to allend.

LighteningJhe load

$46,115

purpose

50

POMEROY - '·Mardi
Gras .. is the theme for this
year 's Meigs
County
Chamber of Commerce
Annual Sprin~ . Dinner.
Dance and Auctton.
The dinner/auction. a signalUre fundraising event which
allows the chantber to keep
opemting, begins at 6 pm ..
April 4 at Kountry Resort
(formerly the Royal Oak
Resort) with tickets at $25 per
person . Tickets can be purchased by calling Mich.elle
Donovan, Meigs County
Chamber of Commerce director at 992-5005 or for more
information ·
e-mail
michelle@ meigscounty chamber.com.
This year's dinner. dance
and auction wiU feature a
DJ. " good food " and many
auction items to bid on .
The auction . helps raise
money to keep the chamber
operating. Donovan said
donated items are also currently being accepted for
the auction.
Sponsorship opportunities
include. the "gold" level at
$400 which includes eight
tickels. name in program.
priority seating. party favors .
table display available: the
"purple" level . $300. four
tickets. name in program .
priority seating. party favors:
the "green" level al $200.
two tickets . name in program. pm1y favors.
Donovan said this event
coupled with the annual
golf otiting and membership
dues are what helps keep
the chamber alive.and well.

•,

deck and beams of the
approach spans before they
prepare to ' demolish the
main span with explosives.
The conlractor. responsible for the detonation of the
bridge is Duane Houkom
Inc. from Texas . Kristofer
Hecht and George ·s.
Rainwaler are the two individuals responsible for the
blasting on this bridge. ·
After the removal of as
much material as possible
from the structure. a detonation plan must be approved
and a pennit granted by the
United States Coast Guard
before a charge can detonate
the center of the bridge,
dropping it irito the Ohio
River. ODOT will then have
around 24 hours to clear the
channel for barge traffic .
Then. possibly two weeks
later, a series of charges will
be used to take down the
cantilever and back spans
which is basically what's left
Beth Sergentiphoto
on both sides of the river.
ODOT . will notify the The obsolete Pomeroy Mason Bridge stands in the shadow of its replacement , the Bridge
media and public when the of Honor. Construction crews have begun dismantling the old I:Jridge to get it as light as
.•
detonation date has been set. . possible before eventually detonating the center sp.an with explosives.
'

�The Daily Sentinel

BY S1£V£N R. HURST
'-SSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

WASHINGTON - The
top U.S. military official
wd Sunday that Iran has
suff"JCient fissile material for
a nuclear weapon. declaring
it would be a "very. very bad
outcome'' should Tehran
move forward with a bomb.
· Adm. Mike Mullen .
chairman of the Joint Chiefs
of Staff, offi:red 'the assess·
ment when questioned in a
broadcast interview about a
recent repon by the U .N.
nuclear watchdog · on the
state of Iran's uranium
enrichment program. which
can create nuclear fuel and
may
be
sufficiently
advanced to produce the
core of warheads.
Mullen was asked if Iran
now had enough fissile material to make a bomb. He
respOnded. "We think they
do, quite frankly. And Iran
having a nuclear weapon I've
believed for a long tune is a
very, very bad outcome for
the region and for the world.''
Mullen's
SJl?kesman.
Capt. John Ktrby. said
Mullen was referring only to
the International Atomic
Energy Agency's finding
that Iran has processed 2.222
. pounds (I ,010 kilograms) of
low-enriched uranium.
Expens differ on whether
that stockpile is enough to
allow Iran to further refine the
material and arm one weapon,
should it choose to do so.
Experts also disagree about
how long it would take Iran to
make the leap to a deployable
weapon. Iran is continuing an
·accelerated nuclear development program.
State
Department
spokesman Roben A. Wood
said Sunday. that it was not
possible say how much fissile material Iran has accumulated.
"There are differing view
not only outside government
but also inside the government" on how far Iran has
· gone, Wood said. He added

PageA2

ACROSS THE ·NATION

25 homes
destroyed in
central Texas
wildfire

Birth announced

MENTOR - Kevin and
Megan (Nichols) Balaban
ot Mentor. Ohio announce
th~ birth of a daughter
Riley Elayne Balaban.
•
She was born Dec. 5,
~008 ~t Lake West Hospital
m Wtlloughby. Ohio, and
wetghed 7 pounds I ounce.
The newborn is the granddaughter of John and
Bn;nd.a Nichols of Vincent.
Ohio and Dennis and Linda
Balaban of Eastlake, Ohio
and the great-granddaughter of · Wanda Wolf of
Chester, Ohio.

Under an international be said. the conditions are in
nuclear treaty it has signed. place for the Baghdad govIran has the right to develop ernment to successfully take
a civilian program for the control of the country.
nuclear generation of elecMullen said Obama listricity. But any · such pro- tened extensively to the
BASTROP: Teuse (AP)
gram must be open to inter· American military leadetship
A wildfire fueled by
national inspection. Iran has and u.s. commanders in lnlq
balked at that after it before announcing withdraw- grass. brush and trees has
became known in past years al. Under the president's destroyed at least 25 home~
that the country ·had hidden · order, the 142,000 U.S. forces and three businesses in cenportions of its nuclear effort in lnlq would be drawn down tral Texas.
Otftcials say two National
that could be linked to a to between 35.000 and 50,000
Guard
helicopters joined
weapons program.
troop&amp; by the 20 10 date. All
other
aircraft
Sunday in
At issue now is Iran's ura- forces would be withdrawn
dropping water on the blaze
nium enrichment efforts. The by the last day of 20 II.
Bush administration insisted
Gates said he thought it near the towns of Bastrop
that was a precursor to mak• was "fairly 'remote" that and Smithville. .
Gov. Rick Perry has acti·
ing weapons-grade materials. conditions in Iraq would
vated
state resources.
President Barack Obama has change enough to alter sigfour Blackhawk
including
sought to change course with nificantly the Obama plan.
Iran. offering diplomatic He said the president has helicopters equipped to
engagement in a bid to prove said he retains the authority drop water and fire retat·
Tehran has more to lose by to change a plan if it's in the dant, firefighters and equip.
ignoring the wishes of other national security interests of ment .
The wildfire has charred
countries than it has to gain · the United States.
through its nuclear efforts.
"Our soldiers wm be con- just over a square mile since
"The question is whether solidated into a limited num- it was staned Satlllday by a
·
you can increase the level of ber of bases in order to pro- fallen power line.
the
sanctions
and
the
cost
to
Texas
Forest
Service
vide protection for themAP photo/FOX News Sunday, Fncklle 1M
the
Iranians
of
pursuing
that
selves
and for civilians who spokesman Lewis Kearney
In this photo provided by FOX News, Adm. Michael Mullen, program at the same time
are
out
wotking in the Iraqi says the fire is about 70 perchairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff. appears on "Fox News you show them an open
neighborhoods
and country· cent contained and that no
Sunday" in Washington Sunday. .
door if they want .to engage side as well," Gates said. additional structures are
·
.
that while he was not sug- anticipated. which is that with the Europeans, with us "The risk to our troops will threatened.
and
so
on
if
they
walk
away
who
were
evac.Residents
be
substantially
less
than
gesting Mullen was incor- Iran remains in pursuit of its
from that program," Gates certainly was last year, and it . uated during the .night were
reel, "We just don't know" nuclear 'program."
"Our chances of being has, has gr:;~dually declined." being escorted back into the
said.
exactly how much fissile
Iran, now subjected to var- successful,
it seems to me,
Gates appeared oil NBC's area Sundhy to Identify their
material Iran.now holds.
. ious penalties by · the U.N., . are a lot better
at
$35
or
$40 "Meet the Press," while property.
·
.
"We are concerned they the U.S. and others over its oil than they were at $140
Bastrop is about 30 ·miles
are gening close" to having nuclear program. denies it oil because there are · eco- Mullen also was interviewed
on
"Fox
News
Sunday."
southeast
of Austin.
enough to build a nuclear wants to build a bomb. It . nomic costs to this program,
w~apon, he added. Wood assens its program is intendspoke to reponers traveling ed to provide the country they do have economic
riii:i~ttl~~
. W~
with Secretary of State with the homegrown ability challenges at home."
Days
after
Obama
Hillary Rodham Clinton in to generate electricity from
Egypt.
·
nuclear reactors.
announced
plan toforces
with·
Chl~ract·
draw U.S. his
combat
So far, the U.S. has not
Defense Secretary Robert
Iraq by Aug. 31, 2010,
Dr
L. Pie
DC • Chiropractic Pbvsician
Gates. who like Mullen · relented in its Claims that from
Mullen
and
Gates
made
clear
·
th
lnsurrulC'C' • Auto Acadcnls • Workers ( omp
appeared on the Sunday talk Iran has ambitions to join
support for e COm· ·
• Medocaro • Mc&lt;hctud ( WV &amp; O Hi ~
·
shows, did not go as far as the club of nu~:Jear-armed thetr
mander m chief's approach.
Bo&lt;·l &amp; Noel&lt; l~m • HeaJ•ches
Mullen. The Iranians, Gates nations. Mullen seemed to
Mullen said he was com·
•t&gt;e,,.,nnl &amp; SportslnJu•y
said, are "not close to a restate that · position in his . fortable with the decision
R_c.•uiw: Nt·w Jl"''~'ww~u Ft•~· $1.5.00 }
.
.
'
QDer Gt•(m Fm· Vmn.surt!d Pmu•nu Ot~l\'.
weapon at this point and so remarks on CNN's "State of whtle
notmg he was reluc.vusr R""" c""P'"' E•P"" 511 tov ·
there is some time" for con- the Union." He . was not
tant
to
~a~,
~bout
"winning
.
236
.F.
and losmg m Iraq. Rather,
_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _Mila
_ _St.,
_PoaiKO)·,
_ _ _OH.
_ _740-!m·looO
_ _ _ ..1
tinued diplomatic efforts.
asked:to elaborate. ·
And the U.S. ambassador
to the United Nations.
Susan Rice, recently told
National. Public Radio that
the IAEA repon "confirms
what we all had feared and

GALLIPOLIS
Throughout the month of
February. Holzer Clinic
physicians and staff gave
back to the communities they
serve by helping to replenish
local food pantries with nonperishable food items.
Each Friday. employees
9onated food items and wore
jeans and red !·shins to show
their suppon for the cause.
''Our employees were very
excited to be involved in
· -such a rewarding project,"
stated Benie Saunders.
Holzer Clinic Customer
·Service Committee Chair.
"This project was planned
because Holzer Clinic
:employees care deeply about
the people in the community,
:and they wanted to do some:thing to give back. We decid:ed that. considering the present economy. a food drive to
stock the local food pantries
·would be a good place to
-,..ian;: said Saunders.

lc Center'I·
·
· · II

•

{

I

Public meetings

.
J\1onday, March 2
RUTLAND - Rutland
. Township Trustees meet in
. regular session. 5 p.m ..
•·Rutland Fire Station . .
. LETART FALLS
Letart Township Trustees , 5
p.m., office building.
Wednesday, March 4 .
. PAGEVILLE - Scipio
:Township Trustees , regular
p.m.,
· meeting ,
6:30
PagevHie Town Hall.
.

Cltibs and
organizations

'

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... ... ..

'I ' .

·'

'f .

'· .

;.

•j

., • ·1 ... ~'

•

· READY TO BUILD SUCCESS?

CALL US TODAY. WE'RE READY TO GET TO \YORK FOR YOU!

'.

Overall. Holzer Clinic gave
over 5,000 pounds of food to
local food pantries and sehool
programs. Some of the food
recipients include: in Athens
County. the John W. Clem
Recovery House and the
Athens Job and Family
Services; in Meigs County,
The Rutland Church of God;
in Lawrence County.
The
Chesapeake
Community Center; in
Jackson County, the Jackson
Christian Chlll'l;h, Oak Hill
Food Pantry. Jackson Food
Pantry,. and "My Brother's
Place '; in Kanawha County,
Hands and Hearts and
in Mason
Sojourners:
County, the Mason County
Homeless Shelter; and in
Galli a County. the Gallipolis
Outreach Center, Vinton
Ba(ltist Church, Grace
Umted . Methodist Church,
Vinton County Outreach,
and the Gallipolis Snack
Pack Program.

Monday, March 2
POMEROY - Meigs
County Cancer Initiative,
regular meeting. noon, con·
room.
Meigs
· ferencc
: County Health Depanment.
: MIDDLEPORT
· Middleport
Community
Association. 9:30 · a.m.,
Peoples Bank .
Thesday, March 3
POMEROY - TOPS will
meet at 5:30 p.m. at the
: Senior Citizens Center for its
: regular weekly meeting . f\n
· open house is being planned
for Marc)) I0 for the pu~ose
of expanding membershtp.
MIDDLEPORT- Stated
: meeting of Middleport
· Lodge #363 , F&amp;AM , 7:30
· p.m.. Middleport Masonic
Temple. All Masons invited.
Refreshments follow.
POMEROY - Ladies
Auxiliary, Drew Webster
Post 39, American Legion,
·w ill meet at I p.m . at the
: Legion Hall in the old
Salisbury elementar-y school
building. .
Wednesday, March 4
POMEROY - Meigs
County Board of Health,
. regular meeting. 5 p.m.,
conference room. Metgs
· County Health Department.

POMEROY CWC
meeting to follow the 7 p.m.
Mass for the living arid
deceased members of
Sacred Heart Church in
Pomeroy.
POMEROY
Middleport Literary Club, 2
p.m.. at the · Pomeroy
Library. Connie Gilkey will
review "The Madness of
Mary Lincoln" by J:json
Emerson.

Church events

740-992~2155
•

The DaJiy Sentinel
•

.PARKERSBURG. W.Va .
(AP) - The state of West
Virginia now owns tts own
sternwheeler
to
ferry
tourists
to
historic
Blennerhasset Island.
State officials signed a
contract Wednesday to buy
a 149-passenger puddlewheeler from River Marine
LLC of Moline . Ill ., for just
under $405 ,000.
Matthew Baker, assistant
superintendent
of
Blennerhassett
Island
.Historical State Park, says

. Submitted photo

Little Kanner Conley is the filth generation in the family of Mary Romine, his great-great grandmother, pictured holding
him. Others here are front, Ashley Samar, his mother,. and Tonia Samar, his grandmother, front, and Betty Kleinert, his ·
great-grandmother, back right.
.
' . . ·
·
·

Circle remembers shut-ills and ·sick residents
RACINE - Fifty-two
baskets of fruit were pre- .
pared for shutins and the
sick at a recent meeting of
the Sonshine Circle at the
church.
At the meeting the Circle
planned a bake and rum·
mage sale to be held at the
Bethany Dorcas Church and
·arranged to make noodles on
March 16 and 18. Orders for
the noodles are now being
taken. The regular monthly
donation was made to the
Meigs County Council on
Aging and baked goods
were sentto God's Net.
It was reponed that 92
cards were sent out over the
past month. Devotions were
given by Judy Gilmore who
read "Sweetness is Charity,"
Mary Ball who gave quotes
from Mother Theresa and
Louise Frank had prayer.
Repons were given and · 1----~.:...~.....:-...
approved. Gilmore gave the
SubmiHed photo
bless before refreshments Fifty-two fruit baskets to be taken to shutins and sick area residents were made and deliv·
were served. Next meeting ered by Sonshine Circle members. Here members working, lefl to right, prepare baskets, ·
will be· March 12.
Blondena Rainer. Mildred Hart,. Ruth Simpson, Bet)Y Proffitt, and Wilma Smith.

Thursday, March S
POMEROY.- Revival at
Carleton
Church,
Kingsbury Road. 6:30 p.m.
through Sunday with speak-'
ers David Rahamut, Ronnie
Vance. Robert Vance.
8Y KATHY MITCHELL
Special sio¥ers. 698-7238
AND MARCY SUGAR
for information .
Saturday, March 7
Dear Annie: It's after I
MIDDLEPORT - The
a.m.
and I can't sleep for the
film. "Fireproof," shown at
second
straight night Two
6 p.m. at Victory Baptist
days ago, my husbaf\d of 15
Church, Middlepon.
years told me he's a crossdresser. Apparently at one
of his organization's' meet·
ings. he was advised to
Thesday, March 3 .
come .out of the closet.
PIKETON
Elma
We've had u wonderful
Imboden will observe his marriage with not one seri90th birthday on March 3. ous argument. We get &lt;~long
Cards may be sent to him at fabulously, traveling and
3752 Long Fork Road, living a very comfortable
Piketon. Ohio. 45661.
life. My grown children
Thursday, March S
from my first marriage love
POMEROY - Herman hilT!, and· he's been a wonMichael will ,celebrate his derful stepfather· and grand·
91 st binhday today. cards father.
may be sent to, 41903
He dressed up for me and
Kingsbury Road. Pomeroy. I was appalled. I feel dirty,
45769.
betrayed and stupid for. not
having figured this out. He
went to a makeup artist and
had picttlres taken of himself .. Who knows if they'll
Saturday, March 7
RACINE - Racine Youth end up on the Internet?
League sign ups. II. a.m.· I What I can't figure out is
. p.m., Racine American how in the world these men.
with their five o'clock shad·
Legion. more info call 247- ows;
feel pretty. There was
3200. 949-2169. .
.
nothing pretty about my
husband .
I can't get an appointment
with a psychiatrist for a
month. My ne~ves are shot.
and I need help in understanding and, at my husthe price includes the cost of band's request, accepting
.transporting The Celebrat,ion this. He doesn't wunt our
Princess about I ,300 miles marriage to end. Please jlive
· from Moline to Parkersburg. me some help. - H1,1rtmg
He hopes the stemwheel·
Dear Hurting: We under·
er, built in 1994 and reno- stand your sense of betrayal,
vated in 2007. arrives in but it's better you know
time for the opening of the what's going on so you can
island season on May I .
deal with it. Cross-dressing
For the past two year~. the does not ~ean your husstate leased a 96-passenger .band is gay. The vast majorstemwheeler. For 27 years ity of cross-dressers are het·
before that, it contracted erosexual. There are some
with a private company to wives who have learned to
ferry tourists to the Ohio accept this aspect of their
River is lund .
husband's personality and

ANNIE'S MAILBOX

Employ self-help in ·cross-dressing problem

Birthdays

Youth events

West Virginia purchases
stemwheeler for $405,000

·.

Five generations
r7"":-:'"lll. . .- : - - - - -

~ommunity Calendar

·Rare .snow blankets South
as East braces for storm
BIRMINGHAM, .Ala. O'Malley said.
(AP) - A potent March · In New York, Mayor
snowstorm blanketed much Michael
Bloomberg
of the Sou.theast with snow · announced rnore than 1,300
Sunday before barreling sanitation workers stood
toward the Nonheast, where ready to spread salt and
officials prepared snow- · plow streets.
.
plows and road-salt for a
"It's the first of March,
wintery assault.
. which as you .know is the
The icy blast threatened month that we say comes jn
to drop ue to a foot of snow like a lion and out like a
in the Phtladelphia area, 13 lamb," he said. "lfs pretty
. inc;hes in New York and 15 .clear that the lions a.re get· .
inches across southern New ting ready to roar."
England late Sunday.
As Wayne Letson drove
Thousands of New York through Alabama toward
City sanitation workers pre- Florida on · Sunday, the
pared to salt city streets, and Michigan resident fretted
airlines preemptively can- about sharing the roads with
celed flights Sunday at the Southerners unaccustomed
region's major airpons. . · to winter weather. The last
· The
Pennsylvama time it snowed in Alabama
Department
of was more than a year ago. in
Transportation planned to January 2008.
attack the snow in the
"This is nothing to me,
Philadelphia area with 400 but I'm worried about the
trucks and 77.000 tons of other people who think ther,
stockpiled salt. assistant know what they're doing,'
press
secretary
Gene he sai&lt;l.
.
Blaum said.
Despite above-freezing
In Georgia, the snowfall temperatures ·in downtown
rendered roads treacherous Atlanta. a heavy cunain of
and delayed flights, while in snow fell on cars and
Alabama. ·more than 210 caused traffic . accidents on
ll:hurches in the central pan slushy streets. The unusual
of the Bible Belt state had to weather . prompted Je~si
cancel morning services.
Prahl and Max DiPace to
Vonda.
Braswell
of .take their dog , Cooper. on a
Alabaster, Ala. was throw- walk through snow-covered
ing snowballs in ·her front Piedmont Park.·
yard instead of putting on
"You :
know
us
her Sunday best. "I think Southerners, .we all freak
you can worship in this it's out when it snows," said
so rare," she said.
Prahl, 26.
up to 7 inches of snow
Some flights were canwas expected . through celed at Hartsfield-Jackson
Monday morning in areas of Atlanta
International
Maryland, northern Vi)'ginia · Airport, where the average
and Washington, D.C., delay was nearly two hours,
where Mayor Adrian Fenty according to the Federal
decl~d a snow emergency. · Aviation
Administration
·. JJ!,Virginia, nearly 10,000 Web site.
customers of two power
AirTran
Airways
companies . lost lllectric spokesman Tad' Hutcheson
power Sunday night after said flights out of Atlanta .
the storm blew in.
. into the Nonheast might
Maryland has ·already 11lso be canceled ' Sunday
spent more than $40 million ni~ht.
responding .to bad weather
'I expect . the Nonheast
in what's been a colder- will be hit · pretty hard
than-usual winter, Gov. tonight so our expectations
Martin O'Malley said is that people flying into
. Sunday. Any money spent Washington, D.C., and
on digging out from the rare Boston will need to call or
March storm will funher check our Web site for posburden a state that's facing a sible
cancellations,"
$2 billion budget shortfall.
Hutches·on told The Atlanta
"I · don 't like snow," Journal-Constitution.

Monday, March 2, 2009

Holzer Clinic gives .
back to the community

----------------:1
1
ftiiWiiiftW I Iii. .

II ·
I
I
1
L

PageA3

BYTHEBEND

The Daily Sentinel

Monday, March 2, 2009

work out a compromise that
allows the marriage to con·
tinue. but qot all wives are
capable of such tolerance.
There are online self-help
groups for women in your
position. The Society for tlje
Second Self {tri-ess.org) has
a section for wives of crossdressers, and we also recommend
you
contact
CrossDressersWives.com.
Dear Annie: My hpsband
and I have no immediate
family nearby, and our son
and only child lives across
the country. We are healthy;
but at an age when we
understand our monality.
We have arrangements in
place with a funeral home
for our burial. We are aware
that traditional expectations
are for a service either at
church. the funeral1home or
graveside .. We have decided
not to hold any memorial
because we· prefer privacy
during what will be a stressful time, and al so because it
is a major inconvenience for
other relatives to travel the
· distance.
Should we inform our
family members now when
all is well'? Or ·should we
make our wishes known in
the death notice and have
the surviving spouse or
child follow up with a per·
sonal telep~one call? Your Faithful Readers
Dear Faithful Readers:
Memorial services are for the
survivors - a way , to say
goodbye to a loved one and
pay respects to the family. If
people find it too inconvenient to attend, they won't
come. But you don't need to
have a service nor · should
you inform people years in
advance. You might change
your mind. However, please
discuss this with your son
and allow him to have some
input on whether or nl)t to

have a service for his remain- to think the worst. lnste&lt;td ,
ing parent. It is unfair to she should take the time to
assume he will not want one. find out what 's really going
Dear Annie: I read the let- on. - Southern Granny
ter from "Annoyed Friend.''
Dear Granny: Many
who belongs to a coffee club . women wrote to say they
that meets weekly. She were ashamed of their
thinks one of the women. homes and that is why they
"Jane," is a freeloader didn't reciprocate.
because she has yet to take
A1inie's Mailbox is writ·
her tum having the women ten by Kathy Mitchell and
over. You said she may be Marcy Sugar, longtime edi·
embarrassed to have people tors of the Ann La11ders
in her home and suggested column. Please e-mail your
"Annoyed" have the next questions to anniesmailmeeting in a coffeehouse.
boxcomcast.net, or write
I joined an upscale book to.: Annie's Mailbox, P.O.
club, but refused to have the Box 118190, Chicago, IL
mernbers in my house 606ll. To find o/11 more
because I am ashamed of about Annie's Mailbox;
the terrible neighborhood and read features by other
where I live. I would have. Creators Syndicate writers
loved to meet at a local cof- and cartoonists, visit the
feehouse had it been ·Creators Syndicate Web
offered . Tell "Annoyed" not page ut www.creutors.com.

Tax Preparation
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H&amp;R BLOCK

�The Daily Sentinel

BY S1£V£N R. HURST
'-SSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

WASHINGTON - The
top U.S. military official
wd Sunday that Iran has
suff"JCient fissile material for
a nuclear weapon. declaring
it would be a "very. very bad
outcome'' should Tehran
move forward with a bomb.
· Adm. Mike Mullen .
chairman of the Joint Chiefs
of Staff, offi:red 'the assess·
ment when questioned in a
broadcast interview about a
recent repon by the U .N.
nuclear watchdog · on the
state of Iran's uranium
enrichment program. which
can create nuclear fuel and
may
be
sufficiently
advanced to produce the
core of warheads.
Mullen was asked if Iran
now had enough fissile material to make a bomb. He
respOnded. "We think they
do, quite frankly. And Iran
having a nuclear weapon I've
believed for a long tune is a
very, very bad outcome for
the region and for the world.''
Mullen's
SJl?kesman.
Capt. John Ktrby. said
Mullen was referring only to
the International Atomic
Energy Agency's finding
that Iran has processed 2.222
. pounds (I ,010 kilograms) of
low-enriched uranium.
Expens differ on whether
that stockpile is enough to
allow Iran to further refine the
material and arm one weapon,
should it choose to do so.
Experts also disagree about
how long it would take Iran to
make the leap to a deployable
weapon. Iran is continuing an
·accelerated nuclear development program.
State
Department
spokesman Roben A. Wood
said Sunday. that it was not
possible say how much fissile material Iran has accumulated.
"There are differing view
not only outside government
but also inside the government" on how far Iran has
· gone, Wood said. He added

PageA2

ACROSS THE ·NATION

25 homes
destroyed in
central Texas
wildfire

Birth announced

MENTOR - Kevin and
Megan (Nichols) Balaban
ot Mentor. Ohio announce
th~ birth of a daughter
Riley Elayne Balaban.
•
She was born Dec. 5,
~008 ~t Lake West Hospital
m Wtlloughby. Ohio, and
wetghed 7 pounds I ounce.
The newborn is the granddaughter of John and
Bn;nd.a Nichols of Vincent.
Ohio and Dennis and Linda
Balaban of Eastlake, Ohio
and the great-granddaughter of · Wanda Wolf of
Chester, Ohio.

Under an international be said. the conditions are in
nuclear treaty it has signed. place for the Baghdad govIran has the right to develop ernment to successfully take
a civilian program for the control of the country.
nuclear generation of elecMullen said Obama listricity. But any · such pro- tened extensively to the
BASTROP: Teuse (AP)
gram must be open to inter· American military leadetship
A wildfire fueled by
national inspection. Iran has and u.s. commanders in lnlq
balked at that after it before announcing withdraw- grass. brush and trees has
became known in past years al. Under the president's destroyed at least 25 home~
that the country ·had hidden · order, the 142,000 U.S. forces and three businesses in cenportions of its nuclear effort in lnlq would be drawn down tral Texas.
Otftcials say two National
that could be linked to a to between 35.000 and 50,000
Guard
helicopters joined
weapons program.
troop&amp; by the 20 10 date. All
other
aircraft
Sunday in
At issue now is Iran's ura- forces would be withdrawn
dropping water on the blaze
nium enrichment efforts. The by the last day of 20 II.
Bush administration insisted
Gates said he thought it near the towns of Bastrop
that was a precursor to mak• was "fairly 'remote" that and Smithville. .
Gov. Rick Perry has acti·
ing weapons-grade materials. conditions in Iraq would
vated
state resources.
President Barack Obama has change enough to alter sigfour Blackhawk
including
sought to change course with nificantly the Obama plan.
Iran. offering diplomatic He said the president has helicopters equipped to
engagement in a bid to prove said he retains the authority drop water and fire retat·
Tehran has more to lose by to change a plan if it's in the dant, firefighters and equip.
ignoring the wishes of other national security interests of ment .
The wildfire has charred
countries than it has to gain · the United States.
through its nuclear efforts.
"Our soldiers wm be con- just over a square mile since
"The question is whether solidated into a limited num- it was staned Satlllday by a
·
you can increase the level of ber of bases in order to pro- fallen power line.
the
sanctions
and
the
cost
to
Texas
Forest
Service
vide protection for themAP photo/FOX News Sunday, Fncklle 1M
the
Iranians
of
pursuing
that
selves
and for civilians who spokesman Lewis Kearney
In this photo provided by FOX News, Adm. Michael Mullen, program at the same time
are
out
wotking in the Iraqi says the fire is about 70 perchairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff. appears on "Fox News you show them an open
neighborhoods
and country· cent contained and that no
Sunday" in Washington Sunday. .
door if they want .to engage side as well," Gates said. additional structures are
·
.
that while he was not sug- anticipated. which is that with the Europeans, with us "The risk to our troops will threatened.
and
so
on
if
they
walk
away
who
were
evac.Residents
be
substantially
less
than
gesting Mullen was incor- Iran remains in pursuit of its
from that program," Gates certainly was last year, and it . uated during the .night were
reel, "We just don't know" nuclear 'program."
"Our chances of being has, has gr:;~dually declined." being escorted back into the
said.
exactly how much fissile
Iran, now subjected to var- successful,
it seems to me,
Gates appeared oil NBC's area Sundhy to Identify their
material Iran.now holds.
. ious penalties by · the U.N., . are a lot better
at
$35
or
$40 "Meet the Press," while property.
·
.
"We are concerned they the U.S. and others over its oil than they were at $140
Bastrop is about 30 ·miles
are gening close" to having nuclear program. denies it oil because there are · eco- Mullen also was interviewed
on
"Fox
News
Sunday."
southeast
of Austin.
enough to build a nuclear wants to build a bomb. It . nomic costs to this program,
w~apon, he added. Wood assens its program is intendspoke to reponers traveling ed to provide the country they do have economic
riii:i~ttl~~
. W~
with Secretary of State with the homegrown ability challenges at home."
Days
after
Obama
Hillary Rodham Clinton in to generate electricity from
Egypt.
·
nuclear reactors.
announced
plan toforces
with·
Chl~ract·
draw U.S. his
combat
So far, the U.S. has not
Defense Secretary Robert
Iraq by Aug. 31, 2010,
Dr
L. Pie
DC • Chiropractic Pbvsician
Gates. who like Mullen · relented in its Claims that from
Mullen
and
Gates
made
clear
·
th
lnsurrulC'C' • Auto Acadcnls • Workers ( omp
appeared on the Sunday talk Iran has ambitions to join
support for e COm· ·
• Medocaro • Mc&lt;hctud ( WV &amp; O Hi ~
·
shows, did not go as far as the club of nu~:Jear-armed thetr
mander m chief's approach.
Bo&lt;·l &amp; Noel&lt; l~m • HeaJ•ches
Mullen. The Iranians, Gates nations. Mullen seemed to
Mullen said he was com·
•t&gt;e,,.,nnl &amp; SportslnJu•y
said, are "not close to a restate that · position in his . fortable with the decision
R_c.•uiw: Nt·w Jl"''~'ww~u Ft•~· $1.5.00 }
.
.
'
QDer Gt•(m Fm· Vmn.surt!d Pmu•nu Ot~l\'.
weapon at this point and so remarks on CNN's "State of whtle
notmg he was reluc.vusr R""" c""P'"' E•P"" 511 tov ·
there is some time" for con- the Union." He . was not
tant
to
~a~,
~bout
"winning
.
236
.F.
and losmg m Iraq. Rather,
_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _Mila
_ _St.,
_PoaiKO)·,
_ _ _OH.
_ _740-!m·looO
_ _ _ ..1
tinued diplomatic efforts.
asked:to elaborate. ·
And the U.S. ambassador
to the United Nations.
Susan Rice, recently told
National. Public Radio that
the IAEA repon "confirms
what we all had feared and

GALLIPOLIS
Throughout the month of
February. Holzer Clinic
physicians and staff gave
back to the communities they
serve by helping to replenish
local food pantries with nonperishable food items.
Each Friday. employees
9onated food items and wore
jeans and red !·shins to show
their suppon for the cause.
''Our employees were very
excited to be involved in
· -such a rewarding project,"
stated Benie Saunders.
Holzer Clinic Customer
·Service Committee Chair.
"This project was planned
because Holzer Clinic
:employees care deeply about
the people in the community,
:and they wanted to do some:thing to give back. We decid:ed that. considering the present economy. a food drive to
stock the local food pantries
·would be a good place to
-,..ian;: said Saunders.

lc Center'I·
·
· · II

•

{

I

Public meetings

.
J\1onday, March 2
RUTLAND - Rutland
. Township Trustees meet in
. regular session. 5 p.m ..
•·Rutland Fire Station . .
. LETART FALLS
Letart Township Trustees , 5
p.m., office building.
Wednesday, March 4 .
. PAGEVILLE - Scipio
:Township Trustees , regular
p.m.,
· meeting ,
6:30
PagevHie Town Hall.
.

Cltibs and
organizations

'

,,

... ... ..

'I ' .

·'

'f .

'· .

;.

•j

., • ·1 ... ~'

•

· READY TO BUILD SUCCESS?

CALL US TODAY. WE'RE READY TO GET TO \YORK FOR YOU!

'.

Overall. Holzer Clinic gave
over 5,000 pounds of food to
local food pantries and sehool
programs. Some of the food
recipients include: in Athens
County. the John W. Clem
Recovery House and the
Athens Job and Family
Services; in Meigs County,
The Rutland Church of God;
in Lawrence County.
The
Chesapeake
Community Center; in
Jackson County, the Jackson
Christian Chlll'l;h, Oak Hill
Food Pantry. Jackson Food
Pantry,. and "My Brother's
Place '; in Kanawha County,
Hands and Hearts and
in Mason
Sojourners:
County, the Mason County
Homeless Shelter; and in
Galli a County. the Gallipolis
Outreach Center, Vinton
Ba(ltist Church, Grace
Umted . Methodist Church,
Vinton County Outreach,
and the Gallipolis Snack
Pack Program.

Monday, March 2
POMEROY - Meigs
County Cancer Initiative,
regular meeting. noon, con·
room.
Meigs
· ferencc
: County Health Depanment.
: MIDDLEPORT
· Middleport
Community
Association. 9:30 · a.m.,
Peoples Bank .
Thesday, March 3
POMEROY - TOPS will
meet at 5:30 p.m. at the
: Senior Citizens Center for its
: regular weekly meeting . f\n
· open house is being planned
for Marc)) I0 for the pu~ose
of expanding membershtp.
MIDDLEPORT- Stated
: meeting of Middleport
· Lodge #363 , F&amp;AM , 7:30
· p.m.. Middleport Masonic
Temple. All Masons invited.
Refreshments follow.
POMEROY - Ladies
Auxiliary, Drew Webster
Post 39, American Legion,
·w ill meet at I p.m . at the
: Legion Hall in the old
Salisbury elementar-y school
building. .
Wednesday, March 4
POMEROY - Meigs
County Board of Health,
. regular meeting. 5 p.m.,
conference room. Metgs
· County Health Department.

POMEROY CWC
meeting to follow the 7 p.m.
Mass for the living arid
deceased members of
Sacred Heart Church in
Pomeroy.
POMEROY
Middleport Literary Club, 2
p.m.. at the · Pomeroy
Library. Connie Gilkey will
review "The Madness of
Mary Lincoln" by J:json
Emerson.

Church events

740-992~2155
•

The DaJiy Sentinel
•

.PARKERSBURG. W.Va .
(AP) - The state of West
Virginia now owns tts own
sternwheeler
to
ferry
tourists
to
historic
Blennerhasset Island.
State officials signed a
contract Wednesday to buy
a 149-passenger puddlewheeler from River Marine
LLC of Moline . Ill ., for just
under $405 ,000.
Matthew Baker, assistant
superintendent
of
Blennerhassett
Island
.Historical State Park, says

. Submitted photo

Little Kanner Conley is the filth generation in the family of Mary Romine, his great-great grandmother, pictured holding
him. Others here are front, Ashley Samar, his mother,. and Tonia Samar, his grandmother, front, and Betty Kleinert, his ·
great-grandmother, back right.
.
' . . ·
·
·

Circle remembers shut-ills and ·sick residents
RACINE - Fifty-two
baskets of fruit were pre- .
pared for shutins and the
sick at a recent meeting of
the Sonshine Circle at the
church.
At the meeting the Circle
planned a bake and rum·
mage sale to be held at the
Bethany Dorcas Church and
·arranged to make noodles on
March 16 and 18. Orders for
the noodles are now being
taken. The regular monthly
donation was made to the
Meigs County Council on
Aging and baked goods
were sentto God's Net.
It was reponed that 92
cards were sent out over the
past month. Devotions were
given by Judy Gilmore who
read "Sweetness is Charity,"
Mary Ball who gave quotes
from Mother Theresa and
Louise Frank had prayer.
Repons were given and · 1----~.:...~.....:-...
approved. Gilmore gave the
SubmiHed photo
bless before refreshments Fifty-two fruit baskets to be taken to shutins and sick area residents were made and deliv·
were served. Next meeting ered by Sonshine Circle members. Here members working, lefl to right, prepare baskets, ·
will be· March 12.
Blondena Rainer. Mildred Hart,. Ruth Simpson, Bet)Y Proffitt, and Wilma Smith.

Thursday, March S
POMEROY.- Revival at
Carleton
Church,
Kingsbury Road. 6:30 p.m.
through Sunday with speak-'
ers David Rahamut, Ronnie
Vance. Robert Vance.
8Y KATHY MITCHELL
Special sio¥ers. 698-7238
AND MARCY SUGAR
for information .
Saturday, March 7
Dear Annie: It's after I
MIDDLEPORT - The
a.m.
and I can't sleep for the
film. "Fireproof," shown at
second
straight night Two
6 p.m. at Victory Baptist
days ago, my husbaf\d of 15
Church, Middlepon.
years told me he's a crossdresser. Apparently at one
of his organization's' meet·
ings. he was advised to
Thesday, March 3 .
come .out of the closet.
PIKETON
Elma
We've had u wonderful
Imboden will observe his marriage with not one seri90th birthday on March 3. ous argument. We get &lt;~long
Cards may be sent to him at fabulously, traveling and
3752 Long Fork Road, living a very comfortable
Piketon. Ohio. 45661.
life. My grown children
Thursday, March S
from my first marriage love
POMEROY - Herman hilT!, and· he's been a wonMichael will ,celebrate his derful stepfather· and grand·
91 st binhday today. cards father.
may be sent to, 41903
He dressed up for me and
Kingsbury Road. Pomeroy. I was appalled. I feel dirty,
45769.
betrayed and stupid for. not
having figured this out. He
went to a makeup artist and
had picttlres taken of himself .. Who knows if they'll
Saturday, March 7
RACINE - Racine Youth end up on the Internet?
League sign ups. II. a.m.· I What I can't figure out is
. p.m., Racine American how in the world these men.
with their five o'clock shad·
Legion. more info call 247- ows;
feel pretty. There was
3200. 949-2169. .
.
nothing pretty about my
husband .
I can't get an appointment
with a psychiatrist for a
month. My ne~ves are shot.
and I need help in understanding and, at my husthe price includes the cost of band's request, accepting
.transporting The Celebrat,ion this. He doesn't wunt our
Princess about I ,300 miles marriage to end. Please jlive
· from Moline to Parkersburg. me some help. - H1,1rtmg
He hopes the stemwheel·
Dear Hurting: We under·
er, built in 1994 and reno- stand your sense of betrayal,
vated in 2007. arrives in but it's better you know
time for the opening of the what's going on so you can
island season on May I .
deal with it. Cross-dressing
For the past two year~. the does not ~ean your husstate leased a 96-passenger .band is gay. The vast majorstemwheeler. For 27 years ity of cross-dressers are het·
before that, it contracted erosexual. There are some
with a private company to wives who have learned to
ferry tourists to the Ohio accept this aspect of their
River is lund .
husband's personality and

ANNIE'S MAILBOX

Employ self-help in ·cross-dressing problem

Birthdays

Youth events

West Virginia purchases
stemwheeler for $405,000

·.

Five generations
r7"":-:'"lll. . .- : - - - - -

~ommunity Calendar

·Rare .snow blankets South
as East braces for storm
BIRMINGHAM, .Ala. O'Malley said.
(AP) - A potent March · In New York, Mayor
snowstorm blanketed much Michael
Bloomberg
of the Sou.theast with snow · announced rnore than 1,300
Sunday before barreling sanitation workers stood
toward the Nonheast, where ready to spread salt and
officials prepared snow- · plow streets.
.
plows and road-salt for a
"It's the first of March,
wintery assault.
. which as you .know is the
The icy blast threatened month that we say comes jn
to drop ue to a foot of snow like a lion and out like a
in the Phtladelphia area, 13 lamb," he said. "lfs pretty
. inc;hes in New York and 15 .clear that the lions a.re get· .
inches across southern New ting ready to roar."
England late Sunday.
As Wayne Letson drove
Thousands of New York through Alabama toward
City sanitation workers pre- Florida on · Sunday, the
pared to salt city streets, and Michigan resident fretted
airlines preemptively can- about sharing the roads with
celed flights Sunday at the Southerners unaccustomed
region's major airpons. . · to winter weather. The last
· The
Pennsylvama time it snowed in Alabama
Department
of was more than a year ago. in
Transportation planned to January 2008.
attack the snow in the
"This is nothing to me,
Philadelphia area with 400 but I'm worried about the
trucks and 77.000 tons of other people who think ther,
stockpiled salt. assistant know what they're doing,'
press
secretary
Gene he sai&lt;l.
.
Blaum said.
Despite above-freezing
In Georgia, the snowfall temperatures ·in downtown
rendered roads treacherous Atlanta. a heavy cunain of
and delayed flights, while in snow fell on cars and
Alabama. ·more than 210 caused traffic . accidents on
ll:hurches in the central pan slushy streets. The unusual
of the Bible Belt state had to weather . prompted Je~si
cancel morning services.
Prahl and Max DiPace to
Vonda.
Braswell
of .take their dog , Cooper. on a
Alabaster, Ala. was throw- walk through snow-covered
ing snowballs in ·her front Piedmont Park.·
yard instead of putting on
"You :
know
us
her Sunday best. "I think Southerners, .we all freak
you can worship in this it's out when it snows," said
so rare," she said.
Prahl, 26.
up to 7 inches of snow
Some flights were canwas expected . through celed at Hartsfield-Jackson
Monday morning in areas of Atlanta
International
Maryland, northern Vi)'ginia · Airport, where the average
and Washington, D.C., delay was nearly two hours,
where Mayor Adrian Fenty according to the Federal
decl~d a snow emergency. · Aviation
Administration
·. JJ!,Virginia, nearly 10,000 Web site.
customers of two power
AirTran
Airways
companies . lost lllectric spokesman Tad' Hutcheson
power Sunday night after said flights out of Atlanta .
the storm blew in.
. into the Nonheast might
Maryland has ·already 11lso be canceled ' Sunday
spent more than $40 million ni~ht.
responding .to bad weather
'I expect . the Nonheast
in what's been a colder- will be hit · pretty hard
than-usual winter, Gov. tonight so our expectations
Martin O'Malley said is that people flying into
. Sunday. Any money spent Washington, D.C., and
on digging out from the rare Boston will need to call or
March storm will funher check our Web site for posburden a state that's facing a sible
cancellations,"
$2 billion budget shortfall.
Hutches·on told The Atlanta
"I · don 't like snow," Journal-Constitution.

Monday, March 2, 2009

Holzer Clinic gives .
back to the community

----------------:1
1
ftiiWiiiftW I Iii. .

II ·
I
I
1
L

PageA3

BYTHEBEND

The Daily Sentinel

Monday, March 2, 2009

work out a compromise that
allows the marriage to con·
tinue. but qot all wives are
capable of such tolerance.
There are online self-help
groups for women in your
position. The Society for tlje
Second Self {tri-ess.org) has
a section for wives of crossdressers, and we also recommend
you
contact
CrossDressersWives.com.
Dear Annie: My hpsband
and I have no immediate
family nearby, and our son
and only child lives across
the country. We are healthy;
but at an age when we
understand our monality.
We have arrangements in
place with a funeral home
for our burial. We are aware
that traditional expectations
are for a service either at
church. the funeral1home or
graveside .. We have decided
not to hold any memorial
because we· prefer privacy
during what will be a stressful time, and al so because it
is a major inconvenience for
other relatives to travel the
· distance.
Should we inform our
family members now when
all is well'? Or ·should we
make our wishes known in
the death notice and have
the surviving spouse or
child follow up with a per·
sonal telep~one call? Your Faithful Readers
Dear Faithful Readers:
Memorial services are for the
survivors - a way , to say
goodbye to a loved one and
pay respects to the family. If
people find it too inconvenient to attend, they won't
come. But you don't need to
have a service nor · should
you inform people years in
advance. You might change
your mind. However, please
discuss this with your son
and allow him to have some
input on whether or nl)t to

have a service for his remain- to think the worst. lnste&lt;td ,
ing parent. It is unfair to she should take the time to
assume he will not want one. find out what 's really going
Dear Annie: I read the let- on. - Southern Granny
ter from "Annoyed Friend.''
Dear Granny: Many
who belongs to a coffee club . women wrote to say they
that meets weekly. She were ashamed of their
thinks one of the women. homes and that is why they
"Jane," is a freeloader didn't reciprocate.
because she has yet to take
A1inie's Mailbox is writ·
her tum having the women ten by Kathy Mitchell and
over. You said she may be Marcy Sugar, longtime edi·
embarrassed to have people tors of the Ann La11ders
in her home and suggested column. Please e-mail your
"Annoyed" have the next questions to anniesmailmeeting in a coffeehouse.
boxcomcast.net, or write
I joined an upscale book to.: Annie's Mailbox, P.O.
club, but refused to have the Box 118190, Chicago, IL
mernbers in my house 606ll. To find o/11 more
because I am ashamed of about Annie's Mailbox;
the terrible neighborhood and read features by other
where I live. I would have. Creators Syndicate writers
loved to meet at a local cof- and cartoonists, visit the
feehouse had it been ·Creators Syndicate Web
offered . Tell "Annoyed" not page ut www.creutors.com.

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OPINION

The Daily Sentinel

111 Court Street • F'ofrlln)y, Ohio

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

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
__ Dan Goodrich
Publisher
Charlene Hoeflich
· General Manager·News Editor

Congress shall make no law respecting an
establishment of religion, or prohibiting the
Jrte exncise thereof; or abridging the freedom
of speech, or of the press; or the right of the .
~ople peaceably to assemble, and to petition
the Government for a redress ofgrievances.
- The First Amendment to the U.S. Constitution

VIEW

Safer?
Speed limit reduction iruffective

Monday, Mareh a, aoog

Dutchman flies Islamization
into world spotlight

The Daily·Sentinel

READER'S

PageA4

·

ALL BUSINESS;·
Shortcomings of bank ~tress · test'

.The Daily Sentinel

The Daily Sentinel• Pap.As

·Obituaries
Naaruse Goebel

What a difference a year
and the wider West ." I news, and that is what these
makes.
would see these same quali- ideas become when an
I say this on realizing that
political
ties lirsthand wllen I inter- international
just over one year ago,
viewed him last summer in celebrity promotes them.
Dutch .
parliamentarian
The Hague .
This is precisely what
Geert Wilders - who has
FoK's Palkot, on the ·other Wilder.s has become, and it
.Diana
be&lt;;n on a multi-stop media
·hiind. was obviously rattled is eJlactly what Wilders is
West
and speaking tour of New
by Wilders' message. and doing.
York,
' Boston
and
Paradoxically, Wilc;lers'
came across , I wrote, ·•as
Washington. D.C. - that
what you might call the international profile alid
includes a screening of his
Nolo Contendere Westerner . media allure result from
lilm "Fitna," hosted by Sen.
is concened effons io corral
whose
idea of coellistence
·
Jon Kyl, R-Ariz., in the U.S. and the Netherlands. finding based on self-censorship."
· him and censor his message,
in a peripatetic if
Capitol - was little known renown
h
h
Palkot practically begged effons that recently culmid d ·l
guar e ext e as 1 e aut or ·'Wilder.s to sotien, i.e., cen- nated in a Dutch appealsoutside the Net.herlands.
of a bestselling memoir.
Indeed, most of whatpeo- "Infidel
," and as a couture-. sor. his views so as not to coun order to prosecute hiJ;Il
ple seemed to know about sheathed subject for Vogue in,tlame the Islamic world. for "hate speech"; in
him - and I refer to those magazine.
Wilders · including those ' moderates' Jordanian effons to extraof us irresistibly riveted on remained in Dutch politics. whose so-called moderation dite the Dutch MP and try
Islamization as the great. his
stance
against morphs into radicalism at . him for "blasrhemy"; and
ignored , existential peril Islamization reponed 10 the the tirst· barb of criticism." in the shamefu British deciwas that Wilders, along with wider world in shonhand
Wilders explained he could- sion to bar Wilders from
then-fellow Dutch parlia- briefs about the so-called n't ilo th;.l "because such entering
the
United
mentarian Ayaan Hir.si Ali, Dutch firebrand .with the self-censorship would con- Kingdom (where he'd been
had lived under threat of platinum-blond hair who cede victory to those who invited by Lord Malcolm
assassination since 2004. opposed Islamic law, and would impose Islamic law Pearson to speak and show
That was when a ftve-p;.ge wanted to halt Islamic on him and his country."
"Fitna" at the House of
Islamic manifesto calling immigration
into
the
In many ways. nothing Lords) as a threat to "comfor Wilders' and Hirsi Ali's Netherlands.
has changed since January munity (read: Muslim) barmurder was found impaled
Then, last year, in late 200!!.
Wilders'
anti- mony ."
with a knife to the stabbed January. FoxNews reponer Islamization
message
Non-paradoxically, il is
and bullet-riddled corpse of Greg Palkot conducted what remains much the same. also the result of eAtended
Theo van Gogh, a critic of was likely the first televised ami it still rattles most video interviews with
Islam and great,great- U.S.
interview
with media . But where last year, Wilders conducted over the
nephew of Vincent van · Wilders. The· "Dutch fire- for example, a well-known last .several inonths by' such
Gogh. Theo. as some will ' brand" had begun making anchorman told me he had bloggers as author Robert
recall, was assassinated. rit- international headlines for never heard of Wilders. not Spencer. Atlas Shrugs and
ualistically, his head nearly his upcoming docu 111entary even at the heigh I of the Tom Trento. all of which are
severed from his body, on critique of the Bible - I "Fitna" controversy last easily accessed on the
the streets of Amsterdam on ntean, the Talmud. Or was it March. his show recently Internet - as is "Fitna."
the morning of Nov. 2, the Bhagavad Gita') No, the interviewed the Dutch MP.
The point is, the conver2004. by Dutch-Moroccan 17-minute film was called On watching other inter- sation about Islam's impact
dual-national Mohammed "Fitna," and it was about the· views with . Wilders lhis on the West - on freedom
Bouyeri. Linked to the Koran. No matter how week , one with Fox 's · of ·speech and conscience,
jihadist Hofstad group. shon, no matter how small, Glenn 'Beck and one with · on women's rights, on reliBouyeri is · serving a life such critiques of Islam draw Fox's Bill O'Reilly, it gious equality and other key
sentence without the possi- notice because Islam brooks seems safe to say, particu- issues- has long been "out
bility of parole.
.
no criticism, and responds larly on considering his there ." Lately, thanks to ,a
Bouyeri's
motive? variously. as we have seen progress up and down the series of nefarious governCriticism of Islam . Van . with Salman Rushdie's Bos-Wash corridor; there's ments' missteps and the;
Gogh and Hirsi Ali had Satanic Verses. the Danish noticeably more room now boldness of a Dutch polititogether m~de a very shon Mohammed cartoons. the for Wilders to air his anti- cal "firebrand," this converfilm titled "Submission" to . Pope's Regensburg address Islamization ideas. It was sation has· suddenly been
call attention to the plightof and other uniquely Islamic rather amazing, after all. to picked up for the first time
women abused according to llashpoints , wah boycotts, hear
O'Reilly
recap and broadcast in new, very
Islamic law; Wilders was an lawsuits, threats. riots. Wilders 's argument with- public arenas.
outspoken critic of Islamic l1rson. attacks - even mur- out even the ' smallest
.The question is, will we
law in the Netherlands . der.
·
smirk: "You donit want" to be uble to keep it going after
Bouyeri sought retribution,
As noted or\ my blog at deport anybody ,I but you the Dutchman !lies hotne? .
taking Van Gogh's life and the time {dianawesi.net), want to halt immigration
(Diana West is a columconsigning both Hirsi Ali Wilders appeared in that (from Islamic countries)." nlst for The Washington
and Wilders to the wary first U.S. interview as "seri- I pon't 'think Americans Time!&gt;. She is the author oj
existence of perpetual prey, ous., cenainly fonhright and have ever heard such ideas "The Death of the Grownboth of . them requiring articulately nonapologetic' SiJOken on prime-time iele- up: How America's Arrested
armed guards to help ensure in his defense of Dutch cui- . vtsJOn.
Development Is Bringing
their continued survival in ture and identity (and, by
It's not that these ideas are Down
Western
their own country -and extension, Western culture not ' "out there" : they are. Civi/izatiorl ," and has a
beyond.
and identity) against the But "out there'' in books, blog at dianawest.ner. She
Hirsi Ali would eventual- Islamization ·process well columns or blogs is not the can be cor1tacred via
ly leave Dutch parliament · under way in his country same thing as breaking dianawesr@verizon .ner.)

lktu Editor: .
I am writing in response to Sunday's (Feb. 22) letter to
the editor qy Ms. Faulk and Tuesday's front page response
to this letter. Although Mayor.Musser and Chief Proffitt say
that they are not targeting people or creating a speed trap,
something Ms. Faulk said must have hit a: nerve, because I
have never seen a letter to the editor be responded to on the
front page of The Daily Sentinel.
·
The Daily Sentinel's gui&lt;,lelines for writing a letter to
the editor state that the letter . must be "in good taste ,
addressing issue.s·, not personalities." Apparently, 'the
guidelines are not the same for the articles , because Ms .
Faulk was,singlec;l out for having a speeding ticket. The
article states that she was going 40 mph in a 25 mph zone
. over Union Avenue . 40 mph? That is nothing compared
to the drivers I see flying by my residence on Union
Avenue goin~ at least 60 mph. I have witnessed this several times, wllh many of the cars being sheriff's deputies,
most likely. not going anywhere official, as they never
have their hghts on.
·
. While I am not out to bash the law enforcement of
Meigs County, I would like to make a couple points.
Mayor Musser stated that .there have only been two tickets issued on East Main Street and nine on West Main
Street since the "beginning of the year." But this speed
limit has not been in effect since the beginning of the year,
as the signs were just recently posted. Also, Ms . Faulk
stated that she "personally had no recollection in
RECENT memory of any serious traffic accidents'~ and
Chief Proffitt then stated this was "totally inaccurate,"
saying that there had been two fatal aecidents in previous
years. While they are. quick to point out the date and
severity._of Ms. Faulk's speeding ticket,) notice that they
'
do not g1ve the dates for these fatal accidents . If I remember correctly, one of these accid.ents occurred when a
motorist struck a telephone pole in the zone that has
always been 25 mph.
Proffitt also brings up an accident between a car and a
motorcycle that occurred l&lt;1st week.l don't see how bringing this up helps make his point. If anything, this proves
that reducing the speed limit is not preventing accidents
•
from occurring.
While I am all for a safer Pomeroy, I agree with Ms.
BY RACHEL BECK
Citigroup Inc . and Wells preferred shares of bank
Faulk in that it is now an.inconvenience to ·drive all the way
. AP ~USINESS WRITER
Fargo &amp; Co., to name a few stock. which then could be
through town in Pomeroy at the pace of 25 mph . Although
- have ample capital to . converted into common·
I guess I should be careful about agreeing with her, as I
NEW
YORK
Lost
in
survive
a downturn that shmes .. ·
may find my name on the front page tomorrow.
all the hype over the just could oe even more severe
Funding for those investAmber Blackston ·
.
"stress
tests"
of
than
the
current
recession
.
mems
initially will come
rolled-out
Pomeroy
the nation 's banks is this
The govemment is giving from what's left of the $700
notewonhy fact: The banks the banks detailed direction billion Troubled Asset
are going lo do some analy- of what to measure, but the Relief
Program
that
LETTERS TO THE
sis of their books by them- specifics have not' been pub- Congress approved last fall.
lidy disclosed.
· On Thursday, the Obama
selves.
E'DITOR
· If anything has been
l;he banks will then be administration said 'it anticiLetters 10 the editor are welcome. They · should be le.1s le.amed from the current cri- charged with doing the pates an additional $750 bilthan 300 words. All lerrers are subject to editing, must be sis, it's that banks are terri-' analysis of their loan and lion may be needed to bail
signed, and include address and telephone number. · No ble at assessing their fin an- securities ponfolios and off- out the nation's banks.
unsigned letrers will be published. Letters should be in cia I health. They've repeat- balance sheet commitments,
While the biggest banks
good taste, addressing issues. nor personalities . Lerrefs of edly downplay~d the size of according to the official already have regulators on
thanks to organizations and individuals will nor be accept· losses and their capital Treasury · Departme'nt's site, they don 't amount to
ed for publication :
cushions since the melt- description of how the pro- the kind of manpower
down in the industry began gram Will work. The banks needed to oversee every
nearly -two years ago.
. will also forecast if they step of the banks' financial
Yet Treasury Depanment huve the resources to absorb analysis. That is why the
says the government is future ·losses.
se lf-assess ments had · to
allowing
them
to
do
just
Then
they
will
repon
their
happen. said banking
Reader Services
· (usPs 21a-9so&gt;
that
under
the
new
''Capital
findings
in
a
"stundardized
industry cons11lting Bert
Correction Polley
'
Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
Program" template" provided by the Ely. He also noted that
Assistance
Our malri concern In all stories is to Published every morning, Monday
Intended
to
bolster
collfi- government agencies over- banks hqve complicated
through Friday, 111 Court Street,
be accurate. If you know of an error
Pomeroy, Ohio. Second-class postage
in
the
·
banking
sys- seeing this process, the internal financial systems
dence
In a story, call the newsroom at (740) paid at Pomeroy.
tern . With this structure, it description said.
that only their employees
992·21!16.
Member: The Associated Press and
might
not.
After
all
that
is
done
,.
the
can
navigate.
the Ohio Newspaper Association.
"It
sounds
like
letting
regulators
and
bank
offi:
But
that still can't overPoatm11ter: Send address correcOur main number Ia
Barry·
Bonds
do
his
own
cials
will
discuss
the
results.
shadow
the risks inherent in
tions to The Daily Sentinel, PO. Box
(740) 992-2156.
testing on whether he is tak- To be sme. regulators can having bunks doing their
729, POmeroy, Ohio 45769.
Department extenelona ara:
tng steroids. Imagine that!" challenge the banks' find- own analysis.
Subscription Rates
"This crisis was caused
said Robert Brusca, who ings · or any assumptions
By carrier or motor route
News
runs the research firm Fact made in the banks· valua- by rnis-modeling of risk by
4 waeko ..............•11.30
Editor: Charlene Hoe11ich , Ext. 12
imd
Opinion Economics.
Lions . They will then decide financial institutions," said
52 weeks ............'128.85
Riporter: Brian Reed , Ext . 14
It 's just the latest exam - how much capital will be Joshua Rosner, managing
Dally ...................so•
Reporter: Beth Sergent, Ext. 13
Senior Citizen rates
pie of a government pro- needed if economic condi- director of the consulting
26 weeka ............ ;'59.81
gram · that's · aimed at tions weaken.
finn Graham Fisher &amp; Co.
52 weeka •.• '; ........'118.90
resolving
the
banking
crisis
Those
lacking
capital
will
Inc . ''To come up with a
Advertising
Subscribers should remn " advance
but
is
more
likely
to
come
be
req!Jired
to
raise
more
black-box
model of capital
Oulllde Selet: Dave H~rris, Ext. 15 dirOO to 1M Dally SOntinel. No sub·
up
short.
U.S
.
leaders
have
through
private
sources,
and
·
risk
for
banks
in. a few
Outllde Selet: Brenda Davis, Ex116 scription· by mall permined ln. areas
where home canier service is availa~e .
been tough with the must do so within six weeks is something that
ClaOIJCirc.: Judy Clark, Ext. 10
rhetoric , but their actions months. Banks .can apply won't work ."
Mall Subacrlpt!on ·
can't seem to fix much of for additional government
For the latest evidence of
lnalde Melga County
General Manager
·
funds after the capital how financial companies
anything.
12 Weeks .... . .. .. ....'35.26
Charlene Hoeflich, Ext. 12
This program will have assessment is complete, but often can't get things right,
26 Weeks .. ...... . ....'70. 70
52 Weeks .. .. .. . .. . '1 40.1 1
19 of t.he nation's biggest there will be a six-month just look at wbat Merrill
E·mall:
banks.
Jll with assels top- waiting period to sec if they Lynch
disclosed
late
mdsnews@mydailysentlnel.com
. Outside Meigs County
ping $IOU billion, parlake in cun first ruisc private Tuesday in a securities fil12 Weeks ....... . .... .'56.55
"stress
tesls." The goal is to .money. New federal support ing: The securities firm's
26 Weeks ......... .' .. '113.60
Web:
gauge
if these institutions will come by way of the 2008 losses were about
52 Weeks . . . , . • . . . ..'227.21
www.mydailysentlnel.com
Bank of America, government's purchase of $533 million more than pry-

. Monday, March 2, 20og

TUPPERS PLAINS - Nadine Goebel 75 Tuppers
Plains, .died Saturday. Feb. 28. 2009. at Camden-Clark
Memorial Hospital in Parkersburg, W.Va.
·
· She was born Jan. 4. 1934: in Tuppers P.lains, daughter of
the late Creston and Phylhs Cole Newland. She was a
member of the Tuppers Plains Church of Christ, was the
past Dean of Nursing at Hocking College, and earned a
Master.of Sctence in Nursing degree.
She ts sumved by her husband, Frederick Goebel; two
sons and daughter-s-in-law. Steven and Kathy and Jel:'frey
and Fabnenna Goebel; two daughters and so~;~s-in-law·.
Susan and Thomas Heller and Sarah and Joe Wasik: a
. brother, Dennis Newland; a sister. Marlene Kuhn: seven
. grandchildren: Catherine. Hannah, Madeline, Sarah,
. Kathlee~. Joe and Ja,ck; three step grandchildren: Eric, Erin
· and Jess1ca; and several nieces and nephews.
. F~ral will be at II. a.m. on Tuesday, March 3, 2009, at
Ewmg Funeral Home m Pomeroy with the Rev. Fr. Waller
· Heinz officiating. Burial will follow at Our Lady of Loretto
: Cemetery in Long Bonom.
Memorial contributions in Mrs. Goebel's name may be
made to Tupper.s Plains Church of Christ.

•

For the Record
RACINE - Charles Williams. 39. Racine, was transto Holzer Medical Center with non-incapacitating
mjuries by Meigs County EMS following a one-vehicle
accident that occurred Wednesday. Feb. 25 at approximately I :45 p.m.
.
Accofding to trooper.s. Williams was driving his 1992
·Ford Escon eastbound on O.hio 124 near mile post 24 when
· the vehicle went off the' right side of the road, lost control,
' continued across the roadway traveling off the left side of
the road striking a guardtail.
' Following the accident, Williams was cited with failure
· to control and driving under suspension. His vehicle sustained disabling damages.
·
~rted

- ~Weather
' Monday ...Sunny. Highs
in the mid 20s. Nonhwest
winds I 0 to 15 mph. Wind
' chill values. as low as 3
below in the morning.
·. Monday night ...Mostly
clear. Cold with lows
· around 10 above. Northwest
winds 5 to 10 mph.
· Tuesday ...Sunny. Highs
around 30. Nonhwest winds
5 to 10 mph.
Tuesday night ...Partly
cloudy. Cold with lows
around 16. North winds
around 5 mph.
· Wednesday ... Partly
·sunny. Highs in the lower
40s.

Wednesday
night ...
Mostly cloudy in the
evening ...Then becoming
partly cloudy. Lows in the
upper,20s.
.
Thursday ...Partly sunny.
Highs in the mid 50s.
Thursday night and
. Frlday ...Mostly cloudy. A
30 percent chance of
showers. Lows in the
upper 30s. Highs in the
lower 60s.
Friday night · through
Sunday... Mostly cloudy
with a 40 percent chance
of showers. Lows in the
upper 30s. Highs in the
upper 50s.

Ohio hospitals: New
.fees could lead to jolJ. cuts
that time, part of which
COLUMBUS (AP) Ohio hospitals are object- would be covered by the
ing to fees proposed by proposed fees.
Gov. Ted Stnckland, sayHospitals would like~ be
. ing they will lead to jobs
cuts and higher costs fot
· mates ·that hospitals would
patients.
Care facilities say they pay $598 milhon ·and get
would have to • pass along back $187 million through
. rate
the extra costs to employees reimbursement
·and
~ustomers,
The increase.
"The state Medicaid budColumbus Dispatch reponget is being balanced on
ed Sunday.
The governor's two-year the back of hospitals ,"
budget plan aims to shift the · association spokeswoman
burden
of
increasing Tiffany Himmelreich said,
Medicaid costs from the "If we are putting up a dolstate to health care lar and for the state to draw
providers. Hospitals, nurs- down three, we want our
ing homes and other facili- dollar back."
The fee would add to the
ties would pay $1.3 billion
Medicaid-related
shortfalls
in franchise fees, creating
revenue that could free up at hospitals, which get
back about 86 cents for
other state funds.
That revenue · will help each dollar they spend for
the state· handle · rising Medicaid patients, she
.
enrollment and costs amid said.
"This fee is only going to
the · recession,
Ohio
Medicaid Director John deplete the safety net and
vital services that are
'Corlett said.
"This takes pressure off available because they can.the general revenue fund. not sustain the hit," she
maintains essential services, said.
Nursing and other care
vrevents rate reductions and
provides greater long-term facilities also have con'• sustainability for the pro- cerns that they'll be paying
gram." Corlett told lawmak- fees and seeing no benefits
in return, said Peter Van
ers last week.
Runkle.
executive director
The Medicaid program
of
the
Ohio
Health Care
·uses state revenue and
111atching funds to provide Association. The group
health insuraJlCe for 1.8 rnil- represents about 750 nurs'lion Ohioans . State officials ing and residential care
expect that number to centers.
Those facilities pay a
approach two !llillion in the
daily fee on each bed but are
pext two years.
only
for
The program will cost reimbursed
:Ohio about $8 billion in · Medicaid patients, he said.

a

,.

2nd Ll .D inlk F. Johnsan

June 14, 2008 he was commissioned as a second lieutenant into the United States
ARMY. He has branched
into the Medical Service
Corps.
Over his military career,
Johnson has done tbe following: Attended
the
ROTC's LTC Training,
graduated · from Army
Reserve Oftlcer Training

Highway Patrol

~~sp~~d~:~oc~~ion e~:i~

viously reponed. That
boosted its full-year loss to
$27.61 billion from the
$27.08 billion it reponed
just last month.
Blame the upward revision on an error in how it
recorded transactions tied to
hedging. That's more bad
news for Bank of America ,
which acquired Merrill on
Jan. I but had to get a $20
billion government loan in ·
order to absorb the investment bank's bigger-thanexpected losses.
.
It was hardly the first trip,
up for Merrill in the last two·
years.
It's hard IO forget what
then-CEO John Thain
boasted
last summer.
"Right now we believe that
we are in a very comfonable spot in terms of our
capital," he said July 17
when Merrill reponed its
fourth straight quarterly
'loss and write-downs from
failed
investments
.approaching $40 billion.
Two months later, it was
forced into the arms of
Bank of America to avoid
collapse like rival Lehman
,
Brothers Holdings Inc .
Rosner ihinks in six
months there will have to be
an.othcr round of stress tests
or something else, because
the latest attempt to resolve
the problems with troubled
banks won't change much
of anything.
·
Part of the problem is that
the government doesn't
seem to know what to do,
so it keeps trotting out
plans that keep troubled
banks kind of ulive. Maybe
that 's the point - it'~
reduced to buying time,
hopmg that markets fix ·
things for themselves . -

POMEROY - 2nd Lt.
Derek F. Johnson. a 2001
graduate of Meigs High
School, recently returned
from Baghdad, lmq, where
his Army Unit, C Co. 94th
Brigade Support Battalion.
had been assigned.
•
Johnson· s prior and current military service and
training includes: Ohio
National Guard member.
Alpha
Battery,
2nd
Battalion. I74th Air Defense
Artillery, McCoti'nelsville
from 2005-08. Johnson also
received his Bachelor of
Science
Degree
in
Recreation Studies along
with a mioor in business on
June 10, 2006.
Johnson then graduated
from Ohio University on
June 13, 2008 with a
Masters of Science in
Recreation and Sport
Sciences. On June 14, 2008
he graduated with a
Bachelor of Science Degree
in Spon Sciences. Also on

Corps' Leader's Tr.Uning Protkiency forhiseAcellent
Course a1 Fort Knox. Ky: military proficienl·y and is
attended
Leadership authorized to wear this decDevelopment Assessment oration on the uniform.
Course at Fort Lewis,
From June 24. 2008 to
Wash .. a siA-weet mandato- end of July. 2008. Johnson
ry camp that evaluates once again attended LTC
cadets in the areas of physi- training at Ft. Kno;&lt;,. Ky ..
cal fitness, leadership. this time as an instructor
marksmanship and land and advisor. He attended
navigation skills; Joh!lson Basic Officer Leader
has received a certificate as Course 11 at Ft. Sam
a Member of the Honor Houston. Tex.as from Aug .
Platoon at Warrior Forge. · 4. 2008 to Oct. 9. 2008.
Johnson also attended an Johnson then reported to the
Airborne Course at Ft. 4th Brigade. IOth Mountain
Benning. Ga .. a three-week Division at Ft. PolL La. for
course teaching Soldiers to his duty permanent station.
While at Ft. Polk.
jump from an aircraft in
combat and non,combatant Johnson participated in
situations. Johnson earned · Individual
· Readiness
the Army PUrachutist Badge Training prior to being
. and wings 'from the I st shipped out t'Or Iraq where
Battalion - 507th Parachute other . member.s of his unit
Infantry. He has also earned .were already serving in
the ~rman Armed Forces Baghdad. Upon completion
Badge
for
Military of their assignment. the
Proficiency and a GOLD Unit, along with Johnson.
German Armed Forces · returned to the states and Ft.
Badge
for · Military · Polk this January.

Law You Can Use

.

Know your rights when faced with layoff
In December 2008, the
state's unemployment rate
topped 7.8 percent, which
is a two .percent increase
in unemployment, or the
loss of 118,000 jobs, in one
year. While businesses
struggle to survive, affed·
ed employees must be
aware of their rights when
flt:ed with an employer's
annoWKe~Dent of ~. layoff.

You may wish to consult an
accountant about the ·tax
. consequences· of lump sum
payments ver.sus extended
payouts.
• Benefits. The separation
agreement may ellplain
your rights regarding con:
Q: I zinderstand my com- tinuation . of benefits, such
po,ny will ask me to sign a as
health
msurance.
separation
agreement. Normally,
departing
Why &gt;
·
employees must elect. in
A: Companies may pre- writing, to continue health
Q: /' ve been told my job sent departing employees coverage for a brief period
is being eliminated as part with a separation agreement oftime. This requires timely
of a reduction in force. that defines both P.arties' payment of the entire prerights .and responsibilities mium. Each of your depenWhat should I do?
A: First, ask questions. regarding your separation dents is entitled .to be noliMost companies are willing from employment. This . fled about requirements for
to provide information agreement usually will continued health insurance
regarding the necessity for require your signature, participation.
the reduction in force. acknowledging that you
The agreement may also
Understanding the reasons · have had an opportunity to explain your rights regardfor the layoff may help you consult with an utlof!!ey, ing retirement pro~rams
to cope with the job loss and an.d that you understand and ~ou may have partictpated
explain the Situation to ·agree with its terms. Make m. Talk to your accountant
potential employers.
sure · you understand your or financial advisor about
Then, ask about the possi- rights and responsibilities. how best to handle the
bility of reassignment or Severance agreements usu- transfer or rollover of retirereemployment. Make sure ally- include a term stating ment funds. Early withthe company is aware of the employee agrees to not drawal of funds will noryour current skills and ask bring a lawsuitagainst the mally .result in a tax penalty .
about job openings in areas company. Look for the fol• Waiver of Cla1ms. In
exchange for severance pay
of the company unaffected lowing provisions:
• Severance Pay. Some or other benefits to which you
by the layoff. If y011 are a
union member, your .repre- companies provide depart- would not normally be entisentative should be able to ing employees with sever- tied, your company may
ance pay for a period of require you to agree not to
e~tplain to you any rights
you may have to be rein- time. Severance pay may be bring legal actio!" against it. If
distributed in .a lump sum or your agreement meludes such
stated.
Also,
check
your may be paid out over time. a waiver or release of claims,
employer's policies for
payout · of unused leave.
such as vacation leave and
· sick leave, Finally, if your
selection for layoff was not
performance-based, request
a reference letter.

ask your attorney what this

might mean for yoo.
Q: Whm and how can I
apply for srme zmemploymen.t benefits?
A: Ohio unemr.Joyment
benefits are avatlable to
most laid-off employees.
You should file for benefits
as soon as you become
unemployed. You can lind
more
information
at
http://unemployMent.ohio .
gov or 1-877-0HIOJOB.
Law You Can Use is a
weekly consumer legal
information column pro11ided by the Ohio State Bar
Association (OSBA). This
article was prepared by
a"orney Maryellen Reash
of the Columbus office of
Lane, Alton &amp; Horst, LL.
C., and was updated by
a"orney Stacy Pollock of
Means,
Bichimer,
Burkholder &amp; Baker, Co.,
L.P.A. Both tut1 members of
the OSBA's Labor and
. Employment Section Board
of Go11ernors. · Articles
appearing in this column
are intended to provide
brood, general information
about the law. Before
applying this information
. to a specific. legal problem, ·
rellllers are urged to seek·
advice from an a"orney.

1--------------:-----------------------------

hin
·
aJl
'di
•ty' d ths
was gton state to ow . gm
ea
·

OLYMPIA, Wash . (AP)
- Terminally ill patients
with less than six months to
live will soon be able to ask
their doctors· to prescribe
them lethal medi9ation in
Washington state.
·
But even though the
"Death with Dignity': law
takes effect Thursday, people .who might seek the lifeending prescriptions could
find their doctors contlicted
or not willing to write them.
Many doctors are hesitant
to talk publicly about where
they stand on the issue, said
Dr. Tom Preston , a retired
cardiologist and board
member of Compassion &amp;
Choices, the group that
campaigned for and suppons the law.
"There are a lot of doctors, who in principle.
would approve or don't
mind this. but for a lot of
social or professional reasons, they don't want to be
· involved," he said.
But Preston said discussions about end-of-life
issues between doctor and
patient will increase because
of the new law, and he
thinks that as time goes on
more and more doctors who
don't have a religious or
philosophical opposition
will be o~n to participating.
"It w1ll be a cultural
shift," he said.

The U.S. Supreme Coun measure and doesn't plan to
ruled in 2006 that it was up prescribe lethal medication
to states to regulate medical to his patients for now.
practice, including assisted · "I am not here to tell )l?Osuicide, and Washington's pie how they should e1ther
Initiative ·1000· was passed live their life or the end of
by nearly 60 percent of state their life," Farber said.
voters in November.
"There's possibly a story
It became the secon!l out there, in the · future .
state, behind Oregon, to that's so compelling that
have a voter-approved mea- maybe I would write a presure allowing assisted sui- scription."
cide.
Farber said he would refer
In December, a Montana patients to Compassion &amp;
district judge ruled that doc- Choices of Washmgton. the
·tor-assisted suicides are state's largest aid-in-dy.ing
legal. That decision, which advocacy group, after talk'
was based on an individual ing about how they came to
lawsuit, is before ·the their decision .
Montana Supreme Coun. · The advocacy group is
While Montana doctors are compiling a directory of
allowed to write prescrip- physicians who aren't opt, tions pending the appeal, ing out of the law, as well as
it's unknown whether any pharm;~cies willing to fill
act01illy have because the prescriptions, said execthere's no reponing process. utive director Robb Miller.
Under · the Oregon and . "Physicians don't underWashington laws, physi-' stand yet exactly how the
cians .and pham'tacists are law works," Miller said.
not required to write or fill "Whenever there's lack of
lethal prescriptions if they understanding, there tends
are opposed to the law. to be some reluctance ."
Some Washington hospitals
Dr. Roben Thompson. an
. are opting out of panicipa- internist and cardiologist at
tion, which precludes their Swedish Medical Center in
doctors from panicipating Seattle who .voted for the
on hospital propeny.
measure, said that in his 32
Dr. Stu Farber, director of years of practice he has treatthe palliative care consult ed patients who would have
service at the University of benefited from this law.
Washington
. Medical
"I believe for the sake of
Center, voted against the compassion, and for a per-

49antpolis' iailp t:ribune ·The Daily Sentinel· ~oint ~leftlant Jeais'ter
mdtclasslfted®mydaltylrlbune..com

son's own individual rights.
that this should be an option
for them." he said.
Washington's law is based
on Oregon's measure. which
took effect in late 1997 . Since
then, more than 340 people
- mostly ailing with cancer
- have used that state's measure to end their lives.
· Under the Washingtoo
law, any patient requesting
fatal medication must be at
least 18 years .old. declared
competent and · a state resident. The patient would have
to make two oral requests.
I 5 days apan, and. submit a
written request wi!nessed by
N'o people. ·one of which
must not be a relative, heir.
attending doctor, or connected with a health facility
where the requester lives. ·
Two doctors must cenify
that the patient has a terminal condition and six
months or less to live.

~nderson 'Mc'DanM

Tunera{ '1fom£
Adr.un McDnnicl
&amp; ,h\Jncs Anderson
D.RECTO RS

CALL TODAY! D4il 441-2342

0411 112;,2151

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OPINION

The Daily Sentinel

111 Court Street • F'ofrlln)y, Ohio

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

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
__ Dan Goodrich
Publisher
Charlene Hoeflich
· General Manager·News Editor

Congress shall make no law respecting an
establishment of religion, or prohibiting the
Jrte exncise thereof; or abridging the freedom
of speech, or of the press; or the right of the .
~ople peaceably to assemble, and to petition
the Government for a redress ofgrievances.
- The First Amendment to the U.S. Constitution

VIEW

Safer?
Speed limit reduction iruffective

Monday, Mareh a, aoog

Dutchman flies Islamization
into world spotlight

The Daily·Sentinel

READER'S

PageA4

·

ALL BUSINESS;·
Shortcomings of bank ~tress · test'

.The Daily Sentinel

The Daily Sentinel• Pap.As

·Obituaries
Naaruse Goebel

What a difference a year
and the wider West ." I news, and that is what these
makes.
would see these same quali- ideas become when an
I say this on realizing that
political
ties lirsthand wllen I inter- international
just over one year ago,
viewed him last summer in celebrity promotes them.
Dutch .
parliamentarian
The Hague .
This is precisely what
Geert Wilders - who has
FoK's Palkot, on the ·other Wilder.s has become, and it
.Diana
be&lt;;n on a multi-stop media
·hiind. was obviously rattled is eJlactly what Wilders is
West
and speaking tour of New
by Wilders' message. and doing.
York,
' Boston
and
Paradoxically, Wilc;lers'
came across , I wrote, ·•as
Washington. D.C. - that
what you might call the international profile alid
includes a screening of his
Nolo Contendere Westerner . media allure result from
lilm "Fitna," hosted by Sen.
is concened effons io corral
whose
idea of coellistence
·
Jon Kyl, R-Ariz., in the U.S. and the Netherlands. finding based on self-censorship."
· him and censor his message,
in a peripatetic if
Capitol - was little known renown
h
h
Palkot practically begged effons that recently culmid d ·l
guar e ext e as 1 e aut or ·'Wilder.s to sotien, i.e., cen- nated in a Dutch appealsoutside the Net.herlands.
of a bestselling memoir.
Indeed, most of whatpeo- "Infidel
," and as a couture-. sor. his views so as not to coun order to prosecute hiJ;Il
ple seemed to know about sheathed subject for Vogue in,tlame the Islamic world. for "hate speech"; in
him - and I refer to those magazine.
Wilders · including those ' moderates' Jordanian effons to extraof us irresistibly riveted on remained in Dutch politics. whose so-called moderation dite the Dutch MP and try
Islamization as the great. his
stance
against morphs into radicalism at . him for "blasrhemy"; and
ignored , existential peril Islamization reponed 10 the the tirst· barb of criticism." in the shamefu British deciwas that Wilders, along with wider world in shonhand
Wilders explained he could- sion to bar Wilders from
then-fellow Dutch parlia- briefs about the so-called n't ilo th;.l "because such entering
the
United
mentarian Ayaan Hir.si Ali, Dutch firebrand .with the self-censorship would con- Kingdom (where he'd been
had lived under threat of platinum-blond hair who cede victory to those who invited by Lord Malcolm
assassination since 2004. opposed Islamic law, and would impose Islamic law Pearson to speak and show
That was when a ftve-p;.ge wanted to halt Islamic on him and his country."
"Fitna" at the House of
Islamic manifesto calling immigration
into
the
In many ways. nothing Lords) as a threat to "comfor Wilders' and Hirsi Ali's Netherlands.
has changed since January munity (read: Muslim) barmurder was found impaled
Then, last year, in late 200!!.
Wilders'
anti- mony ."
with a knife to the stabbed January. FoxNews reponer Islamization
message
Non-paradoxically, il is
and bullet-riddled corpse of Greg Palkot conducted what remains much the same. also the result of eAtended
Theo van Gogh, a critic of was likely the first televised ami it still rattles most video interviews with
Islam and great,great- U.S.
interview
with media . But where last year, Wilders conducted over the
nephew of Vincent van · Wilders. The· "Dutch fire- for example, a well-known last .several inonths by' such
Gogh. Theo. as some will ' brand" had begun making anchorman told me he had bloggers as author Robert
recall, was assassinated. rit- international headlines for never heard of Wilders. not Spencer. Atlas Shrugs and
ualistically, his head nearly his upcoming docu 111entary even at the heigh I of the Tom Trento. all of which are
severed from his body, on critique of the Bible - I "Fitna" controversy last easily accessed on the
the streets of Amsterdam on ntean, the Talmud. Or was it March. his show recently Internet - as is "Fitna."
the morning of Nov. 2, the Bhagavad Gita') No, the interviewed the Dutch MP.
The point is, the conver2004. by Dutch-Moroccan 17-minute film was called On watching other inter- sation about Islam's impact
dual-national Mohammed "Fitna," and it was about the· views with . Wilders lhis on the West - on freedom
Bouyeri. Linked to the Koran. No matter how week , one with Fox 's · of ·speech and conscience,
jihadist Hofstad group. shon, no matter how small, Glenn 'Beck and one with · on women's rights, on reliBouyeri is · serving a life such critiques of Islam draw Fox's Bill O'Reilly, it gious equality and other key
sentence without the possi- notice because Islam brooks seems safe to say, particu- issues- has long been "out
bility of parole.
.
no criticism, and responds larly on considering his there ." Lately, thanks to ,a
Bouyeri's
motive? variously. as we have seen progress up and down the series of nefarious governCriticism of Islam . Van . with Salman Rushdie's Bos-Wash corridor; there's ments' missteps and the;
Gogh and Hirsi Ali had Satanic Verses. the Danish noticeably more room now boldness of a Dutch polititogether m~de a very shon Mohammed cartoons. the for Wilders to air his anti- cal "firebrand," this converfilm titled "Submission" to . Pope's Regensburg address Islamization ideas. It was sation has· suddenly been
call attention to the plightof and other uniquely Islamic rather amazing, after all. to picked up for the first time
women abused according to llashpoints , wah boycotts, hear
O'Reilly
recap and broadcast in new, very
Islamic law; Wilders was an lawsuits, threats. riots. Wilders 's argument with- public arenas.
outspoken critic of Islamic l1rson. attacks - even mur- out even the ' smallest
.The question is, will we
law in the Netherlands . der.
·
smirk: "You donit want" to be uble to keep it going after
Bouyeri sought retribution,
As noted or\ my blog at deport anybody ,I but you the Dutchman !lies hotne? .
taking Van Gogh's life and the time {dianawesi.net), want to halt immigration
(Diana West is a columconsigning both Hirsi Ali Wilders appeared in that (from Islamic countries)." nlst for The Washington
and Wilders to the wary first U.S. interview as "seri- I pon't 'think Americans Time!&gt;. She is the author oj
existence of perpetual prey, ous., cenainly fonhright and have ever heard such ideas "The Death of the Grownboth of . them requiring articulately nonapologetic' SiJOken on prime-time iele- up: How America's Arrested
armed guards to help ensure in his defense of Dutch cui- . vtsJOn.
Development Is Bringing
their continued survival in ture and identity (and, by
It's not that these ideas are Down
Western
their own country -and extension, Western culture not ' "out there" : they are. Civi/izatiorl ," and has a
beyond.
and identity) against the But "out there'' in books, blog at dianawest.ner. She
Hirsi Ali would eventual- Islamization ·process well columns or blogs is not the can be cor1tacred via
ly leave Dutch parliament · under way in his country same thing as breaking dianawesr@verizon .ner.)

lktu Editor: .
I am writing in response to Sunday's (Feb. 22) letter to
the editor qy Ms. Faulk and Tuesday's front page response
to this letter. Although Mayor.Musser and Chief Proffitt say
that they are not targeting people or creating a speed trap,
something Ms. Faulk said must have hit a: nerve, because I
have never seen a letter to the editor be responded to on the
front page of The Daily Sentinel.
·
The Daily Sentinel's gui&lt;,lelines for writing a letter to
the editor state that the letter . must be "in good taste ,
addressing issue.s·, not personalities." Apparently, 'the
guidelines are not the same for the articles , because Ms .
Faulk was,singlec;l out for having a speeding ticket. The
article states that she was going 40 mph in a 25 mph zone
. over Union Avenue . 40 mph? That is nothing compared
to the drivers I see flying by my residence on Union
Avenue goin~ at least 60 mph. I have witnessed this several times, wllh many of the cars being sheriff's deputies,
most likely. not going anywhere official, as they never
have their hghts on.
·
. While I am not out to bash the law enforcement of
Meigs County, I would like to make a couple points.
Mayor Musser stated that .there have only been two tickets issued on East Main Street and nine on West Main
Street since the "beginning of the year." But this speed
limit has not been in effect since the beginning of the year,
as the signs were just recently posted. Also, Ms . Faulk
stated that she "personally had no recollection in
RECENT memory of any serious traffic accidents'~ and
Chief Proffitt then stated this was "totally inaccurate,"
saying that there had been two fatal aecidents in previous
years. While they are. quick to point out the date and
severity._of Ms. Faulk's speeding ticket,) notice that they
'
do not g1ve the dates for these fatal accidents . If I remember correctly, one of these accid.ents occurred when a
motorist struck a telephone pole in the zone that has
always been 25 mph.
Proffitt also brings up an accident between a car and a
motorcycle that occurred l&lt;1st week.l don't see how bringing this up helps make his point. If anything, this proves
that reducing the speed limit is not preventing accidents
•
from occurring.
While I am all for a safer Pomeroy, I agree with Ms.
BY RACHEL BECK
Citigroup Inc . and Wells preferred shares of bank
Faulk in that it is now an.inconvenience to ·drive all the way
. AP ~USINESS WRITER
Fargo &amp; Co., to name a few stock. which then could be
through town in Pomeroy at the pace of 25 mph . Although
- have ample capital to . converted into common·
I guess I should be careful about agreeing with her, as I
NEW
YORK
Lost
in
survive
a downturn that shmes .. ·
may find my name on the front page tomorrow.
all the hype over the just could oe even more severe
Funding for those investAmber Blackston ·
.
"stress
tests"
of
than
the
current
recession
.
mems
initially will come
rolled-out
Pomeroy
the nation 's banks is this
The govemment is giving from what's left of the $700
notewonhy fact: The banks the banks detailed direction billion Troubled Asset
are going lo do some analy- of what to measure, but the Relief
Program
that
LETTERS TO THE
sis of their books by them- specifics have not' been pub- Congress approved last fall.
lidy disclosed.
· On Thursday, the Obama
selves.
E'DITOR
· If anything has been
l;he banks will then be administration said 'it anticiLetters 10 the editor are welcome. They · should be le.1s le.amed from the current cri- charged with doing the pates an additional $750 bilthan 300 words. All lerrers are subject to editing, must be sis, it's that banks are terri-' analysis of their loan and lion may be needed to bail
signed, and include address and telephone number. · No ble at assessing their fin an- securities ponfolios and off- out the nation's banks.
unsigned letrers will be published. Letters should be in cia I health. They've repeat- balance sheet commitments,
While the biggest banks
good taste, addressing issues. nor personalities . Lerrefs of edly downplay~d the size of according to the official already have regulators on
thanks to organizations and individuals will nor be accept· losses and their capital Treasury · Departme'nt's site, they don 't amount to
ed for publication :
cushions since the melt- description of how the pro- the kind of manpower
down in the industry began gram Will work. The banks needed to oversee every
nearly -two years ago.
. will also forecast if they step of the banks' financial
Yet Treasury Depanment huve the resources to absorb analysis. That is why the
says the government is future ·losses.
se lf-assess ments had · to
allowing
them
to
do
just
Then
they
will
repon
their
happen. said banking
Reader Services
· (usPs 21a-9so&gt;
that
under
the
new
''Capital
findings
in
a
"stundardized
industry cons11lting Bert
Correction Polley
'
Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
Program" template" provided by the Ely. He also noted that
Assistance
Our malri concern In all stories is to Published every morning, Monday
Intended
to
bolster
collfi- government agencies over- banks hqve complicated
through Friday, 111 Court Street,
be accurate. If you know of an error
Pomeroy, Ohio. Second-class postage
in
the
·
banking
sys- seeing this process, the internal financial systems
dence
In a story, call the newsroom at (740) paid at Pomeroy.
tern . With this structure, it description said.
that only their employees
992·21!16.
Member: The Associated Press and
might
not.
After
all
that
is
done
,.
the
can
navigate.
the Ohio Newspaper Association.
"It
sounds
like
letting
regulators
and
bank
offi:
But
that still can't overPoatm11ter: Send address correcOur main number Ia
Barry·
Bonds
do
his
own
cials
will
discuss
the
results.
shadow
the risks inherent in
tions to The Daily Sentinel, PO. Box
(740) 992-2156.
testing on whether he is tak- To be sme. regulators can having bunks doing their
729, POmeroy, Ohio 45769.
Department extenelona ara:
tng steroids. Imagine that!" challenge the banks' find- own analysis.
Subscription Rates
"This crisis was caused
said Robert Brusca, who ings · or any assumptions
By carrier or motor route
News
runs the research firm Fact made in the banks· valua- by rnis-modeling of risk by
4 waeko ..............•11.30
Editor: Charlene Hoe11ich , Ext. 12
imd
Opinion Economics.
Lions . They will then decide financial institutions," said
52 weeks ............'128.85
Riporter: Brian Reed , Ext . 14
It 's just the latest exam - how much capital will be Joshua Rosner, managing
Dally ...................so•
Reporter: Beth Sergent, Ext. 13
Senior Citizen rates
pie of a government pro- needed if economic condi- director of the consulting
26 weeka ............ ;'59.81
gram · that's · aimed at tions weaken.
finn Graham Fisher &amp; Co.
52 weeka •.• '; ........'118.90
resolving
the
banking
crisis
Those
lacking
capital
will
Inc . ''To come up with a
Advertising
Subscribers should remn " advance
but
is
more
likely
to
come
be
req!Jired
to
raise
more
black-box
model of capital
Oulllde Selet: Dave H~rris, Ext. 15 dirOO to 1M Dally SOntinel. No sub·
up
short.
U.S
.
leaders
have
through
private
sources,
and
·
risk
for
banks
in. a few
Outllde Selet: Brenda Davis, Ex116 scription· by mall permined ln. areas
where home canier service is availa~e .
been tough with the must do so within six weeks is something that
ClaOIJCirc.: Judy Clark, Ext. 10
rhetoric , but their actions months. Banks .can apply won't work ."
Mall Subacrlpt!on ·
can't seem to fix much of for additional government
For the latest evidence of
lnalde Melga County
General Manager
·
funds after the capital how financial companies
anything.
12 Weeks .... . .. .. ....'35.26
Charlene Hoeflich, Ext. 12
This program will have assessment is complete, but often can't get things right,
26 Weeks .. ...... . ....'70. 70
52 Weeks .. .. .. . .. . '1 40.1 1
19 of t.he nation's biggest there will be a six-month just look at wbat Merrill
E·mall:
banks.
Jll with assels top- waiting period to sec if they Lynch
disclosed
late
mdsnews@mydailysentlnel.com
. Outside Meigs County
ping $IOU billion, parlake in cun first ruisc private Tuesday in a securities fil12 Weeks ....... . .... .'56.55
"stress
tesls." The goal is to .money. New federal support ing: The securities firm's
26 Weeks ......... .' .. '113.60
Web:
gauge
if these institutions will come by way of the 2008 losses were about
52 Weeks . . . , . • . . . ..'227.21
www.mydailysentlnel.com
Bank of America, government's purchase of $533 million more than pry-

. Monday, March 2, 20og

TUPPERS PLAINS - Nadine Goebel 75 Tuppers
Plains, .died Saturday. Feb. 28. 2009. at Camden-Clark
Memorial Hospital in Parkersburg, W.Va.
·
· She was born Jan. 4. 1934: in Tuppers P.lains, daughter of
the late Creston and Phylhs Cole Newland. She was a
member of the Tuppers Plains Church of Christ, was the
past Dean of Nursing at Hocking College, and earned a
Master.of Sctence in Nursing degree.
She ts sumved by her husband, Frederick Goebel; two
sons and daughter-s-in-law. Steven and Kathy and Jel:'frey
and Fabnenna Goebel; two daughters and so~;~s-in-law·.
Susan and Thomas Heller and Sarah and Joe Wasik: a
. brother, Dennis Newland; a sister. Marlene Kuhn: seven
. grandchildren: Catherine. Hannah, Madeline, Sarah,
. Kathlee~. Joe and Ja,ck; three step grandchildren: Eric, Erin
· and Jess1ca; and several nieces and nephews.
. F~ral will be at II. a.m. on Tuesday, March 3, 2009, at
Ewmg Funeral Home m Pomeroy with the Rev. Fr. Waller
· Heinz officiating. Burial will follow at Our Lady of Loretto
: Cemetery in Long Bonom.
Memorial contributions in Mrs. Goebel's name may be
made to Tupper.s Plains Church of Christ.

•

For the Record
RACINE - Charles Williams. 39. Racine, was transto Holzer Medical Center with non-incapacitating
mjuries by Meigs County EMS following a one-vehicle
accident that occurred Wednesday. Feb. 25 at approximately I :45 p.m.
.
Accofding to trooper.s. Williams was driving his 1992
·Ford Escon eastbound on O.hio 124 near mile post 24 when
· the vehicle went off the' right side of the road, lost control,
' continued across the roadway traveling off the left side of
the road striking a guardtail.
' Following the accident, Williams was cited with failure
· to control and driving under suspension. His vehicle sustained disabling damages.
·
~rted

- ~Weather
' Monday ...Sunny. Highs
in the mid 20s. Nonhwest
winds I 0 to 15 mph. Wind
' chill values. as low as 3
below in the morning.
·. Monday night ...Mostly
clear. Cold with lows
· around 10 above. Northwest
winds 5 to 10 mph.
· Tuesday ...Sunny. Highs
around 30. Nonhwest winds
5 to 10 mph.
Tuesday night ...Partly
cloudy. Cold with lows
around 16. North winds
around 5 mph.
· Wednesday ... Partly
·sunny. Highs in the lower
40s.

Wednesday
night ...
Mostly cloudy in the
evening ...Then becoming
partly cloudy. Lows in the
upper,20s.
.
Thursday ...Partly sunny.
Highs in the mid 50s.
Thursday night and
. Frlday ...Mostly cloudy. A
30 percent chance of
showers. Lows in the
upper 30s. Highs in the
lower 60s.
Friday night · through
Sunday... Mostly cloudy
with a 40 percent chance
of showers. Lows in the
upper 30s. Highs in the
upper 50s.

Ohio hospitals: New
.fees could lead to jolJ. cuts
that time, part of which
COLUMBUS (AP) Ohio hospitals are object- would be covered by the
ing to fees proposed by proposed fees.
Gov. Ted Stnckland, sayHospitals would like~ be
. ing they will lead to jobs
cuts and higher costs fot
· mates ·that hospitals would
patients.
Care facilities say they pay $598 milhon ·and get
would have to • pass along back $187 million through
. rate
the extra costs to employees reimbursement
·and
~ustomers,
The increase.
"The state Medicaid budColumbus Dispatch reponget is being balanced on
ed Sunday.
The governor's two-year the back of hospitals ,"
budget plan aims to shift the · association spokeswoman
burden
of
increasing Tiffany Himmelreich said,
Medicaid costs from the "If we are putting up a dolstate to health care lar and for the state to draw
providers. Hospitals, nurs- down three, we want our
ing homes and other facili- dollar back."
The fee would add to the
ties would pay $1.3 billion
Medicaid-related
shortfalls
in franchise fees, creating
revenue that could free up at hospitals, which get
back about 86 cents for
other state funds.
That revenue · will help each dollar they spend for
the state· handle · rising Medicaid patients, she
.
enrollment and costs amid said.
"This fee is only going to
the · recession,
Ohio
Medicaid Director John deplete the safety net and
vital services that are
'Corlett said.
"This takes pressure off available because they can.the general revenue fund. not sustain the hit," she
maintains essential services, said.
Nursing and other care
vrevents rate reductions and
provides greater long-term facilities also have con'• sustainability for the pro- cerns that they'll be paying
gram." Corlett told lawmak- fees and seeing no benefits
in return, said Peter Van
ers last week.
Runkle.
executive director
The Medicaid program
of
the
Ohio
Health Care
·uses state revenue and
111atching funds to provide Association. The group
health insuraJlCe for 1.8 rnil- represents about 750 nurs'lion Ohioans . State officials ing and residential care
expect that number to centers.
Those facilities pay a
approach two !llillion in the
daily fee on each bed but are
pext two years.
only
for
The program will cost reimbursed
:Ohio about $8 billion in · Medicaid patients, he said.

a

,.

2nd Ll .D inlk F. Johnsan

June 14, 2008 he was commissioned as a second lieutenant into the United States
ARMY. He has branched
into the Medical Service
Corps.
Over his military career,
Johnson has done tbe following: Attended
the
ROTC's LTC Training,
graduated · from Army
Reserve Oftlcer Training

Highway Patrol

~~sp~~d~:~oc~~ion e~:i~

viously reponed. That
boosted its full-year loss to
$27.61 billion from the
$27.08 billion it reponed
just last month.
Blame the upward revision on an error in how it
recorded transactions tied to
hedging. That's more bad
news for Bank of America ,
which acquired Merrill on
Jan. I but had to get a $20
billion government loan in ·
order to absorb the investment bank's bigger-thanexpected losses.
.
It was hardly the first trip,
up for Merrill in the last two·
years.
It's hard IO forget what
then-CEO John Thain
boasted
last summer.
"Right now we believe that
we are in a very comfonable spot in terms of our
capital," he said July 17
when Merrill reponed its
fourth straight quarterly
'loss and write-downs from
failed
investments
.approaching $40 billion.
Two months later, it was
forced into the arms of
Bank of America to avoid
collapse like rival Lehman
,
Brothers Holdings Inc .
Rosner ihinks in six
months there will have to be
an.othcr round of stress tests
or something else, because
the latest attempt to resolve
the problems with troubled
banks won't change much
of anything.
·
Part of the problem is that
the government doesn't
seem to know what to do,
so it keeps trotting out
plans that keep troubled
banks kind of ulive. Maybe
that 's the point - it'~
reduced to buying time,
hopmg that markets fix ·
things for themselves . -

POMEROY - 2nd Lt.
Derek F. Johnson. a 2001
graduate of Meigs High
School, recently returned
from Baghdad, lmq, where
his Army Unit, C Co. 94th
Brigade Support Battalion.
had been assigned.
•
Johnson· s prior and current military service and
training includes: Ohio
National Guard member.
Alpha
Battery,
2nd
Battalion. I74th Air Defense
Artillery, McCoti'nelsville
from 2005-08. Johnson also
received his Bachelor of
Science
Degree
in
Recreation Studies along
with a mioor in business on
June 10, 2006.
Johnson then graduated
from Ohio University on
June 13, 2008 with a
Masters of Science in
Recreation and Sport
Sciences. On June 14, 2008
he graduated with a
Bachelor of Science Degree
in Spon Sciences. Also on

Corps' Leader's Tr.Uning Protkiency forhiseAcellent
Course a1 Fort Knox. Ky: military proficienl·y and is
attended
Leadership authorized to wear this decDevelopment Assessment oration on the uniform.
Course at Fort Lewis,
From June 24. 2008 to
Wash .. a siA-weet mandato- end of July. 2008. Johnson
ry camp that evaluates once again attended LTC
cadets in the areas of physi- training at Ft. Kno;&lt;,. Ky ..
cal fitness, leadership. this time as an instructor
marksmanship and land and advisor. He attended
navigation skills; Joh!lson Basic Officer Leader
has received a certificate as Course 11 at Ft. Sam
a Member of the Honor Houston. Tex.as from Aug .
Platoon at Warrior Forge. · 4. 2008 to Oct. 9. 2008.
Johnson also attended an Johnson then reported to the
Airborne Course at Ft. 4th Brigade. IOth Mountain
Benning. Ga .. a three-week Division at Ft. PolL La. for
course teaching Soldiers to his duty permanent station.
While at Ft. Polk.
jump from an aircraft in
combat and non,combatant Johnson participated in
situations. Johnson earned · Individual
· Readiness
the Army PUrachutist Badge Training prior to being
. and wings 'from the I st shipped out t'Or Iraq where
Battalion - 507th Parachute other . member.s of his unit
Infantry. He has also earned .were already serving in
the ~rman Armed Forces Baghdad. Upon completion
Badge
for
Military of their assignment. the
Proficiency and a GOLD Unit, along with Johnson.
German Armed Forces · returned to the states and Ft.
Badge
for · Military · Polk this January.

Law You Can Use

.

Know your rights when faced with layoff
In December 2008, the
state's unemployment rate
topped 7.8 percent, which
is a two .percent increase
in unemployment, or the
loss of 118,000 jobs, in one
year. While businesses
struggle to survive, affed·
ed employees must be
aware of their rights when
flt:ed with an employer's
annoWKe~Dent of ~. layoff.

You may wish to consult an
accountant about the ·tax
. consequences· of lump sum
payments ver.sus extended
payouts.
• Benefits. The separation
agreement may ellplain
your rights regarding con:
Q: I zinderstand my com- tinuation . of benefits, such
po,ny will ask me to sign a as
health
msurance.
separation
agreement. Normally,
departing
Why &gt;
·
employees must elect. in
A: Companies may pre- writing, to continue health
Q: /' ve been told my job sent departing employees coverage for a brief period
is being eliminated as part with a separation agreement oftime. This requires timely
of a reduction in force. that defines both P.arties' payment of the entire prerights .and responsibilities mium. Each of your depenWhat should I do?
A: First, ask questions. regarding your separation dents is entitled .to be noliMost companies are willing from employment. This . fled about requirements for
to provide information agreement usually will continued health insurance
regarding the necessity for require your signature, participation.
the reduction in force. acknowledging that you
The agreement may also
Understanding the reasons · have had an opportunity to explain your rights regardfor the layoff may help you consult with an utlof!!ey, ing retirement pro~rams
to cope with the job loss and an.d that you understand and ~ou may have partictpated
explain the Situation to ·agree with its terms. Make m. Talk to your accountant
potential employers.
sure · you understand your or financial advisor about
Then, ask about the possi- rights and responsibilities. how best to handle the
bility of reassignment or Severance agreements usu- transfer or rollover of retirereemployment. Make sure ally- include a term stating ment funds. Early withthe company is aware of the employee agrees to not drawal of funds will noryour current skills and ask bring a lawsuitagainst the mally .result in a tax penalty .
about job openings in areas company. Look for the fol• Waiver of Cla1ms. In
exchange for severance pay
of the company unaffected lowing provisions:
• Severance Pay. Some or other benefits to which you
by the layoff. If y011 are a
union member, your .repre- companies provide depart- would not normally be entisentative should be able to ing employees with sever- tied, your company may
ance pay for a period of require you to agree not to
e~tplain to you any rights
you may have to be rein- time. Severance pay may be bring legal actio!" against it. If
distributed in .a lump sum or your agreement meludes such
stated.
Also,
check
your may be paid out over time. a waiver or release of claims,
employer's policies for
payout · of unused leave.
such as vacation leave and
· sick leave, Finally, if your
selection for layoff was not
performance-based, request
a reference letter.

ask your attorney what this

might mean for yoo.
Q: Whm and how can I
apply for srme zmemploymen.t benefits?
A: Ohio unemr.Joyment
benefits are avatlable to
most laid-off employees.
You should file for benefits
as soon as you become
unemployed. You can lind
more
information
at
http://unemployMent.ohio .
gov or 1-877-0HIOJOB.
Law You Can Use is a
weekly consumer legal
information column pro11ided by the Ohio State Bar
Association (OSBA). This
article was prepared by
a"orney Maryellen Reash
of the Columbus office of
Lane, Alton &amp; Horst, LL.
C., and was updated by
a"orney Stacy Pollock of
Means,
Bichimer,
Burkholder &amp; Baker, Co.,
L.P.A. Both tut1 members of
the OSBA's Labor and
. Employment Section Board
of Go11ernors. · Articles
appearing in this column
are intended to provide
brood, general information
about the law. Before
applying this information
. to a specific. legal problem, ·
rellllers are urged to seek·
advice from an a"orney.

1--------------:-----------------------------

hin
·
aJl
'di
•ty' d ths
was gton state to ow . gm
ea
·

OLYMPIA, Wash . (AP)
- Terminally ill patients
with less than six months to
live will soon be able to ask
their doctors· to prescribe
them lethal medi9ation in
Washington state.
·
But even though the
"Death with Dignity': law
takes effect Thursday, people .who might seek the lifeending prescriptions could
find their doctors contlicted
or not willing to write them.
Many doctors are hesitant
to talk publicly about where
they stand on the issue, said
Dr. Tom Preston , a retired
cardiologist and board
member of Compassion &amp;
Choices, the group that
campaigned for and suppons the law.
"There are a lot of doctors, who in principle.
would approve or don't
mind this. but for a lot of
social or professional reasons, they don't want to be
· involved," he said.
But Preston said discussions about end-of-life
issues between doctor and
patient will increase because
of the new law, and he
thinks that as time goes on
more and more doctors who
don't have a religious or
philosophical opposition
will be o~n to participating.
"It w1ll be a cultural
shift," he said.

The U.S. Supreme Coun measure and doesn't plan to
ruled in 2006 that it was up prescribe lethal medication
to states to regulate medical to his patients for now.
practice, including assisted · "I am not here to tell )l?Osuicide, and Washington's pie how they should e1ther
Initiative ·1000· was passed live their life or the end of
by nearly 60 percent of state their life," Farber said.
voters in November.
"There's possibly a story
It became the secon!l out there, in the · future .
state, behind Oregon, to that's so compelling that
have a voter-approved mea- maybe I would write a presure allowing assisted sui- scription."
cide.
Farber said he would refer
In December, a Montana patients to Compassion &amp;
district judge ruled that doc- Choices of Washmgton. the
·tor-assisted suicides are state's largest aid-in-dy.ing
legal. That decision, which advocacy group, after talk'
was based on an individual ing about how they came to
lawsuit, is before ·the their decision .
Montana Supreme Coun. · The advocacy group is
While Montana doctors are compiling a directory of
allowed to write prescrip- physicians who aren't opt, tions pending the appeal, ing out of the law, as well as
it's unknown whether any pharm;~cies willing to fill
act01illy have because the prescriptions, said execthere's no reponing process. utive director Robb Miller.
Under · the Oregon and . "Physicians don't underWashington laws, physi-' stand yet exactly how the
cians .and pham'tacists are law works," Miller said.
not required to write or fill "Whenever there's lack of
lethal prescriptions if they understanding, there tends
are opposed to the law. to be some reluctance ."
Some Washington hospitals
Dr. Roben Thompson. an
. are opting out of panicipa- internist and cardiologist at
tion, which precludes their Swedish Medical Center in
doctors from panicipating Seattle who .voted for the
on hospital propeny.
measure, said that in his 32
Dr. Stu Farber, director of years of practice he has treatthe palliative care consult ed patients who would have
service at the University of benefited from this law.
Washington
. Medical
"I believe for the sake of
Center, voted against the compassion, and for a per-

49antpolis' iailp t:ribune ·The Daily Sentinel· ~oint ~leftlant Jeais'ter
mdtclasslfted®mydaltylrlbune..com

son's own individual rights.
that this should be an option
for them." he said.
Washington's law is based
on Oregon's measure. which
took effect in late 1997 . Since
then, more than 340 people
- mostly ailing with cancer
- have used that state's measure to end their lives.
· Under the Washingtoo
law, any patient requesting
fatal medication must be at
least 18 years .old. declared
competent and · a state resident. The patient would have
to make two oral requests.
I 5 days apan, and. submit a
written request wi!nessed by
N'o people. ·one of which
must not be a relative, heir.
attending doctor, or connected with a health facility
where the requester lives. ·
Two doctors must cenify
that the patient has a terminal condition and six
months or less to live.

~nderson 'Mc'DanM

Tunera{ '1fom£
Adr.un McDnnicl
&amp; ,h\Jncs Anderson
D.RECTO RS

CALL TODAY! D4il 441-2342

0411 112;,2151

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•

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BWA!.TERSOM'f'OO.Il.YTRIBUNE.COM

I!

Save money: only uses about 8¢ electric an hour; so tum down f)Ur thermostat and never be cold again .
By MAn. Woooo
!!Joi-...1-o Syodi&lt;ut&lt;

(UMS) · Everyone hates high heat bills.
But we're all sick and tired of simply turning down the thermostat and then being

•

cold.

Well now, the popular HEAT SURGE'"
miracle heaters are actually being giVen
away ff!!e to the general public for the next
48 ·hours starting at precisely 8:00 a.m.
The only thing local readers have

.

otW-

game-high 3 1 points. Erin
Shennan added 12 to · tfte
triumph.
Audrionna Pllllins led the
· Green and White with 13
· points. followed by Kasel'
Turley with 11 and Emeri
C~ery with 10 mark.ers .
Alhe Rawson was next
with seven points.
The l ady Eagles lone
se.nior- Kay lee Milam .ended her hoops career
17 points throughout the · with three points. Beverly
final stiiDza to wrap up the Maxs011 and Hay ley Gillian
11-point decision.
rounded out the scoring
The Red . · White and with two points each.
Black: jumped out ro a 14-8
SWHS advances tl) play
edge ,after eight minutes of New 801&gt;ton in the 0-4 display. then both teams trict final thb Saturday in
Sl:ored 15.apiece in the sec- Athens at the Ohio
ond canto to pull within University Cl)nvocation
29-23 at the intermiss.ion. Center. Tip-off is schedSouth Webster's Briana uled for 1 p.m .
Rawlins scored 10 of her
Eastern l:ompteted its
16 points during that piv- season 5-5 overall in TVC
otal third quarter, while Hocking play. good enough
..,.. w.llllrs/pllalt .
Kayla Cook added nine for a third-place . tie with
. markers during that i;ame Trimble. EHS also.compel· Eastern's Allie .Rawson. (35) leaps for a rebound between a
second half· stretch. Cook ed in .its fourth consecutive · pair of ·$outh Webster playe!S during the second half of
finished the night with a district semfinal matchup. Saturday's Division IV district semifinal at Jackson.

· JACKSON
The
·
Eastern
girls
basketball
ot Hlringlon
HS. "'3Q ., m.
team hung around with
top-seeded South Webster
for thr« of foor quarters
pla)led 011 Saturday afternoon. but the one period
· that got away from the
fourth-seeded Lady Eat{les
proved to be the differ. ence-mak.er during a 65-48
setbacl. in a Division IV
district semifinal contest
held at Jaclr.son High
School.
The Lady Eagles ( 10- 12)
trailed
by six points after
CLEARWATER.
Fla.
lAP) - Detroit Lioll&amp; both the ftrst quarter and
defellSive eJld Corey Smith first half. but a 1 ~8 su~
iDd Oakland Raiders line- by the Lady Jeeps ( 16-6) 10
. kcker Marquis. Cooper the third period all but
)liere 810011g four boaters sealed the deal with a 48lliissing
Sunday
off 31 advantage heading into
"lorida's Gulf Coast. the ~finale :
EHS cut the deficit to
COast Guard and Smith's
within
12 points early in
apt said.
the
fourth.
but the two
:. Smith and Cooper were
a 21.-foot vessel tha.t left teams eventually matched
(:learwater · Pass
on
Saturday morning for a
fishing trip IIDd did not
return as expected, the
Coast Guard said Sunday.
BY ~~RYAN WALTERS
Clews used a helicopter IIJid
BW~LTERSOMVDAJL'I'TRIBUNE. COM
• ~7-t'oot boat to search a
730-square mile area west
JACKSON - A slow
of' Clearw·ater Pass on start
led to a bad finish for
SUnday.
BY BRYAN WALT£RS
the
SQuth
Gallia girls basSmith owned the boat and ketball team
.
SWALTERSOMVOAILYTRIBUNE.COt.t
on Saturday
be and Cooper had been on afternoon during a 58-49'
fis,hing trips before. said setback to third-seeded New
LOGAN - Basketball
Ron Del Duca. Smith's Boston in a Division IV disgames ·are won and l05t at
agent. The pair had been trict semifmal contest held
the free throw line. especially when it cumes to tournateammates on the Tampa at Jackson Hidt School. ·
ment play.
Bay· Buccaneers in 2004.
The second-seeded Lady
Second-seeded Vinton ·
The Coast Gua!d said the Rebels (16-6) - minus a
County
made the most of its
~ others were aboard, few key players in the opencharity
tosses
- especially
i!Jentified as wm Bleakley ing canto due to family ·
in
the
and Nick Schuyler, but they commitments
found
fourth
did not provide other themselves in a big hole at
quarter details. .
hal~me, down 17 points to
to
help
Smith, 29. had 30 tackles, the Lady Tigers ( 18-3).
secure
a
including three sacks. IIJid
.SGHS. however, scrapped
hllrd-fought
an interception in 12 games IIDd cia wed through most of
45-42 decilast season for the winless · the ~'OIId half to eventuals. i o n
Lions. Smith. wbo is 6- ly pull the ~arne to within
Saturday
foot-2, 250 pounds. also one possess1011 with 2:40
night over
played for the San left in regulation. but were
seventhFrancisco 49ers and played never able to fully get over
seeded
college ball at North the proverbial hump.
Galli
a
· The Red and Gold stumCarolina State.
Academy
' . Del Duca called Smith .bled out of the gates. falling
in
a
o!Ji! of the "good guys" of behind 16-5 after eight min- ·
Division
II
.utes of play. Then NBHS
the
boys sec• league and. . was
. . plan- followed with a 13-7 run in
nl\lg to start vtsmng teams
tional final
IS a free agent this week. the second period for a 29at Logan
fie said be has spoken with 12 edge at the intermission.
H i g' h
The Lady Rebels began
Smith's family and is also
School.
In ,touch with Coast Guard their furious 37-29 second
T h e
half charge in the third.
officials.
Vikings
"They've assured me that going on a 12-9 rwi to pull
(18-3)
they're deploying all avail- within 38-24 heading mto .
the unbeatable resoun:es to look for the finale .
en 2009 TVC Ohio charnpi·
Trailing 42-32 with five
these guys and get them
ons - rnade 15-of· 21 free
minutes
left, Jasmine
back," he sai!l.
throw attempts in the fourth
Cooper, 26, bus played Waugh canned a trifecta at
quarter. helping the hosts
break a 26-all tie through
five seasons with the the 4:41 mark to pull within
three fmmt:s with a I Q-16
Buccaneers.
Seahawks, seven. That three-pointer
run for the hard-fought
Jaguars. Steelers
and sparked a 7-0 run over the
three-point decision .
Raiders. He appeared in 26 next two minutes, allowing
YCHS stormed out to a 6games with the BuccaneerS SGHS to ptill within 42-39
with
just
under
three
minlead
jus I I :45 into the con0
ill 2004 and 2005, recordutes
remaining.
.
test. but Gallia Academy
ing 30 tackles. He' has
·
NBHS
countered
with
the
countered
with an 8-2 run
played sparingly since as he
next
four
points
over
the
over
the
next
3:10 to knot
· bas bounced between
Bryton WeiWrl/plloto things up at eight . The
next
42
seconds
to
recapture
teams , appearing in 13
South Gallia's Jennifer Sheridan releases a shot anempl between a pair of New Boston
games and recording 10
................. 1.2
Please SH DevilS, 82
defenders during tyhe second half of of Saturday's Division IV district semifinal al Jackson.
tackles. Cooper. who is 6foot-3 . 230 pounds. played
college ball at Washington.
.Ri~k Davis, 11 meteorolo·l!ist with the . National
Weather Servtce m Tampa ,
BY BRYAN WALTERS
the
three' day
battle
1l!id seas were about 2 to 4 BW~LTERSOMroAILYTRIBUNE COM unscathed. brin1; home state
~et Saturday morning and
championships m three dif•!JCreased to 3 to 5 feet in
HUNTINGTON - Good ferent weight classes.
(!¢ · · afternoon .
Late things come in threes . The
Mitchell went perfect in
~turday night, a small Point Pleasant wrestling the 171-pound weight class
did! advisory was issued, program Clll) make 11 strong division. posting a convinc·
\.(lien winds were around 20 case for that statement.
ing 7-3 decision over Jake
knots and seas were up to 7
The Big Blacks finished as Justice of Independence.
~tor more. There were no the team runner-up in Class Mitchell finishes his illustri·
!lfanderstorms in the area.
AA·A for the third consecu- ous career at Point with his
· Hog
Meness
· ~ Davis said the water was tive year and also produced tirst state championship and
~·~tremely rough and chop- · three state champions at the a 40·4 overall record.
2009 West Virginia State
Maness - with a hard- division. fending off Zac
~·on Sunday afternoon.
Wrestling
Championships
fou~ht
..5-4 decision over Acord of Liberty Raleigh by
:..J.ions spokesman Bill ·
'e,'enist and Raiders senior. held over a three-day span Justin Fisher of Roane in the u 2-1 decision in the final.
executive John Hererra said this past weekend at the Big · 119-pound championship - Hogg ends the year 47-3
became the third Big Black overall, while Maness comthe teams are monitoring Sandy Superstore Arena.
Point Pleasant finished in program history to win pletes his senson at 42-1.
teports.
The three champions this
behind only 13-time reign- multiple state titles in a
weekend
now brings Point
ing champion Oak Glen in career. Maness - the 112the Class AA-A standings, pound champion. a year ago Pleasant u total of II in pro- .
'
. finishing the day with 136.5 - joined the likes of James gn1m history. Ten of those ·
points. Oak Glen was 20 Casto (2005-2006) and championships have come
·:
' ,. 1-740-446-2342
. &amp;XI. 33
poin!s ahead of PPHS with a Anthony Jeffers (2007- in the lust five seusons.
.~'
... - 1-74(&gt;.446-3008
winning
total of 156.5 mark- 2008). Both Casto and Other PPHS champions
'~
'
I'IHIIBryan Wah..-.llliO p/1010
ers.
Maness accomplished their include Brent Hereford nnd
.&amp;~.••.Sill!
Three Point grapplers - titles in different weight Heath Shirley in 2006, as Point Pleasant senior Derek Mitchell, !eft. lends off a charge
well as the school's first by Gallia Academy's Clint Saunders during this December
senior
Derek Mitchell and classes.
JkYan Wolters, Sports Writer
27, 2008file pholo taken at' the Gallipolis lnvitatial)al held at
sophomores Rusty Maness
Hogg earned his first
(740) 446-2342, Oid: 33
\)w811tra 0 mydallytrlbune.ccm
ended crown in the heavyweight . PIIUI SH Wrestll~~&amp;o B2 Gallia Academy High School In Gallipolis.
and Casey Hogg
~·-:- ? ' -

- -'Milo!:.

on

laiiJ

ft.tj~ru15 MADE IN TH~ USA: Everyone wants to save money on heat bills this winter, so entire Amish communities are working from the·crack of dawn to fi~;~ish . These fine real wood Amish made fireplace mantles are built to last forever. The bak
mantle is a real steal at just two hundred ninety·e1ght dollars beca~&gt;~se all those who beat the order deadline by calling the National Hotline at
1-800-235·8052 .to order the fireplace mantles are actuallll9etting
. the imilorted hi·tech Fireless Flame HEAT SURGE m1racle heaters for free.
just two hundred ninety-eight dollars since al'1i! turning a~ aU dealers in order to let surprising the whole family by getting two.
the entire cost of the miracle heater is free. readers baY&amp;~ per household just as long So when lines are busy keep trying or log
Thfs .free giveaway is the best way to as they eaD 'lierore the d'i!lldline," confirms onto amishfireplaces.com. We prorilise to
get to every call Then we can have a deliv·
slash heating bills and stay warm through Milton.
the·:~.. of winter. The' HEAT ~ .SURGE
lt'sa-rally~~gettworight ery truck out to your door right away with
Roll·n·Giow Fireplace gives you zone beat- now because fOr only the nett 48 hours you your beautiful Heat Surge Roll-n-Giow Fireing and all the beauty al)d warmth of a get both mirad.e' beaters ft'ee. That's like place," Milton said.
"You'll instantly feel bone soothing heat
built-in ftreplace but rolls from room-to- putting II~ hund~ bucks right in your
room so it can also save you a ton of money pocket lqld you.can save eV.m more money in any room. You will never have to be cold
on your monthly heating bills.
again," he said. • ·
on heating bills.
Even people in California and Florida
"Everyone's calling to get one but tbo~e
. on the WOI'Idwide web:
www.amishfireplaces.com
.are !locking to get them so they may never who really want-to save a tot of money are
have to turn on their furnace all winter. And ...-·-·· ---·------·---...,.-·------~ ··- ,
sinee it uses only about 8 cents of electric an ,
·
.
' ' ,-.,,
hour on the standard setting. the potential
·-g
"· e
·
savings are absolutely incrediqle.
,~
"We are making sure no one gets left out;
but you better hurry because entire comThe National Toll Free Hotiines are ?.ow open. All those whG beat the 48-haur order
munities of Amish· craftsmen are straindeadline to cover th&amp; t astof:tl1e Amtsh made Fireplace Mantle and shipping 9&lt;11t the HEAT
ing to keep up with demunds. For now, we
SURGE miracle- Mater free. :: ·
·
.
.......
~ . strict _
ijmit of 2 per hou~old has been imposed. Since some home w~rkers want
I to build their awn mantlepiecl!, they are let·
ting peOj)l&amp;get the imported miracle heater
I
alone for Just'249. Or, with the Amish made
mantle you get the miracle heater free.
Use the map below to tacate the weather zone you live in and call ~he H.otllne num·
How It Works: The HEAT SURGE miracle
ber for your zone.
I heater Is a work of engineering genius from
f
the China coast so advanced, you simply
, plug it into any standard outlet. It uses only
about 8$ of electric an hour on the standard
setting. Yet. it produces up to an amazing
5,119 BTu's on. the high setting. So watch
· out. a. powerful on board hi.·tech heat tur·
I bine silently forces hot air out into t~e room
1 from .the vent so you feel the bone sooth·
I
! ing heat instantly. ~· even has certificatiori
• ON THEIR WAY~ Winter
have
I of Underwriters Laboratories covete'd UL
turned countr}( roads into pipelines to the big
listing. It also comes with a limited full year
city delivery system. Everybody wants a fire·
replacement or money back warranty plus
place that comes fully assembled with a hand·
a 30-0ay Satisfaction Guarantee.
made Amish mantle In oak or cherry finish an.d I
gets delivered by truck right to your door. All you
do is plug it in,
'

Haw· t. 0 t 2 free .hea+a.rs.

~··

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=HdEAT SURGE®
Flame
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·

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F1reless

1

1

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•
The Heat Surge mira·
cle fireplace has earned the prestigious Good
Housekeeping Seal. The product has earned
the Seal aftl!r evaluation by the Good House·
keeping Research Institute.

- 6: 1S........
HS.
p,m. -

2:NFL players
among Fla.
missing boaters

today.
to do is
call the National Distribution Hotline before
the 48-hour deadline with their order for the
handmade Amish Fireplace Mantle. Everyone who does is instantly being awarded the
miracle beater absolutely free.
This is all happening to annoimce the
HEAT SURGE Roll-n-Glow'" Fireplace
which actually rolls from room-to-room so
you can turn down your thermostat and
·take the beat with you anywhere. That way;
everyone who gets them first can immediately start savi1ig on their beat bills.·
Just in time for winter weather, portable
Amish encased f~replaces are being delivered directly to the doors of all those who
beat the deadline.
These remarkable fireplaces are being
caUed a miracle because they have wllat~
being called the 'Fireless Flame' patented
technology that gives yoo the peaceful
flicker of a real 6re but without any llames,
fumes, smells, aShes or mess. Everyone il;
getting them because they require no chimney and no vent. You just plug them in.
The Fireless Flame looks so real it amazes
everybody because it has no real fire. So
what's the catch? Well, soft spoken Amish
craftsmen who take their time ·hand building the mantles have a process that forces
a strict household limit of 2 to keep up with
orders.
"We can b!lrely keep up ever since we
started giving heaters away free. Now that
it's really cold outside, everyone's trying to
get them. Amish craftsmen are ·working
their fingers to tbe bone to be SUI"&amp; evwyone gets their delivery in time to save a lot of
money," confirms Timothy Milton, National
Shipping Director.
"These portable Roll-n-Glow Fireplaces
are the latest home decorating sensation.
They actually give you a beautifully redecorated room while they quickly beat from
wall to wall. It's the best way to dress up
every room, stay really warm and slash
your heat bills all at the same time," says
Josette Holland, Home Makeover Expert.
And here's the best part. Readers who
beat the 48-hour order deadline are getting
their imported hi-tech miracle heaters free
when encased in the Amish built real wood
fireplace mantles; The mantles are being
handmade in the USA right in the heart of
Amish country where they are beautifully
hand-rubbed, stained and varnished.
You just can't lind custom made Amish
mantles like this in the national chain stores.
That makes the oak mantle a real steal for

@wra

-·

Kotaltonly 1
:~.... oomea out of .
the top ,.,.

I

'
. .n. hl·t.ch
.U.nt

hHt turlllne titk•
In

coJd air

START CALLING AT
8:00A.M. TODAY .

START CAWNG AT

, ·1

8:30A.M. TODAY

START·CALLING AT
9:00 A.M. TODAY

1-800·235·8052

1~00·23&amp;-;5223

. 1·800·239-6133

'

!

i
'

'

Bl

The. Daily Sentinel

'

:·~ ~l .~~~"~.:?~#I.~.?:!:~.. J

SIISII, 58-49 Vikings

fend otT
Blue DeYils

Point second at state wrestling tourney

E»m..icrus
....
.

_.,.Omydol·-·-

• EASILY ROLLS ANYWHERE: Thrs is th e par·

Evervor&lt;e can get low bills
tabl e Roll·n·Giow' Fireplace. that easily ro lls and stay wa rm and cozy. The new Roll ·n·Giow
from bedroom to Irving room to keep you warm. Frreplace saves a ton of money and makes your
No vents, no chr mney and no tools. Just plug it in .. fro nt room look like a mill ron bucks.
·

a SAFE

The Frreless Flame looks so
i
everyone but therers no real Ore. That makes the flame wrn·
dow safe to the touchunderthe watchfuleye ofa parent. It's
where the kids will playand the cat and d09 will sleep.

miracle heater free. It is
grvenaway free to all who beat the 48·hour order dead ·
l1ne for your cho1ce of the oak or cherry finrsh Amish
Mantles. rh.e free heater comes alreadyencased. ·

• FREE:

:. .
'

.

'

I
I

�Pqe A6 • The Daily ~tine!
~2009 UNIVERSAl MEDIASYNDICATE

www .mydailysentinel.com

INC. SPECIAL ADVERTISEMENT FEATURE

ADvERTISEMENT

Monday. March 2. l009
FCR HEAT SURGE LLC3939 EVERHABD RD

laside
n.s...,

CANTON OH 44709

Amish mantle and miracle invention
help h
heat bills hit ro

rw'

,.,..a

wliilamias.t.... •

Lady Jeeps end Eastern's season, 65-48
"
'
...
-----'!£!',. .

·Miracle heaters being given away free with orders for real Amish fireplace mantles to announce the ·invention
that helps slash heat bills, but Amish craftsmen under stmin of Winter rush force household limit of 2

,.._...,., -.
--~--. at 7 · ·44&amp; cal

BY BRIM WALTERS

BWA!.TERSOM'f'OO.Il.YTRIBUNE.COM

I!

Save money: only uses about 8¢ electric an hour; so tum down f)Ur thermostat and never be cold again .
By MAn. Woooo
!!Joi-...1-o Syodi&lt;ut&lt;

(UMS) · Everyone hates high heat bills.
But we're all sick and tired of simply turning down the thermostat and then being

•

cold.

Well now, the popular HEAT SURGE'"
miracle heaters are actually being giVen
away ff!!e to the general public for the next
48 ·hours starting at precisely 8:00 a.m.
The only thing local readers have

.

otW-

game-high 3 1 points. Erin
Shennan added 12 to · tfte
triumph.
Audrionna Pllllins led the
· Green and White with 13
· points. followed by Kasel'
Turley with 11 and Emeri
C~ery with 10 mark.ers .
Alhe Rawson was next
with seven points.
The l ady Eagles lone
se.nior- Kay lee Milam .ended her hoops career
17 points throughout the · with three points. Beverly
final stiiDza to wrap up the Maxs011 and Hay ley Gillian
11-point decision.
rounded out the scoring
The Red . · White and with two points each.
Black: jumped out ro a 14-8
SWHS advances tl) play
edge ,after eight minutes of New 801&gt;ton in the 0-4 display. then both teams trict final thb Saturday in
Sl:ored 15.apiece in the sec- Athens at the Ohio
ond canto to pull within University Cl)nvocation
29-23 at the intermiss.ion. Center. Tip-off is schedSouth Webster's Briana uled for 1 p.m .
Rawlins scored 10 of her
Eastern l:ompteted its
16 points during that piv- season 5-5 overall in TVC
otal third quarter, while Hocking play. good enough
..,.. w.llllrs/pllalt .
Kayla Cook added nine for a third-place . tie with
. markers during that i;ame Trimble. EHS also.compel· Eastern's Allie .Rawson. (35) leaps for a rebound between a
second half· stretch. Cook ed in .its fourth consecutive · pair of ·$outh Webster playe!S during the second half of
finished the night with a district semfinal matchup. Saturday's Division IV district semifinal at Jackson.

· JACKSON
The
·
Eastern
girls
basketball
ot Hlringlon
HS. "'3Q ., m.
team hung around with
top-seeded South Webster
for thr« of foor quarters
pla)led 011 Saturday afternoon. but the one period
· that got away from the
fourth-seeded Lady Eat{les
proved to be the differ. ence-mak.er during a 65-48
setbacl. in a Division IV
district semifinal contest
held at Jaclr.son High
School.
The Lady Eagles ( 10- 12)
trailed
by six points after
CLEARWATER.
Fla.
lAP) - Detroit Lioll&amp; both the ftrst quarter and
defellSive eJld Corey Smith first half. but a 1 ~8 su~
iDd Oakland Raiders line- by the Lady Jeeps ( 16-6) 10
. kcker Marquis. Cooper the third period all but
)liere 810011g four boaters sealed the deal with a 48lliissing
Sunday
off 31 advantage heading into
"lorida's Gulf Coast. the ~finale :
EHS cut the deficit to
COast Guard and Smith's
within
12 points early in
apt said.
the
fourth.
but the two
:. Smith and Cooper were
a 21.-foot vessel tha.t left teams eventually matched
(:learwater · Pass
on
Saturday morning for a
fishing trip IIDd did not
return as expected, the
Coast Guard said Sunday.
BY ~~RYAN WALTERS
Clews used a helicopter IIJid
BW~LTERSOMVDAJL'I'TRIBUNE. COM
• ~7-t'oot boat to search a
730-square mile area west
JACKSON - A slow
of' Clearw·ater Pass on start
led to a bad finish for
SUnday.
BY BRYAN WALT£RS
the
SQuth
Gallia girls basSmith owned the boat and ketball team
.
SWALTERSOMVOAILYTRIBUNE.COt.t
on Saturday
be and Cooper had been on afternoon during a 58-49'
fis,hing trips before. said setback to third-seeded New
LOGAN - Basketball
Ron Del Duca. Smith's Boston in a Division IV disgames ·are won and l05t at
agent. The pair had been trict semifmal contest held
the free throw line. especially when it cumes to tournateammates on the Tampa at Jackson Hidt School. ·
ment play.
Bay· Buccaneers in 2004.
The second-seeded Lady
Second-seeded Vinton ·
The Coast Gua!d said the Rebels (16-6) - minus a
County
made the most of its
~ others were aboard, few key players in the opencharity
tosses
- especially
i!Jentified as wm Bleakley ing canto due to family ·
in
the
and Nick Schuyler, but they commitments
found
fourth
did not provide other themselves in a big hole at
quarter details. .
hal~me, down 17 points to
to
help
Smith, 29. had 30 tackles, the Lady Tigers ( 18-3).
secure
a
including three sacks. IIJid
.SGHS. however, scrapped
hllrd-fought
an interception in 12 games IIDd cia wed through most of
45-42 decilast season for the winless · the ~'OIId half to eventuals. i o n
Lions. Smith. wbo is 6- ly pull the ~arne to within
Saturday
foot-2, 250 pounds. also one possess1011 with 2:40
night over
played for the San left in regulation. but were
seventhFrancisco 49ers and played never able to fully get over
seeded
college ball at North the proverbial hump.
Galli
a
· The Red and Gold stumCarolina State.
Academy
' . Del Duca called Smith .bled out of the gates. falling
in
a
o!Ji! of the "good guys" of behind 16-5 after eight min- ·
Division
II
.utes of play. Then NBHS
the
boys sec• league and. . was
. . plan- followed with a 13-7 run in
nl\lg to start vtsmng teams
tional final
IS a free agent this week. the second period for a 29at Logan
fie said be has spoken with 12 edge at the intermission.
H i g' h
The Lady Rebels began
Smith's family and is also
School.
In ,touch with Coast Guard their furious 37-29 second
T h e
half charge in the third.
officials.
Vikings
"They've assured me that going on a 12-9 rwi to pull
(18-3)
they're deploying all avail- within 38-24 heading mto .
the unbeatable resoun:es to look for the finale .
en 2009 TVC Ohio charnpi·
Trailing 42-32 with five
these guys and get them
ons - rnade 15-of· 21 free
minutes
left, Jasmine
back," he sai!l.
throw attempts in the fourth
Cooper, 26, bus played Waugh canned a trifecta at
quarter. helping the hosts
break a 26-all tie through
five seasons with the the 4:41 mark to pull within
three fmmt:s with a I Q-16
Buccaneers.
Seahawks, seven. That three-pointer
run for the hard-fought
Jaguars. Steelers
and sparked a 7-0 run over the
three-point decision .
Raiders. He appeared in 26 next two minutes, allowing
YCHS stormed out to a 6games with the BuccaneerS SGHS to ptill within 42-39
with
just
under
three
minlead
jus I I :45 into the con0
ill 2004 and 2005, recordutes
remaining.
.
test. but Gallia Academy
ing 30 tackles. He' has
·
NBHS
countered
with
the
countered
with an 8-2 run
played sparingly since as he
next
four
points
over
the
over
the
next
3:10 to knot
· bas bounced between
Bryton WeiWrl/plloto things up at eight . The
next
42
seconds
to
recapture
teams , appearing in 13
South Gallia's Jennifer Sheridan releases a shot anempl between a pair of New Boston
games and recording 10
................. 1.2
Please SH DevilS, 82
defenders during tyhe second half of of Saturday's Division IV district semifinal al Jackson.
tackles. Cooper. who is 6foot-3 . 230 pounds. played
college ball at Washington.
.Ri~k Davis, 11 meteorolo·l!ist with the . National
Weather Servtce m Tampa ,
BY BRYAN WALTERS
the
three' day
battle
1l!id seas were about 2 to 4 BW~LTERSOMroAILYTRIBUNE COM unscathed. brin1; home state
~et Saturday morning and
championships m three dif•!JCreased to 3 to 5 feet in
HUNTINGTON - Good ferent weight classes.
(!¢ · · afternoon .
Late things come in threes . The
Mitchell went perfect in
~turday night, a small Point Pleasant wrestling the 171-pound weight class
did! advisory was issued, program Clll) make 11 strong division. posting a convinc·
\.(lien winds were around 20 case for that statement.
ing 7-3 decision over Jake
knots and seas were up to 7
The Big Blacks finished as Justice of Independence.
~tor more. There were no the team runner-up in Class Mitchell finishes his illustri·
!lfanderstorms in the area.
AA·A for the third consecu- ous career at Point with his
· Hog
Meness
· ~ Davis said the water was tive year and also produced tirst state championship and
~·~tremely rough and chop- · three state champions at the a 40·4 overall record.
2009 West Virginia State
Maness - with a hard- division. fending off Zac
~·on Sunday afternoon.
Wrestling
Championships
fou~ht
..5-4 decision over Acord of Liberty Raleigh by
:..J.ions spokesman Bill ·
'e,'enist and Raiders senior. held over a three-day span Justin Fisher of Roane in the u 2-1 decision in the final.
executive John Hererra said this past weekend at the Big · 119-pound championship - Hogg ends the year 47-3
became the third Big Black overall, while Maness comthe teams are monitoring Sandy Superstore Arena.
Point Pleasant finished in program history to win pletes his senson at 42-1.
teports.
The three champions this
behind only 13-time reign- multiple state titles in a
weekend
now brings Point
ing champion Oak Glen in career. Maness - the 112the Class AA-A standings, pound champion. a year ago Pleasant u total of II in pro- .
'
. finishing the day with 136.5 - joined the likes of James gn1m history. Ten of those ·
points. Oak Glen was 20 Casto (2005-2006) and championships have come
·:
' ,. 1-740-446-2342
. &amp;XI. 33
poin!s ahead of PPHS with a Anthony Jeffers (2007- in the lust five seusons.
.~'
... - 1-74(&gt;.446-3008
winning
total of 156.5 mark- 2008). Both Casto and Other PPHS champions
'~
'
I'IHIIBryan Wah..-.llliO p/1010
ers.
Maness accomplished their include Brent Hereford nnd
.&amp;~.••.Sill!
Three Point grapplers - titles in different weight Heath Shirley in 2006, as Point Pleasant senior Derek Mitchell, !eft. lends off a charge
well as the school's first by Gallia Academy's Clint Saunders during this December
senior
Derek Mitchell and classes.
JkYan Wolters, Sports Writer
27, 2008file pholo taken at' the Gallipolis lnvitatial)al held at
sophomores Rusty Maness
Hogg earned his first
(740) 446-2342, Oid: 33
\)w811tra 0 mydallytrlbune.ccm
ended crown in the heavyweight . PIIUI SH Wrestll~~&amp;o B2 Gallia Academy High School In Gallipolis.
and Casey Hogg
~·-:- ? ' -

- -'Milo!:.

on

laiiJ

ft.tj~ru15 MADE IN TH~ USA: Everyone wants to save money on heat bills this winter, so entire Amish communities are working from the·crack of dawn to fi~;~ish . These fine real wood Amish made fireplace mantles are built to last forever. The bak
mantle is a real steal at just two hundred ninety·e1ght dollars beca~&gt;~se all those who beat the order deadline by calling the National Hotline at
1-800-235·8052 .to order the fireplace mantles are actuallll9etting
. the imilorted hi·tech Fireless Flame HEAT SURGE m1racle heaters for free.
just two hundred ninety-eight dollars since al'1i! turning a~ aU dealers in order to let surprising the whole family by getting two.
the entire cost of the miracle heater is free. readers baY&amp;~ per household just as long So when lines are busy keep trying or log
Thfs .free giveaway is the best way to as they eaD 'lierore the d'i!lldline," confirms onto amishfireplaces.com. We prorilise to
get to every call Then we can have a deliv·
slash heating bills and stay warm through Milton.
the·:~.. of winter. The' HEAT ~ .SURGE
lt'sa-rally~~gettworight ery truck out to your door right away with
Roll·n·Giow Fireplace gives you zone beat- now because fOr only the nett 48 hours you your beautiful Heat Surge Roll-n-Giow Fireing and all the beauty al)d warmth of a get both mirad.e' beaters ft'ee. That's like place," Milton said.
"You'll instantly feel bone soothing heat
built-in ftreplace but rolls from room-to- putting II~ hund~ bucks right in your
room so it can also save you a ton of money pocket lqld you.can save eV.m more money in any room. You will never have to be cold
on your monthly heating bills.
again," he said. • ·
on heating bills.
Even people in California and Florida
"Everyone's calling to get one but tbo~e
. on the WOI'Idwide web:
www.amishfireplaces.com
.are !locking to get them so they may never who really want-to save a tot of money are
have to turn on their furnace all winter. And ...-·-·· ---·------·---...,.-·------~ ··- ,
sinee it uses only about 8 cents of electric an ,
·
.
' ' ,-.,,
hour on the standard setting. the potential
·-g
"· e
·
savings are absolutely incrediqle.
,~
"We are making sure no one gets left out;
but you better hurry because entire comThe National Toll Free Hotiines are ?.ow open. All those whG beat the 48-haur order
munities of Amish· craftsmen are straindeadline to cover th&amp; t astof:tl1e Amtsh made Fireplace Mantle and shipping 9&lt;11t the HEAT
ing to keep up with demunds. For now, we
SURGE miracle- Mater free. :: ·
·
.
.......
~ . strict _
ijmit of 2 per hou~old has been imposed. Since some home w~rkers want
I to build their awn mantlepiecl!, they are let·
ting peOj)l&amp;get the imported miracle heater
I
alone for Just'249. Or, with the Amish made
mantle you get the miracle heater free.
Use the map below to tacate the weather zone you live in and call ~he H.otllne num·
How It Works: The HEAT SURGE miracle
ber for your zone.
I heater Is a work of engineering genius from
f
the China coast so advanced, you simply
, plug it into any standard outlet. It uses only
about 8$ of electric an hour on the standard
setting. Yet. it produces up to an amazing
5,119 BTu's on. the high setting. So watch
· out. a. powerful on board hi.·tech heat tur·
I bine silently forces hot air out into t~e room
1 from .the vent so you feel the bone sooth·
I
! ing heat instantly. ~· even has certificatiori
• ON THEIR WAY~ Winter
have
I of Underwriters Laboratories covete'd UL
turned countr}( roads into pipelines to the big
listing. It also comes with a limited full year
city delivery system. Everybody wants a fire·
replacement or money back warranty plus
place that comes fully assembled with a hand·
a 30-0ay Satisfaction Guarantee.
made Amish mantle In oak or cherry finish an.d I
gets delivered by truck right to your door. All you
do is plug it in,
'

Haw· t. 0 t 2 free .hea+a.rs.

~··

1

=HdEAT SURGE®
Flame
·-"·-·~··· ··~····· ·~··

·

..

·~

F1reless

1

1

.

•
The Heat Surge mira·
cle fireplace has earned the prestigious Good
Housekeeping Seal. The product has earned
the Seal aftl!r evaluation by the Good House·
keeping Research Institute.

- 6: 1S........
HS.
p,m. -

2:NFL players
among Fla.
missing boaters

today.
to do is
call the National Distribution Hotline before
the 48-hour deadline with their order for the
handmade Amish Fireplace Mantle. Everyone who does is instantly being awarded the
miracle beater absolutely free.
This is all happening to annoimce the
HEAT SURGE Roll-n-Glow'" Fireplace
which actually rolls from room-to-room so
you can turn down your thermostat and
·take the beat with you anywhere. That way;
everyone who gets them first can immediately start savi1ig on their beat bills.·
Just in time for winter weather, portable
Amish encased f~replaces are being delivered directly to the doors of all those who
beat the deadline.
These remarkable fireplaces are being
caUed a miracle because they have wllat~
being called the 'Fireless Flame' patented
technology that gives yoo the peaceful
flicker of a real 6re but without any llames,
fumes, smells, aShes or mess. Everyone il;
getting them because they require no chimney and no vent. You just plug them in.
The Fireless Flame looks so real it amazes
everybody because it has no real fire. So
what's the catch? Well, soft spoken Amish
craftsmen who take their time ·hand building the mantles have a process that forces
a strict household limit of 2 to keep up with
orders.
"We can b!lrely keep up ever since we
started giving heaters away free. Now that
it's really cold outside, everyone's trying to
get them. Amish craftsmen are ·working
their fingers to tbe bone to be SUI"&amp; evwyone gets their delivery in time to save a lot of
money," confirms Timothy Milton, National
Shipping Director.
"These portable Roll-n-Glow Fireplaces
are the latest home decorating sensation.
They actually give you a beautifully redecorated room while they quickly beat from
wall to wall. It's the best way to dress up
every room, stay really warm and slash
your heat bills all at the same time," says
Josette Holland, Home Makeover Expert.
And here's the best part. Readers who
beat the 48-hour order deadline are getting
their imported hi-tech miracle heaters free
when encased in the Amish built real wood
fireplace mantles; The mantles are being
handmade in the USA right in the heart of
Amish country where they are beautifully
hand-rubbed, stained and varnished.
You just can't lind custom made Amish
mantles like this in the national chain stores.
That makes the oak mantle a real steal for

@wra

-·

Kotaltonly 1
:~.... oomea out of .
the top ,.,.

I

'
. .n. hl·t.ch
.U.nt

hHt turlllne titk•
In

coJd air

START CALLING AT
8:00A.M. TODAY .

START CAWNG AT

, ·1

8:30A.M. TODAY

START·CALLING AT
9:00 A.M. TODAY

1-800·235·8052

1~00·23&amp;-;5223

. 1·800·239-6133

'

!

i
'

'

Bl

The. Daily Sentinel

'

:·~ ~l .~~~"~.:?~#I.~.?:!:~.. J

SIISII, 58-49 Vikings

fend otT
Blue DeYils

Point second at state wrestling tourney

E»m..icrus
....
.

_.,.Omydol·-·-

• EASILY ROLLS ANYWHERE: Thrs is th e par·

Evervor&lt;e can get low bills
tabl e Roll·n·Giow' Fireplace. that easily ro lls and stay wa rm and cozy. The new Roll ·n·Giow
from bedroom to Irving room to keep you warm. Frreplace saves a ton of money and makes your
No vents, no chr mney and no tools. Just plug it in .. fro nt room look like a mill ron bucks.
·

a SAFE

The Frreless Flame looks so
i
everyone but therers no real Ore. That makes the flame wrn·
dow safe to the touchunderthe watchfuleye ofa parent. It's
where the kids will playand the cat and d09 will sleep.

miracle heater free. It is
grvenaway free to all who beat the 48·hour order dead ·
l1ne for your cho1ce of the oak or cherry finrsh Amish
Mantles. rh.e free heater comes alreadyencased. ·

• FREE:

:. .
'

.

'

I
I

�The Daily Sentinel ·Page 83

Marshall defeats UCF, 67-62

Devils

lead to 6362 with 10
s e co nd s
remain ing. Pitts
made two
f r e e
throws· to
NOIEIIOOK push the
lead bad
up to three, and Taylor's 3PQinl attempt to tie the
score missed. Pins mllde
two more free throws with
2 seconds left to put the
game out of reach.
Taylor .scored 28 points
to lead the Knights (16-12.
6-8) . Kenrick Zondervan
added 10 points and seven
rebounds.

HUNTINGTON. W.V.
tAP)
Damier Pitts
scored 21 points and
Marshall beat Central
Florida 6 7 -f&gt;2 on Saturday
night.
Pitts shot 4-for-f&gt; from
behind 3-point line and 7for-7 from the free-throw
line. Mar~el Humphre~
&amp;dded 18 points and 12
rebounds
for
the
Thundering Herd 414-15 .
6-8 Conference USA).
while : T"un:tl
Baines
chi~ in with 16 points
and i I rebounds.
With a three-point deficit
late in the contest.
Jennaine Taylor made a
layup to cut Marshall's

fnuPagorBl
Maroon and Gr&lt;~y dosed the
canto with a 3-2 spun to
lead 11-10 after eight minutes ot' action.
The Blue De~il&amp; (7- 14)
i'eU behind as many as four
points ( 17- 13) with 1:_30 left
m the baJf. but countered
with fOur strai~t points to
enter halftime !led at 17-all.
Both teams also scored nine
points apiece in the tiUnJ
stanza to bring the game to
26-all entering the finale.
· The VU;.es stormed out to
a 32- 28 edge with 5: 19 left
in regulation. but a lhreepoinl play by Nick. Mitchell
- followed by a Chris
Armstrong buc~et - gave
the Blue and White it final

IIIIIIP Sc1r11111rd
lrontoo 7!1\

Prep Boxscores

.MIQnolio Sondv Wit\' !Sii, w
l1idgooloo&lt;l•1
Marion Pl.....nt
Fairbarlka·.._ OT

Sount WEilsi ER 65,

-

·-

Iii 8 17- &lt;II
to 15 19 17 - 65

8

55. lllilfllrd

cem.r

fnuPageBl

~ Gilllon I ().(1. 2. ~ 'IIJrlwi 5 I ·

Folrtand . . _ - . . . . . . . .

champion :_ Alex Reed bac~ in 1998.
Ifs the second lime in
progrolill history that Point
yielded three state champions at the same finals.
matching a program best.
The Big Blacks also ended
the season having lost to
only two teams - Calhoun
County at regionals and
Oak Glen at state.
Point avenged a home
loss to Calhoun County at
re~ionals. · finishing
II
potnts ahead of thlril-place
( 125 .5) . after
CCHS
Satwday. Roane County
(100) . was fourth and
Grafton (94) rounded out
the t~tive. .
Selli.o r Phillip Allen finished third in the 12.5-pound
division, while junior }bock
McClung ended up fifth in

39
Rlcllmon&lt;l ~ 50, Gall&amp; Mills Hawken

48. 0T
Sl CloliS\'illa 48. Borntsville 45
Wlddl110 40; CJe. ~ 32

~.1;!!:12): llnlm1o Halllir 0 ()-0
O.tc.wto. . 1 o-o 3. ~­
I CHI 2. Pullins 4 s-9 13.

Mot-

Wrestling

IJI~

-n• Hlglllan&lt;l55, W J - 32

EAsmiN48.

S\.'l:ta'

s Point 1!4

-IY

- n Hiland 116, Bcwerstoo Concrtlon

Vlllle!l34

2 11. Emori c"'"*ll 5 11-4 10. Ashltll Conal Wlrt&lt;- HaMS~ Prep 60,
~~COIII . Sl
0 o-a 0. JoiiMQn. 0
0.
3 1-2 7. T01lllS: 20 7- Cats. A1ricen1ric 152. Gn:rv. Cltw Christian
·~- Th~nt goats; 1 (Milam) .
48
·SOUTI!WEIISTER (16-li): Erin Moo,. I
Cots. Wellington 50. Qenvitl&amp; 44
1-2 3. Erin Slte&lt;mln 6 0.0 12. Tasna Covington 50. BradfOrd 27
.0 ()-0 0. Kill&lt; Ia Cllok 10 !HI .31. ~ Jalforson !7. Spring, Em- C - O ().(I Q, Atl-.;1 0 o-oo. . Christian oW
Honnol&gt; Mcntgom4r; 0 o-o o. ~ ~rfield Christian 64. Gahanna
.
.
au,en
0 o-o 0. Brilna -~"~ 7 2-3 16, Qlnstian 54
Fet1cie Slor1cJ!oll &lt;Hl 3. TOTALS 2512· A. Loramie 56, ~ Flirlawn 26
16 65. Th~nt gaols; 3 (Cook 2. Marion Cotlt 53. ~rt Mlldlson
S l - lCh!lstion &lt;13
- C o l l i. 81 , loft \lernan Ataclamy
37
- l i e ·R ; - 53, r..,. Christian
61. C1f

NSGollia

o-o

~-sa.35
~ CIII'.Botllol..,_ll_ Clutstior1 311
1Ift oll.ifo ~ IUo "' 011 36
WoiiNhglot
SUglr Gnwe

If 13 9 20 - 58
5 7 12 25- 4!1 ·

cr.-.111.

NEW 80S10N (1&amp;-3): Mitior 0
0. Mlran&lt;lo Coli 2 ().() 4, Missy

o-o

.

-~39

Bucl&lt;ley 3 1).4 9, Myc:NMI Homil1an 3 ....
10, Ai'j... Ralnos 2 8-10 12. Kac:i
McNutt o ().() o. Koyla Wllo'j 5 1~17 23.
lOT.'ILS I 5 2+:15 S8. ThfO&lt;ti!Oint gooJs;
4 (Bud&lt;IOI' 3. Witty).
SOOTH GALLIA (16-&amp;): Courtney
_ , Q ().(1 0, l.inds&lt;JV Jol&gt;nson 0 1).
o tt. Jennm Sll&lt;lridlln 5 H 20. ~
0\Jtlcln 1 6-1 2. a..- Conadoy 2 47 8, Jasm!M Waugh 1 ().(1 3, Hallee
Swoln 3 o-a &amp; NotMI&gt;o Adkins 3 2-5 a.
Morgen Gillilond 0 2-2 2. TOTAlS: 15 1424 4&amp;. Th-I&gt;Qint goeJs: 5I Sheridan 4,
w..gh).

Splngs 55. \llllooe 49 •

. , _ ,, 11&gt;

-

GIRlSBA~

toll-

e.~

Dhl Fnl

C.,.~ieMoSI . X_

Elytio 118, GroftQn

-.w 45

GrHn.S2. Atot. Flmtooe •r

--.g . , _ 45, c.,.

Rebels
..

fi001PageBl

.

Thurgpad

a three-possession lead (4639) at the I :58 mark. South
HorQng 54. Sor.dus0y02
Galli
a countered with a bastf&gt;
02
.
r.toson
35.
Cin.
Anderson
32
10
7
9
Golli!&gt;olls
Vln!an Co 11 6 9 19- 45
~·!.'?' I'Oj'ry 56. Un- Lalot 51
at
I :27 ·to pull within
ket
, . _ _ 62, Chardon 47
five, but never came closer
GALLIA ACADEMY (7·15): Quintan OlmOted Fals 55, Middlel&gt;urg Hts..
Nlllor1 2 2-36, Etllan- 4 ().(19, Nick Mldpolk4S
· the rest of the way.
~ 37, Flndllty30 .
Milchoii41-19.Ctn~24-4
NBHS advances to play
lologrlilicat 51, Cle. St.
8. Kyle 3 ().() 8.
1 Flo&lt;:ky 0.0 2. Baou Whaley o ().(1 0. John ~02
South Webster in the D-4
0 2-2 2. TOTALS: 1&amp; !HO 42. -HIIL62. - - 3 8 district finat this Saturday
ThrH-pQint goals: I ( - . ).
SyNonia
57. ltll. Scott 40
VINTON COUNTY (18-3): N4y Grillo 2 ltil. 0.. Cotll. 52. ~ - in Athens at the Ohio
il-!l7, ,_ytor Reed 0~ 0. LINilAWhead 49
University
Convocation
I 5-6 7, Etllan Allen 3 D-1 &amp;. ,l,clam W.rd ...... Slar181. ...... ~ 30
...... - 8 1 , IIOWiing 0... 4$
Center. Tip-off is sched1 0.0 3. Brandon Cieri&lt; 1 2·2 4, Thomlloon 0 o-o 0, Dylan Gulltoie 3 ().() \lanclllia Bultof M . Fairborn &lt;13
uled for I p.m.
8.Jakel'retor28-10 12.TOTN.S 13111- W.nen H1rdlng 67, Brecks~Jjlle~
BroacNieoo His. 59 .
.
27 45. Tlwoo pair &gt;I goalo: I (Wionl).
It was the final basket·
Wllitellause Anlllony wayne 59, umo
ball
game for seniors
.
t....allliatk.r...,.••.._... St. 4li
a·nd
Flold - Gollla -.ny 18-48 'll&gt;ungo. ll&lt;lardmor&gt; 78. Con. GlenOak :rr Jennifer Sherldan
(.333) 2-painl gaols ls-30 (.500) 31&gt;aint
Adkins
in
the
Red
Natasha
goals 1·18 (.056); Vll\100 County I~ _ , . . 49. Canol FuiiQn Norll\.,..1 ..
and Gold. Sheridan - the
(.325) 2-palnt gcols 12-30 (.&lt;100) 31&gt;ainl Illy VIllage Boy 119, VermHian 47
gcols 1-10 (.100); ...... - - : - Gdia Bolle'lue ..,Oek-29
program ·s all-time leadAcodomy 9-10 (.900); VInton CoUnly 18- Brjw148, - .... 28
ing scorer with I ,021
27(.667): R - - Ga11ia .-.-ny eon. 5aulh &amp;1. l'looot«Trlway 18
-28

GALUA AcADEMY 42

LOflin -IClrlg 47,......., Lalot 39

Jwod-

-·to•

-"

Conlleld 62. Ro- SE 30
Coliria eo. Umo Shaw- 75
Cln. McNiotlolos &gt;43. Cin. lndian Hill37
Cltl. l'lyoning oW. Cin. Flnnev~&lt;&gt;Wn 30
Cuyahoga Falls Waloh Josull 54.
-28

25 (l(ylo 8). VInton Counly 27
(Joke Pralar 10): Asslala - Gillie
Aoodomy 4 (QuintOn Nbart 2), Vinton
County 8 IN4f Grilo 4): Stell$ -Galla
Aoodomy 9 (ChriS AlrnslrOng 3), Vinton

County It (LINi l.owiMtod 4): Blocl&lt;s Gollia ,l,cadfmy 3 (l(yla Milcllell 2),
VInton County 3 (Jake Proter 2):
Gallla .-.-ny n vtnmn
County 14: Team fouls Gallia
.-.-ny 22. Vinton Count'! 9.

ume Bath 66. Otlawa-Gifl\dOII39
Napoloan 58. Cellance og

Parma.tits. Holy Nome 52. warnmsvme
H1s. 48

StrulhOII 59, """~ Mooney 4,1
65. Medina BOO&lt;• ..

~

Tlftln Columbian &amp;1, U~r Sandusky 39
Wlpokanela 50, St. Marys Memorial 30
Wauseon 83. ltll. Libbey 4I

BOYS BASKETBALL

eon.cent Colli 55. Navarro Fairies 52
Can. Timlren 78. Orrville &amp;!I
Clo. St. lgnatlus 59. Clo. Benedictine 50
Ootphos St.John's 67, Collna 1!4
Findlly Liberty-Bantoo 40, Arlington 24
Holland Springfield 46, l'lopaloan 42
Lucu 65. Je....,..ville Hillsdale &amp;4
Mansllokl Sr. 55. Mosoiltan Washington
Vllloy 45
ltil. Libbey 60, Tot. WM""'r 08
72

Q..,.38

Colo. ~85. Dublin Je«&gt;me •a
Cola.
Wllelatono
60.
Colo.

,,....,..,..,sa

Metamora

Otsego 44

....... 7$, o . t o l d - S9
Mt Vlrnon 39. Wuhrdll Cent. 36
A~ ea. Colo. w.t""' Rkl(lo51

Dlvlitlen.

hill&gt;...,.. 81. Lltlll Miami 02
ltlllbttainll &amp;8, MUton-UNon ~
Batlal·,.te 74. Qln. Fl'o'OI'\OWn 51
a_.. I i i i o - 75, Coehac:tan

81

eo.-

70. Rlvtond Buckoyo 28
C h - 63, l,lc0ermalt Sclato NW 38
Cln:lw;illo Lagon Elm 78. Walhlngtan

C.H. Mllml-_ 48
Col$. O.SI 11t 80, Amanda·Ctetrcreak

so

Cots. Wan.traon 70. l.okowood 4 t
Day. c.rtG11 59, Day. OOI&lt;WOOd •6
oa~ Dunlllf
Monrao .w
- ~ ~ Vlllty 56. London 53

ee.

L - Cenlar Olontangy Orono- 65.
- " ' UotrJng va11oy •a

Morlotta 70, Jaclra&lt;&gt;n 60
McArlhur VInton C011nty 45, Gallipolis
Gollill 02 .
MlllorlbuiD w. &amp;4. bnaovlllo
Moysvllloi!l. 20T
- P h i l 118. Mt:Connelt-.ill
Morgan.

Nor&gt; Dod 73, Batavia Clermont NE

~

.

1

EveJV~Hf'l

:

Gallia Academy was 2lO overall in ·sEOAL _play .
which was last in the Soulh
Division. However. GAHS
fini shed eighth in the
league because Jacks11n
volunteered to nut play jn
the SEOAL Day !&gt;f
Champions . Because of
· that. the lronmen officiaily
finished last .
( 152). sophoore Matt Wan&amp;
( 130)
and
freshm!'l'
Brandon Taylor (145) all
qualified for the. distnct
event. but none of the
quartet managed to reach
the three rounds of finals.
Meigs·.. lone qualifier senior Ernie Welsh - also
qualified for districts. 'but
failed to finish in the t~
six.
Gallia Academy was
28th overall with r I9
points.
while
tile
Marauders scored three
points for the 48th spot ·in
the 50-team field.
·
Graham Local - whiCh
produced 12 of the 14 individual district champioAs
- cruised to the team title
with 358 points. Runner-up
Greenville and third-place
Miami Trace were next
with 86 points apiece . . .
Results of the 2009
Division U district tournament in Goshen are available on the web at
www.baumspage.com

'

In .One Week With Us
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tleribune

(740) 446-2342 (740) 992-2156 (304) 675-1333
OrFaTo

og..H,.,.... .
Monday thru Friday
8:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m.

Now you con how borders and oraphics .
~
odded to yourdasslliecl ads
_{1

Word Ads

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S.IMiey Ja.-c.ol•:;tlftt

tti'CR

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SF

_ _ _

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S. Wtblter M , RHdtvllle Eaattrn .t8

.

Cln. Hilla Chrlalllln Academy ea. Cln.

·

Cln. N. Collogo Hill 75, Wllllomoburg !58
Cln. Pu~l Marian 80, Cln. SCI'IIo 36
Cola. IlNdy 45. Rlc:hwaad N. Un&lt;on 33
GallO MNia Gilmour 85, - - 81

1'7
0:

...._..

KIT &amp;CARLYLE
CUI

Apoito•rtl/

•

TowMauMt

career points -;- led the ·
Lady Rebels with · 20
points, while Acllins finished her career with eight
markers.
. . . .
Chll!ldra CB!laday added ·
eight points for the Lady
Rebels, while Hailee
. Swain endtl4 the day with
six
markers.
Waugh
chipped in: tbree and the
duo of Tayler Duncan and,
Mor.gan Gilliland rounded
. things out · wit4 two
apiece.
·
Kayla Wiley led the
Lady Tigers and all scorers with 23 points, . followed by Alyssa Raines
with 12 and Mychael
Hamilton with 10.
·
The Lady Rebels were .
making their third consecutive appearance in the
district semifinals.

llrylln W.ltei'S/pheto

I
4

'
1

•

se

~~~e you priced a John
Deere laleiy? You'll be ~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;i;;;;i;;i;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;
surprised! Check o~ l our RV

Solem 80. Nllta Mcl(lnloy 22
Slryl&lt;tr sa. Edon 22
.'
Sycamo,. Mohowtc 45. Tiffin Coi'Nt ..
Tlpp City Botl1ol 50. Naw Pant Nationol
Trall24
'
'

U$ed
Inventory
www.CAREO.com.

m!eh8el
740-.W6·2412

ltll. Ottawa Hlllo 47, Northwood 28

----------------~-~--------·----------------------~·----------~

•

e=.;c.,

Sl.OOforlorve

• Ahclta 1111111 ba p-lllld'

• .... .,.. ............. ......_c.

BordetsS3.00Jperod

Grophlcs SOt far small

3ll

s.
DMalonll
llloa11&gt;Cart01f 58, Gahanna Cote. 28

lE

:I.'flUlCLASSIEIED UHEADHOTICED

.
.
Mllltlury Lake 58, Rosslord 21
MI. Blanchard Ri..,rdale 75, Limo Ce&lt;lt.
Colli. 51
Orrville 33, Can. Cent. Cath. 24
St. Hen~ 51 . Colctwater U
Versailles 43. Milton-Union 24
'ltlunga .. Ursutlne 61 . Garrettsville
Garfiol&lt;l 39
Dlvlolon IV
Ada 48. Oola 1-t.rdin Northern 35
,l,noonia 61 , Pitsburg Franltlin·Monroo
45
Aohland 52, Mansliekl Sr. 49
Bodtar&lt;l Chane! 72. Newbury 34
Corey 59. Fostoria St Wondolln 47
Clll $even Hills &amp;!1. Williamsburg 35
Oolplloo Sl. John's 45. OII011Wia 36
Ft. Laromle 68. DeGraff Rlverlldo 41
Ft RteOYOry ... Minslar 30
Hornier Po- Henry 54, Con~nenlal 50
Houston 40. Ruooia 36
Kalida 4&amp;. Nalgola 34
I(I.U.nd &amp;4. Corneratooe Chllolian 27
L.., 74, 'Arllngtan 69, OT
Lowollvlllo 61, Wanen Jf'l( og
McComb 45, Tal. Chriatian oW
New Rl~ 52, Old Fort 20
.
Norftlk St Pllul 33, Laa11M Danbury

-..vsr

82. Cln.

JUSISA.Y
CHARGE II!

~2t57

M. Tontogany

'PandOri·GIIboO 63, CoiYoFtawaon 21
PaltloVIIIo ... EdQirtoo $4
Plym&lt;odh &lt;13, Manoflokl St. ,_(i 38 · •
Charltttan
sa. Ftytlt9;11tl-Parry

Door Park :!1

district tournament at
Goshen High School. and
none of the five Blue Devil

'·

.

Wyoming 45
Tlpj) Clll'~ 47, Urbana &lt;II, OT

Baoc~

weekend at the Division D

CLASSIFIED

Ha-.tlan&lt;l Woyno :nace 61 . RO&lt;Idord ·
Pari&lt;WO'/ 49

~- 68. Cola._, 40
G~v&gt;M Clll' !Ill. ~.~neuter ee

St. hrnar&lt;l Roger

GOSHEN - So close.
.
lllld yet so far.
The Gallia · Academy
wrestling te~. concluded
its tremendous. season this

- Sentinel -

Olvtoton 111

Akr. Manchester 60, Jeromesville
Hillsdole37
Arcl'llold 41 , Uberty Center 34
CUstown Miami E. 36. Anna 33
Columbia Station Columbia 73. Cals.
Independence &amp;I
Coho~mbtana Crestview 54, Columbiana
49
Cuyahoga Falls CVCA 58, Creston
Narweyne 57. OT
Elyria Coth . 30, Cle. Cent Colli. 32
Rndlly Llber1y-llonton ?•· Columbus

.6
Pioneer N. Central S3. Tot Maumee

Hordl,;.-...':,",lor

ALTERNATE SPOT AT STATE

grapplers that made it to
that event advanced out lo
the state level.
But one - junior Jared .
Gravely - will serve as the
first alternate in the 21 5pound division. which
means GAHS might not be
done just yet.
Gravely placed fifth overall in the 21 S weight class.
which makes him the fu:st
.non,qualifier for state in
that division. If any of the
other four qualifiers cannot
go next weekend at.the state
tournament - rather it be
an injury or an inability to
make weight
then
Gravely will compete in the
state.
Gravely was the only
GAHS wrestler to make it
to the final six spots in
each division . He defeated
Connor
Maglecic
of
Norwood by a 4-0 count to
win the rights to the ahernate spot ..
Semor Clint Saunders
( 171 ). junior Kyle Bays

p.m.

~ribunr

Sandusky Perkins 42. Pemberville

Eostwaod·30
Sll&lt;llby 54. L..ingt&lt;&gt;n 27

OHIO

w......

the 160-pound weight class.
Sophomore Matt Cornell
(liB) and freshman Josh
HereiQrd ( 135) both placed
sixth in their respective
divisions.
.
Oak Glen's Larry Shaw
was named 2009 Coach of
the Year in Cla5s . AA-A,
while Cameron Gallagher
· of Grafton was named the
Outstanding Wrestler of the
·Year.
· Complete results of the
2009 West Vuginia State
Wrestling Championships
are available on the web at
www.wvmat.com
·
DEvils' GRAVELY EARNS

markers apiece.
. ,
Vinton County fin tsbtd
the night 18-of-27 at tile
free throw line for 67 percent . wh ile the Devils were
9-of- 10 at the stripe for ~
percent. GAHS also CO"?~·
mined 17 turnovers. three
more than the VW8gs. :
VCHS advances to the
D-4 district semifinals on
Friday in AtheDS when it
takes on Hillsboro at the
Ohio
Uruversity
Convocation Center at . 8

South Gallia's Hailee Swain (23) and Chandra Canaday
(20) try to .block a shot attempt by a New Boston player dur·
ing Saturday's D-4 district semifinal at Jackson .

25

Prep Scores

II was the ftnal ltooJ?s
game for five Gallta
Acaderl:ty seniors - Nibert.
Armstrong. Kyle Mitchell.
Evan Wood and Beau
Wbaley - in the Blue and
White. Armstrong finished
with eight points. while
Mitchell and Nibert ea•·h
had six in their finales .
Whaley did not sco~ and
Wood did not play.
Ethan Moore and Nick
Mitchell . paced the Devils
with Dine markers apiece .
Both . J\lfed Golden and
John Troester rounded out
. the scoring with two points
each.
·
Jake ·Prater led the
VIkings - who captured
their third consecutive sectional crown
with
game-highs of 12 points
and 10 rebounds. Andy
Grillo and Levi Lawhead
were next with seven

,

LaGrange Keystooe 45. Parma Padua

111""""'" -

of the evening at
33-32 With 4:47 left.
~ GAHS went scoreless
over the next 3:37, while
VCHS scored the next eight
points for a 40-33 cushioo.
Gallia Academy eoded its
scoreless streak. with a trifecta by Quinton Nibert at
l: 10 for a 40--36 deficit.
Vinton County increased
its lead to 45-40 in the latter
moments. with Nibert
adding a basket jost before
the buzzer to roundup the
three-point outcnme. The
V'&amp;kes scored their final II
points at the free throw tiDe.
There were seven ties and
nine le-.sd cbanges throogbOilt the Coone Q( the pme.
Gallia Academy's big~
lead was live pomts (22-17)
at the I :22 mart of the
third. The Vikes biggest
le&amp;d was ~ven late in the
fourtb.

DorM !7. LQ&lt;Irl\tlp. talctlal

Alcr. Kenmore 54•. 1M
Alcr. Norll\ 65, E. CJe. Shlot S8
--57.Th&gt;y28

VIHION COUNTY 45,

advan~e

•

at Servke
Car· Trailers

at

Equipment 740-446·3825

Ca rmk:hael

�The Daily Sentinel ·Page 83

Marshall defeats UCF, 67-62

Devils

lead to 6362 with 10
s e co nd s
remain ing. Pitts
made two
f r e e
throws· to
NOIEIIOOK push the
lead bad
up to three, and Taylor's 3PQinl attempt to tie the
score missed. Pins mllde
two more free throws with
2 seconds left to put the
game out of reach.
Taylor .scored 28 points
to lead the Knights (16-12.
6-8) . Kenrick Zondervan
added 10 points and seven
rebounds.

HUNTINGTON. W.V.
tAP)
Damier Pitts
scored 21 points and
Marshall beat Central
Florida 6 7 -f&gt;2 on Saturday
night.
Pitts shot 4-for-f&gt; from
behind 3-point line and 7for-7 from the free-throw
line. Mar~el Humphre~
&amp;dded 18 points and 12
rebounds
for
the
Thundering Herd 414-15 .
6-8 Conference USA).
while : T"un:tl
Baines
chi~ in with 16 points
and i I rebounds.
With a three-point deficit
late in the contest.
Jennaine Taylor made a
layup to cut Marshall's

fnuPagorBl
Maroon and Gr&lt;~y dosed the
canto with a 3-2 spun to
lead 11-10 after eight minutes ot' action.
The Blue De~il&amp; (7- 14)
i'eU behind as many as four
points ( 17- 13) with 1:_30 left
m the baJf. but countered
with fOur strai~t points to
enter halftime !led at 17-all.
Both teams also scored nine
points apiece in the tiUnJ
stanza to bring the game to
26-all entering the finale.
· The VU;.es stormed out to
a 32- 28 edge with 5: 19 left
in regulation. but a lhreepoinl play by Nick. Mitchell
- followed by a Chris
Armstrong buc~et - gave
the Blue and White it final

IIIIIIP Sc1r11111rd
lrontoo 7!1\

Prep Boxscores

.MIQnolio Sondv Wit\' !Sii, w
l1idgooloo&lt;l•1
Marion Pl.....nt
Fairbarlka·.._ OT

Sount WEilsi ER 65,

-

·-

Iii 8 17- &lt;II
to 15 19 17 - 65

8

55. lllilfllrd

cem.r

fnuPageBl

~ Gilllon I ().(1. 2. ~ 'IIJrlwi 5 I ·

Folrtand . . _ - . . . . . . . .

champion :_ Alex Reed bac~ in 1998.
Ifs the second lime in
progrolill history that Point
yielded three state champions at the same finals.
matching a program best.
The Big Blacks also ended
the season having lost to
only two teams - Calhoun
County at regionals and
Oak Glen at state.
Point avenged a home
loss to Calhoun County at
re~ionals. · finishing
II
potnts ahead of thlril-place
( 125 .5) . after
CCHS
Satwday. Roane County
(100) . was fourth and
Grafton (94) rounded out
the t~tive. .
Selli.o r Phillip Allen finished third in the 12.5-pound
division, while junior }bock
McClung ended up fifth in

39
Rlcllmon&lt;l ~ 50, Gall&amp; Mills Hawken

48. 0T
Sl CloliS\'illa 48. Borntsville 45
Wlddl110 40; CJe. ~ 32

~.1;!!:12): llnlm1o Halllir 0 ()-0
O.tc.wto. . 1 o-o 3. ~­
I CHI 2. Pullins 4 s-9 13.

Mot-

Wrestling

IJI~

-n• Hlglllan&lt;l55, W J - 32

EAsmiN48.

S\.'l:ta'

s Point 1!4

-IY

- n Hiland 116, Bcwerstoo Concrtlon

Vlllle!l34

2 11. Emori c"'"*ll 5 11-4 10. Ashltll Conal Wlrt&lt;- HaMS~ Prep 60,
~~COIII . Sl
0 o-a 0. JoiiMQn. 0
0.
3 1-2 7. T01lllS: 20 7- Cats. A1ricen1ric 152. Gn:rv. Cltw Christian
·~- Th~nt goats; 1 (Milam) .
48
·SOUTI!WEIISTER (16-li): Erin Moo,. I
Cots. Wellington 50. Qenvitl&amp; 44
1-2 3. Erin Slte&lt;mln 6 0.0 12. Tasna Covington 50. BradfOrd 27
.0 ()-0 0. Kill&lt; Ia Cllok 10 !HI .31. ~ Jalforson !7. Spring, Em- C - O ().(I Q, Atl-.;1 0 o-oo. . Christian oW
Honnol&gt; Mcntgom4r; 0 o-o o. ~ ~rfield Christian 64. Gahanna
.
.
au,en
0 o-o 0. Brilna -~"~ 7 2-3 16, Qlnstian 54
Fet1cie Slor1cJ!oll &lt;Hl 3. TOTALS 2512· A. Loramie 56, ~ Flirlawn 26
16 65. Th~nt gaols; 3 (Cook 2. Marion Cotlt 53. ~rt Mlldlson
S l - lCh!lstion &lt;13
- C o l l i. 81 , loft \lernan Ataclamy
37
- l i e ·R ; - 53, r..,. Christian
61. C1f

NSGollia

o-o

~-sa.35
~ CIII'.Botllol..,_ll_ Clutstior1 311
1Ift oll.ifo ~ IUo "' 011 36
WoiiNhglot
SUglr Gnwe

If 13 9 20 - 58
5 7 12 25- 4!1 ·

cr.-.111.

NEW 80S10N (1&amp;-3): Mitior 0
0. Mlran&lt;lo Coli 2 ().() 4, Missy

o-o

.

-~39

Bucl&lt;ley 3 1).4 9, Myc:NMI Homil1an 3 ....
10, Ai'j... Ralnos 2 8-10 12. Kac:i
McNutt o ().() o. Koyla Wllo'j 5 1~17 23.
lOT.'ILS I 5 2+:15 S8. ThfO&lt;ti!Oint gooJs;
4 (Bud&lt;IOI' 3. Witty).
SOOTH GALLIA (16-&amp;): Courtney
_ , Q ().(1 0, l.inds&lt;JV Jol&gt;nson 0 1).
o tt. Jennm Sll&lt;lridlln 5 H 20. ~
0\Jtlcln 1 6-1 2. a..- Conadoy 2 47 8, Jasm!M Waugh 1 ().(1 3, Hallee
Swoln 3 o-a &amp; NotMI&gt;o Adkins 3 2-5 a.
Morgen Gillilond 0 2-2 2. TOTAlS: 15 1424 4&amp;. Th-I&gt;Qint goeJs: 5I Sheridan 4,
w..gh).

Splngs 55. \llllooe 49 •

. , _ ,, 11&gt;

-

GIRlSBA~

toll-

e.~

Dhl Fnl

C.,.~ieMoSI . X_

Elytio 118, GroftQn

-.w 45

GrHn.S2. Atot. Flmtooe •r

--.g . , _ 45, c.,.

Rebels
..

fi001PageBl

.

Thurgpad

a three-possession lead (4639) at the I :58 mark. South
HorQng 54. Sor.dus0y02
Galli
a countered with a bastf&gt;
02
.
r.toson
35.
Cin.
Anderson
32
10
7
9
Golli!&gt;olls
Vln!an Co 11 6 9 19- 45
~·!.'?' I'Oj'ry 56. Un- Lalot 51
at
I :27 ·to pull within
ket
, . _ _ 62, Chardon 47
five, but never came closer
GALLIA ACADEMY (7·15): Quintan OlmOted Fals 55, Middlel&gt;urg Hts..
Nlllor1 2 2-36, Etllan- 4 ().(19, Nick Mldpolk4S
· the rest of the way.
~ 37, Flndllty30 .
Milchoii41-19.Ctn~24-4
NBHS advances to play
lologrlilicat 51, Cle. St.
8. Kyle 3 ().() 8.
1 Flo&lt;:ky 0.0 2. Baou Whaley o ().(1 0. John ~02
South Webster in the D-4
0 2-2 2. TOTALS: 1&amp; !HO 42. -HIIL62. - - 3 8 district finat this Saturday
ThrH-pQint goals: I ( - . ).
SyNonia
57. ltll. Scott 40
VINTON COUNTY (18-3): N4y Grillo 2 ltil. 0.. Cotll. 52. ~ - in Athens at the Ohio
il-!l7, ,_ytor Reed 0~ 0. LINilAWhead 49
University
Convocation
I 5-6 7, Etllan Allen 3 D-1 &amp;. ,l,clam W.rd ...... Slar181. ...... ~ 30
...... - 8 1 , IIOWiing 0... 4$
Center. Tip-off is sched1 0.0 3. Brandon Cieri&lt; 1 2·2 4, Thomlloon 0 o-o 0, Dylan Gulltoie 3 ().() \lanclllia Bultof M . Fairborn &lt;13
uled for I p.m.
8.Jakel'retor28-10 12.TOTN.S 13111- W.nen H1rdlng 67, Brecks~Jjlle~
BroacNieoo His. 59 .
.
27 45. Tlwoo pair &gt;I goalo: I (Wionl).
It was the final basket·
Wllitellause Anlllony wayne 59, umo
ball
game for seniors
.
t....allliatk.r...,.••.._... St. 4li
a·nd
Flold - Gollla -.ny 18-48 'll&gt;ungo. ll&lt;lardmor&gt; 78. Con. GlenOak :rr Jennifer Sherldan
(.333) 2-painl gaols ls-30 (.500) 31&gt;aint
Adkins
in
the
Red
Natasha
goals 1·18 (.056); Vll\100 County I~ _ , . . 49. Canol FuiiQn Norll\.,..1 ..
and Gold. Sheridan - the
(.325) 2-palnt gcols 12-30 (.&lt;100) 31&gt;ainl Illy VIllage Boy 119, VermHian 47
gcols 1-10 (.100); ...... - - : - Gdia Bolle'lue ..,Oek-29
program ·s all-time leadAcodomy 9-10 (.900); VInton CoUnly 18- Brjw148, - .... 28
ing scorer with I ,021
27(.667): R - - Ga11ia .-.-ny eon. 5aulh &amp;1. l'looot«Trlway 18
-28

GALUA AcADEMY 42

LOflin -IClrlg 47,......., Lalot 39

Jwod-

-·to•

-"

Conlleld 62. Ro- SE 30
Coliria eo. Umo Shaw- 75
Cln. McNiotlolos &gt;43. Cin. lndian Hill37
Cltl. l'lyoning oW. Cin. Flnnev~&lt;&gt;Wn 30
Cuyahoga Falls Waloh Josull 54.
-28

25 (l(ylo 8). VInton Counly 27
(Joke Pralar 10): Asslala - Gillie
Aoodomy 4 (QuintOn Nbart 2), Vinton
County 8 IN4f Grilo 4): Stell$ -Galla
Aoodomy 9 (ChriS AlrnslrOng 3), Vinton

County It (LINi l.owiMtod 4): Blocl&lt;s Gollia ,l,cadfmy 3 (l(yla Milcllell 2),
VInton County 3 (Jake Proter 2):
Gallla .-.-ny n vtnmn
County 14: Team fouls Gallia
.-.-ny 22. Vinton Count'! 9.

ume Bath 66. Otlawa-Gifl\dOII39
Napoloan 58. Cellance og

Parma.tits. Holy Nome 52. warnmsvme
H1s. 48

StrulhOII 59, """~ Mooney 4,1
65. Medina BOO&lt;• ..

~

Tlftln Columbian &amp;1, U~r Sandusky 39
Wlpokanela 50, St. Marys Memorial 30
Wauseon 83. ltll. Libbey 4I

BOYS BASKETBALL

eon.cent Colli 55. Navarro Fairies 52
Can. Timlren 78. Orrville &amp;!I
Clo. St. lgnatlus 59. Clo. Benedictine 50
Ootphos St.John's 67, Collna 1!4
Findlly Liberty-Bantoo 40, Arlington 24
Holland Springfield 46, l'lopaloan 42
Lucu 65. Je....,..ville Hillsdale &amp;4
Mansllokl Sr. 55. Mosoiltan Washington
Vllloy 45
ltil. Libbey 60, Tot. WM""'r 08
72

Q..,.38

Colo. ~85. Dublin Je«&gt;me •a
Cola.
Wllelatono
60.
Colo.

,,....,..,..,sa

Metamora

Otsego 44

....... 7$, o . t o l d - S9
Mt Vlrnon 39. Wuhrdll Cent. 36
A~ ea. Colo. w.t""' Rkl(lo51

Dlvlitlen.

hill&gt;...,.. 81. Lltlll Miami 02
ltlllbttainll &amp;8, MUton-UNon ~
Batlal·,.te 74. Qln. Fl'o'OI'\OWn 51
a_.. I i i i o - 75, Coehac:tan

81

eo.-

70. Rlvtond Buckoyo 28
C h - 63, l,lc0ermalt Sclato NW 38
Cln:lw;illo Lagon Elm 78. Walhlngtan

C.H. Mllml-_ 48
Col$. O.SI 11t 80, Amanda·Ctetrcreak

so

Cots. Wan.traon 70. l.okowood 4 t
Day. c.rtG11 59, Day. OOI&lt;WOOd •6
oa~ Dunlllf
Monrao .w
- ~ ~ Vlllty 56. London 53

ee.

L - Cenlar Olontangy Orono- 65.
- " ' UotrJng va11oy •a

Morlotta 70, Jaclra&lt;&gt;n 60
McArlhur VInton C011nty 45, Gallipolis
Gollill 02 .
MlllorlbuiD w. &amp;4. bnaovlllo
Moysvllloi!l. 20T
- P h i l 118. Mt:Connelt-.ill
Morgan.

Nor&gt; Dod 73, Batavia Clermont NE

~

.

1

EveJV~Hf'l

:

Gallia Academy was 2lO overall in ·sEOAL _play .
which was last in the Soulh
Division. However. GAHS
fini shed eighth in the
league because Jacks11n
volunteered to nut play jn
the SEOAL Day !&gt;f
Champions . Because of
· that. the lronmen officiaily
finished last .
( 152). sophoore Matt Wan&amp;
( 130)
and
freshm!'l'
Brandon Taylor (145) all
qualified for the. distnct
event. but none of the
quartet managed to reach
the three rounds of finals.
Meigs·.. lone qualifier senior Ernie Welsh - also
qualified for districts. 'but
failed to finish in the t~
six.
Gallia Academy was
28th overall with r I9
points.
while
tile
Marauders scored three
points for the 48th spot ·in
the 50-team field.
·
Graham Local - whiCh
produced 12 of the 14 individual district champioAs
- cruised to the team title
with 358 points. Runner-up
Greenville and third-place
Miami Trace were next
with 86 points apiece . . .
Results of the 2009
Division U district tournament in Goshen are available on the web at
www.baumspage.com

'

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Sentinel

tleribune

(740) 446-2342 (740) 992-2156 (304) 675-1333
OrFaTo

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

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Cln. Hilla Chrlalllln Academy ea. Cln.

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Cln. N. Collogo Hill 75, Wllllomoburg !58
Cln. Pu~l Marian 80, Cln. SCI'IIo 36
Cola. IlNdy 45. Rlc:hwaad N. Un&lt;on 33
GallO MNia Gilmour 85, - - 81

1'7
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KIT &amp;CARLYLE
CUI

Apoito•rtl/

•

TowMauMt

career points -;- led the ·
Lady Rebels with · 20
points, while Acllins finished her career with eight
markers.
. . . .
Chll!ldra CB!laday added ·
eight points for the Lady
Rebels, while Hailee
. Swain endtl4 the day with
six
markers.
Waugh
chipped in: tbree and the
duo of Tayler Duncan and,
Mor.gan Gilliland rounded
. things out · wit4 two
apiece.
·
Kayla Wiley led the
Lady Tigers and all scorers with 23 points, . followed by Alyssa Raines
with 12 and Mychael
Hamilton with 10.
·
The Lady Rebels were .
making their third consecutive appearance in the
district semifinals.

llrylln W.ltei'S/pheto

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m!eh8el
740-.W6·2412

ltll. Ottawa Hlllo 47, Northwood 28

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lE

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Mllltlury Lake 58, Rosslord 21
MI. Blanchard Ri..,rdale 75, Limo Ce&lt;lt.
Colli. 51
Orrville 33, Can. Cent. Cath. 24
St. Hen~ 51 . Colctwater U
Versailles 43. Milton-Union 24
'ltlunga .. Ursutlne 61 . Garrettsville
Garfiol&lt;l 39
Dlvlolon IV
Ada 48. Oola 1-t.rdin Northern 35
,l,noonia 61 , Pitsburg Franltlin·Monroo
45
Aohland 52, Mansliekl Sr. 49
Bodtar&lt;l Chane! 72. Newbury 34
Corey 59. Fostoria St Wondolln 47
Clll $even Hills &amp;!1. Williamsburg 35
Oolplloo Sl. John's 45. OII011Wia 36
Ft. Laromle 68. DeGraff Rlverlldo 41
Ft RteOYOry ... Minslar 30
Hornier Po- Henry 54, Con~nenlal 50
Houston 40. Ruooia 36
Kalida 4&amp;. Nalgola 34
I(I.U.nd &amp;4. Corneratooe Chllolian 27
L.., 74, 'Arllngtan 69, OT
Lowollvlllo 61, Wanen Jf'l( og
McComb 45, Tal. Chriatian oW
New Rl~ 52, Old Fort 20
.
Norftlk St Pllul 33, Laa11M Danbury

-..vsr

82. Cln.

JUSISA.Y
CHARGE II!

~2t57

M. Tontogany

'PandOri·GIIboO 63, CoiYoFtawaon 21
PaltloVIIIo ... EdQirtoo $4
Plym&lt;odh &lt;13, Manoflokl St. ,_(i 38 · •
Charltttan
sa. Ftytlt9;11tl-Parry

Door Park :!1

district tournament at
Goshen High School. and
none of the five Blue Devil

'·

.

Wyoming 45
Tlpj) Clll'~ 47, Urbana &lt;II, OT

Baoc~

weekend at the Division D

CLASSIFIED

Ha-.tlan&lt;l Woyno :nace 61 . RO&lt;Idord ·
Pari&lt;WO'/ 49

~- 68. Cola._, 40
G~v&gt;M Clll' !Ill. ~.~neuter ee

St. hrnar&lt;l Roger

GOSHEN - So close.
.
lllld yet so far.
The Gallia · Academy
wrestling te~. concluded
its tremendous. season this

- Sentinel -

Olvtoton 111

Akr. Manchester 60, Jeromesville
Hillsdole37
Arcl'llold 41 , Uberty Center 34
CUstown Miami E. 36. Anna 33
Columbia Station Columbia 73. Cals.
Independence &amp;I
Coho~mbtana Crestview 54, Columbiana
49
Cuyahoga Falls CVCA 58, Creston
Narweyne 57. OT
Elyria Coth . 30, Cle. Cent Colli. 32
Rndlly Llber1y-llonton ?•· Columbus

.6
Pioneer N. Central S3. Tot Maumee

Hordl,;.-...':,",lor

ALTERNATE SPOT AT STATE

grapplers that made it to
that event advanced out lo
the state level.
But one - junior Jared .
Gravely - will serve as the
first alternate in the 21 5pound division. which
means GAHS might not be
done just yet.
Gravely placed fifth overall in the 21 S weight class.
which makes him the fu:st
.non,qualifier for state in
that division. If any of the
other four qualifiers cannot
go next weekend at.the state
tournament - rather it be
an injury or an inability to
make weight
then
Gravely will compete in the
state.
Gravely was the only
GAHS wrestler to make it
to the final six spots in
each division . He defeated
Connor
Maglecic
of
Norwood by a 4-0 count to
win the rights to the ahernate spot ..
Semor Clint Saunders
( 171 ). junior Kyle Bays

p.m.

~ribunr

Sandusky Perkins 42. Pemberville

Eostwaod·30
Sll&lt;llby 54. L..ingt&lt;&gt;n 27

OHIO

w......

the 160-pound weight class.
Sophomore Matt Cornell
(liB) and freshman Josh
HereiQrd ( 135) both placed
sixth in their respective
divisions.
.
Oak Glen's Larry Shaw
was named 2009 Coach of
the Year in Cla5s . AA-A,
while Cameron Gallagher
· of Grafton was named the
Outstanding Wrestler of the
·Year.
· Complete results of the
2009 West Vuginia State
Wrestling Championships
are available on the web at
www.wvmat.com
·
DEvils' GRAVELY EARNS

markers apiece.
. ,
Vinton County fin tsbtd
the night 18-of-27 at tile
free throw line for 67 percent . wh ile the Devils were
9-of- 10 at the stripe for ~
percent. GAHS also CO"?~·
mined 17 turnovers. three
more than the VW8gs. :
VCHS advances to the
D-4 district semifinals on
Friday in AtheDS when it
takes on Hillsboro at the
Ohio
Uruversity
Convocation Center at . 8

South Gallia's Hailee Swain (23) and Chandra Canaday
(20) try to .block a shot attempt by a New Boston player dur·
ing Saturday's D-4 district semifinal at Jackson .

25

Prep Scores

II was the ftnal ltooJ?s
game for five Gallta
Acaderl:ty seniors - Nibert.
Armstrong. Kyle Mitchell.
Evan Wood and Beau
Wbaley - in the Blue and
White. Armstrong finished
with eight points. while
Mitchell and Nibert ea•·h
had six in their finales .
Whaley did not sco~ and
Wood did not play.
Ethan Moore and Nick
Mitchell . paced the Devils
with Dine markers apiece .
Both . J\lfed Golden and
John Troester rounded out
. the scoring with two points
each.
·
Jake ·Prater led the
VIkings - who captured
their third consecutive sectional crown
with
game-highs of 12 points
and 10 rebounds. Andy
Grillo and Levi Lawhead
were next with seven

,

LaGrange Keystooe 45. Parma Padua

111""""'" -

of the evening at
33-32 With 4:47 left.
~ GAHS went scoreless
over the next 3:37, while
VCHS scored the next eight
points for a 40-33 cushioo.
Gallia Academy eoded its
scoreless streak. with a trifecta by Quinton Nibert at
l: 10 for a 40--36 deficit.
Vinton County increased
its lead to 45-40 in the latter
moments. with Nibert
adding a basket jost before
the buzzer to roundup the
three-point outcnme. The
V'&amp;kes scored their final II
points at the free throw tiDe.
There were seven ties and
nine le-.sd cbanges throogbOilt the Coone Q( the pme.
Gallia Academy's big~
lead was live pomts (22-17)
at the I :22 mart of the
third. The Vikes biggest
le&amp;d was ~ven late in the
fourtb.

DorM !7. LQ&lt;Irl\tlp. talctlal

Alcr. Kenmore 54•. 1M
Alcr. Norll\ 65, E. CJe. Shlot S8
--57.Th&gt;y28

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Appllcallo~s

1

for tho
Ernest A. Wjngett and
Mulne L. Wingett
Education
Memorial
Truat are available al
the oHice of Little,
Sheets llo Warner, 21 I·
213
East
Second
Street, Pomeroy, Ohio
or Southern Local High
School, Racine, Ohio.
The deadline for !lllng
the application Is not
iater lhan April 6th,
2009. Those eligible are
High School Graduetas
who areiegalnosldants
of Sutton Township,
Melgo · County, Ohio,
and lineal gnondnlacea
and
grandnephewl
(and their lineal de·
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and Maxine S. Wingett,
regardleaa of whore
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(3) 2, 9

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Public Notice
NOTICE TO CONTRAC·
TORS ·
Sealed proposals !or
!he Portland Commu·
nlty Cenhtr- Arena
Eleclrlcal Project Meigs
Coun!y Ohio ail per
apacl!lclllona In bid
packo! will be received
by tho Mtlga County
Commluionera atthelr
oHice al the Court·
house,. Pamaroy. Ohio
45789 unlli 1:00 p.m..
March 19, 2009 and
then at 1:15 p.m. at said
oftlco ouaned and road
afoud !or the following :
Specl!lcallons, and bid
forms may be secured
at tho oftlce o! Meigs
County Comminlo~·
ere,
Courthoute,

Yoor Rigbllo Koow. D!livmd Righllo

Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
Phone 740.992·2895. A
deposit o! 0 dollars wll!
be req~lred for each
set ol .plans and apeciflcallono, check mado
payable lo:. The full
amount will be ,...
turned wllhln thirty (30)
days after receipt of
blda.
Each bid muat be ac•
companied by either a
bid bond In an emounl
of 100% of the bid
amount with a surety
satisfactory to the
aforesaid
· Meigs
County Commission·
era or by certl!led
check, callhlers check,
or letter of credit upon
a solvent bani&lt; iii the
amount of not lesa then
111% of the bid amount
In favor o1 the alo,...
oald Mo(go County
Commissioners. Bid
Bonds shall be aceom·
pan led by Proo! of Au·
lhorlly of the oftlcial or
agent signing the
bond.
Bids shall be sealed
ani! marked as Bid for
Portland Community
Center Elec1rlcal and
mailed or delivered to:
Meigs County Commla·
alonera Courthouse
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
Attention of bidders Ia
called 10 all of tho requi romania contained
In this bid packel, pa,...
titularly to tho Federal
Labor Standards Provl·
slona and Davis-Bacon
Wages, various lnaur·
anco
requirements,
various equal opportu·
nlly provlslona. and the
requlrement .for a pay·
ment bond and pe,...
formance bond tor

100% of the contact
rice. No bidder may
wilhdraw his bid wllhln
thirty (30) days · after
lhe actural dale of the
opening thereof. The
Mtlgs Coullly Commls·
sloners reserve the
right to reJect any or·all
.
bids.

Hill's Self
Storage
29625 Bashan Road
Aocine. OH 45n1

740..949-2217

E'IER. WE

7:00am· 8:00pm

(3) 2, 9

RIBERT

BISSEll
CIIISTIICTIDI

J40·112·1m

"FX"!I Y YPi ·P YWVPOX FO Y vvo · M

YDE I!IP WRE·XFYPZM ' BYYP. "

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YDOWIOJPZ CFO NJIRRA
PREVIOUS SOLIJTION: "I slid""' undttr lilt i lusion thai basical~ P!lOfJio lh1nk
of me as 1111 tJ5)-IIlCkooli~ lW'9 a&lt;:mr · ·Jack N1chdson

AstroGraph

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WOII

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Rtoroonoo Ionon of tho
0 ioolr
1Mmblod - . be-

Cblr..u.dJty:

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lly lllmlce Oool
In tM veer lhead. associations with
enterprising lndMduats who 11e both

law "' foriOI lour ~...... WCids.

BRELAV

I1 I. I I 12 I

ot g,..l bent"l. What lilly IMCh ~""' wm
not only oo stimulotirlg bul molorlal~
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PISCES (Fob.-rcll 201 - llornosilc
ectivities could prove to be extAimety
Sttti$fying. Puttering around th4t house or
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PARROTS .
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47239 Ri&lt;bt:t ·R"ad. Long Bonom. OH

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'SCUIRREL PUNCHING' A
FEW MONTHS BA.CI&lt;.

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Servl«

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G..WI"'Ils, OH 4!631 ·

lnsuml,fne

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740411-9.187
Rl&lt;k JohnSOII·OW-

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CORNER STONE
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Windows
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742·2332
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• PlumblnK
.• Pole Barns

,

YOU CAN STOP WRITING.
PEOPLE. IT W~S ~SILLY
STORYLINE, AND IF WE
COULD THINK OF A
WAY TO REPENT FOR
PUNCMING ASCUIRIL

· •

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L-~~'-:::~--...-......• ".~·

ClARFIELD

Local Contractor

740.367-(1544

s P xu P ;i o x 11 P v R R. N x v·z av 'i' P

RFTP

CI'MtiVe and industrious will Pt0\14t to be

I

-------Public: Notice
------REQUEST FOR COST
PROPOSAL Construe·
lion Material· Storage
• New Homes.
Building
Rulfand Fire Oepart•
• Garages
ment
·Complete
ATIENTION: Suppliers
Remodeling
The . Molga County
commlaaloners are ,...
questing colt propos·
als !or conatructlon
St.op &amp; Compare
materlala, auch proposala to be provided
prior 10 1:00 p.m. on
March 12; 2009.
Proposal mull Include
all colla auoeiated
with dallvery. The Llal·
lng o! the construction
materials may be ob•
lolned from the Meigs
County Grants oHice.
Cost propo1111 may be
mailed or delivered to ~~
the Melga County
Gran!l Oillct, 117 E.
Memorltl Drive, Sullo
5, Pomeroy, 'l:lhlo
45769. Quoalloneln,...
Now Selling:
gard to lhlt requoat ·
• Fonl &amp; ~otor.:rat\
may be addrtlled to
Paris • Engirw.ii,
Jean · Truoaell, Meigs
Tmnst\.•r
C'.-sl,!s &amp;
Granll Admlniatralor 11
1'nm1'
n\lsslons
740·992·7908 .
• Alk nnurket
Mlck Davenport, Proal·
Rcpluccmeu1
ShetH
dtnl
Ml•tal
&amp;
Cm11poncms
Melge Coun1y Commla·
alonera ·
'
(2) 26, (3) 2

WANT!

$1tl per lb Ca&gt;h only
l,'l\lt l' l ('\jULI('O..\ in &amp;J, Ut'C\'

H&amp;H
· Guttering
Hours

r.-·, w..s - s

to -

· ~ lit sNits to a s;&gt;adll. lit tirlds lilt
queen tor you. And il ho play$. club you
gel NiO tiid&lt;s trvm lilt suit. Eilhol way.
j&lt;lU OSCapi! blame-ir&amp;ll.

(1-\IE..f

1\wn.-- VII

Shipn~nls

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~-:

740.367·0536

Stanley TreeTrimming
&amp; Removal

SMEYIR

8

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SCRAM -lETS ANSWERS ;.,c•()Q

Nylon - Vouch - Joun.:c - CONCEAL
Co·worker to newcomer. "The person who knows
mmc than the boss should be car&lt;tullo CONCEAL it."
Lethal -

ARLO &amp; JANIS

-

SCORPIO (Oct. 24·No' 221- Others
are trying to get you 10 join a promising
partnership, but only II you aoo thoi 0110
who plays the leading fole . The situation
needs a suong and gutsy parson at the
helm .
SAGITTARIUS (No'. 23· Doc . 21 ) - This
Is one or those days when two haads will
be better than one. If vou have to make a

Vo"

don't have to be brash or foolish In orttar
to take a calculated risk. Think It through
thoroughly, and II II mRketsense, ~ven If
11 takes guts 10 . accomplish. 11'1! be the

rtght move to make.

SOUPTONUTZ
I !leNT t&lt;&gt;IOW IF 1
00

.

Wt~1\la

740-591 -8044

Please leave messa e

•

'

_.__...- -------

,.-... •

6 u~~~~8~N~~~~ LHTERS I

unclear.

Referenees Available'
Call Gary Sumley @

Advertise
in.thls space for
$70 per month

Sniffing and sneezing the
husband moaned, "The popular
remedy that won 'I cure a cold is

Complete the chutOI• qiiC!od
Hili119 In tht miw119 wor~
you dtvolop from stop No. 3 below.
PRINT NUMII!R!C LETT ERS IN I
THESE SQUARES
.

•

lng to achieve, ll could ~a~ you perceive
that which your logic finds ccntu&amp;lng or

bener. vou !eel better.
AQUARIUS (Jon . 20-Fob. t91 -

' Experienced

'
"'

"''

~,;,gr-,;,-.;·~~~i--T~-,~--!

make your enlint being feel bett1r than It

Work
'Reasonable Rates
' Insured

0

tong time.
TAURUS (April 20-May 20) - There are
exceuent possibilities 10 make more tnan
a few business dials t~l coukl yield a
tidy profit It worn be anything you do dif·
lerentty: It's merely that the timing Is
right
GEMINI (May 21.June 20) - It'$ nice to
be easygoing, but make' sure tl"lat ~
don't let the control slip from your hanGs
in m•Hers pel'$0rlally Important to you .
Manage your own affairs.
CANCER !Juno 2hluly 221- Some dil·
llcult people can be managed rather
nicely il you let the solutions appear to
come from them rather than from you . liS
a smau pnce to pay "" their support.
LEO (Jut~ 23-Aug. 22) - Wtlen an
opportunity arises to get Involved with ll
trion&lt;l witt1 whom you'vo nevor clone
busine.. oo1oro. orea&lt;1 slowly. tt eouto
havo hl&lt;lden disadvantages · altoched
that nailhor pari'/ wlltllko.
VIRGO (Aug. 23·SepL 22) - Oneo yo"
o.,.rcome your toel ings or Inadequacy or
soll·doubl, o goal lhot hos provlously
&amp;\laded you can be reached. Fear and
mistrust of '1QUr abiMtles are the culprits .
not your abilitieS or know-how.
LiBRA ISopl 23·0cl. 231 - Do not diS·
count your lfltulllon with regard to an
Important endeavor you have bten hop·

hl\s In a Jong time. When you brett~~

' Prompt and Qunlity

.

AL 0 YS
I I~ I I

ARIES (Marth 21 ·Aflril 19) ,..... This. could
be a better~than-U&amp;Ual day for Clltl;hlng
up on all your correspondence. Ctu.n up
your e ~ mall . and conta_ct all those people
to wnom you'V&amp; owed messagft tor a

ma,lor d&amp;&lt;:lslon, don't do so without con·
suiting a partner whO has a stake In lt.
CAPRICORN (Oec, 22·Jan . 19) -Th ink
abaut getting sonle exercise. Getting oft
your dun and moving your muactes will

Froo Eatlmahta

•n~

now?

At-1 1 aUT +lE's. NOT
HERE. SO WE. CAN
CAI.L. +lll'l WAATLIW"J'.IIW'f'f

orill ·-

...._, lilt dub orldlllt .,..
linesse.llulwhen bath ogoponents lollow.
cash a third ........,_ lhon oil with a
hoWl. We$! takes tllis and IWO i!IOie
·' - ' lrid&lt;s. 'oliu riscan:t a s;&gt;adll and a
club !rom lilt board. • oiamoncl .....
club !rom !""' hand. What can West oo

r\o.IOUL.I&gt; '{QU

c.ll: 740-416-5047
IIMII:

Sunset
Homes ·

when you pay for a 6 or 12
month subscription on your
home delivered subscription!

I

Migciubft.....,.

~ I lilt dub yell got s;&gt;lldo$ """"91

1lut ' -

$70

740-742-3411

I

FA'RMERS
MARl&lt;ET

Advertise
in this
spate
for

Senior Discount*

Address-~---...-------

-lloehoWI silt. East .........

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

Jon v.n Meter •
l'llul Rowe

Custom Built
homes. roofs,.
garngeslpole
buildings,
additions, drywall,
siding, e!c.

I

""' ' - afty ,.,...... to

1011 triclcs: two
(~ lridr. ant). bJr
&lt;iamoiiCIS ....... Al!il&gt;l glara,
yell '-two _..,"" niol~ .....
nor: lind lilt ,_. queon or lib • win-

.

Racine, Ohio 740-247·2019

or a

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-·
ing -

-yellcm?
~ Slarl oitll eiglll

Bry•n Reeves

I
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In toao;s &lt;1111. W~""' IJil to moM ttvoo

no-trum;&gt; ..._ tho lie ol tho - ~- .... -...tho hoWijao1-

THE BOR" LOSER

"\

: Subscriber's Name _______

tllomeon-·

oncl triclc and take IWO ~ ~ East

&amp;
Benefits.. Fax. resume to
741).44fj·911l4 or t:tnail
to LLCOCAREO.COM

I

lil&gt;ltiont -!lad.~- ho Joij lloe

Thol8 " ""·-to IJU4lOS. ~lilt­

necessary.

.

Houst d Cllnlnorl$ in 1919. said. -n.

-

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E•peri-

6unbap uti me' ·6ttttintl

·-rJ-iolllloNarq Nillx.lloeillst - 1 0 ......... .

E-mail: captblll658yahoo..com

Cp.,

.41alltpoli• Jlailp Qtribune
t'oint t)lta"nt B.egiltter
The Daily Sentinel

AI~

When you can,
combine chances ·

HOLLER

Heallti/Ro~r8mont

.

UT

l'lo;s

Opening lead: ., s

2&amp;St.Rt. JW•c "]•4•

Maclaaiu

·and

.

.. " ' 5

740.446.9200

.· ·o. l·•d·· · e·::.:·r·Y~J:·'
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•ECIIIT

'W"W'W.ttrtaw tllwlt

Servkie Technician position avallabte tor diesel

' )Veei&lt;iy Pay + Bonus!
"CQnllllete BeneHts.

~..,.

Hardllld hU1111 Aid Filii• a

. lmmodlalloyl

as FUU. Tllll!

... ....

&amp; IUs

It I( T I

"' wort&lt; wiltl oltlers !n a
smaH setting. This is a 40
hour a wool&lt; position wiltl
t&gt;oneffts ava»abl&amp; .~

valley

~&gt; t •

-stop a.o..sr-xs

RV "s.
(740 ) W~ -5344
Mon-Fri
~:00 •m• ~: 3!\ pm
•j

you 65•

1
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"'im~rize

825 Third Avenue. Galh·
polis • Ohio 45631 . or by
e-mail to mdtnewsOmydailytribullo.ccm

·-~~~~­
(:l-11pm)

1
I
1

w,. sen·i&lt;,... &gt;n&lt;1

~ Many pooiti&lt;lns, avg 111ree monltls. lnterost.o
PlY S20 10 $3G'tlr, no .ax, appHcants can sef1d their
llOf.
requi..t resumes to · Kovirl Kol~.
t ·86e-295-2S86
A&lt;:coss Managing E&lt;Ji!Qr, . Ohio

Group

homo "" my ohikl. 00
NOT my ttmo it
.... not serious!

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repair . .

do"*'-

-----

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. ; mall t.'ngl~

••1• staff . as o pagtnator/copy
e&lt;ltor: The sue&lt;essful
COIIdiQole . wij! p;irOOpale
Eye tor
pays 'n tl'le ~Jy ~ ot
cme a\IOI'Ition 10 dotajl, . tl'le OVP s ill&lt;oe - ·
••• ~.~·~
-~ pers ana Sunday pul&gt;h·
· - ·~~.,.
•
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...., by ~ . .
· - ana mulli-laSMg co~ •
~•'W'11!1 "''W
sl&lt;i~ Mus ~ ~· .
pages.
Knowledge ol
. ·~
t .,. ........ Quart&lt; )(press and Adobe
with Adcbo
f&gt;roclu&lt;ts. Photos/lOp Is desired.
PIHse send resume to Carldidate must oo able

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{5 Po&amp;ntH

~ • • - an its edi!llrial

=·

~~-~~!165~0~167~·

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www~

Ne" &amp; l'&gt;«! Ttres.
We bu)· uS«! tires.
· ~o·omputer wheel
aJ lgrttnerlrs.. \\'t!' at':;ll
Uo I:Ju&lt;l":;.li~hl

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C'ustum Aonll' Buillling
.
Sb.'1:'•I Fr:.uu~: ' B whhDtp)
8uliili"l'. R"""""li"l&lt;
G&lt;n&lt;r..I "'!'"'

must

CLA llo&gt; 2211 200 Main
St. Point F'teasant WV
:2ssSo:
~~~.,....-::--~
Nan Compony Now Hir·

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rcill•

L&amp;l.tlftlllln
4'M7 Wipplf Rd.

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17.1....!~

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pakloXj). 304-6J'5.3EOO.
. Gllll'l* p lg llf

C&lt;ultry lllrinlt ~.
:NI BA an pnlllOt1y
tio&lt;ll
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plarlsJ
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FioiOIICilgl W. own 1111
bltlll
ClK
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Sat. ~:00 1111\ • IZ
If• Uf/flftll"- .Will"

OWNER Fl·
i'WICE
AVAilABLE. Need full time tlair styliSt file Ohio Volley Publi0/l(740j 44&amp;-3li70
orilh managers license.. '"9 Co. ~ seeking a
Gall 740-965-3965
qualilled rov,_ \0 fill

..

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REA Crosiword Puaale ·

6 A. tt I

CONSrltUCTION
l'O,
Pr

ffft Esti=atcs
M.iilth:' nn

J&lt;;in1ng Our
An&lt;! Dedicated

NQ-992 ~72

uwa

~

Provlding
Ou!Sianding
Quality
CanJ lb Our- Residents.

The position is IIJII om&amp;
40 hours a """· wilh

vans. Cfoon M'IR. Home

We

Clllio

M:ln·Fn.. 9orn001Jm Anc:1
Fill OlJt An Application.
Full Time And Port
Time -~ AvailTo Those QuaJifi'id lndi·
v&lt;luals Coml)leting Tho
Class. AppUcants Must
Be [)opendoi)Je (Attondallco, Is A Must) TOim
Plajllr&gt; Wi lh PQSibvo ~
btudoo To Joll1 Us In

f""'!'".COliS please.

s.lea

Philip
APder

aA."iKS

FnenQI)
Staff. Please Sltlp B)lu
our
Front
01fice

rollef high scllool a/tllet·
1:s in the area lor ltle
daily -'lion
~
oIt w..,.
' '"news·
.
.
1!'1119'. as . .el asaSSIS.t
witl'l ill&amp; pruducbon ot
sports page$. Excellent

11
!!11111•111d~-~~~~~~'1!31!!l'bo&lt;
0!111!2ba~ltl everyday, must haw S·

yard. WtU be selltOQ rn
tne Tn..State area. Trans-portatiOn
and marenal
fixp9fl9f'IC8
raqu1red.

Conmr

Middfapoort.

ooted

2SR 2 Balh lorNo•p-~b ng~~at ben@fits: Interested
. •ar·
ulililieo inc:!.
w• ""
•-·
tiee can send 11!~S to
Piivate hlt Dol&gt; &amp; r.t tel+ Arouisitions Fine Jew&amp;iry.
I.Jg Sklg. I.Jg floot deck. 151 2nd Ave. Galtipclls.
Ko\&gt;in Kelly, Managing
'*&gt; """'- No S/11Qking No
Editor. Ohio Valley Pub.::;1545-;,;;,;t;,;700!!!.!!!'7~~= Wantoc! DriVe&lt; will&gt; expolishing Co.• 625 Third
~
rion&lt;:o n flatbed and . Ave.. GallipoRs. Ollio
98

$45()lmQ

.. .

l&lt;&gt;ca!W 0 333 Page St.

O.e&lt;broot&lt;

Spol-Ia.. .
The Oh10 Valley Publish·
"'9 co. 1s !;e911Jng mort.

_

3 'tpr 1111'11 COM

BRPDGE

fvranOe ~tlendk:are . com

·-Sj;;:;~-

hours.
-t
e

to

IlK: ,_'IU

llii.:M54

w.
~-==-~=-=-~~::_:-,~
"""" tor 1ocaJ lumbe&lt;

WLCLJII.

Comm1ssoono&lt;1
tllsod
""· 361119 ~ salat). S8i!d ...
Fillad.
PoinonJy,
011 SU1119S to PO Bo&gt; 449\
WWW.9llt9r'ldieent.~.
Gal!iPQii$. OH 45631.

-NEXT WEEK'

I -

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Sl&lt;ollo&lt;l

•"""
ol""'byBast
EmQtoyars
1n Oh10
th&amp;

!' wp .. , ch2.20118
AP?FYOOP

·- ·-

---

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p • 84 • 11te D.ny SmtiH~

-.w ·

Dltoen&amp;D' Lf

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o1

t't'

l'w:Mgo at 90 day$1

-

lllroc:tor
and
~ab- center Reqwred:
Ohro RN l1C9nse. EILPQ·
nenc9 rn educaDOnttrarnrng rn heal1hcare samng,
Rockspnngs
c.,..

statv CHembe• ot
Commtf'Cet

-all

CaiiTOOAY'
11"1181'\fteW TOMORROW•

A!llllf _

:.0. 1 If.! 11a ;n F1o1rock 3 goolbons tQ HU. W~l
SI!OO.OO • mon. lrlin. Work !rom home.

304-31a-·
Flollible
;!~;;!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~
Go

_

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...,,........,..."""
Courtside Bar &amp; Gnll

'

----

,

~

....._,,..,.

"'!!!!~!!!!!~":"'~~ acatpt;ng appiication tot
vated. nAnnle-onented
-··••~ 11
~ •• ·-•
, • •,
~......_
"_,_ "" - · · - Individual ahll a v~cy
have ~ ....,. -~ ....
~~~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~
··~· ., ••• ~~ "'"'
in thenewsdepl. as a
21111. '*&gt; llOI$. no """"'· oxporionce. Af&gt;l&gt;ly "' - · Spo-n~·. ~ ··~.
son or call 10 set
•~· •~ '"" Ifill.
47 -lite Ad
up ""
, ·' --"~m lf&lt;ill
~rant $501)'dep. Ref". ll'ltBNteW.
740-441--93n
..._~w
... car luJI.,IDJ.v
Roc. 74().446.2458
~~""':!~~~~
;;~, ~.~ .•_
ro~~
r~~ 1~
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No tloOng cost iWld

oo

ZERO OOWNI Wll
-

imp&lt;&gt;lomouts.

~ l Bad C Oil 2; 3; • and 5 bod"""""
740 1t6 3384.

avlilable.
.

~~!'!"""~~~~

308 2nd avo. Downrown
Ga/III)Qllo
JCeQIIIIOIITIIfiTY
M...
' e~.,~
~ ,.......
cllanic-Night Shi~ compotilivot wages.
Good
Send """""" "' .
Sands Hill Mlni"lf LLC.
P.O. Box 650, Hamden.
OH 45634 or call (740)
3844211 to .request an
01&gt;1llica!ion.

-v

-115.

0

MH

+

writing and English silill~
plio~ silills and
lulawlodgo of deslllop
publishingn SO&lt;JQIIt

451l31 or kk&amp;llyOm1·

-hltt acte in Pt. Y" """· Call Brenda at

dailytribui'M!.com. No
....,.,..
~1$ •le·-.
~ 1\l'"" ,.... "' -

-t
on +

7

7

CUTJING EDGE
LAWN CAR£

"

Co

l1l Announce
Will Be lioldlng An
STNA Class In Tile Near
Furura II Yoo Aro ln.,...
In

•L..SS.: 1· l
...... rrWIShilot.
Sod~ C..,.._
17.) 517~

.kifSt..._

•

l'l'•) 517-tlilO

HAS·

SOMETHING
FOR YOU!!

lO Sohedule · An lnl&lt;lrview Conla,;t Hollie Bum·
garner, l Pt&lt;. Staff OeveJ..
opmont Coor&lt;tnator 0
O.orbrool&lt;

R.LHOllON
TRUOONG .
Dump truck
~ce
w.llo dliur•rs

.,. Hllll
LilrntGM- Cimel
Dirt- Af'lille

Center Is Att E.O.E. An&lt;!
A Partlc;il&gt;art Ot The
OIIJll Free Workplace

7•985-44n

F&gt;rogram.

~40-66~~s-400~~~~= ~~~~~~=-

~.M~'"'=Roo~..,.--~wan~~to&lt;l~3 Aulomotivel$mlllt
111'1 • 2

Balli

._

7~128

limitoc! ted&gt;ni&lt;ian.

'" V

~15-5774

--=~~P::'r"'oc"'too""v~·,~....-

',..,
....
DilloriHIOif
$1 orlda - i s oil ~""'

, _ lo own your dream
txlme. C.U Now!

, _ Homes

=

~-inmy

DrivofS -""' full tine.
Cimanon
CQacll.

1-1188-64&amp;-9590

--

lntoCI&amp;ion lsllirtngl

·-·

If SO; you

.

AUCTIONS/ANTIQUES

U!T

~

Publishing

hyd~ulics .

ence

. ., . . .k

J41.418-11M
IN OU~ ~TIUf 01'1

www.auctlonzlp.com
15548

StJPf,~OVAI.

-....... '"lrG $T~S INVOLVfl&gt;

boa1s. aru..l

IN NAsTY l"fMVPS,.!

Ow-s:

B'f GORR'f, THAT'S
AWF\1\. NICE a;: 'EM !!

bJ ..-

•

HOOTIN'

per
month

I'll~~ ~otilts in ~ltt~p!r!.

NOTICES
NOTICE

Here's all you
need to do ...
Fill out the coupon below
and drop off or mail it with.a
copy of your photo ID.

Appllcallo~s

1

for tho
Ernest A. Wjngett and
Mulne L. Wingett
Education
Memorial
Truat are available al
the oHice of Little,
Sheets llo Warner, 21 I·
213
East
Second
Street, Pomeroy, Ohio
or Southern Local High
School, Racine, Ohio.
The deadline for !lllng
the application Is not
iater lhan April 6th,
2009. Those eligible are
High School Graduetas
who areiegalnosldants
of Sutton Township,
Melgo · County, Ohio,
and lineal gnondnlacea
and
grandnephewl
(and their lineal de·
acendanla} of Erneat A.
and Maxine S. Wingett,
regardleaa of whore
they may reside.
(3) 2, 9

P•••••••~•••••••••••••••••••••••

: City/State/Zip --~----1
I

I

: Phone,________________________
I

I

I

I

I
I

Mall or drop off this coupon 111ong
with a copy ot your photo 10 to
Ohio Valley.Publlshlng P.O. Box 469, Galllpolla, OH 45831

I

I

··························------·

WIIal~

is looing and

ft i$ ~to-""trid&lt; to
find
out how hN&lt;Is are Sjllittillg.
-.so.Wlllty n 4-3. yell con take lilt
club In COIIIIJIOI&amp; safety '100 will
loSe at moot ltvoolarl$ IIICI one club

CELEBRITY CIPHER

00 5-2. ""' will
n- to guOs.""""
whllltotodo.

by luis Clmpos
Ct!lbnty Cl:Nf ~'*'wnn,cren1 1tQm~s ~ lwl!cu s ~
E.:n !till' II'IIMCIIN' U'C$lof nt11r .

~ras. ""'

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V'OF COUR!£ 'l00\1€.
~ I~PRt.~ION t£5:::'1_., ~~~~~lOt-\ ;;E;~-1

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JrahMinn8MII.com

Public Notice
NOTICE TO CONTRAC·
TORS ·
Sealed proposals !or
!he Portland Commu·
nlty Cenhtr- Arena
Eleclrlcal Project Meigs
Coun!y Ohio ail per
apacl!lclllona In bid
packo! will be received
by tho Mtlga County
Commluionera atthelr
oHice al the Court·
house,. Pamaroy. Ohio
45789 unlli 1:00 p.m..
March 19, 2009 and
then at 1:15 p.m. at said
oftlco ouaned and road
afoud !or the following :
Specl!lcallons, and bid
forms may be secured
at tho oftlce o! Meigs
County Comminlo~·
ere,
Courthoute,

Yoor Rigbllo Koow. D!livmd Righllo

Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
Phone 740.992·2895. A
deposit o! 0 dollars wll!
be req~lred for each
set ol .plans and apeciflcallono, check mado
payable lo:. The full
amount will be ,...
turned wllhln thirty (30)
days after receipt of
blda.
Each bid muat be ac•
companied by either a
bid bond In an emounl
of 100% of the bid
amount with a surety
satisfactory to the
aforesaid
· Meigs
County Commission·
era or by certl!led
check, callhlers check,
or letter of credit upon
a solvent bani&lt; iii the
amount of not lesa then
111% of the bid amount
In favor o1 the alo,...
oald Mo(go County
Commissioners. Bid
Bonds shall be aceom·
pan led by Proo! of Au·
lhorlly of the oftlcial or
agent signing the
bond.
Bids shall be sealed
ani! marked as Bid for
Portland Community
Center Elec1rlcal and
mailed or delivered to:
Meigs County Commla·
alonera Courthouse
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
Attention of bidders Ia
called 10 all of tho requi romania contained
In this bid packel, pa,...
titularly to tho Federal
Labor Standards Provl·
slona and Davis-Bacon
Wages, various lnaur·
anco
requirements,
various equal opportu·
nlly provlslona. and the
requlrement .for a pay·
ment bond and pe,...
formance bond tor

100% of the contact
rice. No bidder may
wilhdraw his bid wllhln
thirty (30) days · after
lhe actural dale of the
opening thereof. The
Mtlgs Coullly Commls·
sloners reserve the
right to reJect any or·all
.
bids.

Hill's Self
Storage
29625 Bashan Road
Aocine. OH 45n1

740..949-2217

E'IER. WE

7:00am· 8:00pm

(3) 2, 9

RIBERT

BISSEll
CIIISTIICTIDI

J40·112·1m

"FX"!I Y YPi ·P YWVPOX FO Y vvo · M

YDE I!IP WRE·XFYPZM ' BYYP. "

G

YDOWIOJPZ CFO NJIRRA
PREVIOUS SOLIJTION: "I slid""' undttr lilt i lusion thai basical~ P!lOfJio lh1nk
of me as 1111 tJ5)-IIlCkooli~ lW'9 a&lt;:mr · ·Jack N1chdson

AstroGraph

tul
~~=· S(Q~d}lv\-ltt.!t'S'
- - - - - lolltM
1: P O l l A N - - - - -

WOII

~ClAY

Rtoroonoo Ionon of tho
0 ioolr
1Mmblod - . be-

Cblr..u.dJty:

_ , .....h~~
lly lllmlce Oool
In tM veer lhead. associations with
enterprising lndMduats who 11e both

law "' foriOI lour ~...... WCids.

BRELAV

I1 I. I I 12 I

ot g,..l bent"l. What lilly IMCh ~""' wm
not only oo stimulotirlg bul molorlal~
grat;tying. ·
PISCES (Fob.-rcll 201 - llornosilc
ectivities could prove to be extAimety
Sttti$fying. Puttering around th4t house or
garden and aceompliShlng thingS !hat
make your pllce n~r will provkM great

lUYivr: every

KUAQC

I I' ll I

i&lt;tf.

;u·

PEANUTS
, 11VE Al.WAifS WONDERED WIN
: PIRATES
PARROTS .
: ON TIIEIR

Cull: MARCUM CONSTRUCTION
For: • Chnin Link Fencing &amp; Wood
Fencing • Room Additions~ Garages

. l-IE LIKES RIDIN6 UP niERE •.

UNLESS I STOP TOO QUICK ..

• Vinyl and Wood Siding • Roofing
• Pole Barns •·Patio's, Porches uml Decks

II~E RIIRCUI, OWIEI
47239 Ri&lt;bt:t ·R"ad. Long Bonom. OH

740-985-4141
~ ( ~I ull'tlat~l

Cell: 740-416·1834
"ith Mi\.t" Man:um RtJOting &amp;: Remode-lina:

1.\+ rt~~n; rx rirlll"t

Seamless Gutters
Roofing, Siding . Gutters
lnStJred &amp; 8oncled
740.653·9657

:cow and BO"'

1---------, r---------;

1',., Esti-ts

'1

WOW. HEliE'S Jl.i'lOTHER
$illY LETTER COI'lCERNING
THE CO/t\ICS WE DID II,BCXJT
'SCUIRREL PUNCHING' A
FEW MONTHS BA.CI&lt;.

· Johnson's Tree

Servl«

.

G..WI"'Ils, OH 4!631 ·

lnsuml,fne

t:Stlm•tos, 20yn Exp.
740411-9.187
Rl&lt;k JohnSOII·OW-

J&amp;L
Construction

CORNER STONE
CONSTRUCTION

• Vlnyf Siding
• Replacement
Windows
• Roofing
·Decks
•O.rages
·.Pole Buildings
• Room Addll!ana

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

Owner:
JameaKttattl!
742·2332
R~plat't'ment

Windo:.-s and
Yin}'I Siding
Spt:ciallsls, LTD
(7401 742-2563
• Siding • VInyl

Windows • Metal
and Shingle Roars
• l&gt;e&lt;ks • Additions

•llle.:!rlcat

• PlumblnK
.• Pole Barns

,

YOU CAN STOP WRITING.
PEOPLE. IT W~S ~SILLY
STORYLINE, AND IF WE
COULD THINK OF A
WAY TO REPENT FOR
PUNCMING ASCUIRIL

· •

~

•

'If

••

i

!

J

I

L-~~'-:::~--...-......• ".~·

ClARFIELD

Local Contractor

740.367-(1544

s P xu P ;i o x 11 P v R R. N x v·z av 'i' P

RFTP

CI'MtiVe and industrious will Pt0\14t to be

I

-------Public: Notice
------REQUEST FOR COST
PROPOSAL Construe·
lion Material· Storage
• New Homes.
Building
Rulfand Fire Oepart•
• Garages
ment
·Complete
ATIENTION: Suppliers
Remodeling
The . Molga County
commlaaloners are ,...
questing colt propos·
als !or conatructlon
St.op &amp; Compare
materlala, auch proposala to be provided
prior 10 1:00 p.m. on
March 12; 2009.
Proposal mull Include
all colla auoeiated
with dallvery. The Llal·
lng o! the construction
materials may be ob•
lolned from the Meigs
County Grants oHice.
Cost propo1111 may be
mailed or delivered to ~~
the Melga County
Gran!l Oillct, 117 E.
Memorltl Drive, Sullo
5, Pomeroy, 'l:lhlo
45769. Quoalloneln,...
Now Selling:
gard to lhlt requoat ·
• Fonl &amp; ~otor.:rat\
may be addrtlled to
Paris • Engirw.ii,
Jean · Truoaell, Meigs
Tmnst\.•r
C'.-sl,!s &amp;
Granll Admlniatralor 11
1'nm1'
n\lsslons
740·992·7908 .
• Alk nnurket
Mlck Davenport, Proal·
Rcpluccmeu1
ShetH
dtnl
Ml•tal
&amp;
Cm11poncms
Melge Coun1y Commla·
alonera ·
'
(2) 26, (3) 2

WANT!

$1tl per lb Ca&gt;h only
l,'l\lt l' l ('\jULI('O..\ in &amp;J, Ut'C\'

H&amp;H
· Guttering
Hours

r.-·, w..s - s

to -

· ~ lit sNits to a s;&gt;adll. lit tirlds lilt
queen tor you. And il ho play$. club you
gel NiO tiid&lt;s trvm lilt suit. Eilhol way.
j&lt;lU OSCapi! blame-ir&amp;ll.

(1-\IE..f

1\wn.-- VII

Shipn~nls

~

(

, t .. I,

··

j

·

·

r-:----~-....., r,:::;a••;;::aE::::""-;::'}
~-:

740.367·0536

Stanley TreeTrimming
&amp; Removal

SMEYIR

8

•

•

•

•

e bv

IIIIl

J

SCRAM -lETS ANSWERS ;.,c•()Q

Nylon - Vouch - Joun.:c - CONCEAL
Co·worker to newcomer. "The person who knows
mmc than the boss should be car&lt;tullo CONCEAL it."
Lethal -

ARLO &amp; JANIS

-

SCORPIO (Oct. 24·No' 221- Others
are trying to get you 10 join a promising
partnership, but only II you aoo thoi 0110
who plays the leading fole . The situation
needs a suong and gutsy parson at the
helm .
SAGITTARIUS (No'. 23· Doc . 21 ) - This
Is one or those days when two haads will
be better than one. If vou have to make a

Vo"

don't have to be brash or foolish In orttar
to take a calculated risk. Think It through
thoroughly, and II II mRketsense, ~ven If
11 takes guts 10 . accomplish. 11'1! be the

rtght move to make.

SOUPTONUTZ
I !leNT t&lt;&gt;IOW IF 1
00

.

Wt~1\la

740-591 -8044

Please leave messa e

•

'

_.__...- -------

,.-... •

6 u~~~~8~N~~~~ LHTERS I

unclear.

Referenees Available'
Call Gary Sumley @

Advertise
in.thls space for
$70 per month

Sniffing and sneezing the
husband moaned, "The popular
remedy that won 'I cure a cold is

Complete the chutOI• qiiC!od
Hili119 In tht miw119 wor~
you dtvolop from stop No. 3 below.
PRINT NUMII!R!C LETT ERS IN I
THESE SQUARES
.

•

lng to achieve, ll could ~a~ you perceive
that which your logic finds ccntu&amp;lng or

bener. vou !eel better.
AQUARIUS (Jon . 20-Fob. t91 -

' Experienced

'
"'

"''

~,;,gr-,;,-.;·~~~i--T~-,~--!

make your enlint being feel bett1r than It

Work
'Reasonable Rates
' Insured

0

tong time.
TAURUS (April 20-May 20) - There are
exceuent possibilities 10 make more tnan
a few business dials t~l coukl yield a
tidy profit It worn be anything you do dif·
lerentty: It's merely that the timing Is
right
GEMINI (May 21.June 20) - It'$ nice to
be easygoing, but make' sure tl"lat ~
don't let the control slip from your hanGs
in m•Hers pel'$0rlally Important to you .
Manage your own affairs.
CANCER !Juno 2hluly 221- Some dil·
llcult people can be managed rather
nicely il you let the solutions appear to
come from them rather than from you . liS
a smau pnce to pay "" their support.
LEO (Jut~ 23-Aug. 22) - Wtlen an
opportunity arises to get Involved with ll
trion&lt;l witt1 whom you'vo nevor clone
busine.. oo1oro. orea&lt;1 slowly. tt eouto
havo hl&lt;lden disadvantages · altoched
that nailhor pari'/ wlltllko.
VIRGO (Aug. 23·SepL 22) - Oneo yo"
o.,.rcome your toel ings or Inadequacy or
soll·doubl, o goal lhot hos provlously
&amp;\laded you can be reached. Fear and
mistrust of '1QUr abiMtles are the culprits .
not your abilitieS or know-how.
LiBRA ISopl 23·0cl. 231 - Do not diS·
count your lfltulllon with regard to an
Important endeavor you have bten hop·

hl\s In a Jong time. When you brett~~

' Prompt and Qunlity

.

AL 0 YS
I I~ I I

ARIES (Marth 21 ·Aflril 19) ,..... This. could
be a better~than-U&amp;Ual day for Clltl;hlng
up on all your correspondence. Ctu.n up
your e ~ mall . and conta_ct all those people
to wnom you'V&amp; owed messagft tor a

ma,lor d&amp;&lt;:lslon, don't do so without con·
suiting a partner whO has a stake In lt.
CAPRICORN (Oec, 22·Jan . 19) -Th ink
abaut getting sonle exercise. Getting oft
your dun and moving your muactes will

Froo Eatlmahta

•n~

now?

At-1 1 aUT +lE's. NOT
HERE. SO WE. CAN
CAI.L. +lll'l WAATLIW"J'.IIW'f'f

orill ·-

...._, lilt dub orldlllt .,..
linesse.llulwhen bath ogoponents lollow.
cash a third ........,_ lhon oil with a
hoWl. We$! takes tllis and IWO i!IOie
·' - ' lrid&lt;s. 'oliu riscan:t a s;&gt;adll and a
club !rom lilt board. • oiamoncl .....
club !rom !""' hand. What can West oo

r\o.IOUL.I&gt; '{QU

c.ll: 740-416-5047
IIMII:

Sunset
Homes ·

when you pay for a 6 or 12
month subscription on your
home delivered subscription!

I

Migciubft.....,.

~ I lilt dub yell got s;&gt;lldo$ """"91

1lut ' -

$70

740-742-3411

I

FA'RMERS
MARl&lt;ET

Advertise
in this
spate
for

Senior Discount*

Address-~---...-------

-lloehoWI silt. East .........

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

Jon v.n Meter •
l'llul Rowe

Custom Built
homes. roofs,.
garngeslpole
buildings,
additions, drywall,
siding, e!c.

I

""' ' - afty ,.,...... to

1011 triclcs: two
(~ lridr. ant). bJr
&lt;iamoiiCIS ....... Al!il&gt;l glara,
yell '-two _..,"" niol~ .....
nor: lind lilt ,_. queon or lib • win-

.

Racine, Ohio 740-247·2019

or a

I
I

-·
ing -

-yellcm?
~ Slarl oitll eiglll

Bry•n Reeves

I
I

In toao;s &lt;1111. W~""' IJil to moM ttvoo

no-trum;&gt; ..._ tho lie ol tho - ~- .... -...tho hoWijao1-

THE BOR" LOSER

"\

: Subscriber's Name _______

tllomeon-·

oncl triclc and take IWO ~ ~ East

&amp;
Benefits.. Fax. resume to
741).44fj·911l4 or t:tnail
to LLCOCAREO.COM

I

lil&gt;ltiont -!lad.~- ho Joij lloe

Thol8 " ""·-to IJU4lOS. ~lilt­

necessary.

.

Houst d Cllnlnorl$ in 1919. said. -n.

-

•

E•peri-

6unbap uti me' ·6ttttintl

·-rJ-iolllloNarq Nillx.lloeillst - 1 0 ......... .

E-mail: captblll658yahoo..com

Cp.,

.41alltpoli• Jlailp Qtribune
t'oint t)lta"nt B.egiltter
The Daily Sentinel

AI~

When you can,
combine chances ·

HOLLER

Heallti/Ro~r8mont

.

UT

l'lo;s

Opening lead: ., s

2&amp;St.Rt. JW•c "]•4•

Maclaaiu

·and

.

.. " ' 5

740.446.9200

.· ·o. l·•d·· · e·::.:·r·Y~J:·'
.. . ,
,.

•ECIIIT

'W"W'W.ttrtaw tllwlt

Servkie Technician position avallabte tor diesel

' )Veei&lt;iy Pay + Bonus!
"CQnllllete BeneHts.

~..,.

Hardllld hU1111 Aid Filii• a

. lmmodlalloyl

as FUU. Tllll!

... ....

&amp; IUs

It I( T I

"' wort&lt; wiltl oltlers !n a
smaH setting. This is a 40
hour a wool&lt; position wiltl
t&gt;oneffts ava»abl&amp; .~

valley

~&gt; t •

-stop a.o..sr-xs

RV "s.
(740 ) W~ -5344
Mon-Fri
~:00 •m• ~: 3!\ pm
•j

you 65•

1
I

"'im~rize

825 Third Avenue. Galh·
polis • Ohio 45631 . or by
e-mail to mdtnewsOmydailytribullo.ccm

·-~~~~­
(:l-11pm)

1
I
1

w,. sen·i&lt;,... &gt;n&lt;1

~ Many pooiti&lt;lns, avg 111ree monltls. lnterost.o
PlY S20 10 $3G'tlr, no .ax, appHcants can sef1d their
llOf.
requi..t resumes to · Kovirl Kol~.
t ·86e-295-2S86
A&lt;:coss Managing E&lt;Ji!Qr, . Ohio

Group

homo "" my ohikl. 00
NOT my ttmo it
.... not serious!

1
1

repair . .

do"*'-

-----

I

. ; mall t.'ngl~

••1• staff . as o pagtnator/copy
e&lt;ltor: The sue&lt;essful
COIIdiQole . wij! p;irOOpale
Eye tor
pays 'n tl'le ~Jy ~ ot
cme a\IOI'Ition 10 dotajl, . tl'le OVP s ill&lt;oe - ·
••• ~.~·~
-~ pers ana Sunday pul&gt;h·
· - ·~~.,.
•
-·
...., by ~ . .
· - ana mulli-laSMg co~ •
~•'W'11!1 "''W
sl&lt;i~ Mus ~ ~· .
pages.
Knowledge ol
. ·~
t .,. ........ Quart&lt; )(press and Adobe
with Adcbo
f&gt;roclu&lt;ts. Photos/lOp Is desired.
PIHse send resume to Carldidate must oo able

'

I

~,: h.ang~s.~

• ! TI 4

• "J
e I 5I
• 'as 1

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•

:t.QI:IIIy.Qorltii&amp;Oc IM ·
:FtooiiDIIiwl)

.,~.011

m~~..-h ani"~ Wl){'k.~
~o:ompl~tt:- ~,. i~o.-e- vii

a s.

•• 3

{5 Po&amp;ntH

~ • • - an its edi!llrial

=·

~~-~~!165~0~167~·

a !

www~

Ne" &amp; l'&gt;«! Ttres.
We bu)· uS«! tires.
· ~o·omputer wheel
aJ lgrttnerlrs.. \\'t!' at':;ll
Uo I:Ju&lt;l":;.li~hl

·-

•AJtl

• Q .. . ' 5

C'ustum Aonll' Buillling
.
Sb.'1:'•I Fr:.uu~: ' B whhDtp)
8uliili"l'. R"""""li"l&lt;
G&lt;n&lt;r..I "'!'"'

must

CLA llo&gt; 2211 200 Main
St. Point F'teasant WV
:2ssSo:
~~~.,....-::--~
Nan Compony Now Hir·

• '. 3

rcill•

L&amp;l.tlftlllln
4'M7 Wipplf Rd.

..

4QJ1t

• l'l'ft&gt; £st;·aftlS
17.1....!~

1'1

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~~·~~ . . . . .

pakloXj). 304-6J'5.3EOO.
. Gllll'l* p lg llf

C&lt;ultry lllrinlt ~.
:NI BA an pnlllOt1y
tio&lt;ll
' E..
1111\y
plarlsJ
¥Y
FioiOIICilgl W. own 1111
bltlll
ClK
~I

-

Sat. ~:00 1111\ • IZ
If• Uf/flftll"- .Will"

OWNER Fl·
i'WICE
AVAilABLE. Need full time tlair styliSt file Ohio Volley Publi0/l(740j 44&amp;-3li70
orilh managers license.. '"9 Co. ~ seeking a
Gall 740-965-3965
qualilled rov,_ \0 fill

..

:\ :

. .. ....

C

•L•••

... TilE

REA Crosiword Puaale ·

6 A. tt I

CONSrltUCTION
l'O,
Pr

ffft Esti=atcs
M.iilth:' nn

J&lt;;in1ng Our
An&lt;! Dedicated

NQ-992 ~72

uwa

~

Provlding
Ou!Sianding
Quality
CanJ lb Our- Residents.

The position is IIJII om&amp;
40 hours a """· wilh

vans. Cfoon M'IR. Home

We

Clllio

M:ln·Fn.. 9orn001Jm Anc:1
Fill OlJt An Application.
Full Time And Port
Time -~ AvailTo Those QuaJifi'id lndi·
v&lt;luals Coml)leting Tho
Class. AppUcants Must
Be [)opendoi)Je (Attondallco, Is A Must) TOim
Plajllr&gt; Wi lh PQSibvo ~
btudoo To Joll1 Us In

f""'!'".COliS please.

s.lea

Philip
APder

aA."iKS

FnenQI)
Staff. Please Sltlp B)lu
our
Front
01fice

rollef high scllool a/tllet·
1:s in the area lor ltle
daily -'lion
~
oIt w..,.
' '"news·
.
.
1!'1119'. as . .el asaSSIS.t
witl'l ill&amp; pruducbon ot
sports page$. Excellent

11
!!11111•111d~-~~~~~~'1!31!!l'bo&lt;
0!111!2ba~ltl everyday, must haw S·

yard. WtU be selltOQ rn
tne Tn..State area. Trans-portatiOn
and marenal
fixp9fl9f'IC8
raqu1red.

Conmr

Middfapoort.

ooted

2SR 2 Balh lorNo•p-~b ng~~at ben@fits: Interested
. •ar·
ulililieo inc:!.
w• ""
•-·
tiee can send 11!~S to
Piivate hlt Dol&gt; &amp; r.t tel+ Arouisitions Fine Jew&amp;iry.
I.Jg Sklg. I.Jg floot deck. 151 2nd Ave. Galtipclls.
Ko\&gt;in Kelly, Managing
'*&gt; """'- No S/11Qking No
Editor. Ohio Valley Pub.::;1545-;,;;,;t;,;700!!!.!!!'7~~= Wantoc! DriVe&lt; will&gt; expolishing Co.• 625 Third
~
rion&lt;:o n flatbed and . Ave.. GallipoRs. Ollio
98

$45()lmQ

.. .

l&lt;&gt;ca!W 0 333 Page St.

O.e&lt;broot&lt;

Spol-Ia.. .
The Oh10 Valley Publish·
"'9 co. 1s !;e911Jng mort.

_

3 'tpr 1111'11 COM

BRPDGE

fvranOe ~tlendk:are . com

·-Sj;;:;~-

hours.
-t
e

to

IlK: ,_'IU

llii.:M54

w.
~-==-~=-=-~~::_:-,~
"""" tor 1ocaJ lumbe&lt;

WLCLJII.

Comm1ssoono&lt;1
tllsod
""· 361119 ~ salat). S8i!d ...
Fillad.
PoinonJy,
011 SU1119S to PO Bo&gt; 449\
WWW.9llt9r'ldieent.~.
Gal!iPQii$. OH 45631.

-NEXT WEEK'

I -

~

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-.mydailysentind.com

No. 16 Purdue beats \Ohio State, 75-50 James wins it with. free
assi~ts.

WEST
LAFAYETTE .
Nt&gt;manja Calasan
.
Ind. (AP) - Purdue surren- had I~ points and JaJuan
den:d
50
points
to Johnson added 12 for the
Michigan in the second half Boilermakers (22-7 . 11 -5
of a loss on Thursday. Two Big Ten) .
da~s
later. the angry
The Buckeyes hav&lt;&gt; lost
B01lermaters allowed 50 four of five .
points the · entire game
"'We did not play well
against Ohio State .
today." Ohio State coach
The
l6th-ro1nked Thad Mana said . "Purdue
Boilermakers boum;ed back had a lot to do with that. We ·
to shut do1110 the Buckeyes dido 't have the mindset we
75-50 on Saturday. Purdue needed to come in here and
held the Buckeyes to ~ get a victory ...
percent shooting and outre·
The BoilermakerYshot 64
bounded them 35-19.
percent in the second half
The
Boilermakers to pull away after leading
allowed 63 percent shoot- 32-26 at halftime. The
in~ in the 87-78 loss at Boilermakers made seven
Michigan. Purdue forward of nine 3-pointers after the
Robbie Hummel. who led breat. It was Purdue's
the Boilermakers with 17 largest victory margin in a
points Saturday. said the conference game this seateam needed to regain its son.
edge on defense.
. Purdue's oft"t~nse is did·•That was very important ing now that Hummel has
to us. because that's what returned from a hairline
we do." he said . "'To give fracture in his lower back.
up 87 points at Michigan The Boilermakers have
was almost embarrassing . scored 70 or more points in
Honestly. it was one of three straight games for the
those things where. we first time in conference
APplloto
needed to go bad. and do play.
Purdue forward JaJuan Johnson (25) gets a dunk in front of
our thing ."
"We're just really getting Ohio State guard Jon Diebfer during the second haH of a
Evan Turner scored .14 everything together, getting ·NCAA college basketball game in West Lafayette. Ind., on
points and fouled out for used to playing with each Saturday. Purdue defeated Ohio State 75·50.
Ohio State (18-9, 8-8). other now that Rob's back."
B.J . Mullens scored two and the Buckeyes behind
Purdue
guard
Chris Kramer said. "It just seems
.
quick
baskets lor Ohio 67-46.
Kramer, who gave up most like we've been shooting
State
early
in
the
second
Matta swke to his star
of the .27 points Michigan's well. especially in the sec·
Manny Harris scored on ond half. We get looks in half to cut Purdue's lead to player afier he walked to
but .
the the bench .
Thursday. redeemed him- the first half. but they· re 32-30.
Boilem1ak.ers
responded
"I jllsl told him, 'Hey.
self.
going down in the second."
quickly.
Hummel
went
for
a
this is one of those days
"I think it's really imporHummel made six. of 10
dunk. and the ball bounced you don't. want to have in·
tant just to stay in front of shots.
him,andKramerdidagood . "I feel like I'm reall~ up. then fell through the athletics,'" Matta said. ··we
job of that," Hummel said . jumping a lot better now.· hoop. After a turnover by have to get ready for
'He's got some real skills he said. "That's why I'm Ohio State. Purdue 's Lewis Tuesday. and you· ve got to
handling the basketbalL If getting more lift on my Jackson made a l:1yup to be a leader in practice and
you can stay in front of him shot. and probably Why I'm increase the lead to 37-30. how we prepare ...
The
Boilermakers
and not go for his shooting better: When my revive the lYowd and force
Cfl)ssover. you're all set."
back was hurting. I was an Ohio State timeout. remained in contention for
Kramer. the league's having a hard time running. Moore made a 3-pointer the "Big Ten title, but they
shortly ulter the timeout to trail Michigan State by I
·defensive player of the year jumping. moving."
last season. also rememPurdue took a 26-14 lead make it · 40-30 with 16:26 112 games with two to play:
"After the · loss (to
bered that Turner scored 26 with nine minutes left in left. Moore made another
three
with
just
.
under
13
on him in Ohio State's 80- the first half after the Ohio
Michigan), we knew we
72 overtime win over State bench was issued a minutes remaining to make would have to come in and
Purdue in Columbus in technical
fouL
The it 49-32.
take it one game at a time."
Turner
committed
·
his
early February.
Buckeyes slowly trimmed
Kramer said. "We need
"I think I wus pretty their deficit. then Turner fourth foul. on otfense. help to win this Big Ten
motivated." Kramer said.
made a long 2-pointer at the with 10:29 to play and Ohio championship. If we don't,
ETwaun Moore had II buzzer to cut Purdue's lead State tn1iling 52-36. He . we still have the 6ig Ten
fouled out with 2:41 left tournament ''
points. 10 rebounds and six to 32,26 at halftime.

Busch drives from
the back to win
on home track
. LAS VEGAS (AP) -Kyle
Busch notched the biggest
win of his young career
Sunday by driving from the
back of the field to win at Las
Vegas Motor Speedway, his
hometown track.
Although there are tar more
hallowed tracks in NASCAR.
this 1.5-mile oval in the desert
was where '1be Wild Thing"
most wanted to:win .
He came prepared at the
stan of the weekend, beating
big brother Kurt for the pole
to put brothers on the front
row for the first time since
2000. But an engine change
in his motor meant he had to
drop to the back of the field at
the stan of the race. and
· · BuS&lt;;h had to power his way
through the field.
.
He took the lead with 57
laps to ,go. then lost it during a
late round of pit stops. ausch
was third on a restan with 22
laJlS to go. then cha&lt;&gt;ed down
Jeff Burton . and leader Clint
Bowyer to move out front
again.
~ ·Say goodnight, Gracie."
spotte[
Jeff
Dicker$on
radioed.
Busch had to hold off the
competition over two linal
restarts for his first victory of
the season. and first win at
Las Vegas in six. career Cup
Series stuns.
He celebrated with thick
burnouts through the grass,
then .apparently blew his
engine again. Enveloped in
thick white plumes of smoke.
he emerged from the clouds
to make his trademark bow to
the crowd.
He then collected the
checkered
!lag
from
NASCAR, and kheeled to
kiss the finish line on the
track.
"I tell you what. thi&gt; is pretty cool," Busch said . " I d1dn't
know exactly what it would
mean. but coming to the
. checkered !lag. there were
knots in my stomach. It's big·
ger than wmning the Daytona
500. I said it wasn't going to
be. but it is ."
Matt Kenseth , trying to
become the first driver in
NASCAR history to win the
first three races of the season.
lost his engine six laps into
the race and finished la~t. In
all·, Roush Fenway Racing
lost three of five motors.

.·

Center-holds
first cancer
genetim clinic, A3

throw' Cavs prevail

Down the stretch. it was
James vs. Johnson at both

ATLANTA (AP)
LeBron James dribbled at
the top of the key with the
clock winding down, then
. made his move. What happened next was a matter of
debate.
.
· AI Horford thought he
played gOod defense. The
officials decided otherwise.
After the call went his
way. James stepped to the
I ine and made, one free
throw with 1.6 seconds
remaining. just enough to
give the Cavaliers their seventh win in eight games. 8887 over the Atlanta Hawks
on Sunday night.
. The Hawks, after rallying
from a 13-point deficit.
squandered a five-point lead
in the final I :42 . Delonte
West hit a jumper. Mo
Williams sank a 3-poinler
and James won it for the
Cavaliers on their final pOS·
session . Driving from the
top of the key. he threw up a
shot that mis;;ed but
Harford, standing in the lane
with his arms up, was called
tor the foul.
''It was unfortunate the
way the game · ended ,"
Horford said. choosing his
words carefully. "He came
to me. I kept my arms
straight. The refs felt it was
a fouL''
·
James missed the tlrst free
throw but swished the sec·
ond. The Hawks still had a
chance after a tirrieout, but
Joe Johnson's jumper over
James clanked off the rim as
the hom sounded.
The Cavaliers (46-12)
moved a half-game ahead of
Boston for the top spot in
. the Eastern Conference und
eclipsed their win tol!ll from
las~ season . Atlanta hun its
·bid to maintain the founh
seed ·in the East. which
would guarantee homecourt advantage in the opening round.
.,
"It's one of the better wins
we've had." Jaines said. "On
the road, it means a lot more
against a playoff team."

.
....
..

ends of the court.
~I was going one-on-one.
I bad to tale the challenge,"
said James • .who called the
closing minutes "some of
the best basketball we've
played all season."
Johnson led tbe Hawks
with 21 points. but he
missed his final two shots including the potential
game-wmner.
"I had a good look.," he
said. "It felt great when it
left my hand. I thought it
was definitely going in, but
not quite."
James ran at Johnson with
a hand e11tended - failing
to get a piece of the ball but, · ·
as James put it. making
"him shoot it a little bit different."
Triple-teamed at times,
James made eight of 20
from the lield. including a
pair of 3-pointers. and .
dished out II assists.
The teams met on a day
that should have made
Cleveland feel right at home
- a freak. March storm left
downtown Atlanta with a
light blanket of snow.
As always. the celebrities
turned out for King James.
Bill Murray . . in Georgia
filming a movie, sat counside along with director·
·Spike Lee, who was trying
to sell Murray on another
project while they both took
in the game.
The Cavaliers led 62-49
about 5 minutes into the .
third. bot the Hawks closed
the quaner ori a 21-7 run.
Johnson. Zaza Pachulia and.
Flip Murray scored five
points each to lead the spun:
Williams had 20 points for
Cleveland. while Zydrunas
llguuskas had a double-double with 17 points and II
rebounds. The Hawks had
five players in double figures , including Murray and
Marviri Williams with 14
apiece.

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SeePageA3
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facilities. See Page AS

houses down from
Store. ,
Ath,ertc,n···said Durst'lind his (
·wii1! v.rere home 11t the time
.
the
·. but wert not .

Neo"''• . General

inJ'!J'e4 IUld nejthe~ ~#re

·_-,1,;,,

}'

·-'

nr-n••
.... ·

. any firefighters..
. · .: ·
. AtliertQll said the double-'
wi!Je :was 11e•rly a total
· , loss.'·Me said 'tl)ough there .. ·
were 'a few tOOIINi and ,
items which w~re salvage~ble, ~he roof ' and floor ·
were heavily damaged.
· Atherton .added the fire· .'
. ·appears to have staned in
tHe side yard. and traveled ·
unde~neath and ·into th' '
.structure . .He ·said the fire
.: • doe$.nQt appear to~ suspi·
cio.us and t~e cause reimuns .
under investigation. ·
Mc;mbers of · the •Olive

. .·.__ '-'

. • Ohio official expects
. delay in state.audit.
.See Page A6

.

De.p artment remained on
scene for nearly five hours
to make sure lb~ fire was
· .out.
·
'

,............... "'
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740-992•2155
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The Daily Sentinel
1.11 .Court Street, Pomeroy, Ohio 45679

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Stall piiOIO

Last f!lghtfir~figh)ell. from the Middleport and Pomeroy Fire Departments were on
the_sc;ene of a IJou~flre at 618 South ftljrd Street in Middleport The Olive, Tuppers
Plains and Chester Fire Departments were also busy with a Slructure fire in

Fi8edsvllle
afl4!rnoori.
., '' .Y.sterday
.
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'

··

Rutland pantry remembered

Upgraded BusAn&amp;ss Ltstings .

FREE ONLINE BUSINESS LISTING

REED

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river frees .
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lead on the investigation.
and reponed the discovery
of the car Monday afternoon.
BCI said the car was being
processed for evidence. No
arrests have been reponed in
connection with the case.
The BCI asks that anyone
with intormation related to
Jacks0n 's murder contact the
sheriff's .office at 992-3371.

POMEROY Meigs
County Commissioners and
others interested in tourism
in the county have taken the
first step tq encourage the
state to upgrade the
restroom facilities at the
U.S. 33 rest areas,
Commissioner · ·
Tom .
Anderson said the commissioners hope to secure fund·
ing for the upgrades through
a federal appropriation.from
U.S. Rep. Charlie Wilson,
D-Bridgepon.
Late last month, commissioners passed a resolution ·
requesting
the
Ohio
Department ofTransponation
"make basic improvements
to these primitive facilities to
bri11g them in line with other
rest areas throughout Ohio."
In their resolution, commissioners said they were
"concerned that the primi·
tive and unimproved rest
areas are an embarrassment to the State of Ohio.
ODOT and the citizens of
Meigs County."
Karen
Pawloski,
spokesman for ODOT
District 10, said the state
plans to tale no action to
fund or complete a restroom

INSIDE

WEATIIER

Call now!

missing by family members
Since reponing the car
when they checked on missing and providing a
Jackson a week ago and description to media outlets,
reponed her missing.
the car has been ~ponedly
Jackson's garage door.had seen as far south as Inez, Ky.,
been left open, and the front . as well as in Scioto County
door to her home was and Parkersburg, W.Va.
unlocked. · Deputies found
The Ohio Bureau of
Jackson's bodY' buried Criminal Identification and
under three feet of debris in Investigation's
Major
her dining room.
Crimes Section has taken the

BY BRIAN

&gt;

A.,. &lt;1boul OOLD &amp; PLATH\JM, ~-~ dixo~nt&gt; &lt;1¥~ilol.t...

Authorities have been looking for the · vehicle, which
was believed to have been
stolen after she was killed.
Preliminary
autopsy
results showed Jackson died
from strangulation, a stab
wound to the neck, and
blunt head trauma.
The car, a 1989 Mercury
Marquis, was discovered

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BREEDO MYIWLYSENTINELCOM

POMEROY Doris
Jackson's vehicle was located Saturday in Athens.
Jackson was found dead in
her home in Tuppers Plains
Thursday, after she was
reponed missing by family
members early last week.

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'i'Ne,ed a ~-tii~r.buSI~e$s? · ·
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Attention Business Owners

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Obama n8mes Kansas
governor as health
secretary choice, As

Sports

Weather

B Section
A6

i!;J 2009 Ohio Valley Publl•hlnK Co.

• ·'

Holzer Clinic

BSERGENT@MYOAILYSENTINELCQM

SYRACUSE
The
River on the rise is
BV BETH SERGENT
God's CARE mmtstry of
,iiiiliiiiiiiiiiiiii:~ii~~jii Ohio
normally
not a good thing
BSEAGENTCMYDAILYSENTINEL.COM
which the food pantry is a
I
but
on
Saturday
night, the
branch, one 1box of food per
river rose enough to fre.e a
RUTLAND - A food month is distributed to
tow boat which had run
pantry operated by th·e Meigs County residents
aground near Syracuse
Rutland Church of God who meet income guide·Friday morning, .according
which also operates a lines set . by t.he Second
to the United States Coast
CARE ministry, recently Harvest Food Bank. The
Guard.
received a donation to that cnurch 's pantry also proThe rising river negated
pantry from employees at vides a hot meal slatting at
the
use of a crane for sal·
6:30 p.m. each Wednesday
Holzer Clinic Meigs.
vage
efforts. Initial reports
The donation was enough evening .. The CARE minwere
the
M-V Wally Roller.
to supply the pantry with istry has been operating the
by
American
owned
food for two weeks.
food pantry for over IQ
Commercial
Lines,
The money and food years and plans to continue
..
had
Jeffersonville.
lnd
were collected lust month serving as many families in .
possibly hit a submerged
by employees of Holzer Meigs County as possible.
rock. Lt. Wes James with
Clinic Meigs as pan of a
The Second Harvest
US Coast Guard out of
the
larger community outreach Foodbank of Southeastern
Huntington, W.Va. saidthat
pro$ram involving other · Ohio is a large warehouse
has not been confirmed and
clime branches. According operation that receives surthe
incident remains under
to Clil)ic Manager Diana plus food donations from
investigation.
Jeffers, at the Meigs· major food manufacturers,
Despite the reported six
branch employees paid $2 wholesalers, and retailers
feet
long by four feet wide
to wear blue jeans to work and then channels this food
gash
in the port side dou(the money was later used to charitable feeding organi·
ble hu II. James said the
to buy food) or employees . zations throughout I 0 counRoller
arrived under its
brought in at leas( two can · ties in' southeastern Ohio.
'
own
propulsion
at 11 p.m . ·
of food. Jeffers said the The foodbank currently disyesterday
at
0-Kan
clinic had heard about the tributes food to over 200
Marine
Repair.
Gallipolis
..
work the pantry wus doing food . pantries.
soup
Submltt.d photo
kitch ens, and congregate
It
was
escorted
to
0-Kan
in Rutland and chose them
EmployeE!S of Holzer Clinic Meigs (pictured) recently parby another vessel as an
as the recipient.
meal sites .
ticipated in a month-long food drive. Their donation was ·
At the Rutland Church of
Plea$. see Pantry, A5
made to the food pantry run by the Rutland Church of God . Please see Tow bo1t. A5
'

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I

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